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The Golden Age of Light Music – The Lost Transcriptions
– Volume 1
Strike Up The Band (Gershwin) – RAF Concert Orchestra/probably Sidney
Torch [1:45]
Swing Time Selection (Kern): The Way You Look Tonight, Pick Yourself
Up, A Fine Romance, Waltz In Swing Time - RAF Concert Orchestra/probably
Sidney Torch [4:43]
Ragging The Scales (Claypole) – Percy Faith and his Orchestra [1:58]
The Butterfly And The Alligator (Rose) – David Rose and his Orchestra
[3:00]
If You Please (from the film Dixie) (Van Heusen) – Sidney Torch
and his Orchestra [3:23]
Primavera (Elders) – Dolf van der Linden and his Orchestra [3:07]
Pepper Tree Lane (from Hollywood Bowl Suite) (Rose) - David Rose
and his Orchestra [1:25]
Balboa Barcarolle (Duke) – Percy Faith and his Orchestra [2:24]
La Bamba De Vera Cruz - Mexican Dance (Traditional) - Percy Faith
and his Orchestra [2:18]
Song Of The Flame (Gershwin) – Phil Spitalny and his Orchestra [1:39]
Too Romantic (from Road To Singapore) (Burke) Leith Stevens and
his Orchestra [2:40]
Flying Down To Rio (Eliscu) – Carmen Dragon and his Orchestra [1:21]
Solitude (de Lange, Mills, Ellington) - RAF Concert Orchestra/probably
Sidney Torch [3:47]
Ding Dong The Witch Is Dead (from The Wizard Of Oz) (Arlen) - David
Rose and his Orchestra [2:53]
The Peanut Vendor (El Manisero) (Simons) – The Orchestra in Khaki/George
Melachrino [3:30]
Jota (from Spanish Dance Suite) (Collins) – World Concert Orchestra/Philip
Green [1:57]
Three Sketches – Enchantment, Whimsy, Day Dreams (Gillis) – Hollywood
Salon Orchestra/Harry Bluestone [6:42]
Dance of the Frogs (based on Frog Went A-Courtin’) (Stringfield)
– Lewis Williams and his Orchestra [3:40]
Praeludium (Järnefelt) – Army Salon Orchestra/Eric Robinson [2:31]
The Three Men Suite - The Man From The Country; The Man About Town;
The Man From The Sea (Coates) The Orchestra in Khaki/George Melachrino
[No.1 - 4:50]; The Orchestra of H.M. Royal Marines (Portsmouth Division)/F
Vivian Dunn [Nos. 2 and 3; 4:31 + 4:47]
Romantic Overture (Overture Romantique) (Béla) - The Orchestra of
H.M. Royal Marines (Portsmouth Division)/F Vivian Dunn [7:25]
rec.1942 – c.1955
GUILD GLCD 5174 [77:39]
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Lost...but found? Let me briefly paraphrase David Adés’s explanatory
notes. These recordings were made on transcription discs for
broadcasting companies to use. During the war they were made
for Forces programmes overseas. None were commercial. Naturally
though quite a few have survived. This applies to popular repertoire
and also to classical. I’m sure collectors will have come across,
for example, US Office of War Information discs. I picked up
a batch in Vienna, but there are plenty about the place.
That’s the point of this disc, to present a disc of transcriptions
on a variety of labels, from a wide range of bands and orchestras.
These, clearly, included the crème de la crème of the brethren;
Torch, Faith, Rose, Melachrino, and their Anglo-American confreres,
and also Dolf van der Linden, whose one contribution here is
songful, but thin-toned. Part of the archaeological fun to be
had centres on tunes that might not otherwise have been recorded
by the bandleader concerned, and also in enjoying the plethora
of Transcription labels; ORBS, VOA, Towers of London, World
Programme Service, Standard Program Library, Thesaurus Orthacoustic
(nice one!) and the others.
Is that Sidney Torch(insky) grunting away at 0:36 into Strike
Up The Band? Grand start anyway. The RAF Concert Orchestra
clearly had some good fiddlers on board and they can be heard
in The Way You Look Tonight, the first in the Swing Time
selection from an ORBS transcription disc of 1942 or 1943. He
also furnishes a ripe, but much later If You Please, and
an over-decorative Solitude (but with a nice Lou Whiteson
fiddle solo). Percy Faith’s VOA disc of Ragging the Scales
has some ballsy percussion and fizzing violins. David Rose later
reworked the otherwise unknown The Butterfly and The Alligator,
so it’s good to make its acquaintance here. Some of these transcriptions
are very short. Phil Spitalny and his All Girl Orchestra are
accorded a measly 1:39, whilst Carmen Dragon and his orchestra
have to make do with only 1:21.
Viola player, composer and conductor Anthony Collins is represented
by his de Falla-sounding but actually very different Jota, played
by Phil Green c.1955. It’s good to hear Don Gillis’s Three Sketches
played by the Hollywood Salon Orchestra conducted by Harry Bluestone
– three delightful and succulent miniatures, with the middle
one having taken one too many sips from Monti’s Czardas. Lewis
Williams gets saucy with Dance of the Frogs by Lamar
Stringfield, who obviously enjoyed himself with cod-Americana.
And then we have an intriguing sequence of Eric Coates’s The
Three Men Suite. The first is a Melachrino performance from
1943 whilst the second and third come from F. Vivian Dunn and
The Orchestra of H.M. Royal Marines (Portsmouth Division) from
a year later. The same forces end the disc with a good performance
of the Romantic Overture, a nineteenth century work by the Hungarian
Kéler Béla, or Béla Kéler, or Adalbert Paul von Kéler. Take
your pick.
I enjoyed this disc. The performances are pretty rare, and they’ve
been collated with acumen, and thoughtfulness. As usual David
Adés booklet notes are a model of what such things should be.
Great sound as well.
Jonathan Woolf
See also review by Bob
Briggs
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