
Today I am doing the same for Miller's second and final film, Orchestra Wives, an uneasy amalgam of musical and melodrama, with a score just as glorious as the first Miller film. And again, the recordings have been cobbled together from several sources.
Meanwhile I've revamped and added to the Sun Valley Serenade post, which you can find here. The music from both films is available in sterling ambient stereo.
The primary sources for both films are the RCA Victor albums that came out in 1954, timed to the release of Hollywood's Glenn Miller Story, and the 20th Century Fox LPs that were issued about five years later. Each set contains materials that can't be found on the other. For this go-round, I've added an alternate take for each film, derived from a long-ago bootleg.
Here are the details of the Orchestra Wives recordings. This second Miller film comes from 1942, just a year after Sun Valley Serenade. The bandleader was to enter the Army soon after its completion. Two years later his plane disappeared over the English Channel.
The Orchestra Wives score opens with a brief version of Miller's theme, his own composition "Moonlight Serenade," heard over the titles. This is an alternate version that adds a swirling harp opening.
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Tex Beneke, Marion Hutton, Ray Eberle and the Modernaires tighten their belts |
We'll have to roll up our sleeves,
Tighten our belts,
But through the dark we'll see
The lady with the liberty light for
People like you and you and you,
And people like me,
People like you and me!
As with many Miller performances, what makes the song work so well is the brilliant arrangement (by Jerry Gray or George Williams) and the meticulous execution by the band and the vocalists - Marion Hutton, Ray Eberle, Tex Beneke and the Modernaires. The song itself is a highly professional effort by the stellar Hollywood team of composer Harry Warren and lyricist Mack Gordon. They also wrote most of the Sun Valley Serenade songs.
The next number is an instrumental, "Boom Shot," which the band plays at a dance in Iowa and which kicks off the plot. (Per a blog post by Miller expert Dave Weiner, the title relates to the overhead camera technique used during the sequence.) This is a Billy May original with a George Williams arrangement.
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Pat Friday |
"At Last" was actually written for (and cut from) Sun Valley Serenade (available here), where Friday also dubbed for Lynn Bari. Her partner that time was male lead John Payne, who sang for himself but was no match for Eberle. The Orchestra Wives version is more romantic; it also has a slightly revised melody line.
"American Patrol" is a joyous swing march, an arrangement by Jerry Gray of F.W. Meacham's "American Patrol March" of 1885. As with all these songs, the playing is flawless.
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Moe Purtill |
"Serenade in Blue" is one of the Miller band's best known songs. Written for the film by Warren and Gordon, it receives an almost impossibly romantic treatment by Billy May and Bill Finegan, vocalists Pat Friday and Ray Eberle, the Modernaires, cornetist Bobby Hackett and tenor saxophonist Tex Beneke. This version from the RCA release is much longer than what is heard in the film; notably it has a moody instrumental opening that is a marked contrast with the balance of the song.
Following this swooning number is the jaunty specialty (also by Warren and Gordon) "(I've Got a Gal in) Kalamazoo." It was an entirely successful attempt to replicate the popularity of Sun Valley Serenade's "Chattanooga Choo-Choo." Once again, Beneke is on the move to see a girl in another town, and again he is interrogated by the Modernaires in the process. Instead of "Hi there, Tex, what you say?" we get "Hi there, Tex, how's your new romance?" The performance is polished and the Jerry Gray arrangement is most effective.
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The amazing Nicholas Brothers |
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Marion Hutton |
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Glenn Miller and Chummy MacGregor |
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George Montgomery, Cesar Romero, Tex Beneke, Marion Hutton, Lynn Bari |
Link (ambient stereo, Apple lossless format):
ReplyDeletehttps://mega.nz/file/fAs30SQb#0jCefVSe9r8G2IvSXsIFQD2Y-u-HejyVQExZ9RuadkE
Great!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Buster, nice collection. But is the movie any good? :) And that's _the_ Jackie Gleason in the group photo? Sure looks like him.
ReplyDeleteThanks Buster!
ReplyDeleteThanks, everyone!
ReplyDeleteErnie - Yes it is the "Great One," in one of his first films. I don't really care for the film, because a lot of it has to do with the interplay of wide-eyed Ann Rutherford and the stereotypically bitchy "orchestra wives" and viperish singer Lynn Bari.
Many thanks for this share.
ReplyDeleteCheers.
Hi Douglas - My pleasure!
DeleteWonderful post! Such great music from that movie.
ReplyDeleteI really like the extended soundtrack versions of “Kalamazoo” and “At Last” especially. They make the commercial 78 versions on Victor seem incomplete, as the arrangements are so heavily edited to fit on the 10 inches.
I can’t even listen to the 78 version of “Kalamazoo” anymore as I keep waiting to hear chunks of the soundtrack arrangement that aren’t there!
I think “At Last” 78 is OK, but I really miss Johnny Best’s trumpet solos and I think Ray Eberle sounds better on the soundtrack version. I feel he’s at his best on the “Orchestra Wives” soundtrack as a whole.
The curious thing to me is that although the 78 version of “At Last” is much shorter, it does include the part that Glenn plays with the trombone section which is in the movie but is usually cut from commercial releases of the soundtrack recordings. Hard to figure!
As for “Orchestra Wives” as a movie, I wouldn’t say it’s great by any means, but I really enjoy the footage of the band playing and I like seeing Glenn and the boys interacting with the “real” actors, as contrived as those interactions may be!
And the Nicholas Brothers! Astonishing is right!
Thanks Johnny - I an with you on all these points. It's not clear why the trombone chorus is cut; I'm not sure it doesn't appear on one or the other soundtrack release, but I haven't such a copy, if so. I do believe that Eberle never sounded better. He is exceptional. And I like the parts of the movie with the band!
DeleteFavorite cut from this is "People Like You and Me." Each of the vocalists takes a turn singing the number, plus it is one of those seldom-remembered gems from the World War II era, with the second verse really capturing the spirit of patriotism that was so prevalent during that tumultuous time period.
ReplyDeletemusicman - Love that song; actually I love the whole set! (Well, maybe not "You Say the Sweetest Things, Baby.")
DeleteAlso like "Boom Shot"
Delete