I promised to get to Sammy Kaye (and, yes, musicman1979--it's his contribution to the twist-ploitation craze), and I will, but for today we have a light concert (aka, light music) post, all of the selections ripped from 12-inch 78s in my collection and spanning the years from (let's see) 1934 to 1946.
We start with the four selections (!) of the two-disc Andre Kostelanetz set, Exotic Music (1946), whose standout track is the roots-of-exotica selection Lotus Land, composed by Cyril Scott in 1905. From the liner notes:
"Lotus Land finds its story in the Odyssey of Homer. During the ten years of tribulation which he spent returning from the siege of Troy, Odysseus braved and overcame many perils, some fierce and aggressive, others latent and passive, but just as deadly. One of these periods awaited him in the land of the Lotus-eaters. Whoever stopped here and ate of the lotus flower would at once forget all thoughts of home and duty and remain on to live in dreamy indolence. This peril, successfully defied by Odysseus, is pictured with wonderful realism in this impressionistic music. The languid, dulled ease, the meaninglessness of time, the fatal beauty of the flower, are all richly embroidered in this tonal tapestry."
Debussy Lite, in other words. And I wish there had been at least two additional numbers, but maybe they ran out of studio time? ("I thought we were booked till 4 pm. Okay, we'll clear out.")
"Lotus Land finds its story in the Odyssey of Homer. During the ten years of tribulation which he spent returning from the siege of Troy, Odysseus braved and overcame many perils, some fierce and aggressive, others latent and passive, but just as deadly. One of these periods awaited him in the land of the Lotus-eaters. Whoever stopped here and ate of the lotus flower would at once forget all thoughts of home and duty and remain on to live in dreamy indolence. This peril, successfully defied by Odysseus, is pictured with wonderful realism in this impressionistic music. The languid, dulled ease, the meaninglessness of time, the fatal beauty of the flower, are all richly embroidered in this tonal tapestry."
Debussy Lite, in other words. And I wish there had been at least two additional numbers, but maybe they ran out of studio time? ("I thought we were booked till 4 pm. Okay, we'll clear out.")
The other three titles are fine, even if lacking in conventional "exotica" feeling, as that term is applied to Esquivel, Les Baxter, et al.
Then, Eric Coates' London Suite, played by the London Philharmonic Orch., as conducted by the composer, on a 1937 Masterworks single, the A and B sides combined into one file. The individual sections are Covent Garden (Tarantella), Westminster (Meditation), and Knightsbridge (March). Note the ingenious treatments of the bell chime ("Westminster Quarters"). This is joyful and skillfully constructed light fare--the epitome of a "Pops" selection. The audio is exceptional.
Andre Kostelanetz returns with the famous Warsaw Concerto, penned by Richard Addinsell for the 1941 movie, Suicide Squadron. Kosty must have recorded this somewhere other than in his usual studio, given the rather muffled highs (which I restored). This isn't the usual distant-mic AK sound, but I don't suppose that would have worked for such a dynamic number. I'm pretty sure the year is 1946. Wish I knew who did the ivory tickling.
Next, Paul Whiteman conducting his 1934 Concert Orchestra in two famous "symphonic jazz" works, both of which yielded highly successful pop songs: Park Avenue Fantasy ("Stairway to the Stars"), and Deep Purple ("Deep Purple" [what else?]." The scoring is by Roy Bargy and (probably) Irving Szathmary, respectively. The pianist is Dana Suesse. Some gramophone-soundbox wear in the loud closing passages for both, but with only minor distortion.
Click here to hear: Light Music Festival--Andre Kostelanetz, London Philharmonic Orch., Paul Whiteman Concert Orch.
Andre Kostelanetz and His Orch. (Columbia Masterworks MX-264, 1946)
Flamingo (Grouya)
Poinciana (Song of the Tree; Nat Simon)
Song of India (Rimsky-Korsakov)
Flamingo (Grouya)
Poinciana (Song of the Tree; Nat Simon)
Song of India (Rimsky-Korsakov)
Lotus Land (Cyril Scott)
Various
London Suite (Covent Garden, Westminster, Knightsbridge)--London Philharmonic Orch., c. Eric Coates, 1937
Warsaw Concerto (Richard Addinsell)--Andre Kostelanetz and His Orch., 1946
Park Avenue Fantasy (Matt Malneck-Frank Signorelli, A: Roy Bargy)--Paul Whiteman and His Concert Orch., piano: Dana Suesse, 9/11/1934
Deep Purple (Peter De Rose, A: prob. Irving Szathmary)--Same
"Oklahoma!" Medley--Andre Kostelanetz and His Orch., 1944
Lee
Lee
14 comments:
Great!
Gimpiero,
Thank you!
This looks fascinating, for sure. It's been a while since you have done a Shellac City-styled post here.
I did want to add that there was a Pop song titled Lotus Land that came out in 1956; it appeared on the flip side of Frankie Laine's huge hit "Moonlight Gambler" and musically has a mild touch of exotica, yet does not go full overboard musically in that department like Les Baxter and Martin Denny did on some of their recordings:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OvNz9BeI8GE
Arranger Percy Faith reuses some of the cascading riffs that he used on Theme From Moulin Rouge here, particularly in the bridge.
Also, did you know that SPC had it's own Ferrante and Teicher-exploitation piano duo called Lewis and Bernard? I found an LP on SPC's Power imprint, in it's Apple Honey Series, with a logo that looks like it is a direct rip-off of the latter-day Stax Records logo, an album titled My Cup Runneth Over. The Ed Ames classic is the only current number in the setlist, with the rest being pop standards and/or public domain material. Plus, the vinyl quality is a lot better than most of the Diplomat albums of the same time period.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/155720938180?_trkparms=amclksrc%3DITM%26aid%3D777008%26algo%3DPERSONAL.TOPIC%26ao%3D1%26asc%3D20230823115209%26meid%3Da1cb9706be894078bcb279e16d95dbbe%
Looking forward to New Twists On Old Favorites eventually. Have a great day, and God bless you.
musicman1979,
Thanks, and I hope you enjoy the set. And the Laine "Lotus Land" is the Scott composition, with lyrics added. I just listened to it (thanks for the link)--and I've had it for years in my 45 collection but never listened to it! But it's THE "Lotus Land."
Thanks for the Lewis and Bernard info. I checked my various SPC F&T LPs (there are four or five variants), and they feature a duo named Phillips and Burns for the filler tracks. The four F&T tracks carried over (and over) by SPC were on a 1952 Davis EP which I've always hoped to encounter in the wilds. Great early F&T. I recall that the Phillips and Burns tracks are painfully out of key between the two pianos!
The Apple Honey series only shows up sporadically in the thrifts, and most of the titles seem to be country. Anyway, Sammy coming up!
Great! Plan to check out Kosty in a little bit. Thanks.
Great post! The Kostelanetz cuts were really good, with Poinciana being my favorite and the Oklahoma medley being a close second. You did an excellent job remastering these 78s; the ones from the album sounded like they came off of vinyl.
The Oklahoma medley is just as good as the Overture on the original movie soundtrack album. By the way, you did not include this medley in the track listing at the bottom of the post.
I also noticed on the Kostelanetz cuts that the sound is a little more sparse compared to the overall "Everything and the kitchen sink Boston Pops"-flavored musical vibe of his '60's and '70's Columbia LPs.
It was also strange to hear Song of India in an Easy Listening orchestral setting after years of listening to the swing adaption by Tommy Dorsey.
The Paul Whiteman cuts certainly sounded older than when it was recorded 90 years ago. Deep Purple was my favorite of the two.
Lastly, was not impressed with the Jerry Case take on Little Star that you posted on Lee's Fake Hits; he did better in an early volume in the series with Nat King Cole's Send For Me in my opinion:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OiqRTg12A6g
Looking forward to New Twists On Old Favorites. Nice relaxing post. Thanks.
musicman1979,
Thanks for the review, and I'll comment on same later. For now, thanks for noting my clerical error: I just corrected this. The complicated sequence of ripping, exporting, editing, then exporting again (to my Music folder) leaves room for mistakes! I don't know how I keep it all together. And, for this post, I had tagged the composer field with a separate app, but that info was lost when I had to export the files a second time to Music. Software is stupid: It doesn't not recognize the same file as such if ANY change has been made. The slightest revision/addition makes it a "new" file. In the midst of such software dysfunction, we're supposed to place faith in AI?
I really appreciate a rip of this. The artwork has been posted many times over at the Facebook group "Exotica...and other Cool,Unusual Music" Were closing in on 26,000 members. I'm one of the admins. Hope to see you there Lee..
Glad you enjoyed it, Domenic! I feel a duty to keep this available. When my hosting service mass-banned my uploads, it was the perfect chance to do a new and improved rip. AK's "Lotus Land" is the all-time great presentation of that roots-of-Exotica classic.
Thanks for the invite. I drop by your group from time to time, posting occasionally.
Belated thanks for this, Lee. Beautiful music in high quality transfers!
Buster,
My pleasure, and thanks for the nice words! I have two copies of this set--one with slightly split discs (lamination cracks), and the other whole. I'd forgotten about my undamaged set, so I was thrilled to rediscover it.
THAT is one glorious Steinweiss cover.
Diane,
Isn't it, though? And the art was reused on the two-record 45 rpm set, and I was sure I had that set, but... it's "hiding" on me.
As a prisoner of Google, I must weigh in as Dave of Ardmore. I hope that rings a bell or gong, depending on which kind of temple you find yourself. I am finally catching up on all your wonderful Kostelanetz posts and wish to request a post of his sublime 1941 recording of “Summertime” with Lily Pons—and any others with her or her comparables. (He also recorded an instrument version the year before.) Supremely adept crossover opera singers get short shrift by bloggers and I think it would be great if someone like you would address this deficiency.
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