27 December 2012

Ella Logan

Ella Logan will be forever associated with Finian's Rainbow, having introduced "How Are Things in Glocca Morra" on Broadway in 1947. Logan also recorded most of the songs from that Burton Lane - E.Y. Harburg score in 1954, for this Capitol LP.

Ella Logan and David Wayne
The Glasgow-born Logan was a veteran singer when she came to Broadway. She made her debut in 1930 in London, and was a club singer in the US, even appearing in several films and shows before hitting it big in Finian's Rainbow.

When this Capitol recording session was taking place, Logan was planning to be involved in an animated version of the show, along with such luminaries as Frank Sinatra. That version was never completed (although the songs were recorded), but this, apparently unrelated LP still came out in 1955.

Logan was a very self-assured, but mannered singer. If you like her vocals on the original cast LP, you will be sure to enjoy this album, which is in a similar style. The fussy arrangements are by George Greeley. The sound is excellent.


23 December 2012

Chistmas Chimes

Church of St. Mary Magdalene
A final post before the holiday - familiar carols played on the chimes with organ and brass. The percussionist here is a famous one - at least as famous as an orchestral timpanist can get. He is James Blades, who recorded the "V for victory" tattoo heard on English broadcasts during World War II. (It was the letter V in Morse code, three dots and a dash, corresponding to the opening of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony.)

Blades takes to the chimes on this recording, made in London's Church of St. Mary Magdalene in  1952. I don't think chimes work that well with other instruments, so I can't pretend this gave me much pleasure, but I know others will disagree. Despite the self-praise for the sound on the back of the LP, it really is just adequate, even for that long-ago time.

Blades lived a very long time, to age 97, and must be the only timpanist to write an autobiography - which I read many years ago.

Happy holidays, everyone!

22 December 2012

Carols by the Bach Choir

The Bach Choir is a large amateur ensemble that has been performing in London since 1875. Reginald Jacques was its conductor for 32 years.

Reginald Jacques
This present disk is one of its first recordings. The entirely conventional program of carols was inscribed in June 1950. The location was London's Kingsway Hall, a famous but now demolished venue for choral and orchestral recordings. Many great sounds were captured there; unfortunately this is not one of them. While the performances are perfectly fine, the sound is frustratingly opaque. Enjoyable enough, but not what it ought to be.

The impressively named Osborne Peasgood, sub-organist at Westminster Abbey at the time, handles the accompaniment.

Merry Christmas and happy holidays to all!

10 December 2012

Les Petits Chanteurs à la Croix de Bois

Les Petits Chanteurs à la Croix de Bois (the Little Singers of the Wooden Cross, also known as the Little Singers of Paris) were formed in 1907 by Paul Berthier. They were led for nearly 40 years by Mgr. Fernand Maillet, who directs the proceedings on this record of Christmas songs from France and other lands.


Mgr. Maillet
The cover photo above is a still from a film called Moineaux de Paris, in which the choir appeared. There is a clip from the movie on YouTube, in which the choir sings for a minute and a half and Mgr. Maillet speaks for four. I can't believe this was considered fascinating film making, even in 1952, but the good curé apparently liked to talk: he introduces all the songs on this record. I have banded his intros separately.

Even though the cover still is from 1952, this LP didn't come out until 1960. It was recorded in November of that year, possibly in the suitably resonant Salle Wagram, where the choir made other records.

07 December 2012

The Christmas Music Box


Cook Records was a quirky label of the 1950s and 60s that was known for good sound and esoteric repertoire. If I think about the Cook releases in my own collection, I can come up with recordings of steam locomotives and steel bands - and this collection of the sounds of antique music boxes.

Emory Cook
Emory Cook was also a very early experimenter with stereophonic sound, even to the extent of inventing his own "binaural" system with two grooves on the same record. (He is demonstrating the binaural system in the photo.)

Regina music box
The record at hand is not a binaural LP. It is an atmospheric mono recording of music boxes in the collection of George and Madeleine Brown. True to his code, Cook did not edit out the mechanical noises of these devices, and the clacking and clunking is a little distracting for those of us listening at home and not watching these machines in action. But the tunes are nonetheless charming - even though some of them have little to do with Christmas ("Stabat Mater"??).

On the back of the record, there is a key to what music boxes you are hearing, but the descriptions are inexact and there are no photos. So while I have included photos of several of these boxes in the download, I am not certain that these are the exact models you are hearing. But least it will give you an idea.