Bernard William George Rose, OBE, (9 May 1916 – 21 November 1996) was a British organist, soldier, composer, and academic.
A graduate of St Catharine's College, Cambridge, 1935–1939, studying under Hubert Middleton and Edward Joseph Dent, he started his academic career at Queen's College, Oxford, 1939–1940 and 1945–1957, before being appointed Informator Choristarum (organist and master of the choristers) at Magdalen College, 1957–1981: Vice President of Magdalen College, Oxford, 1973–1975. Emeritus Fellow 1981–1996. He was in his later years president of the Royal College of Organists 1974–1976. His Preces and Responses, for use in the Anglican service of evensong, is widely performed. In 1952 he conducted the premiere of An Oxford Elegy by Ralph Vaughan Williams.
A chorister at Salisbury Cathedral from 1925 to 1931, Bernard Rose studied the organ under Sir Walter Galpin Alcock, and was appointed as an assistant organist at the cathedral aged just 15. He continued to study the organ under Sir Walter when he became a student at the Royal College of Music from 1933 to 1935. He won the organ scholarship to St Catharine's College over Edward Heath. As Rose began his position as a tutor in music, organist of The Queen's College, Oxford, and conductor of the Eglesfield Music Society, the Second World War was declared. He volunteered and was seen by an army selection board and called up in September 1940, when he underwent training. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in 2nd Northamptonshire Yeomanry on 26 January 1941. He saw action in the North African and Italian campaigns as a "Desert Rat" with the 4th County of London Yeomanry (Sharpshooters), and took part in the D-day landings on 6 June 1944. Captured on 13 June 1944 during the Battle of Villers-Bocage in Normandy, he spent the remainder of the war at Oflag 79, a German POW camp near Brunswick, Lower Saxony, until the Ninth United States Army released him and his colleagues on 12 April 1945. He left the army with the rank of captain.