John Veale | |
---|---|
Born |
John Douglas Louis Veale 15 June 1922 Shortlands, Bromley, Kent, UK |
Died | 16 November 2006 Bromley, Kent, UK |
(aged 84)
Nationality | English |
Occupation | Classical composer |
Parent(s) | Douglas Veale (father) |
John Douglas Louis Veale (15 June 1922 – 16 November 2006) was an English classical composer.
He was born in Shortlands, Bromley, Kent; his father, Douglas Veale, later served as Registrar of the University of Oxford (1930–1958) and received a knighthood. John Veale was educated at Repton and Corpus Christi College, Oxford (his father's old college), alongside Kenneth Tynan. As a composer, he was largely self-taught, but took some lessons from Egon Wellesz, Thomas Armstrong, Roger Sessions and Roy Harris (the latter's only English pupil).
He served as film correspondent with the Oxford Mail (1966–1980) and as copy editor at Oxford University Press (1968–1987).
His compositions include three symphonies (No. 1 was written 1944–47, and premiered by Sir John Barbirolli at the Cheltenham Music Festival in 1952; No. 2 written in 1965; No. 3 in 1997), a clarinet concerto (1954), a violin concerto (1982–84), Panorama (an orchestral evocation of San Francisco premiered by Sir Adrian Boult in 1951), Metropolis concert overture (1955 premiered by Sir Charles Groves), numerous other orchestral and ensemble pieces including Apocalypse for chorus and orchestra, and a number of film scores including The Purple Plain, The Spanish Gardener, No Road Back, Portrait of Alison and High Tide at Noon. Some of his film scores were later destroyed by the film studios.