Clifton Parker
Clifton Parker was a British composer, particularly noted for his film scores. During his career, he composed scores for over 50 feature films, as well as numerous documentary shorts, radio and television scores, over 100 songs and music for ballet and theatre.
Life
Edward John Clifton Parker was born on 5 February 1905 in London, the youngest son of a bank manager. He was encouraged by his father to go into commerce but studied music privately and composed his first published work, Romance for violin and piano, when aged sixteen. In 1924, he decided to divide his names—to use 'Edward John' for lighter compositions and 'Clifton Parker' for more serious compositions. However, he never used the former. He obtained an ARCM diploma in piano teaching at the Royal Academy of Music in 1926 and abandoned his career in commerce and became a music copyist.By the mid-1930s he was living in Folkestone and acting as organist and arranger to the local municipal orchestra. He was also achieving success with some of his classical pieces and managed to get his work accepted for broadcast on the BBC, work such as In a Twilight Dim with Rose. He came to the attention of Muir Mathieson, one of the music pioneers of the British film industry. His early film compositions were uncredited, including the 1942 Noël Coward film In Which We Serve. There followed a series of war documentaries, including Battle Is Our Business, Towards the Offensive and Western Approaches, through which his name finally began to attract attention. The Imperial War Museum held a commemorative event with special screenings of the films in June and July 2003.
The 1950s were a prolific period, with Parker composing for many mediums, especially film. However, in 1963 he was one of three composers, the others being William Alwyn and Franz Reizenstein, who abandoned scoring film music in protest of the exorbitant percentage of royalties taken by the publishers.
Parker was married twice. His second wife, Yoma Sasburg, was principal dancer in a number of his ballet productions. He was the father of Julia Clifton Parker, better known as writer Julia Stoneham. He was inactive for the final 13 years of his life owing to ulcers and emphysema, and he died on 2 September 1989, aged 84, in Marlow. The Clifton Parker Bursary at Dartington International Summer School was founded to encourage the study of film music.
Works
Film scores
Clifton Parker wrote the music for many feature films, and is much admired for his "lively symphonic style". Although most of his scores are missing, presumed destroyed, several have been reconstructed by Philip Lane and have been released on a Chandos Records CD, performed by the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra. Notable scores include:It Started at Midnight Yellow Canary Western Approaches This Happy Breed Johnny Frenchman Steam, short documentary directed by James E RogersThe Man Within Blanche Fury Poet's Pub The Blue Lagoon Treasure Island The Wooden Horse – finest scoring of creditsLife in Her Hands The Story of Robin Hood The Sword and the Rose Single Handed Night of the Demon Campbell's Kingdom Sea of Sand The 39 Steps Sink the Bismarck! A Circle of Deception The Hellfire Club Taste of Fear The Treasure of Monte Cristo Girl on Approval H.M.S. Defiant Mystery Submarine- ''The Informers''