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  2. The Squadronaires - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Squadronaires

    The Squadronaires is a Royal Air Force band which began and performed in Britain during and ... featuring transcriptions of some of the original Squadronaires music ...

  3. Ronnie Aldrich - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronnie_Aldrich

    Aldrich was educated at The Harvey Grammar School, Folkestone, and taught violin at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. [1] Before the Second World War, he went to India to play jazz and first gained fame in the 1940s with the Squadronaires, which he led from 1951, when the band was then billed as Ronnie Aldrich and The Squadronaires, up until their disbanding in 1964.

  4. Ricochet (Teresa Brewer song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricochet_(Teresa_Brewer_song)

    The recording by Joan Regan With The Squadronaires was released by UK Decca Records as catalog number F 10193, and in Australia as catalogue number Y6543. It reached number 8 on the UK song chart. [which?] The recording by Alma Cogan with Ken Mackintosh and his orchestra was made in London on November 27, 1953.

  5. Cliff Townshend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cliff_Townshend

    Before ending up with The Squadronaires, he played in a number of small bands as part of his duties, as the RAF high command recognized the morale value of popular music. During the early days of the war, he met Betty Dennis, who enlisted in 1941 when she was sixteen. She drove a truck and sang with RAF bands.

  6. They Can't Take That Away from Me - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/They_Can't_Take_That_Away...

    The song is featured in Kenneth Branagh's musical version of Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost (2000), in Stephen Herek's Mr. Holland's Opus (1995), and in Barry Levinson's Rain Man (1988). The melodic hardcore band Strung Out also sampled the song for the intro of "Analog", the opening track on their 2004 album Exile in Oblivion .

  7. Pete Townshend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pete_Townshend

    Townshend was born in Chiswick, West London, at the Chiswick Hospital, Netheravon Road, in the UK.He came from a musical family: his father, Cliff Townshend, was a professional alto saxophonist in the Royal Air Force's dance band the Squadronaires and his mother, Betty (née Dennis), was a singer with the Sidney Torch and Les Douglass Orchestras.

  8. Joan Regan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Regan

    Joan E. Bethell was born in either Romford, Essex, or West Ham, London (sources disagree), on 19 January 1928, [2] the youngest of six children born to Joseph Bethell and Katherine E. Hartnett, whose marriage was registered in March 1916.

  9. Jackie Lee (Irish singer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackie_Lee_(Irish_singer)

    Among them "Born To Lose" from the film Robbery (1967), "Love Is Now" from the Norman J. Warren film Loving Feeling (1969), and the title song to the horror film Goodbye Gemini (1970). In 1968, as 'Jacky', she had a UK Top Ten hit single with " The White Horses ", [ 1 ] the theme from a children's TV programme. [ 3 ]