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Jerome Kern by Bettina Steinke (National Portrait Gallery) |
For at least the first 60 years of the last century, it was not unusual for classical vocalists to sing popular songs. Those days, singers could appear at the Met, in film, operetta and on the radio performing a variety of repertoire.
Record companies were keen to exploit the fame their artists had developed through radio or film, so it became common for these singers to adopt songs that suited their styles and had popular appeal. What better source than the rich catalogue of the beloved songwriter Jerome Kern, who wrote in a style that was close to the operettas that most of these singers had appeared in.Today's post presents 13 of those crossover classical-popular vocalists in the Kern repertoire, via recordings dating from 1919 to 1951. We start with an album by mezzo Risë Stevens, and continue with singles from John McCormack, Lawrence Tibbett, Lily Pons, Richard Tauber, Grace Moore, Eleanor Steber, Gladys Swarthout, Jeanette MacDonald, Lauritz Melchior, Dorothy Kirsten and William Warfield. Finally, we have a reupload of an album by Irene Dunne, who appeared in several Kern films.
This is a companion to my recent post of the Show Boat Scenario for Orchestra from the Cleveland Orchestra and Artur Rodziński.
Risë Stevens in Songs of Jerome Kern
When her Jerome Kern album was recorded in 1945, Risë Stevens had achieved so much notoriety than Hollywood had cast her as an opera singer in Bing Crosby's 1944 film Going My Way. She had already been at the Met for six years by that time, and was to continue throughout the next few decades.The Kern songs formed the first album she would make with the Shulman brothers - Alan providing the arrangements and Sylvan conducting them. The Shulmans were notable crossover artists themselves - when they were not performing in the NBC Symphony, they formed one half of the Stuyvesant String Quartet and were the motive force behind the jazz group the New Friends of Rhythm. Alan wrote for both classical and pop ensembles.
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The New Friends of Rhythm: Alan Shulman is the first violin, Sylvan the cellist |
For her Kern album, Stevens selected prime examples of the composer's artistry; only "Don't Ever Leave Me" might not be considered among his greatest hits. It is, however, one of his best songs and is especially well done here. Overall, I find the performances pleasing, although critics of the time took issue with both the singer and the accompaniments. The New York Times insisted that Stevens was "an operatic singer and not a crooner." And the formidable Max de Schauensee in The New Records declared that he had never heard such "elaborately saccharine arrangements." (He was not paying attention to the pop music of the time - swooning romanticism was the vogue.) Well, for what it is worth, I enjoy the singer and her accomplices a great deal. It helps to have songs the quality of Kern's compositions.
Stevens was popular with the advertisers as well as the record buyers. Below, she touts GE radio-phonographs: the better to hear her with.
Please forgive some surface noise on a few cuts.
Kern Songs by Classical Vocalists
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John McCormack |
The earliest recording in the group is also perhaps the least well-known song. "The First Rose of Summer" comes from the 1919 show She's a Good Fellow, with book and lyrics by Anne Caldwell. John McCormack (1884-1945) made his record the same year, with his usual exceptional diction, control and involvement. The acoustic recording is one of the best of its kind. More McCormack can be found in these earlier blog collections.
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Lawrence Tibbett |
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Richard Tauber |
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Gladys Swarthout |
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Grace Moore |
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Jeanette MacDonald RCA promo |
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Eleanor Steber |
At long last we return to Music in the Air and a rendition of "The Song Is You" by the vocally and physically imposing Lauritz Melchior (1890-1973). In 1947, the Danish titan had left Wagner behind for a second career in Hollywood as a singing character actor. His studio, M-G-M, kept him busy recording as well, pairing him with Georgie Stoll for this production. Melchior also occupied his time endorsing products, including at least two brews, Pabst Blue Ribbon and Rheingold (below). I like to think he switched to the latter because of his Wagnerian background, but it probably had more to do with free beer. You can hear more from Melchior in these earlier posts.
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Dorothy Kirsten |
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William Warfield in Show Boat |
I have saved the best for last. To me, one the greatest recordings of all time is William Warfield's performance of "Ol' Man River" in the 1951 film version of Show Boat. The vocal quality, emotional involvement, control, and sheer beauty of his singing are overwhelming. His tempo is slow but the concentration and tension never slacken. I've featured all his early Columbia recordings here; this single came out on M-G-M. Kern wrote the song for Paul Robeson - and his version appeared on the blog many years ago, but it was not finer than this.
Performances of Show Boat and its songs have always been sensitive, increasingly so as time goes on. Please see this 2018 Boston Globe article for an illuminating discussion of some of the issues faced by performers and their views of the subject.
Reup: Irene Dunne in Songs by Jerome Kern
Irene Dunne's 1941 album of Kern songs may not have been the most popular item I've ever posted here, but it surely is among my favorites. I have remastered my old transfer in honor of this Kern celebration; it is available here.
Unlike the artists mentioned above, Dunne never appeared in opera or operetta. She had wanted to become an opera singer when young, but was told her voice was too small. She did well, however, as a singing lead in films, then achieved her greatest successes in screwball comedies, where she excelled. She was an endearing performer.
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Melchior touted beer; Dunne stuck to cola |
Links (Apple lossless):
ReplyDeleteRisë Stevens in Songs of Jerome Kern
https://mega.nz/file/rF0AWQZC#JcFDXXKX8-q05X2DQgBDXPjlEfHsBnZeOgr0FRKIk2A
Kern Songs by Classical Vocalists
https://mega.nz/file/aYsGHKZY#ReJcaz4jgMNxJbaixYpGZb2pendyb-w47MQ5M2kea1k
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteIt is my odd fate to have heard multiple strange versions of "Old Man River."
ReplyDeleteThere is Stan Freberg's "Elderly Man River," of course, but that was an intentional goof and quite funny.
Of the rest, two stand out.
Way back when in the early days of television, the Amateur Hour was still on the air, albeit without Major Bowes and Ted Mack was the emcee. There were even local feeder shows leading up to the big national show. One of those came out of Wheeling, West Virginia and we were just within the viewing zone.
My parents used to watch this show out of a sense of wonder at the sheer lack of talent in the Wheeling-Steubenville area. Very often there was a guy who played "The Flight of the Bumblebee" on a bicycle pipe, a stately lady in an ancient ball gown declaiming "Excelsior," musical saw virtuosi, guys who could almost lip-sync "Peggy Sue." That kind of thing.
Over sixty-plus years, most of this has passed into the blessed oblivion of memory but one has stuck with me all these years.
A very small and very serious (white) kid walked up to the mike and sang "Old Man River" in his childish soprano voice. And he was dead serious. I don't think that Emma Kirkby ever sang that particular song but I doubt she could have given the intensity that this boy delivered. You could almost see him toting a very small barge or lifting a tiny bale. You have to wonder who his A&R consultant was.
Years and years later, I was listening via shortwave to a German variety show and on came a guy to sing The Song.
I don't remember his name but he had a sonorous bass voice, ideal for the material, especially compared with soprano kid.
But. He had a thick, very thick, German accent, so the title came out as Olt Mawn Reefer. This accent quickly turned some of Hammerstein's lyrics backwards:
He ton't blant daters, he ton't blant gotten,
Und dose who blant them are zoon vor cotten....
usw
The climax of the song was an unintentional masterpiece:
You und me, ve shrev und sdrain,
Potties all achink und rawked mit bane.
Dote dot parge. Leeft dot pail.
Get a leetle trunk,
Und you lant in Yale.
I am not making this up.
Charlot - Congratulations on posting the single funniest comment I have received in the nearly 13 years of curating this blog. I thought the lady performing "Excelsior!" was hysterical, but then I read about the German singing "Ol' Man River" and landing in Yale.(I particularly liked the throw-away "usw" joke.)
DeleteDespite my best (not very good) efforts there are still some typos.
DeleteI meant "bicycle pump" of course.
Also is should be "You und me, ve shvet und sdrain."
There are probably a few more I haven't noticed yet. At least I didn't type "bicycle pimp."
Very grateful for the new batch of Kernariana!
ReplyDeleteAnd what a collection of vocalists!
You've outdone yourself, Buster!!!!
gpdlt2000 - Thanks!
DeleteThanks, Buster. I also appreciate the vintage product endorsements. I wish people would pay me to endorse something, but in this day and age, I'd have to be a Youtube star before anyone would pay me...
ReplyDeleteErnie - Yeah, we need to get off these outdated platforms and on to something new. I believe I may be best suited to TikTok.
DeleteNever forget that the Golden Age of American Popular Music invited crossover. The realms of opera, Broadway, cabaret and nightclub were adjacent. Just listen to how operatic some of the singers Duke Ellington used throughout his life. How I miss the proximity of genres to which that age was so congenial. Kern came out of operetta. What you have done here reminds us of the central fact of diversity: genres rub shoulders. Thanks. This was a brilliant post.
ReplyDeleteThanks, David, and good point about Ellington.
DeleteExcellent point, David Federman. "Popular" and "classical" singing were not miles apart then, as they are now. The very term crossover was unknown then -- a good operatic singer wasn't entering alien territory when singing a Top 40 song (which probably originated as a show tune).
DeleteTo my mind, Dorothy Kirsten was the most convincing of all of them with this material. She just had an easy rightness with it.
JAC - I like Kirsten as well. I think all of the artists here are fine, although I don't care for Pons (while noting that the songs were written for her) and think that Melchior is mainly a curiosity.
DeleteBuster, the mention of Lily Pons prompts me to ask if you have a record that I would love to hear again, not having heard it in years. It's DIE FLEDERMAUS, featuring Pons and sung in English. Wish I could recall the label but I think the English lyrics were written by Garson Kanin. At any rate, many thanks for all your terrific posts.
DeleteHi Kevin - I have seen the Odyssey edition of that set, but not the original Columbia. Sorry, but I don't have either one. The book for that version was by Kanin and the lyrics by Howard Dietz. Ormandy conducted.
DeleteThat Columbia set was something of a cause celèbre in its day.
DeleteThe conductor was supposed to be Fritz Reiner but he jumped ship from Columbia to RCA back in the day when this meant something.
So Bing needed somebody PDQ and Ormandy was the nearest Hungarian maestro available.
Reiner recorded a disk of competing excerpts for RCA.
As near as I can recall, Reiner was the better conductor and had the better cast. But it was in mono and is long out-of-print.
In either case, I am not a big fan of Fleidermaus in English. The book is weak enough in German and just seems sillier and more drawn-out in translation. Also, by the time the Columbia set emerged, Lily Pons's battle with singing flat was long lost.
Columbia's set came out just in time to lose to Clemens Krauss's set on Decca/London.
My favorite version is the video of Carlos Kleiber in Munich.
The DGG audio recording is hopelessly ruined by Ivan Rebroff. How such a perfectionist as Kleiber let that one slip through is something I will never understand.
Charlot - Thanks, I wondered why Ormandy was the choice for that recording.
DeleteVery interesting, Charlot. Thanks for the info.
DeleteThank you!
ReplyDeleteThe Rise Stevens album of Kern songs is lovely. I had certainly heard of her over the years but don't think I ever heard her singing before. I will be exploring your other Stevens posts next, Buster. Thanks so much!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, and please enjoy!
DeleteAlways interesting to hear how classical singers appropriate lighter repertoire and these Kern immortal songs . Am a big fan of Rise Stevens (so musician, wonderful voice and excellent diction)...Thanks a lot Buster for these gems !! Jean
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jean - I love Stevens myself!
ReplyDeleteA thousand thanks for this superb post, which I know will provide many hours of enjoyment, and not just to me! :-)
ReplyDeleteCounterleben - I certainly hope it does. Thanks for your message!
DeleteThank you, Buster.
ReplyDeleteRich
thanks Buster. love Kern
ReplyDelete