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Ray Noble (musician)





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  Name Ray Noble
  Img Replace this image malesvg
  Background non_performing_personnel
  Birth Name Raymond Stanley Noble
  Born December 17 , 1903
  Died April 3 , 1978
  Origin Brighton, England , USA
  Genre Jazz
  Occupation Bandleader , Composer , Arranger, Actor
  Associated Acts Al Bowlly


Ray Noble was a British Bandleader , Composer , arranger and Actor . Noble was born in Brighton, England on December 17 , 1903 and died in London on April 3 , 1978 . Noble studied music at the Royal Academy Of Music and became leader of the HMV Records studio band in 1929. The band, known as the New Mayfair Dance Orchestra , featured members of many of the top hotel orchestras of the day. The most popular vocalist with Noble's studio band was Al Bowlly .

The Bowlly/Noble recordings achieved popularity in the United States . Union bans prevented Noble from taking British musicians to America so he arranged for Glenn Miller to recruit American musicians. The American Ray Noble band had a successful run at the Rainbow Room in New York City with Bowlly as principal vocalist.

Bowlly returned to England but Noble continued to lead bands in America, moving into an acting career portraying a stereotypical upper-class English idiot. His last major successes as a bandleader came with Buddy Clark in the late 1940s .

Noble wrote both lyrics and music and contributed "Love Is The Sweetest Thing" and "Cherokee" to the rolls of great popular music. His song " The Very Thought Of You " is among the greatest of all popular songs and the recording by Al Bowlly with Noble's studio orchestra is incomparable. Another significant recording of the song was made by the American jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald , on her 1961 album '' Ella Swings Gently With Nelson ''.

Ray Noble was also an arranger who scored a lot of record hits in the 1930s : "Easy to Love" (1936), "Mad About the Boy" (1932), "Paris in the Spring" (1935).

Noble and Bowlly's 1934 recording of "Midnight, the Stars and You" was prominently featured on the soundtrack of Stanley Kubrick 's film '' The Shining '' in 1980.

For another sample of a Noble/Bowlly classic, the 1931 song "Guilty" can be found on the '' Amélie '' film soundtrack.

Noble played the piano but seldom did so with his orchestra. In a movie short from the 1940s featuring Ray Noble and Buddy Clark (one of his most popular band singers), Ray Noble is asked by the announcer to play one of his most popular hits. He sits down at the piano and plays "Goodnight Sweetheart" ("Goodnight sweetheart, 'til we meet tomorrow. Goodnight sweetheart, parting is such sorrow"). This is the song that once seemed to be played at the end of every high school and college prom, the end of every party featuring live music, and the last song played by a dance band to signal the end of the evening.

Noble also provided music for many radio shows like '' The Charlie McCarthy Show '' and '' Burns And Allen '', where in addition to leading the band he played a somewhat "dense" character who was in love with Gracie Allen . His catchphrase was "Gracie, this is the first time we've ever been alone together."


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