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Vagn Holmboe
Vagn Holmboe
Danish composer
1
John Rutter
John Rutter
British composer, conductor and arranger
2
Malcolm Arnold
Malcolm Arnold
English composer, conductor
3
Peter Graham
Peter Graham
British brass band composer
4
Gordon Langford
Gordon Langford
British composer
5
Peter Maxwell Davies
Peter Maxwell Davies
English composer and conductor
6
Edward Gregson
Edward Gregson
English composer; college principal
7
William Walton
William Walton
English composer
8
William Russo
William Russo
American musician
9
Gérard Grisey
Gérard Grisey
French composer
10
Howard Blake
Howard Blake
composer
11
Gregory Rose
Gregory Rose
British composer and music director
12
Eric Ball
Eric Ball
British composer and conductor
13
Granville Bantock
Granville Bantock
British composer and conductor
14
Philip Wilby
Philip Wilby
British composer
15
Gustav Holst
Gustav Holst
English composer
16
John Williams
John Williams
American composer, conductor, pianist and trombonist (born 1932)
17
Bob Curnow
Bob Curnow
musician
18
Bill Holman
Bill Holman
American composer, arranger, and conductor
19
Nicholas Maw
Nicholas Maw
British composer
20
Jack Cooper
Jack Cooper
American composer, arranger, orchestrator, multireedist, and music educator.
21
Stephen Paulus
Stephen Paulus
American composer
22
Frank Ticheli
Frank Ticheli
American composer
23
David Farquhar
David Farquhar
New Zealand composer
Goff Richards
British composer from Cornwall

Goff Richards

Intro
British composer from Cornwall
Music

Goff Richards (18 August 1944 – 25 June 2011), sometimes credited as Godfrey Richards, was a prominent Cornish brass band arranger and composer. He was born in Cornwall, studying at the Royal College of Music and Reading University. Between 1976 and 1989, he lectured in arranging and at Salford College of Technology. He was the musical director of the Chetham's Big Band for many years. In 1976, he was made a Bard of the Cornish Gorsedd. He received a Doctorate from Salford University in 1990, after a career that had seen him lead the University Jazz Orchestra to the BBC Big Band of the Year title in 1989.

He was well known for his original brass compositions such as "Trailblaze", "Doyen", "Exploding Brass!" and the marches "The Jaguar" and "Barnard Castle", and won a European Broadcasting Union Award in 1984 for his "Continental Caprice". He was also a prolific arranger for brass bands, and his works included "Hymns of Praise", "Shepherd's Song", "Over the Rainbow", "Mack the Knife", "New York, New York", "Chanson d'Amour", "I'll Walk with God", and "That's a Plenty". He also arranged and composed light orchestral and choral works, and his works have been performed by the King's Singers, Huddersfield Choral Society, London Brass, Evelyn Glennie and various BBC orchestras.

He died on 25 June 2011 in Cheshire, following an illness, at the age of 66.