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  1. Philip Green (19 July 1911 – 6 October 1982), sometimes credited as Harry Philip Green or Phil Green, was a British film and television composer and conductor, and also a pianist and accordion player. He made his name in the 1930s playing in and conducting dance bands, performed with leading classical musicians, scored up to 150 films, wrote radio and television theme tunes and library music, and finally turned to church music at the end of his life in Ireland, a song from which period ...

  2. May 15, 2022 · Philip Green was a British film and tv composer.He started out in the 1930's playing in dance bands and signed to EMI in 1933 aged 21. He conducted large orc...

  3. 'The March Hare' is a composition by Philip Green (1911-1982), a British film and television composer, conductor and accordion player. He made his name in th...

  4. Philip Green was born on 19 July 1911 in Whitechapel, London, England, UK. He was a composer and actor, known for One for the Money (2012), All Night Long (1962) and Desert Mice (1959). He died on 6 October 1982 in Donnybrook, Dublin, Ireland.

  5. Philip Green. Philip Green was born in 1911, and he started to learn the piano at the age of seven. He won a scholarship to London's Trinity College of Music when aged only thirteen, where he studied many areas of music including theory, harmony, orchestration and composition. He completed his studies by the age of eighteen, and began his ...

  6. Nov 11, 2022 · Philip Green (July 19, 1911 - October 6, 1982), born Harry Philip Green, was a movie and television composer whose work ran the range of horror to comedy. He composed for many production music libraries including Capitol Hi Q, Chappell, Francis Day & Hunter, and Paxton. He formed the EMI Photoplay Q Music, where he became the sole contributor.

  7. Green also composed under the names Don Felipe, Louise Duke and Jose Belmonte. Some of his memorable works included his ‘Cuban Suite’, ‘La Maja De Goya’, ‘Ecstasy - Tango’, ‘White Orchids’, ‘Follow Me Around’, ‘Romance’ (from the film The Magic Bow), ‘Two Mexican Pictures’, ‘Sensation For Strings’, ‘Mandolins ...