Search Manic Mark's Blog

Saturday, January 13, 2024

The Cool World Of Jack Sheldon

 

I Think That's Going To Rain Today

The Cool World Of Jack Sheldon
Produced for Straight Arrow Productions, Inc. by Don Sebesky
Arranged by Don Sebesky
Art Direction: Beverly Parker
Cover Design: Rod Dyer
Dot Records DLP 25950
1969

Shangri-La
Medley: Happy Together / Honey Pie
The Whiffenpoof Song
The Boy's Got Soul
I Think He's Hiding
Detroit City
Don't Go Breakin' My Heart
I Think It's Going To Rain Today
Afterthoughts
Meet A Cheetah

Aloha Hawaii - The Polynesians

 

Lovely Hula Hands

Aloha Hawaii
The Polynesians 
Featuring: Harry Baty, Sam Kaapuni, Lani Sang with Sam Kokl
Crown Records CLP 5044
1957

To You Sweetheart
Song Of The Islands
Lovely Hula Hands
Beyond The Reef
Kalua
Tomi Tomi
Loch Lomond
Beauty Hula
Putupe
Aloha Oa

Spanish Rhapsodies For Young Lovers - Midnight Sting Quartet

 

The Lonely Bull

Spanish Rhapsodies For Young Lovers
Midnight Strings Quartet
With Harpsichord, Piano and Rhythm 
A Snuff Garrett Production
Produced by Snuff Garrett
Arranged by Glen D. Hardin
Engineer: Henry Lewy
Design & Photo: Studio Five
VIVA V 36004
1967

The Lonely Bull
Meditation
La Paloma
Maria Elena
Guantanamera
Summer Samba
El Relicario
Our Day Will Come
Quiet Nights Of Quiet Nights
The Girl From Ipanema
Cuando Calienta El Sol (Love Me With All Your Heart)
Spanish Eyes

Friday, January 12, 2024

Meredith Wilson's The Music Man - Hill Bowen

 

Goodnight, My Someone

Instrumental Selections From Meredith Willson's The Music Man
Hill Bowen and His Orchestra
Photo by Philip Lustig
RCA Camden CAl-428
1958

Seventy-Six Trombpnes
Goodnight, My Someone
The Sadder-But-Wiser Girl For Me
Marian The Liibarian 
Gary, Indiana
The Wells Fargo Wagon
It's You
Shipoop!
Lida Rose
Till There Was You

Organ Holiday - Ethel Smith

 

Portuguese Washerwomen

Ogan Holiday
Ethel Smith
Vocalion VL 73778

The Sound Of Music
I Wish You Love (Que Rest-T-II De Nos Amours)
You'll Never Get Away From Me
'Til Tomorrow
Portuguese Washerwomen
Mademoiselle De Paris
Small World
Do-Re-Mi
Ce Jour La-A Paris
Valentine

Bon Voyage - Al Nevins

Bon Voyage

Bon Voyage
Al Nevins and His Orchestra
Arranged by Sid Ramin and Irwin Kostas
Photo: David B. Hecht
RCA Victor LPM-1337
1957

Ship's Officers – S.S. Bon Voyage
Captain - Al Nevins
Co-Executive Officers - Sid Ramin, Irwin Postal
Co-Executive Engineers - Fred Elsasser, Don Hoefler
Chief Purser and Concert Master - Harry Lookofsky
First Class Pursers and Vocalist - The Honeydreamers

Great Day
Sentimental Journey
Pink Champagne For A Blue Lady
Let Yourself Go
Nice Work If You Can Get It
Give My Regards To Broadway
Isn't It Romantic
Putting On the Ritz
Someone Is Rocking My Dreamboat
Slow Boat To China
You And The Night And The Music
There's A Boat Leaving Soon For New York 

Greatest Hits - Wes Montgomery

 

A Day In The Life

Greatest Hits
Wes Montgomery
Producer: Creed Taylor
Cover Photography: Guy Webster
This recording employs the HAECO-CSG system and may be played either monaurally or stereophonically
A&M Records SP 4247
1970

From the inside (gatefold) cover: He was just getting to enjoy the view from the top, savoring an international surge of recognition to which he had never seriously aspired, when the end came, with a suddenness that stunned the music world of five continents. But it would not be appropriate to wax maudlin over the loss of Wes Montgomery. His personality, like the sound of his guitar, reflected a love of life, an adjustment to the vicissitudes of his profession, the ability to display in each performance whatever emotion were called for by the composition and arrangement; but never a trace of saccharine sentimentality. 

John Leslie Montgomery's career was unorthodox in several respects. It began unusually late; except for two years on the road with Lionel Hampton's band (1948-50), he remained, until his middle thirties, in almost total obscurity, working in his native Indianapolis. When fame caught up with him, the extent of his acceptance was almost overwhelming, particularly by the standards normally applied to a jazz musician. He was at the height of his popularity and had just returned home from a tour when a heart attack ended it all June 15, 1968.

Perhaps "ended it all" is an oversimplification, for Ees' name, far from being forgotten, still is heard daly on radio stations; the legacy of his style remains, not only on his own recordings, but in the performances of the guitarists beyond number who 2ere inspired by him and do their best to emulate his sui generic technique.

In a reversal of Shakespeare's lines, there was no evil done by Wes to live after him, and the good, far from being interred or forgotten, has stayed with us on the best seller charts and on our record players. No pretender has yet occupied his throne with any substantial degree of success.

Wes was in his twentieth year, a married man, before his translated his admiration for Charlie Christian into positive action by taking up the guitar. At first he played in the then accepted manner, using a plectrum and plying single-string lines through an amplified guitar. The style that was ultimately to be associated most closely with him came about by accident.

"The neighbors complained that I sounded too loud," he once said, "so I took my guitar to a back room, turned down the amp, gave up the pick, and began just using the fat part of my thumb. At the same time I stared to experiment with the idea of playing the melody simultaneously in two registers."

Prominent musicians passing through town would catch him at some secluded rendezvous, but the word spread very slowly, In his own view, it was Cannonball Adderley who opened the door for him, by placing an immediate call to a New York record producer. The latter guaranteed him a session, sound unheard, on the strength of Cannon's enthusiasm.

He appeared a jazz concerts in London Madrid, Brussels, Lugano, San Remo. Everywhere he went, a retinue of admirers displayed their friendship and admiration, still marveling that a soloist unable to read music could have added something so completely fresh and catalytic to the evolution of modern guitar.

Though recognition and a certain security were his from the early 1960s, it was not until he began recording with large orchestras that Wes reached out beyond the jazz fraternity to capture a mass audience. It was in such orchestral contexts that he made his last three albums, all on A&M, all produced by Creed Taylor, who played a vital role in masterminding his development as a major recording artist.

Central also to his role as a style-setter was Don Sebesky. The young arranger proved orchestrations that enhanced Wes' statements without ever obtruding. His gift for guiding and sustaining a mood is typically mirrored in A Day In The Life. Note the shivering tremolo of the strings' entry, Wes' gradual transition from Lennon-McCartney to pure, personalized Montgomery.

Georgia, with Herbie Hancock setting the mood, comprised just one chorus and a tag–time enough for Wes to let his own light shine on Hoagy Carmichael's 1930 melody.

Windy, which we all once associated with the Association, is the sort of simple, undemanding melody that leaves Wes free to swing in a jaunty, pretension-free manner. Again Sebesky's string writing is subtly interwoven.

I Say A Little Prayer For You draws rhythmic aid and succor from Wes' frequent recording companions Grady Tate and Ron Carter, on drums and bass. This transmutation of the Bacharach tune is perhaps the most unremitting jazz tack on this set, with the strings entering only briefly a couple of times.

Road Song was originally known as OGD when Wes recorded it with Jimmy Smith. It's one of Wes' most charming originals, with colorful harmonic and melodic contrast in the release of the A-A-B-A chorus.

The baroque treatment of Eleanor Rigby puts Wes through a kaleidoscope of moods and voicings. Yesterday, also Lennon-McCarney, takes us back a century or two to a promo pre-Beatle England; that first half minute gives you no hint of what is to come.

The Percy Sledge hit When A Man Loves A Woman displays several of the elements that guaranteed artistic and commercial acceptance for Wes; his own work both straight and ad lib; the rich, full strings; a triplet tour from Grady Tate.

Scarborough Fair offers a hint of Stravinsky-via-Sebasky, an intriguing rhythmic figure in 5/4 by bassist Richard Davis, and a long, one-chord extension that exemplifies Wes' facility for understatement.

In Down Here On The Ground, Lalo Schifrin's thematic creativity dovetails perfectly with Wes' flair for bringing his own essence, rhythmic and melodic, to any theme. The only non-Sebesky chart here, it was arranged by Eumir Deodato, who for the most part left Wes free to go his own serene, sensitive way.

Wes Montgomery has something to say that had never been said before. It is our good fortune that albums and tapes make it possible for his statements to continue echoing around the world. We shall not, as they say, see his like again. – Leonard Feather

A Day In The Life
Georgia On My Mind
Windy
I Say A Little Prayer
Road Song
Eleanor Rigby
Yesterday
When A Man Loves A Woman
Scarborough Fair
Down Here On The Ground

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown - Clark Gesner

 

Happiness Is A Peanut Album!

Happiness Is A Peanut Album!
Songs From The Off-Broadway Musical
You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown
Based On The Comic Strip "Peanuts" by Charles M. Schulz
Music and Lyrics by Clark Gesner
Played by The "Bugs" Bower Boys & Girls
Music Arranged and A&R by "Bugs" Bower
Produced by Joseph Abend
Engineer: Warren C. Slaten
Pickwick/33 STEREO SPC-3069
1967

Featured on this album are:

Connie Zimet, whose show credits include important roles in "Most Happy Fella," "Guys & Dolls," "Brigadoon," and "South Pacific"

Ron Marshall, a young man who has appeared with Dick Clark, Ed Sullivan and Arthur Godfrey, and who has recorded many children's record albums.

You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown
Little Known Facts
Suppertime
My Blanket And Me
Charlie Brown's Kite
The Baseball Game
Snoopy
Schroeder 
Doctor Lucy
Happiness

Diesel Smoke, Dangerous Curves And Other Truck Driver Favorites - Various

 

Truck Driver Favorites

Diesel Smoke, Dangerous Curves
And Other Truck Driver Favorites
Starday Records SLP 250
1963

Six Days On The Road - Red Sovine
Radar Blues - Benny Martin
Truck Driving Man - Hylo Brown
Blue Endless Highway - Tom O'Neal
Diesel Smoke, Dangerous Curves - Bobby Sykes
Gooseball Brown - Lonnie Irving
Truck Drivers Queen - The Willis Brothers
Look At That Rain - Hylo Brown
Truck Driving Joe - Ken Clark
Long Lonesome Road - Bobby Sykes
Pinball Machine - Merle Kilgore
King Of The Open Road - Red Sovine
Sleeper Cab Blues - Ton O'Neal
Big Footed Dan - Benny Martin

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

Organ With Percussion And Sound - Bob James

 

Caravan

Organ With Percussion And Sound
Bob Kames 
King Records 742

Mack The Knife
Calcutta
When The Saints Go Marching In
Misirlou
Ain't She Sweet
Caravan
Colonel Bogey March
All I Do Is Dream Of You
But Definitely
After You've Gone
Ivory Tower
On The Sunny Side Of The Street
I Want You
Wake Up With A Whistle

Where The Action Is! - Various

 

Where The Action Is!

Where The Action Is!
Design Records DLP-210
1965

So Long, Stay Well - Barry McGuire
Wanted, One Girl - Jan & Dean
I Never Knew - Roy Orbison
Back Home Again - Floyd Cramer
You're The One - Johnny Rivers
It Hurt Me So - Jerry Lee Lewis
Ring-A-Ling - Neil Sedaka
Please Come Back Baby - Gene Pitney
Greenback Dollar - Glen Campbell
Come On Honey, Let's Dance - Freddie Scott

It's A Guitar World - Chet Atkins

 

A Taste Of Honey

It's A Guitar World
The International Guitar Of Chet Atkins
Produced by Chet Atkins, Bob Ferguson and Felton Davis
Recorded in RCA Victor's "Nashville Sound" Studio, Nashville, Tennessee
Recording Engineers: Bil Vandevort and Jim Malloy
RCA Victor LSP-3728
1967

From the back cover: Nobody buys a Chet Atkins album to read the liner notes! But I think everybody who buys a Chet Atkins album deserves read them sooner or later in the hope they will offer a glimpse into the world of this remarkable man. One could write of a recording session so deceptively simple in instrumentation that it is only as an after thought that you realize musical history was wrought; or one could write of the innumerable trips Chet has made abroad – guitar in hand – as ambassador of the Nashville Sound.

However, I think you would be most interested in a few specific references, like these:

For no one – When you first listen you may not notice the lack of supporting instruments! But listen again – this is for everyone who has asked for Chet alone. Here it is, and it's great!

January in Bombay and Ranjana – These are India's attendants at this musical U.N. feast. Harihar Rao, an outstanding musician from India, stopped by Nashville enroll to Bombay. Nothing would do but that he and Chet combine talents – raw on the sitar (see picture) and the hopi, a kind of drum with a pull string on it (like a miniature "Washtub" bass). On the first selection the sitar learned an American folk tune; on the second Chet's guitar learned Hindi. The sympathetic harmonics and quartet-tone scale of the sitar are unusual to the Western ear, but they provide a cosmopolitan setting for Chet's own sensitive finger style.

A Taste Of Honey – while Chet's guitar has learned, of late, to speak in foreign tongues, it has not forgotten the unique traits that make it famous. Jerry Reed would say, "Lay that thumb in, Chet!" And here it is; Chet keeps the bass thumb line going while presenting the melody in broad chords and ingle notes.

A lot of words could be written about each song here, but the real thing s worth a thousand words; and it lies just inside this cover. – Bob Freguson

From Billboard - March 25, 1967: Excellent Easy Listening and Country radio programming material as Chet Atkins shows why he's worth his weight in gold guitar strings. He teams up with sitar player Harihar Rao on a couple of tunes and lays in some of the finest guitar work in the world on "What Now My Love."

What'd I Say
Cast Your Fate To The Wind
Lara's Theme (from "Doctor Zhivago")
A Taste Of Honey
For No One
Picking' Nashville
January In Bombay
Ranjana
Et Maintenant (What Now My Love)
'Na voce, 'na chitarra e'o poco'e luna
Star-Time
Sempre

A Touch Of Elegance - André Previn

 

Le Sucrier Velours

A Touch Of Elegance
André Previn
His Piano and His Orchestra
Cover Photo: Jerry Schatzberg
Columbia Special Products
Special Archives Series CSRP 8449

From the back cover: Whenever I think of André Previn, I think of Robert Graves. An English critic last year called an essay on Graves' vast works Nowhere Is Washing So Well Done, referring to his abilities as novelist, historian, critic, poet, essayist, and writer of letters to editors; Previn, right now, is Grafes' only counterpart of the music scene. Must I say how many fields he functions so ably in? I think not. If I say anything more in public about Previn's horizon-braking talents, people will say we're in love.

I think so. André also is equipped with a sharply satirical mind. The last time I did a note on an "LP" of his I tried to put in at the story about the time that he and Red Mitchell and Frank Kapp, who play bass and drums with him on this, were going east on an aircraft and were told that the bass would have to have a ticket. André thereupon insisted that the bass be given the usual passenger's drink. Somebody cut that out of the last note, but I am not only persistent but adamant; there, you've heard it. Now you hear another. When I was asking André about this "LP," he said, "Listen, do you know that they're making Tristan And Iseult out at Fox? I had not known, but I was not surprised: Jerry Wald is making Ulysses, he says. "How do you think's playing Tristan?" That, I couldn't guess. "Gardner McKay," said André.

That's André Previn, and that's about all I plan to say about him. It seems only proper to let him speak for himself: "I've admired Duke all my life," he said recently. "On this record, I've put in some of the 'obvious' things, such as Sophisticated Lady, and some of the 'long-lost' things, such as Prelude To A Kiss and A Portrait Of Bert Williams." (I'm sure André will know I'm only lint-picking if I interject a comment here. No Ellington song is ever "obvious," and to an Ellinton fan like me, one who plays his old 78s until the scratching-reducer on the hi-fi is ready to quit, no Ellinton song ever is "one-lost.") There is also an Ellington premiére Le Sucrier Velours, which Duke gave to André especially for this collection.

The idea here, André continued, was to show the poems themselves – not to do them in anything approximating Ellington's own marvelous voice, but in another voice altogether. Therefore he, Red, Frank and twenty strings sat down for two nights and did them. The Ellington melodies emerged in a new, original Previnian concept, and the nearest I can come to defining it is to say that it is a little like Bernard Buffet doing his own idea of a Picasso he especially likes.

"The worst you could do would be to try to imitate Duke, " André told me. "His own ties are 'way out of their won league. The can stand up in any way they're played and still maintain their own point of view. Many bandleaders write things for their own work that won't work outside it in different voicing. He doesn't. He work. They can be played by anybody, almost any way."

Here I must disagree. Offhand I can think of forty bandleaders ho couldn't begin to play Ellington. And now that I've disagreed, I've got to agree (this is why Zero Mostel used to call The Flexible Mind). Eddie Condon's band used to play Prelude, and very nicely, too. Chet Lincoln and his Royal Lancastrians, a band I described as the nuts when I was a frenzied fourteen in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, used to play Solitude. My wife, formerly with Husk O'Hare and other revolutionary groups, make me keel every time she sings those hilariously ingenious lyrics to Sophisticated Lady (in what other composer's works could one find "nonchalant" rhymed with "restaurant"?) Nobody, however, has yet done Ellington the way André and his friends have done him here – warmly, admiringly, and outside yet inside the master's idiom. The song, A Touch Of Elegance, is André's own homage to Duke. Pretty good washing, I'd say. – Richard Gehman (Richard Gehman writes frequently on people in the musical and entertainment worlds. He is at work on a profile of André Previn for the new magazine Show Business Illustrated)

I Got It Bad
Satin Doll
I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
Perdido
Solitude
Le Sucrier Velours
A Portrait Of Bert Williams
A Touch Of Elegance
It Don't Mean A Thing
Prelude To A Kiss
What Am I Here For
Sophisticated Lady

Monday, January 8, 2024

A Thousand And One Notes - John Scott Trotter

Autumn Nocturne

A Thousand And One Notes
John Scott Trotter
A World Of Stereo
Cover Photo by Phil March
Warner Bros. Records 1223
1958

From the back cover: If I may be pardoned a rather uninspired paraphrase of this album's title, may I say, I've spent a Thousand and One Nights with John. Seventeen or so years on the radio. Not to mention countless mornings and afternoons recording, extended tours, and camp shows. It's readily apparent then that I should know him rather well, and it's equally obvious that I must have great respect for his ability and his musical integrity. His impeccable taste. Really, I can think of so many times when he has rescued me from blaring gaffes and melodic cliches – when his choice of material, his arrangements, his use of voices and instruments meant the success of an album or a record. If I am able to distinguish the good from the bad, if I know anything about music at all, what little I know rubbed off Trotter onto me.

Looking back now one these seventeen years, I am vastly impressed with just how much John Scott Trotter has meant to my career, When I heard that he was doing an album, "A Thousand And One Notes," I was confident that he would do something very special, and I believe he has – because John doesn't go any other way.

Among this group of songs he's using here is some particularly well chosen material – a wide variety of beautiful things, with sharply contrasting treatments. Lots of musicianship here too – good men, which certainly doesn't surprise me. Fellas in the craft love to work under John's stick. They have tremendous respect for his talent and his ability, of course, and they appreciate his taste and discrimination, but I also like to think that they like the organization, the discipline that always prevails on a disk date with John. I don't mean that the atmosphere is stiff or formal. There are lots of laughs. John is a role-poly fella, you know, and such types generally have great good humor, as does John, but there are no monkeyshines, no shenanigans.

John comes to the date well prepared, everything is in orderly arrangement, and from the first downbeat to the final chord it's cool, shady and all down hill. In all the times that I've worked with John I have only heard him raise his voice once, an occasion when the trombone player showed up slightly sauced, and after taking his chair, instead of listening to John's instructions he was busy throwing wisecracks, asides, and soot voces around. Trotter froze him with a steely eye, rapped once with his stick, and said sharply, "Mr. Winslow." The date proceeded smoothly from then on to its conclusion.

When I first met John he was playing piano for the late Hal Kemp at the Manager Grill in New York. He was fresh out of North Carolina University, as were most of the personnel in the Kemp band, and his arrangements, notable for their staccato trumpet effects, were even then attracting considerable attention. The fact that he has come a long way since then, that he's risen to a top position in this business is not accidental. John has studied with some of the most important serious musicians in the country. He is intensely dedicated to the purpose of doing things that are fresh, inventive an musical honest. Many such things will be found in this fin album. – Bing Crosby

From Billboard - November 2, 1958: Charming picture of Trotter and kids listening to the "music" of  sea shells give this package nice display. Liner notes by Bing Crosby are also of interest. Package features lushly arranged instrumental treatments of widely contrasting oldies ranging from the haunting "Solitude" to the gay "Fiddle Faddle" and the hip-swinging "Tico Tico."

Fiddle Faddle
Adios
Sophisticated Lady
Sabre Dance
Blue Tango
Solitude 
Tico Tico
Gobelues
In An Eighteenths Century Drawing Room
Autumn Nocturne
Anna 

Sister Rosetta Tharpe

 

Lily Of The Valley

Sister Rosetta Tharpe
Crown Records CLP 5236
1961

Nothing Between
Lily Of The Valley
Seeking For Me
Shine For Jesus
Never Alone
I Do, Don't You
God, Lead Us Along
Family Prayer
What Are They Doing
I Saw The Light
Blow You Trumpet Of Zion
On The Joy That Came To Me

Charlie Gore The Country Gentleman

 

Stumbling Block

Charlie Gore
The Country Gentleman
Audio Lab AL-1526
Audio Lab Recordings Are A Product Of King Records, Inc. - Cincinnati, Ohio
1960

If God Can Forgive You So Can I
Oh! Mis'rable Love
Each Time I Pray
Stumbling Block
Gonna Take Another Walk Downtown
Who's Been Dragging Your Little Red Wagon
It's A Long Way Back To Town
This Orchid Means Goodbye
Mabel, Mabel
Over You
Railroad
Heaven Sent You To Me

Music From The Sound Track Of The Columbia Picture Picnic

 

Love Theme

Music From The Sound Track Of The Columbia Picture Picnic
Decca Records DL 8320 (also available on Decca Extended Play ED-846 - 45 RPM)
1956

Love Theme
Hal's Theme
The Owen's Family
Flo And Madge
Moonglow and Love Theme
It's A Blue World / Torn Shirt (Part 1)
Torn Shirt / Hal's Turmoil
Rosemary Pleads / Rosemary Alone
Culmination / Hal's Escape
The Owen's Girl / Millie
You Love Me / Madge Decides

Velvet & Gold - Jackie Gleason

 

Again

Ti-Pi-Tin

Jackie Gleason 
Velvet & Gold
For Lovers Only
A Capitol Record Club Exclusive Two-Record Set
Produced by Dick Jones
A&R Coordinator: Pete King
Designed by Dave Kessler
Capitol Records SOB 91546
1968

From the inside (gatefold) cover: When people hear the name "Jackie Gleason," many are likely to envision the comedian who has come to be known as "The Great One" – a title that refers to his considerable girth and even more voluminous talent.

Others, though, including you who own this Capitol Record Club exclusive album, know another Jackie Gleason – the innovative musician who is responsible for creating some of the most romantic orchestrations of love themes ever. The story of these two sides of Jackie Gleason is a remarkable study of a man who was risen to the top of his profession through almost unlimited talent and is now beloved by millions of fans all over the world.

Jackie is one of the most well known and best-loved stars of television, Broadway and the movies. And, as with every enterprise in which Jackie Gleason has involved himself, creating and recording the type of music you'll hear on the album has become another of his major achievements.

Working with the concept of producing albums featuring some of the most frankly romantic music ever recorded, Jackie first outlined his ideas to New York's most sought-after arrangers – often demonstrating phrases and melodies on the trumpet he taught himself to play.

When the arrangements were written to his complete satisfaction, Gleason called in virtuoso musicians like trumpeter Bobby Hackett to star in solo roles. The resulting "Jackie Gleason sound" introduced on his first Capitol album, Music For Lovers Only," caused an immediate and lasting public sensation.

This Club exclusive album, however, spotlights even another facet of the complex Jackie Gleason musical personality. The first and second sides are arranged in the original lush "million-string" style that is universally symbolic of the Gleason touch. The third and fourth sides are recorded in a lighter dancing mood, with special emphasis on brass. This newer Gleason sound is now also familiar as a vital part of  Jackie's music.

With his large orchestra, Gleason creates moods of temptation, romance, daring and high-pitched emotion. Seemingly millions of violins laying a sensuous foundation for a solo instrument... shimmering, subdued flashes of brass and woodwinds.... a beat that is prepared for intimate dancing or pure listening pleasure – these are some of the intoxicating highlights of the Jackie Gleason sound.

It has been said that a great comedian must first be a great actor, that a great actor must be able to capture and portray the full range of human emotion, and that music plays upon the mind and heart. If this truths are kept in mind, it becomes easy to understand the timeless appeal of music interpreted and conducted by Jackie Gleason. 

Once you hear this album, unquestionably one of Jackie's best, it become apparent that "The Great One" – one of the most famous and acclaimed clowns of all time – is capable of inducing far more than laughter from an audience. As a result of his genius, a whole new style of orchestration and musical interpretation has been born. You'll treasure the 20 examples of this internationally famous sound in a program of standard love themes on "Velvet and Gold... for Lovers Only."

Once In A While
The Second Time Around
If I Had You
Softly, As I Leave You
Where Are You?
Again
You Stepped Out Of A Dream
What Can I Say After I Say I'm Sorry?
I'm In The Mood For Love
Lara's Theme (from "Doctor Zhivago")

Cabaret
September Song
Out Of Nowhere
Ti-Pi-Tin
Starry-Eyed And Breathless
You Hit The Spot
On The Street Where You Live
How High The Moon
Love Is Here To Stay
Just You, Just Me






A Swingin' Dance Date! - Peter Palmer

 

Soon

A Swingin' Dance Date
Peter Palmer and His Orchestra
Mercury Records MG 20487
1960

Blue Moon
You're Driving Me Crazy (What Did I Do)
I've Heard That Song Before
The Touch Of Your Lips
Just You Just Me
Heart And Soul
Soon
The Continental
They Didn't Believe Me
But Not For Me
The Nearness Of You
Side By Side

Hold Me - Bert Kaempfert

 

Hold Me

Hold Me
Bert Kaempfert and His Orchestra
Trumpet Solos by Fred Moch
Produced by Milt Gabler
Decca Records DL 4860
1967

From Billboard - April 29, 1967: Kaempfert can make any song sound fresh and alive, and here he starts things moving with the oldie, "Hold Me." The other songs, including "Take Seven," "Lady" and "Marjoram," show the Kaempfert group at its exciting best. Fred Moch's horn swings.

Hold Me
Hold Back The Dawn
Sermonette
It's The Talk Of The Town
Pussy Footin'
So What's New
Somebody Loves You
Lady
Sweet Maria
Rose Room
Marjoram

From Maui With Love - Martin Denny

 

Quiet Village

From Maui With Love
The Piano Artistry of Martin Denny
Arranged, Performed and Produced by Martin Denny
Drums - Frank Flynn
String Bass - Tibor Leske
Recorded at A&R Recording Studio - Rancho Mirage, California
Engineer: Scott Seely
First American FA-7743
1980

From the back cover: This is Martin Denny's first recorded piano LP. And it is aptly named since it culminates Martin's twenty-five year love affair with Hawaii.

Martin Denny first arrive in Honolulu in 1954. Since then he has appeared at virtually all of the entertainment landmarks in the Islands including Don the Beachcomber, Royal Hawaiian, Hawaiian Village, Kahala Hilton and now the Wailea Beach Hotel on Maui. It was at the Shell Bar at the Village, which he opened in 1956, that he initiated the famous exotic sounds and bird calls, which have become his musical trademarks.

The Martine Denny Group has performed all over the mainland at college concerts and has made 36 recordings. "Quiet Village" sold over a million singles and earned a gold record. His first LP, Exotica, sold 400,000 and was awarded a Silver Platter.

From Maui With Love demonstrates Martin Denny's piano versatility from the classical version of "Tiny Bubbles" (with apologies to Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Chopin, Liszt, Strauss and Tchaikovsky!) to some of his big hits – "Quiet Village" and "A Taste Of Honey."

To celebrate his current engagement at the Wailea Beach Hotel, Martin Denny introduces two of his newest composition on this album. "From Maui With Love" captures the mood of Maui and the swinging "Raffles" takes its name from the beautiful gourmet restaurant where he performs to the listening delight of its diners and his many fans.

Tiny Bubbles
The Maui Waltz
Return To Paradise
Firecracker
From Maui With Love
Island Of Dreams
Raffles' 
A Taste Of Honey
Quiet Village
Aloha I Love You
Lahaina Luna
Blue Paradise