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Friday, March 7, 2025

For Once In My Life - Gloria Spencer

 

Lord, Don't Move The Mountain

For Once In My Life
Gloria Spencer
World's Largest Gospel Singer – 615 lbs.
Produced by Shannon Williams
Cover & Liner Photographs: Bruno Of Hollywood
Layout and Design: Dan Quest and Associates
Recording Engineer: Ernie Winfrey
Remixed at Woodland Sound Studios, Nashville, Tennessee by Rex Collier
Mastering: Woodland Sound Studios by Denny Purcell
Creed Records 3066
1976

From the back cover: Many performers claim the title to World's Greatest Gospel Singer, or King or Queen Of The Gospel, but if there is anyone who can dispute Gloria Spencer Gray's title to World's Largest Gospel Singer, we do not know who it could be.

Gloria stands five feet and three inches and weighs in at 625 pounds. Her unusual weight is due to a genetic illness of the glands. There seems to be no known cure for this problem. Gloria's sister died weighing 628, after undergoing an operation which was supposed to remove fatty tissues. Gloria also has another sister who weighs over 300 pounds. You will hear on this album, in one of Gloria's songs, the story of her heavier sister and how it took twenty men to carry the coffin to the cemetery.

Gloria has not let this problem of overweight stand in her way of leading a normal happy life. Although there are several inconveniences, Gloria looks at each as a challenge and just keeps going on singing for God. She has toured all over the country and her audiences have been tremendous. Not long ago Gloria met and married Rev. David Gray. Although he only weighs 135 pounds, they seem to be the ideal couple. Rev. Gray is a student dormitory counselor at Kitrell Junior College outside Raleigh, North Carolina. The couple spends most of their time here, when Gloria is not traveling. She now travels about ten months out of each year. When Rev. Gray is free, he often travels with her.

Travel is a problem for Gloria. When she travels by plane, reservations have to be made two weeks in advance so the airlines can have special seat belts installed. Because of her unusual size, she occupies three seats. For this extra service, the airlines usually charge almost two fares. Most of her travels are by special vans which she owns. At hotels, beds have to be reinforced with special blocks that are carried by Gloria's attendants. However, at Gloria's home in Pennsylvania, all the furniture is custom made and things are more convenient for her.

In addition to her great ability to deliver God's word through song, Gloria loves to play the piano and type. She also has the unusual ability to type over 100 words per minute.

Gloria has overcome the curious and unusual questions she is often asked and says that it just doesn't bother her any more because she knows she is no side show or freak. "I just want to go on doing God's work 'till he gets ready to call me home" Gloria says.

For Once In My Life
Thy Will O Lord
Ain't Gonna Study War No More (with Rev. Isaac Douglas)
Glad To Be In His Service
It's In My Heart
I'll Fly Away (Gloria's Testimony & Story of Her Sister, 628 lbs.)
Amazing Grace (Gloria's Testimony of her Miracle Healing)
Lord, Don't Move that Mountain
Walk With Me Lord

Thursday, March 6, 2025

Music Of Edgar Varése - Volume 2

 

Music Of Edgar Varése

A Sound Spectacular
Music Of Edgar Varése - Volume 2
Robert Craft Conducting The Columbia Symphony Orchestra
Arcana / Déserts / Offrandes - Dona Precht Soprano
Cover Photo: Columbia Records Studio - Henry Parker
Recorded under the auspices of the American Music Fund Recording Guarantee Project
Columbia Records STEREO MS 6362
1962

From the back cover: Arcana has been recorded under the auspices of The American Inter- national Music Fund Recording Guarantee Project. The Fund is the United States affiliate of The International Music Fund, founded by Serge Koussevitzky in 1948 to aid living composers through the performance, recording and broadcasting of their music.

To further these objectives, The American International Music Fund initiated in 1957-58 the Recording Guarantee Project with the approval of the American Federation of Musicians and a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. The Project calls for the tape recording of contemporary works, not available on commercial recording, while these works are performed by the participating United States and Canadian symphony orchestras at their regular concerts. The tapes, duplicates of which are deposited in seven strategically located libraries, are auditioned biannually by an international jury of three eminent musicians who recommend one or more of the tape recorded works for commercial recording. Thus in 1959 Arcana was recommended by the Recording Guarantee jury and subsequently recorded by Columbia Records under the auspices of The American International Music Fund, Inc.

ARCANA. Requires an orchestra of 120 musicians: 70 strings, 8 percussionists play- ing some 40 percussion instruments, 8 horns, 5 each of the standard woodwinds, 5 trumpets, 3 trombones, 2 tubas, 2 sarrusophones, heckelphone, contrabass clarinet, contrabass trombone. First performed April 8, 1927 by The Philadelphia Orchestra, Leopold Stokowski conducting. On the title page of the score appears the following quotation from the Hermetic Astronomy of Paracelsus:

"One star exists higher than all the rest. This is the apocalyptic star; the second star is that of the ascendant. The third is that of the elements, and of these there are four, so that six stars are established. Besides these there is still another star, imagination, which begets a new star and a new heaven.
– Paracelsus the Great, monarch of Arcana."

In the Middle Ages, the name "great arcanum" was especially applied to the science of alchemy, whose chief aim was to change baser metals into gold and to discover the elixir of perpetual youth.

In his program notes for the first performance, Lawrence Gilman wrote: "Mr. Varèse's work is not a symphonic poem, and the lines quoted in the score are not to be taken as a guide to its imaginative content, except in the most general way, as an indication of certain moods, certain thoughts which were in the composer's mind at the time of its conception. The work, says Mr. Varèse, is 'absolute music,' not program music. Its structure adheres to a definite and governing form-though not to a conventional pattern. This form might be regarded as an immense and liberal expansion of the passacaglia form-the development of a basic idea through melodic, rhythmic and instrumental transmutation. This basic idea is the phrase of eleven notes that opens the work... There are also suggestions of the concerto grosso form, indicated by the use of the brass choir as a sort of concertino, in the eighteenth century sense."

DÉSERTS. 2 flutes (sometimes piccolos), 2 clarinets (sometimes small clarinet and bass clarinet), 2 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, bass tuba, contrabass tuba, piano, percussion, 2 magnetic tapes of electronically organized sounds transmitted on two channels by means of a stereophonic system. First performed in Paris in 1954 by the Orchestre National, Hermann Scherchen conducting.

Déserts was conceived for two different media: instrumental sounds and sounds electronically produced. After planning the work as a whole, Varèse wrote the instrumental score, always keeping in mind its relation to the organized sound sequence on tape to be interpolated at three different points in the score. There are four instrumental sections of different lengths and three interpolations of organized sound. The music given to the instrumental ensemble may be said to be evolved in opposing planes and volumes, producing the sensation of movement in space. But, though the intervals between the pitches determine these ever-changing and contrasted volumes and planes, they are not based on any fixed set of intervals, such as a scale, a series or any existing principle of musical measurement. They are decided by the exigencies of this particular work. The title "Déserts" should not lead the listener to expect de-scriptive music. Varèse has said that there is no program, no literal reference. For him but not, he insists, necessarily for anyone else, the word "désert" suggests not only "all physical deserts (of sand, sea, snow, of outer space, of empty city streets) but also the deserts in the mind of man; not only those stripped aspects of nature that suggest bareness, aloofness, timelessness, but also that remote inner space no telescope can reach, where man is alone, a world of mystery and essential loneliness."

OFFRANDES. Soprano voice, piccolo, flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, trumpet, trombone, harp, solo strings, percussion. First performed in New York in 1922 by the International Composers Guild conducted by Carlos Salzedo with Nina Koshetz, soprano. The two songs, or "offerings," are dedicated, respectively, to the composer's wife, Louise, and to Carlos Salzedo.

CHANSON DE LA-HAUT 
(Vincente Huidobro)
La Seine dort sous l'ombre de
   ses ponts
Je vois tourner la terre
et je sonne mon clairon 
vers toutes les mers.

Sur le chemin de ton parfum
toutes les abeilles et les paroles s'en vont. 
Reine de l'Aube des Pôles,
Rose des Vents que fane l'Automne. 
Dans ma tête un oiseau chante toute l'année.

LA CROIX DU SUD
(José Juan Tablada) 
Les femmes aux gestes de madrépore 
ont des poils et des lèvres rouge d'orchidée. 
Les singes du Pôle sont albinos
ambre et neige et sautent
vêtus d'aurore boréale

Dans Le Ciel il y a une affiche
 d'Oléo margarine
Voici L'arbre de la quinine 
et la Vierge des Douleurs
le Zodiaque tourne dans la nuit 
de fièvre jaune
la pluie enferme tout le Tropique 
dans une cage de cristal
C'est l'heure d'enjamber le crépuscule 
Comme un zèbre vers l'Ile de jadis 
où se réveillent les femmes assassinées

SONG FROM ON HIGH

The Seine is asleep in the shadow of 
   its bridges.
I watch Earth spinning, 
And I sound my trumpet 
Toward all the seas.

On the pathway of her perfume 
All the bees and the words depart, 
Queen of the Polar Dawns,
Rose of the Winds that Autumn withers. 
In my head a bird sings all year long.

THE SOUTHERN CROSS

Women with gestures of madrepores 
Have hair and lips as red as orchids. 
The monkeys at the pole are albinos, 
amber and snow, and frisk 
dressed in the aurora borealis.

In The Sky there is a sign, 
Oleomargarine.
Here is the quinine tree
And the Virgin of the Sorrows.
The Zodiac revolves in the night 
of yellow fever.
The rain holds the tropics
in a crystal cage.
It is the hour to stride over the dusk
Like a Zebra toward the Island of Yesterday 
Where the murdered women wake.

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Bob McGrath From Sesame Street

 

Hold On To Your Dream

Bob McGrath From Sesame Street
Arranged by Stuart Schart
Produced by Robert Allen for Dymor Productions, Inc.
Engineer: Don Dasale
Affinity Records A-1001S
Distributed by Stereo Dimension Records
1970

Good Good Morning Day
Me Sunshine Guitar
Why Choose To Be Afraid
What Does It Have To Rain On Sunday?
So It Doesn't Whistle
Groovin' On The Sunshine
Best Friend
Hold On To Your Dream
I Can Do It!

Monday, March 3, 2025

Hi-Fi Music For Children from 2 to 92 - Russ Garcia

 

Hi-Fi Music For Children from 9 to 92

Hi-Fi Music For Children from 9 to 92
Russ Garcia and His Orchestra
Producer: Jack Wagner
Cover Photography: Dave Pell
Supervisory Engineer: Ted Keep
Liberty Records LRP 3065
1957

From the back cover: DEAR to our hearts are the joys of childhood; and what is more reminiscent of childhood than a song like "Pop Goes The Weasel," "Old MacDonald Had A Farm" or "Mary Had A Little Lamb"? These are among the songs you'll hear in this LIBERTY recording, arranged instrumentally by Russ Garcia in a manner which will please the classical devotee, the jazz enthusiast, the pop fan and the hi-fi bug.

For those who prefer the classical, we dare say the simple melody of "Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater" has never been so eloquently treated. This selection was arranged with the true feeling of serious music while retaining its youthful appeal in the two- fingered introduction and the pizzicato passages. The jazz influence is felt in the unique approach to "Yankee Doodle" and "Davy Crockett." Here the modern voiced band is featured with a beat that really swings. The follower of popular songs will enjoy the delightful arrangement of "Lavender's Blue" and the humorous treatment of "Doggie In The Window." There's excitement for the hi-fi fan throughout the entire album with particular emphasis on "The Par- ade Of The Wooden Soldiers," "Mary Had A Little Lamb" and "Old MacDonald Had A Farm." On these "woofer and tweeter-testers" you'll hear sounds ranging from the wood block to the bass fiddle.

Here at last is an album which can be enjoyed not only by the adult for its imaginative arrangements but by the youngest member of the family for its simple, familiar melodies and sounds. Here, then, is "Hi-Fi Music For Children"... particularly those between the ages of 2 and 92!

About Russ Garcia

Russ Garcia is one of those rare California individuals, a native son... He was born in Oakland California where he evinced more than a passing interest in music at a very tender age. He later studied at San Francisco State College and with such eminent teachers as Edmund Ross, Ernst Toch, Sir Albert Coates, Castelnuovo - Tedesco and Ernest Krenek... It was but a short jump from this background to Hollywood where he has become a top arranger-conductor for many luminaries in both the picture and recording fields... He has scored and conducted for Julie London ("About The Blues"), Ella Fitzgerald, Oscar Peterson, Sarah Vaughn and Dinah Shore to name but a few... Mr. Garcia is happily married, writes symphonies and string quartets in his spare time. He has also authored a best-selling book on arranging "The Professional Composer"... He is a member of the Bahai faith and believes that to make this a happy, peaceful world for all men no matter what their country, color or religion is the goal that justifies his existence.

Twinkle Twinkel (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

Mary Had A Litle Lamb

Lavender's Blue (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

Davy Crockett

Where, Oh Where Has My Little Dog Gone (Adapted by Russ Garcia) / Doggie In The Window

Pop! Goes The Weasel (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

Parade Of The Wooden Soldiers

Peter Cottontail

Johnny' So Late At The Fair (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

Hi-Ho, Nobody's Home (Adapted by Russ Garcia) / Down By The Station

Peter, Peter Pumkin Eater (Adapted by Russ Garcia) / London Bridges (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

In A Toyland World

Yankee Doodle (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

Row, Row Row (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

Mickey Mouse March (The Mouseketeer Song)

Whistle While You Work / Heigh Ho

Old MacDonald (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

Farmer In The Dell, Four And Twenty Blackbirds, Lazy Mary, Ol' King Cole (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

Happy Birthday (Adapted by Russ Garcia)

Harry Not Jesse - Harry James

 

Hot Pink

Harry Not Jesse
Harry James Plays Neal Hefti
Music Composed and Arranged by Neal Hefti
A&R Coordinator: Irv Stimler
Director of Engineering: Val Valentin
Metro M536 (perviously released MGM album entitled: Harry James Plays Neal Hefti - E/SE-3972)
1965

Harry, Not Jesse
Tweet Tweet
Chiarina
The Creeper
Mister Johnson
Sunday Morngin
Hot Pink
Koo Koo
Rainbow Kiss
San Souci

Carnival Of The Americas - Tito Rodriguez

 

Todo Todo Termino

Carnival Of The Americas
Tito Rodriguez and His World Famous Orchestra
Package Designed by Norman Art Studio, Chicago
Musicor Records MM 2018
1964

From the back cover: American countries. Collected here are twelve selections representing top tunes from each country.

These songs will indicate immediately just why Tito Rodriguez has come to be recognized as the foremost exponent of Latin American music, and why he and his orchestra have been a headline attraction in leading clubs and ballrooms from Argentina to Canada. Their interpretation bears the inimitable Rodriguez stamp, a factor that has made all of his recordings best-sellers in virtually every nation in the Western Hemisphere.

Tito has reached these heights through a com- bination of talent and a constant awareness of new trends in Latin American music. As a result, the public has come to expect from him at all times wonderful musical innovations and entertainment.

In his most recent album, "From Tito With Love," he sang for the first time on records. The result was one of his most successful albums to date.

These painstaking efforts, plus his gifted abilities as a performer, arranger and orchestra- leader, have thrust the Tito Rodriguez Orchestra to the forefront of the Latin American Musical Scene.

Listen now to the superlative performances collected here, and celebrate the CARNIVAL OF THE AMERICAS in your own home.

Avisale A Mi Contrario (Let My Adversary Know)
Un Cigarrillo La Lluvia y Tu (A Cigarette, The Rain & You)
Todo Todo Termino (This Is The End)
Piensalo Bien y Santa (Mosaico De Mexico Bolero Medley)
El Bigoton De Danilo (Daniel's Mustache)
Mosaico De Panama (Panama Medley)
Que Sabes Tu De Mi (What Do You Know About Love)
El Dia Que Me Quieras (The Day You'll Love Me)
Fue En Santiago (It Happened In Santiago)
Tu No Comprendes (You Don't Understand)
Ay Mulata Coqueta (What A Girl!!!)
Sacando Candela (Sparkling Fire)

Panufnik - Universal Prayer - Leopold Stokowski

 

Universal Prayer

Panufnik
Universal Prayer
Leopold Stokowski
Recorded in Westminster Cathedral, London, on September 4-5, 1970 in the presence of the composer
Recording Engineer: Bob Auger
A Dolby System Recording
Cover: Variation within a sphere No 10: The Sun by Richard Lippold
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fletcher Fund, 1956, New York
Photographs of the conductor (during the recording of this work) and of the composer by Camilla Jessel
Sleeve printed and made by MacNeil Press Ltd., London, S.E.I.
Unicorn Records RHS 305

April Cantelo - Soprano
Helen Watts - Contralto
John Mitchinson - Tenor
Roger Stalman - Bass
The Louis Halsey Singers
David Watkins, Maria Korchinska, Tina Bonifacio - Harps
Nicolas Kynaston - Organ

The Universal Prayer

Father of All! in every Age, 
   In every Clime ador'd,
By Saint, by Savage, and by Sage, 
   Jehovah, Jove, or Lord!

Thou Great First Cause, least Understood! 
   Who all my Sense confin'd
To know but this, - that Thou art Good, 
   And that my self am blind:

Yet gave me, in this dark Estate, 
   To see the Good from Ill; 
And binding Nature fast in Fate, 
   Left free the Human Will.

What Conscience dictates to be done, 
   Or warns me not to doe, 
This, teach me more than Hell to shun, 
   That, more than Heav'n pursue.

What Blessings Thy free Bounty gives, 
   Let me not cast away;
For God is pay'd when Man receives, 
   T'enjoy, is to obey.

Yet not to Earth's contracted Span, 
   Thy Goodness let me bound;
Or think the Lord alone of Man,
   When thousand Worlds are round.

Let not this weak, unknowing hand
   Presume Thy Bolts to throw, 
And deal Damnation round the land, 
   On each I judge Thy Foe.

If I am right, oh teach my heart 
   Still in the right to stay;
If I am wrong, Thy Grace impart 
   To find that better Way.

Save me alike from foolish Pride,
   Or impious Discontent, 
At ought Thy Wisdom has deny'd 
   Or ought Thy Goodness lent.

Teach me to feel another's Woc; 
   To hide the Fault I sec; 
That Mercy I to others show,  
  That Mercy show to me.

Mean tho' I am, not wholly so 
   Since quicken'd by thy Breath, 
O lead me wheresoe'er I go,
   Thro' this day's Life, or Death:

This day, be Bread and Peace my Lot;
   All else beneath the Sun,
Thou knows't if best bestow'd, or not;
   And let Thy Will be done.

To Thee, whose Temple is all Space,
   Whose Altar, Earth, Sea, Skies; 
One Chorus let all Being raise!
   All Nature's Incence rise!

                       – Alexander Pope

From the inside front cover: For some years I had in mind a very deep wish to write a prayer to the God of all religions to the 'Father of All' races and creeds - in which the spiritual content would help to unite the feelings of all people so tragically divided in this disturbed world.

When reading through the works of Alexander Pope, at last I felt I had found the perfect text in his 'Universal Prayer', which, although written over 250 years ago, struck me with its vitality and the strength of its meaning to us now. This indeed was a prayer for all men to the 'Father of All'. Perhaps I was doubly moved to know that these words, for which I had been searching so long, were written by the poet who had lived and worked just a few hundred yards up the River Thames from my own home, where I would myself be composing the music.

The construction of the work was imposed upon me by the classical structure of the poem. Alexander Pope himself declared that 'Order is Heav'n's first law', and this corresponds very exactly with my own long-standing belief, so far as any and every viable work of art is concerned. Composing my Universal Prayer, I designed a symmetrical framework, building up a structure in which the first stanza corresponds with the thirteenth (last) one; the second stanza with the twelfth, the third with the eleventh, and so on-coming to the centre of the work the axis, the seventh stanza, where, in contrast to the humility and the quiet condemnation of hypocrisy throughout the rest of the poem, Pope openly uses his keen blade of irony to strike out against fanatacism.

The stanzas of the poem, sung by the four soloists, are divided by short interludes, sometimes instrumental only, sometimes including the chorus. These interludes are also symmetrically arranged, and additionally a great number of other internal symmetric patterns are to be found within the whole symmetric framework. (Diagram 1)

My Universal Prayer is composed on two Plans: Plan I-four solo voices together with three harps, with precisely indicated rhythm; Plan II - organ and chorus, with no rhythmical indications, giving freedom of musical expression to the individual performer, whether it is the organist, or just a member of the chorus.

For this work, I chose instruments which I felt could add a kind of mystery and colour to the poem, using harps not only for the special quality of their sound, but also because they would never overwhelm the voices of the soloists singing the all-important text. The organ, besides its colouristic attributes, has great additional significance in that it supports the architectural structure of the whole work.

The chorus is divided into just two parts: male and female voices. They sing on one note (B natural) throughout the whole work, using only the first three words of the poem, 'Father of All'. The rhythm is chosen freely by each member of the chorus in order that the individual voices should be heard - my idea is that they represent the multitudes of the world, together and yet free to express their own prayer in their own voice to their own concept of God. At the very beginning, they shout as if to catch God's attention; at the end, with full voice they express their trust in Him. Approaching the axis of the composition, the singing of the chorus changes to unpitched sound, first whispering, then speaking out, as their appeal to God becomes more ugent and intense. After the axis, this intensity reduces in the reverse, mirrored procedure.

With regard to the musical material which I used in the com- position of this work, it is not possible for me to slot it into any particular stylistic classification: this work is neither tonal, nor polytonal, nor composed with the twelve-tone method; it is not serial, nor alcotoric - it is based strictly upon one triad only, from the beginning to the very end of the work, used both vertically and horizontally, with its perpetual reflections. (Ex. 2 & 3) While imposing upon myself this extremely stern discipline and simplicity of sound organisation, for me the dramatic requirements of the poem were of paramount importance, and therefore I kept the technical side very much subservient to the spiritual and emotional content.

A colossal and desperately urgent task stretches ahead, in the search for the unity and brotherhood of all mankind, and my purpose in composing this work was to contribute to this ideal in the only way I could, in my own language as a composer and within the limits of my own power of musical expression.

Andrzej Panufnik, Twickenham, 1971


Andrzej Panufnik, composer of international stature, was born in Warsaw, Poland, on 24th September, 1914. He started composing at the age of nine. In 1936, he received his diploma with distinction for theory and composition of music at the Warsaw State Conservatoire, achieving this in only half the normal time. In 1937-38, he studied the art of conducting with Felix Weingartner at the State Academy of Music in Vienna. He then completed his musical studies in Paris, and in London, returning to Warsaw at the outbreak of World War II.

All the early music of Panufnik is lost: it was burnt. during the Warsaw uprising in 1944. His post-1944 musical output consists of numerous works for orchestra, chamber and vocal music, and works for piano.

Immediately after the war, he was appointed permanent conductor of the Cracow Philharmonic, and later director of the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra. From that time onwards he began his very extensive travels, conducting all the leading orchestras of Europe.

In 1950 he was elected vice-chairman of the International Music Council of Unesco in Paris, together with the late Arthur Honneger.

Since 1954, when he left Stalinist Poland and took up residence in England, he has conducted all the major British orchestras, and for two years (1957-59) he was musical director of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. He chose to give up this post in order to concentrate more upon composition, traveling occasionally on invitation from leading orchestras across the world.

His most important compositions include Sinfonia Rustica (first prize, Chopin Competition, Warsaw 1949) and Sinfonia Sacra (first prize, Prix de Composition musicale Prince Rainier III de Monaco, 1963), both of which symphonies have been recorded by the Monte Carlo Orchestra conducted by the composer. His Sinfonia Elegiaca was one of several of his more important works with world and American premières given by Leopold Stokowski. Besides these symphonies, four of his other most significant orchestral works, Tragic Overture, Autumn Music, Heroic Overture and Nocturne have been recorded by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Jascha Horenstein.

Andrzej Panufnik's talents as a composer of con- temporary ballet music have been receiving increasing recognition. In 1967, the Joffrey ballet mounted Elegy (choreography by Gerald Arpino) at New York City Center; in November 1968, Cain & Abel (choreography by Kenneth MacMillan) was presented at the Deutsche Oper, Berlin, and in March 1970, a two-act ballet, chorcography and music received high critical acclaim.

The Universal Prayer was completed in 1969, and its world première took place on 24th May, 1970, at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York, con- ducted by Leopold Stokowski, who performed this work twice in the same prograinme to an audience of 4,000. It won immediate recognition from both public and press, who found this prayer to be "... the grandest, most awesome kind of music" (New York Times). Stokowski himself said, "... In my opinion, it is a new departure in composition, just as 'Le Sacre du Printemps' of Stravinsky was a new departure... I am hoping that all faiths will realise the greatness of the poem and of the music, and that it will become often performed, like the Ninth Symphony of Beethoven..." (Music, New York). The success of the first performance led to this recording four months later, and further performances followed in the same year, again conducted by Stokow- ski, first at Princeton, New Jersey; and then a special performance at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York, for which the chorus was truly universal, consisting of members of all possible religious groups, including Catholics and Protestants, Muslims as well as Jews, Hindus and Buddhists.


Leopold Stokowski has always been an innovator in the science of recording techniques, and he is the only conductor to have recorded in all methods from the acoustically made shellac disc (he made his first records in 1917) to the latest 8-channel quadrophonic system, as in this, his first recording for Unicorn.

Born in London of Polish ancestry, Stokowski com- menced his academic studies at the Royal College of Music. He later became organist at St. James's, Picca- dilly, and took up a similar post in New York in 1905. His ambition to become a conductor was realised in 1908 when he directed his first concert in Paris. His London début came the following year, and he then returned to America to take over the Cincinatti Orchestra. In 1912 he left Cincinatti to commence an association of nearly thirty years with the Philadelphia Orchestra which he built into one of the greatest ensembles the world has known. He gave countless notable first performances, including the American premières of Berg's Wozzeck, Mahler's 8th Symphony, Schoenberg's Gurrelieder and Stravinsky's Le Sacre du Printemps.

Always eager to bring music to a wider public – especially young people he appeared in several films, of which the best known is Walt Disney's 'Fantasia'. He has made many orchestral transcriptions of the music of Bach and other composers, and in 1943 published his book 'Music for All of Us'.

When he left Philadelphia he formed the All-American Youth Orchestra, and was later closely associated with the orchestras of the N.B.C., New York City Symphony, Hollywood Bowl Symphony, and New York Philharmonic. In 1955 he became conductor of the Houston Symphony, and in 1962 formed his own American Symphony Orchestra in New York.

Stokowski has done more than any other conductor of his generation to champion new works, and he continues to further the contemporary cause with this première recording of Panufnik's Universal Prayer.

Sunday, March 2, 2025

Calypsos - The Talbot Brothers Of Bermuda

 

The Talbot Brothers Of Bermuda

Calypsos
The Talbot Brothers Of Bermuda
ABC- Paramount ABC-156
1957

From the back cover: THE TALBOT BROTHERS OF BERMUDA are the most celebrated calypso artists in the world.

Throughout the winter, spring and summer they are the chief entertainment attraction to world tourists in Bermuda, where they appear nightly at the foremost hotels of the island. In the fall of the year they begin their annual goodwill tour of the United States, during which they make limited public appearances at various cities under the aegis of the Sheraton Hotels and on television (in 1957, exclusively with Ed Sullivan), and numerous SRO appearances at the most famous private clubs and colleges in the east.

There are five brothers and a cousin in the group: Archie, Austin, Roy, Bryan, Ross, and Cousin Mandy. Their calypso numbers have the true native tones of predominantly string and percussion instruments; there is no intrusion of modern brass in the ensemble. Their most famous instrument is Roy's doghouse, which is a homemade bass comprised of a single fishing line, a bolt, and a meat-packing case. On it are inscribed the names of most of the celebrities for or with whom they have performed – Babe Ruth, Bing Crosby, Tommy Dorsey, Arlene Francis, Mary Martin, William Holden, and numerous others.

The repertoire of the Talbot Brothers is not limited to the monotone of calypso. They perform as well many romantic ballads and comedy pieces. And they compose as well as perform. Four of their latest compositions are recorded on this LP, viz., "The Calypso Cha-Cha," "Bermuda's Still Paradise," "Atomic Nightmare,' and, lastly, "Bermuda Affair," which was composed at the request of the producers of the motion picture of the same title, starring Kim Hunter, as the theme melody for the picture. Mandy sings it.

Those who have been favored to see the Talbot Brothers in Bermuda or in one of their rare personal appearances in the United States will tell you that they are a treat to the ear and a spectacular ensemble to the eye. They are inimitable in their field, and the best in the world.

Atomic Nightmare
Scratch, Scratch Me Back
Bermuda's Still Paradise
Is She Is Or Is She Ain't
Back To Back
Calypso Cha-Cha
You Can Go (But You'll Return)
The Soldier Song
Bermuda Affair
Gonna Cut You With The Razor
Nora, Nora
Sager Boy
Give An Ugly Woman Matrimony

Mallet Mischief - Vol. II - Harry Breuer

 

TV Funeral March

Mallet Mischief - Vol. 2
Harry Breuer and His Quintet
Photograph by Bob Witt
Audio Fidelity AFLP 1882
1958

From the back cover: Originality is a rare thing in music. Composers, conductors and interpreters are constantly searching for new subtleties of expression, unusual styling, something different. There are just so many ways of performing a composition. Except for minor variations in style, most musicians confine their efforts to fairly conventional standards and let it go at that. Harry Breuer, however, is an exception.

Harry Breuer would have been in his element on the memorable occasion when Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture had its world premiere and startled an audience with the blast of a genuine cannon which the composer had incorporated into his original score. Not that Breuer is given to admiring noise making. On the contrary, he is a musician who, seeking to exploit a much-neglected medium in music, chose three percussion instruments and charted new paths of expression on all three. The instruments he selected are the marimba, vibraphone and glockenspiel, which have been relegated to that group of orchestral instruments that most conductors haul out only when they want to give audiences a taste of novelty. Harry Breuer has converted this taste into a basic diet. Probably the most noteworthy compliment paid him came from a fan who had heard his quintet perform and said: "You don't just listen to this man's music making; you become infected with it."

People everywhere, since time immemorial, have found it hard to resist tapping their feet or otherwise keeping time to music with some kind of noise maker. The development of percussion instruments has seen the invention of no less than three hundred types of objects using practically every kind of material known to man-skin, wood, metal, glass, fibre, bone and even liquid. The music lover of today who would like to be in the shoes of the cymbalist in Tchaikovsky's fourth symphony, of the tympanist in Berlioz' Symphonie Fantastique, or of the triangle player in Humperdinck's Hansel und Gretel has much in common with his ancestor who beat two pieces of wood, bone or metal together to keep time during a tribal dance.

Of the great variety of percussion instruments that have been devised through the years, precious few survive in the modern symphony orchestra and jazz band. The more common ones-tympani, drums, tambourine, triangle, cymbals, bells and chimes-are heard chiefly as supplementary instruments. Only in recent years have a few composers seen fit to orchestrate for the more unusual percussion instruments like castanets, marimba, vibraharp, glockenspiel, blocks, sticks and rattles. And here also, with few exceptions, these instruments are generally treated as "second class citizens" in the instrumental family.

In spite of the fact that relatively few instruments have a wide variety of multiple sound effects, the marimba, vibraharp and glockenspiel have been wantonly neglected. It is difficult to understand the reason for this, considering the vast potential of tonal range and dynamics afforded by these instruments. For many years composers and performers alike were content to accept the simple wooden block construction of the marimba and vibraharp; and when they used these instruments it was usually a kind of humorous effect. Today, as a result of considerably more knowledge about the nature of acoustics and tonal dynamics, these instruments have achieved more serious consideration. An increasing number of modern and contemporary composers have assigned more prominent roles to them, and a number have even written solo works featuring them.

Probably the principal reasons why the marimba, vibraharp and glockenspiel have come into their own are the recognition by musicians of the multi-tone possibilities they offer, the wide range of tonal effects that has been opened up through the amplification of live sound through electronic techniques, and the application of the double and bounce beat (on the marimba and vibraharp). The latter has come about through the borrowing of the drummer's technique. It has involved not only the actual technique of striking the instruments with mallets with the double and bounce beat as used on the drum, but also the invention of the so-called cross-hammer technique-a system that calls for crossing the arms when one plays in higher or lower registers. All of this has enabled the performer to achieve greater speed, more complex harmonies and a larger variety of dynamic effects.

Not content with the inconspicuous place accorded the ma- rimba, vibraharp and glockenspiel, Harry Breuer has explored new tonal worlds through his stunning arrangements and his interpretation of many popular favorites on marimba, vibraharp and glockenspiel. Many fascinating effects are achieved in this recording, which contains some delightful compositions and provides a perfect showcase for the three instruments played both as solos and in ensemble. Breuer and his quintet display some dazzling pyrotechnics in the TV Funeral March and the famous Hora Staccato. The lyrical beauty of La Paloma and the Pavane is captured to best advantage on the vibraharp, to which is added an intriguing kaleidoscope of tonal color and technical wizardry with the addition of marimba and glockenspiel. And you'll fairly jump to the volcanic energy of Down Home Rag.

The interesting thing about this recording as a whole is its exploitation of tuned percussion instruments, which present an entirely different tonal and acoustical experience from ordinary percussion like drums, cymbals, triangle, etc. The unusual subtleties of each of the three instruments in the high and low registers, of loud and soft tones, and of technical intricacies are captured here with matchless perfection, where they might otherwise be totally lost (to the naked ear, or in a recording of lesser quality with respect to sound engineering techniques). Here, indeed, is a collection of selections that is calculated to meet the most exciting standards of Hi-Fi enthusiasts.

HARRY BREUER acquired a solid musical grounding through the study of violin before he decided to switch to percussion instruments. As conductor, arranger and performer he has appeared with his quintet on the Steve Allen TV show, in a number of other top video and radio programs, and has been kept busy with studio, transcription and motion picture work. He has written numerous works, including study material, for all mallet instruments (marimba, vibraphone and glockenspiel). A native of Brooklyn, Breuer started his professional career as xylophone soloist in movies and vaudeville. He made his radio debut during the early days of broadcasting on the A & P Gypsies Show, the Cliquot Club Eskimos and other popular programs of the day. Later he joined Roxy's Gang as soloist at the Roxy Theater in New York, and subsequently appeared at the Radio City Music Hall. His motion picture credits include performances in short features for Warner Bros., Educational Pictures and Soundies. For some years he was staff musician at the Warner Bros. studio under David Mendosa and at the Fox Studios under Erno Rapee. This was followed by a period as staff musician at the NBC Studios. He is considered one of the country's leading authorities on mallet instruments.

Farmerette 
Pavanne
Dainty Miss
Fiesta De Oro
Fiesta Waltz
Hora Staccato
Paloma Beguine
TV Funeral March
Down Home Rag
Minute Merengue
Tropicale Stephanie
Boomerang