| Leonard Salzedo 1921 - 2000 |
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Leonard Salzedo was born in
London in September 1921. He was descended from Sephardic Jews, expelled
from Spain in 1492. He studied at the Royal College of Music, London,
with Isolde Menges for violin and Dr Herbert Howells for composition.
While still a student he won the Cobbett Prize for his First String
Quartet and was commissioned to write his first ballet The Fugitive
for the Ballet Rambert, the first of 17 ballet scores. |
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In 1946/ 47 he and his wife Pat Clover were members of the Ballet Negres, a company formed by two Jamaican dancers and comprising mainly black dancers and musicians from the Caribbean, Africa and Britain. Salzedo wrote four ballets for the company. |
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From 1947 to 1950 he played
in the London Philharmonic Orchestra, and then in the Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra from 1950 until 1966. While in the RPO he was conductor’s
assistant for Sir Thomas Beecham, and Beecham premiered his newly
finished First Symphony (1952). In 1956 Salzedo wrote his most
successful ballet score The Witch Boy which has had over 1,000
performances in thirty different countries, including a 1990s revival by
the London City Ballet; and the most recent performance in 1997 at the
Teatro Colon, Buenos Aires. The RPO under Beecham also premiered the
concert suite from the Ballet which was later recorded with Salzedo
conducting. During this period Salzedo also wrote two other very
successful pieces: the film score for Hammer’s The Revenge of
Frankenstein (1958), and the Divertimiento for Three Trumpets and
Three Trombones (1959), whose opening fanfare was the theme for the
Open University from the 1970s to the 1990s. |
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During the 1960s he wrote
more ballet scores including The Travellers, The Realms of
Choice and Hazard for Ballet Rambert, and Agrionia
for London Dance Theatre. He also wrote for many different
ensembles and combinations including orchestral pieces, cantatas, pieces
for strings, brass, wind and percussion. In 1964 he joined the London
Soloists Ensemble for whom he wrote Concerto Fervido, and with
whom he toured in Britain and Europe, and recorded Concerto Fervido.
In 1967 for its 21st birthday celebrations the RPO
commissioned Toccata, which was premiered at the Royal Festival
Hall conducted by Rudolph Kempe. In the same year Salzedo gave up
playing the violin to become Musical Director of Ballet Rambert
(now Rambert Dance Company) when the Company became a modern
dance company. He held this post for five years. |
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From 1972 until 1974 he was
principal conductor with the Scottish Ballet, and from 1982 until 1986
he was Music Director of London City Ballet, for whom he orchestrated
classical ballet scores including Swan Lake, Nutcracker
and Les Sylphides for smaller orchestra. |
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After 1986 he devoted himself
full-time to composition and these years saw a string of important works
including String Quartets, the Stabat Mater for soprano,
alto, chorus and orchestra, a Violin Concerto, a Piano
Concerto, and Requiem Sine Voxibus (Requiem without voices)
(1989) for very large orchestra, one of his largest and most substantial
scores, which Salzedo regarded as one of his finest achievements but
which he never heard performed. |
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In spite of continuous
activities as a performer Salzedo wrote more than 160 compositions,
including 10 String Quartets, two symphonies, 17 ballets, and many
pieces for strings, brass, wind, percussion, voice, and combinations of
these. He often called on his Spanish/ Jewish heritage for ideas and
inspiration as reflected in the melodies, rhythms and titles of many of
his works. |
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He died at home in Leighton Buzzard in May 2000, leaving behind a vast musically diverse legacy of works which bespeak a love of his craft and an insider’s knowledge of the orchestra and its various instruments. Paul Conway & Caroline Salzedo |