Bill Richards | |
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Born |
Bill Richards 28 March 1923 Ottawa, Canada |
Died | September 10, 1995 Burlington, Ontario, Canada |
(aged 72)
Occupation | Violinist, composer, arranger, editor |
Years active | 1939–1995 |
Spouse(s) | Billie Mae Richards (m. 1940; his death 1995) |
Children | Judi Richards |
Bill Richards (28 March 1923 – 28 February 1995) was a Canadian violinist, composer, arranger, and editor. His compositional output includes several film scores, a Flute Quartet (1964), and a number of fiddle tunes. He recorded two of his own fiddle compositions for Spiral Records in 1957 and another of his fiddle compositions was featured in the movie The Pyx. He also was active as a musician and concertmaster on a number of studio recordings from the 1950s through the 1990s, and can be heard on recordings by artists like Moe Koffman, Catherine McKinnon, Anne Murray, and Gordon Lightfoot among others. In 1962 he and a quartet featuring the organist Lou Snider recorded two LP albums for the Canadian Talent Library Trust.
Born William Francis Caven Richards in Ottawa, Richards began his musical training as a child at the Canadian Conservatory of Music in his native city with Jack Cavill (violin) and Herbert Sanders (piano). He started his performance career at the age of eight working as a violin soloist on radio programs in Ottawa and Hull. He continued with violin studies in Ottawa with David Shuttleworth and then in Toronto with Broadus Farmer in 1939. In 1942 he joined the Royal Canadian Navy; notably serving as a featured soloist and orchestra member for the musical revue Meet the Navy from 1943-1945. After World War II he pursued further violin studies in Toronto with Elie Spivak in 1946 and Albert Pratz in the mid-1950s. He married his first wife, actress Billie Mae Richards (née Dinsmore), in the mid-1940s and their daughter Judi Richards, a successful pop singer and songwriter, was born in 1949.