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George Webley (Read 12999 times)
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George Webley
May 9th, 2011, 12:19pm
 
George Webley, BBC London 94.9's weeknight presenter has passed away this weekend.

The popular host, who previously presented Breakfast at BBC Three Counties Radio, died on Saturday morning but the cause of death is not confirmed at this stage.

George was also well know as a TV and Radio composer, along with television presenting jobs for the BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Sky. He was responsible for themes like Have I Got News For You, The Office, Graham Norton, Room 101 and the finale of One Foot In The Grave.

He won a Sony Radio Academy Gold Award for Best Music Broadcaster in 2002.

On his BBC London profile, it says: "As a bandleader he has worked around the world on over 500 hours of live TV."



Source:-
http://radiotoday.co.uk/news.php?extend.6974.12
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Re: George Webley
Reply #1 - May 9th, 2011, 12:20pm
 
Tributes have been paid to the London radio presenter who composed the theme tune to Have I Got News For You? and The Office after his sudden death.

George Webley, 53, better known as Big George, died in the early hours of Saturday after collapsing at his home in Milton Keynes.
He had hosted the weekday overnight programme on BBC London for five years and was the partner of fellow presenter Jo Good. As well as being a composer he won a Sony Award in 2002 for best music presenter and had worked for Three Counties Radio.

A statement on his family's website said: "It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Big George Webley. Cause of death cannot be confirmed as we are awaiting the coroner's report. Our hearts go out to all those who share our loss." BBC London 94.9 editor David Robey said: "Big George lived up to his name in every sense, a larger than life character with a radio personality to match.

"He was a truly distinctive broadcaster who will be terribly missed by his many devoted listeners and his colleagues."

Webley was also a band leader who worked around the world on more than 500 hours of live TV and had presented programmes for BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Sky.

On Twitter, comedian Anthony Davis said: "Sad to hear of the death of talk radio host Big George. A genuine personality who will be missed by many." BBC 6 Music presenter Gideon Coe wrote: "Big George knew how to put together a music programme. Played what he wanted and believed in."


By:-  Rob Parsons

Source:-
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23948087-london-radio-presenter-g...
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Re: George Webley
Reply #2 - May 9th, 2011, 12:26pm
 
His personal web-page is here:-

http://www.biggeorge.co.uk/Home.html
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Re: George Webley
Reply #3 - May 9th, 2011, 12:28pm
 
George Webley, the presenter of the weekday overnight programme on BBC London 94.9, has died aged 53.

Big George, as he was known, had presented the show for the past five years. He won a gold Sony Award in 2002 for best music presenter and was formerly with BBC Three Counties Radio.

He died in the early hours of Saturday, his family said.

He also had a long career as a musician and composed TV theme tunes, including Have I Got News For You.

The cause of death is not known at this stage, the BBC said.

Big George was also a band leader, performer and composer.

BBC London 94.9 Editor David Robey said: "Big George lived up to his name in every sense, a larger than life character with a radio personality to match.

"He was a truly distinctive broadcaster who will be terribly missed by his many devoted listeners and his colleagues at BBC London 94.9."

Source:-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-13327591
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Re: George Webley
Reply #4 - May 11th, 2011, 3:42pm
 
'Big George" Webley, who has died suddenly aged 53, was a larger-than-life figure who combined the careers of talk-radio broadcaster and prolific composer and arranger of television themes, for shows such as Have I Got News for You and The Office.

His career as a radio presenter began in the mid-1990s with a Saturday late show on GLR, the BBC station for London. In the late 1990s he was given a slot on Horizon Radio near his home in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire. Webley claimed that he had previously "jammed" the station in protest at its failure to support local musical talent. He was praised by the Guardian's Anne Karpf for his "unmistakeable tones of the proselytiser, giving his show the feel of a pirate station".

When that commercial station was absorbed into a larger group, he resigned on air and moved to BBC Three Counties Radio, where his show won a Sony radio award in 2002. There were also television appearances as a music expert for Graham Norton's Eurovision shows and Music File, a BBC educational series.

In 2006, Webley returned to BBC London 94.9 (the renamed GLR), hosting the 2am to 6am show and winning a loyal audience, not least from night workers such as taxi drivers. In a tribute to Webley, the London Taxi Branch of the RMT union said that "he always allowed us airtime like no other presenter or station".

Webley was born in Clapham, south London, into a musical family. His aunt was the secretary of the fan club for the American singer Frankie Laine, who became Webley's godfather. As a teenager, Webley was a proficient pianist and guitarist. He formed a band to write and perform songs in the style of Abba, but, impressed by the notorious television show when the Sex Pistols insulted the presenter Bill Grundy, George's band decided to join the fledgling punk movement. As Blitz, they played frequently at the Roxy club in Covent Garden.

Webley next "apprenticed" himself to the skilled bass guitarist Herbie Flowers, shadowing him for a couple of years. During this time Webley gained a foothold in the London recording session scene. He subsequently played on dozens of sessions, many of which were for advertising jingles, where he picked up the rudiments of creating short and effective compositions.

In 1989, he gained his first big break as the musical director for Jameson Tonight, a daily chat show on the new Sky satellite television channel. Hosted by Derek Jameson, the show typically featured one or more musical interludes by guest performers. Webley had to organise accompaniments for a wide variety of singers, from Barry Manilow to Captain Sensible, as well as providing the show's theme tunes.

During the 1990s, Webley became a leading composer of television theme music. As well as music for the long-running panel show Have I Got News for You, he arranged the opening and closing music for Ricky Gervais's The Office and wrote the theme for the comedy show Room 101. He once wrote that "if passports still stated occupation, mine would say 'composer of music with an average duration of 29 seconds'".

Webley campaigned vociferously for the rights of composers, which he felt were under attack from the production companies who commissioned theme tunes. He complained in his column for the industry magazine Sound On Sound that such companies frequently claimed half the repeat fees paid by broadcasters and he had a public dispute with Hat Trick, the company responsible for Have I Got News for You.

Webley had suffered a heart attack while broadcasting in 1996, but the cause of his death is not known. He is survived by his partner, the broadcaster JoAnne Good, his children Harry, Twig, Clare and Natalie Jayne, and three grandchildren.

• George Webley, broadcaster and composer, born 29 May 1957; died 7 May 2011


By:- Dave Laing

Source:-
http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2011/may/10/big-george-webley-obituary
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Re: George Webley
Reply #5 - May 19th, 2011, 9:17am
 
This is taken from the Independent:

George Webley: Maverick radio presenter, musician and composer of the theme tune for 'Have I Got News For You'
By Pierre Perrone
Tuesday, 17 May 2011


In its various guises – GLR, BBC London 94.9 – the BBC station for London has been the home of maverick radio presenters such as the late Charlie Gillett, Chris Evans, Danny Baker, Norman Jay and Mark Lamarr, as well as "Big George" Webley, the larger-than-life broadcaster who, five nights a week, hosted the 2am to 6am show beloved of cab drivers, night workers and insomniacs. Never short of an opinion, Webley and his dedicated callers, texters and e-mailers put London and the world to rights, and formed a strong bond, as demonstrated by the tribute 300 taxi drivers paid him. Four days after his death they gathered on the steps of All Souls Church, near Broadcasting House in central London, and held a minute's silence in the presence of his partner and fellow BBC London 94.9 presenter, JoAnne Good.

Webley previously presented music programmes on GLR, BBC Three Counties Radio, where he won a Sony award in 2002, and the Buckinghamshire station Horizon. "I got my break in radio after jamming the signal for Horizon Radio in Milton Keynes, in protest at their lack of local music commitment," he told the Radio Times in 2009. When Horizon was bought by the GWR group in 1995, and Webley was asked to play Phil Collins, he resigned after a very 'Big George' last stand. "Instead of playing the housewife's favourite, cuddly Phil Collins, I played progressive jazz-funk Phil Collins – wall-to-wall tracks by his band Brand X, which is even more unlistenable than his wine-bar favourites."

Webley also appeared on myriad radio and television programmes as a musicologist, the self-styled "Quentin Tarantino of musical appreciation", where he made the most of his exhaustive knowledge and the unique insights he had acquired in his parallel career as session musician, bandleader, arranger and composer of television themes. Most famously, he composed the slamming intro and outro for the long-running panel TV show Have I Got News For You, showing the same ability to think on his feet that characterised his radio work after the original tune he had written was ditched the day before the recording session.

"It was too late to cancel, the players had been booked, so there was nothing for it but to pen another theme," he wrote in his column for Sound On Sound, the music recording technology magazine he contributed to. "I knew the opening title sequence was 32 seconds long, but that included the four-second tympani drumming and Big Ben boinging sequence already completed in conjunction with the animator's storyboard. I knew the piece had to be manic, with a big kick at the end, and have a few demented twists and turns in the middle. So that evening I fixed a tempo (192bpm) and charted out the right number of bars. Next, I structured the piece – chord patterns, drum fills, stops, and so on. Then it was up again at 7.30 am. I scored the parts out on the train journey to the studio. It was recorded in one take, live, during a one-hour session in the depths of a basement in Soho. I doubt if the sax player and trumpeter had their instruments in their hands for more than five minutes."

Born in Clapham in 1957, he seemed destined for a musical career when his aunt arranged for Frankie Laine, whose fan club she ran, to be his godfather. An appearance by Donald Swann, of Flanders and Swann fame, at his primary school in 1963, confirmed this. "From the first moment he lifted the piano lid, I knew the direction my life was going to take," he recalled.

Webley saw the Small Faces at Streatham Top Rank when he was nine and, having learned piano and guitar, joined a covers band in the early '70s. He began writing his own compositions and in 1977 formed Blitz, who became the house band at the Roxy Club, the short-lived temple of punk in Covent Garden. He acquired a "leopard skin" haircut and met his future wife there but, despite contributing "Strange Boy" to the Farewell To The Roxy live album, and touring with UK Subs in 1978, Blitz remained a footnote in the history of punk.

He wrote to the renowned session bassist Herbie Flowers to ask for advice and was invited to a studio where he was recording a Justin Hayward album with the producer Jeff Wayne. Webley began accompanying Flowers to sessions, and occasionally depped for him. he became a session regular too, not only playing bass with Sally Oldfield, JB's All Stars – the short-lived group assembled by Specials drummer John Bradbury in 1984 – and The Big Heat, but also writing advertising jingles and and acting as bandleader. In 1989, he was hired as the musical director for Jameson Tonight, a daily chat show on Sky. Modelled on David Letterman, broadcast from Paramount City, Paul Raymond's rebranded Windmill Theatre in Soho, and presented by Derek Jameson, the show called for Webley and his musicians to accompany guests as diverse as Chris Farlowe, Humphrey Lyttelton, Alvin Stardust and Hinge and Bracket, and ran to 350 editions.

The prolific Webley composed the themes for Room 101, for TV shows presented by Jo Brand, Rory Bremner and Graham Norton, arranged the Mike D'Abo composition "Handbags and Gladrags" which book-ended The Office and produced incidental and play-out music for another of the UK's best-loved sitcoms, One Foot In The Grave. In the late '90s he presented the award-winning BBC educational series Music File on BBC 2.

However, he became incensed by the complexities of the royalties system and the sleight-of-hand production companies use when accounting for repeat fees, video, DVD and overseas incomes, and started campaigning on behalf of other TV composers.

"I've earned more from the one track I did for One Foot in the Grave than I have from 16 Have I Got News For You DVDs and videos," he said. "I just don't feel I'm being fairly treated. We work in an industry where you can get shafted all the time, but what you should be doing is the gentlemanly thing."

Webley suffered a heart attack while broadcasting on GLR in 1996, but returned to the airwaves three years later. He enjoyed juggling his media and music-making commitments and also gigged and recorded with his trio, The G Spot. In 2008, he wrote a newspaper column for the London Daily News.

"When George first arrived at GLR we didn't know what to make of him," says Gideon Coe, a colleague of Webley's in the '90s and now a stalwart of BBC 6 Music. "But it soon became clear that those of us who thought we knew about how to put together a properly eclectic, engaging and brilliant music programme had much to learn from George. He believed passionately in good music radio."

George Webley, broadcaster, composer, musician and bandleader: born London 29 May 1957; married (two daughters, two sons); died Milton Keynes 7 May 2011.
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