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John Veale
John Douglas Louis Veale (June 15, 1922 - November 16, 2006) was an
English classical composer.
He was born in Shortlands, Bromley, Kent. He was educated at Repton
and Corpus Christi College, Oxford, alongside Kenneth Tynan. As a
composer, he was largely self-taught, but took some lessons from
Egon Wellesz, Thomas Armstrong, Roger Sessions and Roy Harris (the
latter's only English pupil).
He served as film correspondent with the Oxford Mail (1966 - 1980)
and as copy editor at Oxford University Press (1968 - 1987).
His compositions include three symphonies (No. 1 was written
1944-47, and premiered by Sir John Barbirolli at the Cheltenham
Music Festival in 1952; No. 2 written in 1965; No. 3 in 1997), a
clarinet concerto (1954), a violin concerto, 'Panorama' (an
orchestral evocation of San Francisco premiered by Sir Adrian Boult
in 1951), 'Metropolis' concert overture (1955 premiered by Sir
Charles Groves), numerous other orchestral and ensemble pieces
including 'Apocalypse' for chorus and orchestra, and a number of
film scores including Purple Plain, The Spanish Gardener, No Road
Back, Portrait of Alison and High Tide at Noon. Some of his film
scores were later destroyed by the film studios.
He wrote in a tonal idiom and suffered under the avant garde musical
regime at the British Broadcasting Corporation headed by its
Director of Music William Glock and almost ceased composition in the
1960s. Following his re-discovery in the 1980s he resumed composing.
His Violin Concerto is available on the Chandos CD label, played by
Lydia Mordkovitch with Richard Hickox conducting the BBC Symphony
Orchestra. It is coupled with the Violin Concerto of Benjamin
Britten.
John Veale died in Bromley, Kent (a south-eastern suburb of London)
on November 16, 2006 from cancer. He was divorced and had several
children, one daughter having died at the age of five.
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