Frederic Bayco

Frederic Bayco, sometimes spelt Fredric Bayco (1913 1970) was an English organist and composer of light music,[1] best known for his Tudor pastiche "Elizabethan Masque".[2][3] Born in London, he attended Brighton School of Music, where he attained an ARCO.[4] He was later made a fellow of the Royal College of Organists (FRCO).[5] Other pieces include "Lady Beautiful", and his marches "Royal Windsor" and "Marche Militaire".[6]

Like many composers of the light music genre, he contributed a number of pieces to music libraries, and as a result his pieces "Inferno" and "Finger of Fear" have ended up being frequently used in programmes such as the Ren and Stimpy Show.[7][8] Many of his KPM library compositions have a historical or martial feel, for example the mock-heroic "Joust"[9] Other pieces appear to have unusual titles, for example "Bear in a Buggy".[10]

References

  1. Sydney Organ.com, accessed 16 November 2010
  2. Peter Gammond, The Oxford Companion to Popular Music (Oxford University Press, 1991) ISBN 978-0-19-311323-7 p.345
  3. Hyperion Records, accessed 16 November 2010
  4. David Alan Simmons, Who's Who in Music and Musicians' International Directory, Volume 1962 (Hafner Pub. Co., 1962), p.16
  5. Organ biography, accessed 16 November 2010
  6. Track listing, A Rifles Bandstand.
  7. Fredric Bayco at the Internet Movie Database, accessed 16 November 2010
  8. APM music - "Inferno" on YouTube, accessed 16 November 2010
  9. KPM Music, accessed 16 November 2010
  10. Philip L Scowcroft, Music and Road Transport music, a Fourth Selection, accessed 16 November 2010


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