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Herbert Spencer and Earle Hagen |
That item presented the group's first LP, made for the "X" label in 1955. Today we'll follow with the balance of Spencer-Hagen's output for that subsidiary of RCA Victor, except for a few songs that I couldn't locate. The collection includes their second LP, Recipes for Romance, along with an LP they shared with fellow arranger Richard Maltby, and one single.
Spencer and Hagen, who were masters of their craft, both had long careers in film and later television. They worked together throughout the 1950s. Spencer was mostly known as an orchestral arranger, Hagen as a composer. The latter's greatest fame was yet to come, via theme songs for such television programs as the Andy Griffith and Dick Van Dyke shows.
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Andy Griffith and Earle Hagen |
Spencer-Hagen's second LP, Recipes for Romance, was apparently intended to capture the swinging bachelor market. It supplied both the romantic mood music, and on the back cover recipies for 12 cocktails. Putting the record on the turntable and then suavely checking the back cover for drink ingredients was apparently meant to be the royal road to romance. (Despite all the mixed drink recipies, the cover suggests wine instead, which might have been less clumsy.)
The back cover scan is in the download for those of you who might want to mix up such fare as a "Cuba Libre." The notes describe the music as follows: "To the exotic rhythm, a full measure of sensuous melody, and pour over warm starlit night." (Seems to be missing a verb, likely "add.")
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The young Herbert Spencer |
Spencer and Hagen shared composing credit for all these numbers, although its tempting to speculate the Hagen did most of the themes and Spencer most of the orchestrations. Whoever did what, this is high quality light music, written primarily for strings, harp and woodwind, with a few brass players as featured soloists. The first number, "Pink Lady," is a gorgeous pastoral melody, for example.
"Silver Fizz" is a contrasting item, the kind of thing that would underscore a breathless travelogue montage. It adds french horns to the mix. And, as you might have guessed, "Cuba Libre" has a Latin beat, with a trombone carrying the first theme.
So it goes throughout this strikingly well-recorded LP, which I've mastered in ambient stereo.
LINK to Recipes for Romance
"Angel Bells" / "Black Sapphire" Single
Two other Spencer-Hagen compositions appeared on a 1954 single - "Angel Bells and "Black Sapphire." These are compatible with the numbers on Recipies for Romance, so I've included them as bonuses items in that LP's file linked above.Musical Highlights from Damn Yankees / Love Themes from the Cinema
The second album, Musical Highlights from Damn Yankees / Love Themes from the Cinema, is actually the LP version of separate EPs issued by Richard Maltby and by Spencer-Hagen.
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EP covers |
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Richard Maltby |
Great
ReplyDeleteThanks for Love Themes from the Cinema!
ReplyDeleteI'd forgotten the 2018 post, where in the comments you said you would put that on on your list for the future. Thanks Buster!
Thanks, folks! Doug - In my case, sometimes the future never comes, but this seems to be an exception.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Buster! I was looking the other day for some examples of albums filled with songs named for drinks, and here you go and present a good one I didn't know about. I had Brazilian Cocktails by Leo Parachi and Cugi's Cocktails by, err, Cugi, of course. I'm sure there are many, many more. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ernie - don't try them all at once.
DeleteWhat great and beautiful stuff, Buster! As an avid film and tv score fan and collector, I've always been surprised at the relative scarcity of Mr. Hagen's stuff on record. And as a fan of John Williams since I started recording his scores for "Jane Eyre" and the Irwin Allen shows off the tv speaker as a kid in the very early 70's, the name "Herbert Spencer" is indeed a hallowed one! The older I get, the more these type of records hit the spot. Thank you so very much.
ReplyDeleteThanks, mike - glad you like it. This stuff is hardly the fashion, but it's great!
Delete