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William Barrington-Coupe

 

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William Barrington-Coupe



 
 
William H. Barrington-Coupe (also known as William H. B. Coupe) (born 1931) is a British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 record producer. He attained notoriety in 2007 when he confessed that a large number of piano CDs that he had sold on his Concert Artist/Fidelio Recordings
Concert Artist Recordings

Concert Artist/Fidelio Recordings is a United Kingdom classical music record label, situated in Royston, Hertfordshire, England, and owned and operated by William Barrington-Coupe....
 label were not in fact performed by his wife Joyce Hatto
Joyce Hatto

Joyce Hatto was a United Kingdom pianist and piano teacher. She became famous late in life, when unauthorized copies of commercial recordings made by other pianists were released under her name, earning her high praise from critics....
 but were copies, in some cases digitally manipulated, of commercially available recordings by other pianists.

he early 1950s Barrington-Coupe worked in London as a classical musicians' agent.






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William H. Barrington-Coupe (also known as William H. B. Coupe) (born 1931) is a British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 record producer. He attained notoriety in 2007 when he confessed that a large number of piano CDs that he had sold on his Concert Artist/Fidelio Recordings
Concert Artist Recordings

Concert Artist/Fidelio Recordings is a United Kingdom classical music record label, situated in Royston, Hertfordshire, England, and owned and operated by William Barrington-Coupe....
 label were not in fact performed by his wife Joyce Hatto
Joyce Hatto

Joyce Hatto was a United Kingdom pianist and piano teacher. She became famous late in life, when unauthorized copies of commercial recordings made by other pianists were released under her name, earning her high praise from critics....
 but were copies, in some cases digitally manipulated, of commercially available recordings by other pianists.

Biography

In the early 1950s Barrington-Coupe worked in London as a classical musicians' agent. A directory from 1953-1954 showed him with two exclusive artists on his books.

The Saga Films and Records Company, of which he was an employee, collapsed in 1960, with the Official Receiver
Official Receiver

An officer of the Insolvency Service, the Official Receiver is an officer of the court to which he is attached. The OR is therefore answerable to the courts for carrying out the courts' orders and for fulfilling his duties under law....
 declaring that Barrington-Coupe was chiefly responsible for the company's demise.

Following the Saga collapse in late 1960, he created the Lyrique record label with Marcel Rodd, who had a record-pressing factory, and began to release records by artists under different pseudonym
Pseudonym

A pseudonym, , is a fictitious alternative to a person's legal name. In some cases, pseudonyms are adopted because it is part of a cultural or organizational tradition, as in the case of Religious names used by members of some religious orders and "cadre names" used by Communist party leaders such as Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin....
s, a not uncommon practice of the era. "The repertoire was from the variety of master tapes now in Rodd's tape library," wrote Ted Perry, one of Barrington-Coupe's former colleagues in an unpublished autobiography
Autobiography

An autobiography is a biography written by its subject . The term was first used by the poet Robert Southey in 1809 in the English language Periodical publication Quarterly Review, but the form goes back to antiquity....
. "It was also, possibly, from some of Coupe's own tapes since he always seemed to have a lot of recorded material of unknown, not to say dubious, provenance."

Recordings of classical works issued on his Delta label were believed to have been copied from radio broadcasts from behind the Iron Curtain
Iron Curtain

The Iron Curtain was the symbolic, ideological, and physical boundary dividing Europe into two separate areas from the end of World War II in 1945 until the end of the Cold War in 1991....
, mixed to disguise the sources. Private Eye
Private eye

A private eye is a nickname for a private investigator. It may also refer to:*Private Eye, a fortnightly British satirical magazine-newspaper, edited by Ian Hislop...
 has claimed that on one recording of Tchaikovsky's 4th Symphony, he made the mistake of inserting a number of bars backwards. A recording issued featuring the Danzig Philharmonic was in stereo
STEREO

STEREO is a Sun observation mission which was launched on 26 October 2006 at 00:52 GMT. Two nearly identical spacecraft were launched into orbits that cause them to pull respectively further ahead of and fall gradually behind the earth....
, when it was known that that orchestra had ceased to exist a decade or more before stereo recording was common. He also made up artists' names: "Wilhelm Havagesse" was the falsely-named conductor of the "Zurich Municipal Orchestra" in a recording of Scheherazade
Scheherazade (Rimsky-Korsakov)

Scheherazade , opus number 35, is a symphonic suite composed by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov in 1888. Based on One Thousand and One Nights, this orchestral work combines two features common to Russian music and of Rimsky-Korsakov, in particular: dazzling, colorful orchestration and an interest in Orient, which figured greatly in the hist...
 released on Barrington-Coupe's Fidelio label
Concert Artist Recordings

Concert Artist/Fidelio Recordings is a United Kingdom classical music record label, situated in Royston, Hertfordshire, England, and owned and operated by William Barrington-Coupe....
 in 1962 (ATL 4006). Charles Haynes, who worked with Barrington-Coupe at Delta, recounted that "quite often they used to 'monkey around', hence conductors Havagesse and Homer Lott and the soprano Herda Wobbel", lamenting that the practice stopped when "the Trades Descriptions Act threatened the continuing existence of these fine artists: 'End of the Road for Musician Havagesse' proclaimed the Daily Telegraphs headline."

Barrington-Coupe set up a further label, on 25 February 1960, with Major Wilfred Alonzo Banks's financial backing, Triumph Records
Triumph Records (UK)

Triumph Records was a UK record label set up in January 1960 in music by Joe Meek and William Barrington-Coupe with the financial backing of Major Wilfred Alonzo Banks....
 this time with Joe Meek
Joe Meek

Joe Meek was a pioneering England record producer and songwriter acknowledged as one of the world's first and most imaginative independent producers....
, a record producer
Record producer

In the music industry, a record producer has many roles, among them controlling the recording sessions, coaching and guiding the musicians, organizing and scheduling production budget and resources, and supervising the recording, Audio mixing and audio mastering processes....
 who became best known for "Telstar
Telstar (song)

"Telstar" ? ? is a 1962 instrumental gramophone record performed by The Tornados. It was the first single by a United Kingdom band to reach number one on the U.S....
", the 1962 hit by The Tornados
The Tornados

The Tornados were an England instrumental group of the 1960s who acted as in-house backing group for many of record producer Joe Meek's productions....
. The pair later fell out and Meek left the company, which subsequently went into liquidation. Meek was followed by David Gooch who produced a number of extended-play and long-playing records on a new label, Dial Records. This association was terminated when Barrington-Coupe had obvious financial difficulties. Desperate to make ends meet, he began importing radios from Hong Kong
Hong Kong

Hong Kong , officially the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, is a territory located in Southern China in East Asia, bordering the province of Guangdong to the north and facing the South China Sea to the east, west and south....
, which he sold in London markets and by mail order, but became the subject of legal action when he failed to pay purchase tax.

On May 17 1966, after what was then the longest-running and most expensive trial at the Old Bailey
Old Bailey

The Central Criminal Court in England, commonly known as the Old Bailey, is a court building in central London, one of a number housing the Crown Court....
, costing the British taxpayer £150,000. Barrington-Coupe and four other defendants were found guilty of failing to pay £84,000 in purchase tax (over £1 million in 2007 currency). Barrington-Coupe was fined £3,600 and jailed for 12 months. His company, W.H. Barrington-Coupe Ltd, was fined £4,000 and finally wound up in 1971. Summing up, Judge Alan King-Hamilton said: "These were blatant and impertinent frauds, carried out in my opinion rather clumsily. But such was your conceit that you thought yourself smart enough to get away with it."

After he was released from jail, Barrington-Coupe was reunited with Hatto. While she began to earn a modest reputation for her recitals of Liszt
Liszt

Liszt may refer to:*Franz Liszt, Hungarian composer and pianist*Anna Liszt, mother of composer Franz Liszt*Adam Liszt, father of composer Franz Liszt...
 and Chopin, Barrington-Coupe maintained a lower profile. In the 1970s, the couple disappeared from the public eye, becoming virtual recluses in their detached modern home in Royston, Hertfordshire
Royston, Hertfordshire

Royston is a town and civil parish in the districts of england of North Hertfordshire, Hertfordshire, England. It is situated slightly west of the Greenwich Meridian, and at the northernmost apex of the county on the same latitude of towns such as Milton Keynes and Felixstowe....
.

It was not until 2002 that they were heard of again. During the previous 13 years they had apparently recorded another 103 CDs of Hatto's playing, which Barrington-Coupe began issuing on his Concert Artist label. In 2007, these CDs were found to be fraudulent copies of recordings of other artists issued by other labels. Barrington-Coupe initially denied any wrongdoing but subsequently admitted the fraud in a letter to Robert von Bahr, the head of the Swedish BIS record label that had originally issued some of the recordings plagiarised by Concert Artist.

External links

  • Daily Telegraph 10 November 2007