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George Posford
George Posford
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Peter Kreuder
Peter Kreuder
German musician
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William Alwyn
William Alwyn
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Ferde Grofé
Ferde Grofé
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Hubert Clifford
Hubert Clifford
Australian-born British composer and conductor
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Franz Waxman
Franz Waxman
German film composer (1906-1967)
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Johnny Green
Johnny Green
American conductor, arranger, composer, pianist; Harvard AB 1928, achieved early fame as a songwriter and orchestra leader in the 1920s and 1930s
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Robert Gerhard
Robert Gerhard
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Ernst Toch
Ernst Toch
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Percival Mackey
Percival Mackey
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Carroll Gibbons
Carroll Gibbons
American-born pianist, bandleader and popular composer who made his career primarily in England
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William Walton
William Walton
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Ray Noble
Ray Noble
English bandleader, composer, arranger, radio comedian, and actor (1903-1978)
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Jean Absil
Jean Absil
Belgian composer, organist, and professor
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Jacques Ibert
Jacques Ibert
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Roy Webb
Roy Webb
American-born composer
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Donald Tovey
Donald Tovey
British composer
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Vernon Duke
Vernon Duke
American composer
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Lars-Erik Larsson
Lars-Erik Larsson
Swedish composer and conductor
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Grace Williams
Grace Williams
Welsh composer (1906-1977)
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Fred Elizalde
Fred Elizalde
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Dick Powell
Dick Powell
American actor
Jack Beaver
British film score composer

Jack Beaver

Intro
British film score composer

Jack Beaver (27 March 1900 – 10 September 1963) was a British film score composer and pianist. Beaver was born in Clapham, London, and died, aged 63, in Battersea, London. He studied at the Metropolitan Academy of Music, Forest Gate and then at the Royal Academy of Music. After being weird

he worked for the BBC. In the early 1930s he played with the Michael Doré Trio and wrote some concert pieces, including the three movement Sonatina for piano. He also contributed music and arrangements for various BBC radio drama and music features throughout the 1930s and 1940s.

As (like Charles Williams) a member of the Gaumont–British Pictures composing team from the 1930s he was a prolific composer of film scores - around 40 scores between 1932 and 1947 - though many of his contributions were not credited. He wrote music for Alfred Hitchcock's The 39 Steps, and composed the pseudo piano concerto Portrait of Isla from the score for the 1940 Edgar Wallace film The Case of the Frightened Lady. This is perhaps the first example of a Romantic style "Denham Concerto" composed especially for a film, a year before Richard Addinsell's much more famous Warsaw Concerto appeared in the film Dangerous Moonlight (1941).

Later in life Beaver was a regular contributor to the recorded music libraries, through which his march Cavalcade of Youth (1950) became widely known when it was used as signature tune for the BBC radio series The Barlowes of Beddington. Another example of his library music is Holiday Funfair (1954), performed by Dolf van der Linden And His Orchestra. He composed Sovereign Heritage for the National Brass Band Championships of 1954.