Tony Britten
50 top tracks
Tony Britten
50 top tracks
Albums

UCL and UEL Anthems
Tony Britten

UEFA Champions League
Tony Britten

UEFA Champions League Anthem
Tony Britten

Champions League
Tony Britten

Uefa
Tony Britten

Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Tony Britten

Music
Tony Britten

UCL
Tony Britten

The Best Themes of 2015 Sporting Events
Tony Britten

Champions League Theme
Tony Britten

title
Tony Britten

Tony Britten
Tony Britten
Biography
Tony Britten is a British composer, best known for adapting the music and writing the text of the UEFA Champions League Anthem....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Tony Britten is a British composer, best known for adapting the music and writing the text of the UEFA Champions League Anthem.
Britten is a graduate of the Royal College of Music. He spent the first few years of his career in theatre as a musical director, including working for Cameron Mackintosh as music supervisor on many shows including Godspell, The Rocky Horror Show and Oliver!. After that he worked at the National Theatre as arranger/musical director. He then moved into film and television as a conductor on productions such as Robocop. He also worked for director Clive Donner.
In 1992, UEFA commissioned Britten to arrange an anthem for the UEFA Champions League which commenced in November 1992. Britten borrowed heavily from George Frideric Handel's Zadok the Priest (one of his Coronation Anthems), and the piece was performed by London's Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and sung by the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields.
In 1994, he composed the music for Mole's Christmas, 30 minute animated film and in 1999 he wrote and directed Bohème, a film based on the Puccini opera, which was broadcast by Five and Artsworld. In 2007 Britten adapted and directed a film version of Oliver Goldsmith’s comedy She Stoops to Conquer for Sky Arts.
He has also directed a number of films, including the documentary Benjamin Britten: Peace and Conflict (2013). <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Tony+Britten">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
