27 February 2011

1949-51 Margaret Whiting Singles

My post of Margaret Whiting's first album was very popular, so I am preparing some follow-up posts of her unreissued singles. This is the first of three such entries - maybe more, if I can find my stash of her 78s. These 12 songs all are from 45s, most of them unplayed store stock.

From 1949, we have a coupling of two Josef Myrow-Mack Gordon songs - It Happens Every Spring, from the film of the same name, and Every Time I Meet You, from The Beautiful Blonde from Bashful Bend. Two excellent songs, nicely done.

From the same year, we have two Irving Berlin songs from the Miss Liberty score - Let's Take an Old Fashioned Walk and Paris Wakes Up and Smiles.

Moving to 1950, Capitol issued an odd coupling of It's a Most Unusual Day, from the two-year-old movie A Date with Judy, with the St. Louis Blues. Later that year, Whiting recorded (We've Got a) Sure Thing from the Bing Crosby film Ridin' High, backed with the awful Solid as a Rock, a synthetic r&b number also recorded by Ella Fitzgerald and the Deep River Boys.

Also from 1950 is a terrific rendition of Come Rain or Come Shine, with a flip side of Dream Peddler's Serenade. The latter had music by Johnny Mercer and lyrics by one of the winners of Capitol's Songs without Words contest, John Rufus Sharpe III. For that contest, Capitol asked entrants to write the words for new music by Mercer, Jimmy McHugh, Livingston and Evans, Isham Jones, Ray Noble and Paul Weston. Sharpe's work was apparently heavily influenced by Kim Gannon's lyrics for A Dreamer's Holiday, which had been a hit the previous year.

Our final 45 is from 1951, and has the hymn-like Faithful by French composer Alex Alstone with words by Jimmy Kennedy, and Lonesome Gal, a worthwhile song by Walter Schumann and Jack Brooks.

Whiting is backed by Frank DeVol on all recordings except Come Rain or Come Shine, which has a Paul Weston arrangement. The sound is excellent.

Hope you enjoy these relatively rare items by one of the finest vocalists of the time.

22 February 2011

Betty Garrett in Call Me Mister

Betty Garrett died last week, and I am honoring her by presenting the cast album from Call Me Mister, a 1946 revue that was a big break for her - and is a favorite show of mine.

Betty Garrett asks South
America to take it away
Now why would Betty Garrett star in something named Call Me Mister? It's because the review pertains to soldiers who were being discharged into the postwar world, and who now could be called "Mister" rather than by their rank. Most of the cast was composed of ex-military personnel - Garrett and some others excepted.

Garrett takes on the role of a worker in a military canteen - in one scene teaching the soldiers to do the then-popular Latin American dances ("South America, Take It Away" - her show stopper); in another lamenting the fact that with the end of war came the end of her clientele ("Little Surplus Me"). She also presents an ode to conspicuous holiday consumption ("Yuletide, Park Avenue").

Lawrence Winters
The rest of the cast is uniformly excellent - the other main vocal star is Lawrence Winters, who later had a distinguished career as an operatic baritone. His numbers include "Going Home Train" (quite similar to "This Train Is Bound for Glory"); a mawkish ode to the late US President Franklin Roosevelt ("The Man on the Dime"); and "The Red Ball Express," which is about the supply-chain convoy in the European theater of war.

The music and lyrics are by Harold Rome, and with few exceptions, the songs are very strong. "South America, Take It Away" was the only hit, in a bowdlerized version by Bing Crosby with the Andrews Sisters. The original is not especially risque, but in 1946, lyrics concerning "my pan-American can" were not heard on the radio. Despite the lack of hits and the topical nature of the lyrics, the score is quite effective and affecting. It strongly conveys the joy, relief and pride of the ex-soldiers. My own favorite is the ballad "Along with Me."

Harold Rome
Call Me Mister was Rome's second notable revue, following Pins and Needles. His first book musical was Wish You Were Here, in 1952. Other scores include Fanny, Destry Rides Again, and I Can Get It for You Wholesale.

Betty Garrett went from this review to Hollywood, appearing in several notable musicals, including On the Town with Jules Munshin, who also was in Call Me Mister and is heard in one number here. She later was often on US television shows.

The cast album, conduced by the show's musical director, Lehman Engel, was first issued on 78s in 1946. This transfer is from the 10-inch LP issue of 1949. The sound is quite good.

19 February 2011

Margie Anderson

Margie Anderson is a somewhat mysterious vocalist who made just this one LP - and I don't even think this began life as an album, rather a bunch of singles.

What we have here is a collection of 10 songs on the low-end budget label Spinorama. These materials also appeared in whole or part on other such supermarket collections from the early 60s. These labels generally operated by acquiring old material on the cheap, and then repackaging it. My suspicion is that this particular package began as singles cut for a small label from about 1953 to 1957 - although there is no hard evidence that this is the case.

Why do I choose those dates? Because By Myself, one of the songs here, was featured in the 1953 movie The Bandwagon, and because Ca, C'Est L'Amour was written for the 1957 film Les Girls.

It doesn't help that there is very limited information available on the singer. The first information I have is that she recorded two singles for Columbia in 1950. She then turns up singing with Louis Jordan in 1953. Finally, she recorded a single for ABC-Paramount in 1960. There also are scattered references to her appearing in night spots.

So, in short, I haven't been able to find out when these records were made or who plays on them - although they clearly are highly proficient musicians. Anderson herself is a very good singer - although she does have a tendency to mangle lyrics a little - and is particularly effective on The Thrill is Gone.

The production values are what you might expect from a low-end label. The sound was shrill, which I have adjusted, and the pressing is cheap. Added reverb is plentiful. Fortunately I have a mint copy of the record, so there is no need to endure any noise induced by mishandling over the years. Any noise here was built in by the issuing entity.

The pitching of some of these items is suspect, and I am sure that London Blues was about a half-tone flat, so I have adjusted it. (The original is also included in the download, in case you want to judge for yourself.)

This is presented (and in flac format) by request.

15 February 2011

George Shearing

George Shearing has been a favorite of mine for a long time, so I wanted to provide a brief tribute to him by presenting one of his earliest LPs.

I've had this particular album in mind for presentation here for quite some time - mainly because I love the unusual cover - but I've never been able to coax decent sound from the execrable early-50s Savoy pressing. Well, I tried again today, with some minor success, and the results are at least listenable.

Note (March 2025): This LP is now available in a new transfer with greatly improved sound.

What we have here is Shearing's first US recordings, made for Savoy in 1947. The artist had recorded in London previously, and after nine sides for Savoy (eight of them here), would move on to Discovery briefly, then fame with M-G-M and Capitol.

The Savoy recordings present Shearing before he adopted the "Shearing sound" - the highly influential combination of his piano in unison with guitar and vibes. Here, it's Shearing with drums and bass only - and in a bop mood, only bringing out his locked-hands approach for his take on "So Rare." Also notable is the way he suggests the genesis of "'Round Midnight" in the opening bars of "Sweet and Lovely."

Savoy's sound may have been crude, but its artwork was avant-garde for the time, a minimalist approach with Burt Goldblatt's photo, the artist's name and not even a mention of the label.

I enjoy all eras of Shearing's long career - even (heck, especially) the cocktail music he produced for Capitol. These early recordings show a side that was overshadowed by his later, more popular efforts.

LINK to new transfer (March 2025)

06 February 2011

Masses by Vaughan Williams and Rubbra

This record represents two notable firsts by London's Fleet Street Choir, which managed to premiere many important works even though it was an amateur ensemble.

Vaughan Williams
In the case of the Vaughan Williams Mass in G minor, this was the first LP version, recorded in Decca's West Hampstead studios in March 1953. The group had made the first-even recording of the piece in 1946, also for Decca.

The choir and its director, T. B. Lawrence, gave the first performance of Edmund Rubbra's Missa in Honorem Sancti Dominici in 1948. This is its first recording, also from March 1953. Lawrence died during the sessions, and the composer conducted the Kyrie and Gloria heard here.

Lawrence formed the choir in the 1920s, drawing its members from journalism and the printing trades. They gave a number of notable first performances, including Britten's A Ceremony of Carols and Hymn to St. Cecilia. (You can find a transfer of their 1943 recording of the latter at Bryan Bishop's Shellackophile blog.) Nonetheless, there is some evidence that Britten did not like the Hymn to St. Cecilia recording - a letter from his publisher tells him that "legally, I could not stop their issue". They also made the first recording of Byrd's Mass for Five Voices. Vaughan Williams and Rubbra both were influenced by the liturgical music of Byrd's 16th century contemporaries.

Rubbra
The performances here have their merits but are not all that one might hope. As the Gramophone reviewer, Alec Robertson, delicately puts it about the Rubbra mass, "The writing, harmonically, is sometimes very difficult for the singers and their intonation is not impeccable in the Kyrie". For "not impeccable" substitute "fairly painful" and you will be closer to the truth.

Despite its prominence in London musical life many decades ago, the Fleet Street Choir is largely forgotten and you will find little mention of it on the web, and no photographs, either of the choir or Lawrence. The overwrought portrait of Rubbra above is by the illustrator-photographer Peggy Delius, a niece of the composer. William Rothenstein did the Vaughan Williams portrait in 1919.

Addendum: note that the download also includes the choir's 1943 recording of Holst's "This I Have Done for My True Love," the fill-up to the Britten set mentioned above.