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Noel Gay Free Music

Biography

Noel Gay Free Music

Noel Gay

Real name: Reginald Moxon Armitage

Effective period / Period of releases: 1985

British composer of popular music in the 1930s to 1940s, organist and musical director.
Born: 15th July 1898 in Wakefield, Yorkshire, UK.
Died: 4th March 1954 in London, England, UK (55 years of age).

Armitage studied music at the Royal College Of Music, London, and Christ's College, Cambridge. He then became the organist and musical director at St. Anne's church, Soho, London, where his early background as a comedic songwriter for Cambridge Footlights continued into the mainstream.

To avoid embarrassment to the church he employed the alias "Noel Gay Willis", often shortened to "Noel Gay" in some credits. His style was very much one of revue, music hall and operetta. At one point he had four shows running consecutively in London's West End, one of which was "Me And My Girl" - that eventually transferred to the Broadway Theater in New York - featuring the number "The Lambeth Walk".

Gay also wrote "Run Rabbit Run", a popular wartime hit in the period in which he wrote for The Crazy Gang, Gracie Fields and George Formby. His son, Richard Armitage, formed Noel Gay Artists in 1950, a talent agency providing revue performers to spread his father's reportoire.

External Pages

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noel_Gay

adp.library.ucsb.edu/names/105955