About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 32. Chapters: British classical cellists, British pop cellists, British rock cellists, English cellists, Scottish cellists, Roy Wood, Georgina Born, Anna Shuttleworth, Ross Pople, Steven Isserlis, Andrew Shulman, Leo Stern, Derek Simpson, Natalie Clein, Philip Sheppard, Mike Edwards, Terence Weil, James Barralet, Hugh McDowell, Peter Gregson, Martin McCarrick, Rohan de Saram, Guy Johnston, Leo Smith, Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, William Henry Squire, Audrey Riley, Paul Buckmaster, Clive Gillinson, John Kennedy, Beth Mburu-Bowie, Oliver Kraus, Lindsay L. Cooper, Caroline Dale, Oliver Kentish, Amaryllis Fleming, Jami Sieber, Melvyn Gale, Joseph Reinagle, Ben Davis, David Lale, Stefan Popov, Tony Hinnigan, Douglas Cummings, William Pleeth, Stephen Paxton, Raphael Wallfisch, Gerard Le Feuvre, William Paxton, Louise Hopkins, Colin Walker, Margaret Moncrieff, Charles Medlam, Amanda Truelove, William Whitehouse, Martin Lovett, Angela East, Adrian Shepherd, Kate Shortt, Hannah Roberts, Helen Liebmann, Christopher Bunting, Oliver Gledhill, Joan Dickson. Excerpt: Roy Adrian Wood (born 8 November 1946) is an English singer-songwriter and musician. He was particularly successful in the 1960s and 1970s as member and co-founder of the bands The Move, Electric Light Orchestra, and Wizzard. As a songwriter, he contributed a number of hits to the repertoire of these bands. Wood's first group in Birmingham in the early 1960s was The Falcons, which he left in 1963 to join Gerry Levene and the Avengers. He then moved to Mike Sheridan and the Nightriders (the band later became The Idle Race). During this period, Wood attended the Moseley College of Art, from which he was expelled in 1964. From this basis, and other Birmingham-based groups, was formed The Move, and they quickly entered the UK Singles Chart. Their single, "Night of Fear," climbed to #2 in...