Jean WIENER (1896-1982) 
          Suite à danser No.1 [17:44] 
          Suite à danser No.2 [7:45] 
          Marcel DELANNOY (1898-1962) 
          Suite à danser ‘Jeunesse’ [32:38] 
          Orchestre Hewitt/Maurice Hewitt 
          rec.1953, Paris 
          FORGOTTEN RECORDS FR826 [58:13]
        
         Much of Jean Wiener and Marcel Delannoy’s 
          film music has been recorded over the years, but this reissue takes 
          us back to 1953 and the heady days of Maurice Hewitt’s eponymous 
          little band. The repertoire is exclusively dance music so those seeking 
          some of French cinema’s classic film scores should head away now. 
          Those, however, attracted to Left Bank wit infused with a modicum of 
          cocktail bar hokum may enjoy this hour-long restoration from Forgotten 
          Records. 
            
          Wiener’s Dance Suite No.1 is a six-movement affair reeking 
          of savoir faire. Insouciance introduces the work, with a knowing salon 
          piano kick to keep things honest. The piano musette feel, richly embroidered 
          with accordion blandishments, creep into the Waltz whilst there’s 
          a sinuous but light-hearted Tango to follow. Elegant and sensuous, the 
          fourth movement Waltz is a prime candidate for Guild’s library 
          of Light Music classics. More off-beat is the harpsichord that underpins 
          the sun-drenched Biguine. The Polka summons up the Wiener and 
          Clement Doucet effusions of the 1920s and 1930sand also, I suspect, 
          cocks a sideways glance at the august shadow of Darius Milhaud. This 
          energising, scintillating music is essentially a trifle, but an ingenious 
          one. The second Suite is much more compact and less winning due to its 
          circumscribed nature. Still, the quietly elegant Waltz charms, and the 
          piano and trumpet dialogue in the slow central movement is as enjoyable 
          as the catchy musette with which the work ends: indelibly Gallic, inimitably 
          Parisian, and defiantly Wiener. 
            
          Delannoy was Wiener’s contemporary - in fact he was two years 
          younger but predeceased Wiener by two decades. His Suite à 
          danser ‘Jeunesse’ has a more souped-up, forced feel 
          than the more authentic inter-war Wiener suites. The clangourous clatter 
          of the percussion, and the torrid vocal chorus is all rather cheesy. 
          Some may go for the flute arabesques over rippling piano in the Samba 
          but surely no one will go for the vapid slow movement entitled ‘Kew 
          Gardens’ - where the alto sax and chorus conspire to generate 
          an insipid arboreal hybrid. This is certainly not one of Delannoy’s 
          most imperishable masterpieces; he seems to have been afflicted with 
          a bout of the exotic from his superscriptions (‘Tangominima’, 
          ‘Danse des négrillons’, ‘Nanou Filhadoué) 
          but his writing remains conventionally chic and unambitious. 
            
          No real fault accrues to Hewitt and his versatile band who acquit themselves 
          well in this mono disc, finely transferred from two Les Discophiles 
          Françaises LPs. There are no notes, as per usual with this series, 
          but internet sources are noted. 
            
          Jonathan Woolf