Parker, C Film Scores
A splendid collection of scores by the prolific Clifton Parker
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Clifton Parker
Genre:
Opera
Label: Chandos
Magazine Review Date: 6/2005
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 80
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: CHAN10279

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Treasure Island, Movement: Main titles and the Admiral Benbow |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Treasure Island, Movement: To Bristol/Setting Sail |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Treasure Island, Movement: On the Island |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Treasure Island, Movement: Storming the Stockade |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Treasure Island, Movement: Jim Hawkins, Ship to Shore |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Treasure Island, Movement: Looking for the Treasure |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Treasure Island, Movement: Leaving the Island |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Western Approaches |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
(The) Sword and the Rose, Movement: Fanfare |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
(The) Sword and the Rose, Movement: Galliard |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
(The) Sword and the Rose, Movement: Lute Dance |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
(The) Sword and the Rose, Movement: Volta |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Sea of Sand |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
(The) Blue Lagoon |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Night of the Demon |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Virgin Island: A Caribbean Rhapsody |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Sink the Bismarck!, Movement: March |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Blue Pullman |
Clifton Parker, Composer
BBC Concert Orchestra Clifton Parker, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Author: Adrian Edwards
This timely issue in the Chandos Movies series marks the centenary of Clifton Parker (1905-89), a prolific composer represented here by documentary films and features like Lewis Gilbert’s Sink the Bismarck! which was premiered at the Odeon Leicester Square on February 11, 1960, and went on to become one of the year’s biggest box-office attractions in the UK, alongside such diverse fare as Doctor in Love and Hercules Unchained!
Treasure Island, the version starring Robert Newton as Long John Silver, directed by Ken Annakin for Disney in 1949, is one of five marine-linked scores in this collection. It begins in opulent fashion with Parker aping the swagger of Korngold and introducing a noble brass theme (0’59” in) that serves as a peroration point in the concluding track. Shanties and figures racing in the strings lend a thrill of splicing the main brace to accompany Stevenson’s classic adventure story. The cue ‘Leaving the Island’ introduces an elegiac note where the tenderness of the moment catches us off guard, a not uncommon characteristic of British light music.
Parker’s Western Approaches, a 1944 documentary depicting the crew of a Merchant Navy vessel surviving a torpedo attack, is muted in tone, the grey waters of the ocean predominant in the orchestral colours. The Blue Lagoon, the story of children shipwrecked on a desert island is picturesque and touched with a childlike innocence (1’30” in). In contrast, Virgin Island, released in 1958 at the height of the calypso craze, is an exotic, tuneful, sun-soaked score with an imaginative use of the guitar amongst the splash of orchestral colours. The March from Sink the Bismarck!, crisp and starch-collared, follows in the tradition of Elgar and Walton’s marches and Sea of Sand, another march for a desert adventure, doesn’t quite stick in the mind despite being championed by the booklet-note writer. No reservations, though, for Night of the Demon, a no-holds-barred main title from Parker for a 1957 thriller that conjures up a nightmarish world of the occult with a pithy brass figure leering out of the scoring, or for Blue Pullman, an evocative through-composed 15-minute composition for a 1960 documentary marking the train’s maiden voyage from Manchester to London’s St Pancras. A resourceful, tuneful score with a suitably ritzy theme (3’10” in) as dinner is served in the luxury Pullman carriage, it brings this CD to an eminently satisfying conclusion.
The indefatigable Philip Lane, who has arranged and edited Parker’s music, is one of the heroes of this recording; the others are the BBC Concert Orchestra, replacing their northern colleagues, the BBC Philharmonic, in this series. They play with huge gusto under Rumon Gamba. The booklet with excellent documentation, stills from the films and a charming photograph of the composer and colleague Muir Mathieson with Jean Simmons, on whose every word they appear to be hanging, is a pleasure in its own right.
Treasure Island, the version starring Robert Newton as Long John Silver, directed by Ken Annakin for Disney in 1949, is one of five marine-linked scores in this collection. It begins in opulent fashion with Parker aping the swagger of Korngold and introducing a noble brass theme (0’59” in) that serves as a peroration point in the concluding track. Shanties and figures racing in the strings lend a thrill of splicing the main brace to accompany Stevenson’s classic adventure story. The cue ‘Leaving the Island’ introduces an elegiac note where the tenderness of the moment catches us off guard, a not uncommon characteristic of British light music.
Parker’s Western Approaches, a 1944 documentary depicting the crew of a Merchant Navy vessel surviving a torpedo attack, is muted in tone, the grey waters of the ocean predominant in the orchestral colours. The Blue Lagoon, the story of children shipwrecked on a desert island is picturesque and touched with a childlike innocence (1’30” in). In contrast, Virgin Island, released in 1958 at the height of the calypso craze, is an exotic, tuneful, sun-soaked score with an imaginative use of the guitar amongst the splash of orchestral colours. The March from Sink the Bismarck!, crisp and starch-collared, follows in the tradition of Elgar and Walton’s marches and Sea of Sand, another march for a desert adventure, doesn’t quite stick in the mind despite being championed by the booklet-note writer. No reservations, though, for Night of the Demon, a no-holds-barred main title from Parker for a 1957 thriller that conjures up a nightmarish world of the occult with a pithy brass figure leering out of the scoring, or for Blue Pullman, an evocative through-composed 15-minute composition for a 1960 documentary marking the train’s maiden voyage from Manchester to London’s St Pancras. A resourceful, tuneful score with a suitably ritzy theme (3’10” in) as dinner is served in the luxury Pullman carriage, it brings this CD to an eminently satisfying conclusion.
The indefatigable Philip Lane, who has arranged and edited Parker’s music, is one of the heroes of this recording; the others are the BBC Concert Orchestra, replacing their northern colleagues, the BBC Philharmonic, in this series. They play with huge gusto under Rumon Gamba. The booklet with excellent documentation, stills from the films and a charming photograph of the composer and colleague Muir Mathieson with Jean Simmons, on whose every word they appear to be hanging, is a pleasure in its own right.
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