Showing posts with label Howard Keel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Howard Keel. Show all posts

05 February 2022

GM's 50th Anniversary Show, Plus Bonus GM Songs

As 1957 drew to a close, General Motors was looking forward to its 50th Anniversary. The previous year had not been its best. Despite offering cars that still are considered classics - particularly by volume leader Chevrolet - that marque had been dethroned in the 1957 sales race by Ford. GM was determined not to have that happen again.

And so for the traditional fall unveiling of the new models, GM went all out to ensure that its cars would be noticed in the market during its 50th year. They started by pumping up the size of their relatively svelte 1957 counterparts. The Chevy Bel Air, for example, gained nine inches in length on a stretched wheelbase, and acquired a bloated look accentuated by new double headlights up front. You could order the Chevy (or any other GM line) in a hideous "Anniversary Gold" that would guarantee they would see you coming down the road.

"Anniversary Gold"
Meanwhile the other GM models gained all manner of chrome gee-gaws on their similarly bulging exteriors - rockets on the Pontiac, glitzy quarter panels on the prestigious Cadillac, and multiple accent pieces on the Oldsmobile and Buick.


GM planned a two-hour television special to mark its 50th, and, unlike the products it had newly introduced, it took pains to make it as tasteful and distinguished as possible. The show had a long list of celebrities taking part, everyone from actor Ernest Borgnine to dancers Jacques d'Amboise and Bambi Lynn. There was comedy with Eddie Bracken and Alice Ghostley, drama with Don Ameche and Peg Lynch, and the obligatory moment of prestige with Helen Hayes intoning a poem written for the occasion by scriptwriter/lyricist Helen Deutsch.

New York Times ad, November 17, 1958
About half the program was given over to music, and much of that was captured on a commercial LP issued by RCA Victor, which is the first musical specimen presented in today's post. (Please see below for bonus items.)

The show began with a Sammy Fain number written for the occasion, "The Happiness Theme," befitting the special's theme, "The Pursuit of Happiness." 

The vocal numbers start with Pat Boone, who had made his name with bland covers of R&B hits and latterly had become a GM spokesperson. Based on his vocal style, I'd say Boone was a follower of Bing Crosby rather than Little Richard, and here he is assigned "Where Are You," a 1937 Jimmy McHugh-Harold Adamson piece that Frank Sinatra had revived a few months earlier for the title song of one of his best Capitol LPs. Boone is not at all a bad singer, some insecure intonation aside, and he does well here.

Steve Lawrence
Up-and-coming crooner Steve Lawrence had the next spot, at least on the LP, and works wonders with 1948's "Far Away Places," often heard on the variety shows of the time. It lent itself to exotic scenery.

Lawrence sticks around for a less-familiar novelty, "The Bullfrog Patrol," penned by none other than Jerome Kern with lyricist Anne Caldwell for the 1919 show, She's a Good Fellow. Joining in are musical comedy veteran Dan Dailey and newcomer Carol Burnett, who had recently become popular on television and in night spots.

Just as recherché was the next number, "The March of the Ill-Assorted Guards" from the 1956 Producer's Showcase television musical Jack and the Beanstalk. The March seems to have been assigned this outing because it was penned by scriptwriter Helen Deutsch in collaboration with Jay Livingston.

The proceedings turned strange for the following number. Not that the song "Mutual Admiration Society" was strange. It was at the time inescapable whenever two people who could carry a tune found themselves on the same stage. The song comes from 1955's Happy Hunting, the Ethel Merman starrer, where it was an attempt to replicate the success of the duet "You're Just in Love," featured in Merman's Call Me Madam of a few years earlier.

Claudia Crawford and Cyril Ritchard
No, the strangeness came from the setting, in which seven-year-old Claudia Crawford talks that old scene stealer, Cyril Ritchard, out of a suicide attempt. The melodrama ends with a traversal of "Mutual Admiration Society," and everyone goes home happy (as was the theme of the show).

Doretta Morrow
Doretta Morrow made the first of her three appearances with "Hi Lili, Hi Lo" (another Deutsch song). Morrow had an active career at the time, both on Broadway (Where's Charley?, The King and I and Kismet) and in Hollywood, (opposite Mario Lanza in Because You're Mine). Earlier in 1957 she had toured in Fanny.

1958 ad plugging RCA TVs and Dinah's Chevy show
No GM show would have been complete without an appearance or three by long-time Chevy mouthpiece Dinah Shore. She is exceptionally good in "They Say It's Wonderful," mostly keeping Dan Dailey on pitch. The always-welcome Howard Keel is characteristically sonorous in "Where or When," then Doretta Morrow returns for another Rodgers and Hart song, "My Romance."

These vocal items are punctuated on the LP by instrumentals from an orchestra led by Bernard Green - "It Might as Well Be Spring," "Out of Nowhere" and "Lover." On television, the latter two were backings for dance numbers from Jacques d'Amboise, Bambi Lynn and Chita Rivera. The orchestrations by Sidney Fine and Milton Weinstein are excellent.

Dan Dailey
Dinah has a solo spot with "These Foolish Things," an Eric Maschwitz-Jack Strachey piece from 1936, and includes the seldom-heard verse. Doretta Morrow and Howard Keel follow with a pleasing medley. The show's finale, "Taking a Chance on Love," was allotted to Dan and Dinah.

There are a quite a few excerpts from the show on YouTube, mainly provided by the son of producer Jess Oppenheimer. The program was broadcast in color, but the excerpts are from black-and-white kinescopes.
The Anniversary Show was well received. The New York Times' Jack Gould was ecstatic, calling it "artistic television of a high order." Perhaps it was, but it was hardly diverse, neither in participants nor material. And while the LP is pleasant to hear, it leaves out any hint of the unconventional or experimental.

The Fisher Body version of GM's 50th Anniversary graphic
Bonus: I Want a Merry Little Lavender Rocket 88 (GM Songs)

You don't need me to tell you that music was changing at the time, and other musical traditions besides the pop song and musical comedy were becoming increasingly popular. Although GM did not acknowledge these in its program, the practitioners of various alternative musical genres had been extolling the merits of GM cars for many years.


Indeed, the most famous song about a GM product was written even before there was a General Motors. That was Gus Edwards' "In My Merry Oldsmobile," from 1905. It also was the first of many tunes to equate the automobile with freedom and even sex! As young Johnny Steele tells his Lucille, "You can go as far as you like with me / In my merry Oldsmobile."

The hit version of the song was by the prolific Billy Murray on Victor. Murray recorded it in 1905, 1906 and 1909, under the same catalogue number. The pressing in this set could be any of those.

A second version of "In My Merry Oldsmobile" dates from about 1918 and was produced specifically for Oldsmobile, with unidentified artists. Olds would go on to use the song for promotional purposes for many years.

Next we have a 1924 record from Bennie Krueger, his alto sax and orchestra. "Ray and His Little Chevrolet" drolly tells the tale of how the protagonist has no trouble attracting girls despite his undersized equipment. The vocalists are studio regulars Billy Jones and Ernest Hare.

Switching genres, we move to 1930's "Riding in a Chevrolet Six" with Oscar Ford, one of the Georgia string band musicians who also included Gid Tanner and Riley Puckett. (Puckett plays on this record.) Oscar tells us that "If you're single and you wanna get a wife / Just buy you a Chevrolet Six." He also advises that "You can outrun the revenuers night and day / If you travel in a Chevrolet Six."

Ben Webster, with Buck Clayton at right
The enduringly popular Cadillacs were the subjects of a few jazz songs, including Dizzy Gillespie's "Swing Low, Sweet Cadillac." But today we turn to alto saxophonist Benny Carter and tenor saxophonist Ben Webster for the latter's terrific instrumental "Cadillac Slim" from 1946. The record was issued under Carter's name, but the bulk of the solo space is given over to Webster, although Carter and trumpeter Buck Clayton also appear. Interestingly, Webster's solos are entirely in the swing idiom, but the theme is clearly influenced by the then-new bop music.

Sonny Boy Williamson
Now we move over to the blues realm for "Pontiac Blues" by Sonny Boy Williamson. This is the musician sometimes called Sonny Boy Williamson II, whose real name was Aleck or Alex (or Rice) Miller. Miller had rebranded himself in the early 40s to capitalize on the fame of another harmonica player. By the time of this 1951 record, Sonny Boy Williamson I had died, so Miller had the name to himself.

I don't mean to take anything away from Miller. "Pontiac Blues," an early issue on the Trumpet label, is a entertaining opus featuring Sonny Boy's powerful harmonica. He tells us, "I found out what my baby likes. / That's a whole lotta lovin' / And that straight-eight Pontiac."

Bea (soon to be LaVern) Baker
From that same year comes a wonderful 78 on OKeh, the first to be issued on the label's new incarnation as Columbia's R&B outfit. It also was the first record by Maurice King and the Wolverines. King was previously music director for the International Sweethearts Of Rhythm. Singer Bea Baker (later to become very well known as LaVern Baker) insists that "I Want a Lavender Cadillac," assuring us that if she gets what she wants, "I'll be good to you."

The final song is "Rocket 88," a big hit for Jackie Brenston and His Delta Cats on Chess. The band was actually Ike Turner and His Kings of Rhythm (Brenston being one of the royal family), but Jackie sang and got the credit. The story is that producer Sam Phillips changed the attribution when he shopped the master to Chess records.

Jackie Brenston emotes while Ike Turner stares
Whoever gets credit, it's a deservedly famous record. Jackie assures us that "Takin' my Rocket on a long, hot run / Ooh, goin' out, oozin' and cruisin' and havin' fun!" (Rocket 88 was an Oldsmobile model, by the way.)

"Rocket 88" is sometimes claimed to be the first rock 'n' roll record, a pointless discussion if ever there was one. What is true is that it has musical antecedents, among them boogie-woogie pianist Pete Johnson's "Rocket 88 Boogie" and jump blues artist Jimmy Liggins' "Cadillac Boogie." The Brenston record is an amalgamation of both styles, accentuated by Ike Turner's terrific band and the novelty of a fuzztone guitar playing the bass figure. The fuzztone was supposedly caused by the an accidental tear in the amplifier speaker, which sounds like an apocryphal tale. Whatever, it's most effective.

There have been many more songs about GM cars, but these are a few of the ones that preceded the GM 50th Anniversary Show, and present a more diverse range of styles. The 50th Anniversary Show album comes from my collection. The 78s are from the endless reaches of the Internet Archive. The sound on the LP was shrill, which I have amended. The 78s can be a bit crackly, but even the Billy Murray record is more than listenable.

In its heyday, GM had five marques - in ascending order of prestige, Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick and Cadillac. Only Buick is unrepresented here; however, I have posted two different versions of the promotional song, "My Buick, My Love and I" on my singles blog, where I also detail a few other Buick songs.

If you are more inclined to the Ford lineup, this blog has a post devoted to a 1970 album by The Going Thing, a semi-folk-rock, Ford-sponsored group, and another to the dealer introduction show for the ill-fated Edsel, not one of Ford's better ideas. Nothing yet from Chrysler!


06 November 2019

'Kiss Me, Kate' with Keel, Grant and Jeffreys

My Sid Ramin post somehow led to a long discussion of this studio version of Kiss Me, Kate in the comments section, involving stalwart blog followers Charlot, JAC, Wortley Clutterbuck and Geoconno. Those who have heard this record, extolled it. Those who hadn't asked me for a transfer.

Here it is and it has many merits, starting with three fine singers, two of whom were experienced in the musical: Howard Keel played Fred Graham in the film version, and Anne Jeffreys succeeded Patricia Morison as Lilli Vanessi on Broadway. The excellent pop singer Gogi Grant had no such advantages, but she is not outclassed in their company.

Howard Keel in the filmic Kiss Me, Kate
The LP also benefits from the imaginative arrangements of the Henri René, whose pop orientation pervades the proceedings. Even with the presence of Keel and Jeffreys, this isn't really a quasi-cast album so much as it is an enjoyable ramble through Cole Porter's songs.

Because there are only three singers, parts in the ensemble songs are reassigned to those on hand. So, rather than the usual trio of gangsters, you will hear Grant, Keel and Jeffreys left to right in "Brush Up Your Shakespeare." The three also take on "Too Darn Hot" and "Another Op'nin', Another Show" in place of the minor characters who present the numbers on stage. In all of these, Keel scales back his voice, hardly sounding like the heroic bass-baritone we all love.
 
Anne Jeffreys as Lilli Vanessi
All three were apparently encouraged to be broad in their effects. This usually works well enough, such as in Grant's bravura version of "Always True to You in My Fashion." But her torchy reading of "Why Can't You Behave" is too externalized; the song benefits from the simpler approach of Lisa Kirk of the original cast. 

In another assignment switch, Grant turns up in "So in Love," which is a Lilli solo in the stage musical, so ordinarily would be assigned to Jeffreys. RCA probably decided it needed to make more use of Grant: the label was giving her a big build-up at the time.

Grant was with Victor for less than two years, but it was enough time for her to record three solo LPs, three potted musicals (this one, Show Boat, also with Keel and Jeffreys, and Gigi with Tony Martin), the soundtrack LP for The Helen Morgan Story, singles and at least one EP. The latter featured four songs from 1958's low-budget, teen exploitation film The Big Beat, which Grant appeared in. I've posted the EP along with her biggest pop hits ("The Wayward Wind" and "Suddenly There's a Valley") on my other blog.

Gogi Grant
The impetus behind this Kiss Me, Kate recording was probably two-fold: the dawning of the stereo era and a late 1958 televised production of the play with Alfred Drake and Patricia Morison from the original Broadway cast. After seeing the play on TV, anyone who wanted a recording could choose between the old mono Columbia of the Broadway cast and the new Living Stereo version on RCA Victor. Capitol stepped into the market in 1959 with a quasi-original cast recording in stereo featuring Drake, Morison, Lisa Kirk and Harold Lang.

At the time, it was not unusual for record companies to issue multiple versions of the same musical. This was particularly true with a new score: there were at least a dozen Gigi recordings: cover versions, budget LPs, instrumental renditions, jazz make-overs, and what not. When RCA put out this Kiss Me, Kate LP, it also issued a competing version on its budget label, Camden, and gave it a bigger promotional push!

Again, this is an good record presented in the ping-pong stereo that was then fashionable and is still enjoyable. The download includes favorable reviews from Billboard and HiFi-Stereo Review.

13 August 2008

Pagan Love Song


The latest in our survey of 10-inch LPs from Hollywood films is the Esther Williams-Howard Keel romance, Pagan Love Song. This one has a score mostly by the great Harry Warren - with the exception of the title song, which is by Nacio Herb Brown. Producer Arthur Freed wrote the lyrics

IMDb claims that Betty Wand dubbed some of Williams' singing - not that her singing is all that good, IMHO. I was surprised that it was a vocal double.

The orchestrations are by Conrad Salinger, a particular favorite of many people, including me.

The file includes three bonuses - deleted versions of two songs on the LP, which I would assume are reprises, and a Howard Keel solo that doesn't appear in the film. The former are from DVD sources; the latter is an outtake on one of the CUT LPs.

NEW LINK

20 July 2008

Rose Marie


This is Hollywood's version of the Friml/Stothart/Harbach/Hammerstein operetta Rose Marie, produced 30 years from its 1924 debut. As was the usual practice, the movie producers bought a famous property and threw out a good chunk of the score. Friml was still around, so they got him to write some new tunes and Paul Francis Webster to give them lyrics. And for good measure music director George Stoll wrote a piece for Bert Lahr.

Bert Lahr in an operetta? Yes, and Marjorie Main too. Fernando Lamas and Ann Blyth are OK, but the main attraction here is Howard Keel as Mike the Mountie. I haven't seen this movie so I can't tell you who the coochie dancer is on the cover, but I suspect she is the maiden who loves Mike - or maybe it is Lamas' trapper character. I don't think it is Bert Lahr.

As far as I can tell, this record has been out of print for a long time. This is the original 10-inch album, with the exception of Ann Blyth's tunes, which had sustained groove damage on the high notes. I dubbed them from a 12-inch record with botched remastered sound, which I have tried to address.