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For 2012:
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5197
Melody Mixture
1 Cab Rank (Dolf van der Linden)
THE SYMPHONIA ORCHESTRA Conducted by LUDO PHILIPP
Charles Brull/Harmonic CBL 409 1957
2 Mr. Lucky (theme from the TV series) (Henry Mancini)
FRANK CORDELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV 45-POP 755 1960
3 Caravan (Edward Kennedy Duke Ellington)
WAL-BERG AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Barclay BB 42 1960
4 Down Under (from the film "The Sundowners")
(Adapted and Arranged by Dimitri Tiomkin)
TOMMY REILLY, Harmonica with WALLY STOTT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Philips PB 1094 1960
5 Glorias Theme from "Butterfield
8" (Bronislau Kaper; Hal David)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
MGM 45-MGM 1110 1960
6 Bilbao-Song (from "Happy End") (Kurt Weill;
Bertolt Brecht)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
CBS 4-41978 1961
7 With Tongue In Cheek (Trevor Duncan, real name
Leonard Trebilco)
THE SYMPHONIA ORCHESTRA Conducted by CURT ANDERSEN
Charles Brull/Harmonic CBL 451 1960
8 Spring Collection (Peter Hope)
THE CRAWFORD LIGHT ORCHESTRA
Josef Weinberger JW 277 1961
9 Scurry For Strings (Lester B. Hart)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA (as The Harmonic
Orchestra Conducted by David Johnson on disc label)
Charles Brull/Harmonic CBL331 1952
10 Spinette (Murray Newman, arr. Bruce Campbell)
BRUCE CAMPBELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA (Coronet Orchestra
on disc label)
MGM E 3167 1955
11 The Cool Caballero (Bernie Wayne, real name Bernard
Weitzner)
BERNIE WAYNE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
ABC Paramount ABC 182 1957
12 Pleasure Island (Ron Goodwin)
RON GOODWIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Parlophone 45-R4787 1961
13 Alma Mia (Fred Hartley)
FRED HARTLEY AND HIS MUSIC
Chappell C 644 1959
14 I Aim At The Stars (theme from the film) (Laurie
Johnson)
LAURIE JOHNSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia 45-DB 4546 1960
15 Dear Old Pals (Angela Morley)
TELECAST ORCHESTRA Conducted by ANGELA MORLEY (as Walter
Stott)
Chappell C 718 1961
16 Leaps And Bounds (Cyril Watters)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA (as Paul Franklin
on disc label)
Paxton PR 725 1960
17 Tango Of The Flowers (Juan Rosa)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Brunswick LAT 8165 1957
18 Peacock In Piccadilly (Wilfred Burns, real name
Bernard Wilfred Harris)
LOUIS VOSS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Bosworth BC 1239 1950
19 Continental Highways (Harold Geller)
GROUP-FORTY ORCHESTRA Conducted by LAURIE JOHNSON
KPM Music KPM 050B 1960
20 Galop On Strings (Tom Wyler, real name Toni
Leutwiler)
THE HARMONIC STRINGS Conducted by TOM WYLER
Charles Brull/Harmonic CBL330 1952
21 Guaracha (No. 3 of Latin American Symphonette) (Morton
Gould)
SIDNEY TORCH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone R 3965 1947
22 Brandy Snaps (Peter Yorke)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA (as The Harmonic
Orchestra Conducted by David Johnson on disc label)
Charles Brull/Harmonic CBL 351 1954
23 Chicken Noodle (Peter Dennis, real name Dennis
Alfred Berry)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA (as Paul Franklin
on disc label)
Paxton PR 661 1956
24 Route Nationale (Roger Roger)
THE PARIS STUDIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by PHILIPPE PARES
Synchro FM 236 1959
25 On Stage (Billy Mack, real names Walter Collins;
William MacDonnell)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA (as Paul Franklin
on disc label)
Paxton PR 614 1954
Stereo: tracks 3 & 6; rest in mono
Unlike many of the CDs in this "Golden Age of Light
Music" series, this collection does not have a special
theme or concept. It is simply a varied mixture of melodies
featuring works by composers who are well-known to light
music aficionados, plus a good helping of pieces by giants
of the music world, such as Henry Mancini, Duke Ellington
and Ron Goodwin. Most of these numbers have been considered
for recent collections, but have been temporarily shelved
for various reasons usually because the CDs were
already full. But they dont deserve to be forgotten,
because they all possess their own special charms.
The Dutch maestro Dolf van der Linden conducts six tracks
in this collection, but not the opening number which is
his own composition. Cab Rank finds him in a typical
bright, inventive style that became his trademark: you can
never be sure at the outset how his works will develop,
and there are usually pleasant surprises in store when the
middle theme arrives. He took great care with the construction
of his pieces, and in view of his tremendous contribution
to light music in general it is not surprising that this
is the fourteenth time that one of his compositions has
been chosen for a Guild CD.
Dolf van der Linden (real name David Gysbert van der Linden,
1915-1999) was the leading figure on the light music scene
in the Netherlands from the 1940s until the 1980s. As well
as broadcasting frequently with his Metropole Orchestra,
he conducted numerous recordings for the background music
libraries of major music publishers. He also made transcription
recordings for Dutch radio and other companies. His commercial
recordings (especially for the American market) were often
labelled as Van Lynn or Daniel De Carlo.
His big presence on the light music scene is partly explained
by the action of the British Musicians Union at the
end of the 1940s, which banned the major London publishers
from employing British musicians to make new recordings
for their Mood Music Libraries. Instead of giving in to
the Unions demands, the publishers simply crossed
the English Channel into Europe, where they utilised the
services of the top broadcasting orchestras in various countries.
Dolf van der Linden, based in Hilversum, was engaged to
conduct hundreds of pieces (often under pseudonyms), particularly
for Paxton, Boosey & Hawkes and Charles Brull/Harmonic
as well as some others. These performances are of
a consistently high quality, and the examples on this CD
include works by top writers such as Cyril Watters, Peter
Yorke and Peter Dennis.
Although not as well-known as most of the other composers
on this CD, Henry Cyril Watters (1907-1984) was highly respected
by music publishers, with his work readily accepted for
its unfailing high standards. At times he was employed as
a staff arranger by Boosey & Hawkes and Chappell, and
he generously devoted some of his energies in running the
Light Music Society for the benefit of his fellow musicians.
Peter Yorke (1902-1966) is a regular contributor to this
series of CDs, as composer, arranger and conductor. After
playing piano in British Dance Bands of the 1920s and 1930s,
he graduated to arranging for Louis Levy before eventually
forming his own concert orchestra for recording and broadcasting.
Peter Dennis hides the true identity of Dennis
Alfred Berry (1921-1994), who also composed (sometimes in
collaboration with others) under names such as Frank Sterling,
Charles Kenbury and Michael Rodney. For part of the 1950s
he ran the Paxton library, but also contributed titles to
other publishers.
Henry Mancini (born Enrico Nicola Mancini, 1924-1994) hailed
from Cleveland, Ohio, and in 1952 he was fortunate in gaining
a job at Universal Pictures in Hollywood. During a six-year
contract he worked on around 100 films, one of his early
assignments being "The Glenn Miller Story" (1953).
By 1958 his talents were widely recognised within the music
business, and thereafter he was offered numerous commissions
for films, recordings and television. Mr Lucky first
reached US TV screens in October 1959, and ran for 34 episodes.
Henry
Mancini provided the smooth theme music, and the choice
for this CD is the version conducted by Frank Cordell (1918-1980),
a top British arranger/conductor who also contributed memorable
scores to films such as "The Captains Table"
(1959), "Flight From Ashiya" (1964), "Khartoum"
(1966), "Mosquito Squadron" (1969), "Ring
Of Bright Water" (1969), "Hell Boats" (1970),
"Cromwell" (1970) he was nominated for
an Oscar, "Trial By Combat" (1976) and "God
Told Me To" (1976).
When music-lovers discuss the Great American Songwriters
there is one name that occasionally gets missed: Edward
Kennedy Duke Ellington (1899-1974). People seem
to remember that he fronted a great band, playing what many
called Orchestral Jazz, yet the fact that he
composed over 1,000 works frequently doesnt register.
But his songs became an essential part of the 20th
Century music scene, and Caravan illustrates that
he was a genius, beyond doubt. Our version features the
French orchestra conducted by Wal-Berg (born Voldemar Rosenberg,
1910-1994) who at one time was closely associated with French
recordings by Marlene Dietrich.
The Canadian Tommy Reilly (1919-2000) was widely regarded
as the worlds leading classical harmonica player,
who seemed equally at home performing serious works (often
composed specially for him), alongside lighter works such
as Down Under. He is accompanied by the Wally Stott
Orchestra, from the time before Wally became Angela Morley
(1924-2009). Later we hear one of Wallys comedy numbers
Dear Old Pals, which features a prominent part for
the bassoon - the instrument which also played a big role
in Wallys earlier composition Mock Turtles
(on GLCD5101).
The 1960 film "Butterfield 8" starred Elizabeth
Taylor (1932-2011) as Gloria Wandrous, and it is hardly
surprising that veteran Hollywood composer Bronislau Kaper
(1902-1983) composed a suitably romantic theme for her.
The version of Gloria by London-born David Rose (1910-1990)
brings out all the glamour and anguish of the screenplay.
Another Guild favourite is Toronto-born Percy Faith (1908-1976)
who moved permanently to the USA in 1940 where he quickly
established himself through radio and recordings. From the
1950s onwards his fame spread internationally, due to the
great success of his numerous long playing albums. Unlike
most of his contemporaries, Faith arranged all his own material,
and he had a particular love of music with a tropical feel,
which certainly comes through in Bilbao-Song.
Regular collectors of this Guild series of CDs will already
be familiar with the music of Trevor Duncan (real name Leonard
Charles Trebilco, 1924-2005). Almost 30 of his original
compositions have now been reissued, and among the best-known
are his first success High Heels (on Guild GLCD 5124),
Grand Vista (GLCD 5124) and Panoramic Splendour
(GLCD5111). He had the ability to write in many different
styles, which no doubt endeared him to the publishers of
mood music who needed to have music readily available to
cover any kind of situation. With Tongue In Cheek
probably expresses Trevors own feelings about some
of the music he wrote.
The English composer Peter Hope (b. 1930) makes his Guild
debut with Spring Collection, one of many attractive
pieces he has contributed to publishers recorded music
libraries over the years. Although his name may be unfamiliar
to many, the same cannot be said of his music. During the
1950s, when light music formed a significant part of BBC
Radios schedules, his compositions and arrangements
were heard on an almost daily basis. His title music for
BBC Television News was used until 1980. More recently new
recordings have been made of his original works, as a new
generation of musicians and conductors becomes aware of
his major contribution to the genre of light music.
Bruce Campbell was one of several writers who owed much
to his association with Robert Farnon. He was a fellow Canadian,
who actually came to Britain some years before Farnon, and
played trombone with various top British bands during the
1930s. Campbell assisted Farnon on his post-war BBC radio
shows, and eventually became a frequent contributor to various
mood music libraries. Spinette comes from a rare
LP that Campbell recorded in Britain for the American market.
The 1950s seems to have been a very busy period for the
American Bernie Wayne (born Bernard Weitzner 1919-1993),
composer of The Cool Caballero. In the USA he is
best known for his "Miss America" Beauty Pageant
theme, and the hit song Blue Velvet. His string of
instrumental successes included Vanessa (GLCD5189),
Port-au-Prince (GLCD5130) and Veradero (GLCD5111).
Ronald (Ron) Alfred Goodwin (1925-2003) was a brilliant
British composer, arranger and conductor, who rose to prominence
in Britain during the 1950s through a series of recordings
that revealed a fresh and vibrant style of light music that
greatly appealed to the public. His ability to arrange and
compose soon resulted in commissions to work in films, and
popular movies like "633 Squadron" (1964), "Those
Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines" (1965) and
Alfred Hitchcocks "Frenzy" (1972) introduced
him to a worldwide audience. Pleasure Island joins
ten of his original works already featured in this series.
Fred Hartley (1905-1980) was a familiar name in British
broadcasting for many years, having made his first appearance
on the BBC as a solo pianist as early as 1925. He was then
employed as an accompanist, and founded his famous Novelty
Quintet in 1931. In 1946 he was appointed the BBCs
Head of Light Music. Five of his own compositions have already
been featured on Guild CDs, and towards the end of the 1950s
he contributed several of his own pieces to the Chappell
Recorded Music Library, from which the choice this time
is Alma Mia. This number will probably strike a familiar
chord among people in Britain, because it is the kind of
charming novelty which he featured so often in his radio
programmes.
Laurie Johnson (b.1927) has been a leading figure on the
British entertainment scene for over 50 years. A gifted
arranger and composer, Laurie has contributed to films,
musical theatre, radio, television and records, with his
music used in many well-known productions such as "The
Avengers" and "The Professionals". I Aim
At The Stars comes from the time when record companies
were still willing to make orchestral singles by well-known
conductors.
Bernard Wilfred Harris, better known as Wilfred Burns
(1917-1990) was a prolific composer of mood music who has
over 200 titles to his credit. After service during the
Second World War he worked at Elstree studios before eventually
becoming a freelance film composer and musical director.
His first of over twenty films was around 1949, with his
final score in the 1970s. His best-known was probably the
large screen version of the popular television series "Dads
Army" in 1971. Peacock In Piccadilly is one
of his many pieces accepted by various London publishers,
and it is his seventh contribution to a Guild CD.
Violinist Harold (Harry) Geller (1916-2005) was born in
Sydney, Australia, but for most of his career he was based
in London. He was a frequent broadcaster with his orchestra
in BBC programmes such as "Morning Music" and
"Music While You Work", but his commercial recordings
were comparatively rare. He composed Continental Highways
for the KPM Record Music Library. Towards the end of the
1970s work in Britain had dried up, so he moved to the USA
where he continued to compose and teach playing the violin
and the technique of conducting.
As Tom Wyler, the Swiss violinist and composer
Toni Leutwiler (1923-2009) became known outside his homeland,
partly due to the success of his charming composition Lovely
Day (on GLCD5183). His music was in demand from many
broadcasting stations, and he was reported to have created
over 2,000 arrangements. Galop On Strings is another
fine example of his mastery of string writing.
Sidney Torch, MBE (born Sidney Torchinsky 1908-1990) is
well-known in Britain for his numerous Parlophone recordings,
as well as his long tenure as conductor of the BBC Concert
Orchestra in the "Friday Night Is Music Night"
BBC radio programme. Guaracha is one of the famous
Latin American Symphonettes by Morton Gould
(1913-1996), rightly regarded as one of the leading American
composers of the last century.
Roger Roger (1911-1995) was a leading figure on the French
music scene for many years, and his fine compositions and
arrangements also won him many admirers internationally. Route
Nationale is his sixteenth composition to be made available
to a wider audience on a Guild CD.
The final track features On Stage, a piece co-composed
by Walter R. Collins, who is remembered for his days as
the distinguished Musical Director of the De La Warr Pavilion
in Bexhill-on-Sea, and also for conducting the London Promenade
Orchestra for the Paxton Recorded Music Library during the
1940s. It provides a typical show business ending
to a varied collection of light music that hopefully includes
something for everyone.
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5198
Light Music While You Work Volume 4
1 Cavalcade Of Martial Songs (arr. Horatio Nicholls) :
The Kings Horses (Noel Gay); The Toy-Town Artillery
(Everett Lynton); The Tin-Can Fusiliers (Horatio Nicholls);
When The Guards Are On Parade (Horatio Nicholls);
Theres Something About A Soldier (Noel Gay); When
A Soldiers On Parade (Horatio Nicholls); When The
Band Goes Marching By (Horatio Nicholls); The Toy Drum
Major (Horatio Nicholls).
HARRY FRYER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 70 1943
2 Roses From The South (Johann Strauss, Jr.)
RONNIE MUNRO AND HIS WALTZ ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 358 1946
3 Lonesome And Sorry (Benny Davis; Con Conrad)
REGINALD PURSGLOVE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 123 1944
4 Carmen Rhythmic Paraphrase (Georges Bizet,
arr. Arthur Lange)
HARRY FRYER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 131 1944
5 Dainty Miss (Bernard Barnes)
HAROLD COLLINS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 81 1943
6 Love Dance Intermezzo (from "Madame Sherry")
(Karl Hoschna)
DAVID JAVA AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 175 1944
7 Tick Of The Clock (James Perry)
HARRY DAVIDSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 349 1945
8 Voices Of Spring (Johann Strauss, Jr.)
RONNIE MUNRO AND HIS WALTZ ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 341 1945
9 Light And Shade (Wynford Reynolds as Hugh Raeburn)
HAROLD COLLINS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 189 1944
10 At The Dance (from "Summer Days" Suite)
(Eric Coates)
RICHARD CREAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 164 1944
11 In A Country Lane (from "Summer Days" Suite)
(Eric Coates)
RICHARD CREAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 164 1944
12 Knuckledust (George Blackmore)
HAROLD COLLINS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 190 1944
13 Dreaming (Archibald Joyce)
HAROLD COLLINS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 80 1943
14 La Cinquantaine (Gabriel Marie)
RICHARD CREAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 286 1945
15 Faust - Rhythmic Paraphrase (Charles Gounod, arr.
Arthur Lange)
HARRY FRYER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 64 1943
16 Tesoro Mio (Ernesto Becucci)
RONNIE MUNRO AND HIS WALTZ ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 400 1946
17 Old Faithful (Abe Holzmann)
HARRY DAVIDSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 287 1945
18 Vision Of Salome (Archibald Joyce)
HARRY DAVIDSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 398 1945
19 Heykens Serenade No. 2 (Jonny Heykens)
DAVID JAVA AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 176 1944
20 Les Sirenes (Emile Waldteufel)
RONNIE MUNRO AND HIS SCOTTISH VARIETY ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 219 1944
21 Waldmere (Frank Hoyt Losey)
LONDON COLISEUM ORCHESTRA Conducted by REGINALD BURSTON
Decca Music While You Work MW 374 1946
22 Danube Waves (Iosif Ivanovici)
RONNIE MUNRO AND HIS SCOTTISH VARIETY ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 252 1945
23 Amina - Intermezzo (Paul Lincke)
HARRY DAVIDSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 259 1945
24 Artists Life (Johann Strauss, Jr.)
RONNIE MUNRO AND HIS WALTZ ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 393 1946
25 Yankee Grit (Abe Holzmann)
HARRY DAVIDSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca Music While You Work MW 287 1945
All tracks mono
This is the fourth and final delve into the riches contained
in the Decca Music While You Work series of
78rpm records, which first appeared in 1942. The last ones
were released in January 1947, concluding a special wartime
project that had seen over 400 discs produced specifically
for relaying over public address systems in factories
the intention being to boost the morale of the workers.
The story behind these records, which were prompted by
the BBC radio series of the same name, has been recalled
in the notes accompanying the previous three CDs in this
series on GLCD5128, 5137 and 5186. The emphasis in
these Guild CDs has been on the Light Music contained on
these records, but these were just part of a wide variety
of popular music that also included recordings by dance
bands, jazz and various instrumental ensembles.
The series was quickly deleted, and throughout the existence
of the label Decca publicity had been sketchy, to say the
least. The record buying public was often unaware of what
was available, so consequently some of the titles must be
quite rare. Some of the later 78s were recorded using Deccas
revolutionary ffrr (full frequency range recording)
process which remained a closely guarded secret for some
while since it had originally been developed to assist the
war effort, and the improved sound quality of several of
the later tracks on this CD is evidence of this.
The orchestras chosen for these recordings would have been
familiar to the public at the time. Foremost among these
is Harry Fryer (1896-1946) and his Orchestra. Like so many
musicians of his era, he found work playing for silent films
and gradually progressed to conducting at London theatres
and leading venues in and around the capital. He was a regular
broadcaster, both before the war and later frequently on
radio in "Music While You Work". The London publishers
Boosey & Hawkes contracted Fryer in 1941 to conduct
for their Recorded Music Library. By the end of the war
he had become a household name and there seems little doubt
that, had it not been for his death in 1946 aged only 50,
his talents would have been much in demand during the post-war
years.
Ronald (Ronnie) George Munro (1897-1989) started his career
playing piano in various clubs and bands in London before
eventually working regularly with EMI particularly
the HMV house orchestra The New Mayfair Orchestra.
He contributed numerous arrangements for top recording bands
such as Jack Hylton, Lew Stone, Percival Mackey, Ambrose
and Henry Hall. In 1940 he was appointed conductor of the
BBCs newly-formed Scottish Variety Orchestra, and
Les Sirenes is typical of the kind of music for which
they became known. After a further spell with a dance band
after the war, he formed his light orchestra for radio in
the fifties, concluding his BBC career with a sextet which
he led between 1962 and 1967. When radio broadcasts dried
up, he emigrated to South Africa, where he reformed his
orchestra, subsequently becoming Head of Light Music for
the South African Broadcasting Corporation.
Reginald Pursglove (1902-1982) was an accomplished violinist
who worked with many of the British dance bands in the 1920s
and 1930s. During four decades he was heard regularly on
the radio fronting various ensembles such as small groups
(his contribution to this CD is a good example) right up
to light orchestras which gradually assumed greater prominence
as dance bands were heard less frequently on the air. His
Albany Players (later renamed the Albany Strings) constantly
provided top quality light music, but eventually the BBCs
decision to rely less upon live music meant that the orchestra
did not survive the 1960s a fate that was to befall
so many of Pursgloves contemporaries.
Harold Collins (c.1900 - c.1971) arold Collins, David Java
at one time was MD at the London Coliseum, although he
also held positions at various provincial theatres. Originally
a pianist, it seems he gave his first broadcast from Plymouth
in 1936 where he was resident conductor at the Palace Theatre,
and was hired by the BBC for "Music While You Work"
soon after the programme was launched. In total he appeared
in 227 programmes with his Orchestra, and he also made a
good number of records for Deccas MWYW series, usually
with a smaller ensemble in a style that suited the light
repertoire that was his speciality his four numbers
in this collection are ideal examples. In later years he
was heard in BBC shows "Morning Music" and "Melody
On The Move", and through his work with Norman Wisdom
he appeared on ITVs top Sunday evening shows from
the London Palladium and the Prince of Wales Theatre.
It seems that David Java recorded only four titles for
Deccas MWYW series, and his career is poorly documented.
In 1938 he played violin alongside Sidney Sax on several
Victor Silvester recordings for Parlophone, and again on
some Columbia recordings in 1941 when Oscar Grasso, Alfredo
Campoli, Reginald Kilbey and Eugene Pini were among the
distinguished violin players whom Silvester employed. After
the war David Java supplied orchestras for Lyons Corner
House restaurant and presumably other similar venues.
Harry Davidson (1892-1967) enjoyed two successful, and
different, careers before and following the Second World
War. After various engagements around London and the north-east
of England spanning the years 1914 to 1929, he finally secured
the highly prestigious appointment as organist at the newly
built Commodore Theatre at Hammersmith in London. The Commodore
had a fine 18-piece orchestra conducted by Joseph Muscant
(1899-1983) and by the early 1930s it had acquired a loyal
national following for its regular broadcasts. After five
years Muscant left to take over the Troxy Broadcasting Orchestra
and, in July 1934, Harry Davidson stepped into his shoes.
(Recordings by both the Commodore and Troxy orchestras may
be found on previous Guild Light Music CDs). Although the
Commodore orchestra was disbanded during the war, Davidson
managed to keep many of his superb musicians together and
soon he was broadcasting regularly, notching up no less
than 109 editions of "Music While You Work" between
1940 and 1946. In November 1943 his BBC radio series "Those
Were The Days" appeared for the first time, providing
listeners at home with a regular helping of melodious old-time
dance music. It became a permanent fixture in the schedules
with Harry in charge until ill-health forced him to retire
in November 1965. It is also appropriate to mention that
he was an extremely prolific recording artist: during the
1950s 78s by his orchestra often occupied almost four pages
in EMI Columbias annual catalogues.
Richard Crean (1879-1955) became a familiar name in the
1930s through his association with the London Palladium
Orchestra, which was probably the best known British theatre
orchestra at the time. In recording terms it was also the
most prolific, with almost 150 recordings made between 1927
and the early 1940s, many of them conducted by Richard Crean
who was in charge from 1930 to 1937. Before joining the
London Palladium Orchestra he had travelled widely as Chorus
Master with the Thomas Quinlan Opera Company, before accepting
a similar position at Covent Garden with Adrian Boult. Then
a spell at Ilford Hippodrome in variety led to his appointment
in 1930 at the Palladium, which lasted until he formed his
own orchestra which he conducted, on and off, for the rest
of his life. For a short while in 1941-42 he conducted the
newly-formed BBC Midland Light Orchestra, and like Harry
Fryer he was also a contributor to the Boosey & Hawkes
Recorded Music Library.
Reginald Bradshaw Burston (1897-1968) was an experienced
musical director who was regularly employed in various London
theatres ranging from DOyly Carte Opera to prestigious
Noel Coward productions and lavish post-war American musicals.
In the mid-1930s he conducted the BBC Midland Orchestra,
then in 1936 he took over the baton of the BBC Revue Orchestra
for several years. Like Harold Collins, Burston also served
as MD at the London Coliseum (also known as the Coliseum
Theatre). It was built in St. Martins Lane by the
famous theatre impresario and architect, Oswald Stoll, and
it opened for its first performance on 24 December 1904.
Since then it has undergone changes of name, various refurbishments
and different kinds of productions, ranging from variety
and operetta to ballet and opera it is now the home
of English National Opera.
Among the composers whose work is featured in this collection,
there are several who deserve special mention. The opening
track is, in essence, a tribute to Horatio Nicholls, both
as composer and arranger. But Nicholls was a
pseudonym, hiding the true identity of Leicester-born Lawrence
Wright (1888-1964). He was a successful publisher, as well
as songwriter (over 600 titles) his most famous being
Among My Souvenirs which he wrote in 1927 with Edgar
Leslie. The previous year he had launched the leading British
musical magazine Melody Maker. In 1962 he received an Ivor
Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to British Popular
Music.
There are a number of discs in Deccas MWYW series
which contain what might be called pure light
music. The two numbers from the suite "Summer Days"
by Eric Coates (1886-1957) tend to confirm that the wartime
public was receptive to orchestral music probably
as a result of hearing so much of it regularly on the radio.
Of course Coates was something of a musical celebrity by
the end of the 1930s, with many of his catchy melodies being
used as signature tunes. The BBC chose his Calling All
Workers as the theme for "Music While You
Work", and this was included in full on the first CD
in this series (GLCD5128) played by the Tivoli Concert Hall
Orchestra. Excerpts from Coates own recording were
used on the second volume (GLCD5137). Surprisingly Decca
did not record Calling All Workers as a full track,
although it did open and close a selection by The Victory
Band.
The medleys of music from "Carmen" and "Faust"
are the work of the American bandleader Arthur Lange (1889-1956).
He seems to have been a frequent visitor to the recording
studios, especially during the 1920s, during which period
of his career he made numerous stock orchestrations
which were used by many bands at the time. He composed music
for over 120 films and, although nominated four times, he
did not win any Oscars.
Another American composer (who was a contemporary of Sousa)
was Abraham Holzmann (1874-1939) whose greatest march success
was Blaze Away, composed in 1901. In this collection
he is represented with two pieces Old Faithful
and Yankee Grit - both given fine performances
by Harry Davidsons Orchestra. Abe earned his
living mainly from Tin Pan Alley where he wrote and arranged
popular songs for publishers such as Leo Feist. Today he
is fondly remembered by lovers of ragtime, but he also penned
many marches, waltzes and other pieces of light music.
The man widely credited for devising "Music While
You Work" is represented with his composition Light
And Shade, which he wrote under the pseudonym Hugh
Raeburn. Considering his musical background, it is
likely that Wynford Hubert Reynolds (1899-1958) had little
problem in persuading the BBC that he had the necessary
knowledge to launch "Music While You Work". He
was already on the staff of the BBC as a producer, although
he was also an experienced performer. He was born in Ebbw
Vale, Wales, and his early musical training at the Royal
Academy of Music concentrated on the violin, viola and composition.
Like many of his fellow musicians, he provided music for
silent films, and eventually joined the Queens Hall
Orchestra under its illustrious conductor (and founder of
Londons Promenade Concerts) Sir Henry Wood.
Reynolds became involved with the early days of radio in
the 1920s, and it wasnt long before he formed his
own orchestra for concerts (including engagements at seaside
venues) and broadcasts. In 1941 the BBC gave him the important-sounding
title Music While You Work Organiser but, due
to the strict rules imposed by the Corporation on its own
employees, this prevented him from appearing with his orchestra
in the programmes. He left this position in 1944, and went
back to performing on radio, not only in "Music While
You Work" but also, later, in popular shows such as
"Bright and Early" and "Morning Music".
Happily the recordings he made for Deccas MWYW series
are evidence of the high quality of his music, although
his influence extended far beyond those 78s bearing his
own orchestras name: he produced the majority of around
420 discs that were issued before the series ended with
the final releases in January 1947.
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5199
Three Great American Light Orchestras
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
All arrangements by Percy Faith
1 Somewhere ("West Side Story") (Stephen Sondheim;
Leonard Bernstein)
Columbia GS7 (Columbia Record Club 5th Anniversary
Album) 1960
2 Petite (Mon Petite Monde a Moi) (David E. Coleman;
Rudi Revil)
Columbia 4-40390 1954
3 The Last Dance (Percy Faith)
Columbia 4-40826 1956
4 My Shawl (Stanley Adams; Xavier Cugat)
Columbia 4-39322 1950
5 La Mer (Beyond The Sea) (Charles Trenet) (The Percy
Faith Strings)
Columbia CS 8124 1959
6 Mon Oncle (Theme from the film) (Franck Barcellini)
Columbia CS 8214 1960
7 Italian Street Song (from "Naughty Marietta")
(Victor Herbert)
Columbia C2S 801 1958
8 Go-Go-Po-Go (Percy Faith)
Columbia CS 8360 1961
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
All arrangements by David Rose
9 California Melodies (David Rose)
MGM C 788 1959
10 Ive Got The World On A String (from "Cotton
Club Parade") (Harold Arlen; Ted Koehler)
MGM C 754 1954
11 The Happy Bow (David Rose)
MGM SE 3895 1961
12 Lonesome On Main Street (David Rose)
MGM E 3067 1953
13 The Mask Waltz (David Rose) featuring RAY TURNER,
piano
MGM E 3067 1953
14 Flavia (David Rose)
MGM C 788 1959
15 Ponderosa (from the TV series "Bonanza")
(David Rose)
MGM SE 3960 1961
16 Its A Most Unusual Day (From the film "A
Date With Judy") (Jimmy McHugh; Harold Adamson)
MGM SE 3895 1961
PAUL WESTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
All arrangements by Paul Weston
17 Whispers In The Dark (Leo Robin; Frederick Hollander)
Columbia CL 572 1954
18 My Darling, My Darling (from "Wheres Charley?")
(Frank Loesser)
Capitol ST 1563 1961
19 Day By Day (Paul Weston; Sammy Cahn; Axel Stordahl)
Columbia CL 574 1954
20 Soon (Ira Gershwin; George Gershwin)
Columbia CL 574 1954
21 There Will Never Be Another You (from the film "Iceland")
(Harry Warren; Mack Gordon) featuring PAUL WESTON, piano
Capitol ST 1223 1959
22 When April Comes Again (Paul Weston; Doris Schaefer)
Capitol ST 1192 1959
23 Folks Who Live On The Hill (from "High, Wide
and Handsome") (Jerome Kern)
Columbia CS 8050 1958
24 Who (from the show "Sunny") (Jerome Kern)
Columbia CS 8049 1958
BONUS TRACK
25 Paul Weston discussing his Jerome Kern recordings in
1958 for a special promotional feature by Columbia Records.
Stereo: tracks 1, 5-8, 11, 15, 16, 18, 21-24; rest in mono.
PERCY FAITH
Percy Faith was born in Toronto, Canada, on 7 April 1908,
the oldest of eight children. As a child he learned the
violin and piano, and originally he expected that he would
pursue his music career as a concert pianist. But he injured
his hands in a fire, which forced him to turn instead to
composing, arranging and conducting.
During the 1930s he was regularly heard in live music broadcasts
on Canadian radio, and his programme "Music By Faith"
was carried by the Mutual network in the USA, prompting
offers of work south of the border. He eventually succumbed
in 1940 and moved to Chicago, leaving Robert Farnon (previously
his lead trumpeter) to conduct his Canadian orchestra. He
became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1945.
Initially Faith concentrated on broadcasting, although
he did make some commercial recordings for the Majestic,
Decca and RCA labels, several of which have featured on
other Guild CDs. However, many other recordings, mainly
derived from his radio programmes, were issued by Voice
Of America on transcription discs, but these were not available
to the general public. Some of them may now be heard on
Guild GLCD5174 and GLCD5181. Things were to change dramatically
when he signed a Columbia (CBS) contract in 1950 to provide
backings for the labels top singers which also allowed
him to begin a regular programme of recording singles and
albums of his own.
He soon discovered that his singles sold well and the new
long playing records needed the kind of popular instrumental
sounds that had formed the basis of his broadcasts for so
many years. Unlike most of his contemporaries, Faith arranged
all his own material, and his exciting and vibrant scores
made his work stand out among the rest. He accompanied many
of Columbias contract singers, and even contributed
the odd popular song, such as My Heart Cries For You
for Guy Mitchell. One of his best-selling singles was Theme
from "A Summer Place" (on Guild GLCD5165)
which is still frequently heard today. It won the Grammy
Award for Record Of The Year in 1961. A second
Grammy followed in 1969 for his album Love Theme from
"Romeo and Juliet".
Percy Faiths albums usually concentrated on the rich
source of popular music of the time, which was available
in abundance in musicals on Broadway and Hollywood films.
But he also had a penchant for the exotic sounds of Latin-American
music, and some of his best-selling collections featured
his distinctive arrangements of the music of Mexico and
Brazil. Like his fellow orchestra leaders, he had to acknowledge
the changing tastes in popular music during the 1960s, and
for a while he managed to attract a younger generation of
listeners with albums devoted to lush orchestral arrangements
of current song successes.
Although his recording career was always paramount, his
composing and arranging abilities naturally attracted offers
of work elsewhere. He composed the popular theme music for
the television series "The Virginian", screened
by NBC in the US and also shown in many countries around
the world. In Hollywood he received an Academy Award nomination
for his arrangements of the songs in the Doris Day film
"Love Me Or Leave Me".
But today it is his numerous albums that have created a
resurgence of interest in his work, thanks to their reissue
on CD. Faith was always busy, whether working in the recording
studios, radio, television or films. He died at Encino,
California, on 9 February 1976, aged 67.
DAVID ROSE
David Rose tends to be remembered today for two great instrumentals
Holiday For Strings (his own extended version
is on Guild GLCD5189) and The Stripper (1962). But
he achieved far more than that during his long and illustrious
career. He was born in London, England on 15 June 1910,
and the family moved to the USA when he was just four-years-old.
After leaving the Chicago College of Music at the age of
16, he joined Ted Fio Rito's dance band, and three years
later became a pianist/arranger/conductor for NBC Radio.
He moved to Hollywood, and in 1938 formed his own orchestra
for the Mutual Broadcasting System, and featured on the
programme "California Melodies". His own theme
for this series is the first item in his segment of this
collection.
Rose began working in movies in 1941 and is credited with
scoring 36 films. In 1943 he had a big hit with his own
composition Holiday For Strings which firmly launched
him as a light music composer in the eyes of the public.
Other catchy novelties soon followed, such as Dance Of
The Spanish Onion (on GLCD5101) and Manhattan Square
Dance (GLCD5102). During military service in World War
II Rose was conductor for the Army-Air Force morale-boosting
stage musical "Winged Victory", which was filmed
in 1944. By the late '40s he was a regular on Red Skelton's
radio show, moving with him into television. He later wrote
scores and themes for over 20 television series and won
Emmy awards for his 14 year stint on "Bonanza",
10 years with "Little House On The Prairie" and
his work on three much-acclaimed Fred Astaire specials.
After chart success with Calypso Melody in 1957,
Rose had a worldwide smash hit in 1962 with another of his
own tunes, a humorous and satirical piece called The
Stripper. He had actually composed this four years previously
for a television show called "Burlesque", and
it gathered dust on his record companys shelves until
they needed a B side for Ebb Tide. A
Los Angeles disc jockey picked it up, and the rest
as they say is musical history. It spawned a complete
album - "The Stripper and Other Fun Songs for the Family",
one of the 50 or so LPs he recorded, including the best-selling
"Like Young" and "Like Blue", made with
André Previn. He won numerous Emmy and Grammy awards
and six gold records.
Apart from his record, film and television work, Rose was
guest conductor with several symphony orchestras. His Concerto
For Flute And Orchestra was first played by the Los
Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and later by the Boston Pops.
Towards the end of his life his enduring passion was miniature
steam trains, which ran on 900 feet of track around his
house. On several occasions he travelled back to his native
land where he met fellow English train enthusiasts. Such
visits usually prompted invitations to conduct, and in October
1971 he was one of four distinguished conductors with the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, who introduced their own music
to a packed Royal Albert Hall audience as part of Filmharmonic
71.
His private life attracted media attention in 1941 when
he became the first husband of Judy Garland. The marriage
didnt survive the pressures of Hollywood fame, but
David eventually found the right partner in his third wife,
Betty, who survived him. He died on 23 August 1990, at his
home in Burbank, California, aged 80.
PAUL WESTON
Paul Weston is the only one of the famous trio of conductors
on this CD actually to have been born in the USA. It all
began way back on 12 March 1912, when Paul Wetstein (later
to become Weston) was born in Springfield, Massachusetts.
As a very young man he needed to find something to occupy
him following an horrific train accident which had almost
killed him, and he decided to study arranging whilst undergoing
a long convalescence. (Interestingly there are similarities
with Percy Faiths early life). It proved to be the
turning point in his career, especially as he had previously
failed an audition to join a dance band as a clarinet player.
While still doing some graduate work at Columbia University,
in 1934 he sold some arrangements to the Joe Haymes Orchestra.
When Tommy Dorsey took over the Haymes orchestra in 1935,
he hired Paul Weston as his chief arranger. This association
lasted five years, during which time the Dorsey band produced
some of its most memorable recordings, including the legendary
Song of India, Stardust and Night and Day.
While with Dorsey, Weston met his future wife, Jo Stafford,
who was then a member of the Pied Pipers vocal group: they
eventually married in 1952.
After leaving Dorsey he worked with Bob Crosby and the
young Dinah Shore. At Crosbys invitation he went to
Hollywood in 1940, and the following year he did his first
film arranging for the Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire movie
"Holiday Inn". Other films quickly followed, and
while at Paramount he met songwriter Johnny Mercer, who
in 1942 was in the process of forming Capitol Records in
partnership with record-store owner Glenn Wallichs and composer
Buddy de Sylva.
So in 1943 Weston joined the staff at Capitol, where he
recorded with their growing roster of singers. At the same
time he was working extensively in shows on radio and later
television, often with Jo Stafford. Thereafter he was picked
by many top stars as their musical director.
In 1950 Weston had left Capitol for Columbia Records, where
he built upon his previous successes with mood music 78s,
by producing a series of LPs that soon accumulated healthy
sales. Despite this, in 1958 he was sacked by A&R Manager
Mitch Miller and returned to Capitol where some of his earlier
big sellers were re-recorded in stereo. As a freelance he
also backed Ella Fitzgerald on her Irving Berlin Songbook
for Verve.
Weston was no mean composer, and he collaborated on several
big hits, among them Day by Day, I Should Care, Shrimp
Boats, Autumn in Rome, Gandy Dancers Ball and
When April Comes Again. His standing among his peers
can be judged by the fact that he was a founder member and
first president of the National Academy of Recording Arts
and Sciences (NARAS), the organisation which began awarding
Grammys in 1958.
Unlike some of his contemporaries, he liked to use the
whole orchestra, not just a few sections. "All I did
was add strings to a dance band" he once explained.
"The reason it still swung was because I used good
jazz musicians." These included soloists of the highest
calibre, like Ziggy Elman, Eddie Miller, Paul Smith and
Barney Kessel. He sometimes resisted the temptation to amplify
the strings, by having the rest of the band play softly
during important string passages, resulting in a chamber-music
quality that went right to the heart of his kind of music.
Aside from his orchestral work, Paul became the Jonathan
of Jonathan and Darlene Edwards a spoof act he formed
with his wife Jo Stafford in which she was a poor amateur
hopeful with an equally useless accompanist. Record buyers
loved it, and it even won them a Grammy.
The final bonus track on this CD features Paul
discussing the project to record 24 pieces by Jerome Kern,
preceded by two of his arrangements from that album.
In 1971 the Trustees of the National Academy of Recording
Arts and Sciences gave its Trustees Award to Paul Weston.
He died on 20 September 1996, at Santa Monica, California,
aged 84.
Potted biographies such as these can only attempt to give
basic information about the musicians who have given so
much pleasure to the world. It is hoped that those who appreciate
this kind of music will be encouraged to learn more about
them, through the many sources of information available
from reference books and the internet. Fortunately their
rich legacy of recorded music remains widely available for
the enjoyment of future generations.
David Ades
The Guild "GOLDEN AGE OF LIGHT MUSIC" series
celebrated its 100th release in November 2012!
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5200
A Glorious Century Of Light Music
1 Look For The Silver Lining (from "Sunny") (Jerome
Kern, arr. Brian Fahey)
CYRIL ORNADEL AND THE STARLIGHT SYMPHONY
MGM SE 3906 1961
2 April In Paris (from "Walk A Little Faster")
(Vernon Duke)
PAUL MAURIAT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Bel Air 7008 1961
3 Puppet Serenade (Ron Goodwin)
RON GOODWIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone PCS 3019 1961
4 The Partys Over (from "Bells Are Ringing")
(Jule Styne; Betty Comden; Adolph Green)
MANTOVANI AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca 45-F11281 1960
5 Loves Sweet Song (from "Czardas Princess")
(Emmerich Kalman)
HANS CARSTE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Polydor SLPHM 237501 1960
6 Milord (Marguerite Monnot; Bunny Lewis)
FRANCK POURCEL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV CSD 1303 1960
7 Lady In Waiting (Ballet Music from the musical "Goldilocks")
(Leroy Anderson)
LEROY ANDERSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Brunswick STA 3030 1960
8 Beach Parade (Roger Roger)
ROGER ROGER AND HIS CHAMPS ELYSEES ORCHESTRA
Chappell C 687 1960
9 Climb Every Mountain (from "The Sound Of Music")
(Richard Rodgers)
BILLY VAUGHN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Dot DOT 25276 1960
10 The Little Train Of The Caipira (Heitor Villa-Lobos)
MORTON GOULD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
RC A LSC 1994 1960
11 All The Way (featured in the film "The Joker Is
Wild") (Jimmy Van Heusen; Sammy Cahn)
FRANK CHACKSFIELD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca SKL 4061 1959
12 Stringopation (David Rose)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
MGM SE 3748 1959
13 How Deep Is The Ocean (Irving Berlin)
HANS GEORG ARLT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Ariola 71231 1959
14 Its DLovely (from "Red, Hot and
Blue") (Cole Porter)
STANLEY BLACK AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca LK 4163 1956
15 Pipsqueak (Dolf van der Linden)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Paxton PR 610 1954
16 Candlelight Waltz (Jack Mason)
BOSTON POPS ORCHESTRA Conducted by ARTHUR FIEDLER
RCA 49-4219 1954
17 Butantan (Guy Wood)
THE MELACHRINO ORCHESTRA Conducted by GEORGE MELACHRINO
HMV B 10657 1954
18 The Starlings (Charles Williams)
CHARLES WILLIAMS AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Columbia DB 3215 1953
19 Sewing Circle (Ray Martin)
RAY MARTIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Coilumbia DB 2896 1951
20 Tea For Two (from "No, No, Nanette") (Vincent
Youmans)
ANDRE KOSTELANETZ AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia ML4382 1951
21 Samba Sud (Sidney Torch)
SIDNEY TORCH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone R 3049 1947
22 String Time (Robert Farnon)
QUEENS HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
Chappell C 304 1947
23 Stars In Your Eyes (Mar) (Gabriel Ruiz, arr. Percy
Faith)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca 23445 1945
24 Dreams On The Ocean (Joseph Gungl)
MAREK WEBER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV C 3123 1939
25 The Jester At The Wedding March (Eric Coates)
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by ERIC COATES
Columbia DB 1505 1934
BONUS TRACK
26 Toymakers Dream (Ernie Golden)
JACK HYLTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV B 5656 1929
Stereo: tracks 1-7, 9-13; rest in mono
This compilation represents a double celebration. Firstly
it praises the talented conductors and composers who created
a wealth of Light Music during the 20th Century;
and secondly it recognises that this is the 100th
Guild Light Music CD dedicated to the preservation of all
that is best from "The Golden Age of Light Music".
Choosing the music to include in this landmark collection
has not been easy, because there are so many conductors
and composers who made valuable contributions to the world
of Light Music during the last century. After much soul-searching
it was decided to concentrate on the conductors who became
household names at the time, through their regular recordings
and broadcasts. Inevitably some who fully deserve to be
featured on this very special occasion have had to be omitted,
simply because they could not all be squeezed onto this
small silver disc. Regular collectors will know that over
2,500 compositions have already appeared in this series,
covering a wide variety of orchestral and brass and military
band performances, so it is hoped that your own particular
favourites have not been ignored for the part they have
played in "The Golden Age of Light Music".
Light music admirers may, quite rightly, ask why the best
known recordings by each of the conductors have not been
selected. The simple answer is that they are most likely
to have appeared on one of the previous ninety-nine CDs
in this series. In fairness to the many regular collectors,
tracks are not duplicated, but the enjoyable choice of music
that has been carefully programmed here illustrates the
outstanding quality of the substantial body of work achieved
by each of these talented musicians.
The honour of providing the opening track goes to Cyril
Ornadel, but equal praise is due to Brian Fahey for creating
such an exciting arrangement of a familiar melody that is
usually heard in a far more sedate setting. A good tune
will lend itself to different interpretations: it used to
be said that whether a song was truly great depended upon
its acceptance for improvisation by jazz musicians. In the
case of Light Music, popular songs often receive distinguished
orchestrations that must have delighted the composers. Two
previous Guild CDs (GLCD5188 & 5193) have already emphasised
the importance of the arranger something which is
evident on every track in this collection. Unfortunately
on this occasion there is only room in the notes for brief
pen portraits of each of the conductors featured.
In the 1950s Cyril Ornadel (1924-2011) was well-known in
Britain (mainly through his television work) but his recording
career owed much to the USA, where MGM commissioned numerous
albums featuring his Starlight Symphony which
were recorded at EMIs famous Abbey Road studios in
London.
The French conductor Paul Julien André Mauriat (1925-2006)
was classically trained, which is sometimes evident in his
work, although his early interest in jazz and popular music
was paramount during his long career. He became internationally
famous in 1968 through his recording of Love Is Blue.
Ronald (Ron) Alfred Goodwin (1925-2003) was a brilliant
British composer, arranger and conductor, who rose to prominence
in Britain during the 1950s through a series of recordings
that revealed a fresh and vibrant style of light music that
greatly appealed to the public. His ability to arrange and
compose soon resulted in commissions to work in films, many
of which became box-office hits around the world.
Annunzio Paolo Mantovani (1905-1980) was the conductor
of one of the most famous light orchestras in the world
from the 1950s onwards. Born in Venice, his family came
to England when he was aged four and he was something of
a prodigy on the violin by the time he reached sixteen.
But he leaned more towards popular music, and fronted many
different kinds of ensembles before long-playing records
(especially when stereo arrived) eventually brought him
worldwide acclaim.
The German conductor Hans Friedrich August Carste (1909-1971)
enjoyed a long recording career, before and after World
War 2. He became one of the musical directors at RIAS in
Berlin in the late 1940s, and eventually formed his own
concert orchestra: he also composed for films and the stage.
Franck Pourcel (1913-2000) is recognised as one of the
big names in French popular music. During his long career
he recorded over 2,000 songs, and achieved world-wide success
with I Will Follow Him which he co-composed with
Paul Mauriat.
Leroy Anderson (1908-1975) is probably the best-loved
American light music composer of his generation. For many
years he was the chief arranger for the Boston Pops,
and he was so prolific that some of his numbers have tended
to become overlooked. His music for the musical "Goldilocks"
surely deserves to be better known.
The third French conductor to be celebrated in this special
collection is Roger Roger (1911-1995), who had the ability
to compose the kind of catchy instrumental pieces that were
much in demand from recorded music libraries around 50 years
ago.
Billy Vaughn (1919-1991) was very successful in producing
big-selling orchestral albums in the USA, partly through
his position as musical director of Dot Records. His foreign
tours with his band earned him many friends, especially
in the Far East.
Morton Gould (1913-1996) became one of the most highly
respected American composers and conductors. He generally
also arranged the works he conducted in the concert hall
and on records, and from 1986 to 1994 he held the important
position of President of the American Society of Composers,
Authors and Publishers (ASCAP).
Francis (Frank) Charles Chacksfield (1914-1995) conducted
one of the finest light orchestras in the world, and during
his long recording career with Decca alone, it is estimated
that his albums sold more than 20 million copies. He was
the first British orchestra to achieve a No. 1 with a non-vocal
disc in the US charts.
London-born David Rose (1910-1990) became one of the truly
great light orchestra leaders in the USA, and his compositions
such as Holiday For Strings (his own extended arrangement
is on Guild GLCD 5189) and The Stripper sold millions.
German violinist Hans-Georg Arlt (1927-2011) began his
distinguished radio career in 1946, and when the RIAS Dance
Orchestra was formed in 1948 he led the string section for
a while. In the following years he became a familiar name
on German radio and television with his own String Orchestra.
The London pianist and bandleader Stanley Black (born Solomon
Schwartz 1913-2002) was successful in many areas of music
during his long career which began in his teens. From playing
piano in Harry Roys dance band he became keen on Latin-American
music, and later recorded many fine light orchestral albums,
which made him popular around the world.
Dolf van der Linden (real name David Gysbert van der Linden,
1915-1999) was the leading figure on the light music scene
in the Netherlands from the 1940s until the 1980s. As well
as broadcasting frequently with his Metropole Orchestra,
he made numerous recordings for the background music libraries
of major music publishers, often featuring his own compositions.
He also made transcription recordings for Dutch radio and
other companies. His commercial recordings (especially for
the American market) were often labelled as Van Lynn
or Daniel De Carlo.
One of the most popular light orchestras in the USA for
many years was the Boston Pops, under its legendary
conductor Arthur Fiedler (1894-1979). It is appropriate
that he should actually have been born in Boston where he
became the eighteenth conductor of the Pops
in 1930, and remained at the helm until a heart attack following
a performance on 5 May 1979 which hastened his death two
months later at the age of 84.
George Miltiades Melachrino (1909-1965) was one of the
big names in British light music from the 1940s to the 1960s.
Born in London, he became a professional musician, competent
on clarinet, alto and tenor saxophone, violin and viola,
and he worked with many British dance bands in the 1930s.
After war service he built an orchestra which became one
of the finest in the world. When long playing records arrived,
Melachrinos sold in vast quantities, especially in
the USA.
Londoner Charles Williams (born Isaac Cozerbreit,
1893-1978) began his career accompanying silent films, then
played violin under the batons of Beecham and Elgar. Right
from the start of the talkies, he provided scores
for numerous British films, and his Dream Of Olwen (on
GLCD5192) is still remembered long after the film in which
it appeared "While I Live". In 1960 he
topped the American charts with his theme for the film "The
Apartment" (GLCD5180), although in reality the producers
had resurrected one of his earlier works Jealous Lover.
Raymond (Ray) Stuart Martin (born Raymond Wolfgang Kohn
in Vienna, 1918-1988) fled from the Nazis and settled in
England before the outbreak of World War 2 where he became
known as Ray Martin. He was one of the leading
names in British popular music during the 1950s, due to
his work on radio, television, films and especially the
recording studios.
Although he was born in Russia, Andre Kostelanetz (1901-1980)
was one of the biggest pioneers in American light orchestral
music during the middle years of the 20th Century.
His broadcasts and recordings were enjoyed by millions,
and it was his ambition to encourage everyone to appreciate
good quality orchestral music.
Canadian-born Robert Farnon (1917-2005) is widely regarded
as one of the greatest light music composers and arrangers
of his generation. His melodies such as Portrait Of A
Flirt (GLCD5120) and Jumping Bean (GLCD5162)
are familiar to millions around the world.
Sidney Torch, MBE (born in London, Sidney Torchinsky 1908-1990)
is well-known in Britain for his numerous Parlophone recordings,
as well as his long tenure as conductor of the BBC Concert
Orchestra in the "Friday Night Is Music Night"
BBC radio programme.
Toronto-born Percy Faith (1908-1976) moved permanently
from Canada to the USA in 1940 where he quickly established
himself through radio and recordings. From the 1950s onwards
his fame spread internationally, due to the great success
of his numerous long playing albums. Unlike most of his
contemporaries, Faith arranged all his own material, and
he had a particular love of Latin American music.
The 1940s witnessed the arrival of a new generation of
light music composers and conductors, whose inventive ideas
would be developed to near perfection during the following
two decades. Until the end of the 1930s, many light orchestras
and small ensembles were still performing the kind of music
that had been popular in the previous century, with the
waltz forming a significant part of their repertoire. This
was certainly the case in central Europe, where the likes
of Barnabas Von Geczy, Dajos Bela, Otto Dobrindt and their
peers recorded vast amounts of light music, but their audiences
expected and were supplied with waltz after
waltz. Foremost among these was Marek Weber (1888-1964).
Born in the Ukraine, he developed his career mainly in Germany,
then moved to London to escape the Nazis, before living
briefly in Switzerland then emigrating in 1937 to the USA.
This tribute to the 20th Century would not be
complete without saluting the English composer and conductor
widely known as the uncrowned King of Light Music.
Eric Coates (1886-1957) was a successful composer of ballads
in the early years of the last century, before devoting
all his energies to light music. He was particularly adept
at writing catchy melodies that appealed as BBC signature
tunes and then making definitive recordings of them, helping
to establish his high profile with the music-loving public
which continues to this day through new recordings of his
works.
There is sufficient time available on this CD to allow
the inclusion of a bonus track, which acknowledges
the popularity among many collectors of recordings from
the 1920s and 1930s that have been featured in some of our
previous compilations. The British dance band fronted by
Jack Hylton (1892-1965) was one of the longest running,
and arguably most popular, due to its many recordings and
broadcasts, frequent appearances in Variety theatres and
its foreign tours. Among its wide-ranging repertoire it
sometimes featured works that can probably best be described
as orchestral novelties: two examples can be found on earlier
Guild CDs - Wedding Of The Rose (GLCD5106) and Dancing
Tambourine (GLCD5163). As well as being instantly appealing,
thanks to their inspired arrangements they were often quite
fun which is partly the intention of our final track.
Its hard to believe that this fine recording is well
over 80 years old and it is a tribute to the skills of the
recording engineers of the 1920s. There seems little doubt
that Hyltons knack of giving his audience what it
liked reflected the fact that Light Music was an important
part of the popular music scene during much of the 20th
Century.
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5195
Great British Composers Volume 1
"London Suite"" (London Everyday) (Eric
Coates)
1 Covent Garden
2 Westminster
3 Knightsbridge
ERIC JOHNSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Westminster WPS 103 1961
4 Prelude (from "Moods" Suite) (Haydn Wood)
QUEENS HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CHARLES WILLIAMS
Chappell C 116 1942
5 Dance Of An Ostracised Imp (Frederic Curzon)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by FREDERIC CURZON
Boosey & Hawkes O 2044 1946
6 Ballet For Children (from the film "Things To
Come") (Arthur Bliss)
LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIR ARTHUR BLISS
Decca SDD 255 1959
"Blithe Spirit" music from the film
(Richard Addinsell)
7 Prelude
8 Waltz
LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by MUIR MATHIESON
Columbia DX 1186 1946
9 Bank Holiday (Appy Ampstead) (Albert William
Ketèlbey)
NEW SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by STANFORD ROBINSON
Decca LK 4080 1954
"Nell Gwynn" (Edward German)
10 Country Dance
11 Pastoral Dance
QUEENS HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CHARLES WILLIAMS
Chappell C 145 & 146 1942
12 Cavalcade Of Youth (Jack Beaver)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
(The Queens Hall Light Orchestra Conducted
by David King on disc label)
Chappell C 397 1950
"The Shoe" Ballet (John Ansell)
13 The Shoe
14 The Sandal
15 The Brogue
QUEENS HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CHARLES WILLIAMS
Chappell C 166 & 167 1942
16 Caribbean Caprice (Len Stevens)
SIDNEY TORCH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone R 3171 1949
17 The Unwanted (modern ballet impression): The Boy
(Trevor Duncan, real name Leonard Charles Trebilco)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CEDRIC DUMONT
Boosey & Hawkes O 2333 1958
18 White Cliffs (Clive Richardson)
CONTINENTAL THEATRE ORCHESTRA Conducted by HEINZ BUCHHOLD
Bosworth BCV 1330 1961
"Holidays Abroad" (Vivian Ellis)
19 Reunion In Vienna
20 Costa Brava
21 Leaning Tower Of Pisa
22 Paris Taxi
23 Swiss Air
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by MONIA LITER (as Paul
Hamilton)
Boosey & Hawkes OT 2370. O 2371, O 2372 1960
24 The White Knight (Charles Williams)
QUEENS HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CHARLES WILLIAMS
Chappell C 705 1961
Stereo: tracks 1-3 & 6; rest in mono
At the outset it is important to emphasise that the idea
behind this compilation is not to offer a definitive selection
of the very best British composers of Light Music. Such
an enterprise could fill at least ten CDs, and then still
leave many deserving composers unrepresented. The intention
is simply to provide examples of the work of just some who
are considered by their admirers to possess the special
talents that are particularly suited to the challenge of
having their works performed by a concert orchestra.
Some pieces are longer than the usual styles to be found
on most Guild Light Music CDs; but there are also examples
of shorter numbers to provide contrasts and emphasise the
wide variety of music that is generally recognised as Light
Music or Concert Music. Collectors who
already have the very first volume of this series
"An Introduction" GLCD5101 may recall that
the accompanying notes tried to explain where the boundaries
of Light Music might possibly lie. Perhaps the truth is
that no two music lovers will ever reach a precise agreement
on this sometimes thorny subject. Does it really matter?
Surely the enjoyment of the music is the paramount importance,
and it is hoped that the undoubted skill of all the composers
on this disc will dispel any lingering doubts that Light
Music occupies a valuable and important niche in the whole
music scene.
The one man who carried the torch for light music during
the first half of the last century was Eric Coates
(1886-1957), who became widely known as the Uncrowned
King of Light Music. Originally a successful composer
of ballads, eventually he devoted all his energies to light
music and was particularly adept at writing catchy melodies
that appealed as BBC signature tunes, the most famous being
Knightsbridge from "London Suite" (used
as the opening and closing music for "In Town Tonight").
This legendary 78 has been reissued on numerous occasions,
and collectors wishing to acquire it have many choices available
to them. Therefore this CD offers what are believed to be
the first stereo performances of one of Coates best
known works, which received favourable critical reviews.
Since the name Eric Johnson first appeared
towards the end of the 1950s, record buyers have wondered
who this obviously accomplished conductor actually was.
There were suspicions that this was a pseudonym (possibly
for contractual reasons) and recent researches reported
on the internet point to the likelihood that Johnson
could have been Dr Kurt List (1913-1970). List was born
in Vienna and studied music under Alban Berg and Anton Webern.
The Johnson recordings appeared on the Westminster
Records label; this was founded in 1949 by the owner of
New Yorks Westminster Record shop. Dr Kurt List is
mentioned as being a music consultant to the label in 1951,
but by the mid-1950s (when Westminster was linked with the
UK Nixa label) there are references to him being Vice President
and Music Director. The London Philharmonic Orchestra made
some anonymous classical recordings for Westminster at Walthamstow
Town Hall in August 1956, and there is the temptation to
wonder if the Eric Coates recordings may have a similar
provenance.
If Eric Coates was the Uncrowned King, then
surely Haydn Wood (1882-1959) must have been the Crown
Prince of Light Music. His career was similar in so
many ways, and when it came to ballads Wood was more successful
Roses of Picardy being the prime example.
This native Yorkshireman created a wealth of delightful
melodies, often as part of suites, and Guild has already
dedicated an entire CD to his music "Joyousness"
(GLCD5121). His contribution this time is the Prelude
from his "Moods Suite".
London-born Frederic Curzon (1899-1973) was a charming,
unassuming man who devoted his early career to working in
the theatre, and like so many of his contemporaries he gradually
became involved in providing music for silent films. As
well as being a fine pianist and a conductor, he also played
the organ, and his first big success as a composer was his
"Robin Hood Suite" in 1937. This encouraged him
to devote more of his time to writing and broadcasting,
and several of his works have become light music standards,
notably March Of The Bowmen (from "Robin Hood
Suite" on GLCD5106), and The Boulevardier (GLCD5177).
Dance Of An Ostracised Imp was another popular number,
possibly due to its whimsical title which certainly suited
the music. Frederic Curzon was eventually appointed Head
of Light Music at London publishers Boosey and Hawkes, and
for a while was also President of the Light Music Society.
When Arthur Bliss (later to be Sir Arthur Edward Drummond
Bliss, 1891-1975) composed the music for the film of H.G.
Wells "Things To Come" it proved to be the
most important score provided up to that time for a British
film. It also influenced film music internationally, with
many composers embracing more symphonic aspects in their
work. As stereo arrived towards the end of the 1950s Bliss
was commissioned to record his Concert Suite of music from
the film with the London Symphony Orchestra, and on this
occasion the March (on Guild GLCD5178) was finally
conducted by the composer. The opening scenes of the film
are accompanied by the Ballet For Children, with
the images of children at Christmas time playing with toy
weapons of war. The music conveys the implied menace, which
horrendously comes true.
Oxford-born Richard Addinsell (1904-1977) is one of the
most famous British film composers of the last century,
his Warsaw Concerto from the film "Dangerous
Moonlight" (1942) being the work which spawned countless
similar works in British films of the post-war era
broadcaster Steve Race named them the Denham Concertos,
after the film studio where many were made. Incredibly he
has around 50 films to his name, but much of the credit
is due to several brilliant orchestrators who turned his
melody lines into the atmospheric scores that so entranced
cinema audiences. "Blithe Spirit" was based
on a Noel Coward play, first staged in the West End in 1941,
and the films score owes its charm to the talents
of Leonard Isaacs (1909-1997), a pianist, conductor and
arranger from Manchester who studied composition with Gordon
Jacob, and conducting with Malcolm Sargent from 1925-29
at the Royal College of Music in London. Among several administrative
positions he held at the BBC from 1936-63 was Head of Music
for the Third programme (1950-54) and a similar position
for the Home Service (1954-63). He moved to Canada in 1963,
and became a Canadian citizen in 1973.
Albert William Ketèlbey (1875-1959), born in the
Lozells area of Birmingham, was a highly successful composer,
who earned the equivalent of millions of pounds during the
peak of his popularity. Pieces such as In A Monastery
Garden (GLCD5182), The Phantom Melody, In A Persian
Market (GLCD5120) and Bells Across The Meadow (GLCD5108)
brought him international fame, no doubt assisted by
his enthusiastic participation in the rapidly growing business
of producing gramophone records. In 1924 he composed his
"Cockney Suite Cameos of London Life",
and the choice for this CD is the fifth and final movement,
Bank Holiday, depicting crowds of Londoners enjoying
a holiday funfair on Hampstead Heath.
Edward German (1862-1936) was born at Whitchurch in Shropshire
and became Sir Edward in the 1928 New Years
Honours. He entered the Royal Academy of Music as an organ
student, subsequently studying the violin and eventually
composition. It was at the suggestion of Sir Arthur Sullivan
that he turned his attention to comic opera. After Sullivan's
death he was given the task of completing Sullivan's unfinished
score of The Emerald Isle produced in 1901. Its success
led to the composition of Merrie England (1902),
A Princess Of Kensington (1903), Tom Jones (1907)
and Fallen Fairies (1909). He also composed more
symphonic works including Welsh Rhapsody, Norwich Symphony
and Theme And Six Diversions. In 1900 German composed
the music for "Nell Gwynn" - a stage play
originally known as "English Nell".
Among the great composers such as Coates, Wood, Bliss and
German in this collection are several others whose names
will mean little to most music lovers. Yet their melodies
have become part of the story of light music in Britain,
and they fully deserve to be included on this CD. Jack Beaver
(1900-1963) was born in Clapham, London, and in the 1930s
and 1940s he was part of Louis Levys team
of composers, providing scores for countless feature films
and documentaries, including Alfred
Hitchcock's first huge international hit "The
Thirty-Nine Steps" (for which Beaver
received no credit). He was hired by Warner Bros. to run
the music department at their British studio at Teddington
in the early 1940s and was also much in demand for scoring
theatrical productions. He frequently undertook a punishing
workload, including numerous pieces for London production
music libraries, which eventually contributed towards his
early death. His ability to create music to cover almost
any mood was second to none, and his Cavalcade Of Youth
was just one in a series of notable works. This is his 14th
composition on a Guild Light Music CD.
John Ansell (1874-1948) was at one time assistant conductor
of the BBC Symphony Orchestra, and he was also frequently
employed in London theatres. As a composer he may be familiar
to music lovers for his overture Plymouth Hoe (which
he conducts on Guild GLCD 5106) and Windjammer Overture
(an edited version is on GLCD5163). But sadly a lot
of his quite considerable catalogue of music is now neglected,
including several suites once so popular among concertgoers.
One of these was "The Shoe", from which
we feature three of the five moments.
Len Stevens (d. 1989) (his full name was Herbert
Leonard Stevens) was like the aforementioned Jack
Beaver - a prolific composer, contributing mood music to
several different libraries, with a style that his admirers
quickly grew to recognise. In common with so many of the
talented musicians employed in the business, he could turn
his hand to any kind of music that was needed, and he was
also involved in the musical theatre. Caribbean Caprice
is typical of the bright and breezy numbers that were always
being heard in cinema newsreels of the 1950s, and its appeal
prompted commercial recordings by Roberto Inglez (1919-1974)
and Sidney Torch (1908-1990), whose version appears in this
collection. This is the composers 15th
appearance on a Guild CD.
Trevor Duncan (real name Leonard CharlesTrebilco, 1924-2005)
was working as a BBC sound engineer when one of his first
compositions, High Heels (on Guild GLCD 5124) made
the light music world sit up and take notice. 28 of his
works have already appeared on Guild Light Music CDs, and
he was the featured composer in "Hall Of Fame Volume
2" (GLCD 5124). Towards the end of his life he confessed
that he was disappointed that he had never been commissioned
to write a complete ballet score. His contribution to this
CD The Boy may be an example of what
the music world has missed. In contrast to his many lighter
numbers and marches, he has created a haunting theme that
conveys the tortured mind of someone who is Unwanted.
Clive Richardson was part of Four Hands in Harmony
(playing piano duets with Tony Lowry), but that was just
a small interlude in a long and successful career. He was
an early contributor of scores to British films, especially
some of the Will Hay comedies, although he wasnt credited
on-screen. London Fantasia (on GLCD5120) was a big
success in the 1940s, when mini-piano concertos were all
the rage. Other Richardson compositions to succeed were
Melody On The Move (GLCD5102), Running Off The
Rails (GLCD5156) and Holiday Spirit (GLCD5120),
that exuberant theme for BBC Childrens Television
Newsreel. White Cliffs is one of several pieces he
wrote with a nautical theme.
Vivian Ellis (1903-1996) was only 24 when he had his first
big success in Londons West End with his show Mr.
Cinders, and he devoted the major part of his illustrious
career to the musical stage. However he also wrote several
pieces of light music which have become classics
in their own right, the most famous being Coronation
Scot (on GLCD5120 and 5181) which was initially well-known
in Britain through its use as one of the signature tunes
for BBC Radios "Paul Temple" series in the
1940s. Another familiar piece was Alpine Pastures (GLCD5169)
used by the BBC to introduce "My Word". Like some
of his contemporaries, Vivian Ellis possessed the precious
skill of being able to conjure up a strong melody, although
he preferred to leave it to others to orchestrate his creations.
It is known that Cecil Milner (1905-1989) was responsible
for the famous train sounds in Coronation Scot, and
the arranger of Elliss "Holidays Abroad"
Suite was Monia Liter (1906-1988) - at the time the
Manager of the Recorded Music Department at Boosey &
Hawkes.
Volumes could be written about Charles Williams (born Isaac
Cozerbreit 1893-1978) who began his career accompanying
silent films, then played violin under the batons of Beecham
and Elgar. Right from the start of the talkies
he provided scores for numerous British movies, and his
Dream Of Olwen (GLCD5192) is still remembered
long after the film in which it appeared "While
I Live". By far the greatest volume of his composing
skills was employed in mood music, providing hundreds of
works for several libraries, and 40 have already been included
on Guild CDs. His stature as a major composer and conductor
of Britains Light Music Scene deservedly allows him
the honour of closing this compilation of superior works
with The White Knight.
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5196
Melodies For The Starlight Hours
1 When Day Is Done (Robert Katscher, arr. Laurie Johnson)
AMBROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA Conducted by LAURIE JOHNSON
MGM 897 1956
2 Ive Told Evry Little Star (from "Music
In The Air") (Jerome Kern; Oscar Hammerstein II,
arr. Conrad Salinger)
THE CONRAD SALINGER ORCHESTRA Conducted by BUDDY BREGMAN
Verve MG VS-6012 1958
3 I Could Have Danced All Night (from "My Fair
Lady") (Alan Jay Lerner; Frederick Loewe, arr.
Percy Faith)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia CL 695 1956
4 Sweet Surrender Waltz (Hubert Giraud)
ANDRE KOSTELANETZ AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia CL 704 1955
5 Manhattan In Satin (from "Impressions of New
York") (Willis Schaefer)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CEDRIC DUMONT
Boosey & Hawkes O 2294 1957
6 Orchids In The Moonlight (Vincent Youmans, arr. Robert
Farnon)
ROBERT FARNON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca LF 1052 1951
7 Moonlight Becomes You (from "The Road To Morocco")
(Johnny Burke; James Van Heusen)
GLENN OSSER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Kapp KL 1022 1955
8 In Paris, In Love (Steve Race)
STEVE RACE, PIANO, AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone 45-R 4730 1961
9 Thinking Of You (Harry Ruby; Bert Kalmar)
JOHN CLEGG AND HIS ORCHESTRA
RCA LPM 1732 1958
10 How Beautiful Is Night (Robert Farnon)
LESLIE JONES and his ORCHESTRA OF LONDON
Pye-Nixa NSPL 83008 1959
11 Melody For Lovers (Cecil Milner)
GEORGES DERVEAUX AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Charles Brull/Harmonic CBL 345 1953
12 Speak Low (from "One Touch Of Venus") (Kurt
Weill, arr. Morton Gould)
MORTON GOULD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
RCA Victor LSC-2552 1961
13 Mind If I Make Love To You (Cole Porter)
PETE KING AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Warner Bros W 1294 1959
14 A Tender Mood (Angela Morley)
TELECAST ORCHESTRA Conducted by ANGELA MORLEY (as Walter
Stott)
Chappell C 717 1961
15 Moon Over Miami (Edgar Leslie; Joe Burke)
GUY LUYPAERTS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca DL 8271 1956
16 Midnight Tango (Anthony Toby Hiller; Irving Hiller;
Daniel Newman)
REG TILSLEY AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Melodisc 1303 1954
17 Cocktails By Candlelight (Peter Yorke)
TELECAST ORCHESTRA Conducted by PETER YORKE
Chappell C 716 1961
18 Take My Lips (Meravigliose Labbra) (Teo Usuelli)
LAURIE JOHNSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia 45-DB 4546 1960
19 Stranger In Town (Malcolm Neville Lockyer, arr. Bruce
Campbell)
BRUCE CAMPBELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA (Coronet Orchestra
on disc label)
MGM E 3167 1955
20 Lonely Room (Adolph Deutsch)
FERRANTE AND TEICHER WITH THEIR ORCHESTRA
London 45-HLT 9164 1960
21 Amami Si Vuoi (Love Me If You Wish) (Vittorio Mascheroni)
GEORGE MELACHRINO Conducting the Orchestra of the 6th
San Remo Festival
HMV SCT 1519 1957
22 During One Night (Theme from the film) (Bill McGuffie;
James Dyrenforth)
BILL McGUFFIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA featuring HARRY PITCH, Harmonica
Philips PB 1100 1961
23 Underneath The Harlem Moon (Harry Revel)
WERNER MÜLLER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Polydor 46007 LPHM 1956
24 Night In Trinidad (David Rose)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
MGM C 788 1959
25 After Hours Joint (J. George Johnson)
NEW WORLD THEATRE ORCHESTRA
Stereo Fidelity SF-3000 1957
Stereo: tracks 2, 10, 12, 21 & 25; rest in mono.
When work for the day has been completed the Starlight
Hours beckon. This is the time to unwind and relax
if youre lucky, in some pleasant company. An evening
out may be in order: first an enjoyable meal, followed by
some mellow moments simply letting the cares of the day
fade away. Should you still have some energy left then why
not seek out some late-night entertainment at a night club,
or perhaps where some gentle jazz sounds are being carried
along in the breeze. On the other hand you can simply stay
at home, start playing this CD, and let the music do the
rest.
Although the record label for When Day Is Done names
the Ambrose Orchestra, in truth all the credit has to go
to the arranger and conductor Laurie Johnson (b.1927), who
has been a leading figure on the British entertainment scene
for 50 years. Early in his career he was asked by MGM to
make a series of recordings as conductor and arranger, but
at the time the bandleader Ambrose was still well-known,
so it was his name that appeared on the labels. Also a gifted
composer, Laurie has contributed to films, musical theatre,
radio, television and records, with his music used in many
well-known productions such as "The Avengers"
and "The Professionals". Later in this collection
he returns conducting his own orchestra in the Italian melody
Take My Lips.
Buddy Bregman (b. 1930) raises his baton for the twelfth
time on a Guild CD conducting a masterly arrangement by
Conrad Salinger (1901-1961). This time he turns his attention
to Jerome Kerns (1885-1945) Ive Told Every
Little Star.
Ella Fitzgerald (1917-1996) once sang the memorable lines
that "My Fair Lady" is a terrific show they
say, we both may see it close one day. Well, it did
eventually close, but not until after 2,717 performances
on Broadway, and 2,281 in Londons West End. The music
remains as fresh and popular as ever, especially when a
great arranger/conductor like Percy Faith (1908-1976) gets
to work on I Could Have Danced All Night.
Andre Kostelanetz (1901-1980) was one of the biggest names
in American light orchestral music during the middle years
of the 20th Century. His broadcasts and recordings
were enjoyed by millions. Sweet Surrender Waltz bears
all the hallmarks of the quality the orchestra achieved
during its finest years.
Willis Schaefer (1928-2007) was an American composer, conductor
and arranger who worked on numerous television series from
the early 1950s onwards. Among his best known shows are
"Gunsmoke", "Disneyland", "The
Phil Silvers Show", "Wagon Train", "Perry
Mason" and personality shows hosted by Jackie Gleason,
Sid Caesar, Ed Sullivan and Johnny Carson. Manhattan
In Satin is a prime example of his skills as an orchestrator,
and perhaps explains why he was so much in demand from top
television programme makers in his homeland.
Canadian-born Robert Farnon (1917-2005) is widely regarded
as one of the greatest light music composers and arrangers
of his generation. His melodies such as Portrait Of A
Flirt (on Guild GLCD 5120) and Jumping Bean (GLCD5162)
are familiar to millions around the world. His arrangements
covered the works of all the top songwriters, and Orchids
In The Moonlight comes from a collection of melodies
by New Yorker Vincent Youmans (1898-1946).
Abe (Glenn) Osser (b. 1914) first came to prominence though
his close association with Paul Whiteman for whom he provided
arrangements and often conducted the orchestra, usually
for the vocalists. Other top bands which used his scores
included Les Brown, Jan Savitt, Bob Crosby, Bunny Berigan
and Charlie Barnet. For much of his career he freelanced
as a conductor and arranger, and became closely associated
with the "Miss America" beauty pageants for many
years. He sometimes worked under pseudonyms such as Arthur
Meisel, Bob Marvel and Maurice Pierre. "The Road To
Morocco" (1942) was the third, and now considered the
best, of the famous Road films starring Bing
Crosby, Bob Hope and Dorothy Lamour. Moonlight Becomes
You was first sung straight by Bing Crosby,
and later in the film it was used in a comedy sequence involving
multi-tracking. This hasnt prevented it becoming a
standard.
Stephen (Steve) Russell Race (1921-2009) first attracted
attention as a pianist and arranger with many top British
bands of the post-war years, and he became a prolific contributor
to production music libraries. His wide-ranging career also
embraced conducting for many TV shows, and he was a popular
compere of panel games and music programmes. In Paris
In Love features him as both composer and performer.
Thinking Of You, played by the John Clegg Orchestra,
was written by Harry Ruby and Bert Kalmar in 1927 for a
Broadway show "The Five OClock Girl". It
became popular again in the early 1950s, thanks to the MGM
film "Three Little Words", which told the life
story of the composers.
The English conductor Leslie Jones (b. 1905), a solicitor
by profession, gave a large number of Robert Farnon compositions
their first stereo versions in sessions for Pye towards
the end of the 1950s. Several have already been featured
on Guild, and How Beautiful Is Night perfectly suits
the ambience of this collection. It was one of Farnons
most successful works: with added lyrics it was recorded
by Sarah Vaughan (1924-1990) and Tony Bennett (b. 1926),
and gave its name to the title of a much-praised album featuring
George Shearing (1919-2011) with the Farnon Orchestra.
Edward Cecil Milner (1905-1989) was a highly respected
composer and arranger in London music circles, particularly
during a long association with Mantovani (1905-1980), for
whom he supplied around 220 scores. He was also an accomplished
composer (he was being recognised while still in his twenties),
with his works, such as Melody For Lovers, willingly
accepted by several background music publishers. Another
of his famous colleagues was Charles Williams (1893-1978),
whose music Milner frequently arranged: the two were closely
associated since their days working on pre-war British films
usually without any screen credits. Cecil Milners
close friend from the same period was Clive Richardson (1909-1998),
composer of Melody On The Move (on GLCD5102),
London Fantasia (GLCD5120, Running Off The Rails
(GLCD5156) and other popular pieces of light music. In the
cinema Milner worked on some 50 films, often for Louis Levy
(1893-1957), most notably the 1938 classic "The Lady
Vanishes".
Morton Gould (1913-1996) became one of the most highly
respected American composers and conductors. He generally
also arranged the works he conducted in the concert hall
and on records (such as Speak Low), and from 1986
to 1994 he held the important position of President of the
American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP).
The American orchestra leader Peter Dudley King (1914-1982)
was also a successful songwriter and arranger, whose career
embraced radio, television, recordings and films. Mind
If I Make Love To You was one of many Cole Porter (1891-1964)
standards he scored during his long and busy career.
Angela Morley (1924-2009) was regarded as one of the finest
arrangers and film composers in recent years. In her later
career she worked on several big budget movies - one example
is the "Star Wars" series assisting John Williams,
and it has been said that the final nine minutes of music
in the film "ET" was entirely her brilliant orchestration.
She also contributed scores to prestigious US TV shows such
as "Dallas" and "Dynasty". In the 1950s
she made many recordings under her former name, Wally Stott,
also providing the priceless musical backings for BBC Radios
"The Goon Show". The Chappell Recorded Music Library
commissioned numerous original works, covering a variety
of different themes. A Tender Mood reveals Angelas
ability to create beautiful string miniatures, in stark
contrast to her bright, bustling numbers such as A Canadian
In Mayfair (on Guild GLCD5157) and Angel Cake
(GLCD5103).
Guy Luypaerts (b. 1917) first appeared on a Guild CD playing
music by Cole Porter (GLCD5127). He was born in Paris to
Belgian parents during the First World War and became well-known
in French musical circles through conducting an orchestra
called the Nouvelle Association Symphonique de Paris. This
was in the era when live music featured prominently on the
radio, and his broadcasts with this orchestra resulted in
invitations to conduct other radio orchestras in European
cities. Luypaerts is listed as providing the music for the
1945 film "Etoile Sans Lumière". He worked
with Edith Piaf (he arranged her 1946 world-wide hit "La
Vie En Rose"), Georges Guetary, Yves Montand and most
notably with Charles Trénet - their collaboration
spanned 30 years and began when Trénet discovered
him playing jazz at an officers mess early in World
War 2. Guild has previously included him conducting quirky
cameos such as The Sleepwalker of Amsterdam (GLCD5131)
and Masquerade In Madrid (GLCD5132). This time Moon
Over Miami finds him in yet another mood.
From the small British record company Melodisc (a label
which issued very few orchestral recordings as it tended
to specialise in West African music) comes Midnight Tango
featuring Reg Tilsley, a well-known composer, arranger and
conductor within the UK music business. He was active in
arranging and recording music library tracks (notably for
De Wolfe); he also worked for a while with the pop group
The Pretty Things and made a number of LP albums for Philips
under the "Sounds Orchestral" banner.
Peter Yorke (1902-1966) is a regular contributor to this
series of CDs, as composer, arranger and conductor
he combines all three skills in Cocktails By Candlelight.
After a grounding in British Dance Bands of the 1920s and
1930s, he graduated to arranging for Louis Levy before eventually
forming his own concert orchestra for recording and broadcasting.
Bruce Campbell was one of several writers who owed much
to his association with Robert Farnon. He was a fellow Canadian,
who actually came to Britain some years before Farnon, and
played trombone with various top British bands during the
1930s. Campbell assisted Farnon on his post-war BBC radio
shows, and eventually became a frequent contributor to various
mood music libraries. Stranger In Town comes from
a rare LP that Campbell recorded in Britain for the American
market. Its composer is Malcolm Neville Lockyer (1923-1976)
who became a familiar name in Britain, through his broadcasts
(almost 6,000) and recordings. After war service in the
Royal Air Force he worked as a pianist and arranger with
Ambrose (1896-1971), Cyril Stapleton (1914-1974) and Robert
Famon, but he soon established himself as a composer, with
approaching 100 titles to his credit.
Arthur Ferrante (1921-2009) and Louis Teicher (1924-2008)
decided to form a piano duo when they met as students at
the famous Julliard School of Music in New York. They launched
their full-time concert career in 1947, and many of their
recordings became big sellers. Lonely Room was composed
by Adolph Deutsch (1897-1980) for the film "The Apartment"
(1960).
Amami si vuoi won the second prize in the San Remo
Song Festival 1956 and was included in the HMV stereo album
recorded by George Melachrino (1909-1965) and The Orchestra
of the San Remo Festival 1956 several tracks from
which have already been included in previous Guild CDs.
The song was written by the writing team of Mario Panzeri
and Vittorio Mascheroni (who wrote Poppa Piccolino)
and the tune was used in the Fiat "Spirito di Punto" advertisements
in the 1990s with the original singer Tonina Torrielli.
Yet another musician whose career crossed paths with Robert
Farnon is William (Bill) McGuffie (1927-1987). He is remembered
by most music lovers as a fine pianist, often leaning towards
jazz, although his occasional work in films proved that
he was also a talented composer. Like the 1960 British crime
film The Unstoppable Man (Bill McGuffies music
was included on GLCD5182), the 1961 movie During One
Night also seems to have vanished from cinema radar,
but the music certainly deserves to be remembered.
Werner Müller (1920-1998) was a bassoonist who became
the first conductor of the RIAS (Radio In American Sector)
Dance Band based in Berlin, which gave its first concert
on 24 April 1949. It was not long before Müller began
to realise that the publics love affair with the swing
era was gradually starting to wane, and sixteen strings
were added to the line-up. The band had built up a strong
following through its Polydor recordings, and by the mid-1950s
the labels dropped the RIAS tag and simply credited
Werner Müller and his Orchestra; he also
recorded under the pseudonym Ricardo Santos.
A good example of the way in which strings became an integral
part of the dance band can be heard in Manhattan Serenade
(Guild GLCD5130) from their LP "Holiday in New
York". Underneath The Harlem Moon comes from
the same collection.
London-born David Rose (1910-1990) became one of the truly
great light orchestra leaders in the USA, and his compositions
such as Holiday For Strings (his own extended arrangement
is on Guild GLCD5189) and The Stripper sold millions.
Many of his original compositions have already been reissued
on Guild, and Night In Trinidad can now be added
to the long list.
J. George Johnson was an American pianist and composer
who wrote more than 500 songs, although he never seems to
have attained success in the charts. His best known was
probably The Laughing Samba (with lyrics by his wife
Anne Spear Johnson), which was recorded by The Andrews Sisters
in the USA and Edmundo Ros (1910-2011) in Britain. His composition
After Hours Joint came from a collection of pieces
connected with New York, from which Guild has previously
reissued several including his Central Park Romance
(GLCD5155) and Greenwich Village (GLCD5167). He died
in April 1994 aged 80.
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5191
Strings Afire
1 Strings Afire (Wayne Robinson; Caesar Giovannini; Herman
Clebanoff)
CLEBANOFF AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury PPS 6019 1961
2 S Wonderful (George Gershwin, arr. Rayburn Wright)
FREDERICK FENNELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury CMS 18050 1961
3 Adieu Tristesse (Felicidade) (from "Orfeu Negro")
(Antonio Carlos Jobim)
HELMUT ZACHARIAS AND HIS MAGIC VIOLINS
Polydor 24113B 1960
4 As Time Goes By (Herman Hupfeld)
ROGER WILLIAMS, HIS PIANO AND ORCHESTRA
London SAH-R6035 1959
5 Skin Divers Ballet (Ron Goodwin)
CYRIL STAPLETON AND HIS ORCHESTRA (as Malcolm Peters)
Top Rank 39/668 1960
6 Champs Elysees (Laurie Johnson)
GROUP-FORTY ORCHESTRA
KPM Music KPM 034 1960
7 I Can Dream Cant I ((Sammy Fain; Irving Kahal)
PETE KING AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Warner Bros W 1294 1959
8 Veradero (Bernie Wayne, real name Bernard Weitzner)
MUSIC BY CAMARATA
Brunswick O5011 1951
9 Valse Mignonette (Trevor Duncan, real name Leonard
Trebilco)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by DOLF VAN DER LINDEN (Nat
Nyll on disc label)
Boosey & Hawkes O 2350 1959
10 Herbstgold (Autumn Gold) (Giovanni Brusso)
HANS GEORG ARLT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Ariola 71231 1959
11 Piccadilly (David Rose)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
MGM SE 4155 1961
12 Very Nice Man (from "Carnival") (Bob Merrill,
arr. Brian Fahey)
CYRIL ORNADEL AND THE STARLIGHT SYMPHONY
MGM SE 3946 1961
13 Corrida (Dominico Savino)
RICHARD HAYMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury SR 60103 1959
14 China Doll (Leroy Anderson)
EASTMAN-ROCHESTER "POPS" ORCHESTRA Conducted by
FREDERICK FENNELL
Mercury AMS16037 1960
15 Assembly Line (Ray Martin)
RAY MARTIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Columbia DB 2882 1951
16 Goblins Gavotte (Anthony Tamburello, arr, Bruce
Campbell)
ROBERT FARNON AND HIS ORCHESTRA (LP label credits Everest
Concert Orchestra Conducted by Derek Boulton)
Everest SDBR 1018 1958
17 Evening On Tokyos Sumida (Dorothy Guyver Britton)
NORRIE PARAMOR AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Capitol ST 10190 1959
18 Maracaibo (Les Baxter)
LES BAXTER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Capitol T 655 1955
19 My Man (Mon Homme) (Maurice Yvain; Albert Lucien
Willemetz; Jacques
Mardochee Charles)
XAVIER CUGAT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
RCA LSP 2173 1959
20 Swedish Rhapsody (Midsummer Vigil) (Hugo Alfven,
arr. Percy Faith)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia 4-39944 1953
21 The Secret Of Happiness (Curtin; Carl Sigmund)
TONY OSBORNE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV 45-POP 483 1958
22 Carefree Character (Alan Perry, real name Ernest
Tomlinson)
THE LIGHT SYMPHONIA Conducted by ROBERTO CAPELLI
Conroy BM 292 1961
23 All Through The Day (from "Centennial Summer")
(Jerome Kern, arr. Paul Weston)
PAUL WESTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia CS 8050 1958
24 Caress (Nagy, arr. Bruce Campbell)
BRUCE CAMPBELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA (Coronet Orchestra
on disc label)
MGM E 3167 1955
25 Sidewalk (Charles Williams)
CHARLES WILLIAMS AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Columbia DB 3493 1954
Stereo: tracks 1, 2, 4, 10-14, 16, 17, 19 & 23;
rest in mono.
The American maestro Herman Clebanoff (1917-2004) has the
honour of opening this collection, and providing the title
track with his own composition Strings Afire, on
which he collaborated with Wayne Robinson and Caesar Giovannini.
The son of Russian emigrants, he was born in Chicago and
began studying the violin when aged only five. By the time
he was twenty he was both concertmaster of the Chicago Civic
Orchestra and youngest member of the Chicago Symphony. Usually
just known as Clebanoff, he had a long association
with NBC, and from 1945 he spent the next ten years as concertmaster
of their Chicago-based orchestra, playing a wide repertoire
from the classics to popular tunes. Chicagos Mercury
music director, David Carroll, recognised Clebanoffs
talents, launching a series of orchestral LPs that were
designed to compete with the output from the other major
labels. Around 1960 Mercury consolidated its recording activities
in the Hollywood area, where Clebanoff also settled for
the rest of his life.
Following their Guild debut with Love Is Sweeping The
Country (Guild GLCD5189), Frederick Fennell (1914-2004)
returns with his Orchestra for another popular George Gershwin
(1898-1937) title S Wonderful. On this occasion
it is appropriate to mention the gifted arranger of these
numbers, and one wonders why he is not better known. Rayburn
Wright (1922-1990) was an American conductor, trombonist
and arranger who taught jazz and film scoring at the Eastman
School of Music, where Frederick Fennell was also an important
presence. Such was the high esteem in which he was held
that the school established the Rayburn Wright Award in
1989, recognising distinguished students.
Helmut Zacharias (1920-2002) was a German child prodigy
who rose to prominence in the 1950s when the American Forces
Network in Frankfurt described him as the best jazz
violinist in the world. During his long career he
composed over 400 works and his album sales exceeded 13
million. Adieu Tristesse was better known as Felicidade
when it opened the 1959 Brazilian film "Orpheu Negro"
("Black Orpheus"), which was largely responsible
for introducing the bossa nova to the world.
Herman Hupfeld (1894-1951) wrote the music and lyrics of
As Time Goes By for the Broadway show "Everybodys
Welcome" in 1931. At the time it attracted little attention,
and might have been quietly forgotten, had it not been chosen
for the 1942 film "Casablanca". Since then it
has been recorded hundreds, maybe thousands, of times, and
the choice of the version by Roger Williams (1924-2011)
is partly influenced by the attractive string passage that
accompanies his distinctive piano.
Skin Divers Ballet is a composition by Ron
Goodwin (1925-2003) who was under contract to EMI for many
years. Similarly Cyril Stapleton (1914-1974) had a Decca
contract, so when they decided to record an LP of Rons
original pieces for a rival label Cyril had to become Malcolm
Peters. Two other tracks from this meeting of two
British Light Music greats have previously appeared
on Guild: Prairie Schooner (on GLCD5182) and Waitin
For The Dawn (GLCD5187).
Laurie Johnson (b.1927) has been a leading figure on the
British entertainment scene for 50 years. A gifted arranger
and composer, Laurie has contributed to films, musical theatre,
radio, television and records, with his music used in many
well-known productions such as "The Avengers"
and "The Professionals". Champs Elysees
is one of many of his compositions that started to appear
in the KPM Recorded Music Library, following its launch
in 1959.
Peter Dudley King (1914-1982) makes his first Guild appearance
with I Can Dream Cant I, an attractive
melody by Sammy Fain and Irving Kahal which deserves to
be better known today. Originally published in 1938 for
a long forgotten musical "Right This Way", it
gained its greatest success in 1949 when a recording by
The Andrews Sisters took it to the top of the US charts.
Ohio-born Pete King was a busy arranger and conductor who
worked extensively on American radio and television, and
in the recording studios.
Judging by his prolific output, the 1950s seems to have
been a very busy period for the American Bernie Wayne (born
Bernard Weitzner 1919-1993). In the USA he is best known
for his "Miss America" Beauty Pageant theme, and
the hit song Blue Velvet. His string of instrumental
successes included Vanessa (on GLCD5189), Port-au-Prince
(GLCD5130) and Veradero (Geoff Loves version
is on GLCD5111). The 1951 recording of Veradero by
the American maestro Salvatore Tutti Camarata
(1913-2005) is more faithful to the composers original
version, hence its inclusion here.
Valse Mignonette is the twenty-seventh composition
by Trevor Duncan (born Leonard Charles Trebilco, 1924-2005)
in a Guild Light Music collection, and judging by the requests
that keep coming in it wont be the last. Many were
written for the publisher that first promoted his work,
Boosey & Hawkes, and their recordings were regularly
of a high standard. Valse Mignonette was conducted
by Dolf van der Linden (1915-1999), whose Metropole Orchestra
in The Netherlands was one of the finest in Europe.
Making his eighth appearance on a Guild CD with Herbstgold
is Hans Georg Arlt (1927-2011) who started learning the
violin at the age of six, and later studied under Professor
Max Strub in Berlin. In 1946 he began his distinguished
radio career, and when the RIAS Dance Orchestra was formed
in 1948 he led the string section for a while. In the following
years he became a familiar name on German radio and television
with his String Orchestra.
David Rose (1910-1990) had previously been regarded as
a jazz pianist, but he persuaded RCA to let him record four
instrumental numbers and the session in March 1942 resulted
in the million-seller which firmly launched his career as
one of Americas top orchestras. It was, of course,
Holiday For Strings, and the maestros own extended
version from the 1950s appears on Guild GLCD5189. He has
already conducted twenty-five of his own works on previous
Guild CDs, and his orchestra has also performed over thirty
numbers by other composers. Piccadilly may not be
his best-known piece, but it portrays all the familiar characteristics
that have made him so popular with his fans who appreciate
the best in Light Music.
From the late 1950s onwards Cyril Ornadel (1924-2011) made
many fine orchestral albums with his Starlight Symphony,
aimed primarily at the American market. His regular arranger
was Brian Fahey (1919-2007), known in Britain as a busy
musical director, arranger and composer. Very Nice Man
is a lesser-known number from the 1961 Broadway show "Carnival".
Corrida receives a spirited performance from the
Richard Hayman (b. 1920) Orchestra. Also known as a harmonica
player, he worked on the MGM musical "Meet Me In St.
Louis" and was put under contract by Mercury Records
in 1950, for whom he made many singles and albums, the best-seller
being his version of Ruby from the film "Ruby
Gentry". He also arranged for the Boston Pops, serving
as back-up conductor for Arthur Fiedler.
Leroy Anderson (1908-1975) was also closely associated
with the Boston Pops for many years as its chief
arranger. Many of his compositions also made their debut
under conductor Fiedlers baton, but for this CD Frederick
Fennell returns (this time with the Eastman-Rochester Pops
Orchestra) playing China Doll, one of Andersons
less familiar melodies which deserves to be heard more often.
Viennese Raymond Stuart Martin (1918-1988) was born Raymond
Wolfgang Kohn, but after he fled from the Nazis and settled
in England before the outbreak of World War 2 he wished
to be known as Ray Martin. He became one of
the biggest names in British popular music during the 1950s.
As well as conducting his orchestra for records, radio and
television, he was also a talented composer. Assembly
Line was one of his early compositions and it is included
in response to requests from several of his loyal admirers.
In 1958 Everest Records of the US commissioned an album
of original compositions (including Goblins Gavotte)
from Tony Tamburello (who died in 1992 aged 72) which it
called "Music Tailored To Your Taste". The Robert
Farnon Orchestra was engaged, and sessions took place during
the summer of 1958 in London at the Friends Meeting
House and the IBC Studios in Portland Place. Bruce Campbell
did most of the arrangements, but Farnons name could
not appear on the record for contractual reasons. So his
orchestra was renamed The Everest Concert Orchestra
and the conductor was credited as Derek Boulton
actually Farnons manager!
Londoner Norman (Norrie) William Paramor (1914-1979) tended
to be better known by the public for his work with pop stars
as Artists and Repertoire Manager on EMIs Columbia
label, but he also made numerous instrumental recordings
and wrote several catchy numbers that greatly appealed
such as Cornflakes under the pseudonym Sidney
Norman (on Guild GLCD5130). Evening On Tokyos
Sumida comes from a collection recorded in London for
EMIs US subsidiary Capitol Records.
Although he was a talented arranger who was capable of
producing the many different styles that a busy musician
working in films and television as well as recordings
was expected to provide, Texas born Les Baxter (1922-1996)
tended to be asked by his record companies to record pieces
with an exotic appeal. Maracaibo also
allows him to exhibit his talents as a composer.
Xavier Cugat (1900-1990) was a Spanish born bandleader
who spent his formative years in Havana, but achieved fame
in the USA. He provided the resident orchestra at New Yorks
Waldorf-Astoria before and after the Second World War, and
he was also a cartoonist and successful businessman. His
four marriages provided fodder for gossip columnists, but
his lasting legacy is appearances in several Hollywood films
and many fine recordings - usually of Latin American music.
The French song Mon Homme has been around
for a long time; it was a success for Mistinguett in 1916,
and Fanny Brice introduced the English version in 1921.
The composer Hugo Emil Alfvén (1872-1960) is a legend
in his native Sweden. His composition Swedish Rhapsody
(written in 1903) gained him fame around the world in the
1950s, thanks to the version on this CD by Percy Faith (1908-1976).
The Secret Of Happiness brings Tony Osborne (Edward
Benjamin Osborne, 1922-2009) back to a Guild collection.
He became a familiar name in post-war Britain due to his
broadcasts and recordings, originally playing piano with
many top orchestras before embarking on his own career.
Ernest Tomlinson (b.1924) is one of Britains
most talented composers, working mainly in light music,
but also highly regarded for his choral works and brass
band pieces. During a very productive career, he has contributed
numerous titles to the recorded music libraries of many
different publishers, often under the pseudonym Alan
Perry such as for Carefree Character.
In recent years Ernest has worked tirelessly to preserve
thousands of music manuscripts that would otherwise have
been destroyed, and he is the President of the Light Music
Society.
Paul Weston (born Paul Wetstein 1912-1996) was one of Americas
top arrangers and conductors, whose orchestral collections
such as Music For Dreaming and Music For
Memories were to provide the springboard for many
future albums. All Through The Day is a typical example
of the hundreds of tasteful arrangements he created during
his long career. In 1971 the Trustees of the National Academy
of Recording Arts and Sciences gave him its Trustees Award.
Bruce Campbell was one of several writers who owed much
to his association with Robert Farnon. He was a fellow Canadian,
who actually came to Britain some years before Farnon, and
played trombone with various British bands during the 1930s.
Towards the end of the 1940s Campbell realised that he possessed
some skills as a composer, and Farnon encouraged him and
provided some valuable guidance. The fruits of this meeting
of talents have already been experienced on Guild CDs in
titles such as Cloudland (GLCD5145), Windy Corner
(GLCD5150) and Skippy (GLCD5125). Caress
comes from a very rare LP which appears to have only been
released in the USA. Campbells name wasnt even
mentioned as conductor of the album.
Our final track features Charles Williams (born
Isaac Cozerbreit 1893-1978), another composer/conductor
whose work is now familiar once again through his many Guild
recordings. He had numerous pieces published by Chappells
when he was the main contributor to their Recorded Music
Library, and almost forty of his compositions have already
been featured on Guild CDs. Sidewalk originally appeared
in the Chappell Recorded Music Library in 1954, but Williams
own commercial recording for Columbia has been chosen to
complete this varied collection of Light Music.
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5192
Stereo Into The Sixties
1 Night And Day (from the film "The Gay Divorcee")
(Cole Porter, arr. Brian Fahey)
CYRIL ORNADEL AND THE STARLIGHT SYMPHONY
MGM SE 3843 1960
2 Bidin My Time (George Gershwin, arr. Rayburn
Wright)
FREDERICK FENNELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury CMS 18050 1961
3 Bobsled (Wayne Robinson; Caesar Giovannini; Herman Clebanoff)
CLEBANOFF AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury PPS 6019 1961
4 Italia Mia (Annunzio Paolo Mantovani)
MANTOVANI AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca SKL 4135 1961
5 London Serenade (Ron Goodwin)
RON GOODWIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone PCS 3019 1961
6 Coney Island (Don Banks)
THE SINFONIA OF LONDON Conducted by DOUGLAS GAMLEY
HMV CSD 1333 1961
7 Carioca (from the film "Flying Down To Rio")
(Gus Kahn; Edward Eliscu; Vincent
Youmans)
JACK SHAINDLIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Brunswick STA 3055 1961
8 What Is There To Say (Vernon Duke; E. Y. Harburg)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
MGM SE 4155 1961
9 Jockey On The Carousel (Jerome Kern, arr. Morton Gould)
MORTON GOULD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
RCA LSC 2559 1961
10 Pedro The Fisherman (from "The Lisbon Story")
(Harold Vousden Purcell; Harry Parr-Davies, arr. Johnny
Douglas)
THE LIVING STRINGS Conducted by JOHNNY DOUGLAS
RCA SF 5072 1960
11 Petite Waltz (Joe Heyne)
DAVID CARROLL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury SML 30022 1961
12 Amparito Roca (Jaime Texidor)
ASTMAN-ROCHESTER POPS ORCHESTRA Conducted by FREDERICK FENNELL
Mercury SR 90144 1960
13 One Eyed Jacks Love theme from the film (Hugo
Friedhofer)
FERRANTE AND TEICHER at two pianos, with Orchestra and Chorus
HMV CSD 1407 1961
14 Lisa (Percy Faith)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia CS 8360 1961
15 Ruby (from the film "Ruby Gentry") (Heinz
Roemheld; Mitchell Parish)
THE MELACHRINO ORCHESTRA Conducted by GEORGE MELACHRINO
RCA LSP 2412 1961
16 On The Beach At Waikiki (Henry Kaikimai; G.H. Stove,
arr. William Hill Bowen
THE LIVING STRINGS Conducted by WILLIAM HILL BOWEN
RCA Camden CAS 661 1961
17 Dream Of Olwen (from the film "While I Live")
(Charles Williams)
RUSS CONWAY, Piano, with MICHAEL COLLINS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia SCX 3299 1960
18 Nobodys Heart (Richard Rodgers, arr. Frank
Cordell)
FRANK CORDELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA featuring NEILL SANDERS,
horn
HMV CSD 1294 1960
19 The Alamo - Theme from the film (Green Leaves Of
Summer) (Paul Francis
Webster; Dimitri Tiomkin)
BILLY VAUGHN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
DOT DLP 25349 1960
20 Fete Circassienne (Wal-Berg)
WAL-BERG AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Barclay BB 42 1960
21 Mayfair (from London Again Suite) (Eric
Coates)
ERIC JOHNSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Westminster WPS 103 1961
22 Away Out West (from the film "Around The World
In Eighty Days") (Victor Popular Young; Harold Adamson,
arr. Robert Farnon)
ROBERT FARNON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
MGM SE 3804 1960
All tracks in stereo
By the time 1960 arrived the record industry was gradually
getting used to its latest asset stereo. The initial
excitement that had greeted its arrival a few years earlier
was being replaced by a desire to use the new technology
to its best advantage. Gone (in most cases!) were the ping-pong
novelty recordings, where instruments flitted about from
left to right: they may have helped novices to set up their
new stereo equipment correctly, but musically they quickly
became tedious. The technology itself was still developing:
separate mono and stereo versions of new recordings were
issued because old mono pickups could not satisfactorily
reproduce the new stereo discs. When production of the mono
versions was phased out in the late 1960s owners of mono
record players had to either replace them with a stereo
one, or change their mono cartridge to a stereo compatible
one.
The prize for providing the opening track for this collection
goes to a man who was already well-known in Britain, mainly
through his television work, but whose recording career
owed much to the USA. From the late 1950s onwards Cyril
Ornadel (1924-2011) made many fine orchestral albums with
his Starlight Symphony, aimed primarily at the
American market. His regular arranger was Brian Fahey (1919-2007),
recognised in Britain as a busy musical director, arranger
and composer. Night And Day by Cole Porter (1891-1964)
first delighted audiences in 1932 in the Broadway musical
"The Gay Divorce" which starred Fred Astaire.
Two years later it was filmed by RKO with Fred Astaire and
Ginger Rogers: for the cinema the title was changed to "The
Gay Divorcee".
Following their first Guild appearances with Love Is
Sweeping The Country (Guild GLCD5189) and S
Wonderful (GLCD5191), Frederick Fennell (1914-2004)
returns with his Orchestra for another popular George Gershwin
(1898-1937) title, Bidin My Time. The gifted
arranger of these numbers was Rayburn Wright (1922-1990)
an American conductor, trombonist and arranger who taught
jazz and film scoring at the Eastman School of Music, where
Frederick Fennell was also an important presence. Fennell
conducts the Eastman-Rochester Pops Orchestra later in this
collection in Spanish composer Jaime Texidors (1884-1957)
familiar Amparito Roca which dates from 1925. Apparently
it was named after his 12-year-old music student.
Chicago-born Herman Clebanoff (1917-2004) had a sound education
in classical music and was an experienced violinist and
concertmaster before he was 20. Usually just known as Clebanoff,
he had a long association with NBC, and later Mercury Records.
Bobsled is one of several bright string numbers he
composed with Wayne Robinson and Caesar Giovannini.
Annunzio Paolo Mantovani (1905-1980) became the conductor
of one of the most famous light orchestras from the 1950s
onwards. Born in Venice, his family came to England when
he was aged four and he was something of a prodigy on the
violin by the time he reached sixteen. But he leaned more
towards popular music, and fronted many different kinds
of ensembles before long-playing records (especially when
stereo arrived) brought him worldwide acclaim. Despite a
very busy schedule embracing radio, television, concerts
and recordings he also found time to compose and arrange
for his magnificent orchestra, and Italia Mia is
one he wrote for an album devoted to his native Italy.
Ronald (Ron) Alfred Goodwin (1925-2003) was a brilliant
British composer, arranger and conductor, whose tuneful
music reached the furthest corners of the world. As he gained
recognition for his original compositions, such as London
Serenade, he became in demand for film scores and among
his best-remembered are "633 Squadron" (1964),
"Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines"
(1965) and Alfred Hitchcocks "Frenzy" (1972).
In 1994 his talents were recognised when George Martin presented
him with the Ivor Novello Award for Lifetime Achievement
in Music. His big album sales also earned him gold and platinum
discs.
The Australian composer Don Banks (1923-1980) gained his
basic musical education down under, then came
to Europe in 1950 to continue his studies. He also earned
his living in London as a professional orchestrator and
composer of music for feature films, documentaries, advertisements,
publishers libraries and the theatre. In fact he became
widely known and recognised within the music business for
his abilities, and his Coney Island (a tribute to
New Yorks famous amusement park) is an outstanding
work of light music. It receives a fine performance from
fellow Australian Douglas Gamley (1925-1998) conducting
the Sinfonia of London.
Carioca first caught the attention of film audiences
in 1933 in "Flying Down To Rio", the movie usually
quoted as launching the screen career of Fred Astaire and
Ginger Rogers. It receives a lively performance under the
baton of Jack Shaindlin (1909-1978) who was a big name in
American music circles for most of his life. He worked as
a pianist for silent films, and his career eventually embraced
composing, arranging and conducting (in the late 1940s he
was musical director of the Carnegie Pops Orchestra). His
music was used extensively in films and television, ranging
from documentaries to cartoons. He was musical director
of the March of Time newsreels which became a part of US
popular culture.
David Rose (1910-1990) was one of the biggest names in
American light music circles during the middle years of
the 20th century. Born in London, England lost
him when the family moved to the USA when he was aged just
four, but he retained a love for his birthplace and in his
later life his fascination with steam railways often brought
him back across the Atlantic. A prolific composer and arranger,
he is an established Guild favourite, and What Is There
To Say reveals the lush string sound of his superb orchestra
at its very best.
The towering talents of two great American musicians combine
in Jockey On The Carousel by Jerome Kern (1885-1945).
Kern was responsible for some of the finest popular music
of the last century, and Morton Gould (1913-1996) conducts
a version that would surely have met with the composers
approval.
The legendary American record producer, Ethel deNagy Gabriel
(b. 1921), is reputed to have created The Living Strings
as a foremost easy listening icon for RCAs budget
label Camden at the end of the 1950s. It was an immediate
success, but far from being one orchestra it was, in fact,
many different ones. Leading arrangers and conductors were
engaged to make mood music albums, and many of these were
recorded in London, using top session musicians. Two are
featured in this collection: first is the catchy Pedro
The Fisherman arranged and conducted by Johnny Douglas
(1920-2003). He made his first professional appearance as
a pianist in 1939 but soon afterwards he was called up for
war service in the Royal Air Force where he formed his own
dance band. Later an arm injury prevented him from playing
the piano for about two years, so he concentrated on his
real love arranging and composing, winning a Melody
Maker Jazz Jamboree award for the best dance band composition.
After the war he began scoring for many famous bands, gradually
expanding his arranging skills. He recorded over 500 titles
for Decca, and received many commissions for radio and television
work. In 1958 he was asked to arrange and conduct "Living
Strings Play Music of the Sea" for RCA, which was recorded
at the Kingsway Hall, London, with an orchestra of 61 musicians.
This began his long association with RCA, New York, and
during the next twenty-five years he made 80 albums for
RCA alone and received a Gold disc for the RCA album entitled
"Feelings". Johnny has to his credit over 100
albums and 36 feature films, the most well-known of the
latter being "The Railway Children" for which
he received a British Academy Film & TV Arts Nomination.
Six tracks later On The Beach At Waikiki finds the
Living Strings conducted by William Hill-Bowen (1918-1964).
He was George Melachrinos right-hand man in the years
immediately following World War 2, often appearing on piano
but, perhaps, more importantly as a brilliant arranger who
managed to recreate his masters famous style to perfection.
He was also a talented composer, and The Living Strings
especially gave him the opportunity to showcase his own
creations.
Petite Waltz features David Carroll (1913-2008)
real name Rodell Walter Nook Schreier
who was well-known in his native USA as a conductor
and arranger. In the mid-1940s he joined the newly formed
Mercury Records where he spent the next 15 years. Initially
employed as an arranger and conductor, he progressed to
being a producer and was later promoted as head of artists
and repertoire. He was particularly successful writing TV
jingles for advertising, and became familiar to the American
public through his work with The Smothers Brothers, eventually
becoming their General Manager.
Arthur Ferrante (1921-2009) and Louis Teicher (1924-2008)
decided to form a piano duo when they met as students at
the famous Julliard School of Music in New York. They launched
their full-time concert career in 1947, and many of their
recordings became big sellers. Film themes seemed to suit
them particularly well, such as Hugo Friedhofers (1901-1981)
Love Theme from "One Eyed Jacks".
Percy Faith (1908-1976) hardly needs any introduction to
Guild regulars. Born in Toronto, Canada, in
1940 he moved permanently to the USA where he quickly established
himself through radio and recordings. From the 1950s onwards
his fame spread internationally, due to the great success
of his numerous long playing albums. Unlike most of his
contemporaries, Faith arranged all his own material, and
his compositions, such as Lisa, confirm his mastery
of the light orchestra.
The haunting theme from the 1952 film "Ruby Gentry"
is played by the fine orchestra conducted by George Miltiades
Melachrino (1909-1965), one of the big names in British
light music from the 1940s to the 1960s. Born in London,
he became a professional musician, competent on clarinet,
alto and tenor saxophone, violin and viola, and he worked
with many British dance bands in the 1930s sometimes
as a vocalist. After war service he built an orchestra which
became one of the best in the world; when long playing records
arrived, Melachrinos sold in vast quantities, especially
in the USA.
Russ Conway (born in Bristol Trevor Herbert Stanford, 1925-2000)
was a largely self-taught British pianist who recorded a
string of hit records for EMIs Columbia label in the
1950s. His reward was a number of prestigious
albums backed by full orchestras, resulting in accomplished
performances such as Charles Williams (1893-1978)
Dream Of Olwen.
Frank Cordell (1918-1980) was a highly regarded English
composer, arranger and conductor whose work first became
noticed through the tuneful backings he often supplied to
some contract singers on HMV singles in the 1950s. Occasionally
he was allowed his own 78s, and he was also responsible
for several distinctive LPs which quickly became collectors
items. From one of these we hear Richard Rodgers (1902-1979)
Nobodys Heart which originally appeared in
the 1942 Broadway musical "By Jupiter".
The 1960 United Artists film "The Alamo"
was directed by John Wayne, who also starred as Davy Crockett.
The main theme became a popular song as The Green Leaves
Of Summer, and the version by Billy Vaughn (1919-1991)
concentrates more on the drama of the story, rather than
the tender moments which have influenced some other arrangers.
Wal-Berg (born Voldemar Rosenberg, 1910-1994) studied at
both the Berlin and Paris Conservatories of Music, and for
a while during the 1930s he was closely associated with
French recordings by Marlene Dietrich. In his later career
he made many orchestral recordings which often had a Russian,
Austrian and Gypsy feel this is clearly felt in his
atmospheric Fete Circassienne. One of his best-known
works is Danse du Diable (Devils Dance) which
Mantovani conducts on Guild GLCD5181.
The English composer Eric Coates (1886-1957) was widely
regarded as the uncrowned King of Light Music
during the first half of the last century. For much of his
life he lived in London, and many of his works portray his
love of the city. Mayfair comes from his suite "London
Again" which was a sequel to his famous "London
Suite" which contained his Knightsbridge march;
this is already featured on Guild in versions by the Band
of H.M. Grenadier Guards (GLCD5147) and Henry Hall and the
BBC Dance Orchestra (GLCD5115). Eric Johnson and his Orchestra
perform Mayfair on a rare stereo LP from 1961.
Canadian-born Robert Farnon (1917-2005) is widely regarded
as one of the greatest light music composers and arrangers
of his generation. His melodies such as Portrait Of A
Flirt (on Guild GLCD 5120) and Jumping Bean (GLCD5162)
are familiar to millions around the world. Farnon conducts
the closing track Away Out West which Victor Young
composed for the Mike Todd Todd-AO big screen version of
Jules Vernes "Around The World In Eighty Days"
in 1956. Todd died in an air crash eighteen months after
the films premiere, and composer Victor Young died
(on 10 November 1956, aged 56) before he knew that his score
had won an Oscar.
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5193
The Art Of The Arranger Volume
1. A Wonderful Guy (from "South Pacific) (Richard
Rodgers; Oscar Hammerstein
II, arr. Conrad Salinger)
THE CONRAD SALINGER ORCHESTRA Conducted by BUDDY BREGMAN
Verve MG VS-6012 1958
2 These Foolish Things (Jack Strachey; Eric Maschwitz,
arr. Angela Morley)
ANGELA MORLEY AND HER ORCHESTRA (as Wally Stott)
Philips SBBL 501 1958
3 And This Is My Beloved (Robert Craig Wright; George
Forrest, arr. David Rose)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
MGM SE 3895 1961
4 Soliloquy (from "Carousel") (Richard Rodgers,
arr. Brian Fahey)
CYRIL ORNADEL AND THE STARLIGHT SYMPHONY
MGM SE 3817 1960
5 Oh, Lady, Be Good (George Gershwin, arr. Rayburn
Wright)
FREDERICK FENNELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury CMS 18050 1961
6 When You Wish Upon A Star (Leigh Harline; Ned Washington,
arr. Annuzio Mantovani)
MANTOVANI AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca SKL 4067 1959
7 East Of Fifth (also known as Stateside Stroll)
(Anthony Tamburello, arr. Bruce
Campbell)
ROBERT FARNON AND HIS ORCHESTRA (LP label credits Everest
Concert Orchestra Conducted by Derek Boulton)
Everest SDBR 1018 1958
8 September Song (from "Knickerbocker Holiday")
(Kurt Weill; Maxwell Anderson,
arr. Roland Shaw)
MANTOVANI AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca SKL 4002 1958
9 Zandunga - Jesusita E Chihuahua (The Dancing Donkey)
(Traditional, arr. Percy Faith)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia CS 8038 1957
10 The London I Love (Harold Purcell; George Posford,
arr. Leon Young)
FRANK CHACKSFIELD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca SKL 4057 1958
11 Where Or When (from "Babes In Arms") (Richard
Rodgers, arr. Morton Gould)
MORTON GOULD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
RCA Victor LSC-2552 1961
12 The Lincolnshire Poacher (Traditional, arr. Robert
Farnon)
ROBERT FARNON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca LF 1123 1953
13 Yesterdays (Jerome Kern, arr. Frank Cordell)
FRANK CORDELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV CSD 1251 1958
14 A Little White Gardenia (from the film "All
The Kings Horses") (Sam Coslow, arr. Ronald Binge)
RONALD BINGE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
RCA LSP 1890 1959
15 Dancing On The Ceiling (Richard Rodgers, arr. Gordon
Jenkins)
GORDON JENKINS AND HIS ORCHESTRA, featuring GORDON JENKINS,
piano
Decca DL 8077 1954
16 The Paratroopers March (original title Marche
des Parachutistes) (Pierre Jules Leemans, arr. Ray Martin)
RAY MARTIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Polydor 46076 LPHM 195817 If Ever I Would Leave You
(from "Camelot") (Alan Jay Lerner; Frederick Loewe,
arr. William Hill Bowen)
THE LIVING STRINGS Conducted by WILLIAM HILL BOWEN
RCA Camden 657 1961
18 Ebb Tide (Robert Maxwell, arr. Johnny Douglas)
THE LIVING STRINGS Conducted by JOHNNY DOUGLAS
RCA Camden 639 1960
19 Volveré (Maria Grever, arr. Laurie Johnson)
AMBROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA WITH STRINGS Conducted by LAURIE
JOHNSON
MGM E 3478 1957
20 Romance (Anton Rubinstein, arr. Arthur Wilkinson)
THE MELACHRINO ORCHESTRA Conducted by GEORGE MELACHRINO
HMV DLP 1083 1955
21 Ill Wind (Harold Arlen, arr. Nelson Riddle)
NELSON RIDDLE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Capitol ST 1571 1961
22 Elizabeth And Essex Love Theme (George Martin, arr.
Ron Goodwin)
RON GOODWIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone PCS 3019 1961
23 The British Grenadiers (Traditional, arr. Clive Richardson)
CHARLES WILLIAMS AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Columbia DB 3271 1953
24 Scheherazade Themes (Rimsky Korsakov, adapted and
arranged by David Carroll)
DAVID CARROLL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury PPS 6002 1960
Stereo tracks 1-11, 13, 14, 17, 18, 21, 22 & 24; rest
in mono.
Guilds first album dedicated to arrangers (GLCD5188)
explained the importance of these often neglected, but very
essential, members of the music fraternity. Their special
gifts of being able to transform often simple melodies into
masterpieces of orchestration are largely taken for granted
by the general public. Hopefully this collection will go
a small way to give a few of them the recognition they deserve.
First on the music stands this time is (Im In
Love With) A Wonderful Guy - the work of Conrad
Salinger (1901-1961). Guild introduced his inventive charts
in the "Strings And Things Go Stereo" collection
(GLCD5153) when it was explained that Buddy Bregman (b.
1930), A&R Manager of the fledgling Verve Records label,
had taken his orchestra into Studio A at Capitol Records
on 20 & 21 March 1957 to conduct an album honouring
Salinger. Such was Bregmans esteem for him that he
retitled his orchestra The Conrad Salinger Orchestra
conducted by Buddy Bregman for the LP "Conrad
Salinger A Lovely Afternoon".
Angela Morley (1924-2009) needs no introduction to Guild
regulars. These Foolish Things was arranged
while she was still known as Wally Stott, and
it draws on her early days when she played alto sax with
bands such as Geraldo. When the strings surge in to join
the small group her experience of working with Robert Farnon
becomes obvious. In her later career she left England for
the USA where she worked on several big budget movies (one
example is the "Star Wars" series assisting John
Williams), and on TV shows such as "Dallas" and
"Dynasty".
London-born David Rose (1910-1990) became one of the truly
great light orchestra leaders in the USA, and his compositions
such as Holiday For Strings (on Guild GLCD 5189)
and The Stripper sold millions. Many of his original
compositions have already been reissued on Guild, but this
time the spotlight falls on his skill as an arranger. And
This Is My Beloved is one of the glorious melodies that
Messrs Wright and Forrest borrowed from Alexander
Borodin (1833-1887) for their hit musical "Kismet".
Oscar Hammerstein IIs lyrics to Soliloquy
probably caused many a proud young parent to shed a tear
the first time they encountered this touching scene in the
musical "Carousel". The father-to-be automatically
assumes that his unborn child will be a boy, but then it
dawns upon him that he may be mistaken. Richard Rodgers
(1902-1979) cleverly captured the change of mood from rumbustious
to tender, and the arrangement by Brian Fahey (1919-2007)
perfectly captures the mood of this show-stopping moment.
Fahey was born in Margate, Kent, but while still in his
twenties he spent five years as a Prisoner of War, where
he put his early studies on piano and cello to good use
by honing his musical skills, especially arranging which
became his passion. During the 1950s he worked for London
publishers Chappell & Co and Cinephonic Music, providing
numerous scores for dance bands, singers and orchestras,
mainly for radio broadcasts. For a while he was Shirley
Basseys musical director and he was also employed
by Cyril Ornadel to provide numerous arrangements for a
series of LPs by the Starlight Symphony mainly aimed
at the American market, but released around the world. The
lush orchestral sounds conjured up by Fahey were miles away
from his pop numbers such as Fanfare Boogie,
which won him an Ivor Novello Award in 1955.
Rayburn Wright (1922-1990) was an American conductor, trombonist
and arranger who taught jazz and film scoring at the Eastman
School of Music, where Frederick Fennell was also an important
presence. He was a trombonist and arranger in the United
States Army Band as well as the Tony Pastor and Glenn Miller-Tex
Beneke Orchestras. In 1965 he was named co-director of music
and conductor of the orchestra at Radio City Music Hall.
He also appeared as a guest conductor with the Rochester
Philharmonic Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra. Wright composed film scores
for the prize-winning television documentary series "Saga
of Western Man." Such was the high esteem in which he was
held that the Eastman School of Music established the Rayburn
Wright Award in 1989 recognising distinguished students.
In his book "Mantovani A Lifetime in Music"
(Melrose Books 2005) Colin MacKenzie describes Mantovanis
own arrangement of When You Wish Upon A Star as "remarkable
which
begins and ends with a descending run from the high strings
to the low basses in imitation of a falling star".
Although he regularly employed top arrangers such as Cecil
Milner (1905-1989), Ronald Binge and Roland Shaw, the maestro
occasionally found the time to orchestrate a melody that
specially appealed to him. He was also a composer, though
few people realised it because he used a variety of pseudonyms,
such as Pedro Manilla, Paul Remy,
Roy Faye, Leonello Gandino, Paul
Monty and Tulio Trapani. Annunzio Paolo
Mantovani (1905-1980) became the conductor of one of the
most famous light orchestras from the 1950s onwards. Born
in Venice, his family came to England when he was aged four
and he was something of a prodigy on the violin by the time
he reached sixteen. But he leaned more towards popular music,
and fronted many different kinds of ensembles before long-playing
records (especially when stereo arrived) brought him worldwide
acclaim. Although there is no doubt that he retained a warm
affection for the land of his birth, he became a British
citizen in 1933.
When Tony Tamburello died in September 1992 at the age
of 72 a short report on his passing in the New York Times
described him as a pianist and vocal coach. But he also
loved to compose tunes like East Of Fifth, but lacked
the expertise to arrange for a full orchestra. An ideal
choice for this work was Bruce Campbell, one of several
writers who owed much to his association with Robert Farnon.
He was a fellow Canadian, who actually came to Britain some
years before Farnon, and played trombone with various British
bands during the 1930s. Towards the end of the 1940s Campbell
realised that he possessed some skills as a composer, and
Farnon encouraged him and provided some valuable guidance.
(East Of Fifth was renamed Stateside Stroll
when the music was leased to the Chappell Recorded Music
Library).
Mantovanis Orchestra returns with September Song
arranged by Roland Edgar Shaw-Tomkins (better known as Roland
Shaw, b. 1920), who Colin MacKenzie reveals in his Mantovani
biography was affectionately known as young Roly
by Monty. Shaws long career (usually out of the limelight)
involved working with countless stars and orchestras, many
of them in the Decca stable. Colin explains
that "when arranging for Mantovani Shaw usually received
the newest material containing the dodgier harmonies but
managed with his taste and ability to soften the edges.
Roland did most of his arranging at night when the phone
had stopped ringing, sitting at a piano with a board in
front of him, sometimes until 3 am. He went to the recording
studios for the sessions and sometimes helped out in the
control box, using his scores".
Another Guild favourite is Toronto-born Percy Faith (1908-1976)
who moved permanently to the USA in 1940 where he quickly
established himself through radio and recordings. From the
1950s onwards his fame spread internationally, due to the
great success of his numerous long playing albums. Unlike
most of his contemporaries, Faith arranged all his own material,
and he had a particular love of Latin American music: his
contribution to this CD will be better known to many as
The Cactus Polka.
Leon Young (1916-1991) learned the piano with organist
and composer Percy Whitlock (1903-1946), and the trombone
with the Salvation Army. After war service in the Royal
Navy, back in civilian life within two years he was contributing
arrangements for Tommy Handley's "ITMA", then
the most popular and prestigious show on radio. In 1953
Decca issued two 78s containing two of Leon's most famous
and memorable arrangements, Charlie Chaplin's theme from
Limelight and Ebb Tide. The label had recently
signed up Frank Chacksfield with a 40-piece orchestra comprising
a large string section and Leon was approached to provide
the arrangements. From one of the many products of this
fortuitous partnership we hear The London I Love.
Leon would eventually be a regular broadcaster in his own
right on the BBC, notably with his String Chorale.
Morton Gould (1913-1996) became one of the most highly
respected American composers and conductors. He generally
also arranged the works he conducted in the concert hall
and on records (such as Where Or When), and from
1986 to 1994 he held the important position of President
of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers
(ASCAP).
The Canadian composer Robert Joseph Farnon (1917-2005)
produced a wealth of light music, and he had a special affection
for folk tunes, such as The Lincolnshire Poacher
from a collection of music from the British Isles in celebration
of the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953.
Frank Cordell (1918-1980) was a talented English composer,
arranger and conductor, and it is his latter two talents
that produce the ethereal version of Yesterdays chosen
for this collection.
Today it is well-known that the English musician Ronald
Binge (1910-1979) deserves recognition as the talented arranger
responsible for creating the distinctive string sound (sometimes
called cascading strings) which made Mantovani
famous throughout the world. He was also an accomplished
conductor and composer (Elizabethan Serenade on GLCD5162
springs immediately to mind), and his arrangement of A
Little White Gardenia comes from one of his LPs aimed
at the American market.
Gordon Jenkins (1910-1984) arranged for many of
the top bands in America before carving out an impressive
career for himself in radio and films. He signed with US
Decca in 1945, and eventually became their managing director.
Dancing On The Ceiling comes from that period
of his career. When he later moved to Capitol he created
some fine arrangements for Nat King Cole and
Frank Sinatra.
Viennese Raymond Stuart Martin (1918-1988) was born Raymond
Wolfgang Kohn, but after he fled from the Nazis and settled
in England before the outbreak of World War 2 he chose to
be known as Ray Martin. He became one of the
biggest names in British popular music during the 1950s,
and The Paratroopers March comes from one of
several LPs he arranged and conducted for the German label
Polydor.
The Living Strings make a welcome return to Guild in the
next two tracks, with performances arranged and conducted
by two top English musicians. William Hill-Bowen (1918-1964)
takes to the podium first for If Ever I Would Leave You,
closely followed by Johnny Douglas (1920-2003) for a memorable
version of Ebb Tide.
Laurie Johnson (b.1927) has been a leading figure on the
British entertainment scene for 50 years. A gifted arranger
and composer, Laurie has contributed to films, musical theatre,
radio, television and records, with his music used in many
well-known productions such as "The Avengers"
and "The Professionals". Early in his career he
was asked by MGM to make a series of recordings as conductor
and arranger, but at the time the bandleader Ambrose was
still well-known, so it was his name that appeared on the
labels. Volveré was included on an LP of Latin-American
melodies.
Arthur Harold Wilkinson (1919-1968) was a British musician
who began composing while serving in the Royal
Air Force during World
War II. Back in civilian life he became known through
his work as a composer and arranger for radio, television
and films, and he was commissioned to write the music which
opened the daily broadcasts from the UKs Tyne Tees
Television station he called it Three Rivers Fantasy.
From his arrangements for George Melachrino (1909-1965)
we have selected Rubinsteins charming Romance.
Nelson Riddle (1921-1985) was a trombonist during his early
career, which could explain why that particular instrument
was featured in some of his most inventive arrangements
for Frank Sinatra. Riddles scores also enhanced the
recording careers of many top stars, from Nat King
Cole and Dean Martin to Judy Garland and Peggy Lee. Fortunately
for us he made a few instrumental albums on his own, and
Ill Wind showcases his scoring for strings.
Ronald (Ron) Alfred Goodwin (1925-2003) was a brilliant
British composer, arranger and conductor, who excelled in
the spheres of recording, broadcasting and films. Elizabeth
And Essex Love Theme was originally written for a projected
LP which was intended to contrast the two Elizabethan periods
in British history. The LP never materialised, but the gently
lilting love theme by George Martin (yes, the same man who
recorded The Beatles) deserved to be heard, so Ron Goodwin
included it on his "Serenade" album.
Clive Richardson (1909-1998) was best-known as a pianist
during his early career, but working on many pre-war British
films (usually without any credit on-screen) honed his talents
as an arranger and composer. He seems to have enjoyed making
amusing versions of popular traditional tunes, such as The
British Grenadiers.
The final track is courtesy of David Carroll (1913-2008)
real name Rodell Walter Nook Schreier
who was well-known in his native USA as a conductor
and arranger. In the mid-1940s he joined the newly formed
Mercury Records where he spent the next 15 years. Initially
employed as an arranger and conductor, he progressed to
being a producer and was later promoted as head of artists
and repertoire. Guild recently reissued his version of Dance
Of The Slave Maidens (GLCD5189), and the requests for
more from the same collection are answered here with the
haunting music that Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908) created
for Scheherazade.
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5194
Natures Realm
1 Thunder And Lightning Polka (Johann Strauss, arr. Sidney
Torch)
SIDNEY TORCH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone R 3488 1952
2 Stormy Weather (Harold Arlen, arr. Morton Gould)
MORTON GOULD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
RCA Victor LSC-2552 1961
3 Misty Valley (Peter Yorke)
FRANK CHACKSFIELD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca F 10315 1954
4 Tango In The Rain (Lotar Leonard Olias)
RAY MARTIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Columbia 45-DB 3895 1957
5 Over The Hills And Far Away (Frederic Curzon)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by DOLF VAN DER LINDEN (as
Nat Nyll on disc label)
Boosey & Hawkes O 2290 1957
6 Whistle Down The Wind (Theme music from the film)
(Malcolm Arnold)
THE WAYFARERS
Decca 45-F 11370 1961
7 Meadow Mist (Trevor Duncan, real name Leonard
Charles Trebilco)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by DOLF VAN DER LINDEN (as
Nat Nyll)
Boosey & Hawkes OT2340 1959
8 The Whirlpool Theme (from the film "Whirlpool")
(Ron Goodwin)
RON GOODWIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Parlophone 45-R 4537 1959
9 Saga Of The Seven Seas (Clive Richardson)
THE SYMPHONIA ORCHESTRA Conducted by CURT ANDERSEN
Charles Brull/Harmonic CBL 438 1959
10 Summer Skies (Leroy Anderson)
EASTMAN-ROCHESTER "POPS" ORCHESTRA Conducted by
FREDERICK FENNELL
Mercury AMS16037 1960
11 Wandering The Kings Highway (Leslie Coward)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
(as Melodi Light Orchestra Conducted by Ole Jensen
on disc label)
Chappell C 509 1955
12 Softly As In A Morning Sunrise (from "The New
Moon") (Sigmund Romberg, arr.
William Hill Bowen)
THE MELACHRINO ORCHESTRA Conducted by GEORGE MELACHRINO
RCA SF 5063 1960
13 Fireflies (Peter Yorke)
QUEENS HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH
Chappell C 338 1948
14 September In The Rain (Al Dubin; Harry Warren, arr.
Ronald Binge)
RONALD BINGE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca F 10410 1954
15 Blue Is The Night (Percy Faith)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia CS 8360 1961
16 Whirlwind (Eric Spear)
QUEENS HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CHARLES WILLIAMS
Chappell C 286 1946
17 Countrywide (Anthony Mawer)
HILVERSUM RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by HUGH GRANVILLE
De Wolfe DW 2678 1961
18 Tonnerre Sur La Louisiane (Thunder In Louisiana)
(Gérard Calvi, real name
Grégoire Elie Krettly)
GÉRARD CALVI AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Pye NPL 28003 1958
19 Twilight On Las Pampas (Dominico Savino)
RICHARD HAYMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury SR60103 1959
20 Headland Country (Robert Farnon)
QUEENS HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
Chappell C 652 1959
21 Trotting Class (Bruce Campbell)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA (as Paul Franklin)
Paxton PR 679 1957
22 Landscape (Paysages) (Roger Roger)
ROGER ROGER AND HIS CHAMPS ELYSEES ORCHESTRA
Chappell C 517 1955
23 The Mad Mountain Ride (George Trevare)
QUEENS HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH
Chappell C 377 1950
24 Spring Idyll (Cyril Watters)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CEDRIC DUMONT
Boosey & Hawkes O 2306 1957
25 Sunrise (from "Grand Canyon" Suite) (Ferde
Grofé)
HOLLYWOOD BOWL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by FELIX SLATKIN
Capitol SP 8347 1956
Stereo tracks 2, 10, 12, 15, 19 & 25; rest in mono
Initially this collection of Light Music was intended to
reflect the scenic beauty of our world, but it soon became
apparent that composers often took a different view
the opening track is a good example. Sometimes the word
nature means anything about our planet which
is non-human, so this automatically encompasses the animal
world, in all its myriad of forms. In total this offers
many opportunities for composers to give their creative
juices full rein, which explains why "Natures
Realm" is certainly much more varied, and hopefully
exciting, than the sequence of serene melodies which the
albums title originally suggested.
Johann Strauss II (1825-1899) conditioned his nineteenth-century
audiences to expect charming waltzes, so it must have come
as quite a shock to them when they saw Unter Donner und
Blitz on the programme for the first time in 1868. Somehow
the familiar English title Thunder and Lightning
sounds less dramatic, but arrangers and orchestras ever
since that first performance over 140 years ago have managed
to create a big impact with Strausss Opus 324. The
arrangement by Sidney Torch, MBE (born Sidney Torchinsky
1908-1990) avoids the percussive excesses of some versions,
while still retaining the excitement of one of the most
famous works of the Waltz King.
From thunder and lightning it is a natural progression
to the accompanying storm, and probably the most famous
piece of music that conjures up the sultry conditions that
often lead to a storms climax was composed by Harold
Arlen (born Hyman Arluck, 1905-1986). Stormy Weather
is said to have been co-written with Ted Koehler at
a party in 1933. Whether or not this is strictly true, there
is no doubt that the weather exerted a benign influence
on Arlen, who composed Over The Rainbow for "The
Wizard of Oz" in 1939, even though the song almost
ended up on the proverbial cutting-room floor. Our version
of Stormy Weather, arranged and conducted by Morton
Gould (1913-1996), bears all the hallmarks of quality to
be expected from one of Americas most honoured musicians.
Peter Yorke (1902-1966) provides two compositions for this
collection. It seems likely that Frank Chacksfield (1914-1995)
recorded his Misty Valley in 1954 hoping that it
might emulate the success of his big hit Ebb Tide
a year earlier. Later we hear Fireflies, a catchy
number Peter wrote for the Chappell Recorded Music Library.
Viennese Raymond Stuart Martin (1918-1988) was born Raymond
Wolfgang Kohn, but after he fled from the Nazis and settled
in England before the outbreak of World War 2 he chose to
be known as Ray Martin. He became one of the
biggest names in British popular music during the 1950s,
and many of his own instrumental recordings were either
waltzes or tangos. Tango In The Rain is by the prolific
German composer Lotar Leonard Olias (1913-1990).
Londoner Frederic Curzon (1899-1973) devoted his
early career to working in the theatre and like so many
of his contemporaries he gradually became involved in providing
music for silent films. As well as being a fine pianist
and a conductor, he also played the organ, and his first
big success as a composer was his "Robin Hood Suite"
in 1937 from which comes March Of The Bowmen on Guild
GLCD5106. This encouraged him to devote more of his time
to writing and broadcasting, and several of his works have
become light music standards, notably The
Boulevardier (GLCD5177), Dance of an Ostracised Imp
and the miniature overture Punchinello. He was eventually
appointed Head of Light Music at London publishers Boosey
and Hawkes, and for a while was also President of the Light
Music Society. He wrote a large amount of mood music
himself his setting of Over The Hills And Far
Away being a typical example of his style.
Before he gained recognition for his more serious music,
Sir Malcolm Arnold, CBE (1921-2006) was much in demand as
a film composer. His most famous work was on "The Bridge
On The River Kwai" (1957) but he seemed equally at
home on small budget British movies, such as "Whistle
Down The Wind". Mystery surrounds the performers
of the title music, The Wayfarers, with some writers suggesting
that the similarity to the film soundtrack could point to
Arnold himself conducting a small group of musicians for
the Decca recording.
Regular collectors of this Guild series of CDs will already
be familiar with the music of Trevor Duncan (real name Leonard
Charles Trebilco, 1924-2005). His beautifully crafted compositions
continue to appear on new CDs, and this time it is his dreamy
pastoral tone poem Meadow Mist that enhances this
collection. He was working as a BBC sound engineer in the
late 1940s when one of his first compositions, High Heels
(on Guild GLCD 5124) made the light music world sit up and
take notice. Eventually his successful and prolific output
mushroomed to such an extent that he had to give up his
day job at the BBC, and also find several different
publishers simply because he was writing too much for just
one to handle.
Ronald (Ron) Alfred Goodwin (1925-2003) was a brilliant
British composer, arranger and conductor, whose tuneful
music reached the furthest corners of the world. As he gained
recognition for his original compositions he became in demand
for film scores, and one of his earliest major commissions
was "Whirlpool" in 1959, from which we
hear the main theme.
Clive Richardson (1909-1998) was best-known as a pianist
during his early career, but working on many pre-war British
films (usually without any credit on-screen) honed his talents
as an arranger and composer. His London Fantasia (on
Guild GLCD5120) was widely praised, and thereafter his work
was regularly commissioned by many leading publishers
Saga Of The Seven Seas being a good example of his
penchant for melodies with a nautical theme.
Leroy Anderson (1908-1975) is probably the best-loved
American light music composer of his generation. For many
years he was the chief arranger for the Boston Pops, and
its famous conductor, Arthur Fiedler, introduced many Anderson
novelties to an appreciative world. He was so prolific that
some of his numbers have tended to become overlooked, such
as the tender Summer Skies.
Wandering The Kings Highway, which appears
to have been composed in the 1930s by Leslie Coward,
owed much of its popularity to the recording by the famous
Australian bass-baritone, Peter Dawson (1882-1961).
Sigmund Romberg (born Siegmund Rosenberg, 1887-1951) excelled
at writing operettas that once popular mainstay of
the music scene that is now almost forgotten. "The
New Moon" in 1928 contained two numbers which have
become standards, partly through their unlikely attraction
to jazz musicians Lover Come Back To Me and
Softly As In A Morning Sunrise. The latter receives
a mystical arrangement by William Hill Bowen (1918-1964)
for the famous British orchestra conducted by George Melachrino
(1909-1965).
The American popular and operatic singer James Melton (1904-1961)
introduced September In The Rain in the 1937 movie
"Melody For Two". Our version is arranged and
conducted by Ronald Binge (1910-1979), destined to remain
forever remembered as the gifted arranger who designed the
cascading strings effect for Mantovani, but
his true achievements deserve far greater recognition.
Percy Faith (1908-1976) hardly needs any introduction to
Guild regulars. Born in Toronto, Canada, in
1940 he moved permanently to the USA where he quickly established
himself through radio and recordings. From the 1950s onwards
his fame spread internationally, due to the great success
of his numerous long playing albums. Unlike most of his
contemporaries, Faith arranged all his own material, and
his compositions such as Blue Is The Night confirm
his mastery of the light orchestra.
The composer of Whirlwind, Eric Spear (1908-1966),
will forever be associated with the theme for the TV series
"Coronation Street", but this was only one of
many light music works he wrote. Midnight Blue, on
a Ron Goodwin (1925-2003) 78, was included on Guild GLCD
5111, and his other works reissued on Guild include Proud
As A Peacock (GLCD5160) and Stratosphere (GLCD5183).
In 1955 the English composer Anthony Mawer (1930-1999)
started contributing occasional mood music pieces to London
publishers De Wolfe, before joining the staff in 1959, where
he remained until 1965. During this period he composed almost
500 titles exclusively for them, and Countrywide
is just one of many delightful melodies he has created
this is his fifth to reach a wider audience through Guild.
Gérard Calvi (real name Grégoire Elie Krettly,
born 1922) first came to the attention of the public in
his native France when he contributed the music in 1948
to a show called "Les Branquignols", with Robert
Dhéry adding witty lyrics to his quirky melodies.
The following year he composed the score for "La Patronne",
launching a career in mainly European films that would continue
for the rest of the 20th Century. By far his
best known cinematic work was for the "Asterix"
films, but Calvi was equally at home in the theatre and
recording studios, and writing popular songs over
300 in total. Probably his most successful composition internationally
was One Of Those Songs - thanks to Will Holt adding
the English lyric to a catchy orchestral piece called Le
Bal de Madame de Mortemouille (on Guild GLCD5160). Tonnerre
Sur La Louisiane is his seventh composition to date
included on a Guild CD.
Richard (Warren Joseph) Hayman (b. 1920) started at the
age of 18 as a harmonica player in Borrah Minevitchs
Harmonica Rascals, but he wisely decided to concentrate
more on arranging and conducting. He worked on the MGM musical
"Meet Me In St. Louis" and was put under contract
by Mercury Records in 1950, for whom he made many singles
and albums, the best-seller being his version of Ruby
from the film "Ruby Gentry". Over a period of
more than 30 years he also arranged for the Boston Pops,
serving as back-up conductor for Arthur Fiedler. An established
Guild favourite (this is his 23rd appearance),
on GLCD5191 he conducted Corrida by Dominico Savino
(1882-1973), and this time he features the same composers
sultry Twilight On Las Pampas.
The Canadian composer Robert Joseph Farnon (1917-2005)
produced such a wealth of light music, that it is hardly
surprising that some of his catchy numbers are still unknown
to many people. Such a piece is Headland Country,
and it would be surprising if he didnt have his beautiful
homeland in mind when he composed it.
Bruce Campbell was one of several writers who owed much
to his association with Robert Farnon. He was a fellow Canadian,
who actually came to Britain some years before Farnon, and
played trombone with various British bands during the 1930s
including Ambrose, Jack Harris, Jack Hylton, Sid Millward,
Hugo Rignold and Lew Stone. Campbell assisted Farnon on
his post-war BBC radio shows, and eventually became a frequent
contributor to various mood music libraries. Trotting
Class was written for the Paxton Mood Music Library,
and it joins eight of his own works already on Guild.
The French composer/conductor Roger Roger (1911-1995) is
also a prolific contributor to Guild Golden Age of
Light Music collections 14 so far, and still
counting. Paysages (Landscape) was one of his many
titles that reached a world-wide audience, thanks to the
Chappell Recorded Music Library.
The composer of The Mad Mountain Ride was George
Trevare, who is mentioned on the internet working as a trombonist
and arranger with the ABC Dance Band in Sydney from 1936.
There are also references to him producing an Australian
television series from 1961 to 1974 "The Magic of Music"
which featured Eric Jupp (1922-2003).
Although not as well-known as most of the other composers
on this CD, Henry Cyril Watters (1907-1984) was highly respected
by music publishers, with his work readily accepted for
its unfailing high standards. At times he was employed as
a staff arranger by Boosey & Hawkes and Chappell, and
he generously devoted some of his energies in running the
Light Music Society for the benefit of his fellow musicians.
He achieved a minor hit with his Willow Waltz (on
GLCD5189) when it was used as a television theme,
and his beautiful Spring Idyll is his ninth composition
now receiving a fully deserved commercial release on Guild.
New Yorker Ferde, or Ferdie Grofé (born Ferdinand
Rudolph von Grofé, 1892-1972) became known in his
native USA during the 1920s, partly through his piano playing
with the famous Paul Whiteman (1890-1967) Orchestra. He
created hundreds of arrangements of popular tunes for the
band, the most memorable being Rhapsody In Blue by
George Gershwin (1898-1937). Possibly Grofés
own most remembered work was his "Grand Canyon Suite",
composed in 1931. The opening movement Sunrise provides
a suitably dramatic conclusion to this collection.
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5189
Holidays For Strings
1 Belle Of The Ball (Leroy Anderson)
LEROY ANDERSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca DL 78954 1959
2 Beyond The Blue Horizon (from the film "Monte
Carlo") (Richard Whiting; W. Franke Harling)
JACK SHAINDLIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Brunswick STA 3055 1961
3 Love Is Sweeping The Country (George Gershwin)
FREDERICK FENNELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury CMS 18050 1961
4 Dance Of The Slave Maidens (also known as Stranger
In Paradise) (from "Prince Igor")
(Borodin, arr. David Carroll)
DAVID CARROLL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury CMS 18045 1961
5 Thanks For The Memory (Leo Robin; Ralph Rainger)
GEOFF LOVE AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Columbia SCX 3527 1958
6 Serenade To Double Scotch (George Martin)
RON GOODWIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone PCS 3019 1961
7 Gigi (Theme from the film) (Alan Jay Lerner; Frederick
Loewe)
THE MELACHRINO STRINGS Conducted by GEORGE MELACHRINO
RCA Victor LSP 2412 1961
8 Cumana (Barclay Allen; Roc Hillman)
THE CLEBANOFF STRINGS AND PERCUSSION
Mercury CMS 18053 1961
9 The Willow Waltz (Cyril Watters)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by MONIA LITER (as Paul
Hamilton)
Boosey & Hawkes O 2381 1960
10 Perfidia (Alberto Borras Dominguez)
XAVIER CUGAT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Mercury PPS 2003 1961
11 Bouquet (Percy Faith)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Philips SBBL 615 1961
12 The Most Beautiful Girl In The World (Richard Rodgers;
Lorenz Hart, arr. William Hill Bowen)
THE LIVING STRINGS Conducted by HILL BOWEN
RCA Camden CAS 637 1960
13 Adios (Enric Madriguera; Eddie Woods, arr. Geoff
Love)
MANUEL AND THE MUSIC OF THE MOUNTAINS (Manuel
is GEOFF LOVE)
Columbia SCX 3402 1961
14 Then You May Take Me To The Fair (from "Camelot")
(Alan Jay Lerner; Frederick Loewe, arr. Brian Fahey)
CYRIL ORNADEL AND THE STARLIGHT SYMPHONY
MGM SE 3916 1961
15 Time Waits For No One (Cliff Friend; Charles Tobias)
REG OWEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
RCA LPM 1908 1959
16 Spending Spree (Andy Thurlow, real name Harry
Rabinowitz)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA (Paul Franklin
on disc label)
Paxton PR 681 1957
17 Nurseryland (Angela Morley, as Walter
Stott)
TELECAST ORCHESTRA Conducted by ANGELA MORLEY (Walter
Stott on disc label)
Chappell C 699 1961
18 On The Loose (Pat Beaver; Tony King)
THE WESTWAY STUDIO ORCHESTRA
Southern MQ 506 1960
"The Rebel" Music from the film (Frank
Cordell)
19 Main Title Theme
20 Oo-La-La
FRANK CORDELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV 45-POP 852 1961
21 Vanessa (Bernie Wayne, real name Bernard Weitzner)
CHARLES WILLIAMS AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Columbia DB 3167 1952
22 Faraway Music (Steve Race)
STEVE RACE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Parlophone 45-R 4840 1961
23 The Singer Not The Song Theme from the Film
(Philip Green)
THE KNIGHTSBRIDGE STRINGS Conducted by PHILIP GREEN
Top Rank International JAR 532 1961
24 Strolling Home (Robert Farnon)
STRING ENSEMBLE Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
Chappell C 707 1961
25 Periwinkle (Frank Sterling, real names Stuart
Crombie; Dennis Berry)
THE WESTWAY STUDIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by KING PALMER
Southern MQ 519 1961
26 Jeunesse (Anthony Mawer)
HILVERSUM RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by HUGO DE GROOT
De Wolfe DW 2676 1961
27 Romance In The Breeze (Edward White)
THE BOSWORTH ORCHESTRA
Bosworth BCV 1353 1961
28 Holiday For Strings (David Rose)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
MGM SE 3748 1959
Stereo: 1-14 & 28; rest in mono
Two superb composer/conductors open and close this collection
dedicated to the strings of the orchestra although
the other fine instruments are not exactly ignored! Leroy
Anderson filled the airwaves of the 1950s with a succession
of pleasing melodies that soon became firm favourites. And
David Rose is widely credited as the man who injected short,
bright pieces of instrumental music with an infectious string
sound in the 1940s that would be emulated by many musicians
during the following decades. Both have earned their place
in Light Musics Hall of Fame, but a glance through
the list of numbers on this CD confirms that they were not
alone in creating the pleasing sounds that once appealed
to the majority of music lovers.
Although there were a number of popular conductors in the
USA during the middle years of the last century, Leroy Anderson
(1908-1975) is probably the best-loved American light music
composer of his generation. For many years he was the chief
arranger for the Boston Pops, and its famous conductor Arthur
Fiedler introduced many Anderson novelties to an appreciative
world. Several have already appeared on Guild CDs, and this
time it is the turn of Belle Of The Ball which first
delighted listeners when the composers own mono recording
was released in 1951. Fortunately for posterity he made
a new recording several years later when stereo arrived.
Beyond The Blue Horizon introduces Jack Shaindlin
(1909-1978) to a Guild CD for the first time, but it should
be noted that he was a big name in American music circles
for most of his life. From his humble origins in the Crimea,
Ukraine, he moved to America as a young boy after winning
a music scholarship in Russia. He worked as a pianist for
silent films, and his career eventually embraced composing,
arranging and conducting (in the late 1940s he was musical
director of the Carnegie Pops Orchestra). His music was
used extensively in films and television, ranging from documentaries
to cartoons. He was musical director of the March of Time
newsreels which became a part of US culture.
Another Guild newcomer from the USA is Frederick
Fennell (1914-2004), who gained an international reputation
as a conductor. He tended to specialise in wind bands, notably
the Eastman Rochester Wind Ensemble, which he was reputed
to have devised in 1952 when recovering from hepatitis.
But his wide experience during his long life (he died aged
90) allowed him to participate successfully in many areas
of the music scene, and Love Is Sweeping The Country
is a delightfully feel-good version of one of the lesser
known tunes from the songbook of George Gershwin (1898-1937).
David Carroll (1913-2008) real name Rodell Walter
Nook Schreier was well-known in his native
USA as a conductor and arranger. In the mid-1940s he joined
the newly formed Mercury Records where he spent the next
15 years. Initially employed as an arranger and conductor,
he progressed to being a producer and was later promoted
as head of artists and repertoire. His track in this collection
(after Kismet it became best known to the world
as Stranger In Paradise) illustrates his versatility.
He was particularly successful writing TV jingles for advertising,
and became familiar to the public through his work with
The Smothers Brothers, eventually becoming their General
Manager.
The pendulum swings across the Atlantic to Britain for
three of the top recording orchestras of the post-war years.
Geoff Love (1917-1991) enjoyed a long musical career. He
was accomplished in all aspects of music and was successful
as a musical director, composer and arranger. He was a well-known
personality in the 'easy-listening' music world, gaining
international fame through his Manuel alter-ego,
under which guise he returns later conducting Adios.
Ron Goodwin (1925-2003) rose to prominence in Britain during
the 1950s through a series of recordings that revealed a
fresh and vibrant style of light music that greatly appealed
to the public. Serenade To Double Scotch was penned
by Goodwins recording manager George Martin (b. 1926),
who also looked after The Beatles for Parlophone.
George Miltiades Melachrino (1909-1965) was one of the
big names in British light music from the 1940s to the 1960s.
Born in London, he became a professional musician, competent
on clarinet, alto and tenor saxophone, violin and viola,
and he worked with many British dance bands in the 1930s.
After war service he built an orchestra which became of
the finest in the world; when long playing records arrived,
Melachrinos sold in vast quantities, especially in
the USA.
Chicago-born Herman Clebanoff (1917-2004) had a sound education
in classical music and was an experienced violinist and
concertmaster before he was 20. Usually just known as Clebanoff,
he had a long association with NBC, and from 1945 he spent
the next ten years as concertmaster of their Chicago-based
orchestra, playing a wide repertoire from the classics to
popular tunes.
Cyril Watters (1907-1984) was highly respected by many
music publishers, and from 1953 to 1961 he was chief arranger
with Boosey & Hawkes, often providing appealing arrangements
for melodies supplied by other composers who were either
too busy, or insufficiently skilled, to orchestrate their
own creations. His compositions were accepted by several
different publishers, but Boosey & Hawkes had the honour
of introducing his most successful composition to the world
the sensuous Willow Waltz which created quite
a stir in Britain when used as the theme for The World
of Tim Frazer on BBC Television in 1960. The orchestra
is conducted by Monia Liter (1906-1988) who at the time
was running the Recorded Music Library at B&H. Born
in Odessa, he left his homeland following the 1917 Russian
revolution, working as a pianist in a cinema orchestra in
China. From there he moved on to many varied jobs in the
Far East, finally ending up in Singapore where he spent
seven years leading a dance band at the prestigious Raffles
Hotel. While in Singapore he became a naturalised British
subject, and came to Britain in 1933 where he worked with
many of the top bands, including the famous vocalist Al
Bowlly. In 1941 he joined the BBC as a composer, conductor
and arranger, initially with the Twentieth Century Serenaders.
After 10 years at the BBC, he left them to concentrate on
concert work and composing.
Xavier Cugat (1900-1990) was a Spanish born bandleader
who spent his formative years in Havana, but achieved fame
in the USA. He provided the resident orchestra at New Yorks
Waldorf-Astoria before and after the Second World War, and
he was also a cartoonist and successful businessman. His
four marriages provided fodder for gossip columnists, but
his lasting legacy is appearances in several Hollywood films
and many fine recordings of Latin American music.
Percy Faith (1908-1976) hardly needs any introduction to
Guild regulars. Born in Toronto, Canada, in
1940 he moved permanently to the USA where he quickly established
himself through radio and recordings. From the 1950s onwards
his fame spread internationally, due to the great success
of his numerous long playing albums. Unlike most of his
contemporaries, Faith arranged all his own material, and
his composition Bouquet is a perfect example of the
heights which orchestral music attained around 50 years
ago.
William Hill-Bowen (1918-1964) was George Melachrinos
right-hand man in the years immediately following World
War 2, often appearing on piano but, perhaps, more importantly
as a brilliant arranger who managed to recreate his masters
famous style to perfection. Later as simply Hill-Bowen
he was to receive due recognition for his talents, partly
thanks to a series of LPs commissioned by RCA.
From the late 1950s onwards Cyril Ornadel (1924-2011))
made many fine orchestral albums with his Starlight
Symphony, aimed primarily at the American market.
His regular arranger was Brian Fahey (1919-2007), well-known
in Britain as a musical director, arranger and composer.
Their contribution is a catchy tune from Camelot
that seems to have been forgotten.
Reg Owen (born George Owen Smith, 1921-1978) studied at
the Royal College of Music in London. Following RAF service
he became arranger for the Ted Heath orchestra from 1945,
then arranged for other conductors including Cyril Stapleton.
Dolf van der Linden (real name David Gysbert van der Linden,
1915-1999) was the leading figure on the light music scene
in the Netherlands from the 1940s until the 1980s. As well
as broadcasting frequently with his Metropole Orchestra,
he was regularly commissioned by the background music libraries
of leading London music publishers to conduct their new
works. He also made transcription recordings for Dutch radio
and other companies. His commercial recordings (especially
for the American market) were often labelled as Van
Lynn or Daniel De Carlo. Spending Spree
comes from the pen of South African Harry Rabinowitz (b.
1916) who became well-known in Britain from his work in
radio and television.
During the 1950s Angela Morley (1924-2009, at the time
working as Wally Stott) composed many light
pieces for Chappell & Co., the leading London publishers
of background music. Nurseryland is typical of the
pleasing, tuneful pieces that became her trademark.
On The Loose introduces us to a rare composition
co-written by Pat (Patrick) Beaver, one of the sons of Jack
Beaver (1900-1963) who was a leading figure in British production
music circles for many years.
Frank Cordell (1918-1980) was a fine English composer,
arranger and conductor whose work first became noticed through
the tuneful backings he often supplied to some contract
singers on HMV singles in the 1950s. Occasionally he was
allowed his own 78s, and he was also responsible for several
distinctive LPs which quickly became collectors items.
The cinema beckoned with some prestigious projects and he
was nominated for an Oscar for his work on "Cromwell"
(1970). One of his early commissions for the big screen
was "The Rebel" (1960) starring Tony Hancock (1924-1968)
who was the top British comedian of his era, with millions
adoring his radio and television shows. Like some other
comedians before and since, he did not find it easy to translate
his humour to the cinema, but "The Rebel" still
contains many priceless moments, especially when he spars
with his landlady Irene Handl. Cordells score was
superb, which HMV issued on both sides of a 45. From time
to time Frank Cordell contributed to publishers production
music libraries, and also composed (and conducted) under
the name Francis Meillear (or Meilleur).
The American composer Bernie Wayne (born Bernard Weitzner
1919-1993) is best known at home for his "Miss America"
Beauty Pageant theme, and the hit song Blue Velvet.
His string of instrumental successes became popular worldwide,
and included Port-au-Prince (GLCD5130) and Veradero
(GLCD5111). Vanessa was also widely recorded
by the top orchestras, and we have selected the Charles
Williams (1893-1978) version for this CD.
Steve Race (1921-2009) first became noticed as a pianist
and arranger with many top British bands of the post-war
years, and he was a prolific contributor to production music
libraries. His wide-ranging career also embraced conducting
for many TV shows, and he was a popular compere of panel
games and music programmes.
Philip Green (born Harry Philip Green 1911-1982) began
his professional career at the age of eighteen playing in
various orchestras. Within a year he became Londons
youngest West End conductor at the Prince of Wales Theatre.
His long recording career began with EMI in 1933, and he
is credited with at least 150 film scores, including "The
Singer Not The Song" (1960).
During his long career (from the mid-1930s to the 21st
Century) the Canadian composer Robert Farnon (1917-2005)
became involved with many kinds of music, from the classics
to jazz. Although his forte was undoubtedly in light music
circles, Strolling Home finds him very much at ease
with the melodic opportunities on offer from the small ensemble
he conducted for the Chappell Recorded Music Library back
in 1961.
The next three pieces from production music libraries are
by composers who made significant contributions to this
area of the music business. In particular Dennis Alfred
Berry (1921-1994) who worked, at various times, for Francis,
Day & Hunter, Boosey & Hawkes, Paxton and Southern;
Anthony Mawer (1930-1999) who was a staff composer at De
Wolfe from 1955 to 1965; and Edward White (1910-1994) the
creator of two light music standards
Runaway Rocking Horse (on Guild GLCD5102) and
Puffin Billy (GLCD5101) as well as many other
appealing melodies.
The final number in this collection features the talented
musician whose famous composition, while still a young man,
would ensure him lasting fame for the rest of his life.
David Rose (1910-1990) created a unique string sound with
his Holiday For Strings in the early 1940s that would
inspire many fellow composers for years to follow. From
time to time he made subtle changes in the orchestration,
and during the 1950s he decided to extend and rework his
best-known (at the time The Stripper came
a little later) melody, without spoiling its original feel
good factor. Its incredible to think that dots
on a music manuscript could give so much pleasure to so
many people for so long!
David Ades
GUILD
LIGHT MUSIC GLCD5190
Continental Flavour Volume 2
1 City Movement (Roger Roger)
ROGER ROGER AND HIS CHAMPS ELYSEES ORCHESTRA
Chappell C 696 1961
2 Simonetta (Belle Fenstock; Irving Caesar)
WERNER MÜLLER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Polydor BM 6021 1956
3 So Wirds Nie Wieder Sein (How Its Never
Going To Be) (Gerhard Winkler; Bruno Balz)
HANS GEORG ARLT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Ariola 71231 1959
4 La Polka Des Menottes (Polka Of The Handcuffed Men)
(Gérard Calvi, real name Grégoire
Elie Krettly)
GÉRARD CALVI AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Pye NPL 28003 1958
5 Das Karussell, Das Dreht Sich Immer Rundherum (The
Carousel Goes Round And Round) (Michael Jary; Hans Fritz
Beckmann)
HANS GEORG ARLT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Ariola 32721 1958
6 Champagne (Franck Pourcel)
FRANCK POURCEL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Capitol T 10229 1960
7 Paris Palace Hotel (Paul Jules Durand)
HELMUT ZACHARIAS AND HIS MAGIC VIOLINS
Polydor 20742 1957
8 Tu TFous De Moi (Are You Kidding Me?) (André
Varel; pseudonym of André Tubiana and
Charles Bailly)
EMILE NOBLOT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Odéon SOE 3181 1956
9 Toy Trumpet (Raymond Scott)
EGON KJERRMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca SDE 7134 1958
10 Parade Of The Elves (Heinzelmännchens Wachtparade,
a.k.a.Tomtarnas Vaktparad)
(Kurt Noack)
EGON KJERRMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca SDE 7134 1958
11 Teddy Bears Picnic (John W. Bratton)
TEDDY PETERSEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Polydor 20394 EPH 1958
12 Les Demons De La Nuit (The Devils Of The Night) (Gérard
Calvi, real name Grégoire
Elie Krettly)
GÉRARD CALVI AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Pye NPL 28003 1958
13 Till Margareta (To Margareta) (Kurt Larsson)
AKE JELVING AND HIS ORCHESTRA, solo violin SIXTEN STROMVALL
HMV 7 EGS 182 1960
14 The Phantom Brigade (William H. Myddleton)
EGON KJERRMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Decca SDE 7134 1958
15 The Whistler And His Dog (Arthur Pryor)
TEDDY PETERSEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Polydor 20394 EPH 1958
16 Hem Fran Slattern (Home From The Plains) (Kurt Larsson)
AKE JELVING AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV 7 EGS 182 1960
17 Happy Time (Tom Wyler, real name Toni Leutwiler)
TONI LEUTWILER AND HIS ORCHESTRA (as The Harmonic
Strings)
Charles Brull/Harmonic CBL328 1952
18 Cupido Dansar (Cupid Dances) (Einar Hylin)
AKE JELVING AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV 7 EGS 182 1960
19 The Extravagant Polka (Pierre Leemans)
EMILE DELTOUR AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Oriole CB 1353 1957
20 Dance Of The Millions (Dolf van der Linden)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS METROPOLE ORCHESTRA
Paxton PR 526 1952
21 Ferry Boat Serenade (La Piccinina) (Eldo di Lazzaro)
CEDRIC DUMONT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Polydor 45 073 LPH 1955
22 Military Tango (André Popp)
ANDRÉ POPP AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Columbia WL 130 1958
23 Amphitryon Waltz (Walter Borchert; Franz Doelle;
Charlie Amberg)
ORCHESTRA MASCOTTE
Parlophone R 2691 1939
24 Tango Bolero (Juan Liossas)
BARNABAS VON GECZY AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV B 8833 1938
25 The Little Goblin (Der Kleine Kobold) (Willi Samariter)
FREDERICK HIPPMANN AND HIS KÜNSTLER ORCHESTRA
Odéon 26392 1930
26 Tales From The Orient Waltz (Märchen
Aus Dem Orient) (Johann Strauss II)
MAREK WEBER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
HMV C 2810 1936
27 Gib Obacht! (Watch Out!) (Ernst Fischer)
OTTO DOBRINDT AND HIS PIANO SYMPHONISTS
Odeon O 31166 1937
Stereo: tracks 3, 5 & 6; rest in mono
There is a slight shift in emphasis in this second volume
of music associated with the Continent of Europe, compared
with the first selection issued in 2007 on GLCD5132. Previously
the intention was to create the impression of melodies reminiscent
of various countries, often as perceived by musicians far
distant from those foreign shores. This time all the tracks
are played by orchestras resident in Europe, and there are
examples of them performing some standard works from the
light music repertoire, as well as pieces more closely associated
with their homelands.
Two of the biggest names in Light Music during the post-war
years in France and Germany have the honour of launching
this collection. Roger Roger (1911-1995) was a leading figure
on the French music scene for many years, and his fine compositions
and arrangements also won him many admirers internationally.
His own instrumental cameos were featured in a radio series
called "Paris Star Time" (Paris a lheure des Etoiles),
which brought him to the attention of the London publishers
Chappell & Co., who were rapidly expanding their Recorded
Music Library of background music at that time. Rogers
quirky compositions soon became available to radio, television
and film companies around the world, and more than a dozen
have already deservedly appeared in this series of Guild
Light Music CDs. British TV viewers with long memories may
recall City Movement being used as the signature
tune for the BBC soap opera "Compact" which was
first screened in 1962.
Werner Müller (1920-1998) is also a well-established
Guild favourite, sometimes under his familiar pseudonym
Ricardo Santos. He was a bassoonist who became
the original conductor of the RIAS (Radio In American Sector)
Dance Band based in Berlin, which gave its first concert
on 24 April 1949. It was not long before Müller began
to realise that the publics love affair with the swing
era was gradually starting to wane, and sixteen strings
were added to the line up. The band had built up a strong
following through its Polydor recordings, and by the mid-1950s
the labels dropped the RIAS tag and simply credited
Werner Müller and his Orchestra. In 1966
Werner moved to Westdeutsche Rundfunk in Cologne, where
he continued to make LPs both purely orchestral and
also accompanying popular singers.
The fine orchestra conducted by Hans Georg Arlt (b. 1927)
makes a welcome return with two contrasting and attractive
numbers. So Wirds Nie Wieder Sein (How Its
Never Going To Be) was co-composed by Gerhard Winkler
(1906-1977), a highly respected composer and arranger on
the German light music scene, whose charming melodies occasionally
reached an international audience, such as Neapolitan
Serenade on GLCD5115. Das Karussell, Das Dreht Sich
Immer Rundherum (The Carousel Goes Round And Round)
was the work of Michael Jary and Hans Fritz Beckmann
Jary (born Maximilian Michael Jarczyk 1906-1988) also co-composed
Durch Dich Wird Diese Welt Erst Schön (Through
You This World Is Beautiful) previously included on
Guild GLCD5169. Hans Georg Arlt was the Concert Master of
choice for many leading German conductors, such as Werner
Müller, Werner Eisbrenner, Heinz Kiessling and Hans
Carste.
Gérard Calvi (real name Grégoire Elie Krettly,
born 1922) first came to the attention of the public in
his native France when he contributed the music in 1948
to a show called "Les Branquignols", and started
to write for films. By far his best known cinematic work
was for the "Asterix" films, but Calvi was equally
at home in the theatre and recording studios, and writing
popular songs over 300 in total. Probably his most
successful composition internationally was One Of Those
Songs - thanks to Will Holt adding the English lyric
to a catchy orchestral piece called Le Bal de Madame
de Mortemouille (on Guild GLCD5160). This time we feature
two more of his original pieces, La Polka Des Menottes
(Polka Of The Handcuffed Men) and Les Demons De La
Nuit (The Devils Of The Night).
Any collection of Continental music would be lacking without
a contribution by the great French conductor Franck Pourcel
(1913-2000). During his lifetime he recorded over 2,000
songs, with I Will Follow Him (co-written with Paul
Mauriat) becoming a big hit, especially in the USA. In 1960
he composed and conducted for Capitol an album devoted to
French wine, from which comes the suitably bubbly Champagne.
Our roster of Continental Light Music Greats
moves back to Germany for the famous violinist who rose
to prominence in the 1950s when the American Forces Network
in Frankfurt described him as the best jazz violinist
in the world. During his long career Helmut Zacharias
(1920-2002) composed over 400 works and his album sales
exceeded 13 million. Paris Palace Hotel is the title
music from a 1956 French romantic comedy film starring Charles
Boyer. The composer was Paul Jules Durand (1907-1977) who
contributed the music score to numerous French films, and
the 1954-55 TV series "The Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes".
Our first Guild newcomer is Emile Noblot (1909-1965)
who studied harmony and piano at the Paris Conservatoire,
then pre-war earned his living giving piano lessons and
playing on the radio. In 1940 he became a prisoner of war,
and through the Red Cross he was allowed to organise a small
orchestra to entertain his fellow prisoners. Back in civilian
life he formed an orchestra for radio broadcasts, which
sometimes numbered as many as 48 musicians. He often played
on the piano, and many of his recordings featured the accordionist
René Joly, who can be heard on Tu TFous
De Moi (Are You Kidding Me?) a tune which was
made popular by Jacqueline François.
Raymond Scotts (1908-1994) famous Toy Trumpet
heralds the Swedish conductor and composer Egon Kjerrman
(1920-2007), the second of several new orchestras making
their debut this time. Kjerrman also conducts two other
Light Music standards: Parade Of The Elves (by the
German composer Kurt Noack 1895-1945) which boasts several
alternative titles; and The Phantom Brigade by William
H. Myddleton (1873-1950) whose surname sometimes appears
as Middleton. Under the pseudonym Arnold
Safroni he wrote the famous Imperial Echoes
march.
Danish music lovers will be familiar with the work of conductor
and violinist Teddy Peterson (1892-1991), who is another
new orchestra to Guild in this collection. He was formally
trained at Copenhagens Music Conservatory, and played
violin in many orchestras in addition to conducting his
own orchestra. He was active in the film industry, and it
is estimated that he recorded around 1,000 pieces of music
during his long career. On this occasion we feature him
conducting two well-known pieces of light music Teddy
Bears Picnic and The Whistler And His Dog.
A musician whose name will be familiar in his native Sweden
is Ake Alexander Jelving (1908-1979). He played the violin
in the Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, and was also a
composer and conductor. His frequent radio broadcasts, particularly
during the 1950s and 1960s, made him a household name, and
his first appearances on Guild feature him in charming versions
of melodies by Swedish composers Kurt Larsson (b. 1909)
and Einar Hylin (1902-1975).
As will already have become evident, many of the orchestras
featured in this collection will have been favourites in
their own countries, and often beyond their national borders.
As Tom Wyler, the Swiss violinist and composer
Toni Leutwiler (1923-2009) became known outside his homeland,
partly due to the success of his charming composition Lovely
Day (on GLCD5183) which Frank Chacksfield recorded commercially
for Columbia in Britain. His music was in demand from many
broadcasting stations, and he was reported to have created
over 2,000 arrangements. Bristol Cream (on GLCD5182)
is another fine example of his mastery of string writing,
but perhaps his most popular work is Happy Time on
this CD.
Belgian violinist Emile Deltour (1899-1956) appears to
have started his recording career as Eddie Tower,
and some 78s he made in April 1940 of versions of Count
Basie titles have received approval from jazz enthusiasts.
Little seems to be mentioned in reference books about his
light music, apart from a charming Concertino in Jazz
for Harp and Orchestra which he first performed in the
1930s. On Guild GLCD5146 he appeared as both conductor (Aperitif)
and co-composer (Polka For Strings); our choice this
time is Extravagant Polka by the Belgian composer
Pierre Leemans (1897-1980) which will have been one of Deltours
last recordings.
We are back in familiar Guild territory with
Dolf van der Linden (real name David Gysbert van der Linden,
1915-1999). He was the leading figure on the light music
scene in the Netherlands from the 1940s until the 1980s.
As well as broadcasting frequently with his Metropole Orchestra,
he conducted numerous recordings for the background music
libraries of major music publishers. He also made transcription
recordings for Dutch radio and other companies. His commercial
recordings (especially for the American market) were often
labelled as Van Lynn or Daniel De Carlo.
Dolf van der Linden has already appeared on more than 30
Guild CDs, and his inventive compositions such as Dance
Of The Millions will ensure his deserved place in the
Light Music Hall of Fame.
We return to Switzerland for a track conducted by Cédric
Dumont (1916-2007), who was born in Hamburg, Germany, but
during his long career he became known as "Mr. Music
Man of Switzerland". He settled in Switzerland at the
outbreak of World War 2 and was soon broadcasting from the
studios in Basel. His career touched the classics as well
as jazz, but it was in the sphere of light music that he
became known throughout Europe. Eldo di Lazzaros catchy
La Piccinina became an international hit in 1940
when the Andrews Sisters recorded it as Ferry Boat Serenade
and took it to the top of the American charts.
André Charles Jean Popp (b. 1924) is a French
composer,
arranger
and screenwriter
whose main claim to fame rests with his composition Love
Is Blue which was a big hit for Paul Mauriat in 1968,
reaching number one in the US charts. But Popps long
career has embraced many styles, often leading to eccentric
arrangements, much of it for his broadcasts on French radio.
Another success was The Portuguese Washerwomen (on
Guild GLCD5132), and he returns this time with Military
Tango.
There is one European light music ensemble that retains
a special place in the affections of music lovers who still
enjoy the traditional styles that were popular in the inter-war
years. In Britain, Australia and New Zealand its numerous
recordings were released under the name "Orchestra
Mascotte". In Germany, Austria and Switzerland it was
the "Wiener Boheme-Orchester". French record collectors
looked for "Le Grand Orchestra Bohémien",
and other titles included "Orchestra Tipica Viennese"
(in Italy), Orquestra Los Bohemois Vieneses" (Spain
and Argentina) and "Wiener Walzer Orkest" in the
Netherlands. With such confusion over its name, it is hardly
surprising that the conductors were also rather shadowy
figures. However there is no doubt that Dajos Bela (1897-1978)
and Otto Dobrindt (1886-1963) played important roles, although
it seems that the various names used for the original orchestra
were possibly later adopted by record companies for other
ensembles. Following their Guild debut on GLCD5163 with
Court Ball Dances, this time we feature the attractive
Amphitryon Waltz.
Barnabas Von Géczy (1897-1971) was born in Hungary
although his family originally came from Venice. After the
First World War he decided to try his luck in Berlin where
in 1924 he obtained his first resident engagement at the
Weinhaus Traube. From 1925 to 1937 he led the Hotel Esplanade
house orchestra, and during this period he made numerous
broadcasts and recordings and undertook frequent tours.
He became one of the best-known hotel ensembles in Germany
and gained an international reputation, helped by superb
performances of popular works such as Juan Liossas
Tango Bolero.
Frederick Hippmann and his Künstler Orchestra from
Berlin complete the list of five new orchestras appearing
on Guild for the first time playing Willi Samariters
The Little Goblin.
Marek Weber (1888-1964) was a major recording artist in
the 1930s. He was born in the Ukraine, developed his career
mainly in Germany, then moved to London to escape the Nazis,
before living briefly in Switzerland - then emigrating in
1937 to the USA. His contribution this time is the waltz
Tales From The Orient, one of the lesser-known works
by Johann Strauss II.
Otto Dobrindts connection with the Orchestra Mascotte
has already been mentioned, but this was just one of the
many areas of Germanys light music scene to benefit
from his participation. As Robert Renard he
has previously appeared on Guild conducting Acrobatics
(GLCD5132) and Donna Juanita (GLCD5116) but this
was just one of several pseudonyms he adopted. From 1928
onwards he led orchestras with various names including the
Odeon Dance Orchestra, Otto Dobrindts Piano Symphonists,
Eric Harden, the Dobbri Orchestra and Frank Sandlers. To
close this collection we unite his Piano Symphonists
with Ernst Fischer (1900-1975), whose compositions such
as the South Of The Alps Suite (on GLCD5180) were
to gain him recognition as an important light music composer.
His catchy Gib Obacht! is no doubt intended simply
as an entertaining novelty number, as which it perfectly
succeeds.
David Ades
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