Carey Blyton
50 top tracks
Carey Blyton
50 top tracks
Albums

Doctor Who - Revenge of the Cybermen (Original Television Soundtrack)
Carey Blyton

Doctor Who - The 50th Anniversary Collection (Original Television Soundtrack)
Carey Blyton

Sherlock Holmes Meets Dr. Who
Carey Blyton

Doctor Who - Revenge of the Cybermen
Carey Blyton

The Return Of Bulgy Gogo
Carey Blyton

Doctor Who: The 50th Anniversary Collection
Carey Blyton

Sweeney Todd / Dracula!
Carey Blyton

The Folksong Arrangements
Carey Blyton

The Choral Music Of Carey Blyton
Carey Blyton

Doctor Who - 052 - Doctor Who and the Silurians (Soundtrack)
Carey Blyton

Doctor Who - The 50th Anniversary Collection (Disc 03)
Carey Blyton

British Light Music Premieres, Vol. 6
Carey Blyton
Biography
Carey Blyton (14 March 1932 – 13 July 2002) was a British composer and writer best known for his song Bananas In Pyjamas (1969), which later (1992) became an Australian children's television series, and for his work on Doctor Who....Read more on Last.fm
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Carey Blyton (14 March 1932 – 13 July 2002) was a British composer and writer best known for his song Bananas In Pyjamas (1969), which later (1992) became an Australian children's television series, and for his work on Doctor Who.
Blyton, a nephew of children's author Enid Blyton, showed a talent for science from an early age, and did not switch to music until he contracted polio and, as he was recovering, began taking piano lessons in 1948 at the age of sixteen. In the 1950s he began his training as a composer and won several certificates and awards.
Blyton is primarily known as a miniaturist, composing short orchestral scores. He wrote some well-regarded and often humorous pieces including Return of Bulgy Gogo (a tribute to Peter Warlock), Up the Faringdon Road, Mock Joplin and Saxe Blue. He also worked as a music editor, and in this capacity he assisted Benjamin Britten.
Blyton wrote incidental music for three stories in the BBC Doctor Who television series: Doctor Who and the Silurians (1970), Death to the Daleks (1974), and Revenge of the Cybermen (1975). He was noted for his use of primitive musical instruments, using Crumhorns to depict the Silurians in Doctor Who and the Silurians, and serpents and ophicleides in Revenge of the Cybermen.
Several CDs of his work were produced, notably Sherlock Holmes meets Dr Who, showcasing his work for an unmade Sherlock Holmes animated series, cues from all three of his Doctor Who stories, and other classics such as Saxe Blue. He died in 2002 from cancer and post-polio syndrome, aged 70.
<a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Carey+Blyton">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
