THE
STRAD
February 1977
Vol.
We are
indebted to Orpheus Publications for their permission
To reproduce
the content of this article for the Centenary of
Reginald
Leopold’s birth.
‘The Strad’ was established in
1890 and subscription is available on line from http://www.thestrad.com It
is part of the Orpheus Publications group which is on line at http://www.orpheuspublications.com
REGINALD
LEOPOLD
by

The name of Reginald
Leopold is known to millions through his
broadcasts and recordings;
"Among Your Souvenirs" and "Melodies
for You" and to BBC Third programme listeners in the delightful "Homeward Bound", which goes out every weekday evening. Light music is a very specialized form of entertainment that needs a high standard of performance and first rate musicianship. "Reg" Leopold has not only received his training at the hands of experts in their field, but he has had the experience of working in almost every form of ensemble playing during more years than he cares to remember.
He was born in
However, Reg's
progress was rapid and soon he was
playing little virtuoso pieces making his
first appearance at a school concert on
Empire Day. Greatly impressed by the
boy's playing, the Headmaster suggested he should try for a scholarship to
A further strong influence in those early days came from Ludwig Lebel,
Head of ensemble playing at
the college, himself a pupil of
David Popper, the great German-Bohemian cellist. "As soon as I went into Lebel's
class, Chamber music and Ensemble
playing became a priority and I knew I could develop under his teaching". Reg has sound ideas about self-knowledge and stresses the importance of the recognition
and assessment of one's strength as well as one's limitations. At this time, we had people like Heifitz
in his prime . . . marvellous playing ... I had enough
sense to realize I
couldn't compete with that! . . . But I loved string quartet playing and Lebel was a fantastic teacher . . . There was nothing like it in
Reg is convinced that this thorough training at the right age has laid a foundation that has served him well in every kind of music . . . "It is the basis for everything. I happen to have specialized in ensemble work but it doesn't matter what you do in music, you must have a solid foundation . . . you can then build on it
whatever way you choose . . . and the
way it suits you!
One other early experience is worth recording. In his student days, Reg became
acquainted with a keen German born amateur
musician who ran a highly successful
bakery in Muswell Hill. "He made the best bread in the district". Every Sunday morning he would invite musicians to his house to play string quartets and Reg was a frequent visitor. He recalled a piece of the baker's advice. "If I were going into a business like you are going into the
music profession, I would try in the
first place to learn a bit about every branch
of the business ... I wouldn't think of specialization until I knew what it was all about".
This advice has certainly been put to good use throughout Reg's career, and he
now knows a great deal about most branches of the profession. This infinite variety started when Reg
was only 18 and, armed with his LTCL
which also included the "Art of
Teaching", he began to look for
work. One of his fellow students at Trinity asked him if he would like
some pupils. Reg
was delighted with the idea and rushed out to get cards printed to the effect that he was qualified to teach. However, although he reaped an ultimate benefit by the exercise at the time, due to his own lack of experience combined with the reluctance of his pupils, Reg
admits that it was not an unqualified success. In most cases, it was "mother" who wanted
them to learn the violin and Reg recalled one boy about 16 who when it came to his lesson
verged on the hostile. His mother confessed
that she had organized the lessons
to keep him off the streets and she was
happy that for at least one evening she
could count on him being at home. About
six months later the general experiment was abandoned when Reg and the mother
finally gave up the unequal struggle.
These days Reg has
little time for teaching
because he is one of our busiest musicians, but he laughingly admits that should the situation arise he would be rather better equipped to take on pupils than he was in his initial experience. Reg certainly learned the hard way; his first professional engagement did not fare much better than his teaching experiment. A friend asked him if he could deputise for a Sunday evening solo job at a church in
Then followed a period in which Reg undertook a
variety of engagements covering almost
every kind of violin-playing including playing in a cinema accompanying silent
pictures in the era immediately before the "talkies". Although it was not easy to find work, Reg
was determined not to go into
one of the large symphony orchestras.
"My training with Lebel had made me an ensemble player and I couldn't
face the thought of being one of 40 violinists all bowing identically". Shortly after this Reg came into
contact with the Colombo Organization,
a firm who supplied orchestras to
restaurants and cafes all over
Although he was earning a steady income, Reg did not
abandon his free-lance work which
now included jazz. Although frowned upon
publicly by many serious musicians,
it was attracting a great deal of their private attention. Today, Jazz is recognized as an art form in its own right, but not at this time. Reg
and many of his friends from
Trinity and the
From the "Troc"
Reg went on to the
In 1934 Reg met
Fred Hartley, "The man who
brought light music right up to date". Hartley had been at the Academy with Hugo Rignold and
when he started his famous
"Fred Hartley Sextet", he appointed Rignold his first leader, who in turn brought Reg
into the group. "Hartley had a way
of rehearsing that was absolute perfection . . . his precision was something you couldn't better in the finest string quartet in the world. There were a lot of
famous musicians in that small group but whenever a photographer arrived, they vanished pretty speedily . . . there were some professors from the Royal Academy in the group and it was more than their job was worth to be seen playing light music".
Reg considers that he learned a tremendous amount from Fred Hartley and thinks that any similar experience is a vital
part of an ensemble player's
training. "This idea
that light music is something that is not
very important is a lot of rubbish ... it takes a very talented musician to play light music properly . . . I've noticed that when Heifitz plays
lighter music, he seems to
try harder ... it is different in the case of the great composers . . . they speak for themselves".
Just before the war Reg
became leader of the Queen's Hall
Light Orchestra under Charles
Williams, and later, Sydney Torch. When war broke out, the London Studio Players was formed for the purpose of sending out programmes after midnight on the BBC Overseas programme, and Reg was
appointed Leader. Many off-shoots sprang from this very talented group; one which later achieved considerable fame was the Michael Kxein
Saxophone Quartet.
When hostilities ceased. Grand Hotel started up again at the BBC with Albert Sandler as its Leader. Sandler had been on
the programme from
Grand Hotel seems to have been the scene for several little dramas. Reg recalled the occasion on which the singer arrived from another engagement with all his dress clothes packed for him by a friend. When he opened the case he found he had been supplied with two left shoes. He was a tall, well built man with large feet so there wasn't a hope of finding any others at such short notice: he was therefore forced to put on the ill-matched pair. Since there were plants and flowers decorating the front of the platform, the audience were quite unaware of what was happening, but the orchestra knew and they had the greatest difficulty in keeping straight
faces when this poor man
made his entrance walking sideways.
"When he left the platform he
looked even funnier . . . like a crab sliding over to the left all the time. I can also remember a singer who is a very big name indeed today . . . He arrived without his braces for his dress suit, so I had to lend him a belt ... it was brown . . . not the most elegant colour with evening dress".
Reg Leopold is probably one of the busiest musicians in
Reg has owned quite a few fiddles in his time. "When I was young I bought a Gagliano for about £125 and then I had one by an Italian maker, Giovanni Gaida who settled
in
Reg's final piece of advice to young aspiring violinists is to pass on his own philosophy which is simply to learn as much about every branch of your profession and then, "somewhere along the line you become aware of what you can do well, and then, as you develop, you must know when to play your strong suit".
Reg Leopold is a quiet-voiced man with a nice dry sense of humour. He has a beautiful modern Georgian house just outside
Reg's other passion is racing cars. This interest goes back to the days of the old Brooklands Course when he once owned the Alfa Romeo that won a number of races by R. E. Featherstonhaugh.
At one time he also owned a Bugatti when his main hobby was skidding up and down the country in fast cars. Today, Reg drives what he calls "an armchair with powered steering and automatic gear change, a Rover 3.5 coupe . . . There's no sound or vibration and its chief function seems to be to drink up a lot of petrol, but ... it does it beautifully".
Even if Reg has more
inclination to comfort than speed
on the road, there is no slowing
of tempo in his professional work.
Besides his BBC programmes, he is busy making LPs and a new one, "Among
Your Souvenirs" is coming out shortly. His two recordings of
"Evenings in the
Reg Leopold's catholic taste in music echoes his own versatility. "I like music for the mood I am in ... Mozart today . . . Delius tomorrow". Perhaps the most lasting impression one has about this very talented but unassuming man is that he has a respect for his profession and for his fellow musicians. In a long career in which he has tackled a great variety of music of every kind he can approach a violin concerto
or a light classic with the
same enthusiasm and vitality. His secret would appear to be a simple one. He is
a perfectionist. To Reg it is all music, and music is both his art and his craft: and in every case, only the best will do.
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