“Sit Down, Stop Waving Your Arms About!”
by Anthony Inglis
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Pub Date 28 Apr 2023 | Archive Date 26 May 2023
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Description
Described by the Manchester Evening News as “One of Britain’s most popular conductors”, Anthony Inglis was born into the Royal Air Force with eight of his relatives, senior and distinguished pilots in the service. His family history however, did not stop him from deciding at the age of six that he was going to conduct.
Anthony knew academia was not for him and battled to persuade his teachers and even his own parents that he did not need educating at expensive private schools. In the end, they agreed and he left school early to attend the Royal College of Music. His career has seen him conducting many famous orchestras and soloists, travelling the world and working in genres from pop bands such as The Scorpions to Bizet’s opera Carmen.
His thirty-three year tenure at Phantom of The Opera in London and Music Directorship of two orchestras, plus his continuing association with Cunard and Katherine Jenkins has meant that although he is at an age when people retire, he continues to be busier than ever.
This is a story of perseverance, hard work, joy, laughter, anecdotes and passion, in a career that he would (almost) do for free!
A Note From the Publisher
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781803138121 |
PRICE | £7.99 (GBP) |
PAGES | 512 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
4.5
I am wont to reading several books at once so I take notes as I go along. My scribbles for Anthony Inglis' autobiographical book reads "rollicking good read" and "illustrious family" amongst others.
I can't honestly think of a better word than illustrious for the Inglis family - RAF heroes, world renowned conductor; a family of singularly accomplished people.
This book was a delight to read. Mr Inglis' childhood reads like a sad Boys Own story - illness that tore him away from home and public school where he never settled - but he makes it very amusing (I laughed a lot throughout the whole book). His later life was not much more settled what with jetting all over the world to conduct various orchestras including working with Katherine Jenkins, Lord Lloyd Webber, Cameron Mackintosh and a decades long stint at Phantom of the Opera - the only "musical" I like).
I don't think you need to know anything about the musical world to enjoy this book as it clear that Anthony Inglis is an accomplished raconteur (he's had a lot of experience talking to orchestras and audiences). There's also the wow factor - who doesn't he know or hasn't met. What a life it has been up to this point.
Well worth reading. Easy to dip in and out of. Very entertaining.
Thanks to Netgalley for the ARC.
Anthony Inglis is a conductor, probably best known for his 33-year tenure at the musical 'Phantom of the Opera' and is also associated with the shipping line, Cunard.
This is an entertaining account of Anthony's life and career. Several family members were in the RAF and one of his uncles flew in the Battle of Britain.
Anthony is very proud of his family history and RAF connection, which is completely understandable.
Having decided from an early age that he would be a conductor, Anthony left school early to attend the Royal College of Music. He has been fortunate to travel the world doing a job he loves pretty much ever since.
This is a detailed account - one could argue too detailed at times - but there are a lot of genuinely funny anecdotes along the way. Anthony has met and worked alongside many well-known people, including the Two Ronnies, and is now music director for the singer Katherine Jenkins.
As a violinist in my local symphony orchestra I certainly appreciate how important a good conductor is but, as Anthony explains, not everything always goes according to plan, even with the best orchestras and musicians.
Anthony has never been what he would call an academic, yet he comes across as charismatic and a witty raconteur.
Several sentences end with exclamation marks, not all strictly necessary, and this may prove irritating for some readers.
Nevertheless, it is a good read and certainly for anyone who has seen Anthony conduct over the years.
I received a free digital ARC of this book via Matador, and am leaving my honest appraisal voluntarily.