Paul Reade (1943-1997) was born in Liverpool,
UK. From 1962-65 he studied piano with Alan
Richardson at the Royal Academy of Music in
London. He went on to the London Opera Centre
before becoming répétiteur with the English
National Opera. Meanwhile he also had his own
compositions performed, including in 1965 his
first orchestral piece, Overture to a City, by the
Academy Orchestra under Maurice Handford.
His grounding in opera and experience with
musical theatre proved immensely valuable when
he moved on, as a freelance composer, to BBC
television. He was able to write music for specific
purposes, achieving full expression in a short
timescale, taking in account practicalities such
as deadlines and limitations of resources.
For the BBC children’s programme Play School he
was not only pianist and songwriter, he also wrote
its famous signature tune. Much more music for
children’s television followed: Crystal Tipps and
Alistair, Ludwig, The Flumps, Mortimer and Arabel
and Alphabet Castle. Other works for children
included The Midas Touch, Cinderella and Aesop’s
Fables, all for narrator and orchestra, and his
children’s opera David and Goliath.
Paul also wrote musical scores for classic TV
drama series such as A Tale of Two Cities, Great
Expectations and Jane Eyre. Other television
scores include the popular signature tune for
Antiques Roadshow, Tom’s Midnight Children and
the music for The Victorian Kitchen Garden for
which he won the Ivor Novello Award 1991.
Given his talent for composing music which
tells a story, it seemed almost inevitable that
he would turn to writing ballets. Together with choreographer David Bintley he created Hobson’s
Choice and Far from the Madding Crowd for the
Birmingham Royal Ballet, both hugely successful.
Other ballets included Byron, Cinderella and The
Match Girl and the Flame.
Paul’s output of concert music included larger
scale music like the Flute Concerto and the
Bassoon Concerto (Catalonia), songs for voice
and orchestra: Chants du Roussillon, El cant dels
ocells, The Lark in a Clear Air, a cantata The Ballad
of Judas Iscariot and several works for choir:
Seascapes, The Journey of the Winds, St. Brendan
and the Fishes and Songs of Oisin.
There are also some wonderful chamber music
works: a saxophone quartet, Luckbarrow Dances
for oboe trio, Serenata for wind sextet, Aspects
of a Landscape for oboe or flute solo, and the
Dance Preludes for flute, viola and harp. Paul
Reade died in 1997, he was 54.