Leon Young (musician)

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Leon Edward Stephen Young (21 April 1916 – 26 January 1991) was a British arranger, conductor and music director. His string orchestra, The Leon Young String Chorale, performed in many recording sessions from the 1950s to the 1970s, perhaps most famously on Acker Bilk's 1961 single Stranger on the Shore.[1]

Young grew up in Rochester, Kent, and was first introduced to music by his family's involvement in the Salvation Army, his father playing cornet in the band. From 1930 he began taking piano lessons from Percy Whitlock, then assistant organist at Rochester Cathedral - until Whitlock moved on to Bournemouth. Young's family soon moved to Tonbridge and Leon Young was appointed as organist for the Baptist Church and conductor of the Co-op Choir. In November 1939 he married Grace Harvey.[2]

Wartime

When war was declared Young signed up as a Royal Marine bandsman.[3] He was on board HMS Hermione when she was sunk by a German submarine on 16 June 1942. Eighty-eight crew members were killed, but Young was among those rescued by the destroyer Beaufort and taken to hospital in Alexandria.[4] At the end of the war he was posted at the Royal Navy School of Music at Scarborough, where he arranged music for the official Naval show Tokyo Express, which opened at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith in June 1945.[2][5]

Arranger and session musician

Final years

References

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