Frederick Tomlinson (18 December 1927 – 17 July 2016) was a British singer, choral director and composer. He founded the Fred Tomlinson Singers, who became well-known in the late 1960s for their association with the cult television series Monty Python's Flying Circus.
Tomlinson trained to become a teacher and served in the Royal Air Force in Singapore before embarking on a career in music. He joined the George Mitchell Singers, who were at the centre of a long-running television variety show franchise from 1958, lasting over two decades. That secured him links with the entertainment industry. He also formed his own vocal quartet, the Northerners, before establishing the Fred Tomlinson Singers in the late 1960s.[7]
He composed original music under the name "Frederick Culpan" (his mother's maiden name) including The Chaucer Suite for chorus and orchestra.[5] Tomlinson also arranged music for his father's choir. He was an active member of Equity’s Concert & Session Singers Committee.[5]
Monty Python and other television work
The Fred Tomlinson Singers sang the music featured on Monty Python's Flying Circus.[5][7] Tomlinson also composed and wrote songs for Monty Python, including "The Lumberjack Song", which he co-wrote with Terry Jones and Michael Palin. He and his Fred Tomlinson Singers then performed "The Lumberjack Song" on the show in December 1969, as well as the song "Spam" in 1970 while dressed as Vikings.[1]
Tomlinson had a lifelong interest in the music of Peter Warlock and Bernard van Dieren.[8] He acted as the chairman of the Peter Warlock Society for 25 years, producing editions of Warlock scores, and wrote several books about the composer, including A Peter Warlock Handbook (1974, 1977) and Warlock and van Dieren, with a van Dieren Catalogue (1978).[9] His Centenary 'Curlew' Companion was arranged as a continuous suite of Warlock songs using the same instrumentation as The Curlew.
In 1971 Tomlinson put together a recording of drinking songs by Warlock, based on an anthology Warlock had compiled in 1929 using the name Rab Noolas (Saloon Bar written backwards). It was originally issued by Unicorn, and reissued in 2024 by Convivium.[10]
Personal life
He married his wife Pamela Mellor during the mid-1950s, having met her at Leeds. She sang as an alto with the Fred Tomlinson Singers. There were two daughters: Bridget (1957 – 6 October 1990) died in a car crash;[11] and Deborah, a sufferer from Rett syndrome, died in 2011. He died aged 88 on 17 July 2016 at his home in Walnut Way, Ruislip, after a long illness.[12][1]