
     
Humphrey Lyttelton
Is descended from a long line of land-owning, political,
military, clerical, scholastic and literary forebears. Not a musician among them. He
claims to have most in common with a former Humphrey Lyttelton who was executed for complicity with
Guy Fawkes in the Gunpowder plot.
He was born on May 23rd, 1921 in ETON
COLLEGE, where his father was a famous housemaster, and where he was subsequently
educated. During the war, he served as an officer in the GRENADIER GUARDS and, on
demobilisation, studied for two years at CAMBERWELL ARTS SCHOOL. In 1949, he joined
the London DAILY MAIL as cartoonist, during which time he also wrote the story-line
for Trogs FLOOK cartoon Trog being the nom de plume of
clarinetist Wally Fawkes.
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He formed his first jazz band in 1948, after spending a year with GEORGE WEBBS
DIXIELANDERS, a band which pioneered New Orleans-style jazz in Britain.
HUMPHREY LYTTELTON AND HIS BAND, with Wally Fawkes on clarinet, soon became the leading
traditional jazz band in Britain, with a high reputation in Europe gained through many
Continental tours.
In 1949, he signed a recording contract with EMI, resulting in a string of now much
sought-after recordings in the PARLOPHONE Super Rhythm Style series. Prior to that, the
band had already made records on his own London Jazz label, and had accompanied the great
SIDNEY BECHET in an historic session for Melodisc in 1949. It was for Parlophone that
Humph recorded his own BAD PENNY BLUES which, in 1956, was the first British
jazz record to get into the Top Twenty.
Highspots of that early period include a visit with an all star British band to the
first INTERNATIONAL JAZZ FESTIVAL in Nice (1948), where he sat in with the
likes of Rex Stewart, Jack Teagarden and Earl Hines and where LOUIS ARMSTRONG was heard to
say That boys comin on!. In 1956, when Louis Armstrong and his All
Stars played a run of concerts in London, Humphrey Lyttelton and his Band were chosen to
open the shows. On the last night, during the finale, Humph put a homemade crown on
Satchmos head and, belatedly, crowned him King of Jazz.
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In the late Fifties, Humph shocked many of his fans by enlarging his band and his
repertoire to include MAINSTREAM and other non-traditional material. The eight-piece band
with its saxophone section of Tony Coe, Jimmy Skidmore and Joe Temperley, toured the
UNITED STATES successfully in 1959 and led to fruitful collaborations in Britain with Buck
Clayton, Buddy Tate and blues-singers Jimmy Rushing and Joe Turner...
HUMPHREY LYTTELTON is today busier than ever. His band, one of the most versatile in
the world, still tours regularly. Every Monday night since 1967 has found him
on BBC Radio Two, purveying THE BEST OF JAZZ on record. Nowadays when people
say I enjoy your radio show
, they are as likely to mean the anarchic
BBC panel game IM SORRY I HAVENT A CLUE in which he has played the
role of reluctant chairman since 1972, and which won the best radio comedy
show in 1995, 2002 and again in 2004.
As a freelance journalist, he has
written restaurant reviews for HARPERS &QUEEN, humorous
articles for PUNCH and the British Airways HIGHLIFE magazine, as well as
numerous articles
on jazz. He has written eight books the latest being It Just Occurred
To Me
He has composed over
two hundred tunes which have been recorded by his band. In leisure moments, he
enjoys bird-watching and is a keen amateur calligrapher. In 1990,
he was appointed President of the SOCIETY FOR ITALIC HANDWRITING.
In
1984, he founded his own record label, CALLIGRAPH RECORDS. This was
primarily to record his own band, and there has been a steady flow of their
albums, sometimes featuring guest artists -- Wally Fawkes, Helen Shapiro,
Buddy Tate, Lillian Boutte and, latterly, Stacey Kent with Jim Tomlinson .
Humph has also made recordings on the label with Kenny Davern and Acker
Bilk. Several Lytteltonians have been featured with their own groups,
notably Bruce Turner and also Adrian Macintosh, Ted Beament and the late
Paul Bridge, the latter replaced in their group Trio Time
by John Rees-Jones. Other
artists who have recorded for the label include singer Maxine Daniels,
Australian cornetist Bob Barnard and the trombone ensemble, Bone Structure.
There have also been reissues of Humph's early work for the Parlophone label
in the Fifties
Humph has been much in demand as
an after-dinner speaker, on his own and in combined presentations with his band. He
has been awarded Honorary Doctorates, in Music, Letters or the Arts at the Universities of Warwick (1987),
Loughborough (1988), Durham (1989), Keele (1992), Hertford (1995) and de
Montfort (1997).
In 1993 he was presented with the GOLD AWARD at the Sony Radio Awards for services to
broadcasting and in 1996 with the prestigious WATERFORD CRYSTAL AWARD by the Institute of
Entertainment and Arts Management for outstanding contributions to the entertainment
business. In April 2000 he achieved the LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD at the
Post Office British Jazz Awards and, in July 2001 the similar award at the
BBC Jazz Awards in the Queen Elizabeth Hall, London.
All the while he has continued to play full-time with his band, as well as
broadcasting and writing. There have been collaborations in concert with
Elkie Brooks, with whom he recorded an album on her label, and with singer
Tina May. In 2006, he enlarged his band once more to eight-piece, attracting many
enthusiastic reviews in the process.
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