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Joseph, born Josef, Engleman was a pianist. He was
perhaps not quite the equal of his son, Harry, born in 1912,
who was regarded by many as a successor to Billy Mayerl as
a syncopated pianist-cum-composer (Harrys compositions,
on the Mayerl model, included Cannon off the Cushion,
1938, Snakes and Ladders, 1939, Chase the Ace,
1936, Skittles he seems to have been keen on
games titles, rather as Mayerl was on flower titles
plus Finger Prints, 1936, and Summer Rain, 1952,
Harry also composed songs, notably Melody of Love,
also arranged as a piano solo and, since then, for other instrumental
combinations, and orchestral items including the twostep The
Thoroughbred. Both Harry and Joseph had their own orchestras
and bands in the Midlands. Harry was a dance band leader who
often broadcast with his own Quintet and with the Aston Hippodrome
Orchestra.
Joseph, if his best remembered output is a guide, was particularly
involved with orchestras and his portfolio of original pieces
is such as to make this writer surprised he has not so far
been given the Marco Polo/Naxos treatment of a CD of his own.
The portfolio includes the concert suites Three American
Sketches, A Cocktail Cabinet, A Dolls House, Four Olde
English Inns, In a Toyshop, A Voyage Lilliput, Suite Rustique,
Childrens Playtime, and Tales From a Fairy Book
and individual movements such as Blarney Stone,
described variously as a march and a twostep, Fiddlers
Folly, featuring a violin solo, Pizzicato Caprice,
the descriptive interlude Riviera Express, the
descriptive scene Bells Across the World, Horseman, River
Girl, Stage Coach, Russian Fiddler, Greyhound Galop, Incognito,
The Wedding of Punch and Judy, Wrens Serenade, the
two humorous pieces Cat and the Mouse (for piano and
orchestra) and Bass Business, a "novelty intermezzo"
for contrabass (or baritone sax or bassoon) and orchestra,
and Spectre, used as the signature tune to radios
"The Armchair Detective". Several of the
individual movements besides Spectre were of the length
suited to "mood music". A notable output, then,
and that is probably just a sample but these original
titles were probably outnumbered by his own arrangements.
Of these I recall Potted Overtures, described as a
"humorous sketch". One of his biggest contributions
to light music though, was helping to found Bosworths
mood music library in 1937 for which he wrote many pieces;
it was indeed Bosworth who published much of his orchestral
repertoire, whether "mood music" or not. Bosworth
once commissioned him to compile a collection of twenty fanfares,
each in a different mood (Military, Oriental, Valse, Comic,
Weird and so on) in effect twenty "library music"
miniatures!
© Copyright Philip Scowcroft
This profile first appeared in Journal Into Melody
September 2007
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