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Wednesday, February 5, 2025

Star Wars - Ferrante & Teicher

 

Main Title from "Star Wars"

Star Wars
Ferrante & Teicher
Arranged by Ferrante & Teicher
Album Produced and Conducted by Nick Perito
Engineer: Frank Kulaga
Recorded by National Recording Studios, New York
Mastered at United Artist's Recording Studio, Los Angles, California
Musical Advisor: Frank Hunter
Ferrante & Teicher play Baldwin Pianos
Art Director: Bill Burks
Album Design: Stan Evenson
Photography: Larry du Pont, Richard Avedon, NASA/After Image
United Artist Music and Records 
1978

Theme From Star Trek
Swinging On A Star
Claire Disco Lune
You Are My Lucky Star
Star Eyes
Moonshine Sonata
Stairway To The Stars
Moon Beams
Stars Fell On Alabama
When You Wish Upon A Star
Main Title from "Star Wars" (from the 20th Century Fox Motion Picture)

Ferrante & Teicher - Phillips & Burns Play At The Twin Pianos

 

African Echoes

Ferrante & Teicher
Phillips & Burns 
Play At The Twin Pianos!
And selections by Phillips and Shaffitz with The Metropolitan Strings
Guest Star Records MONO G 1410
1964

African Echoes
Falling In Love With Love
All The Things You Are
Mississippi Boogie
So In Love
High, High, High (Jai, Jai, Jai)
My Romance
Speak Low
Boogie Express
You'll Never Walk Alone

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

The Thomas Crown Affair - Michel Legrand

 

Playing The Field

The Mirisch Corporation Presents
Steve McQueen, Faye Dunaway in
A Norman Jewison Film
The Thomas Crown Affair
Co-Starring Paul Burke, Jack Weston
Written by Alan R. Trustman
Produced and Directed by Norman Jewison
Music Composed and Conducted by Michel Legrand
Main Theme – The Windmills Of Your Mind sung by Noel Harrison
Lyrics by Marilyn and Alan Bergman
United Artists UA-LA295-G
1968

Theme from The Thomas Crown Affair (The Windmills Of Your Mind)
Room Service
A Man's Castle
The Chess Game
Cash And Carry
His Eyes, Her Eyes (vocal by Michel Legrand
Playing The Field
Theme from The Thomas Crown Affair (The Windmills Of Your Mind)
The Boston Wrangler
His Eyes, Her Eyes
The Crowning Touch

Hang 'Em High - Hugo Montenegro

 

Theme For Three

Hang 'Em High
Hugo Montenegro
His Orchestra and Chorus
Musical Arrangements by Hugo Montenegro
Produced by Joe Reisman
Recored in RCA's Music Center Of The World, Hollywood, California 
Recording Engineer: Mickey Crofford
RCA Victor STEREO LSP-4022
1968

From the back cover: Back in the '50's "background" or "mood music" was the rage. Today, background music has moved to the foreground thanks to the popularity of talented arranger-conductor-composers like Hugo Montenegro. The Montenegro musical credits are most impressive: staff arranger for Andre Kostelanetz, conductor-arranger for Harry Belafonte, important film-scoring assignments ("Hurry Sundown") and extensive TV work ("I Dream Of Jeannie," "The Outcasts" and "Here Comes The Brides").

His first hit album for RCA was Music from "The Man From U.N.C.L.E." followed up by the enormously successful music from "The Good Bad And The Ugly." His new release, Hang Em' High, is an extension of the Montenegro "young sound" which turned music from "The Good, The Bad And The Ugly" into a top seller. Indeed, Montenegro has developed a unique musical identity that makes his vibrant orchestrations instantly recognizable. This new collection is a stunning showcase of contemporary pops excitingly performed by the Montenegro orchestra and chorus along with the unique talents of Muzzy Marcellino and Jack Keller. For years Marcellino has whistled themes for motion pictures and records. His most notable job was "The High And The Mighty." This is "The Whistler's" second album with Montenegro. Hugo would like to give special thanks to Jack Keller for his assistance in developing My Love and Wish I Knew into songs. (They were originally composed as television cues.) The effect is bold, fresh and bracing. These are sounds for right now – for this very moment.

With selections like theme from "Valley Of The Dolls," "In The Heat Of The Night," theme from "The Fox" and the new hit "Hand 'Em High," this Montenegro album runs the gamut from romantic rock through raunchy blues, brassy mariachi and the bright, lyrical western orchestral settings that made the music from "The Good, The Bad And The Ugly" such a smash. Here, then, is more of the Montenegro magic – imaginative, modern, entertaining and distinctive. – John Lissner

Hang "Em High
Theme from "The Fox"
Theme from "Valley Of The Dolls"
Wish I Knew
Theme For Three
Bandolero!
In The Heat Of The Night
Tomorrow's Love
For Love Of Ivy
My Love
Bitter Love
Keystone Kop

Saturday, February 1, 2025

Voices And Instruments - Wernick / Boros

 

Jacket includes the sheet below as well as the business card-sized "Erratum" (corrections) note
Voice And Instruments

Voices And Instruments

Richard Wernick
Haiku of Basho
Neva Pilgrim, Soprano
Contemporary Chamber Players of The University Of Chicago
Richard Wernick, Conductor
Moonsongs From The Japanese
Neva Pilgrim, Soprano

David John Boros
Anecdote Of The Jar
Piano Interlude (The Pleasures of Merely Circulating)
Martin Boykan - Paino
Alan Nagel - Bass
David Satz - Bass Clarinet
Brandels Chamber Chorus - James Olesen, Conductor
Yet Once Again
Constance Boykan - Flute
Wedding Music
George Fisher - Piano

Produced by Carter Harman
Art Direction: Judith Lerner
Cover Concept: Harley Gaber
Cover Painting: Portrait of Daruma by Ekaku Hakuin - Courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution, Freer Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
Haiku - Presser (ASCAP): 10'34" - Recorded by Richard Mintel: May 23, 1977, Chicago
Moonsongs - Presser (ASCAP): 6'12" - Recorded by Marc Aubort; January 25-7, 1977, New York
Anecdote and Interlude - MS: 10' 45"
Yet Once Again - MS: 7'35"
Wedding Music - MS: 6'55"
Boros recorded by David Hancock; May 1, 1977; Waltham, Massachusetts
American Contemporary 
CRI 379 STEREO
1977

Each year, the American Academy-Institute of Arts and Letters bestows awards upon four young composers for achievement, and a recording of their music on CRI is part of their prize. Richard Wernick was a 1976 winner. The memorial recording of music by the late David John Boros was made possible any the generosity of his family, friends and colleagues here and abroad.

From the back cover: Richard Wernick (b. Boston, 1934) attended Brandeis University where he studied composition with Irving Fine and Harold Shapero, and received his M.A. degree from Mills College where he studied with Leon Kirchner. Since 1957, when he served as musical director and composer-in-residence of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, he has received many awards and grants – including the 1977 Pulitzer Prize in Music and the award of the American Academy-Insitute of Arts and Letters tha made this recording possible. Wernick has been a faculty member of the University of Buffalo and the University of Chicago, and became Professor of Music at the University of Pennsylvania in 1968. He writes: "The HAIKU OF BASHO is a setting of five haiku by and (in one instance) about Matzuo Basho (1643-94), generally acknowledged to be the foremost writer of this form of Japanese verse. The first four poems of the cycle are fine examples of how Basho was able to capture the essence of seemingly inconsequential moments of vignettes and, with the must frugal means of literally expression, communicate to the reader a sense of the timeless and eternal. The fifth poem, written a century later, is more in the nature of a 17-syllable one-line-joke, a play on the word 'basho' which means 'banana leaf.'

"There are no programmatic connections between the haiku and the music, nor is there any attempt at word painting. There relationship of the music to the words is rather one of attitude attempting through an economical and tightly woven means of abstract musical expression, to create sound images similar to (or analogous to) the poetic images evoked by the haiku. The attitude is perhaps best summed up by Basho's own admonition to his pupils: "Do not seek to follow in the footsteps of the men of old; seek what they sought.'

"The melodic and harmonic aspects of the score are derived from on tone row which appears throughout the piece in several forms. There is a departure from conventional 12-tone technique in that the rows are used only as the basis for harmonic and melodic materials which are then subjected to more or less standard procedures of development and variation. The improvisational qualities of the HAIKU are partially achieved by the use of metrical modulation in which the conjunction and the superimposition of even and uneven metrical units generate continuous changes in the speed of the music. Apart from a few places where the speed may vary at the discretion of the conductor or one of the instrumentalists, the relationship of rhythm to speed is directed by the composers notation, and is intended to provide a feeling of freedom without the composer abdicating control of the music."

Moonsongs From The Japanese was composed in the spring of 1969, not long after the first performance of HAIKU OF BASHO.

"This piece was written in response to a request from Neva Pilgrim for a work that would 'travel lightly,' i.e. one that could be done without piano accompaniment. This led to the conception of a work for 3 voices the outer two being pre-recorded and the middle one being performed live. Although it is conceivable that the MOONSONGS could  be sung by three different sopranos, no performance of this version has yet taken place.

"The idea of composing a 'sequel' to the HAIKU OF BASHO (in the sense of writing another group of haiku settings) seemed a natural one to me at the time. I had enjoyed immensely the challenge of setting that uniquely spare and evocative poetric genre.

"The time when I began to work on the piece coincided with the final preparations for the first moon landings, and it seemed more than appropriate to select a group of haiku about the moon. Aside from the excitement which most of us felt about this great achievement, I also had tinges of regret that the moon would never again be quite the same after it had been 'stepped on.' The very fact of human contact, by its nature, would detract from the mystery and romance which for thousands and thousands of years had surrounded this ever-changing celestial body. Thus the selection of these affectionate and evocative poems.

"Both the HAIKU OF BASHO and MOONSONGS FROM THE JAPANESE are dedicated to Neva Pilgrim."

The music on the other side of this record is the work of a composer who died young. David John Boros was 31 years old in 1975. The tragic automobile accident that killed him and his wife, Emidia Meloncelli, cut short the career of a very gifted composer, a highly unusual spirit whose energy and imagination promised continued creativity and the years to come.

He was born in 1944. He received a B.A. degree from the University of California at Berkeley in 1966 and an M.F.A. degree from Brandeis University in 1970. His teachers included Seymour Shifrin, Arthur Berger, Marin Boykin, David Lewin and Henri Lazarof. He spent 1968-69 in Rome on a Fulbright-Hayes ground, studying with Petrassi. At the time of his death he was on the faculty of Brandeis University.

Between 1970 and 1973 he lived in Rome, working as a pianist in an American gospel group that toured Italy, Switzerland and Austria. Jazz and gospel music played an important role in his life and their influence is always present in his music, although not explicitly until the unfinished piece he was working on at the time of his death.

Wedding Music, written in 1968, is the earliest of the pieces presented here. This solo piano piece was written for a specific occasion, the marriage of a lifelong friend. Yet Once Again is a solo flute piece, written in 1970 for Constance Boykan, who performs it here. This is perhaps the piece which most strikingly reveals his outstanding gift for melodic line. An extended opening section employs only three notes, playfully resting on one and then the next. Rapidly the piece opens up into a long and flowing aria.

The unfinished choral piece based on poetry of Wallace Stevens is the most ambitious of the pieces. It was to consist of two movements, the first of which, ANECDOTE OF THE JAR, is in its finished and complete form. In the second movement, The Pleasures of Merely  Circulating, the entrance of the chorus is preceded by a long introduction in the piano. This introduction was conceived of as a piece in itself. For that reason it is included on this recording, even though the eventual entrance of the bass clarinet and the double bass strongly suggests continuation. The choral movement which was to follow exists only in sketch, and is unfinished, even in that form.

The poem pits order against disorder, rationality against what Stevens called the squirming facts of life. The poem that the two remain in constant competition from which neither can triumph. This duality is portrayed metaphorically in the poem in the images of the clear, round jar and the slovenly wilderness. In the music it is suggested by contrasting, sometimes conflicting, musical elements.

The piece is divided into three sections. In the first, the chorus is unaccompanied and the writing tends to be polyphonic. The second section consists of a long interlude for the bass clarinet and the double bass. The jazz influence is apparent here, a kind of stylized jam session. When the chorus re-enters at the star of the third section, the instruments continue. They do not accompany the voices, but rather, as is suggest by the poem, they maintain melodic and rhythmic freedom, even though they have lost the wildness of the middle section.

The unfinished choral setting of The Pleasures Of Merely Circulating was a conscious attempt to integrate some of the materials and feeling of gospel music into the language of contemporary music. Some of that material is present, in a more disguised form, in the piano introduction. The is particularly apparent in the parallel chords heard at the opening. It is an intensely felt and moving piece, and when, at the end of it, the other instruments enter to prepare for the movement that will not follow, there is a dramatic sense of promise which will not be fullfilled. – Notes on Boros by Edward Cohen

Nevan Pilgrim is known and admired throughout the country for her performances of contemporary music. She has appeared with major orchestras and groups including the Chicago Symphony, Speculum Musicae and the Contemporary Chamber Players of the University of Chicago, and many composers besides Wernick have written music for her. She also appears on CRI SD245 in Murray Schafer's Requiem For A Party Girl and Rochberg's Songs In Praise Of Krishna on CRI SD 360.

The Contemporary Chamber Players of The University of Chicago is one of the foremost groups of its kind. Its music and that of it founder-conductor, Ralph Shapey, are to be heard on several CRI records. The members on this recording are: Elliott Golub, Terry Applebaum, Stanely Davis, Michael Geller, Marie Moulton, Edward Poremba and Andrea Swan.

James Olesen is conductor of the Brandeis Chorus and director of the Early Music Ensemble. George Fisher played the first performance of Wedding Music as a freshman at Brandeis. A student of Robert Helps, he is at present a graduate student at SUNY (Stony Brook). Constance Boykan is a free-lance flutist who has appeared extensively as a soloist, and with such chamber music groups as Seraphim. Martin Boykan reached at Brandeis; his music may be heard on CRI SD 338.

Members of the Brandeis Chorus on this recording are: Carolyn Arend, Majorie Cohen (soloist), Karen Komar, Susan Larson (soloist), Barbara Marcus, Barbara Winchester, Ivy Anderson (soloist), Mary Sego, Kathy White, Bruce Fithian (soloist), Edward Nowacki, Charles Walker, Allen Anderon (soloist), Matthew Dooley, Keith Kibler, Howard Treibitz.

Chamber Concerto For Cello & 10 Players - Charles Wuorinen

 

Chamber Concerto / Ringing Changes

Chamber Concerto For Cello & 10 Players (Side One)
Charles Wuorinen, Conductor
Fred Sherry - Cello
The Group For Contemporary Music

The Group For Contemporary Music:
Fred Sherry - Cello
The Group Fro Contemporary Music
Harvey Sollberger - Flute
Josef Marz - Oboe & English Horn
Jack Kreiselman - Clarinet & Bass Clarinet
Donald MacCourt - Bassoon
Jeanne Benjamin - Violin
John Graham - Viola
Alvin Brehm - Double-Bass
Robert Miller - Piano
Raymond DesRoches, Richard Fitz, Claire Heldrich - Percussion


Ringing Changes, For Percussion Ensemble (Side Two)
Charles Wuorinen, Conductor
The New Jersey Percussion Ensemble
Raymond DesRoches, Director 

The New Jersey Percussion Ensemble
Raymond DesRoches, Director
Joseph Passaro - Vibraphone & Timpani
Marty Martini, Louis Oddo - Vibraphone
Dean Poulsen, Eugene McBride - Piano
Ken Hosley, Donald Mari - Drums
Matthew Patuto - Brakedrums
Doreen Holmes - Almglocken
Michael Moscariello - Cymbals
Vincent Potuto, Jr. - Tamtams
James Pugliese - String Drums & Chimes

Coordinator: Teresa Sterne
Art Direction: Robert L. Heimall
Cover Art: Herb Tauss
Cover Design: Paula Bisacca
Engineering: Marc J. Aubort, Joanna Nickrenz (Elite Recordings, Inc.
Mastering: Robert C. Ludwig (Sterling Sound, Inc.)
A Dolby-system recording
Nonsuch Records H-71263
1971

Form the back cover: Charles Wuorinen (b 1938 in New York) has to date composed nearly 100 works of all genres, and he is also active as performer, conductor, teacher, and writer. He holds degrees from Columbia University and an honorary doctorate from Jersey City State College and has taught at Columbia and Princeton Universities, the New England Conservatory, University of Iowa, Manhattan School of Music, and the University of South Florida.

In 1970, Wuorinen received the Pulitzer Prize for Music for his electronic work Time's Encomium. Other distinctions have included the Lili Boulanger Memorial Award, BMI-SCA Awards, Bearns Prize, Brandels University Creative Arts Award Citation in Music, Alice M. Ditson, and Guggenheim Fellowships; commissions from the Ford Foundation, Berkshire Music Center, Koussevitzky, and Fromm Music Foundations; and he has been honored by the American Academy of Arts & Letters.

Works by Charles Wuorinen have been issued in recordings by Acoustic Research, Advance, Cambridge, CRI, Golden Crest and Nonesuch. Time's Encomium was composed to a Nonesuch Records commission (H-71225, released July 1969).

In 1962, Charles Wuorinen, together with fellow Columbia University students Joel Krosnick and Harvey Sollberger, founded the Group for Contemporary Music. The motivation for its formation was the desire on the part of composers to exercise more direct control over the performance of their music and the conditions under which it was to be presented; the Group was the first of the active contemporary-music ensembles directed by composers who also played and conducted. With Sollberger and Wuorinen as co-directors, its first nine seasons of concert-giving were presented at Columbia University's McMillin Theatre, in cooperation with the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center. The Group also preformed frequently in major concert halls and on other campuses, as well as in numerous radio broadcasts and television appearances throughout the U.S.A. Since its inception, it has presented hundreds of new works – many of them world premieres and first New York performances.

Beginning with the 1971 - 72 season, the Group for Contemporary Music has become affiliated with the Manhattan School of Music. The Group has recorded for Acoustic Research, CRI, Epic, and Vox. This album marks its first appearance on Nonesuch.

Fred Sherry (b. 1948) has been associated with many of the principal new-music performance ensembles, including the Group for Contemporary Music, New York Composers Forum, Contemporary Chamber Ensemble, and the recently formed Speculum Musicae (of which he is a founding member). He was a student of Leonard Rose at the Juilliard School of Music and made his New York recital debut in 1969. Mr. Sherry has performed abroad, including appearances in France, Italy, and Hawaii with the Juilliard Ensemble, and with Charles Wuorinen and Harvey Sollberger, presenting contemporary American music in a U.S. State Department tour of Cyprus and Greece. He has participated in recordings for CRI, Columbia, Philips, RCA Victor, and Nonsuch.

Raymond DesRoches (b. 1934) was a student of Paul Price at the Manhattan School of Music, where he received his Master of Art degree. A leading percussionist, he has been active as a member of the Group for Contemporary Music, the Contemporary Chamber Ensemble, and virtually every East-coast organization devoted to the presentation of new music. He has recorded for CRI, Columbia, Desto, Vanguard, and Nonesuch.

In 1968, DesRoches formed the New Jersey Percussion Ensemble, consisting of students from William Paterson College, Rutgers University, and Jersey City State College (where he has been a member of the teaching faculties). In its first season, the Ensemble was invited by the Group for Contemporary Music to perform Varése's Ionisation in one of their programs at McMillin Theatre. Following this highly acclaimed debut, the Ensemble made return appearances in full concerts in the Group's 1970 and 1971 series, and it has presented an annual series of programs in the New Jersey colleges. Ringing Changes was composed for the New Jersey Percussion Ensemble, and this recording of the work represents the Ensemble's record debut.

Friday, January 31, 2025

High Fidelity Demonstration Record Vol. II

 

High Fidelity Demonstration Record

High Fidelity 
Demonstration Record
Volume II
Urana UCS 56

Six Frequency Bands for testing purposes

Marche Militarie (Schubert) - Walter Schneiderhan (solo violin), Otto Schulhof (piano), Hubert Jellinek (harp), Vienna Philharmusica Orchestra, Sandauer

Trumpet Concerto (Hadyn) - Holler (trumpet), Vienna Philhamusica Orchestra, Swarowsky

Champagne Polka (J. Strauss) - Vienna Philharmusica Orchestra, Hagen

Danse Espagnol from "Swan Lake" (Tchaikowsky) - Orchestra of National Theatre, Prague - Krombholc

Marche Indienne from "L'Africaine" (Meyerbeer) - Orchestra de l'Opera, Paris - Sebastian 

Serenade (Drigo) - Schneiderhan (solo violin), Schulhof (piano), Jellinek (harp), Vienna Philharmusica Orchestra, Sandauer

Egyptian March (J. Strauss) - Vienna Philharmusica Orchestra, Hagen

Domino (Ferrari) - Orchestra de Moulin Rouge

A Winter's Tale - Paul Winter

 

Fallout

A Winter's Tale
Songs To Make You Thimk
Paul Winter
Eddie Dimond on Piano, Harpsichord and Bongos
Charlie Byrd on Guitar
Offbeat Records 4014
A Division of Washington Records
Esoterica for Everyman
1957

From the back cover: It would be nice to report that Paul Winter had the wholesome, typical, usual kind of American, upbringing – born backstage at the old Roxy, between the acts of "The Drunkard," on the boards from the age of 18 months, alcoholic at five, marijuana addict at seven, autobiography at eleven, and dead in a Delahaye at 12 1/2. But no. Paul prepared himself for the concert stage by being born in Los Angeles and raised in Detroit, getting various degrees at the University of Michigan, teaching philosophy, working on an educational radio station and now as a disc jockey in Detroit. (He abandoned a Ph.D. thesis in the Philosophy of History because of a scarcity of rhymes for Aristotle.) Today, having survived the yearly model changes in Detroit, Paul has a wife, two small daughters a subscription to The Reporter, a green Plymouth, and an unquenchable curiosity and humor about world affairs. All affairs. From the hydrogen bomb to Kim Novak and back again. And forward again.

He has black crewcut hair, a  ball point pen, and I don't know whether or not he sleeps in pajamas.

It should not be thought that Paul is content with the accomplishment represented by his repertory of lieder and folk drama. His days are filled with happy labors. For example, he has announced his candidacy from the President of the next Geophysical Year; he is training to run a better-then-four-minute mile; he hopes to discover why human beings with tattoos on their hands, to a man, all smoke the same brand of cigarettes. When he has accomplished all these tasks, he hopes to do something really difficult, like changing a permanent needle. He is the finest type of young American male. His digestion is fairly good, as are thyroid, psyche, and the tender skin around the eyes. – Herbert Gold

Tired Blood
Automation Blues
Film Clip
Stalin Met Trotsky In Hell
Good Bishop Berkeley
Toptoon (The D.J.)
Actor's Studio (Tempo di Tennessee)
Ballad Of Orval Faubus (Little Orvy)
Team Man
Hollywood Hot Stuff
All Hail
Sing A Song Of Schopenhauer
Had It Fallout

The Golden Treasury Of French Prose - Volume 2

 

The Golden Treasury Of French Prose

The Golden Treasury Of French Prose
Volume 2
Lucienne Le Marchand & Georges Riquier of The Theatre National Populaire
Montesquieu Voltarie
Rousseau
Diderot
Laclos
Chateaubriand
Stendhal
Michelet
Balzac
Directed by Arthur Luce Klein
Cover Design by Roy Kuhlman
Photograph of Notre-Dame Gargoyle, Courtesy French Government Tourist Office
Recorded at Technisonor, Paris
Spoken Arts SA 796

From the back cover: Read by Georges Riquier & Lucienne Le Marchand

Georges Riquier epitomizes the highest standards of acting in the French theatre. He started to act very young while he was involved in a serious study of literature. But both activities were interrupted by the war. He became a pilot in the French Air Force. Demobilized in Morocco in 1941 he at once organized a small theatrical company called "Le Petit Chariot" which like the traveling players of centuries ago set up their wagon stages wherever an audience could be found, and his company played Moliere in the cities, tiny villages, even in the fields. He rejoined the Armed Forces in 1942 and fought his way back to France via Algeria and Sardinia. He met Jacques Copeau just before his discharge in 1945 who had great influence on him. He then joined the company of Louis Jouvet, and over the years played principal parts in plays by Giraudoux, Moliere and Jules Romains, touring with Jouvet all over the world. When Jouvet died in 1951, Riquier spent a year playing with le Centre Dramatique de L'Quest, and in 1952 he was invited by Jean Vilar to participate in the famed Festival at Avignon to play one of the leading roles in Musset's "Lorenzaccio". Since then he has been one of the keystone's in Vilar's Theatre National Popular where he has interpreted dozens of roles in plays by Moliere, Shakespeare, Sophocles, Eliot and others. His range is remarkable, his gift for characterization, beyond compare. He has appeared in many films and is a professor of Dramatic Art at L'Ecole Charles Dullin. Always interested in developing young talent he is very active in "les Groupements de Jeunes." He is also the founder of "le Theatre du Jeune Public" and the author of such popular children's plays as "Dadais", "Le Roy Nu", "Youm et les Longues Moustaches", and "Le Petit Cheval Bossou".

Lucienne Le Marchand made her stage debut in 1931 at the Theatre de l'Oeuvre in "Le Mal de la Jeunesse" by Bruckner, directed by Raymond Rouleau, and since that time her name has been associated with the foremost actors, directors and playwrights of the Parisian theatre world. During the war she was in charge of theatre productions broadcast by Radio-France in Algiers. After her returning to Paris in 1945 she appeared in numerous plays and films, starring in dramas by Marcel Achard, Cromelinck and Jean-Paul Sartre. In 1951 she participated in the last festival at Avignon under the direction of Jean Vilar before he created the Theatre National Popular, in which she created the role of the "Electric": in the "Prince de Hombourg" which was later repeated in Paris, as well as the role of "Elvire" in Corneille' "Cid". She left the T.N.P. in 1953 in order to create the leading role in Arthur Miller's "The Crucible" for the Theatre National Belge in Brussels, and participated in numerous festivals all over France and on tour through North Africa. Lucienne Le Marchand has been with the Theatre National Popular again since 1957 and is it leading actress. She is gifted with a voice that has been compared to that of Sarah Bernhardt's for its golden quality, and it has been used to great advantage in the classics of Racine, Corneille, Moliere and Marivaux. She joins Renaud in the Spoken Arts list of incomparable French actresses by her sensitive interpretation of some of the great names in French literature

Lettres Persanes: Rica a Usbek - Montesquieu (1689 - 1755)

Candide - Voltaire (1694 - 1778)

Lettre de M. de Voltaire a Madame La Marquise du Deffand 4 juin 1764 - Voltaire (1694 - 1778)

Emile on de l'Education - Sij étais Riche - Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712 - 1778)

Les Confessions: Une Nuit a la Belle Etoile - Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712 - 1778)

Paradoxe sur le Comédien - Diderot (1713 - 1784)

Extrais des Liaisons Dangereuses Lettre - La Marquise de Merteuil au Victime de Valmont - Laclos (1741 - 1803)

Rene: Reveries de Rene - Chateaubriand (1768 - 1848)

Genie du Christianisme: Les Ruines - Chateaubriand (1768 - 1884)

Le Rouge et le Noir - Stendhal (1783 - 1842)

Jeanne D'Arc - Michelet (1798 - 1874)

Le Pere Goriot - Honore De Balzac (1799 - 1850)

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Pasodobles Torreros - Gran Orquesta Española - Manuel Gómez de Arriba

 

Pasodobles Torreros

Pasodobles Toreros
Gran Orquesta Española 
Conducted by Manuel Gómez de Arriba
Montilla FM-11
1957

From the back cover: Manuel Gómez de Arriba began his musical career with the initial intent of forming a band. In a competition he won his first job as an instrumentalist in a military band, and, shortly thereafter, also as a result of winning another contest, he made his entry into the field of conducting. Appointed to direct the Banda de las Academia de Aviación de León, he graduated from there to the Región Central or the main Spanish Banda de Aviación, which he presently directs. In this collection of pasodobles, one of his own compositions is included, i.e., "Galas Imperiales". The expert baton of Gómez de Arriba made the transition from his customary material style to a light and graceful musical rendition of a typical afternoon in a bullring.

Gallito
La Gracia de Dios
Galas Imperiales
Aguero
La Giralda
El Gato Montes
Dauder
El Nino de Jerez
Angelillo
El Vito

Tales Of Hoffmann - Max Schonherr & Paul Schoffer

 

Tales Of Hoffmann

Excerpts from Tales Of Hoffman
Paul Schoffler - Baritone
The Austrian Symphony Orchestra
Max Schonherr - Conductor
Famous Ballet Music
The Coppélia and Naila Ballets
Recorded in Europe 
A Don Graber Production
Remington RLP-149-39 (10 inch disc)
1953

One curiosity to note about the jacket (which is difficult to photograph and share here) is that, apparently, as an effort to save money spent on paper stock, budget label Remington repurposed a stack of misprinted or error flats leftover from a pressing titled "Can Can Hightlights" (not the cover art or version that can be seen in Discogs). So that, when folded into a jacket, the printed side faced inside and then the assemblers applied the above graphic print to the front cover.

Minuet
Dapertutto's Aria
Intermezzo and Barcarolle
Mazurka, Waltz and Csardas from "Coppelia"

More Of Les - Les Elgart

 

Night And Day

More Of Les
The Sensational Dance Orchestra of Les Elgart
Philips B 07056 L
Printed in Holland
1955

From the back cover: Of all the many fine orchestras now playing around the U.S.A., none offers a more enticing invitation out on the floor than the orchestra of Les Elgart. This is not music designed for those who want to listen for contrapuntal ideas or inspired tootle in the trumpet section; it is designed for those who are young and those who are young in heart and simply want to have a fine time dancing. Even the titles of the songs Les Elgart has selected for the program add to the invitation!

No new orchestra in recent years has aroused so much enthusiasm and so immediate a response from all segments of the dancing public. There have been all kinds of innovations in dance music, including a flock of neo-Glenn Miller groups, but somehow it was not until the Elgart organization began to move around that a full-fledged response to dancing came to full flower. Not that these arrangements and this orchestra are dedicated to soggy presentation of tempo and melody – far from it! The sharp, clean sound of a fine orchestra is there, the arrangements are full of life and invention, and the idiom is as contemporary as anyone could ask for.  But this orchestra was conceived primarily to answer the need for a dance band, and to that end it has succeed admirably.

In Elgart's own words, the basis of the orchestra is described: "We didn't want a pounding sound. We want it to flow and be good to dance to and play with. Furthermore, this is largely an ensemble band, which is why it's able to work the class spots and appeal to both the college kids and the older groups. We give them the melody, but within a good musical context." And that is what is heard in this collection: melody, but with solid musical ideas about sound and texture surrounding it.

It all began when Les and his brother Larry got discouraged with much of the music they heard and decided to build a group along the lines they felt should envelop a fine dance orchestra.

They collected a group of musicians grounded in the jazz tradition who were capable of fine ensemble playing, and set to work on their arrangements. With a dance orchestra, it takes a while for the word to get around, and while the talk of building, Les and his orchestra were recorded in a collection of standard favorites and Elgart originals that swiftly became the talk of the music business. And from that time on they have continued to zoom up in popularity all across the New World and even on into the Old. With each successive release they have increased their hold on the dancing public, and enlivened any number of phonographs with highly original and listenable arrangements of old classics and sprightly new works. A sampling of almost any number in this collection will provide plenty of musical thought, but it is likely that before the thought begins to get too deep, the feet will begin tapping and the dance will be on.

The Varsity Drag
Wedding Bells
Honky Tonk Train Blues
Ain't She Sweet
Night Train
Night And Day
Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart
Why Don't You Fall In Love With Me
Stardust
Charlie's Dream
The Little White Duck
East Is East

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Man With A Horn - Bill Berry

 

Man With A Horn

Man With A Horn
Bill Berry
Theme Songs of "The Greats"
Parade Record, Co. SP 360

When The Saints Go Marching In - Louis Armstrong
My Funny Valentine - Miles Davis
Bye Bye Blackbird - Chet Baker
Anthropology - Dizzy Gillespie
I Can't Get Started - Bunny Berrigan
Royal Garden Blues - Mix Beiderbecke
Ciribiribin - Harry James
I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me - Roy Eldridge
Rose Room - Harry Edison

Put Fun In Your Life - Dance Time with Will Kennedy

 

Put Fun In Your Life Try Dancing

Put Fun In Your Life
Try Dancing 
Dance Time with Will Kennedy
Composed and Recorded by Will Kennedy
America's Foremost Authority of Ballroom Dance Tempo Music
Cover: Richard Hashagen
Dancetime Records
Radio Recorders Company - Hollywood, California
LP WK 1501 16 RPM Speed (original disk speed)

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Morton Gould Showcase

 

Showcase

Showcase
Morton Gould and His Orchestra
Arranged by Morton Gould
Columbia Masterworks Records ML 4046

From the back cover: Morton Gould's first original contribution to the world of music came in 1920 when he was six years old and published a composition entitled, appropriately enough Just Six. This was a waltz.

A few years later he was awarded a scholarship at the New York Institute of Musical Art, and within seven years he was giving piano recitals. For a short time he played piano in vaudeville, movie houses and with dance bands, eventually becoming a member of the musical staff of the Radio City Music Hall and then of the National Broadcasting Company.

His brilliant talents were quickly recognized, and he was given a radio program of his own on the network of the Mutual Broadcasting System which became one of the most popular weekly broadcasts of its kind and which later was heard over the Columbia Broadcasting System.

Morton Gould's compositions, notably Spirituals, Interplay, Minstrel Show and the Latin-American Symphonette, have been performed by many of the leading symphony orchestras of America. Among the conductors who have presented his music are Artur Rodzinski, Dimitri Mitropoulos and Arturo Toscanini.

Henderson - The Birth Of The Blues
Brahm - Limehouse Blues
Porter - Begin The Beguine
Arlen - Blues In The Night
Loeb - Masquerade
Carmichael - Georgia On My Mind
Simons - The Peanut Vendor
Traditional - Two Guitars

The 12 Greatest Songs Ever Written - The International Pop Orchestra

 

Laura

The 12 Greatest Songs Ever Written
Volume II
Played by 110 Men
The International Pop Orchestra
Produced by Don Costa and Bernie Lowe
Cameo SC-2003
1962

Begin The Beguine
Autumn Leaves 
Never On A Sunday
Summertime
Laura
You'll Never Walk Alone
Stormy Weather
Stardust
Old Man River
Always
My Melancholy Baby
September Song

French Music For The Theater - Paul Paray

 

French Music For The Theater

Paul Paray conducts the
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra 
Dukas - The Sorcerer's Apprentice (Scherzo)
Fauré - Pelléas And Mélisande (incidental Music, Op. 80)
Roussel - The Spider's Feast (Symphonic fragments from the Ballet-Pantomime, Op. 17)
Mercury Classics MG 50035
1954

From the back cover: About Paul Paray and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra

Because of Paul Paray's tremendous vitality and kinetic energy, his very presence at an ordinary social gathering seems to electrify the atmosphere. Such is the sheer personal impact of this remarkable artist who in the fall of 1952 took over the musical destinies  of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra which Mercury is so proud on its Olympian Series recordings.

The Detroit Symphony Orchestra came into existence in the spring of 1914. Four years later, when the renowned conductor-pianist, Ossip Gabrilowitsch, began his long association with the Orchestra, Detroit became the proud possessor of one of the nation's great symphonic organizations. 

The death of Gabrilowitsch in 1936 ushered in a difficult transition period for the fortunes of Detroit's orchestra; but by 1951 it had became very plain to all music-minded citizens of the Motor City that support of a great symphony orchestra must be the cultural responsibility of the entire community. On the evening of October 18, 1951, Paul Paray conducted the first concert of a completely reorganized ensemble.

Paul Paray, whose personal and musical dynamism has created such excitement in Detroit and elsewhere in the country where he has appeared as guest conductor, is a musician of singularly wide background and experience. In 1911 he was a Prix de Rome winner at the Paris Conservatory; but his subsequent musical activities were interrupted by combat duty in World War One. Only in 1918 did young Paray embark in earnest on a conductorial career. First he was appointed assistant conductor of the Lamoureux Orchestra in Paris; then in 1923 he became that orchestra's permanent leader. Nine years later, Paray took over the famous Concerts Colonne in Paris, succeeding Gabriel Pierne. Paray's American debut was with the N. Y. Philharmonic Symphony at Lewisohn Stadium, where he scored a dazzling personal triumph and was acknowledged as one of Europe's greatest masters of the baton; but again the onset of war made it impossible for him to follow up his initial success. The war and occupation years in Paris saw him defying the Nazis at every turn, using his power of music and of his personal prestige as his principal weapons. Only when his own life was in immediate and deadly periled he "exile" himself to Monte Carlo until after the liberation, when Paris welcomed him home as a conquering hero.

It was in 1951 that Paul Paray, now an Officer of the Legion of Honor and a "Member d l'Institut", returned to America, there to conduct the first five concerts of the re-organized Detroit Symphony Orchestra. So overwhelming was the power and vitality of his musicianship that his appointment as permanent conductor was assured; and in the fall of 1952 Paray was the proud conductor of an expanded 104-piece Detroit Symphony boasting in its first chairs and in its ranks some of the finest musicians in the country.