Monday, August 5, 2019

MONDAY MEMORIAL TVXOHOF TRIBUTE - BARRINGTON PHELOUNG



I believe this is the first time the Television Crossover Hall of Fame is inducting a composer into the TVXOHOF.  But I can’t think of another composer like Barrington Pheloung who is so indelibly linked with three connected TV series.  Perhaps with one of the sci-fi franchises?  However, I don’t think any of them have been to so insert a piece of his soul into those works like Mr. Pheloung has. 

I’m just sorry that it has taken his death for me to realize he deserves to be in the Crossover Hall.


As with Colin Dexter with his original novels about Morse, and previous Hall of Fame member Russell Lewis with his ‘Endeavour’ scripts, Mr. Pheloung was fond of putting puzzles into his work, as you will see....



From the BBC:
Barrington Pheloung, who composed the haunting theme for TV drama Inspector Morse, has died at the age of 65.
The Australian-born composer shared several interests with Colin Dexter's irascible detective, not least his love of opera and cryptic crosswords.

He became known for hiding clues and red herrings in the score for the TV show, occasionally revealing the killer's identity in morse code.


The hypnotic title song also included a motif based on the letters M.O.R.S.E.




Pheloung died at home in Australia, his agent confirmed to the BBC. No cause of death was given.


When the show's producer Kenny McBain joined forces with Anthony Minghella to adapt ‘Inspector Morse’ for TV in 1987, they approached Pheloung to supply the theme.


The classical-inspired melancholy score earned the musician global acclaim and a Bafta Award nomination for best original music. Pheloung said the success was down to the show's unconventional two-hour time slot, which allowed him to write more intricate musical cues.


"Our incentive was to try and produce a feature film rather than a television episode," he told cultural historian Damian Michael Barcroft in 2014. "Therefore, I was given much more scope to create longer sequences of music."


The theme song was written after studying Dexter's original novels and Minghella's screenplay for the first episode.


"We decided that Morse is a very melancholic character, so the tune had to be melancholic, and he was a lover of classical music, so it should be an orchestral score and not synthesiser," he told Soundtrack magazine in 1994.


"The final thing is that he has a very cryptic mind, he loves doing crosswords; we came up with the obvious idea - his name is Morse and we use morse code in the music.



"It spells out his name in the main theme and that formed the rhythm. It fits nicely in a triple compound time and that suggested a harmonic structure and I picked up my guitar and there was the tune."


Pheloung went on to score ‘Morse’ spin-offs ‘Lewis’ and ‘Endeavour’.


From Wikipedia:


Barrington Somers Pheloung (10 May 1954 – 31 July 2019) was an Australian composer based in England. He composed several television theme tunes and music, particularly for ‘Inspector Morse’ and its follow-up series, ‘Lewis’, and prequel ‘Endeavour’.  

Pheloung is best known for the theme and incidental music to the ‘Inspector Morse’ television series, for which he was nominated for Best Original Television Music at the British Academy Television Awards in 1991; the sequel ‘Lewi’s, and the prequel ‘Endeavour’.   



For the Morse, and Lewis, and Endeavour: The Inspector Morse Universe Facebook page, page owner Christopher Sullivan enlisted a musicologist to provide an appreciation of Pheloung’s work.  I'm including an excerpt which highlights the musical puzzles he provided.


From Professor Helen Roulston:
Pheloung incorporated his own recordings of composers, whose music, whether instrumental, vocal, or operatic, could be judiciously incorporated as themes and clues into the various episodes of the ‘Inspector Morse’, ‘Inspector Lewis’, and the first years of the ‘Endeavour’ series, along with his own original music, especially the opening and closing works of the videos.  


As I said, I’m sorry that Mr. Pheloung’s induction is under these circumstances.  He would have made an excellent showcase for the September theme of Creators/Behind The Scenes.

 

"Some people just can't help making a difference in our lives by simply being who they are. They make the world a little brighter, a little warmer and a lot funnier. Barrington was one of these people. "
- DNA Music



Welcome to the Hall, Mr. Pheloung....

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