Russ Conway, DSM (born Trevor Herbert Stanford; 2 September 1925 – 16 November 2000) was an English popular music pianist and composer. Conway had 20 piano in the UK Singles Chart between 1957 and 1963, including two Chart-topper hit record.
After leaving school, aged 14, he attended secretarial college before working as a solicitor's clerk. The employment ended when, on his fifteen birthday, Stanford was sent to a borstal for a three-year term after stealing some money he found in a packet. It was in borstal that he taught himself the piano. A few months later, in January 1941, his mother died.
Following his release from borstal, his father sent him to a Merchant Navy Training School. During the Second World War, in 1942, he was conscripted into the Royal Navy and was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal as signalman in a minesweeping flotilla "for distinguished service, efficiency and zeal" in clearance of mines in the Aegean Sea and operations during the relief of Greece 1944–45. During his Navy service, he lost the tip of the ring finger of his right hand while using a bread slicer. At the end of the war, he chose to remain in the Navy, but was discharged in 1948 because of a stomach ulcer. He joined the Merchant Navy as a baggage steward with P&O, but left after a recurrence of the complaint.
In 1956, Conway (credited as 'Terry Stanford') composed the music for a BBC Television production of Beauty and the Beast.
Between 1957 and 1963, Conway had 20 UK chart hits, and in 1959 alone he achieved a cumulative total of 83 weeks on the UK Singles Chart. This included two self-penned number one , "Side Saddle" and "Roulette", the latter deposing Elvis Presley's "A Fool Such As I". He appeared frequently on light entertainment Television shows and radio for many years afterwards, performing at the London Palladium on a number of occasions and becoming a regular on the Billy Cotton Band Show for several seasons. He also made recordings as a vocalist. Many of his hits feature accompaniment directed by Geoff Love.
In 1958 Conway (as "Trevor H. Stanford") composed, with Norman Newell, the music for the flop musical Mister Venus, which starred Frankie Howerd and Anton Diffring, The show, with book by Ray Galton and Johnny Speight, opened at the Prince of Wales Theatre on 23 October 1958 but closed after just sixteen performances.
He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1959, when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews during a recording session at the BBC's Studio 1 at 201 Piccadilly, London.
Conway appeared as himself in French and Saunders' 1994 Christmas special, playing "Side Saddle"—or, in an alternative edit, the Gerry and the Pacemakers hit "I Like It"—in their spoof of The Piano.
In the documentary Frankie Howerd: The Lost Tapes, Barry Cryer, commenting on Howerd not coming out as gay, also said that Russ Conway did not, as in 'those days' it would have been career suicide. Conway said in 1995 that he was unsure about his sexuality: "I haven't the faintest idea what it is....I was certainly no angel in my younger days and I have tried everything there is to try."
Conway, who never married, died on 16 November 2000, just two weeks after his last public performance.
Richard Hope-Hawkins delivered the main eulogy at the funeral held at the historic St Mary's Church, Redcliffe, Bristol. Elton John sent a wreath. In 2001 Hope-Hawkins devised, staged and directed a tribute to Conway at the Colston Hall, Bristol, with an all-star cast. The £11,000 raised by the event was donated to St Peter's Hospice, Bristol.
Conway could not read music, so the published sheet music of his work is inaccurate and simplified. Pianist Mike Thomson (1946–2018) produced some faithful transcriptions, but they were not able to be fully published due to copyright issues.Thomson, Mike. How to play the piano in Russ Conway's honky-tonk style, Russconway.co.uk
1957 | "Roll the Carpet Up" / "The Westminster Waltz" | — | — | — |
"Soho Fair" / "The Spotlight Waltz" | — | — | — | |
"The Red Cat (Le Chat Rouge)" / "Late Extra" | — | — | — | |
"Piano Pops No. 1" | — | — | — | |
"Party Pops" | 24 | — | — | |
"Scot Pops" | — | — | — | |
"The Harry Lime Theme" / "The Lantern Slide" | — | — | — | |
1958 | "Party Pops (No. 2)" | — | — | — |
"Pal Joey Pops" | — | — | — | |
"Piano Pops (No. 3)" | — | — | — | |
"South Pacific Pops" | — | — | — | |
"Piano Pops (No. 4)" | — | — | — | |
"Piano Pops (No. 5)" | — | — | — | |
"Got a Match" / "Toby's Walk" | 30 | — | — | |
"Piano Pops (No. 6)" | — | — | — | |
"My Fair Lady Pops" | — | — | — | |
"More Party Pops" | 10 | — | — | |
"The World Outside (Theme from the Warsaw Concerto)" / "Love Like Ours" | 24 | — | — | |
1959 | "Piano Pops No. 7" | — | — | — |
"Side Saddle" / "Pixilated Penguin" | 1 | 78 | — | |
"Piano Pops No. 8" | — | — | — | |
"Roulette" / "Trampolina" | 1 | 71 | 106 | |
"Piano Pops No. 9" | — | — | — | |
"China Tea" / "The Wee Boy of Brussels" | 5 | — | — | |
"Song from North By Northwest" / "Theme from The Scapegoat" | — | — | — | |
"Snow Coach" / "Time to Celebrate" | 7 | — | — | |
"More and More Party Pops" | 5 | — | — | |
1960 | "Royal Event" / "Rule, Britannia!" | 15 | — | — |
"Medley of Tunes from Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'be" | 47 | — | — | |
"Lucky Five" / "The Birthday Cakewalk" | 14 | — | — | |
"Piano Pops No. 10" | — | — | — | |
"Passing Breeze" / "The Key To Love" | 16 | 91 (B-side) | — | |
"Even More Party Pops" | 27 | — | — | |
1961 | "Pepe" / "Matador from Trinidad" | 19 | — | — |
"Parade of the Poppets" / "Lulu" | — | — | — | |
"Pablo" / "The Singing Bells" | 45 | — | — | |
"Say It with Flowers" / "Roses of Picardy" (with Dorothy Squires) | 23 | — | — | |
"Toy Balloons" / "Forgotten Dreams" | 7 | — | — | |
1962 | "Lesson One" / "Angelo" | 21 | — | — |
"Concerto for Dreamers" / "Primera" | — | — | — | |
"Blitz Medley" / "Oliver! Medley" | — | — | — | |
"Always You and Me" / "Alone Again" | 33 | — | — | |
"Russ Conway's Sing Song Medley" | — | — | — | |
1963 | "Gigolo" / "Terry's Toon" | — | — | — |
"Flamenco" / "Tell Me In September (Dimelo en Septiembre)" | — | — | — | |
"Liverpool Pops" | — | — | — | |
"Gold Rush" / "Halloween (Europa Melody) | — | — | — | |
"Conway Capers No. 1" | — | — | — | |
1964 | "Mack the Knife" / "A Bedouin in Baghdad" | — | — | — |
"Conway Capers No. 2" | — | — | — | |
"Concerto for Lovers" / "Love is the Sweetest Thing" | — | — | — | |
1965 | "Little Leprechaun" / "Falling Tears" | — | — | — |
"The Beggars of Rome" / "The Urchins of Paris" | — | — | — | |
"I'm Shy, Mary Ellen I'm Shy" / "I See the Moon" | — | — | — | |
1966 | "The Crunch" / "The Patient Heart" | — | — | — |
"Celebration Day" / "Girl In My Soup" | — | — | — | |
"Swinging Pops" | — | — | — | |
1968 | "Pink Piano" / "Il Buffu (The Clown)" (as The Russ Conway Sound) | — | — | — |
1970 | "Polonaise" / "Villa D'Amour" | — | — | — |
"Love Is All" / "Lara's Theme from 'Doctor Zhivago'" | — | — | — | |
1971 | "How Small We Are, How Little We Know" / "When I Grow Too Old to Dream" | — | — | — |
"Aranjuez, Mon Amour" / "Up, Up and Away" | — | — | — | |
1972 | "The Boy Friend" | — | — | — |
1973 | "Life Is Good" / "Long Nosed Nellie" | — | — | — |
1974 | "Bordello" / "A Place Like This" | — | — | — |
"She" / "Eye Level" | — | — | — | |
1976 | "Love Is a Many Splendored Thing" / "Life is Good" | — | — | — |
1977 | "A Welsh Melody" / "Don't Cry for Me Argentina" (with Mike Sammes) | — | — | — |
1984 | "Theme from The Terry Fox Story" / "Floriana" | — | — | — |
1989 | "Bareback" / "Side Saddle MkII" | — | — | — |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart. |
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