Here's one of those movies from the 40s that used classical music (or classical music by-products, anyway) in the service of melodrama.
Like our last venture into Golden Age Hollywood, this was a Joan Crawford vehicle. Fresh from her Mildred Pierce triumph, she was paired this time with smoldering prole John Garfield. I like the IMDB summary: "A classical musician from the slums is sidetracked by his love for a wealthy, neurotic socialite."
Well, you can probably imagine what happens with that plot (as IMDB says, "Tragedy ensues"). But you may find it hard to imagine what happens in the score when Franz Waxman decides that Wagner's Tristan and Isolde really needs the assistance of Isaac Stern and Oscar Levant in solo roles. What ensues is not exactly tragic, but it's not exactly Wagner either. Waxman, Stern, and Levant were all wonderful musicians, but this was not a good idea.
Stern has better luck with Waxman's arrangements of Dvorak's Humoresque and Rimsky-Korsakov's Flight of the Bumble-Bee. Waxman also does an arrangement of Sarasate's arrangement of themes from Bizet's Carmen (if that makes sense). For some reason, he left Sarasate's Zigeunerweisen alone.
This record must have been aimed at the market for fiddlers (Stern was then an up-and-comer) because it has a nice drawing of the violinist rather than a photo of Garfield or Crawford on the cover. Thank goodness the result looks nothing like the gaudy movie poster.
Sylvia Syms' 1956 Decca Singles
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*Cash Box *April 28, 1956The vocalist Sylvia Syms was, until 1956, a niche
attraction. She had issued LPs on Atlantic and the obscure Version label,
and t...
2 weeks ago