Guild’s inventive programming embraces a wide range of options, 
                  from Transcription series, to multi-volume discs on diverse 
                  themes. This is the second in its catch-all A-Z series in which 
                  titles are presented alphabetically. In this volume we start 
                  with At the Theatre and end with Zip Along. The 
                  only cheat comes via the tricky to place ‘X’ – so we get Exotica 
                  instead, with an emphasis on the second letter. 
                  
                  As usual there’s a cavalcade of bands and composers, and conductors. 
                  The Regent Classic Orchestra, conductorless, gets things off 
                  to a fine, confident Eric Coates-like start. It’s soon followed 
                  by the snappy Curtain Time played, with no conductor 
                  credit once again, by the New World Theatre Orchestra in 1957. 
                  By this time arrangements could sprawl just a bit more then 
                  in the days of 2:35 or whatever – this one almost touches five 
                  minutes in length and is the longest cut in the programme. Naturally 
                  the genre is susceptible to modish batteries of percussion and 
                  rhythms, and this is fate not wholly escaped by Percy Faith 
                  on Edelma with the near-ubiquitous Mitch Miller doing 
                  his thing on oboe. 
                  
                  There’s a refugee from Guild’s Music While You Work series 
                  in the shape of the tune Fairy Tiptoe played by Harry 
                  Davidson and his orchestra in 1946. The war being over, productivity 
                  wasn’t quite so dependent on strict up-tempo Fairies – though 
                  the ubiquitous Fairy in the Light Music genre might make an 
                  interesting trope for the inquisitive and musical post-graduate. 
                  
                  
                  Gazelle, a lovely tune by Montague Ewing, is charmingly 
                  light on its feet courtesy of the New Century Orchestra under 
                  its exacting maestro Sidney Torch(insky). This ingenious opus 
                  courts the Graingeresque. Unlike, however, the gargantuan arrangement 
                  of Ketèlbey’s In A Monastery Garden from the New Century 
                  Orchestra under the symphonically-inclined Stanford Robinson, 
                  who manages to make the thing sound positively Tchaikovskian. 
                  There’s another trope; the influence of Russian orchestral music 
                  on British Light Music composers. 
                  
                  If you want newsreel zip turn to Jack Beaver’s Kings of Sport 
                  in Robert Farnon’s top-notch recording for Chappell of 1947. 
                  And if you want a confluence of elite talents try the next track, 
                  Let Us Live For Tonight, wherein Adrian Bernard’s tune 
                  is arranged by Sidney Torch and the band is conducted by Reg 
                  Leopold, erstwhile maestro fiddler. One conductor of whom the 
                  notes are silent is Ernest Maxin who directs his own orchestra 
                  in No Orchids for My Lady for Top Rank LP in 1960. Surely 
                  this is the Ernest Maxin associated with Kathy Kirby, and who 
                  directed and choreographed Morecambe and Wise in some of their 
                  greatest TV shows? 
                  
                  There’s a mild dash of exotica courtesy of a Singapore jaunt 
                  from Monty Kelly, and a well characterised piece from Charles 
                  Williams, as ever on top form for Columbia in 1952. Charles 
                  Brull directs The Harmonic Orchestra in a Spoliansky tune. Listen 
                  out for Bill McGuffie’s memorable The Unstoppable Man, 
                  his film theme of 1960. Then we go right back to Jack Hylton’s 
                  somewhat creaky performance of Vienna City of My Dreams 
                  in 1936. 
                  
                  So, from A-Z there’s much fun to be had from this latest compilation. 
                  
                  
                  Jonathan Woolf 
                    
                
Track-listing
                At the Theatre (Stuart) [2:15] 
                  Regent Classic Orchestra 
                  Bristol Cream (Leutwiller) [2:42] 
                  The Symphonia Orchestra/Curt Andersen 
                  Curtain Time (Johnson) [4:57] 
                  New World Theatre Orchestra 
                  Downland (Milner) [2:56] 
                  L’Orchestre de Concert/Paul O’Henry 
                  Edelma (Tucci) [2:40] 
                  Percy Faith and his orchestra 
                  Fairy Tiptoe (Fredericks) [2:45] 
                  Harry Davidson and his orchestra 
                  Gazelle (Ewing) [2:20] 
                  New Century Orchestra/Sidney Torch 
                  Huckle Buckle (Farnon) [2:59] 
                  Leslie Jones and his orchestra 
                  In A Monastery Garden (Ketèlbey) [4:54] 
                  New Symphony Orchestra/Stanford Robinson 
                  Jack O’Lantern (Feux Follets) (Roger) [1:57] 
                  Roger Roger and his orchestra 
                  Kings of Sport (Beaver) [2:48] 
                  Queen’s Hall Light Orchestra/Robert Farnon 
                  Let Us Live For Tonight (Bernard) [4:04] 
                  New Concert Orchestra/Reg Leopold 
                  Miss Melanie (Binge) [2:23] 
                  Stuttgart Radio Orchestra/Kurt Rehfeld 
                  No Orchids for My Lady (Stranks) [2:34] 
                  Ernest Maxin and his orchestra 
                  On A Little Street In Singapore (DeRose) [3:18] 
                  Monty Kelly and his orchestra 
                  Prairie Schooner (Goodwin) [2:37] 
                  Cyril Stapleton and his orchestra 
                  A Quiet Stroll (Williams) [2:52] 
                  Charles Williams and his orchestra 
                  Romantic Illusion (Spoliansky) [2:56] 
                  The Harmonic Orchestra/I Karr 
                  Stereophonic March (Rose) [2:56] 
                  David Rose and his orchestra 
                  Taxi (Campbell) [2:35] 
                  Danish State Radio Orchestra/Robert Farnon 
                  The Unstoppable Man (McGuffie) [2:04] 
                  Bill McGuffie (piano) and The Cine-Musica of London 
                  Vienna City Of My Dreams (Sieczynski) [3:14] 
                  Jack Hylton and his orchestra 
                  A Waltz for Terry (Duncan) [3:18] 
                  New Concert Orchestra/Dolf van der Linden 
                  Exotica (Green) [3:14] 
                  Philip Green and his orchestra 
                  Young Man’s Fancy (Barrington) [2:29] 
                  New Concert Orchestra/Cedric Dumont 
                  Zip Along (White) [2:41] 
                  The Grosvenor Studio Orchestra