Bernie WAYNE 
                Port-au-Prince (arr. Frank Cordell) 
                [2:29] 
                Frank Cordell and his orchestra 
                Camillo BARGONI 
                Autumn Concerto (arr. William Hill Bowen) 
                [3:05] 
                Melachrino Orchestra/George Melachrino 
                
                Irving BERLIN 
                It’s A Lovely Day Tomorrow (arr. Ron 
                Goodwin) [2:22] 
                Ron Goodwin and his concert orchestra 
                
                Peter de ROSE 
                American Waltz (arr. Laurie Johnson) 
                [2:32] 
                Ambrose and his orchestra 
                Louis ALTER 
                Manhattan Serenade [2:52] 
                Werner Muller and his orchestra 
                LLEWELLYN 
                Highway Patrol – Theme from the TV series 
                [2:41] 
                Cyril Stapleton and his orchestra 
                Van ORSOUW 
                Spirito [2:41] 
                Dolf van der Linden and his orchestra 
                
                Sidney NORMAN 
                (real name Norman [‘Norrie’] William 
                Paramor) 
                Cornflakes [2:36] 
                Les Baxter and his orchestra 
                Albert MCCARTHY 
                and Richard FREITAS 
                
                Fiddlesticks 2:07] 
                David Carroll and his orchestra 
                Douglas FURBER 
                and Philip BRAHAM 
                
                Limehouse Blues [2:30] 
                Ray Martin and his orchestra 
                Michael DURSO 
                and Mel MITCHELL 
                and Murl KAHN 
                
                Petticoats Of Portugal [2:36] 
                Walter STOTT 
                Quiz [2:45] 
                Danish State Radio Orchestra/Robert 
                Farnon 
                Annunzio MANTOVANI 
                Toyshop Ballet [2:20] 
                Mantovani and his orchestra 
                NEWMAN 
                Theme from "The Proud Ones" 
                [2:26] 
                Leroy Holmes and his orchestra 
                Edward WHITE 
                Show Girl [2:56] 
                Dolf van der Linden and his orchestra 
                
                The Polygon Light Music Legacy 
                Franz WAXMAN 
                and Mack DAVID 
                
                Many Dreams Ago (from film "Elephant 
                Walk") (arr. Laurie Johnson) [2:49] 
                
                Laurie Johnson and his orchestra 
                Ray MARTIN 
                Muriella [3:02] 
                Ray Martin and his orchestra 
                Carl NIESSAN 
                Desire Tango [2:39] 
                Geoff Love and his orchestra 
                Eddie LISBONA 
                Elaine (arr. Johnny Gregory) [2:28] 
                
                Johnny Gregory and his orchestra 
                CONSTANTIN 
                and FRANCIS 
                
                Letter To Virginia (arr. Laurie Johnson) 
                [2:42] 
                Laurie Johnson and his orchestra 
                Sammy MYSELS 
                The Forget-Me-Not Waltz (arr. Johnny 
                Gregory) [2:12] 
                Johnny Gregory and his orchestra 
                Benjamin FRANKEL 
                Lily Watkins Theme (from film "A 
                Kid For Two Farthings") (arr. Laurie 
                Johnson) [2:20] 
                Laurie Johnson and his orchestra 
                James KRIEGSMANN 
                and Douglas WALTERS 
                
                The Bridge Of Love [2:59] 
                Jackie Bond and his saxophone and orchestra 
                
                Edward RUBACH 
                Tinkle Box Samba [2:36] 
                Bernard Monshin and the Concert Tango 
                Orchestra 
                Fred SPIELMAN 
                Episode [2:34] 
                Geoff Love and his orchestra 
                Heino GAZE 
                Song of the Pearlfishers – Tango (arr. 
                Laurie Johnson) [3:14] 
                Laurie Johnson and his orchestra 
                Tolchard EVANS 
                The Watermill (arr. Johnny Gregory) 
                [3:09] 
                Johnny Gregory and his orchestra 
                L. SINGER 
                Petite Ballerina [2:24] 
                Michael Fredericks and his orchestra 
                
                Malcolm LOCKYER 
                Fiddlers’ Boogie [2:37] 
                Malcolm Lockyer and his orchestra 
              
              I have to admit that 
                I’ve rather lost track of the series 
                and volumes-within-series that pour 
                out of the Guild Light Music foundry. 
                But I’m not complaining when the results 
                are so consistently entertaining and 
                when they cannily push to the outer 
                reaches of the fifty-year copyright 
                period. The recording dates of this 
                particular volume cover the years 1951 
                to 1956. 
              
 
              
This disc concentrates 
                on two things – popular instrumentals 
                and the legacy of the Polygon Light 
                Music series. Polygon was a small but 
                potent addition to the recorded labels 
                of the time and it captured a most interesting 
                selection of songs and artists, of whom 
                we have here a representative sample. 
              
 
              
The range of instrumentals 
                is much as before. There’s a mini-mini 
                pocket piano concerto as an introductiuon 
                to Autumn Concerto – complete 
                with bossa percussion and "holiday 
                strings" mood. A constant feature 
                throughout is some of the sophisticated 
                voicings fashioned by composers and 
                especially arrangers – listen to Laurie 
                Johnson’s articulate voice leading in 
                the Peter de Rose song American Waltz. 
                Many of the pieces evoke moods, dance 
                or otherwise, and plumb the vernacular 
                – try the bluesy sax in Manhatten 
                Serenade. There are TV theme tunes, 
                popular songs, vacation dreamscapes, 
                and also of course the occasional genre 
                piece to add piquancy. 
              
 
              
The title track is 
                the rather rinky-dink old time Cornflakes, 
                written by Norrie Paramor here hiding 
                under the name Sidney Norman - as well 
                he might with this boogie and swirling 
                strings confection. Ray Martin turns 
                in a rather glutinous Limehouse Blues 
                whilst Billy Vaughn comes on strong 
                with some modish percussion in his Iberian 
                jaunt – complete with mouth organ solo. 
                Mantovani plumbs the generic for his 
                contribution and Leroy Holmes goes West 
                in The Proud Ones. 
              
 
              
The Polygon tracks 
                are invariably finely played. Ray Martin 
                redeems himself with Muriella, 
                which is the epitome of lyrical elegance, 
                and there’s an equally well-turned Forget-Me-Not-Waltz 
                from Johnny Gregory. The alto saxophone 
                in light music encouraged some questionable 
                taste; how you respond to Jackie Bond’s 
                The Bridge of Love depends on 
                how far you can take this kind of thing. 
                Me, not at all – I’ll stick with Hodges 
                and Benny Carter, thanks. Laurie Johnson 
                infiltrates some intriguing sonorities 
                to the tango from the Song of The 
                Pearlfishers; the Tolchard 
                Evans delight, The Watermill, 
                is evocatively arranged and played by 
                Johnny Gregory. And to finish the Guild 
                compilers leave us on a high – Malcolm 
                Lockyer’s scandalously good-time Fiddlers’ 
                Boogie.
              
 
              
David Ades is doubtless 
                getting thoroughly bored reading how 
                well chosen his selections and notes 
                are. More goodies from the Guild stable. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf