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George Melachrino

Personal Profile

George Melachrino
  • Date of Birth:
    May 1, 1909
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Taurus
  • Place of Birth:
    London, England, UK
  • Place of Death:
    London, England, UK
  • Date of Death:
    June 18, 1965
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Nationality:
    British

Family

George Melachrino

    Career

    George Melachrino

    Trivia

    George Melachrino
    • He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Recording at 1625 Vine Street in Hollywood, California.
    • By 1938 he was getting star billing for his BBC broadcasts, and in 1939 he was leader of the dance orchestra at London’s Café de Paris.
    • World War 2 interrupted Melachrino’s career, although it helped to steer him in a different direction, musically speaking.
    • Following a brief spell in the military police, a back injury resulted in him being drafted back into broadcasting, in special shows for the troops overseas.
    • He became Musical Director of the Army Radio Unit, and toured with the ‘Stars In Battledress’.
    • Melachrino formed a 50-piece ‘Orchestra In Khaki’, employing the finest professional musicians serving in the forces.
    • He relished in the artistic freedom he enjoyed, which permitted him to perform a wide variety of music.
    • In 1944 Regimental Sergeant Major George Melachrino (note that the British Army didn’t consider that their top musician should be a commissioned officer!) became conductor of the British Band of the Allied Expeditionary Forces, working alongside Major Glenn Miller and Captain Robert Farnon, who fronted the US and Canadian bands.
    • There is an intriguing story about how the wartime Melachrino style evolved.
    • His senior at the War Office, Eric Maschwitz (of A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square fame), said he wanted to hear Pennsylvania Polka played by an orchestra of 80.

    Quotes

    George Melachrino
    • "I admired him immensely, both for his talent and his bright way of life. George was a wonderful host. He was, I think, the instigator of the big orchestra with the tumbling strings, which he did during the war."
    View all Quotes: George Melachrino

    Biography

    George Melachrino
    Last Updated: Monday, August 24, 2009

    George He was born George Miltiades Melachrino in Albany Street, London in 1909. His father was a Greek cigarette manufacturer, and his mother came from Broadway in Worcestershire. At the age of four he was being taught by his stepfather on a miniature violin, and was only thirteen when he made his first public appearance as a solo violinist. Three years later he enrolled at the Trinity College of Music, winning particular praise for his work with strings. He proceeded to master all the instruments of the orchestra, with the exception of the piano and harp. In addition he had a pleasant singing voice, and broadcast from the BBC Studios at Savoy Hill when only eighteen.

    Like so many of his contemporaries, Melachrino discovered that his talents were well suited to the demands of the British dance bands which flourished during his youth. In numerous broadcasts and recordings he performed on clarinet, alto and tenor saxophone, violin, viola and as a most competent vocalist. While still in his teens, as early as 1926 he was recording with Geoffrey Gelder and his Kettner’s Five, and in the following years he was employed by Ambrose, Harry Hudson, Jack Jackson, Van Phillips, Rudy Starita, Jay Wilbur, Marius B. Winter and Carroll Gibbons and his Savoy Hotel Orpheans. Gibbons made him one of his ‘star’ vocalists, and his duets with Anne Lenner were especially popular. Examples of his work with this fine ensemble can be heard on Vocalion CDEA6047.

    Melachrino was married three times. His first wife and two sons aged 12 and 15 were killed by a flying bomb during the war. Afterwards he devoted much of his time to helping sick children. His second marriage was dissolved. In 1961 he had a son by his third wife, former ballet dancer Noreen Lee.

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