As before, these are pop versions of the operettas, such as audiences might have heard from MacRae's weekly Railroad Hour on radio. Most of the song selections are quite brief, allowing more of the numbers to be included on each side of a 12-inch LP (or separately on 10-inch albums).
My transfer comes from a 12-inch disc, although I believe I have at least Naughty Marietta in yet another format - a double EP.
This post also includes a bonus - a 10-inch LP of selections from Naughty Marietta and Herbert's 1905 operetta Mlle. Modiste, from the RCA "Show Time" Series of the early 1950s, featuring Doretta Morrow.
The Red Mill
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Still from the 1906 production |
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The photo of Norman and MacRae that inspired the cover art |
The arranger and conductor for The Red Mill was Carmen Dragon, making his only appearance in this series. He was a Capitol mainstay for many years - as was George Greeley, who filled the same roles for Naughty Marietta. Neither use Herbert's own charts, even though the composer was famed for his orchestrations. For those, you can look to several more modern recordings.
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Carmen Dragon and George Greeley |
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From the 1906 production |
Naughty Marietta
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Victor Herbert |
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Marguerite Piazza and Katherine Hilgenberg |
Capitol decided to cast the title role with Marguerite Piazza, a talented singer with the required temperament but who also had a tendency to be squally and whose diction was not the clearest. She does match well with MacRae, however. Los Angeles contralto Katherine Hilgenberg joined the cast for "'Neath the Southern Moon," a good performance.
No matter who sings, Herbert's melodic profusion wins out. This particular work include both my own favorite Herbert melody ("I'm Falling in Love with Someone") and his most parodied piece ("Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life"). Capitol saved them both for the grand close of this quick and pleasant spin through Herbert's most enduring legacy. It and its disc mate are very well recorded, with the impact enhanced by ambient stereo.
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Film still with Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald |
Unlike The Red Mill, I found no stills from the first production of Naughty Marietta, so we'll have to make do with a publicity photo from the famous 1935 film, with Jeanette MacDonald as Marietta and Nelson Eddy as the hero, Captain Richard Warrington.
Bonus - Songs from Mlle. Modiste and Naughty Marietta
These materials (and all the "Show Time" Series entries) have appeared on the blog once before, but this is a new ambient stereo mastering based on the Internet Archive's 10-inch LP, rather than the EPs I presented years ago.
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Felix Knight and Doretta Morrow |
The leading lights of these Herbert operettas were Doretta Morrow and Felix Knight, both veterans of stage and film productions. Morrow introduced many famous songs as an original cast member of Where's Charley ("My Darling, My Darling"), The King and I ("I Have Dreamed" and "We Kiss in Shadow") and Kismet ("Baubles, Bangles and Beads"). Knight was a regular in the operetta and musical recordings of this era, having taken part in productions of The Merry Widow, The Desert Song, The Red Mill, Can-Can, Kiss Me Kate and others.
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Edward Roecker |
The "Show Time" presentations were even more abbreviated than the Capitol series - four songs from each of the two shows on a 10-inch LP. But the selections here are appropriate, and the performances and sound are excellent. Morrow in particular is an exciting performer. RCA sensibly leads Mlle. Modiste with her gorgeous performance of "Kiss Me Again," one of Herbert's best songs.
Links (ambient stereo, Apple lossless format):
ReplyDeleteGordon MacRae - Red Mill, Naughty Marietta
https://mega.nz/file/PEFDlaSL#zGh0cqHqW4VZzF-g3RDqr2KLx6B9vJYG_X8jfRgM--0
RCA "Show Time" Series - Mlle. Modiste, Naughty Marietta
https://mega.nz/file/SIVgBD4a#Dk_9Ri6xt2Zxv_XeP98dRBSFgbiq2zZ9xkK9K_OH4CQ
Great
ReplyDeleteFantastic Buster. Thanks so much
ReplyDeleteThank you, folks!
ReplyDeleteHello Buster - Been waiting to download this but cannot get to mega
ReplyDeleteHi Jeff - The links seem to work. Make sure you get only the two lines starting with "https:"
DeleteLet me know if it doesn't work and I'll find an alternative site.
Thanks Buster - I should have started at "Https" as you said - Thanks for uploading the album
DeleteAs always, thank you for the amazing shares. I wonderng if you have MacRae and Kirsten singing deKoven's Robin Hood. I have a cassette transfer but the speed is completely wrong.
ReplyDeleteHi Eric - Thanks for your note! I've never seen that piece; is it an aircheck? If you have a digital file, I can probably correct the speed/pitch.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteEric - Yes, it was about a full step sharp, which you don't often see except in airchecks. I assume this is from the Railroad Hour. I haven't listened to the whole thing yet, but the parts I auditioned sound good. I corrected the speed and made some other adjustments. Kept it in flac for you. Let me know what you think.
Deletehttps://mega.nz/file/nYVTiTZb#2tYxpUxKGYQFPyJ1t3sTJyJoQCyDmMO7I8K4VWVufYg
It is a great improvement, to be understated. Thank you for the fixes. I hope that you enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Eric - it's quite good!
DeleteThanks so much Buster. Not to downplay Herbert's many achievements, but I wonder if his greatest gift to posterity is Dvorak's cello concerto. Dvorak was in the audience when Herbert was soloist in the premiere of his own Cello Concerto No. 2, and was so impressed with the work that he decided to write a cello concerto of his own. The rest, as they say, is history...
ReplyDeletePhillip - Good point! I looked quickly to see if the two works had been recorded on the same disc, and it has been done a few times. I'm not sure that I have one, although I am sure I have at least one recording of the Herbert work.
DeleteThanks, Buster! Good to complete the set.
ReplyDelete