Ernest Tomlinson

English composer Ernest Tomlinson was born in Rawtenstall on 19 September 1924. He sang as a chorister at Manchester Cathedral, and studied at Manchester University and the Royal Manchester College of Music (interrupted by serving in the Royal Air Force at the end of World War II). Moving to London, he worked as a staff arranger for Arcadia and Mills Music Publishers, writing music for radio, TV, recording studios and the stage. He was also organist at a church in Mayfair.

His work was first broadcast by the BBC in 1949, and he later formed his own orchestra, the Ernest Tomlinson Light Orchestra. He also founded the Northern Concert Orchestra, with which he performed and broadcast, and was musical director of the Chingford Amateur Dramatic and Operatic Society and the Rossendale Male Voice Choir.

Tomlinson was known mostly for his light orchestral music - overtures, suites, rhapsodies, miniatures and English folkdance arrangements. He also wrote in the symphonic jazz idiom, and produced concertos, an opera, a ballet and works for choirs, brass bands and wind bands.

He died near Preston on 12 June 2015, aged ninety.

 

A selection of articles about Ernest Tomlinson

CD Spotlight. Vivacious Performances - Music from Scotland, heard by Gerald Fenech. '... a spectacular album full of inspirational melodies that go straight to the heart.'

CD Spotlight. Miniature Gems - Light music by Ronald Binge, heard by Gerald Fenech. '... brimming with lilting music that is as dramatic as it is evocative, colourful and harmonically exquisite ...'

Record box. Ignited memories - British light music, reviewed by Patric Standford