Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Roger Roger (composer)

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Name
  
Roger Roger

Role
  
Composer

Music director
  
O Sunce


Roger Roger (composer) rogerrogerfr1images2800207928845738jpg

Died
  
June 12, 1995, Paris, France

Albums
  
Midnight Mood, Mirror Symphony

Similar People
  
Nino Nardini, Robert Farnon, Sidney Torch, George Melachrino, Charles Williams

Roger Roger (5 August 1911 – 12 June 1995) was a French film composer and bandleader. His aliases included Eric Swan and Cecil Leuter, the last being a pseudonym he used for his electronic productions. He was one of the first, with Pierre Henry and Jean-Jacques Perrey, to experiment with the Moog synthesizer; his Pop Electronique album was released in 1969, five years after Bob Moog put his electronic device on the market.

Contents

Roger died in Paris in 1995. Since his death, renewed interest in light music has seen several CD albums released, both in dedicated albums and in compilations, including music used under the test card by the BBC in the 1970s.

He is listed as the composer for two episodes of the Flash Gordon (1954) television series, and for the series' incidental music.

Farmer Alfalfa

His piece "Komic Kapers" was used in the 1950s by the Commonwealth cartoon distribution company. They put it as the opening music when adding sound to many of Paul Terry's silent Farmer Alfalfa cartoons from the 1920s (also known as Farmer Grey). Although never chosen by Terry, Rogers's piece was indelibly imprinted on a whole generation of children as the signature tune for these strange, eerie, frantic cartoons.

Discography

Major records

References

Roger Roger (composer) Wikipedia