Peter Gammond
Biography
Peter Gammond (30 September 1925 – 6 May 2019) was a British music critic, writer, journalist, musician, poet, and artist. Peter Gammond was born in Winnington, Northwich, Cheshire. The son of John Thomas Gammond (1892–1970), a clerk, and Margaret Heald (1898–1985), Gammond inherited his musical interests from his father, who was a skilful and well-known amateur cellist and instrument repairer. After early preparatory school in Weaverham, where he lived from 1930 to 1950, he was educated at Sir John Deane's Grammar School, where he attained distinctions in English and Art in the Higher School Certificate examinations. He won a scholarship to Manchester College of Art, having at the time an ambition to be a cartoonist, but at the age of 18 in 1943 was called up and served in the Royal Armoured Corps as a tank driver mainly in the Far East and India, ending with the 25th Dragoons, which was involved in the Hindu-Muslim conflict prior to Indian independence in 1947. Upon returning to civilian life in 1947 Gammond continued his studies at Wadham College, Oxford, until 1950, where he read English. While at Oxford, he became well known in literary circles as a poet, appearing in three editions of Oxford Poetry, and as a cartoonist and writer with Cherwell. As poetry editor of the university magazine, The ISIS, Gammond worked under editors R. J. Harvey, Alan Brien, Robert Robinson, and Derrick Cooper. Gammond appeared in Oxford Viewpoint, where a study of his poetry by Irving Wardle was also published. During his time at Oxford, he composed and produced an operetta, Love and Learning, and played trombone in a university jazz band led by John Postgate. On leaving Oxford, Gammond worked for a time in a West Country pub and as a rates assessor in Willesden, before joining the publicity department of the Decca Record Company in 1952, as an editor and sleeve-note writer, which led to his liaising closely with some of the leading classical and operatic performers of the time.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

The Hawk Flies High
1957

Rhapsody In Blue / An American In Paris
1959

The Best Of Duke Ellington And His Famous Orchestra
1961

Hide And Seekers
1964

Rhapsody In Blue (The 1925 Piano Roll)
1976

Previn Plays Gershwin
1971

Hawaii
1967

Los Machucambos In Phase 4
1962

Nutcracker Suite
1962

The Nutcracker, Op. 71 (Excerpts)
1956

The Unique Thelonious Monk
1956

The Planets
1976

Gypsy!
1966

Nat King Cole Sings For You
1965

The Seekers
1964

Carmen Jones
1963

Also Sprach Zarathustra
1962

Requiem
1962

The Sound Of Music
1961

Symphony No. 5 / Coriolan Overture
1959

Concert Encores
1958

Memories Of Vienna
1958

Ellington Showcase
1956

Sylvia/Coppelia (Excerpts)
1955
Credited work
827 releases · 269 albums · active 1952–2016
- Other credits · 837
- Production · 6
Studios: Sofiensaal · Kingsway Hall · Hadar Cinema · Liverpool Philharmonic Hall
Frequent collaborators
- Various
- Tchaikovsky
- Beethoven
- Mozart
- Lehár
- Johann Strauss
- Duke Ellington
- Mantovani And His Orchestra
