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Great Light Orchestras Salute George Gershwin and Jerome Kern

1 Look For The Silver Lining (from "Sally"1920); They Didn’t Believe Me (from "The Girl From Utah" 1914); Long Ago And Far Away (from film "Cover Girl" 1944) (Jerome Kern)
ANDRE KOSTELANETZ AND HIS ORCHESTRA
2 Love Walked In (from "The Goldwyn Follies" 1938) (George Gershwin, arr. Robert Farnon)
ROBERT FARNON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
3 Why Was I Born (from "Sweet Adeline" 1929) (Jerome Kern)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
4 A Fine Romance (from film "Swing Time" 1936) (Jerome Kern, arr. Johnny Douglas)
JOHNNY DOUGLAS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
5 For You, For Me, For Evermore (from film "The Shocking Miss Pilgrim" 1947) (George Gershwin, arr. Percy Faith)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
6 Who (from "Sunny" 1925); I’ve Told Ev’ry Little Star (from "Music In The Air" 1932) (Jerome Kern, arr. Angela Morley)
KINGSWAY PROMENADE ORCHESTRA Conducted by STANLEY BLACK
7 Embraceable You (from "Girl Crazy" 1930) (George Gershwin)
FRANK PERKINS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
8 Fascinating Rhythm (from "Lady Be Good" 1924) (George & Ira Gershwin)
ANDRE KOSTELANETZ AND HIS ORCHESTRA
9 Can’t Help Singing (title song from 1944 film) (Jerome Kern)
THE MELACHRINO ORCHESTRA Conducted by GEORGE MELACHRINO
10 Strike Up The Band (title songs from 1927 musical) (George Gershwin)
DANISH STATE RADIO ENTERTAINMENT ORCHESTRA Conducted by KAI MORTENSEN
11 "Lovely To Look At" Film Selection (Jerome Kern, Otto Harbach) Lovely To Look At, You’re Devastating, Yesterdays, I Won’t Dance, Smoke Gets In Your Eyes, The Touch Of Your Hand, Lovely To Look At.
RAY MARTIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
12 Liza (from "Show Girl" 1929) (George Gershwin, arr. Richard Jones)
THE PITTSBURGH STRINGS Conducted by RICHARD JONES
13 Long Ago And Far Away (from film "Cover Girl" 1944) (Jerome Kern, arr. Gordon Jenkins)
GORDON JENKINS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
14 Rhapsody In Blue (1924) (George Gershwin)
PHILIP GREEN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA with RONNIE SELBEY, piano
15 Can I Forget You (from "High, Wide and Handsome" 1937) (Jerome Kern)
GLENN OSSER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
16 The Way You Look Tonight (from film "Swing Time" 1936) (Jerome Kern, arr. Ron Goodwin)
RON GOODWIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
17 George Gershwin Suite (Gershwin) Strike Up The Band, Embraceable You, Do-do-do, Love Walked In, Swanee, Someone To Watch Over Me, S’Wonderful, I Got Rhythm, Bidin’ My Time, But Not For Me, Somebody Loves Me, Of Thee I Sing.
LOUIS LEVY AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA

GLCD 5148

The 20th Century was a time when popular songwriters were truly blessed by three wonderful inventions which transformed the way in which music became accessible to everyone, virtually on demand. The gramophone, radio and talking pictures created an almost insatiable appetite for words and music, which the entertainment moguls of the day did their best to satisfy – often earning themselves a very comfortable living in the process.

There must have been thousands of tunesmiths churning out melodies in the hope of attracting attention from a public always eager for more. As the century dawned sheet music sales were the main source of income for publishers, since all who could afford it had a piano in the home. Even by the 1940s there were so-called ‘hit parade’ charts listing the most popular tunes compiled from piano scores, although eventually disc sales became a more accurate reflection of the public’s preferences.

A few composers and lyricists emerged as being pre-eminent purveyors of their art. Most had previously directed their talents towards the musical theatre, but the lure of Hollywood eventually proved too strong for many to resist, and the movies of the 1930s witnessed a tremendous outpouring of musical talent (in Europe as well as the USA) and the finest songs of the period are now a part of our enduring musical heritage.

In previous collections in this series Guild has already saluted the talents of Richard Rodgers (GLCD 5123) and Cole Porter (GLCD 5127): now it is the turn of George Gershwin and Jerome Kern.

Encapsulating the brilliant achievements of George Gershwin in a few paragraphs is well nigh impossible, but anyone wishing to study his career in depth has a wide choice of excellent biographies by learned musicologists from which to choose. He was born Jacob Gershovitz in Brooklyn, New York on 26 September 1898 and is reported to have taught himself to play on a neighbour’s piano. At the age of thirteen a teacher introduced him to the classics, and two years later he found employment with a music publisher as a demonstrator of the latest songs. By the time he was twenty he had completed his first Broadway musical, "La La Lucille" and around the same time he had his first big hit Swanee when it was discovered by Al Jolson.

Thereafter it seemed that almost everything he wrote found favour with the public, and throughout his career he worked closely with his elder brother Ira who was one of the great lyricists of the period. It has been said that Gershwin’s strengths were a result of his willing acceptance of European musical culture which he cleverly married to the jazz idiom that swept America during his youth. Nowhere was this more apparent than in his memorable Rhapsody In Blue in 1924, although subsequent attempts to compose a sequel of similar stature somehow eluded him, despite several important works written for the concert hall. But it appears that his heart was mainly in the theatre and, when sound arrived in the late 1920s, the cinema. It was a tragedy that someone so talented should have had their life cut short by a condition that would probably have been curable today. He was diagnosed as suffering from a brain tumour, and died in Hollywood on 11 July 1937 aged only 38.

There is a famous quote which still bears repeating: the writer John O'Hara summed up the feelings of many Americans when he said "George Gershwin is dead, but I don't have to believe it if I don't want to."

Thirteen years before Gershwin’s arrival on the planet, Jerome David Kern was born in New York City on 27 January 1885. Although their careers bore certain similarities, Kern has been described as being more influenced by the European school of musical theatre which was a strong force on Broadway during his formative years. In fact he spent some while studying in Germany, and worked successfully in London where he met his wife Eva, and contributed songs to several West End shows.

Drawing room ballads were still popular during the early years of the last century. They sold in their thousands to budding musicians who would perform them in their own homes for the entertainment of sometimes long-suffering family and friends. Students have suggested that Kern managed to break a long established mould when, in 1914, with lyrics by Herbert Reynolds he created what some consider to be the first modern ballad, They Didn’t Believe Me. It has also been claimed that he helped to move the traditional Broadway musical on to a higher plane with "Show Boat", written in collaboration with Oscar Hammerstein II in 1927.

Eventually Kern was persuaded to write for Hollywood musicals, although it has been said that he was nervous when approached to write the score for the Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers 1936 film "Swing Time". Then in his fifties, he wondered if he still had his finger on the musical pulse of the younger generation, but he didn’t need to worry; tunes such as Pick Yourself confirmed that he could cope very well with modern rhythms, and he continued to produce delightful film scores including the memorable "Cover Girl" with Rita Hayworth and Gene Kelly in 1944.

In 1945 Kern was working on a planned revival of "Show Boat", but he never saw it performed: he died of a heart attack in New York on 11 November 1945 aged 60. At his friend's memorial service, Oscar Hammerstein remarked: "He stimulated everyone. He annoyed some. He never bored anyone at any time."

In selecting the orchestras for this tribute an attempt has been made to offer some performances which will be less familiar to music lovers. Rather than repeat versions that are readily available elsewhere, some rare 78s have been rescued from oblivion – such an example being the 1945 Decca recording of Rhapsody In Blue. It is conducted by Philip Green (1910-1982) who began his professional career at the age of eighteen playing in various orchestras. Within a year he became London’s youngest West End conductor at the Prince of Wales Theatre. His long recording career began with EMI in 1933, and he is credited with at least 150 film scores. A compulsive worker, he appeared in countless radio programmes and also composed numerous pieces of mood music for major London publishers including Chappell & Co., Francis Day & Hunter, Paxton and EMI’s Photoplay Music, where he ultimately became the only contributor to the catalogue. The pianist Ronnie Selbey played on several Ambrose 78s during 1941, and was present on some of Ted Heath’s earliest recordings for Decca. He also worked in the USA where he was Vic Damone’s pianist for a while.

Composers as prolific as Gershwin and Kern occasionally decline to publish some of their creations for various reasons, and it can be a moment of great excitement when researchers later discover some works previously unknown. Manuscripts left behind by Gershwin were naturally the subject of keen interest and in 1947 a film "The Shocking Miss Pilgrim" with Betty Grable offered a ‘new’ and posthumous score with lyrics, as always, by his brother Ira. Several of the songs became popular, the most lasting being For You, For Me, For Evermore which Percy Faith (1908-1976) delightfully arranged for his own tribute to Gershwin released by Columbia in 1957.

In the middle years of the last century the name ‘Louis Levy’ (1893-1957) would have been familiar to millions of cinemagoers around the world. He was listed as Musical Director on countless British films, and he led a team of fine composers and arrangers that helped to establish film scoring as an important craft in its own right. As head of a music department servicing both Gaumont British and Gainsborough studios, Levy was one of the most influential figures in British film music from the 1930s to the 1950s. He was more prolific than his contemporary Muir Mathieson, although it has to be said that the latter enjoyed greater critical acclaim. Levy’s success in films resulted in major record contracts for HMV and Columbia, and he became a regular broadcaster.

His famous long-running BBC radio series "Music From The Movies" began on 6th January 1936. Levy’s aim was to allow listeners at home to enjoy the same lush orchestrations they were then accustomed to hearing in the cinema. He further extended this ideal to his commercial recordings, and the rich sounds emanating from his large orchestra were considered impressive by contemporary collectors. Through the sheer necessity of having to produce so much music, Levy wisely employed several talented arrangers who helped to establish his style, among them Peter Yorke (1902-1966, who adapted the powerful Levy sound for his own successful post-war concert orchestra), and Bretton Byrd (who was Levy’s chief music editor at Gaumont British). To the constant frustration of researchers, it was rare for record companies to divulge the names of the arrangers on 78 labels, so it is a matter for conjecture as to who was responsible for scoring the Gershwin selection which concludes this CD. Certainly it was not the work of Peter Yorke; his arrangements are unique and instantly recognisable to his admirers, and in any case he was busy with his own orchestra conducting frequent broadcasts and recordings at that time. Bretton Byrd is, perhaps, an obvious choice since he was still composing and conducting for films several years after this suite was recorded. However the style bears little similarity to Levy’s 1930s discs (some of which were undoubtedly Byrd’s work) so a definite attribution must await the discovery of future evidence.

David Ades

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The Show Goes On

1 The Show Goes On (Ivor Slaney)
HUDSON ORCHESTRA Conducted by WALTER WARREN (real name MEYER DE WOLFE)
2 Broadway Melody (Nacio Herb Brown)
FRANK CHACKSFIELD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
3 The Film Opens (Eleventh Hour Melody) (King Palmer)
LONDON PROMENADE ORCHESTRA Conducted by WALTER COLLINS
4 If I Had A Talking Picture Of You (Buddy De Sylva, Lew Brown, Ray Henderson, arr. Robert Farnon)
ROBERT FARNON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
5 News Theatre (Jack Beaver)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH
6 Startime (Eric Rogers)
WINIFRED ATWELL, piano, with FRANK CHACKSFIELD AND HIS ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS
7 South Wales And West – Television March (Eric Coates)
ERIC COATES AND HIS ORCHESTRA
8 Television Playhouse (Len Stevens, full name Herbert Leonard Stevens)
THE CRAWFORD LIGHT ORCHESTRA
9 Picture Parade (Jack Beaver)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CHARLES WILLIAMS
10 Curtain Time (Bob Haymes)
ACQUAVIVA AND HIS ORCHESTRA
11 Stars In My Eyes (from "The King Steps Out") (Fritz Kreisler)
ANDRE KOSTELANETZ AND HIS ORCHESTRA
12 Up With The Curtain (Jack Strachey)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by FREDERICK CURZON
13 Back Stage (Harry Rabinowitz)
NEW CENTURY ORCHESTRA Conducted by ERICH BÖRSCHEL
14 Leading Lady (Edward White)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
15 Top Of The Bill (Jack Strachey)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH
16 Chorus Girl (Claud Vane, real name Rufus Isaacs)
WEST END CELEBRITY ORCHESTRA
17 The Man On The Flying Trapeze (Alfred Lee, George Leybourne)
GEORGE TZIPINE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
18 It’s In The Air – theme from the film (Harry Parr-Davies)
ROYAL AIR FORCE ORCHESTRA Conducted by Wing Commander R.P. O’DONNELL, MVO
19 Floor Show (Len Stevens, full name Herbert Leonard Stevens)
NEW CENTURY ORCHESTRA Conducted by ERICH BÖRSCHEL
20 Lap Of Luxury (Angela Morley)
TELECAST ORCHESTRA Conducted by ELLIOTT MAYES
21 Gay And Glamorous (Kenneth Essex, real name Rufus Isaacs)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
22 A Star Is Born (Robert Farnon)
ROBERT FARNON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
23 ITMA Signature Tune (Michael North, arr. Ronald Hanmer)
BBC VARIETY ORCHESTRA, leader FRANK CANTELL, Conducted by CHARLES SHADWELL
24 The Spice Of Life (James Kennedy, Michael Carr, arr. Ronald Hanmer)
CHARLES SHADWELL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
25 Radio Romantic (Sidney Torch, real name Sidney Torchinsky)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH
26 South Bank (Paul Fenoulhet)
STUTTGART RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by KURT REHFELD
27 Premiere (Trevor Duncan, real name Leonard CharlesTrebilco)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by JACK LEON
28 Melody Of The Stars (Peter Yorke)
PETER YORKE AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
29 There’s No Business Like Show Business (Irving Berlin, arr. Angela Morley)
WALLY STOTT AND HIS ORCHESTRA

GLCD 5149

The theatre is notorious for its superstitions. "Break a leg" … "the Scottish Play" and the avoidance of using mirrors and live flowers on-stage are probably some of the best known. Equally there is the saying "The Show must go on" when everything seems to be conspiring against such an event taking place!

In this collection the Show definitely does go on, with many talented Light Music composers doing their best to create a feeling of warmth, happiness and general well-being that is usually associated with the entertainment business. Thus we have a good selection of pieces descriptive of the theatre, alongside some diversions into the worlds of the cinema, radio and television.

The honour of opening this compilation goes to Ivor Slaney (1921-1998) who, as well as being an accomplished composer, was also a fine oboe player much in demand for concerts and recording sessions (he played on several Robert Farnon albums). He was born in Birmingham and received his musical education at London’s Royal College of Music. His compositions include Donkey Doodle (on Guild GLCD 5131), Georgian Rhumba (which his wife, pianist Dolores Ventura, recorded commercially), Brazilian Suite and an Oboe Concerto and Suite. He also worked on many film scores, and one of his most successful for the small screen was the Carlos Theme from the TV series "Sentimental Agent", which he recorded with his orchestra on an HMV 45. In the early 1960s he arranged and conducted (anonymously) some of the 101 Strings albums for the American Somerset (later Alshire) label which were issued in the UK as part of Pye’s ‘Golden Guinea’ series. One of his later TV projects was the children’s series "The Double Deckers".

The pinnacle of theatrical success is to perform in London’s West End or New York’s Broadway. Hollywood spent a decade chronicling the highs and lows of life on Broadway, and no one summed it up better than Nacio Herb Brown (1896-1964) when he wrote Broadway Melody for the 1929 film of the same name. Also that year the public first heard If I Had A Talking Picture Of You which cleverly exploited the excitement created by the arrival of the ‘talkies’. Three decades later Robert Farnon’s (1917-2005) arrangement injected the melody with a touch of romance which the more frenetic versions on its debut failed to capture.

Most of the music on this CD was specially written for the Recorded Music Libraries (now often known as Production Music) of the main London publishers. During the 1940s and 1950s there was a big surge in demand from the entertainment business for affordable music that was readily available in recorded form, without the cumbersome copyright restrictions that had been so troublesome. A number of composers excelled at being able to create a variety of moods, and even some writers normally associated with more serious works were tempted to get involved.

One might include Cedric King Palmer (1913-1999) in this category, because of his undoubted studious nature. He was a prolific composer of mood music who contributed more than 600 works over a period of 30 years to several London publishers. He was able to adapt his writing to many different styles, and The Film Opens became one of his best-known works, especially in the USA. It was chosen as the theme for a television series called "11th Hour Theater" so it became the Eleventh Hour Melody. A lyric was added by the American Carl Sigman, prompting commercial recordings and healthy US sheet music sales. To survive in the music business meant accepting many varied commissions, and King Palmer could turn his hand to making popular arrangements of the classics which he often conducted with his own orchestra on the BBC Light Programme in the 1940s and 1950s. His many bright and tuneful pieces disguised the fact that he possessed a serious knowledge of music; at the age of 26 he completed a study of the work of Granville Bantock (1868-1946), and in 1944 Palmer wrote ‘Teach Yourself Music’ for the Hodder and Stoughton Home University Series which ran to several editions. He ceased composing production music in the 1970s, and towards the end of his life he became a patient and popular piano teacher, with sometimes over 60 pupils on his books.

TV 24-hour news channels are not unique – or even new. There was a time when many large towns and cities would possess news theatres, in which the latest newsreels and short features would be screened continuously, thus allowing folks with spare time on their hands the opportunity to pass the odd hour or so catching up on world events. Railway stations were ideal locations, and Chappells asked Jack Beaver (1900-1963) to write the kind of theme that was appearing so frequently in newsreels of the period. News Theatre is a fine example of his ability to capture a chosen mood to absolute perfection although his Picture Parade (which was the signature tune for an early BBC Television series of the same name) will be more familiar to the public. His sons described Beaver as a workaholic, who would dash between engagements in various parts of the country, often completing scores for theatrical productions during long train journeys en route. He also worked on well over 100 films and documentaries but, like many of his contemporaries at that time, his name did not always appear on the credits.

When commercial television was launched in Britain in September 1955 one of its early successes was "Sunday Night At The London Palladium". It appeared regularly from 1955 to 1967, then reappeared for a season in 1973/74. The theme Startime was composed by Eric Rogers (1921-1981), who was musical director at the London Palladium at the time. As his career developed he tended to concentrate on films, initially as conductor (several early "Carry Ons" and the first James Bond film "Dr No") then he also wrote the music, most notably "Carry On Cabby" (1963) and "Carry On Matron" (1972). He emigrated to the USA in 1975, where he became in demand for films and television series.

As commercial television gradually spread across Britain, each of the individual companies decided to follow the original example set by the BBC, and use a march to signal the commencement of broadcasting (back in the 1950s the advent of 24-hour television was still decades away in the future). Eric Coates (1886-1957) composed the Television March for the BBC; for the commercial company ATV he wrote Sound And Vision and when the South Wales and West region approached him he resurrected a former piece Seven Seas (originally composed in 1937) and renamed it after the TV station.

Len Stevens(d. 1989 - his full name was Herbert Leonard Stevens) was a prolific composer, contributing mood music to several different libraries, with a style that his admirers quickly grew to recognise. Like so many of the talented musicians employed in the business, he could turn his hand to any kind of music that was needed, and he was also involved in the musical theatre. His publishers, Josef Weinberger, would have been keen to get his work accepted for television (where the royalties were far more generous than radio), hence their decision to choose the title Television Playhouse.

The radio segment commences with Robert Farnon’s A Star Is Born which used to introduce the star guest towards the end of the BBC’s "In Town Tonight" during the later years of its long run. One of the popular features in Tommy Handley’s ITMA show (ITMA stood for "It’s That Man Again" – the opening words of the signature tune by Michael North) was a musical interlude in which arrangers would be invited to contribute their own ideas on a well-known tune. Often these were folk songs or nursery rhymes, but Ronald Hanmer (1917-1994) decided that he ought to honour the programme itself, hence his ingenious musical portrait of the show’s own famous song. He was a prolific composer and arranger whose proud boast was that he had worked in the music business since the day he left school. Many of his comic creations enlivened the BBC’s wartime ITMA broadcasts (his arrangement of Ten Green Bottles is on Guild GLCD 5102), and eventually over 700 of his compositions were published in various background music libraries. His film scores include Made in Heaven (1952), Penny Princess (1952) and Top of the Form (1953). He was also in demand as an orchestrator of well-known works for Amateur Societies, and the brass band world was very familiar with his scores – sometimes used as test pieces. In 1975 he emigrated to Australia, where he was delighted to discover that his melody Pastorale was famous throughout the land as the theme for the long-running radio serial Blue Hills. In Britain his best-known theme was the signature tune for BBC radio’s The Adventures of P.C. 49; the music came from a Francis, Day & Hunter Mood Music 78 simply called Changing Moods.

Charles Shadwell (1898-1979) conducted the BBC Variety Orchestra in the ITMA broadcasts, which made him a minor celebrity due to regular quips with Tommy Handley. He had a recording contract with HMV, and The Spice of Life was familiar as the signature tune of "Music Hall".

During the 1940s Paul Fenoulhet (1906-1979) directed the Skyrockets service band. He became a well-known conductor in Britain thanks to his appointments heading various BBC light orchestras, for whom he scored numerous arrangements. He also composed some light pieces, including a concert suite "Suffolk Sketches". On this CD he is represented by South Bank, which is his portrait of an area on the south bank of the River Thames which was establishing itself as an important centre for the arts, following the 1951 Festival of Britain which saw the construction of the Royal Festival Hall. In essence it is a clever arrangement of the old nursery rhyme London Bridge Is Falling Down.

Other treats include the ebullient Curtain Time by Bob Haymes (1922-1989), screen actor and younger brother of the famous singer Dick Haymes. His biggest songwriting success was That’s All recorded by Frank Sinatra in 1962. Mention must be made of the superb Andre Kostelanetz (1901-1980) version of Fritz Kreisler’s Stars In My Eyes. And the two tracks featuring the genius of Angela Morley (b. 1924): her own sultry composition Lap Of Luxury, and our closing track There’s No Business Like Show Business which she arranged and conducted for the Philips label when she was working as ‘Wally Stott’.

Jack Strachey (1894-1972) composed many fine numbers with a true show business feel, and we feature two – Up With The Curtain and Top Of The Bill. His place in popular music’s hall of fame has been assured as the composer of These Foolish Things, and in the world of light music he is known especially for In Party Mood (the signature tune of "Housewives’ Choice" – the original recording is on Guild GLCD 5120) and Theatreland, which is offered on Guild in two versions by Jay Wilbur (GLCD 5102) and Harry Fryer (GLCD 5137).

The one film theme is "It’s In The Air" which movie buffs will recognise as one of George Formby’s many morale-boosting comedies from the war years. Appropriately our version is a now rare 78 featuring the Royal Air Force Orchestra.

The remaining composers this time were all also brilliant arrangers, and most of them were well-known conductors. South African Harry Rabinowitz (b. 1916) came to England in 1946 and was appointed conductor of the BBC Revue Orchestra in 1953. He became better known to the public through BBC radio and TV entertainment shows like 'Hancock's Half Hour' and was Head of Music for London Weekend Television in 1970s. He also conducted for West End musicals and film scores.

Edward White (1910-1994) enjoyed considerable acclaim with his Runaway Rocking Horse when it emerged as one of the most popular pieces of light music in the immediate post-war years – the version by the Orchestre Raymonde can be heard on Guild GLCD5102. But he was to achieve even greater success a few years later with Puffin’ Billy, thanks to its use in Britain as the signature tune of "Children’s Favourites", and as the theme for "Captain Kangaroo" in the USA.

Sidney Torch (1908-1990) was one of Britain’s finest theatre organists during the 1930s but after war service in the Royal Air Force he concentrated entirely on composing, arranging and conducting light music. Previous Guild CDs have included some of his catchy compositions (composed especially for the Chappell Recorded Music Library), and from the 1950s to the 1970s he was a familiar name in Britain thanks to his association with the radio programme "Friday Night Is Music Night".

Claud Vane and Kenneth Essex hide the true identity of Rufus Isaacs, who also used other pseudonyms such as Derek Dwyer and Howitt Hale. His many short works often had a ‘show business’ or holiday feel.

Peter Yorke (1902-1966) worked with many leading British bands during his formative years, some of the most notable being Percival Mackey, Jack Hylton and Henry Hall. In 1936 he began a fruitful collaboration as chief arranger with Louis Levy, one of the pioneers of music for British films, who employed several talented writers such as Clive Richardson, Charles Williams and Jack Beaver, but seldom gave them any credit on-screen. Later on Peter Yorke conducted one of Britain’s most popular broadcasting and recording orchestras from the 1940s until the 1960s.

Leonard Trebilco (1924-2005) adopted the pseudonym ‘Trevor Duncan’, to avoid a conflict of interest while he was working at the BBC. His first big success had been High Heels, but this was soon followed by a string of other catchy instrumentals. Premiere on this CD is one of his early works, before he became well-known through pieces such as The Girl From Corsica.

Which just leaves Georges Samuel Tzipine (1907-1987) to remind us that the circus is definitely a part of show business. From the mid-1920s he was musical director of France’s Gaumont Newsreel for which he composed a vast amount of varied background music to suit all kinds of documentary moods and themes. There are also references to him being commissioned to record various cues for use in American TV series during the 1950s.

To return to our opening theme, how could anyone want a fellow performer to "break a leg" during their performance? Is it the kind of thing an ambitious understudy would say to a big star? Not necessarily. One of several explanations is that it simply means that they hope the show will go so well resulting in many curtain calls. Still confused? In theatres the curtains, or ‘tabs’, are also known as ‘legs’. In older theatres they had to be cranked up and down by hand, and the machinery was known to fail on occasions. So in theatrical folk lore "break a leg" can mean that repeated rising and lowering of the curtains in response to an enthusiastic audience could result in the ‘leg’ breaking down. Another way of ‘breaking a leg’ is to bend the knee, in other words take a bow.

Avoiding mirrors and flowers on stage is simply common sense, rather than superstition. The bright lights could reflect in a mirror, blinding someone in the audience, and the heat generated by the lights would probably cause most blooms to wilt before the end of the performance.

Which leaves us with the ‘Scottish play’ – Shakespeare’s "Hamlet". Saying the ‘H’ word in the theatre is supposed to bring bad luck, possibly because it is generally the most-performed of all Shakespeare’s works, and contains three fights giving plenty of scope for accidents. Probably it is no more dangerous for actors than any other production, but that would spoil a much-loved theatrical legend!

David Ades

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"CHILDHOOD MEMORIES – Volume 2"

1 Popgun Patrol (Frank Perkins)
FRANK PERKINS AND HIS ‘POPS’ ORCHESTRA
2 Dance Of The Marionettes (Gilbert Vinter)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by DOLF VAN DER LINDEN
3 Jack-in-a-Box (Alan Perry, real name Ernest Tomlinson)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by DOLF VAN DER LINDEN
4 Hunt The Slipper (Il Court Le Furet) (Roger Roger)
ROGER ROGER AND HIS CHAMPS ELYSEES ORCHESTRA
5 Dance Of The Pirate (José Fontaine)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA (VAN LYNN on LP label)
6 Ourselves When Young (Robert Docker)
LONDON PROMENADE ORCHESTRA Conducted by WALTER COLLINS
7 The Magic Garden (Horace Shepherd)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
8 Teddy Bears’ Picnic (John W. Bratton)
BARNABAS VON GECZY AND HIS ORCHESTRA
9 A Fairy Ballet (Cecil White)
BOURNEMOUTH MUNICIPAL ORCHESTRA Conducted by Sir DAN GODFREY
Cello by Ernst Slaney; Trumpet by Phil Ledington
10 Doll Dance (Nacio Herb Brown)
NAT SHILKRET AND HIS ORCHESTRA
"Tales From A Fairy Book" Suite (Josef Engleman)
11 Babes In The Wood
12 Rumpelstickins
13 Cinderella
14 Ali Baba
WEST END CELEBRITY ORCHESTRA
15 Parade Of The Imps (Callo Ecklebe)
GEORGE GROHROCK-FERRARI AND HIS ORCHESTRA
16 Sleepy Marionette (Charles Williams)
CHARLES WILLIAMS AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
17 Whipper-Snapper (Peter Yorke)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
18 Toyland Tattoo (Robert Farnon)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
19 See-Saw (Douglas Brownsmith)
INTERNATIONAL RADIO ORCHESTRA
20 Nine Naughty Gnomes (Hans May, real name Johannes Mayer)
THE HARMONIC ORCHESTRA Conducted by HANS MAY
21 Drummer Boy (Charles Williams)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
22 Marionette March (Dolf van der Linden)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
23 Pirouette (Henry Croudson)
LOUIS VOSS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
24 Paper Hats And Wooden Swords (Walter Collins)
HILVERSUM SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by ANTON DUREM
25 Golliwog On The Loose (Len Stevens, full name Herbert Leonard Stevens)
NEW CENTURY ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH
26 Pinocchio March (Julius Steffaro, real name Jan Stoeckart)
HILVERSUM RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by HUGO DE GROOT
27 Scherzetto For Children (Fred Hartley)
BBC TELEVISION ORCHESTRA Conducted by ERIC ROBINSON

Guild GLCD 5144

The opening paragraph of Guild’s first volume of "Childhood Memories" (GLCD 5125) stated: "The carefree years of childhood have for centuries provided inspiration for writers and composers, often conjuring up happy memories that seem remote from the realities of everyday life. At times we all need to escape into a world where problems seem non-existent, and it is hoped that the music in this collection will provide just that welcoming refuge."

Clearly these sentiments were shared by many purchasers of this series of Guild Light Music CDs, because there have been numerous requests for a second volume of similar compositions. So once again we offer a mixture of well-known favourites alongside some catchy offerings from the production music libraries which would have been heard many times on radio, television and films (especially newsreels) during the middle years of the last century.

The composers represented in this collection include some legendary names in Light Music circles. Equally there are some less frequent contributors to ‘The Golden Age of Light Music’ who also deserve their share of the limelight. Our opening track features such a musician as both conductor and composer of Popgun Patrol: Frank Perkins (1908-1988) gained a degree in Economics at university, but he soon discarded the idea of a financial career for his first love, music. After studying in both America and Europe, he became noticed in 1934 following a successful collaboration with lyricist Mitchell Parrish which resulted in Stars Fell on Alabama and Emmaline. In 1937 he was engaged as an arranger by Warner Bros. in Hollywood, where he remained until the mid-1960s. Although much of his work failed to get acknowledged (such as some piano improvisations in the legendary 1942 movie "Casablanca") his name can still be spotted in the music credits for many Warner Bros. pictures particularly during the war years. Later he tended to concentrate more on light orchestral works for concert performance producing some catchy novelties with intriguing titles such as Kentucky Trotter (on GLCD 5114), The Frustrated Floorwalker, Barbara (GLCD 5119) and The Deserted Patio. One of his biggest hits was Fandango (GLCD 5103) which also became a song with the benefit of an added lyric by John Bradford. In 1962 Frank received an Oscar nomination for his work scoring the musical "Gypsy".

Lincoln-born Gilbert Vinter (1909-1969) is probably best remembered in Britain as the conductor of the BBC Midland Light Orchestra when it was one of the foremost contributors of quality light music on the BBC. However he also excelled as a composer, both in light music and the brass band world. He was a chorister at Lincoln Cathedral, then studied bassoon at the Royal Academy of Music, later becoming a Professor and Fellow of the Academy. As a young man he played bassoon in the BBC Wireless Military Band and the London Philharmonic. During World War II, he was a member of the Royal Air Force Central Band and later led several RAF bands including the RAF Coastal Command Band. After the war Vinter joined the BBC as a staff conductor where he also developed his skill as a composer. Many of his works were for brass band and among his finest is The Trumpets, scored for the unusual combination of a large brass band, chorus, and bass soloist. When Inter-art Music Publishers launched their new production music library Impress in the mid-1950s he was commissioned to write several pieces of mood music. Perhaps the best-known was Portuguese Party in 1956 (on Guild GLCD 5141); it was well-received, and enjoyed many broadcasts and eventually a commercial recording on HMV. Also for Impress, Air Display (Guild GLCD 5131) showed how an ‘ordinary’ piece of mood music could still grab the listener’s attention, which equally applies to his contribution this time – Dance Of The Marionettes for the Boosey & Hawkes library, which is scored for woodwind. An example of Gilbert Vinter’s arranging and conducting skills can he heard on the Guild Light Music CD "Musical Kaleidoscope – Volume 1" (GLCD 5139) which includes his arrangement Music of the People – England played by the BBC Midland Light Orchestra under his baton in 1952. It is a clever work which incorporates some of the street cries of old London as well as traditional English airs.

Ernest Tomlinson(b.1924) is one of Britain’s most talented composers, working mainly in light music, but also highly regarded for his choral works and brass band pieces. During a very productive career he has contributed numerous titles to the recorded music libraries of many different publishers, often under the pseudonym ‘Alan Perry’ (one of Ernest’s amusing quotes is that "this fellow Alan Perry is a more successful composer than I am!"). One of his best-known numbers is Little Serenade, developed from a theme he wrote as incidental music for a radio production ‘The Story of Cinderella’ in 1955; from the same source comes his charming Fairy Coach on Guild GLCD 5142. His suites of English Folk Dances have also become part of the standard light music repertoire. As well as writing many bright and breezy works (such as Jack-in-a-Box on this CD) Ernest can also turn his hand to portrayals of natural beauty, witness Great Panorama on GLCD 5145.

Robert Docker (1918-1992) was a regular broadcaster, mainly as a pianist, but also through his activities ‘behind the scenes’ as a composer and arranger, working closely with people such as Sidney Torch. His best-known compositions include Tabarinage (Buffoonery) and Legend, although it is probably for his many skilful arrangements that he is best remembered. They were often included in BBC Radio’s "Friday Night is Music Night" although the selection on this CD – Ourselves When Young – was created several years before that long-running programme was first heard on the BBC Light Programme in 1952. Docker has cleverly woven a tapestry of many familiar (and some less well-known) nursery rhymes that used to be a part of growing up.

Horace Shepherd (1892-1960 – also known as Hugh Kairs) was musical director and composer of the score for at least ten British films from the 1930s to 1950s, perhaps the best-known being "Hatter’s Castle" (1942) based on the A.J. Cronin novel. He also seems to have been active in Europe – the 1930 French film "Prix de Beauté" being just one example. He is listed as the director of "Making The Grade" (1947), a short film about actors becoming stars which featured Jessie Matthews. "The Flamingo Affair" (1948) credits him with producing and directing as well as composing the score; it might be interesting to see today, since the famous violinist Stephane Grappelli is listed as ‘appearing as himself’. Although Horace Shepherd did not contribute a vast amount to mood music libraries, his music was of a high standard as demonstrated in his sensitive The Magic Garden on this CD, and Winter (GLCD 5138).

Joseph (Josef) Engleman (d. 1949) was an English pianist who also composed a large amount of light music. His works (particularly his suites) found favour with the many municipal and theatre orchestras that existed until World War 2 and he is credited with helping to found the Bosworth Mood Music Library in 1937, for which he contributed numerous pieces. He continued his involvement with light orchestras in the Midlands after the war, although it has to be acknowledged that his son, Harry Engleman (b. 1912) became better known as a pianist and dance band leader. Joseph’s Children’s Playtime Suite has already been featured in Guild’s first volume of "Childhood Memories".

Hans May (real name Johannes Mayer, 1891-1959) was a Viennese-born composer and music director who devoted much of his musical life to composing for the screen and stage. Initially he worked in the German film industry, but in the mid-1930s the developing political situation forced him to relocate briefly in France before eventually settling in England, like so many other mid-European musicians at that time. His numerous films included scores for the Boulting Brothers, Gainsborough Films and the Rank Organisation, and he conducted many early 78s for the Harmonic Music Library which was established in the mid-1940s. He also wrote many songs, perhaps the best known being Throw Open Wide Your Window. His Rippling Down The Mountain was included in the Guild CD "Reflections of Tranquility" (GLCD 5112) and here we have the wonderfully titled Nine Naughty Gnomes which finds him as both composer and conductor. In his later career he concentrated more on stage productions, including "Carissima" in collaboration with Eric Maschwitz.

The final track on this CD comes with an apology for the fact that the sound of it is not up to our usual high standards. Indeed, there was much soul searching and discussion before the decision to include it was made.

So let us explain that it is a piece of British Television history which should be instantly familiar to children of the early 1950s who watched the BBC's programmes especially made for them on the small black and white screens that seemed such a scientific miracle at the time. The problem we faced was that the original recording could not be located and the only copy available was one which had been dubbed to optical film soundtrack and then transferred to videotape before being copied to CD for restoration work to be attempted. Despite considerable efforts, the final result is far from perfect, but the rarity of this piece of music, and the fact that it is unlikely ever to appear on another commercial recording, persuaded us to include it.

It was made long before the days of 24-hour TV, when broadcasts were scheduled in segments through the day and in-between there could be test cards or promotional films, although often the screens were left blank. When broadcasting was due to re-start familiar symbols such as clocks would appear, together with a piece of music which became familiar through its sheer repetition.

For several years from 21 May 1951 onwards the children’s segment was introduced by "Scherzetto For Children", specially commissioned by the BBC, and recorded by Eric Robinson (b. 1908) and The Television Orchestra. Its composer, Fred Hartley (1905-1980), was a familiar name in British broadcasting for many years, having made his first appearance on the BBC as a solo pianist as early as 1925. He was then employed as an accompanist, and founded his famous Novelty Quintet in 1931. In 1946 he was appointed the BBC's Head of Light Music. We are grateful to Andrew Emmerson and Tony Clayden (both enthusiastic and extremely knowledgeable collectors of old radio and television memorabilia) for so readily allowing Guild to issue this precious recording.

David Ades

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Scenic Grandeur

1 Sequoia (Kermit Leslie & Walter Leslie real surnames Levinsky)
KERMIT LESLIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
2 Golden Highway (Len Stevens)
LOUIS VOSS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
3 Scenic Grandeur (Robert Farnon)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
4 Green (Gordon Jenkins)
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by FRANK SINATRA
5 October Mist (Ted Fiorito, Paul Francis Webster)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
6 Great Panorama (Alan Perry, real name Ernest Tomlinson)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by DOLF VAN DER LINDEN
7 Whispering Pines (Mahlon Merrick)
MAHLON MERRICK AND HIS ORCHESTRA
8 Pastoral Montage (Gideon Fagan)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
9 The Tall Ships (Trevor Duncan, real name Leonard Trebilco)
STUTTGART RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by KURT REHFELD
10 Evening Mist (Salvatore ‘Tutti’ Camarata)
CONDUCTED BY CAMARATA
11 Seascape (Tony Lowry)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
12 Quiet Countryside (Peter Yorke)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH
13 Cloudland (Bruce Campbell)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
14 Hills Of Brecon (Charles Williams)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
15 Atlantic Crossing (Clive Richardson)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
16 Melody At Moonrise (Cyril Watters)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by FREDERIC CURZON
17 Table Bay (Harry Rabinowitz)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
18 Open Skies (Robert Farnon)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
19 Yacht Race (Jack Beaver)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CHARLES WILLIAMS
20 Still Waters (Trevor Duncan, real name Leonard Trebilco)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by FREDERIC CURZON
21 Piper In The Heather (Frederick Peter Hargreaves)
FRANK CHACKSFIELD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
22 Forest Fantasy (Dolf van der Linden)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
23 Arizona Sketches (Victor Young)
VICTOR YOUNG AND HIS ORCHESTRA

Guild GLCD 5145

For many people the word ‘grandeur’ will imply something magnificent on a large scale, and that is certainly one meaning. However dictionaries carry far wider definitions, among them ‘nobility’ and ‘splendour’ but these descriptions do not necessarily indicate considerable size as a pre-requisite for such terms. A majestic mountain range, a large valley or a vast seascape – all these undoubtedly qualify as ‘Scenic Grandeur’, yet surely the same term can be applied to a wild-flower meadow in the morning mist or a cloudy sky tinted pink and grey by a setting sun. To qualify for inclusion in this collection the talented composers do not need to have been inspired by size, but by nature’s beauty in its many and varied forms.

But sheer size certainly applies to the opening track, because California’s Giant Sequoia (Sequoiadendron) is credited as the largest tree in terms of total volume on our planet. The Levinsky brothers Kermit and Walter certainly managed to capture its glory in their composition Sequoia, which was chosen as the theme for NBC’s daytime re-runs of "The Loretta Young Show". Research on these musical brothers suggests that they appeared happy to use their birth surnames for most of their activities, although it seems that the few LPs featuring ‘Kermit Leslie and his Orchestra’ required a name that is, perhaps, more easily remembered. Both were originally musicians, playing saxes and woodwinds, but Kermit appears to have had a more varied career in later years. Born in New York City, he was working as a professional musician by the time he was fourteen. In 1939 he joined Alvino Rey’s band as saxophonist and arranger, until he was conscripted during the Second World War. Later he studied harmony and counterpoint and for a while became an arranger with Tommy Dorsey. He was a prolific composer (often with his brother Walter) with over 50 published titles to his credit, although Walter’s total is even higher. In 1964 Kermit worked as orchestrator on the film "Return to Oz" and in 1968 he orchestrated and conducted Marvin Hamlisch’s score for the Woody Allen picture "Take the Money and Run". Several compositions by these brothers have been featured on previous Guild CDs: The Little Toy Shop (GLCD 5114); Walking On Ice (GLCD 5131); and Gilbert The Goose (GLCD 5143).

Unfortunately few of us live in places that are outstandingly beautiful, so for many it is necessary to travel some distance to find the mountains, valleys and seascapes that can provide the serene antidote to modern life. It seems likely that Herbert Leonard Stevens (d. 1989) had this in mind when he wrote Golden Highway. He was prolific composer, contributing mood music to several different libraries, with a style that his admirers quickly grew to recognise. Like so many of the talented musicians employed in the business, he could turn his hand to any kind of music that was needed, and he was also involved in the musical theatre. Other examples of his tuneful melodies on previous Guild CDs include Easy Street (GLCD 5119), This Modern Age (GLCD 5124), Airways Suite (GLCD 5131), Snow Shadow (GLCD 5138), Cigarette Girl (GLCD 5140), Lido Fashion Parade (GLCD 5142) and Golliwog On The Loose (GLCD 5144).

It is arguable that two of the featured composers in this collection have between them written so much music described as ‘scenic’ that their works could have filled this CD. Robert Farnon (1917-2005) and Leonard Trebilco (1924-2005), who composed most of his music as ‘Trevor Duncan’, were masters of this genre. Farnon provides the title track Scenic Grandeur which, surprisingly, is one of his works that he did not choose to include on one of his own many commercial recordings. His other contribution Open Skies did feature in a collection of music associated with the American West, but that is not yet in the public domain so we have selected his original recording of this work for the Chappell Recorded Music Library. Trebilco’s pieces are The Tall Ships (which superbly captures the atmosphere of the great days of sail) and Still Waters. The careers of both composers have been profiled on previous Guild CDs, and Leonard Trebilco was the featured composer of ‘Hall of Fame – Volume 2’ (GLCD 5124).

The inspiration for Gordon Jenkins’ tone poem Green came from a piece of poetry by Norman Sickel, at one time a radio script-writer for Frank Sinatra. Like many before him, Sickel regarded the colour green as being allied to all that grows and the natural beauty that ensues. Jenkins seems to have effortlessly conveyed this sentiment into musical notes, thus creating a vivid impression of nature in all her atmospheric phases. This melody comes from an album conducted by Frank Sinatra (1915-1998) in the summer of 1956 when Capitol engaged their star singer to front a symphony size orchestra to celebrate the opening of their new Hollywood studios – now famously known all over the world as the Capitol Records Tower. One of the composers personally selected by Sinatra for this prestigious project was Gordon Hill Jenkins (1910-1984) with whom he would subsequently record the superb 1957 LP ‘Where Are You’ (his first in stereo) and two years later ‘No One Cares’.

The available space in these booklets makes it impossible to do full justice to each and every composer, conductor and arranger of the music included. A difficult choice has to be made, which usually means that those whose careers have been highlighted previously are often put to one side in favour of those who may be less familiar, or appearing in a Guild collection for the first time.

Gideon Fagan (1904-1980) was born in Cape Town, South Africa, and studied music under Vaughan Williams at London’s Royal College of Music from 1922 to 1926. He worked in films and his conducting assignments included a spell with the BBC Northern Orchestra (now the BBC Philharmonic) from 1939 to 1942, and several West End shows (his recording of a selection from "Song of Norway" conducting the Palace Theatre Symphony Orchestra was included on Guild GLCD 5141). He contributed a few compositions to recorded music libraries, and his best-known work was probably Pastoral Montage (for Chappell) which the BBC used as the music accompanying its television interlude film of a windmill. Fagan returned to South Africa in 1949 and was appointed a music director of the South African Broadcasting Corporation in 1963, then lectured at Cape Town University from 1967 to 1973.

Successful writers and conductors often need assistance from other arrangers when faced with heavy work schedules, and it is hardly surprising that some of the collaborators benefit greatly from such contacts. Bruce Campbell was one of several writers who owed much to his association with Robert Farnon. He was a fellow Canadian, who actually came to Britain some years before Farnon, and played trombone with various British bands during the 1930s. Towards the end of the 1940s Campbell realised that he possessed some skills as a composer, and Farnon encouraged him and provided some valuable guidance on occasions. One such example is Cloudland which certainly reveals Farnon influences, although admirers of Campbell’s work can spot his own trademarks which he developed during the 1950s when he became much in demand from various mood music publishers. He can also be heard on Guild in Children’s Hour and Skippy (GLCD 5125).

It is always particularly satisfying when a composer takes the trouble to explain the background to a major piece of music, and Victor Young (1900-1956) provided the following information in the sleeve notes to the LP which includes our final track,

Arizona Sketches. "I had been commissioned by Paramount Studios to write a symphonic tone poem to cover all the beautiful things about Arizona. This is one time the music has been composed before cinematography was added to it. With the aid of the director we invented a story about a prospector going to Arizona with his little German music box. He sets up camp at night, lights his pipe and falls asleep. As the music box fades out, the dream takes place, and in his dreams we go through Arizona - the majestic rocks, the desert flowers in bloom, the dust storm – and we fade back to the music box. The old prospector wakes up, puts his pipe and music box away, and leads his mule out of the scene. The main theme of the Arizona Sketches attracted the attention of Frank Loesser. He wrote a very beautiful lyric to the theme known as Prairieland Lullaby. Bing Crosby recorded it, as did Glenn Miller. Arizona Sketches has had several illustrious performances. It has been given at the Hollywood Bowl in California and at Carnegie Hall with Leopold Stokowski as conductor."

It is worth mentioning that the British production music libraries of the 1950s had to contend with a ban by the Musicians’ Union which forced them to record their music on the Continent of Europe. Impress chose Germany’s excellent Stuttgart Radio Orchestra under their conductor Kurt Rehfeld, although the 78 labels simply credited ‘The Lansdowne Light Orchestra’. Chappells used several orchestras, although it seems their preferred choice was the Danish State Radio Orchestra (usually conducted by Robert Farnon) which became ‘The Melodi Light Orchestra conducted by Ole Jensen’ on the 78s. Boosey & Hawkes retained their familiar ‘New Concert Orchestra’ name, although one of their conductors ‘Nat Nyll’ was actually Dolf van der Linden, a top arranger/ conductor/ composer from the Netherlands who gained a well-deserved international reputation for his work. Other production music libraries used similar pseudonyms, although Paxton credited many of their recordings to Dolf van der Linden and his Metropole Orchestra based in Hilversum. New discoveries in this area continue to be made and, whenever it is possible to name the real orchestra on recordings like these, they will be given in Guild booklets.

David Ades

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"STRINGIN’ ALONG"

1 Stringin’ Along (Victor Young)
VICTOR YOUNG AND HIS ORCHESTRA
2 Penthouse Serenade (Will Jason, Val Burton)
WERNER MULLER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
3 Mam’selle Moderne (Trevor Duncan)
STUTTGART RADIO ORCH / KURT REHFELD
4 Rainy Afternoon (Kermit Leslie & Walter Leslie)
KERMIT LESLIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
5 Heading For Home (Reginald King)
REGENT CLASSIC ORCHESTRA
6 A New Born Love (Giraud)
GUY LUYPAERTS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
7 Man In A Hurry (Ronald Binge)
STUTTGART RADIO ORCH / KURT REHFELD
8 Wedding Of The Violins (Leo Lefleur)
ALFONZO D’ARTEGA AND HIS ORCHESTRA
9 Whirl Of The Waltz (Paul Lincke)
LONDON PROMENADE ORCH / ERIC ROGERS
10 Aperitif (Fontaine, Speguel)
EMILE DELTOUR AND HIS ORCHESTRA
11 Carioca (Vincent Youmans)
ANDRE KOSTELANETZ AND HIS ORCHESTRA
12 Devotion (Otto Cesana)
OTTO CESANA AND HIS ORCHESTRA
13 Fresh Up (Peter Dennis, real name Dennis Berry)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
14 By Heck (Gilbert L. Wolfe, Henry R. Stern)
GEORGE TZIPINE AND HIS SALON ORCHESTRA
15 I’m In Love With Vienna (Hammerstein, Strauss)
RICHARD HAYMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
16 Polka For Strings (Emile Deltour, Fud Candrix)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
17 Gay Romance (George Melachrino)
THE MELACHRINO ORCHESTRA
18 Tentacion de Amor (Xavier Cugat, Fausto Curbelo, arr. Laurie Johnson)
AMBROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA WITH STRINGS Conducted by LAURIE JOHNSON
19 Six Proud Walkers (Theme from the BBC TV serial) (Ray Martin)
RAY MARTIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
20 Flight 101 (Vivian Ellis)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCH / R. FARNON
21 Ballet Of The Bells (Ray Martin)
JACKIE BROWN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
22 Zsa-Zsa (Bernie Wayne, real name Bernard Weitzner)
BERNIE WAYNE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
23 The Frustrated Floorwalker (Frank Perkins)
FRANK PERKINS AND HIS ‘POPS’ ORCHESTRA
24 Bordeaux (David Rose)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
25 Moomin (Robert Farnon)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCH / R. FARNON
26 Bobby Sox (George French)
L’ORCHESTRE DEVEREAUX
27 Apple Flap (John Pi Scheffer)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
28 The Little Ballerina (Guy Pierre Lafarge)
DAVID CARROLL AND HIS ORCHESTRA

Guild GLCD 5146

Once again Guild looks to the composing genius of Victor Young to launch a collection of tuneful orchestral cameos – the first such occasion was his piece Travellin’ Light (GLCD 5114). This time the spotlight falls on Stringin’ Along which reminds us that Victor Young (1900-1956 – some sources give his birth as 1899) was a musician of many talents. His early career was spent as a concert violinist and classical composer, but he decided to move into the popular music arena and joined Ted Fio Rito’s band. In 1928 his first big hit song Sweet Sue probably persuaded him to widen his musical horizons (you can hear the superb David Rose recording of this tune on Guild GLCD 5133). He settled in Hollywood in the mid-1930s, intending to concentrate on writing for films, but he also worked on radio and conducted many of Bing Crosby’s Decca 78s. Victor Young excelled as a violinist, arranger, film composer, songwriter, conductor and record producer. This wide experience in all forms of music was exceptional even by Tin Pan Alley and Hollywood standards, all the more so because his international reputation was achieved in such a short lifetime. Perhaps he enjoyed his greatest triumph shortly before his death, when he composed the score for "Around The World In Eighty Days", the 1956 big screen epic which won Victor Young an Oscar, although it was awarded posthumously. He didn’t orchestrate everything he wrote for the screen (surely he couldn’t have found the time), but used experienced arranger/composers such as Leo Shuken and Sidney Cutner to fill out his sketches. For a while his fellow orchestra leader in the US Decca stable was Gordon Jenkins, who is reported as having said that Victor was a lovely man and a wonderful composer, "but he always had a bad band - full of relatives and refugees from the old country who needed work". Although born in Chicago, Young had strong ties with his grandparents’ country Poland, where he spent some of his formative years (his widowed father abandoned him as a child) and studied at the Warsaw Conservatory of Music together with his sister Helen.

Werner Müller (1920-1998) was a bassoonist who became the first conductor of the RIAS (Radio In American Sector) Dance Band based in Berlin, which gave its first concert on 24 April 1949. It was not long before Müller began to realise that the public’s love affair with the swing era was gradually starting to wane, and sixteen strings were added to the line up. The band had built up a strong following through its Polydor recordings, and by the mid-1950s the labels dropped the ‘RIAS’ tag and simply credited ‘Werner Müller and his Orchestra’. A good example of the way in which strings became an integral part of the line up can be heard in Manhattan Serenade (GUILD GLCD 5130) from the LP "Holiday in New York", and Penthouse Serenade in this collection comes from the same source. Tangos also enjoyed a revival during the 1950s, and Werner used the pseudonym ‘Ricardo Santos’ for his recordings with a South American flavour. In 1966 he moved to Westdeutsche Rundfunk in Cologne, where he continued to make LPs – both purely orchestral and also accompanying popular singers such as Caterina Valente.

Reginald Claude McMahon King (1904-1991) was an accomplished pianist, who performed under the baton of Sir Henry Wood at the Proms soon after he completed his studies at London’s Royal Academy. In 1927 he took an orchestra into Swan & Edgar’s restaurant at their Piccadilly Circus store, where they remained until 1939. During this period he also started broadcasting regularly (during his career his number of broadcasts exceeded 1,400), and he made numerous recordings, often featuring his own attractive compositions. He made his last broadcast in 1964, but during a long retirement he continued composing until shortly before his death. One of his major works, the concert overture The Immortals, was featured on Guild GLCD5106 spotlighting music of the 1930s, and in a lighter vein his tuneful orchestra can be heard playing popular melodies such as Lullaby Of The Leaves (GLCD 5134) and Roses At Dawning (GLCD 5139) on several Guild CDs. Once again we feature him as a contributor to one of London’s production music libraries with his exciting Heading For Home for Bosworth.

Guy Luypaerts (b. 1917) first appeared on a Guild CD playing music by Cole Porter (GLCD 5127). He was born in Paris to Belgian parents during the First World War and became well-known in French musical circles through conducting an orchestra called the Nouvelle Association Symphonique de Paris. This was in the era when live music featured prominently on the radio, and his broadcasts with this orchestra resulted in invitations to conduct other radio orchestras in European cities. Luypaerts is listed as providing the music for the 1945 film "Etoile Sans Lumière". He worked with Edith Piaf (he arranged her 1946 world-wide hit "La Vie En Rose"), Georges Guetary, Yves Montand and most notably with Charles Trénet - their collaboration spanned 30 years and began when Trenet discovered him playing jazz at an officers’ mess early in World War 2. Guild has previously included his imaginative sounds in the Cole Porter tribute (GLCD 5127) and conducting quirky cameos such as The Sleepwalker of Amsterdam (GLCD 5131) and Masquerade In Madrid (GLCD 5132). This time A New Born Love finds him in yet another different mood.

Alfonso D’Artega (1907-1998) arrived in the USA from his native Mexico in 1918. Often merely known by his surname (spellings of his first name vary), he was educated in music and composition at the Strassburger Conservatory by Boris Levenson, who was a pupil of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. D’Artega became a conductor, arranger and composer of wide and varied musical experience, and conducted orchestras for radio, television, transcriptions, recordings, concert stage and motion pictures. In 1946 he originated and conducted in Carnegie Hall the Pop Concerts, with the members of the New York Philharmonic; other notable conducting assignments were with the Buffalo Philharmonic, Miami Symphony, St. Louis Symphony and the Symphony of the Air. He portrayed the role of Tchaikovsky in the 1947 United Artists production "Carnegie Hall" and also conducted the sound track for the film. In addition to conducting, D'Artega also composed well over 50 popular compositions, both alone and sometimes in collaboration with others. Perhaps his best known song was In The Blue Of Evening (on which he collaborated with Thomas Montgomery Adair), which was a hit recording for Frank Sinatra with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra in 1943; the American public would have recognised him particularly for The NBC Chimes Theme. He has previously appeared on Guild with Victor Herbert’s Dagger Dance (GLCD 5140) and Tulips In Springtime (GLCD 5138). This time it is Leo Lefleur’s Wedding Of The Violins which receives the dazzling D’Artega treatment.

Belgian violinist Emile Deltour appears to have started his recording career as ‘Eddie Tower’, and some 78s he made in April 1940 of versions of Count Basie titles have received approval from jazz enthusiasts. During a career which began in the 1920s he worked with Django Reinhardt and the French singer Lucienne Boyer and is listed as having accompanied various singers in the Netherlands during the 1940s, but little seems to be mentioned in reference books about his light music recordings which briefly appeared during the 1950s. In this collection he appears as both conductor (Aperitif) and co-composer (Polka For Strings).

Italian born Otto Cesana (1899-1980) spent much of his early career in California where he lived from 1908 to 1930. His piano studies commenced at the age of ten, and he became an accomplished organist; he also learned about orchestration and harmony which he put to good use working in radio and Hollywood film studios. Most critics regarded Cesana’s work as being ‘easy listening’, although the distinguished jazz critic Leonard Feather considered him worthy of an entry in the 1960 Encyclopaedia Jazz through his acclaimed composition Symphony In Jazz. By then Cesana had returned to Italy, although he was living in New York when he died in 1980. Guild has previously featured his exciting and vibrant Night Train (GLCD 5131), but this time the mood is more romantic and mellow, as the title Devotion suggests.

Georges Samuel Tzipine (1907-1987) is making his Guild debut in this collection with his orchestra’s recording of the catchy novelty number By Heck. He studied at the National Conservatory of Music in Paris, winning a first prize in 1926. Originally he became recognised as a virtuoso on the violin, but he progressed to composing and conducting (often with the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra) and made numerous recordings of both classical and popular music during his long career. From the mid-1920s he was musical director of France’s Gaumont Newsreel for which he composed a vast amount of varied background music to suit all kinds of documentary moods and themes. There are also references to him being commissioned by US publishers to record in France various cues for use in American TV series during the 1950s.

George Melachrino (1909-1965) was one of the big names in British light music from the 1940s to the 1960s. Born in London, he became a professional musician, competent on clarinet, alto and tenor saxophone, violin and viola, and he worked with many British dance bands in the 1930s. He was also in demand as a singer, and can be heard on recordings with Carroll Gibbons and others. During World War 2 he became Musical Director of the Army Radio Unit, and his 50-piece ‘Orchestra in Khaki’ toured with the ‘Stars in Battledress’. When the Allied Expeditionary Forces Programme of the BBC began broadcasting to Allied troops on 7 June 1944 (one day after D-Day), George Melachrino was featured conducting the British Band of the AEF; his colleagues were Glenn Miller and Robert Farnon (whose recordings can be heard on many Guild CDs), fronting the American and Canadian Bands. After the war Melachrino built on his service band to form the magnificent orchestra that went on to achieve worldwide fame, mainly through its superb long-playing record albums which sold in millions. One aspect of his work which was not known to the majority of his fans was his involvement with the short-lived EMI recorded music library. Melachrino composed and arranged a number of pieces intended for use by radio, television and films, and several of these have already appeared in this series, for example Spring Morning (GLCD 5104), London - March (GLCD 5118), There Is A Tavern In The Town (GLCD 5118), Cockney Girl (GLCD 5139), Gracious Gown (GLCD 5120), Bobbysox Bounce (GLCD 5140) and Little Brown Jug (GLCD 5129). To this impressive list we now add Gay Romance, which has been requested by several collectors of this series of CDs.

Ray Martin (1918-1988) was one of the biggest names in British popular music during the 1950s. He conducted his orchestra regularly on radio and television, and was also an Artists and Repertoire Manager at EMI’s Columbia label, where he produced many hit records by their top contract stars. His own compositions were among some of his biggest successes (notably Marching Strings), and two of his lesser known works are included here. "The Six Proud Walkers" was a BBC TV drama series for which Ray Martin was commissioned to compose the theme. At the time he was a familiar face on British TV screens, through his regular appearance with his orchestra in programmes such as "Quite Contrary". Ballet Of The Bells is typical of many short pieces which seemed to flow effortlessly from Martin’s pen; on this occasion (wearing his A & R hat) he passed it over to his colleague Jackie Brown to wave the baton, although the musicians employed are probably the ones who usually played for Martin’s sessions. Jackie’s own output as a composer was relatively sparse, although light music aficionados regard his Metropolis (on Guild GLCD 5102) as one of the finest pieces of its kind. He worked on around a dozen films, and was the unseen conductor who used to direct the Billy Cotton Band for its television shows while Bill himself performed on-screen. Jackie also became a household name in Britain thanks to his regular appearances on Hughie Green’s (1920-1997) "Double Your Money" TV quiz show.

Special mention should be made of Robert Farnon’s Moomin, because some people assume that it relates to a pleasurable activity, such as ‘spooning’! In fact ‘Moomin’ is a cartoon character dreamed up by Tove Jansson, who first appeared in the 1950s. He remains popular today, and even has his own Theme Park in Finland. As a ‘thank-you’ for his catchy novelty, Robert Farnon (1917-2005) was presented with a tie covered in Moomins, which he proudly wore for many years.

George French was a British violinist who broadcast frequently on the BBC in the happy times of the last century (roughly until the 1960s) when radio stations actually employed ‘live’ musicians. He contributed to many popular series ("Music While You Work" being one prime example) and performed (often as leader) for most of the well-known conductors. He also had a gift for composing, as evidenced by Bobby Sox from the Francis, Day & Hunter mood music library.

John Pi Scheffer (1909-1988) will be unfamiliar to most light music admirers. His composition Apple Flap could almost be considered a one-off in this genre, since he concentrated mainly on composing and conducting brass music in his native Netherlands.

The American David Carroll(b. 1913) has the honour of providing our final track this time with Guy Lafarge’s The Little Ballerina. He was musical director of Mercury Records from 1951 to the early 1960s, accompanying many of the label’s contract singers as well as making some instrumental recordings of his own. Several of his LPs had a ‘dance’ theme, often including his own compositions, and he employed the cream of Chicago’s session musicians.

David Ades

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Bandstand In The Park – Volume 2

1 "The Dam Busters" Film Theme (Eric Coates)
CENTRAL BAND OF THE ROYAL AIR FORCE Conducted by Wing Commander A. E. SIMS, OBE
2 Jenny Wren (Davis)
BLACK DYKE MILLS BAND Conducted by Arthur O. Pearce
Cornet solo – WILLIAM LANG
3 Smiles ‘N’ Chuckles (Robert Farnon)
NEW ERA SYMPHONIC BAND Directed by MICHAEL JOHN
4 Amparito Roca (Jaime Texidor)
GRENADIER GUARDS BAND Conducted by Major F.J. HARRIS
5 Flash Harry (Ronald Binge)
BAND OF THE GRENADIER GUARDS Conducted by Major F.J. HARRIS, MBE
6 The Whistler And His Dog (Arthur Pryor)
BLACK DIAMONDS BAND
7 High School Cadets (John Philip Sousa)
GRAND MASSED BANDS Conducted by JAMES OLIVER
8 Evensong (Easthope Martin)
BBC WIRELESS MILITARY BAND Conducted by B. WALTON O’DONNELL
9 Down The Mall (John Belton, real names Tony Lowry and Douglas Brownsmith)
FODENS MOTOR WORKS BAND
10 The Jolly Airman (P. Beechfield-Carver)
CENTRAL BAND OF THE ROYAL AIR FORCE Conducted by Wing Commander A.E. SIMS, OBE
11 Sing As We Go (Harry Parr-Davies)
BBC WIRELESS MILITARY BAND Conducted by B. WALTON O’DONNELL
12 Eros In Piccadilly (Jack Strachey)
THE RAF CENTRAL BAND Conducted by Squadron Leader A.E. SIMS
13 Knightsbridge (from "London Suite") (Eric Coates)
BAND OF H.M. GRENADIER GUARDS Under the Direction of Capt. GEORGE MILLER
14 Die Bosniaken Kommen (Eduard Wagnes)
DEUTSCHMEISTER KAPELLE Conducted by Julius Herrmann
15 Music In The Park (Joseph Bergeim)
IRISH GUARDS BAND
16 Royal Review (Arnold Steck, real name Leslie Statham)
BAND OF THE ROYAL NETHERLANDS NAVY Conducted by Capt. G. NIEUWLAND
17 "Cockleshell Heroes" Film Theme (F. Vivian Dunn)
BAND OF THE ROYAL MARINES SCHOOL OF MUSIC Conducted by Lt. Col. (later Sir) F. VIVIAN DUNN, CVO, FRAM
18 With Sword And Lance (Hermann Starke)
REGIMENTAL BAND OF H.M. GRENADIER GUARDS Conducted by Lt. Col. GEORGE MILLER
19 Over The Sticks (Edrich Siebert, real name Stanley Smith-Master)
CWS (MANCHESTER) BAND Conducted by ALEX MORTIMER
20 Golden Spurs (Tony Lowry)
BAND OF THE ROYAL NETHERLANDS NAVY Conducted by Capt. G. NIEUWLAND
21 El Charro (James L. Tarver)
GRENADIER GUARDS BAND Conducted by Major F.J. HARRIS
22 The Great Little Army (Kenneth J. Alford, real name Frederick Joseph Ricketts)
GRAND MASSED BANDS Conducted by JAMES OLIVER
23 New Post Horn Galop (Roger Barsotti)
BAND OF THE QUEEN’S ROYAL REGIMENT Conducted by ROGER BARSOTTI
24 March Of The Royal Air Forces Association (A.E. Sims)
CENTRAL BAND OF THE ROYAL AIR FORCE Conducted by Wing Commander A.E. SIMS, MBE
25 Vindobona (Karl Komzak)
DEUTSCHMEISTER KAPELLE Conducted by JULIUS HERRMANN
26 Prince Igor Ballet Dances (Borodin, arr. Sir Dan Godfrey)
BBC WIRELESS MILITARY BAND Conducted by B. WALTON O’DONNELL

Guild GLCD 5147

The introduction to Guild’s first volume in this series (GLCD 5117) observed that there was a time when every self-respecting town would have its own bandstand as a proud feature of the main public park. Resorts – both inland and on the coast – would especially welcome such structures as evidence of their wish to offer cultural entertainment to the visitors they set out to attract. Bandstands knew no national boundaries: they could be found just about everywhere in the civilised world and, despite their name, they were not confined to ensembles generally referred to as ‘bands’, but used for all kinds of musical entertainment.

Bandstands can still be found in public places, although sadly some have been allowed to fall into disrepair. Others are rarely used for their original purpose, except on very isolated occasions. Therefore it is all the more pleasing when one comes across such a venue being occupied for music-making, just as it would have been many years ago. Perhaps the ‘golden age’ for bandstands was during the first half of the last century, when professional musicians formed a far greater number of the total workforce.

Military bands are today, in some instances, a shadow of their former selves. Once they would have numbered fifty or sixty regular players, but now they often perform with less than half that number of musicians. However many remain very versatile ensembles, with the musicians often doubling on other instruments (such as strings) so that their repertoire can be expanded to include works normally considered more within the remit of concert or salon orchestras. It should be remembered that Military bands play not only for parades but also ceremonial dinners and other social functions, where an orchestral sound is sometimes more appropriate. 

A fine example of a famous band which can perform virtually anything that is demanded of it is the Central Band of the Royal Air Force, heard on the opening track. Eric Coates (1886-1957) was regarded as ‘the uncrowned king of light music’ so it was hardly surprising that the producers of the 1954 film "The Dam Busters" approached him to write a suitable march to pay homage to the RAF heroes of World War 2. Leighton Lucas (1903-1982) had been engaged for the background score, but something rather special was required for the title music, and Coates duly obliged. The famous march became one of the composer’s best-loved pieces, and it is still being performed in concerts to this day. Critics have described it as the finest piece of English music since Elgar composed Land Of Hope And Glory. The opening bars are particularly impressive; conveying the sound of a bomber aircraft lumbering along the runway, gradually building up speed until it finally takes off. Although originally written for an orchestra, it makes an even bigger impact when scored for a band.

Boosey & Hawkes engaged the RAF Band to make some mood music recordings for them in 1948, and while Jack Strachey’s Eros In Piccadilly features strings carrying the main melody for most of the time, the warm full sound of the brass players certainly gives this piece an added ‘body’ that might have been difficult to achieve with the usual line-up of a concert orchestra.

Admirers of Service Bands will no doubt already be familiar with the famous names on this CD, so it is not proposed to go into any great detail in these notes. Recordings made by the Coldstream and Grenadier Guards have helped to perpetuate the names of those great regiments, and record companies have regularly invited them into their studios. But not all bands were associated with the armed forces. There were (and happily still are) many fine concert bands, and musicians in Municipal orchestras sometimes exchanged their string instruments in favour of woodwinds and brass, thus allowing their ensembles to offer their public a more varied selection of musical works.

In the post-war years Chappell & Co. enjoyed a period as Britain’s premier provider of production or background music, employing many of the finest composers in this specialised niche in the entertainment business. Robert Farnon (1917-2005) created numerous bright and catchy orchestral cameos which became familiar around the world, but his war service with the Canadian Army had also given him a solid grounding in military music, which he put to good use on a few rare occasions. Such an example is Smiles ‘N’ Chuckles which clearly is not to be taken too seriously. Bands often enjoyed being able to include quirky pieces like this in their concerts, to provide some light relief among the more serious works they were usually obliged to perform.

Arthur Willard Pryor (1870-1942) composed one of the best-known tunes of the first half of the last century, although many people probably couldn’t name it, and even more would not have known who wrote it. Considered by some to be America’s greatest trombone virtuoso, Pryor’s main claim to fame is having composed The Whistler And His Dog, but even if he had not written this popular and catchy tune he would still be remembered for many other musical achievements. He was a member of Sousa’s famous band for over ten years, and conducted many of its recordings up to 1903. He also claimed to have performed 10,000 solos while with the band, including several tours overseas. He then went on to make records with his own band and is credited with having influenced the growing popularity of ragtime; he continued to arrange and compose a vast amount of music until officially retiring in 1933. ‘Whistler’ (composed in 1905) has been arranged for, and recorded by, every kind of orchestra and ensemble and our version by the Black Diamonds Band is probably near to what the composer will originally have had in mind when he conceived this memorable novelty.

The brass band movement continues to flourish in Britain with some estimates claiming that there are still upwards of 1,000 of them. In the 1930s and 1940s, when they were much more prolific, there appeared to be an insatiable appetite for recordings of ‘Massed Brass Bands’ and Frank Andrews’ superb discography "Brass Band Cylinder & Non-microgroove Disc Recordings 1903-1960" lists over 300 of them. Many of these were made at Brass Band Festivals such as the ones at the De Montfort Hall, Leicester and Crystal Palace, London but there were numerous occasions when the record companies brought together groups of bands especially for recording sessions. Regal Zonophone made many such recordings with some featuring as many as 15 bands with 350 players, but the two we include here, conducted by James Oliver, use more modest forces having being made by the combined Hanwell Silver, Lewisham British Legion, St. Pancras Brass and St. Hilda’s Professional bands.

In Britain the BBC established its own bands once its radio service became established, and several different ensembles were created – and changed – before the right formula was discovered. The Wireless Military Band flourished from 1927 until its last performance on 16 March 1943. In 1936 it was renamed The BBC Military Band and record labels, which had hitherto called it "The BBC Wireless Military Band", reflected this change. Its high standing on the British musical arena is confirmed by the fact that leading figures in other fields were pleased to contribute to its repertoire; such as our final selection of dances from "Prince Igor" arranged by Sir Dan Godfrey (1868-1939), for many years conductor the world-famous Bournemouth Municipal Orchestra – the forerunner of today’s Bournemouth Symphony. This recording certainly confirms the extremely high standard of playing consistently achieved by the musicians in this band.

The origins of the fabled Deutschmeister Band can be traced back as far as the 1680s, but its golden age began during the last years of the 18th century, when Emperor Josef II ordered it to be stationed in Vienna, so delighted was he with its quality of music. To this day the Deutschmeister retains a premier status, although its existence was threatened following Austro-Hungary's defeat in the First World War. But such was the esteem in which Austrians had come to regard their Deutschmeister Band that public outcry demanded that it be preserved for posterity. And so the Band was retained in civilian guise to continue the art of playing those wonderful marches, waltzes and polkas which graced the Viennese capital. Many famous works by such noted composers as Johann Strauss, and Franz Lehar were written for the Band, which uses special instrumentation similar to that which most German bands employ, including Flugal horns, and flat snare drums. Czech-born Karl Komzak (1850-1905) was a composer who contributed profusely to the repertoire of the Band, and his Vondobona is a typical example.

Sir Francis Vivian Dunn (1908-1995) was an ideal choice to compose the music for the film "Cockleshell Heroes" because he had many strong links with military music. Early in his career he played violin under Sir Henry Wood, and was a founder member of the BBC Symphony with Sir Adrian Boult. He is credited with having guided the Royal Marines Band during 38 years’ service to a pre-eminent position in the military band world, and it is appropriate that he should be conducting them playing his own film theme on this CD. Sir Vivian directed the band on the Royal Yacht on several tours, and in 1969 EMI presented him with a gold disc following sales of over one million LPs by the Royal Marines Band. He also involved himself with the light music repertoire, and made several highly acclaimed albums conducting the Orchestra of the Light Music Society.

Londoner Edrich Siebert (1903-1984) (he was born Stanley Smith Master) is a popular composer in the brass band world, with a vast number of works to his credit. He began his musical career in 1917 as a boy musician in the Cheshire Regiment, and returned to service life during the Second World War. From 1946 onwards he devoted himself entirely to arranging and composing, and Over The Sticks was the signature tune of BBC Radio’s "Mid-day Music Hall".

Ronald Binge (1910-1979) was a prolific composer and arranger, but his lasting fame will probably be linked with the famous ‘cascading strings’ effect he created during a long association with the world famous conductor Mantovani. The same style is cropping up in parts of Flash Harry and it was also particularly evident in his Cornet Carillon on GLCD 5117. It is interesting to note that he was starting to experiment with this sound as early as 1940 in a piece called The Choristerswhich is included on the Guild CD "Mantovani – By Special Request, Volume 2" (GLCD 5113). Going back to Flash Harry, as well as being a colloquial expression for someone who may be something of a ‘wide boy’, it was also an affectionate nickname for the famous conductor Sir Malcolm Sargent (1895-1967). Who did Ronnie Binge actually have in mind when he composed his clever cameo?

The final composer/conductor who deserves to be mentioned is Roger Barsotti, born in 1901 in London of Italian extraction. His career began as a flautist with the Hastings Municipal Orchestra, before joining the "Buffs" regiment as a band-boy in 1916 where he was soon promoted to Band Sergeant. Later he attended the Royal Military School of Music and was appointed bandmaster of the Queen's Royal Regiment in 1930, a position he occupied for fifteen years. Following retirement from the British army in 1946 after 30 years service, he took over the London Metropolitan Police Band – a post he held until 1968 when he became Musical Advisor to the Royal Parks. He wrote many works for military band, including at least thirty marches plus another forty or so assorted pieces including galops, xylophone solos, fanfares, piccolo solos, serenades and trombone features. For some years he contributed a series of mood music compositions to London publishers for their background music libraries, and this time he is also featured as the conductor waving the baton for his own Post Horn Galop, recorded for the Bosworth mood music library during the Second World War.

It has previously been noted that the worlds of Light Music and Military and Brass Bands are often overlapping, with each genre happy to ‘borrow’ from the other. Surely no one could argue that this is not the case, based on the evidence in this tuneful collection.

David Ades

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Musical Kaleidoscope – Volume 2

1 Kaleidoscope (Dolf van der Linden)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS METROPOLE ORCHESTRA
2 Circus Polka (Garfield de Mortimer – real name Trevor Boswell, Young)
REG OWEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
3 Bewitched (Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
FELIX KING, HIS PIANO AND ORCHESTRA
4 Bobbysox Bounce (George Melachrino)
GEORGE MELACHRINO AND HIS ORCHESTRA
5 Shadow Of A Man (theme from the film) (Carr)
JACKIE BROWN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
6 Down The Solent – Overture (Felton Rapley)
NEW CENTURY ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH
7 The Broken Horseshoe (theme from the film) (Wilfred Burns)
WILFRED BURNS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
8 Sea Reivers (from "Two Hebridean Sea Poems") (Granville Bantock)
LONDON PROMENADE ORCHESTRA Conducted by WALTER COLLINS
9 Frenesi (Alberto Borras Dominguez, Leonard Whitcup)
DON FELIPE AND HIS CUBAN CABALLEROS (actually PHILIP GREEN)
10 Columbine (Leighton Lucas)
LEIGHTON LUCAS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
11 Oriental Dance (Granville Bantock)
LONDON PROMENADE ORCHESTRA Conducted by WALTER COLLINS
12 Saluting Base (Cecil Milner)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by CHARLES WILLIAMS
13 Jay Walker (Maurice Grew)
STUTTGART RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by KURT REHFELD

Short and Sweet

14 Park Lane Serenade (Dolf van der Linden)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
15 Ticker Tape (Sidney Torch)
TELECAST ORCHESTRA Conducted by ELLIOTT MAYES
16 Pioneer Trail (Charles Williams)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
17 Intermission (Ronald Hanmer)
L’ORCHESTRE DEVEREAUX Conducted by GEORGES DEVEREAUX
18 Cigarette Girl (Len Stevens)
TELECAST ORCHESTRA Conducted by ELLIOTT MAYES
19 Skiddles (Sherman Feller, arr. Robinson)
GEORGE LIBERACE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
20 A Pinch Of Salt (G. Powell)
RAY VENTURA AND HIS ORCHESTRA
21 Doreen (Andrew Ackers, Sunny Skylar)
MONTY KELLY AND HIS ORCHESTRA
22 Dagger Dance (Victor Herbert)
ALFONZO D’ARTEGA AND HIS ORCHESTRA
23 Pizzicato Tango (Perry)
ARTURO CHAITE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Three Pieces from "Woodland Sketches" Op.51 (Edward Alexander MacDowell)
24 In Autumn
25 From Uncle Remus
26 By A Meadow Brook
CAMARATA AND HIS ORCHESTRA

Drama, Menace and Excitement

27 The Duel (Sidney Torch)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH
28 The Four Horsemen (Ronald Hanmer)
HARMONIC ORCHESTRA Conducted by HANS MAY
29 Follow That Car (Charles Williams)
QUEEN’S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
30 Inhumanity (Trevor Duncan, real name Leonard Trebilco)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by FREDERIC CURZON

Guild GLCD 5140

Many of the orchestras and conductors on these latest Guild CDs will already be familiar to readers of this magazine, so we will concentrate more on the lesser known musicians, some of them appearing for the first time in the ‘Golden Age of Light Music’ series.

Guild’s second ‘Musical Kaleidoscope’ (the first is on GLCD 5139 and full details appeared in our last issue) also begins with a tune called Kaleidoscope, this time composed and conducted by that famous Dutch maestro Dolf van der Linden (1915-1999). He was the major figure in the Netherlands popular music field from the 1940s until the 1980s, and became one of the most respected conductors of the European Light Music scene.

Reg Owen (born George Owen Smith, 1921-1978) took up the saxophone at fifteen, played in youth bands then completed his education at the Royal College of Music in London. Following RAF service, in which he played for the Bomber Command Band, he became arranger for the Ted Heath orchestra from 1945, then arranged for other conductors including Cyril Stapleton. When he joined the PRS in 1954 he decided to change his name legally to "Reginald Owen." Regarded as one of England's leading orchestrators, Reg published his book "The Reg Owen Arranging Method" in 1956. By some he is labelled a ‘one hit wonder’ thanks to his best-selling recording of Manhattan Spiritual in 1958. His own film scores date from 1957 and include "Murder Reported" (1958), "Very Important Person" (1961), "A Coming-Out Party" (1961) and "Payroll" (1962). He moved to Brussels in 1961, though he continued to arrange, compose and conduct albums all over Europe, including France, Germany and Italy before moving finally to Spain where he died in 1978.

Felix Ferdinand King (1912-1982) became popular in Britain following the Second World War due to his recordings, broadcasts and tenure with his orchestra at some of the leading West End clubs. His long career actually began in the early 1930s as a dance band pianist, including for a while the newly-formed Victor Silvester orchestra in 1935. King also composed for films and ventured into Europe until war service in the RAF brought his career to a temporary halt.

Many of the light orchestral composers and conductors of the post-war years cut their teeth in the dance bands of the 1930s, and some certainly knew how to swing. A prime example is George Melachrino (1909-1965), whose Bobbysox Bounce has been requested by several loyal collectors of this series. It is not strictly Light Music, but Guild is pleased to bend the rules on this occasion and offer it as a ‘special track’ in this varied selection of often rare pieces which, hopefully, has included something for everybody.

"Shadow of a Man" was a 1954 British film which failed to excite the critics, which may explain why it seems to have vanished almost without trace. Jackie Brown is credited with composing and conducting the incidental music, while the title theme was probably the work of Michael Carr (real name Maurice Cohen, 1904-1968) who wrote many popular songs, often in collaboration with Jimmy Kennedy (1902-1984). Jackie Brown was one of Britain’s leading cinema organists, equally at home on large theatre consoles as well as their small electronic counterparts performed by enthusiasts at home. His output as a composer was relatively sparse, although light music aficionados regard his Metropolis (on Guild GLCD 5102) as one of the finest pieces of its kind. He worked on around a dozen films, and was the unseen conductor who used to direct the Billy Cotton Band for its television shows while Bill himself performed on-screen. Jackie also became a household name in Britain thanks to his regular appearances on Hughie Green’s (1920-1997) "Double Your Money" TV quiz show.

Bernard Wilfred Harris, better known as ‘Wilfred Burns’ (1917-1990) was another prolific composer of mood music who remained a backroom-boy for much of his career, although his name was seen on screen in a number of films. As a teenager he was a church organist and in 1936 joined the Army as a bandsman in the 4th Queens’ Own Hussars. He was posted abroad in November 1940 and captured in Greece the following April. Shrapnel wounds had destroyed his left eye, and damaged his hand and arm. He was a prisoner of war for two and half years, during which time he set up and ran a prisoners' band in which all the players had little or no sight, using instruments supplied by the Red Cross. After the Second World War ended he composed numerous pieces of mood music for various music publishers, and also worked at Elstree studios before eventually becoming a freelance film composer and musical director. His first of over twenty films was around 1949, with his final score in the 1970s. His best-known was probably the large screen version of the popular television series "Dad’s Army" in 1971. Leading London mood music publishers accepted more than 200 of his works for their libraries and he achieved possibly his greatest success when his piece Saturday Sports was chosen by BBC Television for its long-running "Sportsview" programme which began in 1954.

In response to several requests, Sir Granville Bantock (1868-1946), who was knighted in 1930, is represented by two contrasting works on this CD – Sea Reivers and Oriental Dance. He is said to have been influenced by the folk music of the Hebrides (off the coast of Scotland) and the music of Richard Wagner, and at one time his work was being compared with Elgar. In fact he succeeded Sir Edward Elgar as professor of music at the University of Birmingham in 1908. In recent years Bantock’s music has enjoyed a modest revival with new recordings of some of his major compositions, notably his Hebridean, Celtic and Pagan symphonies. He was instrumental in the founding of the City of Birmingham Orchestra whose first performance in 1920 was of his Overture: Saul.

Leighton Lucas (1903-1982) seems to have been at home in the realms of more serious music (especially ballet and opera) yet he also produced some pleasing light music and enjoyed success with scores for several prestigious films. In 1954 he wrote the incidental music for "The Dam Busters" (Eric Coates only contributed the famous march), and other projects included "Target for Tonight" (1941 – the theme is on Guild GLCD 5118), "The Yangtse Incident" (1957) and "Ice Cold in Alex" (1958). At one time the Leighton Lucas Orchestra was heard regularly on BBC Radio, and he made some mood music recordings for EMI’s short-lived recorded music library during the 1940s.

Edward Cecil Milner (1905-1989) was a respected backroom boy in London music circles, arranging for many top orchestras such as Mantovani, for whom he supplied over 200 scores. He was also an accomplished composer (he was being recognised while still in his twenties), with his works, such as Saluting Base for Chappells, willingly accepted by several background music publishers. It is particularly appropriate that this piece should be conducted by Charles Williams, since the two were closely associated from their days working on pre-war British films (another of Milner’s good friends from the same period was Clive Richardson). In the cinema he worked on some 50 films (often for Louis Levy) most notably the 1938 classic "The Lady Vanishes".

Some pieces of light music last only a little over a minute, but in those precious seconds many talented composers have managed to produce perfect cameos that have become memorable in their own way. Often they have been used as signature tunes helping to bury them even deeper into one’s musical subconscious, ready to be triggered at unexpected moments. Titles somehow seem irrelevant: it is the catchy passages and general ambience that is so appealing. Bowing to many requests, we have assembled a small group of such pieces under the heading ‘Short and Sweet’. Dolf van der Linden’s many fans in his native Netherlands will soon recognise Park Lane Serenade as his familiar theme, while British television viewers have heard Charles Williams’ Pioneer Trail for countless years in the annual BBC TV awards for the nation’s most popular sporting personalities. In the early days of commercial television in Britain there used to be advertising features (much like their cinema counterparts at the time) where companies could have their products shown in quick succession in vision only without a spoken soundtrack. The music used in the background in the London area while these messages were flashed on the screen was Cigarette Girl by Len Stevens. The other two pieces in this section will also be familiar to many through their repeated hearings for various purposes.

After the "Shorts" the spotlight firstly falls upon two orchestras new to this Guild series. George Liberace’s (1911-1983) claim to fame somewhat unfairly rests upon the fact that his brother ‘Lee’ (his real first names were Wladziu Valentino but he only used his surname professionally) was a flamboyant pianist who enjoyed considerable world-wide popularity especially in the 1950s. George worked with his brother as the backing band in his shows but in his later life he was more successful as a music publisher.

Frenchman Ray Ventura (1908-1979) was a multi-talented entertainer who, in addition to being an orchestra leader, also worked as an actor, producer, composer and writer. He was involved in numerous film productions particularly during the 1950s and 1960s.

Monty Kelly (1910-1971) was a trumpeter, arranger and bandleader who played with the Paul Whiteman and Skinnay Ennis bands before landing a job with NBC in New York. For a while he was a regular in the recording studios, and Cash Box magazine named him ‘most promising orchestra’ in 1953, but by then the era of popular instrumentals was starting to wane in the USA. His albums continued to do well, and they are still sought by light music fans.

Alfonso D’Artega (b. 1907) arrived in the USA from his native Mexico in 1918. Often merely known by his surname (spellings of his first name vary), he was a conductor, arranger and composer of wide and varied musical experience, and conducted orchestras for radio, television, transcriptions, recordings, concert stage and motion pictures.

Lack of space makes it impossible to mention every composer and conductor represented in this collection. However most of those not credited in these notes will have been profiled in previous Guild Light Music CDs.

Finally it seems that a significant number of music lovers occasionally appreciate listening to something a little more exciting and, at times, quite demanding. Since Guild Music launched "The Golden Age of Light Music" back in 2004 there has been a trickle of requests for dramatic mood music which, quite frankly, hasn’t fitted into the style of content in previous volumes. The trickle has almost become a steady stream, so the time has now come to bow to the wishes of some of our loyal followers. With composers such as Charles Williams, Ronald Hanmer, Sidney Torch, Trevor Duncan and other gifted writers active in this niche of the production music market, it would be churlish not to offer some occasional examples of their more melodramatic – and even horrific - moments. In science fiction films music has especially played an important role in establishing just the right mood, and in Britain the older generation still remembers the brilliant way in which it was used in the BBC’s vintage 1950s television series "Quatermass" (Inhumanity was the closing music for the first two "Quatermass" serials). If you prefer your music always to be melodic and tuneful you may wish to terminate this CD after track 26. For the courageous among you, prepare to be excited and shocked by the last four tracks!

David Ades

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Globetrotting

1 Broad Horizon (Trevor Duncan real name Leonard Trebilco)
STUTTGART RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by KURT REHFELD
2 Lovers In Paris (Lou Logist)
RAY VENTURA AND HIS ORCHESTRA
3 Alpine Festival (Fred Hartley)
FRED HARTLEY AND HIS ORCHESTRA
4 Swiss Boy (Cedric Dumont)
CEDRIC DUMONT AND HIS ORCHESTRA
5 Music for the Nostalgic Traveller in Italy (arr. William Hill-Bowen)
THE MELACHRINO ORCHESTRA Conducted by GEORGE MELACHRINO
6 The Italian Theme (Angelo Giacomazzi)
ARTURO CHAITE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
7 Flamenco Love (Larry Wagner)
REG OWEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
8 Portuguese Party (Gilbert Vinter)
STUTTGART RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by KURT REHFELD
9 Majorca (Midinette) (Gaste, Bonnett)
JOE LOSS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
10 In The Mystic Land Of Egypt (Albert William Ketèlbey)
NEW SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by STANFORD ROBINSON
11 Oriental Bazaar (Peter Yorke)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
12 Madagascar (Richard Hayman)
RICHARD HAYMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
13 Tahiti Tango (Ray Martin)
JACKIE BROWN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
14 Indian Mail – Descriptive (Lamothe)
ORCHESTRE RAYMONDE
15 Chinese Serenade (Victor Herbert)
ROCHESTER POPS Conducted by MORTON GOULD
16 Cuban Love Song (Jimmy McHugh)
MONTY KELLY AND HIS ORCHESTRA
17 Mexican Hat Dance (Jarabe Tapatio) (Partichela, arr. Morton Gould)
MORTON GOULD AND HIS ORCHESTRA
18 Street In Manhattan (Frank De Vol)
FRANK DE VOL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
19 "Song Of Norway" – selection (Robert Wright, George Forrest – based on melodies by Grieg)
PALACE THEATRE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by GIDEON FAGAN
Three English Dances (Roger Quilter)
20 No. 1
21 No. 2
22 No. 3
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by RAE JENKINS
23 Journey’s End (Jack Beaver)
NEW CENTURY ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIDNEY TORCH

Guild GLCD 5141

The popular song spoke of "Faraway places with strange sounding names", and it is a fact that many of the places mentioned in the music in this collection were just names to most people when the recordings were made in the middle years of the last century. Since then ‘Globetrotting’ has become a pastime for millions, and the music has taken on the additional role of providing pleasant memories of past visits, both near and far from home.

No longer do exotic locations appear out of reach to intrepid adventurers, so the opening track Broad Horizons seems an appropriate way to commence our journey. It is one of many works depicting the beauty of the great outdoors created by Leonard Trebilco (1924-2005), who composed most of his music under the pseudonym Trevor Duncan. ‘Treb’ (as he was known to his friends) contributed hundreds of pieces to background music libraries, and there are already many examples of his work in this Guild Light Music series, including the special tribute to him on GLCD5124 – ‘Hall of Fame’ Volume 2.

Fred Hartley (1905-1980) was a familiar name in British broadcasting for many years, having made his first appearance on the BBC as a solo pianist as early as 1925. He was then employed as an accompanist, and founded his famous Novelty Quintet in 1931. In 1946 he was appointed the BBC’s Head of Light Music

Cédric Dumont (1916-2007) was born in Hamburg, Germany, but during his long career he became known as "Mr. Music Man of Switzerland". Growing up in the 1930s he came into contact with Jack Hylton in England, and over in the USA he seems to have worked briefly with Teddy Wilson, Harry James and Benny Goodman. He settled in Switzerland at the outbreak of World War 2 and was soon broadcasting from the studios in Basel. His career touched the classics as well as jazz, but it was in the sphere of light music that he became known throughout Europe. British mood music libraries engaged him to conduct their works (often anonymously) when they were unable to record in Britain due to a Musicians’ Union ban, particularly during the 1950s.

William Hill-Bowen (1918-1964) was George Melachrino’s right-hand man in the years immediately following World War 2, often appearing on piano but, perhaps, more importantly as a brilliant arranger who managed to recreate his master’s famous style to perfection. Such an example is the charming selection of well-loved Italian melodies, which includes Funiculi Funicula (Denza), Santa Lucia (Cottrau), Tarantella (traditional), Catari Catari (Cardillo), Gondola Song (Vassini), Parlami d’Amore Mariu (Bixio) and La Danza (Rossini). Later Hill-Bowen was to receive due recognition for his talents, partly thanks to a series of LPs commissioned by RCA.

Gilbert Vinter (1909-1969) is mainly remembered in Britain as the conductor of the BBC Midland Light Orchestra when it was one of the foremost contributors of quality light music on the BBC. As a young man he played bassoon in the BBC Wireless Band and the London Philharmonic, and taught at the Royal Academy of Music. During World War II, he was a member of the Royal Air Force Central Band and later led several RAF bands. After the war, Vinter joined the BBC as a staff conductor and he also developed his skill as a composer. Many of his works were for brass band, and among his finest works is The Trumpets, which is scored for a large brass band, chorus, and bass soloist. Portuguese Party was a bright piece he wrote in 1956 for Inter-art Music Publishers when they launched their new production music library Impress. It was well-received, and enjoyed many broadcasts and eventually a commercial recording on HMV. The Guild Light Music CD "Musical Kaleidoscope – Volume 1" (GLCD 5139) includes Gilbert Vinter’s arrangement Music of the People – England played by the BBC Midland Light Orchestra under his baton in 1952. It is a clever work which incorporates some of the street cries of old London as well as traditional English airs.

It may seem strange to find the name of Joe (Joshua Alexander) Loss (1909-1990) on this CD, because most of his career was firmly built on the solid rock of dance music, at which he was supremely successful. But like many others who have tended to get ‘pigeon-holed’ simply because they have been so good at providing what their public wanted, there is always the urge to expand horizons. Maybe Joe Loss looked with envy at what his peers were doing with large light orchestras in the 1950s, which encouraged him to add strings to his fine band. The result is a pleasing arrangement of the popular melody Majorca which certainly did the image of that popular Mediterranean island no harm at all. Joe’s career stretches from the 1930s to the 1980s and such was the kudos attached to his name that he was able to operate several bands within his organisation to satisfy the many demands from society functions, including royalty.

Albert William Ketèlbey (1875-1959) was a highly successful composer, who earned the equivalent of millions of pounds during the peak of his popularity. Pieces such as In a Monastery Garden, In a Persian Market and In The Mystic Land Of Egypt (on this CD) brought him international fame, no doubt assisted by his enthusiastic participation in the rapidly growing business of producing gramophone records.

In the USA Frank De Vol (1911-1999) is known primarily as the composer for the radio and TV series "The Brady Bunch" (and later as an actor), but light music fans appreciate that his career has been far more substantial. It was not uncommon to see the credit ‘Music by De Vol’ on many films, and he started playing violin in cinema orchestras just as the silent films era was coming to an end. After touring with the Alvino Rey orchestra, in the 1940s he began a recording career, first as an arranger for vocalists Ella Fitzgerald, Tony Bennett, Doris Day, Vic Damone and Nat "King" Cole. His arrangement of "Nature Boy" sung by Nat "King" Cole became a number one hit in 1948. In the 1950s his own Hollywood orchestra, called "Music of the Century", played frequently at the Hollywood Palladium, and he worked on numerous motion picture scores.

Gideon Fagan (1904-1980) was born in Cape Town, South Africa, and studied music under Vaughan Williams at London’s Royal College of Music from 1922 to 1926. He worked in films and his conducting assignments included a spell with the BBC Northern Orchestra (now the BBC Philharmonic) from 1939 to 1942, and several West End shows. He contributed a few compositions to recorded music libraries, and his best-known work was probably Pastoral Montage (for Chappell) which the BBC used as the music accompanying its television interlude film of a windmill. Fagan returned to South Africa in 1949 and was appointed a music director of the South African Broadcasting Corporation in 1963, then lectured at Cape Town University from 1967 to 1973.

Roger Quilter (1877-1953) has been regarded essentially as a miniaturist, and it is for his songs (particularly his settings of poems by Shakespeare and Herrick) that he is and always will be chiefly remembered. His famous Children's Overture was featured on Guild GLCD 5125, and this time it is the turn of his Three English Dances which were orchestrated by Percy Fletcher (1879-1932) and received their première at London’s Queen’s Hall on 30 June 1910.

Jack Beaver (1900-1963) was another ‘backroom boy’ who provided many scores for the Louis Levy organisation – in total he was responsible for over 100 films and documentaries. He was also a very prolific contributor to several different production music libraries, and Journey’s End is one of the early pieces he wrote for the fledgling Francis, Day & Hunter mood music library, which was launched in the late 1940s.

David Ades

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1950s Volume 5 - Sunny Side Up

1 Sunny Side Up (De Sylva, Brown, Henderson – arr. Robert Farnon)
ROBERT FARNON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
2 Las Vegas (Bert Kaempfert)
BERT KAEMPFERT AND HIS ORCHESTRA (‘BOB PARKER’ on record label)
3 Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White (Luis Gugliemi, Jacques Larue, David Mack –
arr. John Gregory, real name Giovanni Gregori)
CYRIL ORNADEL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
4 Baffi (Nino Ravasini)
MONIA LITER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
5 Clown On The Eiffel Tower (Jacques Strop, Dany Michel)
FRANCK POURCEL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
6 My Friend Elizabeth (Robert Katscher)
RAY MARTIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
7 Toot Sweet (Ira Lee)
DAVID CARROLL AND HIS ORCHESTRA
8 Red Cloak (Ron Goodwin)
RON GOODWIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
9 Bumps-a-Daisy (George Siravo)
GEORGE SIRAVO AND HIS ORCHESTRA
10 The Telegraph Operator And The Chorus Girl (Bernie Wayne, real name Bernard Weitzner)
BERNIE WAYNE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
11 Pizzicato Waltz (Georges Boulanger)
GEORGE LIBERACE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
12 Easy On The Eyes (Marvin M. Wright)
GROSVENOR STUDIO ORCHESTRA
13 Vuelve (Noro Morales, arr. Laurie Johnson)
AMBROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA WITH STRINGS Conducted by LAURIE
JOHNSON
14 Madame Pompadour (Jack Say, real name Jacques Ysaye)
ROBERT FRENCH AND HIS CONTINENTAL ORCHESTRA
15 Starlight (Angela Morley)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
16 Party Dress (Tony Tamburello, arr. Bruce Campbell)
TELECAST ORCHESTRA Conducted by ELLIOTT MAYES
17 Mischievous Mac (Ronald Binge)
CRAWFORD LIGHT ORCHESTRA
18 Holiday On The Road (Peter (Gabriel Philippe) Pares, Roger Roger)
GROSVENOR STUDIO ORCHESTRA
19 Lido Fashion Parade (Len Stevens)
CRAWFORD LIGHT ORCHESTRA
20 Flat Spin (Cyril Watters)
LOUIS VOSS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
21 Fairy Coach (Ernest Tomlinson)
CRAWFORD LIGHT ORCHESTRA
22 Practical Joker (Van Phillips)
STUTTGART RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by KURT REHFELD
23 Bel Air (Frank Sterling, real name Dennis Berry)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
London Transport Suite (Sidney Torch)
24 The Hansom Cab
25 Rosie The Red Omnibus
26 5.52 From Victorloo
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
27 My Last Love (Lewis, Cochrane)
GEOFF LOVE AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
28 Prairie Duster (Mahlon Merrick)
MAHLON MERRICK AND HIS ORCHESTRA
29 Orange (Nelson Riddle)
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by FRANK SINATRA
30 Dance Of Fury (Nacio Herb Brown)
DAVID ROSE AND HIS ORCHESTRA

Guild GLCD 5142

The human brain is – quite simply – amazing. Described in one dictionary as being a "convoluted nervous tissue in (the) skull of vertebrates", it is capable of a seemingly endless stream of thoughts and actions, and older people will often claim that experiences from previous decades are still locked in, just waiting for something to release them once again. Music can often trigger memories previously believed to be long forgotten, and some of the tracks in this collection may well provoke a glow of recognition among those hearing them for the second time around.

This selection has been chosen with the aim of recalling the cheerful, bright and breezy style of music that – over fifty years later – our memories tell us seemed prevalent in the 1950s. Typically the entertainment profession at the time was trying to provide an antidote to the post-war misery and austerity that was still afflicting so many countries. Listening to these happy sounds one can be forgiven for forgetting that the early 1950s witnessed rationing and shortages of most luxury items, while the later years in the decade were overshadowed by the threat of global nuclear war. They were hardly the happiest of times to be alive, but you will find plenty of clues to suggest otherwise as you listen to this CD!

The title track Sunny Side Up sets the tone admirably, with a Robert Farnon (1917-2005) arrangement that was chosen as the play-out music for many of Kenneth Horne’s shows on the BBC Light Programme. Usually only the first few bars were heard by listeners at home, which was a pity because this is a fine example of the way in which a full concert orchestra can be made to swing like a dance band. Farnon had learned this technique during his period as conductor of the Canadian Band of the Allied Expeditionary Forces in World War Two, and it was to be the kind of orchestration that would add such a tremendous backing to Tony Bennett when the two of them worked together on radio, television, records and in the concert hall in later years.

Bert Kaempfert (who was born Berthold Heinrich Kämpfert, 1923-1980) became one of Germany’s most famous musicians on the international stage from the 1960s onwards. He could play the accordion, clarinet, piano and saxophone, but more importantly he was also a gifted composer and arranger. Working as a producer at Polydor in Hamburg he was ideally placed to promote his talents, but before his career really took off he was obliged to look after many of the label’s top singers. Under the pseudonym ‘Bob Parker’ he made several orchestral records of his own compositions, and Las Vegas revealed that he was the equal of many writers working in a similar fashion in Europe and the USA at that time. As his career progressed he tended to move away from light music and achieved considerable success with an easy listening style that inclined towards jazz and often relied upon a rhythmic beat described in Germany as ‘knackbass’ (crackling bass).

Johnny Gregory (born Giovanni Gregori in London, 1924) is best known as a prolific arranger and conductor who worked for various British labels including Philips where his contract lasted for over 20 years. He is also a composer and has written the music for some 27 films, scored over 500 compositions and made numerous records which span the broad scope from light music to Latin American and Oriental. In 1976 he received an Ivor Novello Award for Introduction and Air to a Stained Glass Window and is generally recognised as one of the best orchestral and string ensemble composer/arrangers. His greatest international fame came from his many recordings of Latin American music as ‘Chaquito’. In this collection he appears early in his career as the arranger of Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White for an album featuring Cyril Ornadel and his Orchestra for World Record Club before it was taken over by EMI. When first launched, it offered a cheap alternative to the major labels, and kept its costs low by selling its LPs in standard plastic sleeves with no individual covers.

Cyril Ornadel (b. 1924) rose to prominence in Britain during the 1950s, largely due to his weekly appearances conducting the orchestra for the popular television series "Sunday Night at the London Palladium". He was MD for numerous top musicals in London’s West End, and his composing credits include the hit show "Pickwick" and the song Portrait of my Love which gave Matt Monro an international hit.

Franck Pourcel (1913-2000) was one of the leading light orchestra leaders in France, and thanks to his collaboration with Paul Mauriat (1925-2006) he became internationally famous with the song I Will Follow Him. Although some of Pourcel’s recordings can be categorised as light music (and Clown On The Eiffel Tower is certainly one example), he later tended to veer towards jazz and rock following the pattern of some of his contemporaries. With hindsight one can ask which kind of audience he was really trying to attract, but his career flourished (he is said to have recorded over 2,000 songs) and he was held in the highest esteem in his own country.

The Synchro-Fox mood music library issued its first British mood music 78s in 1957, and we feature two of the early ones. Easy On The Eyes is by Marvin M. Wright whose credits include cues for the American TV series "Felony Squad" (1966-1969). The other title from Synchro-Fox brings us a typical Roger Roger (1911-1995) composition Holiday On The Road (Peter Pares is credited as co-composer) which sounds like it may have been recorded in Roger’s own studio in Paris.

Cyril Watters (1907-1984) was highly respected within the music profession and, although from 1953 to 1961 he was chief arranger with Boosey & Hawkes, he often contributed to the recorded music libraries of many of the top London music publishers. One of his greatest successes was the wistful Willow Waltz (chosen as the theme for the television series "The World of Tim Frazer" in 1960) but he was equally at home with brighter, up-tempo numbers such as Flat Spin on this CD. For several years during the 1960s he guided The Light Music Society through a difficult period when broadcasters and record companies seemed to be turning their backs on the genre, but his quiet persuasion undoubtedly benefited many of his colleagues. He was a true gentleman, in every good sense of the word, and was widely admired by his friends and colleagues for his personal qualities, as well as his tuneful music.

Ernest Tomlinson(b.1924) is one of Britain’s most talented composers, working mainly in light music, but also highly regarded for his choral works and brass band pieces. During a very productive career, he has contributed numerous titles to the recorded music libraries of many different publishers, often under the pseudonym ‘Alan Perry’. One of his best-known numbers is Little Serenade, which he developed from a theme he wrote as incidental music for a BBC radio production "The Story of Cinderella" in 1955, and another piece from the same source is Fairy Coach on this CD. His suites of English Folk Dances have also become part of the standard light music repertoire. In recent years Ernest has worked hard to preserve thousands of music manuscripts that would otherwise have been destroyed, and he is the present Chairman of the Light Music Society.

The American Van Phillips (1905-1992) was a talented man whose achievements covered a wide variety of activities. He was brought to London by Carroll Gibbons (1903-1954) in 1925 to play saxophone in the Savoy Havana Band. A few years later he was a recording studio manager at Columbia Records, working with the bands of Jack Payne, Billy Cotton, Ambrose and Henry Hall. He also made 78s under his own name which were highly praised for their innovative arrangements and musicianship. His career soon involved West End shows ("Bow Bells" was his first musical show orchestration in 1931), and British films also used his skills – "Contraband" in 1934 was his first full score, to be followed by work for Richard Tauber and Jack Buchanan, among others. BBC broadcasts and a 39-week series for Radio Luxembourg further enhanced his public profile, and in the 1950s he composed the distinctive music for the landmark BBC Light Programme radio series "Journey Into Space". Phillips’ contribution to this CD is his composition Practical Joker, which he wrote for the newly-launched Impress Mood Music Library in 1956. Comments at the time pointed to the similarity with well known works by Robert Farnon and Angela Morley (when she was working as Wally Stott), but no doubt this was at the insistence of the label’s manager. Other works revealed his own particular style, which soon became recognisable to light music admirers. In later life his hobby of travel photography took over his life completely, and his 1966 "Traveller’s Book of Photography" sold over 150,000 copies. He remained active in this field until 1987, when he finally retired from his travels at the age of 82.

Mahlon LeGrande Merrick (1900-1969) began his musical career as a saxophone player, but eventually he concentrated on working in radio, films and especially television. He was associated with a number of popular television series notably "The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show" and "The Jack Benny Program", remaining the musical director for the popular comedian for thirty years. A versatile composer, a number of his works appear under the pseudonym ‘Gene LeGrande’, and his best-known piece Look Sharp Be Sharp - also known as the Gillette Look Sharp March (played by the Boston ‘Pops’ Orchestra) is on Guild GLCD 5135. Prairie Duster comes from an album called "Seven Winds" he recorded for the small US label Urania in the mid-1950s.

In the summer of 1956 Frank Sinatra (1915-1998) conducted an album of orchestral music to celebrate the opening of the new Capitol Records Tower in Hollywood, supposedly built to resemble a stack of records. Critics have observed that by this time Sinatra will have regarded that his comeback was secure, thanks to his best-selling albums and critically acclaimed films. Like many creative artists before him, he wanted to do something completely different, so he engaged a team of top composers and arrangers to create short works based on poems by his radio scriptwriter, Norman Sickel. The poems were all about different colours, so the album was appropriately called "Tone Poems Of Color". Capitol assembled around sixty Hollywood musicians for their star singer, who proceeded to make one of the most unusual recordings of his long career. The line-up included some of Sinatra's well known arranger/conductors such as Nelson Riddle, Billy May, and Gordon Jenkins, as well as iconic figures like Elmer Bernstein and Andre Previn. Photos taken at the sessions reveal that Nelson Riddle was on hand (at least part of the time) in case he was needed, but seemingly Sinatra managed to cope although the resulting LP was hardly among the top ten favourites of his loyal fans, and it remained out of the catalogues for many years. The piece selected this time is Orange by Nelson Riddle (1921-1985) who was a trombonist during his early career, which could explain why that particular instrument was featured in some of his most inventive arrangements for Frank Sinatra. Riddle’s scores also enhanced the recording careers of many top stars, from Nat ‘King’ Cole and Dean Martin to Judy Garland and Peggy Lee. He made a few instrumental albums on his own, but one is left with the impression that he could have achieved more in this area, had he not been so successful accompanying the finest singers around.

David Ades

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Animal Antics

1 Dance Of The Little Pink Horse (Bernie Wayne, real name Bernard Weitzner)
BERNIE WAYNE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
2 The Waltzing Cat (Leroy Anderson)
LEROY ANDERSON AND HIS ‘POPS’ CONCERT ORCHESTRA
3 My Dog Has Fleas (David Rose)
VICTOR YOUNG AND HIS ORCHESTRA
4 The Donkey Serenade; introducing Sympathy (Rudolf Friml, arr. Sidney Torch)
SIDNEY TORCH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
5 Morning Canter (Arnold Steck, real name Leslie Statham)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
6 Nightingale (George Rosner, Fred Wise, Xavier Cugat, arr. Percy Faith)
PERCY FAITH AND HIS ORCHESTRA
7 Fauns And Satyrs (Oliphant Chuckerbutty)
LOUIS VOSS AND HIS ORCHESTRA
8 Mosquitos’ Parade (Howard Whitney)
SIDNEY BOWMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
9 Dance Of The Three Blind Mice (Donald Thorne)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by JACK LEON
10 The Glow Worm (Paul Lincke)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by JAY WILBUR
11 Flamingo (Ed Anderson, Ted Grouya, arr. Richard Jones)
THE PITTSBURGH STRINGS Conducted by RICHARD JONES
12 Lambs In Clover (Jack Strachey)
L’ORCHESTRE DEVEREAUX Conducted by GEORGES DEVEREAUX
13 Meadow Lark (King Palmer)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS METROPOLE ORCHESTRA
14 Snake Charmer (Charles Williams)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
15 I Hear A Thrush At Eventide (Charles Wakefield Cadman, arr. Cecil Milner)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by JAY WILBUR
16 Peacock Patrol (Peter Barrington, real name Felton Rapley)
NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA Conducted by R. de PORTEN
17 Gilbert The Goose (Kermit Leslie & Walter Leslie real surnames Levinsky)
KERMIT LESLIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
18 Pelican Parade (Dolf van der Linden)
DOLF VAN DER LINDEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
19 Skylark (Hoagy Carmichael, arr. Ron Goodwin)
RON GOODWIN AND HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA
20 Butterfly Fantasy (Eugene Ettore, arr. Mischa Michaeloff)
MISCHA MICHAELOFF AND HIS ORCHESTRA, Leader ALFRED SVERDLOFF
21 Chicken Reel (Leroy Anderson)
BOSTON POPS ORCHESTRA Conducted by ARTHUR FIEDLER
22 Bird Charmer (Robert Farnon)
DANISH STATE RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT FARNON
23 Tiger Tango (Clyde Hamilton real name Cyril Stapleton, Robert Earley real name
Robert Frederick Standish – better known as Bob Sharples)
CYRIL STAPLETON AND HIS ORCHESTRA
24 Bullfrog On A Spree (Burton, George Liberace)
GEORGE LIBERACE AND HIS ORCHESTRA
25 March Of The Penguins (Norman Richardson)
THE RAF CENTRAL BAND Conducted by Squadron Leader A.E. SIMS
26 The Frolicsome Hare (H. Ashworth Hope)
LESLIE JEFFRIES AND HIS ORCHESTRA
27 Frogs’ Wedding (Karl Bell)
REGENT CLASSIC ORCHESTRA
28 Animal Antics (Colin Wark)
LONDON PALLADIUM ORCHESTRA

Guild GLCD 5143

Those who observe strict adherence to the formal rules of pedantry will be quick to point out that the title of this collection is misleading … and they are quite right! Not all the tracks refer to animals; there are birds and insects among the other creatures thrown in for good measure. A more accurate title would be ‘non-human antics’, but somehow that lacks the attractive alliteration of "Animal Antics". So please forgive us a small measure of indulgence, and accept our good intentions in allowing human composers to pay tribute to those creatures on our planet that are genetically different from us.

Our attractive opening number – Dance Of The Little Pink Horse - is yet another catchy novelty by the American Bernard Weitzner (1919-1993) who was known as Bernie Wayne. His career was riding high in the 1950s with tunes such as Vanessa, Port-au-Prince (on GLCD 5130), Veradero (GLCD 5111) and The Magic Touch (GLCD 5111). Two of his best-known numbers were songs: Blue Velvet which was a number-one hit single for Bobby Vinton, and (There She Is) Miss America sung by Bert Parks during the crowning moments of the Miss America beauty pageant.

Generations of musicians – both amateur and professional – will have automatically sung My Dog Has Fleas when tuning the four strings of the ukulele, banjo and variations of these once-popular instruments. Several composers have felt the urge to write tunes using the familiar quartet of notes, but surely the award for the most inventive must go to David Rose (1910-1990). Rather surprisingly he does not appear to have made an early commercial recording of this piece, but this is not really a disappointment since the version by Victor Young (1900-1956) is such fun.

Soorjo Alexander William Oliphant Chuckerbutty (1884-1960) was once described by fellow organist Quentin Maclean (1896-1962) as "the only organist I know who combines whole-time cinema work with whole-time church work and makes a job of both." He began playing piano at the age of six and was composing by the time he reached 14. In 1928 he recorded on organ with Hal Swain and his Band at the Café Royal, London, and continued to make 78s alongside his other duties as a church organist. Most of his compositions were for the organ, and few are heard today, apart from Paean (on Guild GMCD 7212 played by James Culp) which has entered the standard repertoire. Performing on the theatre organ he was known as ‘Wilson Oliphant’, and when writing about playing the organ he used the name S.W.Chuckerbutty. Fauns And Satyrs seems to be something of a rarity, although it is possible that he composed it as an organ work and, realising its potential, his regular publishers Bosworth decided to have it orchestrated for their mood music library. But what exactly are Fauns and Satyrs? Legend has it that they lived among the woods and hills and were he-creatures, like men, with the hind-legs of goats, short horns on their foreheads, and long pointed ears. But there was a difference between the Fauns and Satyrs. The Fauns were handsome, gentle, innocent, and rather foolish. The Satyrs were hideous, clumsy, hairy monsters, with flat faces, little eyes, and huge mouths, great gluttons, often drunk, and sometimes mischievous: most of them were dull and stupid, but many of them had plenty of sense and knowledge. How can one composer possibly encompass all of that within three minutes? Mr. Chuckerbutty did!

Donald James Dean Thorne (1901-1967) has not produced a large amount of light music, but he is remembered especially for one particular piece – Rippling Waters (on Guild GLCD 5112) which the BBC chose as the background music for their 1950s television interlude of angel fish in an aquarium. Donald Thorne spent his early musical career as a pianist for dances at the Savoy, Berkeley and Claridges hotels in London, as well as providing arrangements of popular tunes to leading bands such as Jack Hylton, Henry Hall, Jack Payne, Roy Fox, Debroy Somers and Carroll Gibbons. In 1934 he joined Granada Theatres at Tooting and Maidstone as a theatre organist, and thereafter spent much of his time at various venues on the circuit. Following war service he continued playing on electronic organs, one of his prestige bookings being aboard RMS Queen Mary. His other compositions (sometimes under the pseudonyms Eric Denville and August Leserve) include a suite "Lights of London", which is rarely heard, and he wrote a few pieces for military band.

Cedric King Palmer (1913-1999) was a prolific composer of mood music who contributed over 600 works during a period of 30 years to the recorded music libraries of several London publishers. He was able to adapt his writing to many different styles, and Meadow Lark finds him in a reflective, lyrical mood. To survive in the music business meant accepting many varied commissions, and King Palmer could turn his hand to making popular arrangements of the classics which he often conducted with his own orchestra on the BBC Light programme in the 1940s and 1950s. His many bright and tuneful pieces disguised the fact that he possessed a serious knowledge of music; at the age of 26 he completed a study of the work of Granville Bantock (1868-1946), and in 1944 Palmer wrote ‘Teach Yourself Music’ for the Hodder and Stoughton Home University Series which ran to several editions. He ceased composing mood music in the 1970s, and towards the end of his life he became a patient and popular piano teacher, with sometimes over 60 pupils on his books.

I Hear A Thrush At Eventide by the American composer Charles Wakefield Cadman (1881-1946) benefits from a beautifully sensitive arrangement by Edward Cecil Milner (1905-1989), a respected backroom boy in London music circles, arranging for many top orchestras such as Mantovani, for whom he supplied around 220 scores. He was also an accomplished composer in his own right (he was being recognised while still in his twenties), with his works willingly accepted by several background music publishers. Cadman is regarded as a truly American composer, supposedly unschooled in the European tradition which was usual for his contemporaries. He achieved early success with two songs, At Dawning and From The Land Of Sky-blue Water, but at various times it seems that he was prone to get involved in disagreements which may have hampered his career: in 1929 he was hired by Fox Studios in Hollywood to score several films for them, but became embroiled in a dispute with Dmitri Tiomkin, and subsequently left. After being virtually ignored during the second half of the last century, Cadman’s music is now gaining fresh interest in the USA, largely due to his life-long association with the Indianist Movement.

Among several very rare items in this collection is what appears to be the only 12" 78rpm record of light music ever released by the British Nixa label, before it grew into one of the larger independents towards the end of the 1950s when it also embraced the Pye and Polygon catalogues (the story of how Polygon became part of Nixa was told in the notes to GLCD 5130 – the 1950s Volume 4).

Eugene Ettore’s Butterfly Fantasy was given an imaginative orchestration by Mischa Michaeloff, who made its first British recording with his own orchestra. When the 78 was released in 1951, Nixa’s publicity stated: "it describes in sound-pictures the birth of a male butterfly and his first attempts at flight, which eventually land him on the ground with a resounding bump! Picking himself up, he espies a lovely lady butterfly and, after a series of tactics to attract her attention, finally succeeds and they fly away together." The other side of this 78, Serbian Sunset, appeared on GLCD 5118 – Buried Treasures. Mischa Michaeloff (researches suggest his family name may have been Michailoff-Sissermann) was musical adviser to Auguste Cranz, Johann Strauss publishers, during the 1930s and he also worked with the tenor Richard Tauber. In the early 1950s he conducted the Mischa Michaeloff Mazurka Orchestra on BBC Radio, and contributed to programmes such as "Music While You Work" and "Bright and Early". He recorded two albums "Wandering Gypsies" and "Strictly From Hungary" for RCA featuring his ‘Symphonic Gypsies’ and an LP of French tunes for Nixa.

Eugene Ettore, the composer of Butterfly Fantasy, is regarded as one of America’s outstanding Accordion Artistes of the last century. His father was a vaudevillian who gave his son a solid grounding in many aspects of music, revealing a passion for composing. During World War 2 he gained practical experience of a professional musician’s life in Military and Dance bands, and carried on the Italian tradition of father and son in the accordion world. He served three terms as President of the American Accordionists’ Association. Among his other popular compositions are Musette Polka, Bambi Samba and Spanish Holiday, and his works range from classical to boogie-woogie.

Bird Charmer was composed by Robert Farnon (1917-2005) with his son David in mind. The inspiration actually came from David’s mother Pat, who said that "he could charm the birds out of the trees!" This was not the first time that Farnon had dedicated one of his creations to his children: Playtime (on GLCD 5125) was written for another son, Paul.

On this occasion our title track actually closes the CD. It is also the oldest recording in this collection, having been released in 1931 with William Pethers conducting the London Palladium Orchestra. The sound gives a clue to the fact that electrical recordings were still relatively new (the first were issued in 1925) although it compares well with many others that were to follow later in the 1930s. Animal Antics was composed by Colin Wark (1896-1939) who seems to have had a varied musical career – for a while working with Puccini and other Italian composers transcribing their works for piano. According to his son David, Colin Wark was responsible for launching Pasquale Troise and his Mandoliers in the early 1930s.

David Ades

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About Geoff 123
Geoff Leonard was born in Bristol. He spent much of his working career in banking but became an independent record producer in the early nineties, specialising in the works of John Barry and British TV theme compilations.
He also wrote liner notes for many soundtrack albums, including those by John Barry, Roy Budd, Ron Grainer, Maurice Jarre and Johnny Harris. He co-wrote two biographies of John Barry in 1998 and 2008, and is currently working on a biography of singer, actor, producer Adam Faith.
He joined the Internet Movie Data-base (www.imdb.com) as a data-manager in 2001 and looked after biographies, composers and the music-department, amongst other tasks. He retired after nine years loyal service in order to continue writing.