Quantcast
Channel: Big 10-Inch Record
Viewing all 838 articles
Browse latest View live

Genie Pace - Round and Round She Goes

$
0
0
Here's another in the long-running series devoted to obscure vocalists.

This LP, from about 1957, showcases probably the only person who made a living both as a lounge singer and roller derby competitor.

This is Genie Pace's first LP, beginning a brief recording career that encompassed one other album, which appears to be from a few years later, and singles on three labels, including one outing on Capitol.

This record was the first on the small Jade label, which also had her inscribe a quasi-rock single, which can be heard here. There is none of that new-fangled rock-n-roll rhythm on this disc, however. As the title says, Genie is "in a midnight mood" for the most part, although she adopts a bolero approach for "I'll Remember April" (a good idea) and a cha-cha backing for "I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good" (a bad idea). For the most part, Frank Metis' charts are accomplished. He did manage to borrow the swirling harp arpeggios from Peggy Lee's "Street of Dreams" record for Genie's "One for My Baby."

Ira Gitler's notes mention that Pace's early influence was Kay Starr, and the Starr style is readily apparent on the LP. But Genie is accomplished in her own right. She has a good voice with an attractive, rapid vibrato, and the songs come off well. I particularly enjoyed "In the Wee Small Hours," where she takes the verse, which is absent from the famous Sinatra rendition.

Genie Pace in 2010
Gitler discusses Pace's roller derby career, giving the impression that she left it behind to become a singer. I'm not sure that's the case - Genie has a "player tribute" page on a site called Banked Track Memories, and she was photographed at a roller derby reunion as recently as 2010 (photo at right).

The sound is reasonably good. Unfortunately I don't have Pace's second LP, which has backings by Mat Mathews, a musician I admire.

A Spring Crop of Reups and Remasters

$
0
0
The crocuses (croci?) are in bloom in these parts, and spring is two days hence. So let's celebrate with a new crop of reups and remasters, some by request, and some blogger's choice.

As usual, where I have lossless files in my archives, I have remastered these, and the resulting sound is generally far superior to my original work and presented in Apple lossless format. It's buyer-beware with the mp3s, I'm afraid.

Links to all the files are in the comments to this post.

The lineup:

Albert Wolff - Massenet and Saint-Saëns(remastered). Two overtures led by the outstanding and now forgotten French conductor. Dashing and full of life. (I'll have to upload more of his artistry.)

Art Hodes - Out of the Back Room (mp3). The Chicago style pianist on an early Blue Note LP.

Canta Maya - A Long, Long Kiss (remastered). An obscure and highly stylized German cabaret singer who somehow ended up on Roulette records.

Chuck Wagon Gang - Favorite Country Hymns (remastered). The first LP by the famous country gospel group.

Dizzy Dean, Don Drysdale and Hey Mabel! (remastered). To welcome the impending baseball season, a reup of singles by Hall of Fame pitchers Dizzy Dean (his signature "Wabash Cannonball") and Don Drysdale (an excellent crooner!), plus a promotional 78 of the Carling Beer jingle "Hey Mabel! Black Label!" in both dixieland and big band versions. (See original post.)

Jane Powell - Date with Jane Powell (remastered). Speaking of pitching, I think I finally have the pitch of this LP right. You have to hear Powell's superb version of "Over the Rainbow"!

Josh White (mp3). An early album, originally on Asch Records, devoted to the pioneering folk singer.

Leonard Bernstein and NYPO in Venice (remastered). A promotional LP issued by the Ford Motor Company's ad agency to mark one of the television specials that Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic did in 1959. Music-making and Lennie talking, in about equal portions.

Mitropoulos Conducts Malipiero and Bach-Casella

$
0
0
Dimitri Mitropoulos made his first postwar tour of Italy in 1950. One stop was for a concert in Turin on June 2, where he also recorded two compositions for the Italian company Cetra.

With the RAI Orchestra in that city, the conductor set down scores by two contemporary Italian composers, Gian Francesco Malipiero and Alfredo Casella. According to his biographer, William Trotter, Mitropoulos programmed Malipiero's Seventh Symphony during the tour, presumably during the stop in Turin. Also taped during the June 2 session was Casella's transcription (actually more a reworking) of the Chaconne from Bach's violin Partita in D.

Malipiero (left) and Casella flank Manuel de Falla
Malipiero and Casella were almost exact contemporaries, although Casella had died at age 63 in 1947, and were leading figures in 20th century Italian musical life. The two were colleagues and both were instrumental in reviving the music of Vivaldi, but they were very different composers.

The RAI Turin orchestra was not a great ensemble - Trotter says that Mitropoulos found the orchestral playing in postwar Italy in considerable disrepair - but the Greek conductor was able to elicit committed playing, especially in the Malipiero.

The recording is lively, but the pressing has a few thumps. This is from the US Cetra-Soria issue of the set.

I could not resist including the Stokowski transcription of the Bach Chaconne in the download, for the sake of contrast. There is little of Stoky's ostentatiously reverential approach in Casella's transcription. The Stokowski is from the His Symphony Orchestra recording of 1950 - it's not my transfer.

Mark Murphy - The Raw 'Rah'

$
0
0
I was unaware until recently that all reissues of jazz singer Mark Murphy's first Riverside album, Rah, had been bowdlerized. Two of the songs were deemed offensive and diluted or dropped altogether.

When I learned this from fellow collector Progress Hornsby, I decided to transfer my nice stereo copy of the record for those who hadn't heard it, and for those who are unfamiliar with Murphy, a talented vocalist.

In my melodramatic way, I call the result the "raw Rah,"but I admit that is an overstatement. There was nothing scandalous about the content, even for 1962, when this came out.

Mark Murphy in the early sixties
Progress explains that Richard Rodgers threatened a law suit because Murphy's version of "My Favorite Things," name-checked any number of jazz artists, and Rodgers did not like having his creations altered. Then there was Murphy's version of the usually sentimental "I’ll Be Seeing You," As Progress relates, "Instead of 'In that small café, the park across the way/The children's carousel, the chestnut trees, the wishing well,' Murphy sings, 'In that damp café, the parking lot across the way/That beat-up carousel where we used to sell cheap muscatel.'" Apparently this offended someone's sensibilities as well. So the reissues of Rah have trimmed "Favorite Things" and zapped "I'll Be Seeing You" altogether.

The cover shows Murphy in collegiate garb holding what appears to be a protest sign. This, however, was a few years before the first big college protests of the sixties - the Berkeley Free Speech Movement. Murphy's sign was intended to depict college spirit. (I went to college in that decade and don't recall any such signs.) In his notes, Ira Gitler writes, "Mark Murphy appeals to the hip collegian - youthful and vigorous but cool, too. Hence Rah minus the exclamation point."

As for the musical quality, this is surely one of the singer's best records. Highlights include a number of the jazz and hip vocal standards of the time: a superb version of "Milestones" with scat singing that even I can enjoy, "L'il Darlin',""Green Dolphin Street," and "Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most." There is even a good but superfluous homage to Lambert, Hendricks and Ross via "Twisted" and "Doodlin'." Ernie Wilkins contributes apt arrangements that often are little more than muted brass chords and rhythm. Good sound.

A Few More Remasters - and One New Transfer

$
0
0
A quick follow-up to last week's group of remasters - here are a few more for you, along with one new transfer that I neglected to include in the previous post.

The two new remastered reups, both in Apple lossless format, are as follows:

Jimmy Blythe - South Side Blues Piano. Surprisingly good sounding (mainly) acoustic recordings by the short-lived blues and boogie-woogie artist.

Rawsthorne - Piano Concerto No. 2. Clifford Curzon's suave and satisfying recording, the first of this fine work.

Here's the one new transfer:

Adolph Hofner - Dude Rance Dances. Early LP by the notable Western swing meister, but please note that this was in Columbia's square dance series, so allemande to the left if you can't handle such things.

Links are in the comments to this post.

Early Elliott Carter: Cello and Piano Sonatas

$
0
0
As a follow-up to my post of Elliott Carter's Piano Sonata and Pocahontas Suite, here is the composer's 1948 Cello Sonata and a second version of the piano work. This is from a circa 1952 American Recording Society LP.

Bernard Greenhouse
Carter wrote the cello score for Bernard Greenhouse, then a young soloist. This was several years before the instrumentalist's long and illustrious association with the Beaux Arts Trio. Greenhouse and pianist Anthony Makas gave the premiere of the work in Town Hall in 1950.

On the other side of the LP, Beveridge Webster makes the Piano Sonata his own in a version that I prefer to the Charles Rosen account that appeared here a while back, not that the Rosen isn't a tremendous accomplishment in its own right. But Webster's approach in the stormier passages of the second movement does make the later reading seem deadpan.

Beveridge Webster
Like Rosen, Webster recorded the sonata twice - the second time for Dover, for which he produced seemingly the entire piano literature in low-priced editions that once were commonly found in bookstores.

I am certain this is the first recording of the Cello Sonata; I believe that is true of the piano work as well. The sound is very good.

Paul Weston's Melodies for a Sentimental Mood

$
0
0
I had a request for more from the estimable and inescapable arranger Paul Weston, so here we have his Melodies for a Sentimental Mood, from circa 1952.

These danceable, easy listening sides make a great contrast to the Elliott Carter sonatas I just presented, which may have many virtues, but certainly will not inspire you to roll up the rugs for a sock hop.

Paul Weston
One of the frustrations of records like this is that the excellent musicians are not identified. However, Weston did often work with a group of famous West Coast session hands, and other records he made for Columbia did specify the personnel, who included the following: Ziggy Elman, Clyde Hurley (tp) Joe Howard, Bill Schaefer (tb) Matty Matlock (cl) Babe Russin, Ted Nash, Eddie Miller (ts) Paul Smith (p) Barney Kessel, George Van Eps (g). The "Embraceable You" solo trumpet certainly sounds like Ziggy.

The sonics on this 10-inch LP are most vivid.

Julie Wilson and 'This Could Be the Night'

$
0
0
Cabaret legend Julie Wilson died this week, and I thought I might pay tribute to her by presenting this relatively obscure soundtrack recording from This Could Be the Night, a 1957 film where she played (what else) a nightclub singer. Wilson's vocal LPs of the period have been reissued, but not this item, as far as I can tell.

Wilson was 32 when the film was shot. She had already become a fixture at the posh La Maisonette at the St. Regis Hotel in New York, with her repertoire of standards and mildly risque material - a sophisticated mix for a high-end audience. She also had appeared in several shows, and this acting experience and her striking looks made her a natural for Hollywood.

Ray Anthony and Julie Wilson
Along with This Could Be the Night, Wilson was cast in the The Strange One (which soundtrack has also appeared here, although it does not feature her). The former film was set backstage at a nightclub. Quite a club - for a band, it employed Ray Anthony's ensemble, and for a stripper, it had the wonderfully attractive Neile Adams (who met her future husband Steve McQueen while making this film).

The movie sounds like fun, but the the soundtrack is nothing special, sorry to report. Anthony does a number of his set pieces - including two hits from 1952, "Trumpet Boogie" and "The Bunny Hop," that old-time wedding reception favorite. (The hop in this one is not as bouncy as the original version, a fixture in my juke box.) There also is something of a Sinatra flavor to the proceedings, with a cover of "The Tender Trap" and a rendition of "I'm Gonna Live Till I Die," which Anthony cut with The Voice back in 1954.

Neile Adams
The latter song has a solo by Julie Wilson, who admittedly did not have such a great voice herself. What she had was presence and personality. Her idol was Billie Holiday, who influence is apparent in two songs associated instead with other famous singers  - "I Got It Bad (and That Ain't Good)" (Ivie Anderson) and "Taking a Chance on Love" (Ethel Waters). She also lets loose with the flapper-era favorite "Sadie Green," and one of the two versions of the title song, written by Nicholas Brodszky and Sammy Cahn. There is a vocal for Neile Adams, who may have been a wonderful dancer and actor, but whose singing was more like squawking.

M-G-M's sound is uncharacteristically close and harsh, but good enough, I guess. I don't have personnel for the band, unfortunately. The film credits suggest that at least some of the arrangements were by Billy May and Skip Martin.

Ray shows the chorus line his spit valve


Bill Frawley Sings the Old Ones, Plus Reups

$
0
0
A quick post tonight to present one new item and a bunch of reups and remasters.

The new offering is by Bill Frawley, usually billed as William Frawley, and perhaps even better known as Fred Mertz of the 50s smash TV show I Love Lucy.

I confess that this is a record I transferred many years ago, and only resurrected because I wanted to listen to Frawley's version of "My Melancholy Baby" - a tune that he claimed to have introduced in 1912. Who knows if this is true, but Frawley was a vaudeville artist, and he probably did perform this number, and the other "Old Ones" on this LP as well. They all would have been heard in the music halls of 100 years ago, when Frawley was a trouper. The album dates from 1957, when Lucy was still on the air. Bill/William/Fred had little voice left at that time, but much style. You'll like this despite yourself.

Full disclosure: I only had mp3s of my original transfer, and I have no idea where the LP has gone to (they sneak away if you don't keep your eye on them). So I remastered the mp3s. This is something I usually don't do, but it is acceptable for material like this, I think, and the result sounds fine.

Here are the reups and remasters, by request:

Brahms - Piano Concerto No. 2 (Serkin, PO-Ormandy) (remastered). Superb pianism in Serkin's first recorded go at the Brahms First, one of three with Ormandy and the Philadelphians. From 1945.

Freddie Mitchell - Boogie Bash (remastered). Honkin' tenor sax from Mitchell and his band, taken from 1949-52 Derby 78s and an Label "X" LP reissuing Derby masters. I spent a lot of time getting the pitch right on these sides, which is more than I can say for the musicians. It's crude but vivid!

Ida May Mack and Bessie Tucker. Two obscure Texas blues singers as heard on a Label "X" reissue from 1955. mp3 only.

Jimmy Yancey - Blues and Boogie. More from Label "X" - this one from Chicago pianist Yancey as heard in 1938 and 1940 recordings. mp3 only.

Kings of the Blues. This final Label "X" offering presents mainly August 1928 Memphis recordings of Jim Jackson, Frank Stokes, Furry Lewis, and IshmanBracey. mp3 only.

Morton Gould, Oiltown, U.S.A., Plus Reups

$
0
0
I have been out sick for a number of weeks, but now that I am restored to health, what better way to celebrate than to address some of the many requests I've received lately.

To start off, we have a new offering - one of the earliest LPs of Morton Gould's easy listening recordings. This 10-inch album primarily consisted of standards to accompany a romantic interlude, anticlimactically leading up to "Goodnight, Sweetheart" and "Let's Turn Out the Lights (and Go to Sleep)".

Gould and the band recorded these songs in December 1947, during a session in New York's Liederkranz Hall, which Columbia would soon abandon for its 30th Street studios. Notable among the eight items is the gorgeous "My Silent Love," written by the now forgotten Dana Suesse in her early 20s as "Jazz Nocturne." Gould pays homage to Suesse's own piano recording in his arrangement.

The sound here is good, but there is some background rustle from my early pressing. As Columbia sometimes did with its "better" artists, this appeared on the Masterworks label.

Also on today's docket:

Oiltown, U.S.A. I've had a couple requests for the soundtrack to this 1953 film produced by evangelist Billy Graham, which I shared back in the early days of this blog. The original transfer is now lost, but I recently rerecorded the 10-inch LP (my copy is actually in double EP form). Artists featured are Cindy Walker, Redd Harper and George Beverly Shea. Read more about it on the original post.

Jo Stafford - Garden of Prayer. Jo's recordings of gospel material are treasurable. This 10-inch LP from 1954 compiles 1950-53 recordings.  I have remastered the lossy originals and the sound is much improved.

Jo Stafford - Sings American Folk Songs. If anything, this early 10-inch LP is better than Garden of Prayer. Again, I've remastered the lossy originals for the best sound from the available files. The recordings come from the late 1940s.

Brahms - Piano Concerto No. 1 (Rudolf Serkin; Pittsburgh/Fritz Reiner). This is the companion recording to Serkin's Brahms 2, which I reposted last month. It comes from February 1946. The lossless transfer has been remastered.

Fran Warren Singles. I posted a variety of material from singer Fran Warren following her death a few years ago. I have reupped her early single with Charlie Barnet, her EP Sings for You, both from my other blog, as well as an extensive collection of RCA singles posted here

Links to all of these are in the comments to this post.

Heinie Beau's Moviesville Jazz

$
0
0
Arranger Heinie Beau has been an interest of mine because of his association with Frank Sinatra, so several years ago I was pleased to find this pristine stereo copy of the only major label recording under his name.

Last year, Marc Myers of the JazzWax blog wrote about Beau and this record, and that article motivated me to pull the LP down from the shelf and to do a transfer - which I finally got around to finishing not long ago.

It's quite a good record, with Beau's compositions and arrangements using filmic set pieces as their starting points, e.g., "In Your Private Eye,""The Tattooed Streetcar Named Baby,""The Five and a Half Gallon Hat Story,""The Gina Pastrami Cha Cha Cha." Beau assembled two groups of Hollywood studio stars for the June 1958 sessions, which were quite well recorded.

Myers' article on the record has details both of the sessions and about Beau's work for Sinatra, which happened mainly as a subcontractor for better known arrangers such as Billy May. Heinie had a reputation for being both fast and talented - talents that are on full display here.

The Great B.B. King

$
0
0
A small tribute today to the fine guitarist and singer B.B. King, who passed away last week. It's in the form of a 1960 Crown LP with the bonus of one of King's best known singles.

1954 ad
Crown was a budget label owned by the Bihari brothers, who had issued King's single records throughout the 1950s on their RPM label and its successor, Kent. These sides made King's reputation; before joining RPM in 1950, his sole efforts were two unsuccessful singles for Bullet in 1949.

The Crown LP collates sides dating from 1952 (an alternate take of "Someday, Baby") to 1959 (the double-sided "Sweet Sixteen"). I've added King's 1956 78 of "Sweet Little Angel," one of his best known songs, and the terrific "Bad Luck."

In fact, the whole set is terrific. King's inspiration was T-Bone Walker, and these records show the influence of that guitarist's big-band blues approach, which was popular and influential in the 1940s. That's not to say that King was not an inspired performer himself - these records swing and rock in an irresistible fashion.

Crown was infamous for its poor quality control, but these recordings sound fairly good, although there is surface noise on "I Was Blind." The best sound, however, is found on the original RPM 78.

I am sure I have some of King's Kent 45s somewhere, but rather than wait until I find those items (which may never happen), let me just post what's at hand. Hope you enjoy these excellent records from this beloved artist.

More Early RCA Sides from Pérez Prado

$
0
0
I recently remastered Pérez Prado's first RCA Victor LP for a reup on this site (available here). The experience was so enjoyable that I transferred this 1960 budget label reissue of more early RCA recordings from the mambo maestro.

Most of these sides date from the early 1950s, when RCA issued Prado's material in its International series. The earliest is probably the fantastic "Ni Hablal" from 1950, the latest possibly "Beautiful Margaret" from 1957, by which time Prado had crossed over to pop success.

The sound is generally very good, although RCA has added some reverb, as was the custom for reissues. The thinking was that the electronic "spaciousness" made things more modern sounding. Spacious or not, the Prado sound was something special, captured here in all its splendor. The great vocalist Beny Moré appears on the superb "Anabacoa."

Reups and Remasters by Request

$
0
0
Although I have taken a break from blogging for a few weeks, I have kept busy responding to requests for reuploads of some older items.

Here is a compilation of what I have been up to. These are all remastered, except for the Danny Kaye, Dennis Day and Honegger records. As always, the remastered material is far superior in sound to the original versions. Links are in the comments to this post.

Diana Lynn - Piano Moods and Piano Portraits. Two charming, if somewhat overlapping albums from the 40s actor/pianist. Remastered from the mp3 files.

Jerry Gray - A Tribute to Glenn Miller. The former Miller arranger's attempt to cash in on the popular 1954 biopic, The Glenn Miller Story.

Jerry Gray - Hi-Fi Shades of Gray. Very early stereo recordings from the Gray band, now excellent sounding in lossless format.

Danny Kaye - Gilbert and Sullivan. The comic singer takes on G&S in this early LP. (mp3)

Ezio Pinza - Sings Enchanted Melodies. One of Pinza's many attempts at crossover material, several of which have appeared here. These are 1940s sides made for Columbia.

Gisele MacKenzie - Orchids from Gisele and self-titled EP.The pop singer's most unusual LP - a compilation of early Capitol singles issued as a promo in her native Canada - and an EP of cover songs on RCA's budget label.

Leopold Stokowski - Music for Easter. Although I am not a Stoki fan, he has somehow appeared on this blog several times. Here are Philadelphia recordings of Parsifal excerpts and the Russian Easter Overture.

Dennis Day - My Wild Irish Rose. RCA had the popular tenor (and Jack Benny associate) record the songs from the 1947 film, My Wild Irish Rose, for this set, originally on 78.

Paul Weston - Music for Easy Listening. One of Weston's many LPs for Capitol, made when he was the music director there.

George Greeley - Piano Demitasse. Greeley was a pianist of great taste and technique, very active in Hollywood as both instrumentalist and arranger. This is an early Capitol LP.

Honegger - Jeanne d'ArcauBûcher. This 1952 Philadelphia recording under Ormandy was a contribution from our friend Joe Serraglio.

Ralph Flanagan's Rodgers and Hammerstein LPs

$
0
0
After making nine or 10 singles for RCA's Bluebird subsidiary, Ralph Flanagan moved on to the main label in December 1949 for sessions that would produce the first of two Rodgers and Hammerstein collections that RCA would issue by him and his Miller-inflected band. This post collates the two collections, by request.

Rita Hayes
The composer and lyricist had only been a team since 1942, but had already produced three massive Broadway hits (Oklahoma, Carousel and South Pacific), one interesting failure (Allegro) and one charming Hollywood musical (State Fair). Flanagan drew upon all these scores for his two collections. The second set (laboriously titled Ralph Flanagan Plays Rodgers & Hammerstein II for Dancing, Volume II) was largely set down in July 1951, with the addition of "What's the Use of Wond'rin'," a leftover from the second 1949 session.

As usual, vocalist Harry Prime makes an appearance, as does Rita Hayes, a good singer who also had a stint with another Millerite, Tex Beneke. Also on hand is the vocal group the Singing Winds, which was apparently Prime, Hayes, Flanagan and two band musicians.

These transfers are from the 10-inch LP versions of the albums, which also came out in 45 and 78 sets, I believe. They were in RCA's "Designed for Dancing" series, which showcased the top bands and pop composers. On the first cover, RCA made Flanagan look reasonably good with a pink complexion; they turned him an unfortunate chartreuse for the second.

Even though there are two LPs here, don't expect a huge amount of music. RCA was only offering six cuts per album in this series. The sound is very good, but there is some rustle on the second volume.

Below is a photo staged probably at the December 14, 1949 recording date. The record company had everyone show up in suits, but the bandleader forgot his hairpiece. In the band you can see (if I am not mistaken): at left, tenor sax Al Klink; in the middle of the trumpets Billy Butterfield, flanked by towering lead trumpet Jimmy Maxwell; the estimable bassist Bob Haggart; and Harry Prime at the vocal microphone. Klink and Butterfield were veterans of the Miller band.

Click to enlarge


Caballé and Wyn Morris in Debussy, Chausson

$
0
0
I transferred this unusual record as the result of a request on one of the classical music newsgroups, and thought some of you might be interested in it, although it falls outside the usual time frame of this blog.

It is one of the few issues on producer Isabella Wallich's Symphonica label of the late 1970s. As usual with her productions of this time, it featured the talented but tempestuous conductor Wyn Morris, the so-called "Welsh Furtwängler," this time in French music rather than his usual Germanic repertoire.

Unusually for the fledgling company, the record starred soprano Montserrat Caballé at the peak of her fame. The diva's representative had proposed recording the Debussy to EMI, but the firm was not interested. Symphonica stepped in, proposing a coupling of Chausson's gorgeous "Poème de l'Amour et La Mer."

Wyn Morris, Montserrat Caballé, Isabella Wallich
In her autobiography, Recording My Life, Wallich says the results were "neither the happiest nor the most successful sessions I ever undertook," citing problems with getting the scores from France, utilizing an unfamiliar hall and engineer, and working around Caballé's operatic commitments in London. For her part the soprano was "unfamiliar" with the Chausson and "somewhat unfamiliar" with the Debussy, per Wallich, although she does praise Caballé's vocal skill and professionalism.

All that aside, the record is decidedly successful. It is well recorded and nicely performed, with Morris seemingly at home in what may be the only French music he recorded, and Caballé in fine voice.

The Debussy is an early work, when he was under the influence of Wagner and the Pre-Raphaelites. "La Demoiselle Elue" is a setting in translation of Dante Gabriel Rosetti's poem "The Blessed Damozel," also the subject of Rosetti's later painting, a detail of which is shown on the record cover. The work by Debussy's older colleague, Chausson, is from the school of Franck.

The recording was laid down in All Saints Church, Tooting, in June 1977. This transfer is from my copy of the subsequent vinyl issue, which has not, as far as I can tell, been reissued. I was a Wyn Morris enthusiast back in the day, and acquired several of his records as they came out. As usual, the download contains hi-res scans of the covers, some related materials and the audio files in Apple lossless format.

Chopin Mazurkas from Maryla Jonas

$
0
0
This recording was the subject of a discussion on one of the classical sharing sites, which motivated me to transfer my very good copy of the LP, which contains an exceptional performance of 18 Chopin mazurkas by the neglected Polish pianist Maryla Jonas.

My friend Fred of the Random Classics blog also offered this album some time ago, but the links are now dead. I hope he doesn’t mind if I quote some of his description of the performance, because my reaction is the same: “This is not the Chopin that you are used to hearing and it is a polar opposite from the elegant, aristocratic approach of Rubinstein.” Fred’s response on first hearing the record: “Never had I heard such melancholy, such world weariness, from these brilliant miniatures. Indeed, Chopin had painted, below the surface, a sadness of seeing his Polish nation subjected to rule and desecration by others.”

Post-war promotional leaflet
Jonas herself had a most difficult life, and was the victim of Nazi persecution, which may have contributed to her early death at the age of 48. Her small discography, made in the US for Columbia in the post-war years, centers on Chopin but also includes a smattering of other composers. This particular LP reissue from 1956 combines two sets of mazurkas, which Jonas inscribed in September 1947 (set M-810) and September 1949 (set M-897), both of which also came out on 10-inch LPs. Sessions for the latter set were in Columbia’s 30th Street studios in New York. No location is listed for the 1947 dates in Michael Gray’s discography, but since that predates Columbia’s use of the 30th Street location, the site may have been Liederkranz Hall. The sound is quite good.

A note about the cover: Columbia had engaged the relatively new design firm Push Pin Studios to prepare a series of covers for its Entré reissue series. Push Pin had been founded by Seymour Chwast and Edward Sorel, who both were to become noted graphic artists. Sorel, soon to leave Push Pin, designed the cover of the Jonas LP in a style far removed from the biting political caricatures that he is known for today.

I plan to transfer another Jonas Chopin set at a later date.

The Brief Success Story of Adler and Ross

$
0
0
Richard Adler and Jerry Ross should have been one of the greatest Broadway success stories – and for a brief time, they were. The composer and lyricist, respectively, of two of the biggest musical hits of the 1950s – The Pajama Game and Damn Yankees – their rapid ascent was stopped only by the early death of Ross, at age 29 in November 1955, just six months after Damn Yankees opened.

Adler and Ross teamed up in 1950. Until The Pajama Game debuted, there was little in the duo’s output to suggest the range and skill displayed in that score. They did enjoy one big hit, Tony Bennett’s version of “Rags to Riches” in 1953, and they put together a good partial score for John Murray Anderson’s Almanac late that same year. Less distinguished was the work they did for the hyperactive R&B troupe, the Treniers, with their contribution of “Poon-Tang!”, a title derived from a vulgar American term referring to women as sex objects. (I should add that said title is the only racy thing about the song.)

(From left) Richard Adler and Jerry Ross demo their songs for director
George Abbott (I believe) and Columbia Records honcho Mitch Miller
So when The Pajama Game opened in May 1954, it was a revelation. Every song was superb on its own and in context, and the music was complemented by an excellent book from co-director George Abbott and novelist Richard Bissell, a tremendous cast including John Raitt, Janis Paige, Reta Shaw, Eddie Foy Jr., and Carol Haney, direction from Abbott and Jerome Robbins, and choreography by Bob Fosse. The cast, with the wonderful Doris Day replacing Paige, repeated their performances for the 1957 film version.

Damn Yankees was hardly less successful, once again with a strikingly fine, if not as varied a score. I am less fond of this show, perhaps because the film is not as successful, with Tab Hunter (!) replacing Stephen Douglass as Joe Hardy, who makes a deal with the devil to become a baseball star and lead the Washington Senators to victory over the hated New York Yankees.

In the 1950s, songs from Broadway shows were still a major contributor to the repertoire of pop singers. The publishers would cajole the record companies into having their artists record songs from the upcoming shows as part of the pre-opening promotional push. These would first be issued as singles, then may have been repackaged as a compilation EP or LP, often in the low-price bracket.

Today’s offering is an example. It combined some of the hits from The Pajama Game and Damn Yankees as a tribute to Adler and Ross, and was issued in Epic’s budget-priced 10-inch LP series just before Ross’ untimely death. The record company was then a relatively new offshoot of Columbia Records. The artists, the Mello-Larks and Jamie, Dolores Hawkins and Neal Hefti, were on its roster at the time.

The Mello-Larks: Bob Wollter, Joe Eich, Jamie Dina, Tommy Hamm
The Mello-Larks started off with the Tex Beneke band in the post-war period, making a number of singles at the time. The original female singer in the group was Ginny O’Connor (who was to marry Henry Mancini). By the time these sides were made, the lead singer was young Jamie Dina, who was so accomplished and such an attraction her name was appended to the group’s own. Dina was married to group founder Tommy Hamm for a brief time, leaving him and the group for another musician, Joe Silvia. Together they founded the J’s with Jamie, who have themselves appeared on this blog.

The Mello-Larks were often on television and are quite polished in an entirely conventional manner. For some reason, arranger Neal Hefti takes a very square approach to “Once-a-Year Day,” treating it like a polka rather than the exuberant romp conveyed by the lyrics. The prominent trombone choir isn’t a help. “Whatever Lola Wants,” a vocal feature for Jamie, is much better.

The other featured singer is Dolores Hawkins, a very good vocalist who is particularly effective on “Hey There,” although she does not radiate the charisma of John Raitt (or Sammy Davis, Jr., for that matter).

For “Small Talk,” one of the best Adler-Ross songs, Hawkins is joined by contract artist Bill Heyer, a sonorous baritone reminiscent of Bob Manning.

Composer Adler never recaptured the magic of his collaboration with Jerry Ross, although Doris Day had a hit with his “Everybody Loves a Lover,” and his scores to Kwamina (for Broadway), and The Gift of the Magi and Olympus 7-0000 (for television) were released on LP.

The sound on the LP at hand is vivid. Backing Dolores Hawkins on her songs is Artie Harris. Don Costa leads the band for “Whatever Lola Wants.”

A note about the way that record companies would repackage material: Epic issued six-cut LPs by the Mello-Larks and Jamie and by Dolores Hawkins, both of which include two of the songs here. The record company also had an EP of hits from The Pajama Game with all three Hawkins tunes on this LP along with the Four Esquires’ version of “Steam Heat.”

More Chopin from Maryla Jonas

$
0
0
As a follow-up to the recent post of Polish pianist Maryla Jonas’ set of Chopin mazurkas, here is the first Chopin program she recorded for Columbia, during April 1946 sessions. This more varied selection contains three additional mazurkas, two nocturnes, two waltzes and a polonaise. Once again, the pianism displays the short-lived artist’s impressive command and ability to create mood.

Cover of 78 set
The set was issued first in a 78 album with a Alex Steinweiss cover, and then in one of Columbia’s first 10-inch classical LPs in 1948, with the generic “tombstone” cover above.

Michael Gray’s discography does not list a location for the recording. The quality was somewhat boxy; I have ameliorated this a bit through the use of “ambient stereo,” which spreads the ambiance to a degree, while neither adding nor subtracting anything from the sound.

These were Jonas’ first records; my two posts comprise three of the six LPs she produced during her lifetime. She died in 1959.

1948 Musical America ad
(click to enlarge)

Latest Group of Reups and Remasters

$
0
0
A large number of reups and remasters today, from the requests of loyal readers (at least I assume they are loyal).

As usual, these cover the range from the sublime (Beethoven piano concertos) to the ridiculous (Mel Blanc). Some have been remastered, as noted below, and now have much better sound.

Links to the lot are in the comments to this post.

Albeniz - Iberia (Philadelphia/Ormandy). The complete Iberia in fine performances from the Philadelphia forces, courtesy of Joe Serraglio.

Mel Blanc - Party Panic! The best thing on this early Capitol LP is Mel’s impression of Al Jolson, with cut-ins from Woody Woodpecker and Porky Pig.

Mitch Miller - Light Music. Taken from a promo album handed out by Mitch himself to Will Friedwald, who handed it out to us.

Mitch Miller Plays Oboe & English Horn (Saidenberg & Stokowski, conductors). More Mitch promos, this time including excellent classical material. Also courtesy of Will.

Mitch Miller - With Horns and Chorus (remastered). Where else but on a Mitch Miller record could you hear Greensleeves presented in oom-pah style? This one is from my collection.

Beethoven - Piano Concertos No. 4 and 5 (De Groot) (remastered). Outstanding artistry from Dutch pianist Cor De Groot, with orchestras led by Willem van Otterloo.

Morton Gould - Interplay, Spirituals (remastered). Surprisingly idiomatic renditions of these very American compositions from De Groot and Otterloo.

Juliette Gréco (remastered). Superb songs from the oh-so world-weary Gréco, via an American compilation of her early French records. Unforgettable!
Viewing all 838 articles
Browse latest View live