GLCD 5158 – The Golden Age of Light Music: That’s Light Musical Entertainment
Various
To the CD in our Shop
Essex Chronicle Jan. 2011
If last week’s Seen and Heard was too gloomy for you, then I will definitely try to lighten this week’s serving!
If last week’s Seen and Heard was too gloomy for you, then I will definitely try to lighten this week’s serving!
For some of us, the 78 rpm is fondly remembered piece of home musical equipment, with each lasting no more than four minutes. When the long-playing record and the 45 rpm version appeared, our entertainment seemed complete (or so we tough).
From the time of jumping up and down to change the record after four minutes comes a compilation from Swiss-based Guild-Records.
In the series The Golden Age of Light Music, comes a volume titled That’s Light Musical Entertainment. The names come floating back from those days of the brittle shellac disc – names such as Percy Faith, Andre Kostelanetz, and George Melachrino; talented band leaders who where often great arrangers.
Two dozen tracks bring together some evergreen titles such as This Heart of Mine, That’s Entertainment and This Can’t Be Love.
The CD is likely to appeal to a certain generation, but I bet there are many Music ensembles who would benefit from exploring this repertoire and finding out was (and still is) good.
Chris Green
Review By FRANK BEHRENS Thursday May 20, 2010
A variety of music and drama on recent releases
Light Musical Entertainment — I know there must have been a finite number of instrumental recordings, however high, made between the late ‘40s and through the ‘50s, but Guild Light Music keeps issuing so many interesting CDs taken from the LPs of that time that I must wonder how many are still left to transcribe.
Among the most recent in The Golden Age of Light Music series is “That’s Light Musical Entertainment.” The 24 selections here were recorded in the ‘50s and are drawn from stage and screen musicals. The disc begins with “That’s Entertainment” to set the mood. Among the familiar melodies that follow are “This Can’t Be Love,” “I’ll See You in my Dreams,” “Buckle Down, Winsocki,” and “Make Believe.” Among the orchestras represented are those of Percy Faith, Andre Kostelanetz, Richard Hayman, Alfred Newman and Morton Gould.
As are each and every one of the nearly 60 CDs in this series, this one is perfect for easy listening or ambient music for gatherings.
German Cradle Songs — How does one review a CD filled with songs designed to put people to sleep? Of course, when those people are babies and the songs are German cradle songs, that is another matter. There is a Carus CD of 26 “Wiegen Lieder, Vol 1” (cradle songs) sung by several vocalists to piano accompaniment that is quite unlike any other vocal collection I own.
It is accompanied by an 88-page booklet that contains all of the German lyrics (but without English translations), and very brief biographies (in German and English) of the singers, none of whom are familiar to me. Among the composers are Brahms, Schumann, Reger, Humperdinck and Mendelssohn. The Humperdinck contribution is, to be sure, from his opera “Hansel und Gretel.”
Many are quite beautiful, some a bit mundane. Some are sung with great feeling, others not as lullabies but as art songs aimed at an adult audience in a concert hall. At the least, it is quite interesting and now and then captivating.
Cold War Collection — I am not sure if two items make a collection, but someone at Acorn Media is. So we have “A Cold War Spy Collection” that consists of two made-for-television productions. Each is shown on a single DVD in three episodes of 50 minutes each.
“The Glory Boys” (1984, appropriately) is about an Arab assassin and an Irish terrorist. They are after an Israeli scientist, who is in England to give a talk. Rod Steiger gives a good characterization as the old Israeli as does Anthony (Tony) Perkins as the British agent responsible for his safety. Although the ending is ironic, 150 minutes is far too long to tell a familiar tale.
“The Contract” (1988) is a tale of bureaucratic bungling. Kevin McNally plays a British agent who must atone for shooting an innocent child in Ireland by bringing an important person and his daughter out of East Germany. The news that a vital party in the removal operation has been captured never gets to the spy; and the plot is mostly concerned with his going ahead despite impossible odds. There is again an ironic ending and again the feeling that it all could have been nicely handled in 90 minutes.
But the acting is good and both are certainly worth watching for that alone.
Murphy’s Law 2 — Following the format of “Murphy’s Law, Series 1,” Tommy Murphy (James Nesbitt) is again confined to undercover roles by his superiors on the police force in Series 2. Following the current trend for most mystery series to become “grittier” (as the press release puts it), this series is still a notch above the others of its kind because of the slight trace of humor provided by the main character.
Acorn Media has released Series 2 in a boxed set of two DVDs holding six episodes of 50 minutes each. Along the way, Murphy poses as a homeless drug dealer, an officer on the take, an expert thief, a cleaner, a priest and a member of a support group. In the last episode, some light is thrown on the death of his daughter, the original cause of his precarious position in the force.
Interesting characterization but not as much fun as “Pie in the Sky” or as endearing as “Midsomer Murders.”
MusicWeb International Wednesday February 4 2010
I’ve reviewed a shelf-load of Guild’s voluminous Light Music series, and there are always good things to discover. There is so much music around that it’s a question of collating it in enterprising and programmatically and thematically interesting ways – and that Guild invariably does.
There are two discs to consider here. A Box of Light Musical Allsorts is the first. My object all sublime is played and arranged by Robert Farnon with his Orchestra, a sort of Farnon does G&S spectacular, a big showy affair with tap dancing too. If Farnon could have a managed a kitchen sink I think he would have tried. Southern Holiday is perhaps more the expected fare, played by the Connaught Light Orchestra on the Conroy label – though it’s a tad on the pleasantly innocuous side of things. Werner Müller unveils a solo violin against skittering strings – a really luscious, exotic feel – in Take Me To Your Heart though he’s followed by Eric Jupp whose band has a rather ants-in-their-pants feel in Three-Two-One-Zero – a sassy effects laden number with fade ending.
If it’s an accordion we’re in Paris and Boris Sarbek sees to that in Pigalle. Farnon returns for a lovely character study, pizzicato-fed, called Mannequin Melody, played by the Queen’s Hall Light Orchestra and composed by that versatile maestro, Clive Richardson. Talking of Farnon there’s a peppy tribute to him by Wally Stott called A Canadian in Mayfair played with suitable brio by Sidney Torch and his orchestra. Even better perhaps is the languorous warmth and unhurried sophistication of the Hollywood elite, in the shape of Alfred Newman and his orchestra, playing the film music to A Letter To Three Wives. It oozes class from every pore.
You can let your hair down – or let anything else you care to – with Edmundo Ros doing the Military Samba. Or if you prefer you can partake of the Gershwin pastiche that is Concerto in Jazz played by Pat Dodd (fine dance band and jazz player) and Melachrino. Dodd boogies on down adeptly. Perhaps I should be more censorious of the cod-exotica enshrined in Casbah by Wally Stott (aka Angela Morley) and played by the same. Only I can’t – it’s great fun. Borodin gets the Percy Faith treatment in Rahadlakum (from Kismet) and then we’re back on the path again for Eric Coates, courtesy of Charles Mackerras’s famous old recording of The Three Bears, a work that shows Coates’s very real admiration for contemporary American music. But if you tire of that there’s always the ‘pizzicato and smile, dear!’ charms of Melody In Moccasins (great title) essayed by Philip Green’s orchestra.
Bigger things are enshrined however in Horace Dann’s Worcester Beacon, a volubly Elgarian opus, a sort of mini-Cockaigne cum P and C march that hits the spot very nicely indeed. This is followed, in an imaginatively programmed diptych of classically-inspired pieces, by Trevor Duncan’s St. Boniface Down. Duncan’s real name was Leonard Trebilco by the way. This is a compound of Holst and VW, a lovely set piece lasting over six minutes – romantic, allusive and intriguing. Did he try his hand at larger scale tone poem writing?
That’s Light Musical Entertainment is the second disc – they’re available singly by the way. The curtain comes up in fine, brash style courtesy of That’s Entertainment (from The Band Wagon) and we lead onto the evergreen lyricism courtesy of Farnon’s Westminster Waltz. Rachmaninoff stalks the piano writing of Ruby from Ruby Gentry – Percy Faith and his orchestra are the bringers of rich wind lines and strongly evocative string solos. Since the disc explores show tunes and the like there are plenty of popular items here, from the dappled melancholia of All My Life – the theme from the film Eight O’Clock Walk – to the lightly tripping This Can’t Be Love.
Instrumentation and arrangement are at their most sumptuous in the All About Eve film music, played by Alfred Newman and his orchestra – and as in the previous volume this is a Rolls Royce performance. One wonders at the identity of the unnamed saxophone soloist in the band known simply as The All Stars. He plays on Blue Theme, a Farnon theme for the film True Lies in 1957; excellent playing indeed. Here In My Arms (from the musical Dearest Enemy) is arranged by Richard Jones who conducts The Pittsburgh Strings for Capitol, and it proves vibrant and enticing, whereas there’s the ultra-plus romance of Morton Gould’s take on Body and Soul to warm one. For more explicit tear-jerking there is always the Melachrino Orchestra reprising the Brief Encounter moment (Rach 2) – this time Arthur Sandford is the pianist. The most extensive track is the last, Since You Went Away composed by Max Steiner and played by him and his orchestra for Capitol in 1954, and there is plenty of rich incident and caprice along the way.
It ends a pleasing selection, indeed two pleasing selections. With the usual fine and extensive liner-notes it’s really a question of what takes one’s fancy, repertoire-wise.
Jonathan Woolf
Memory Lane Winter 2009
This selection is based on music written for films and musical shows. There are some blockbusters, such as the opening track That’s Entertainment and This Can’t Be Love, but also some tunes that I can’t recall hearing before, such as Buckle Down, Winsocki. The Granddaddy of film music, Alfred Newman, conducts All About Eve and another prolific Hollywood composer, Max Steiner, brings the CD to a conclusion with a nine-minute selection of incidental music from his score for Since You Went Away. As always with Guild this is a first class production.
GH
MusicWeb International Friday August 14th 2009
I am sure I am not alone in still doing a brief double-take when I see the Guild label on a disc of Light Music. Yet, what a service they are providing – excusing the pun given their history of church music! To my enduring shame these are the first two discs in this extensive series – the liner-notes list another 57 releases – that I have heard and all I can say is the loss is mine. I suspect that many readers of this will be familiar with the style and content of these discs but for those who are not it is worth making clear a couple of points. These are historical performances all dating from the 1950s featuring an enormous variety of composers, arrangers, conductors and orchestras. So, there will be two key elements in ensuring the success of this disc and indeed the series that goes above and beyond the inherent quality of the music or the performances. They are the technical quality of the transfers and re-mastering and the coherence of the programming and track selection. I have nothing but praise for both of these departments. Not that that should be a surprise when one sees that the audio restoration is in the safe hands of Alan Bunting and the series production and compilation is overseen by phenomenally knowledgeable David Ades. He has also written the extensive, informative and interesting liner-notes. Allied to track-listings that include original release information and quirky artwork and you have an exemplary release. Before dealing with the discs separately and in greater detail there are a couple of other general thoughts that struck me while listening. The 1950s were a time when this was truly a music industry. The sheer volume of music being written and recorded – and performed live – was extraordinary. These two discs total 48 tracks featuring about 39 orchestras with nearly as many composers and the like. This was the golden age for musicians who were part of the hallowed inner circle of session players who could and often did achieve the holy grail of the 21 session week – literally 3 three hour sessions every day of the week. David Ades in his very illuminating notes goes some way to explaining the complexities of contractual and union rulings that meant orchestras and groups often appeared under totally spurious names and this is an area that is both fascinating and mind-boggling. But ultimately does that matter when you can sit back and listen to such scintillating group of entertaining pieces?
The first disc is the aptly named A Box of Light Musical Allsorts. This is a perfect title. The delight of this selection is exactly that of a box of chocolates. Everyone will have different favourites, surprise new discoveries and occasional old favourites. And if there’s a piece that does not quite appeal, don’t worry, another will be along in a minute! Separating the artistic from the technical again for a moment; I marvelled anew at the sheer quality of the execution of all of these tracks. For sure, different performance and recording styles were employed – generally the sound is close and tight – but there is not a single piece where you don’t find yourself smiling with delight at some aspect of the performance. The opening track My object all sublime played and arranged by Robert Farnon and his Orchestra is a case in point. It fairly rockets off – a really demanding opening tossed off with cocky aplomb by the excellent orchestra – with the new-fangled stereo recording allowing a tap dancer to stroll across your hi-fi! From there on it really is nearly eighty minutes of unalloyed pleasure. Every listener will enjoy some tracks more than others. My favourites for what they are worth are Three-Two-One Zero by Norrie Paramor and Canadian in Mayfair – creating an instantly familiar atmosphere with its combination of Holiday for Strings manic pizzicati and multiple voice lush string voicings. The Concerto in Jazz and Worcester Beacon – the earliest recording – from 1946 – and the most sonically limited although not to any excessive degree – and particularly St. Boniface Down. This last was written by the wonderful Trevor Duncan. These were happy discoveries although the latter moves away from the library music style of most of the disc towards something a little more individual and serious/light if that’s not verging on the oxymoronic.
Clearly, because this disc builds on the library of recordings previously released they compliment those and allow other purchasers to build their own collections. My only query is the inclusion of the Mackerras/LSO Coates The Three Bears. This appears to be the same recording that has graced the Classics for Pleasure Coates compilation for so many years. Assuming that to be so, and when surrounded by so much that is unfamiliar and rare, it feels like a little piece of unnecessary potential duplication. That being said it is fascinating to juxtapose the quite different recording/performance of the LSO performance with the rest of the disc – and it is a fine performance in its own right.
The second disc reviewed here is That’s Light Musical Entertainment. All of the high values of performance and production that were mentioned above are in evidence here too. As a matter of simply musical taste this album appeals to me far less than the former. With the previous disc the bulk of the performances are of original orchestral pieces. On this disc the bulk are instrumental/orchestral versions of vocal standards or show songs. So you are immediately into a debate about the degree of ‘intervention’ of the arranger. Is it to be a straight transcription or an elaborated treatment? If the former, well listen to the song and if the latter at what point does the arrangement overwhelm the melody? The Angela Morley/Robert Farnon team responsible for A Canadian in Mayfair above produce another gem with Farnon’s justly famous Westminster Waltz and I always have a soft spot for pretty much any Ronald Binge so I enjoyed I’ll see you in my dreams. Conrad Salinger is the one arranger who can inflate the simplest tune into something of spectacular scale and yet somehow ‘make it work’ – the Straussian brass writing has a lot to do with it! – so his version of That’s Entertainment! that opens the disc is a guilty pleasure. By contrast I find the version of All My Life by Geraldo and his New Concert Orchestra to be too predictable and saccharine. Likewise, David Rose’s take on Come Rain or come Shine leaves me quite unmoved. It’s a purely personal reaction I know but I find that the orchestrations that are charming in original scores become rather hackneyed in arrangements – when does a piece cross that elusive barrier from ‘light’ to ‘middle of the road’? Obviously, the bulk of the music on both these discs was written with little view to its longevity – I suspect most of the composers and arrangers involved would be tickled pink to think that their work was still being listened to fifty years after the event. However, to my ear the song arrangements wear their years less lightly and are less interesting in consequence. But, if they do appeal, you will find them here in exemplary performances and transfers so do not hesitate.
Compulsory purchases for followers of this series and excellent discs for nostalgia seekers everywhere.
Nick Barnard