Today I am presenting a selection of Clark's records as a vocalist with the bands of Freddy Martin, Archie Bleyer, Ruby Newman and Wayne King, with the addition of a few duets he made with chanteuse Hildegarde. These are from the 1930s extending out to his 1946 Hildegarde session.
His first record (?)
I am indebted to blog follower and discographer Nigel Burlinson for sending me his Buddy Clark discography, which enabled me to identify several Clark recordings where the singer is uncredited on the label. Nigel's document also provided the recording dates noted below.
Clark's first record is often thought to be a vocal on "Evening," made with the Gus Arnheim band in 1932 for Victor. Wikipedia goes so far to note that Clark sang as a tenor for this first record, then switched to baritone for his 1934 discs with Freddy Martin's orchestra. I think that is unlikely. The 1932 Buddy sounds nothing like the 1934 Buddy - who is very recognizable as the singer heard on the rest of these sides on through his Columbia records.
So who is the Buddy Clark who sang with Arnheim? I don't know, but I will note that "Buddy Clark" was a stage name. The singer who became popular was born as Samuel Goldberg.
With Martin, Bleyer and Newman
Clark's vocals for Freddy Martin were recorded in September 1934, including polished renditions of "Stars Fell on Alabama," "Isn't It a Shame" and "In the Quiet of an Autumn Night."
Just as good are two songs with a band led by Archie Bleyer (who later ran Cadence records): "Wild Honey" and "Irresistible." These were from the month after the Martin records - October 1934.
We move on to two uncredited vocals with the band of Ruby Newman, both from the new Rodgers and Hart musical On Your Toes: "Quiet Night" and the title song, both of which Clark handles beautifully. These date from March 1936.
With Wayne King
Clark started making records \with Wayne King in 1940, and soon began appearing on radio with the King band. In October 1940 they cut the the bouncy patriotic song "He's My Uncle" and the terrific Hoagy Carmichael-Harris Robison number, "I Should Have Known You Years Ago" (Buddy has some trouble negotiating the final cadence on the latter).
Clark is credited on the label of the single above, but for the balance of his Wayne King output he is incognito. This is supposedly because OKeh gave Clark a contract as a single artist - and indeed he made his first OKeh records just a month after the October date with King.
The balance of Clark's output with King include "'Til Reveille," "Dawn," "Time and Time Again," and "Time Was," all from June 1941, "Darling, How You Lied," from September of that year, and "Amour" from October. All are nicely done.
Duets with Hildegarde
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Hildegarde |
Happen to Us," a milder version of Cole Porter's 1928 song "Let's Do It" by the talented wife-and-husband team of Alberta Nichols and Mann Holiner.
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The singer as slugger |
The download includes a number of other clippings from the magazines of the time, showing Clark playing baseball (above), swimming, rehearsing and dancing with his wife.
These recordings were taken from various sources - mainly from Internet Archive - but all have been remastered and the sound is generally quite good.
Link (Apple lossless):
ReplyDeletehttps://mega.nz/#!vUF0VSSZ!ceuM59j6jrx4BQp6Fm9O8sZiLImvAbk3B_2dZi61cE4
Thanks, Buster. But I'm a little confused about the timeline of Buddy with Wayne King. You say he first appeared with King in 1941, and soon started making records. Then you talk about a record they made together a year earlier in 1940. Typo, or am I really confused?
ReplyDeleteErnie - Good catch! He must have started making records even before the radio gig. I'll correct the text.
DeleteI've always enjoyed his singing and have encountered his dance band work only intermittently. Thanks so much for this collection, Buster. For a while there, his recording of 'Linda' became one of my most persistent earworms.
ReplyDeletePhillip - Ah, Linda - here's the filmed version:
Deletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ynyn3UQPlWU&list=RDYnyn3UQPlWU&index=1
thanks for assembling this collection, Buster!
ReplyDeleteI remember Hildegarde. She used to appear on television in the '50's and always, always sang "Darling, Je Vous Aime Beaucoup," a strong contender for the worst song, melody and lyrics, ever written. Even as a child, I hated it.
ReplyDeleteBad as it is, Jo Stafford recorded it with distinction, admittedly as her alter-ego, Darlene Edwards. The wobbly intonation at the word "good" in "Wish my French was good enough" is a classic comic demolition.
Hildegarde was also half of the worst Sinatra record ever, although Mitch Miller is the guilty party.
Charlot- I think Nat Cole recorded Darling etc. as well. As for a Frank, I don’t think he recorded with Hildegarde. You may be thinking of another mono-named personality, Dagmar, who did the remarkable Mama Will Bark with the Voice, who woofed through the song.
DeleteListening to "In the Quiet of an Autumn Night," I was reminded, once again, of what a great band and taste Freddy Martin had in the early 1930s. Have you ever heard a record of his called "Moon About Town"? It's really a classic. In any case, thank you and your blog followers for their devotion to singers like Clark. You might think of pursuing some of Eddy Howard's rarities--especially those recorded with Teddy Wilson. In any, and almost every, case, thank you.
ReplyDeleteHi David - I’ll have to look for that Marin record.
DeleteBoth singers entered my consciousness when I was barely old enough to understand -- 6 or 7?
ReplyDeleteMy elementary school (in Chicago) occasionally screened movies for the whole student population, and Melody Time (the Disney compilation film) was one. The "narrator" to link the segments was the voice of Buddy Clark, identified as such in the credits. and embodied as... a microphone with a face? something like that? Anyway, of course I had no idea who he was in real life.
And on one variety show after another, this lady would be introduced as "the incomparable Hildegarde," which I thought was very unusual construction for a name. She always seemed to sing the same song, too.
JAC - Yeah that was probably the notorious Darling Ye Vous Aime Beaucoup.
DeleteThe plane crash on Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles that killed Buddy Clark was on 1 October 1949, not 1948.
ReplyDeleteIt struck me that being on Columbia, which launched the LP in the summer of 1948, Clark was probably the first recording artist to die after having released an LP. And indeed, a look at Columbia's main CL 6000 series of 10" LPs shows that there were three by that point, including one with Dinah Shore.
Thanks Buster. You can never have too much Clark!
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