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Monia Liter
was born in Odessa on the Black Sea on 27 January 1906, where
he studied piano and composition at the Imperial School of
Music. He left Russia during the 1917 revolution for Harbin,
in North China, where he managed to continue with his musical
education. This provided him with the suitable qualifications
that enabled him to join an Italian opera company in Shanghai,
as assistant conductor and choirmaster, subsequently touring
with them throughout China and Japan. When this engagement
terminated, he formed his own dance band in Hankow.
Some while
later he was in India with an American dance band, which involved
touring throughout the sub-continent and Burma, eventually
visiting Malaya. He decided to settle in nearby Singapore,
and for seven years he was employed with his own orchestra
at the famous Raffles Hotel, where he engaged the young Al
Bowlly as a vocalist. While in that city he became a naturalised
British subject. Monia Liter and Al Bowlly travelled to Britain
in 1929, and different reports of this period of Liters
career contain conflicting information. However it appears
that Monia returned to China where he was appointed head of
music at a commercial radio station in Shanghai; in 1933 he
decided to make his permanent home in London.
His first
appearance back in England was with his friend Al Bowlly in
variety at the Holborn Empire (by now Bowlly had found fame,
mainly as Ray Nobles singer, although he had provided
the vocals on 78s by numerous British dance bands), and thereafter
Liter played the piano with virtually every famous dance band
in Britain. He was a frequent visitor to the recording studios,
firstly with Lew Stone (from 1933 to 1936), Nat Gonella (1934
- 1937), Jack Hylton (1936 and 1937), Harry Roy where
he replaced Stanley Black (1939 and 1940), then on various
occasions with Victor Silvester (1940 - 1944). Sometimes these
bands would be recording Monia Liters own arrangements
for them.
In 1941
he joined the BBC as a pianist, conductor and arranger, initially
with the Twentieth Century Serenaders. After 10 years at the
BBC, he left them to concentrate on composing and concert
work, which involved touring with famous names such as Sophie
Tucker, Larry Adler and Richard Tauber. George Melachrino
chose Monia Liter as the solo pianist on his HMV recording
of Gershwins Rhapsody in Blue, and with
the Mantovani Orchestra on Decca he recorded Clive Richardsons
London Fantasia (reissued on Vocalion CDEA6019),
Hubert Baths Cornish Rhapsody, Mischa Spolianskys
A Voice in the Night (Vocalion CDEA6044) and Albert
Arlens Alamein Concerto.
He was also
in demand for films, recording and television, as well as
working in the Light Music department at Boosey & Hawkes,
writing numerous works for their Recorded Music Library. In
1956 the BBC commissioned him to compose a serious work for
their Light Music Festival, for which he wrote his Scherzo
Transcendant. Other original works include Andalusian
Girl, Black Chiffon, The Valley of
the Kings, Prelude Espagnole, Spanish
Suite, Two Southern Impressions and The
Puppets.
In his later
career Monia Liter preferred to concentrate more on writing,
rather than performing. He died in London on 5 October 1988
aged 82.
David
Ades (2003)
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