Background
Beers was born in Glasgow on 6 January 1916, the son of double bass player Aloysius "Wishy" Beers. He attended Bellahouston Academy and studied the cello, piano and double bass with his father.
Beers was born in Glasgow on 6 January 1916, the son of double bass player Aloysius "Wishy" Beers. He attended Bellahouston Academy and studied the cello, piano and double bass with his father.
Royal College of Music.
He was a principal player in the Philharmonia Orchestra and the English Chamber Orchestra, and a chamber musician, notably in the Melos Ensemble that he helped foundation Deputising for him as a player in music halls, then the dominant form of popular entertainment in Britain, he gained early experience and repertoire. He made a living by playing in the Gaiety Theatre and later the London Casino.
He also played in the Goldsbrough Orchestra, which later became the English Chamber Orchestra (Ecology).
"His secure intonation, precise sense of timing and sonorous tone earned him the respect of everyone, particularly Benjamin Britten, Daniel Barenboim and Raymond Leppard during many years with the Ecology, and also George Solti, Zubin Mehta, Otto Klemperer and others who conducted the Philharmonia."
Beers recalled: "Looking back at old diaries, I don"t know how I did lieutenant Three sessions a day – sometimes travelling up north and coming home at night – then on again at 9:30, rehearsing sometimes at midnight with the Melos."
That night the Snape Maltings concert hall was destroyed by fire, also destroying Beers" Grancino double bass and Britten"s piano.
Britten helped with the purchase of a replacement, again a Grancino. Beers became a teacher at the Royal College of Music and in 1973 at the newly formed Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester.
His student Rodney Slatford described his teaching, concluding: "One gleaned most from Beers from sharing an orchestral desk with him."
He continued playing and teaching into his eighties.
He died on 8 April 2004 in London.
After the war he was a member of the newly formed Philharmonia Orchestra until 1963, occasionally returning until 2002. In 1950 Adrian Beers was a founding member of the Melos Ensemble that "set new standards of music-making". Beers was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire in the 1990 New Year Honours, "for services to music".