BBC Northern Dance Orchestra | |
---|---|
Orchestra | |
Short name | NDO |
Former name | BBC Northern Variety Orchestra (1951) |
Founded | 1956 |
Disbanded | 1974 |
Later name | BBC Northern Radio Orchestra (1974) |
Location | Manchester, United Kingdom |
Concert hall | Playhouse Theatre |
Principal conductor | Alyn Ainsworth Bernard Herrmann |
The BBC Northern Dance Orchestra was a big band run by the BBC and formed in 1956[1] as the successor to the BBC's Northern Variety Orchestra, which had been formed on 1 April 1951. Known to listeners as the NDO, it broadcast on the radio daily, usually from recordings made at the Playhouse Theatre in Hulme, Manchester, and on many trips to halls throughout the UK. Through BBC Transcription Services it gained loyal listeners overseas.
Many well-known musicians played with the orchestra over the years, including trumpeter Syd Lawrence, who left the NDO and formed his own very successful big band in 1967,[2] and saxophonist Johnny Roadhouse, one of the band's founding members.
The NDO's first conductor was Alyn Ainsworth, who had conducted the BBC's Northern Variety Orchestra. Ainsworth also wrote some of the band's arrangements together with Pat Nash and Alan Roper, using a standard big band line-up of five saxophones, a flute, four trombones, four trumpets, occasional solo violin, and a rhythm section of piano, double bass, guitar, drums and percussion.
The original NVO owed its roots to Ray Martin and his orchestra, who were playing for variety and other programmes long before the BBC decided to form its own band based in Manchester, and who did, on occasion, conduct the orchestra.
BigBandsDatabase
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).