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British composer Monty Norman is seen in a March 2001 photo. Photo: PA via AP

James Bond theme composer Monty Norman dies aged 94

  • The twangy, menacing piece of music has been used in all 25 films revolving around the suave British secret agent
  • John Barry, who was hired to arrange the theme, was widely assumed to be the composer, and Norman had to sue to assert his authorship
Music

Monty Norman, a British composer who wrote the theme tune for the James Bond films, has died. He was 94.

A statement posted on Norman’s official website on Monday said: “It is with sadness we share the news that Monty Norman died on 11th July 2022 after a short illness.”

Norman was hired by producer Albert “Cubby” Broccoli to compose a theme for the first James Bond film, Dr No, released in 1962.

He drew on a piece he had written for a proposed musical adaptation of V.S. Naipaul’s A House for Mr Biswas, shifting the key riff from sitar to electric guitar. The result – twangy, propulsive, menacing – has been used in all 25 Bond thrillers.

Producers hired composer John Barry to rearrange the theme, and Barry was widely assumed to have written it – to Norman’s chagrin.

Barry, who died in 2011, went on to compose scores for almost a dozen Bond films, including Goldfinger and You Only Live Twice.

Norman went to court to assert his authorship, suing The Sunday Times newspaper for libel over a 1997 article asserting the theme was composed by Barry.

He won in 2001 and was awarded £30,000 in damages.

Born Monty Noserovitch to Jewish parents in the East End of London in 1928, Norman got his first guitar when he was 16.

He performed with big bands and in a variety double act with comedian Benny Hill before writing songs for early British rockers Cliff Richard and Tommy Steele and composing for stage musicals including Make Me an Offer, Expresso Bongo, Songbook and Poppy.

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