Victor YOUNG 
                (1900 – 1956) Stringin’ Along [3:20] 
                
                Will JASON 
                & Val BURTON 
                Penthouse Serenade [2:51] 
                Trevor DUNCAN 
                (pseudonym for Leonard 
                Charles TREBILCO) (1924 – 
                2005) Mam’selle Moderne [2:48] 
                Kermit LESLIE 
                & Walter LESLIE 
                (pseudonyms for Kermit 
                and Walter LEVINSKY) 
                Rainy Afternoon [3:22] 
                Reginald KING 
                (1904 – 1991) Heading for Home [2:45] 
                
                GIRAUD 
                A New Born Love [2:17] 
                Ronald BINGE 
                (1910 – 1979) Man In A Hurry [2:41] 
                
                Leo LeFLEUR 
                Wedding of the Violins [3:16] 
                Paul LINCKE 
                (1866 – 1946) Whirl of the Waltz 
                [3:12] 
                FONTAINE & 
                SPEGUEL Aperitif [3:11] 
                Vincent YOUMANS 
                (1898 – 1946) Carioca (1934) 
                [2:16] 
                Otto CESANA 
                Devotion [2:44] 
                Peter DENNIS 
                (pseudonym for Dennis 
                BERRY) Fresh Up [2:56] 
                Lewis Wolfe 
                GILBERT (1886 
                – 1970) & Henry 
                R STERN (b 1874) By Heck 
                [2:00] 
                Oscar HAMMERSTEIN 
                II (1895 – 1960) & Johann 
                STRAUSS II (1825 – 1899) 
                I’m In Love with Vienna [2:19] 
                Emile DELTOUR 
                & Fud CANDRIX 
                Polka for Strings [2:11] 
                George MELACHRINO 
                (1909 – 1965) Gay Romance [3:44] 
                
                Xavier CUGAT 
                (1900 – 1990), Fausto 
                CURBELO (b 1915) (arranged 
                by Laurie JOHNSON) 
                Tentacion de Amor [2 :46] 
                Ray MARTIN 
                (1918 – 1988) Six Proud Walkers 
                (Theme from the BBC TV serial) [2:49] 
                
                Vivian ELLIS 
                (1903 – 1996) Flight 101 [2:47] 
                
                Ray MARTIN 
                Ballet of the Bells [2:14] 
                Bernie WAYNE 
                (pseudonym for Bernard 
                WEITZNER) (1919 – 1993) Zsa-Zsa 
                [2:30] 
                Frank PERKINS 
                (1908 – 1998) The Frustrated Floorwalker 
                [2:58] 
                David ROSE 
                (1910 – 1990) Bordeaux [2:40] 
                Robert FARNON 
                (1917 – 2005) Moomin [2:30] 
                George FRENCH 
                Bobby Sox [2:05] 
                John Pi SCHEFFER 
                (1909 – 1988) Apple Flap [2:48] 
                
                Guy Pierre 
                LAFARGE The Little Ballerina 
                [2:38] 
                Alfonzo D’Artega (Lefleur); Jackie Brown 
                (Ballet of the Bells); David Carroll 
                (Lafarge); Otto Cesana (Cesana); Emile 
                Deltour (Aperitif); Richard Hayman (Hayman); 
                Andre Kostelanetz (Youmans); Guy Luypaerts 
                (Giraud); Kermit Leslie (Leslie); Werner 
                Muller (Penthouse Serenade); David Rose 
                (Rose); Dolf Van Der Linden (Candrix, 
                Dennis, Scheffer); Bernie Wayne (Wayne); 
                Victor Young (Young) all with their 
                "Own" Orchestra; Ray Martin And his 
                Concert Orchestra (Six Proud Walkers); 
                Frank Perkins And his Pops Orchestra 
                (Perkins); Georges Tzipine and his Salon 
                Orchestra (Stern); Ambrose and his Orchestra 
                with Strings/Laurie Johnson (Cugat); 
                Danish State Radio Orchestra/Rovert 
                Farnon (Ellis, Farnon); London Promenade 
                Orchestra/Eric Rogers (Lincke); The 
                Melachrino Orchestra/George Melachrino 
                (Melachrino); L’orchestre Devereaux/Georges 
                Devereaux (French); Regent Classic Orchestra 
                (King); Stuttgart Radio Orchestra/Kurt 
                Rehfeld (Binge, Duncan) 
              
               
              Perhaps the time has 
                come when we can paraphrase, like the 
                advertisement for a certain beer, and 
                drawl that this is ‘probably the best 
                Light Music series in the world.’ It’s 
                certainly the most extensive and is 
                also compiled with a curatorial sense 
                for the themes involved – seemingly 
                inexhaustible but then someone has to 
                sit down to do the hard work and collate 
                the things, so it’s hardly automatic. 
              
              
              This latest entrant’s 
                title is pretty self-explanatory. Many 
                of the names of the composers and orchestras 
                will be very familiar to initiates of 
                the genre and to adherents of the series 
                in general. Victor Young kicks things 
                off with fanciful string work in the 
                title track, the B section of which 
                is a luscious intermezzo for solo violin 
                (Young was himself a violinist) and 
                then comes a dollop of Rachmaninovian 
                piano to liven things still further. 
                It’s a locus classicus of packing in 
                a veritable symphony of moods and impressions. 
                Werner Muller unveils a very suave Penthouse 
                Serenade – one can imagine the à 
                la mode 1956 furnishings from this ultra 
                sleek number; the musical equivalent 
                of Ernő 
                Goldfinger’s furniture. By comparison 
                there’s a bright, sprightly and brisk 
                offering called Mam’selle Moderne 
                from Kurt Rehfeld and his Stuttgart 
                band; the number was written by Trevor 
                Duncan. Note the elegant pizzicati. 
              
              
              Kermit Leslie contributes 
                a very glamorous MGM waterfall of a 
                piece, shot through with romantic reverie 
                and that in its turn is immediately 
                contrasted with the Regent Classic Orchestra’s 
                spruce Heading for Home, on the 
                esteemed Bosworth label. 
              
              Variety within the 
                sub-genre, as one can tell, is the name 
                of the game. Rehfeld appears again with 
                a very witty and pictorial Binge number 
                Man in a Hurry – the poor chap 
                keeps getting stopped en route. From 
                the busy annoyances of him we flee to 
                the glittering imprecations of Wedding 
                of the Violins and then on to visit 
                the spicy Latin charms of Aperitif. 
                George Tzipine makes a welcome appearance 
                directing his Salon orchestra. Aficionados 
                will remember that he made solo records 
                as a violinist for Pathé, Odeon 
                and Parlophone. His band has an easy 
                swing and sports some fine winds and 
                harp.
              
              Ambrose swivels his 
                hips – impeccably, naturally – for some 
                Latin-Americana on Tentacion de Amor 
                but I can’t say I much warmed to 
                Bernie Wayne’s Zsa-Zsa. I know 
                the Great Gabor could be cheesy but 
                there really is a grim (dubbed?) choir 
                to lessen the spirits. Robert Farnon’s 
                Moomin re-establishes humour 
                and confidence. And we end with a Tchaikovsky-doffing 
                The Little Ballerina.
              
              Plenty of vibrant vitality 
                then in this issue. The transfers are 
                good, the notes even better.
              
              Jonathan Woolf 
                
              see also review 
                by Bob Briggs