John Evans-Pughe in Thessaloniki - 1 August, 1947
from Letters of the Evans-Pughe family:
FROM: John Evans-Pughe, 14073964 L/Cpl Evans Pughe, S.I.C. c/o A.P.O, British forces in Greece, Salonika.
DATE: Friday 1 August 1947
…To-night there is the usual merry noise here = 4 dance bands, 1 piano, 1 wireless, one accordion + singers on the beach, a party of blokes singing in a boat out in the bay, and innumerable other choruses cropping up from time to time, also, me scraping the violin until a few minutes ago….
John Evans-Pughe, Letters of the Evans-Pughe family. In Private papers of the Evans-Pughe family. https://led.kmi.open.ac.uk/entity/lexp/1442253295111 accessed: 18 November, 2024 (Contributed by Christine Evans-Pughe)
Listeners
Experience Information
Date/Time | 1 August, 1947 |
Medium | live |
Listening Environment | in the company of others, outdoors, in public |
Notes
John Evans-Pughe (1925 to 1996) was a chorister (with his younger brother Tom) at the choir of the College of St Nicholas, Chislehurst, under Sir Sydney Nicholson and later a music scholar at Kings School Canterbury, Kent. The St Nicholas choir was recorded for many BBC broadcasts and for Columbia Records. A Columbia recording in 1939 featuring John Evans-Pughe and Michael Lumb as treble soloists singing O Lovely Peace (Handel) and Brother James’ Air (arr. Jacob) was a best seller. John did National Service in Egypt and Greece, and then studied science at Trinity College, Dublin. He went on to became an electronics engineer for Marconi Space and Defence Systems, continuing with music in his spare time.