Thursday, April 30, 2015

Vintage Records Review Desk 7: Duke Ellington Octet, Martha Tilton, Bing Crosby 1930s Radio Recordings

For this new installment in the series, we take a close look at three European imports that have landed on our Review Desk, all of them extremely recommendable and taken from radio sources. We begin with one of the few live recordings of Duke Ellington in an octet setting that are currently available. And then we spotlight two vocal releases: a fine compilation of Martha Tilton live broadcasts with the Benny Goodman orchestra, and a recently issued collection of rare Bing Crosby broadcasts from the Kraft Music Hall in the mid 1930s.

While he often led sessions with small groups, particularly in the early years of his career, unfortunately not too many recordings of Duke Ellington in an octet setting have survived. The Duke Ellington Octet at the Rainbow Grille (Gambit Records, 2006) presents one of them, a very interesting date at New York' Rainbow Grille from August 17, 1967, preserved for posterity due to the fact that it was broadcast by the CBS radio network. The first five tunes on this album are apparently rehearsals that the sound engineer caught on tape while adjusting the balances in preparation for the broadcast. The first of these finds the Duke at the piano, wistfully playing a medley of two of his lesser-known compositions, "Heaven" and "Le Sucrier Velours," and in the background we can hear people chatting and glasses clinking, which suggests that nobody seems to be paying much attention to the performance. The whole octet begins to warm up next, using for that purpose classic Ellington numbers such as "In a Sentimental Mood," "Azure," and "I'm Beginning to See the Light," as well as a rocking tune called "Rock the Clock."

Then the broadcast proper begins, after an announcer urges the crowd to applaud as the band goes on the air, and the sound improves somewhat. The octet is made up of star soloists from within the Ellington orchestra, namely Cat Anderson on trumpet, Lawrence Brown on trombone, Johnny Hodges on alto, Paul Gonsalves on tenor, and Harry Carney on baritone, supported by a rhythm section that includes the Duke himself on piano, bassist John Lamb, and drummer Steve Little. This reduced lineup called for new arrangements, which in the hands of all these giants sound rich and full of excitement, giving all the horns plenty of chances to shine. The set list features many Ellington and Billy Strayhorn standards, such as "Take the 'A' Train," "Satin Doll," "Sophisticated Lady," "Passion Flower," "Solitude," and "Things Ain't What They Used to Be," as well as Juan Tizol's "Perdido," which is ably performed here by Cat Anderson. Ellington himself, of course, is heavily spotlighted on piano, and his playing, as usual, is never less than superb. This is definitely a very welcome release, with personnel information and well-written liner notes that could, however, be a little more detailed. It appears that several other performances from this Ellington octet engagement exist, and judging by the quality of the music we can hear on this CD, they all deserve the be issued commercially.

It is well known that Benny Goodman disliked to work with vocalists, and he only featured them with his legendary big band because of their selling potential. Thus, when he first played Carnegie Hall in January 1938 (a landmark concert that was to swing what the famous Paul Whiteman appearance at Aeolian Hall about a decade earlier had been to Whiteman's brand of symphonic jazz) he only allowed his female vocalist at the time, Martha Tilton, to sing two songs. Yet the physically and vocally attractive Liltin' Miss Tilton, as she was often billed, was always a crowd pleaser, and the roaring approval of the Carnegie Hall audience to her rendition of "Loch Lomond" prompted Goodman to step up to the microphone and clarify that, even though no encores had been prepared, Tilton would reappear later on in the show to sing another number. The audience's response to that second song, "Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen," was just as noisy proving that the public at large did not share the bespectacled bandleader's contempt for vocalists, who, in fact, would in time end up becoming one of the many reasons for the ultimate demise of the big band business.

Culled from live broadcasts made by the Goodman orchestra between 1937 and 1939, the generous two-CD set Liltin' (Jasmine Records, 2007) showcases Tilton's powerful yet unassuming vocals on 49 tracks that should be of interest to anyone who enjoys her Carnegie Hall performances. The sources of these recordings are broadcasts from the Camel Caravan radio show (1937-39) and airchecks that originated from the Madhattan Room in New York's Hotel Pennsylvania in 1937, all of them with very good sound considering the circumstances in which they were preserved. The quality of the songs varies, since Goodman featured on this broadcasts many throwaway pop hits of the day that have not stood the test of time, but the orchestra always sounds exciting because includes great names such as Harry James, Ziggy Elman, Jess Stacy, Bud Freeman, Hymie Schertzer, and Dave Tough, among many others. Moreover, when Tilton is given the right song (Cole Porter's "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" or Johnny Mercer's "And the Angels Sing," for instance) she always delivers, and the well-oiled sound of the orchestra never fails to get a enthusiastic responses from both the dancers and the listeners in the audience. Tilton would leave the Goodman organization in 1939 to launch a solo career, concentrating on radio work and making some fine records for Capitol, a label that was never sure whether to present her as a balladeer or a novelty performer. Offering several tracks that she never recorded commercially with Goodman and even a couple of excellent duets with Johnny Mercer, this collection serves as a fantastic introduction to the lilting voice of Martha Tilton directly from the bandstand.

And, finally, Kraft Music Hall: Selected Performances 1935-1936 (JSP Records, 2015) is an unexpected but wonderful surprise for all Bing Crosby fans and collectors, which we have just received from the International Club Crosby. Although the medium of radio was of paramount importance in Crosby's meteoric rise as a multimedia star in the 1930s, unfortunately not too many broadcasts from this early period of his career have survived. As the subtitle of this disc ("Lost radio recordings rediscovered and released here for the first time") suggests, this compilation attempts to fill that void by presenting material from early Kraft Music Hall programs that have not been heard since they first aired in 1935 and 1936. At that particular point in time, December of 1935, Crosby's old boss, Paul Whiteman, was still the host of KMH, and the singer was simply a guest on the program. While the show was broadcast from New York, Bing's segments were relayed from Hollywood, as we can hear on the first track of this album, which has Whiteman introducing Crosby, who was not backed by Whiteman's outfit but by the excellent, swinging Jimmy Dorsey orchestra. It appears that it was common practice for Crosby during his guest spots to sing a medley of songs associated with him or taken from one of his then-current movies, as well as a few tunes that he had introduced or helped make popular, such as "On Treasure Island," "Red Sails in the Sunset," "Dinah" (unfortunately sans the Mills Brothers here), and "After You've Gone." As John Newton observes in the liner notes, Bing sings the romantic ballad "I'm Yours," which "fits neither category, but is nevertheless a welcome addition" and would later be beautifully recorded by Dean Martin.

These performances are not interesting merely because of their rarity, but rather because they prove that Crosby was a master interpreter of popular song who was even more exciting, jazzy, and improvisatory when he was singing to a radio audience in front of a microphone and supported by a bandleader of the caliber of Jimmy Dorsey. On the December 26, 1935, broadcast, which includes a rather sleepy version of "I Get a Kick Out of You" by Kay Weber that sounds as though she were not getting any kicks out of singing the song, it becomes clear that Crosby is acquiring more protagonism, since he sings more numbers than on previous programs. In fact, come January 1936, Crosby began to host the KMH himself, quickly turning it into one of the most popular radio shows in the country, with a weekly listenership estimated at dozens of millions. From the first two shows hosted by Crosby we get some fantastic performances of songs like "Eeny-Meeny-Miney-Mo," "I'll See You in My Dreams," "A Little Bit Independent," and "Some of These Days," still backed by Dorsey, who would remain on the show until July 1937. This new release complements JSP's very recommendable 2007 four-CD set, The Vintage Years, which included broadcasts made between 1932 and 1950, featuring some interesting duets with Judy Garland and Jimmy Durante, and will delight Crosby fans for the scarcity of this type of material and also for the fact that it is up to the usual audio restoration standards of the fine British reissue label.


Monday, April 20, 2015

Vintage Pop Oddities 1: George Sanders

This new series of posts in The Vintage Bandstand will feature brief articles on oddball vintage pop and jazz albums that, for one reason or another, I regard as interesting and worthy of a spin despite their undeniable strangeness. We begin, appropriately, with the only LP ever released by British film and television actor George Sanders, whose vocal performances are rather erratic but overall quite enjoyable and charming.

While he is fondly remembered by many for his roles in movie classics such as Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca and Joseph L. Mankiewicz's All about Eve, among several others, British actor George Sanders never made a name for himself as a singer. In fact, he only recorded one album under his name, The George Sanders Touch: Songs for the Lovely Lady, released by ABC-Paramount in 1958, but in spite of a few ads in Variety and other trade publications that suggest that the label may have seen some selling potential in Sanders's crooning, the album never quite got anywhere, and today it is prized only by the staunchest of Sanders fans and by the most relentless collectors of celebrity vocals.

And yet, it does not look like Sanders himself saw the LP merely as just another entry in the "celebrity record" category. He had always fancied following a singing career and had occasionally vocalized in movies such as Walter Lang's Call Me Madam (1953), with a score by none other than Irving Berlin, but it was not until five years later that he was given the chance to record a whole album showcasing his singing. According to Sam Staggs, in his book All about "All about Eve"  (St. Martin's Griffin, 2001), Sanders had been interested in music for a long time and enjoyed singing opera and had even dabbled in songwriting:

If George Samders had been more ambitious, he might have left acting for a career in opera. During an appearance in Tallulah Bankhead's radio show in the early 1950s he sang the aria "In lacerato spirito," from Verdi's Simon Boccanegra. His well-trained voice was so pleasant that many in the studio audience did not believe it belonged to George Sanders. They left convinced that he had mouthed a recording of someone else's singing. . . He did, however, record an album called The George Sanders Touch in 1958. On it he sang not arias but standards, including "September Song," "As Time Goes By," and "More Than You Know." Included on the album was a song of his own composition, "Such Is My Love." (93-94)

As Staggs notes, The George Sanders Touch is a collection of standards that presents Sanders as a balladeer, crooning a selection of well-chosen yet slightly predictable slow numbers, backed by a lush string orchestra arranged by Don Costa and Nick Perito. The opening track, "Try a Little Tenderness," sung in an appropriately tender manner, is one of the high points of the album, with Sanders relying on his well-trained baritone for romantic effect. After that, he stays in familiar territory, doing classics like "They Didn't Believe Me," "As Time Goes By," "Something to Remember You By," "The Very Thought of You" (written by another Englishman, bandleader Ray Noble) and "More Than You Know." However, the arrangements, though beautifully constructed, are invariably slow, which indicates that Sanders must not have felt entirely comfortable with uptempo numbers. This lends an air of sameness to the record, which at some points becomes inevitably monotonous because Sanders clearly lacks range and insists on singing all tracks in a way that often makes him sound rather aloof and uninvolved with the song.

Sanders does not let us forget that he is an actor, though, and he sometimes slips into recitation, as in "September Song," for instance. He reaches back to the 1930s for most of his repertoire, and Harold Adamson and Victor Young's "Around the World," from the film Around the World in Eighty Days (1956), is the only contemporary song on the album, along with Sanders's own "Such Is My Love," a pleasant ballad that blends in perfectly with the rest of the album. According to the liner notes by Natt Hale, which emphasize Sanders's many talents, from acting to singing to playing the piano and the saxophone, Sanders's self-penned tune "was considered a 'must' by Costa and Perito, after hearing it but once." The whole album, however, fell into obscurity very quickly and has never been reissued on CD, perhaps because Sanders's name is not as well known now as it was in the 1950s and '60s, but anyone who is able to find an old vinyl copy in the bargain bin of some used record store is encouraged to purchase it, if only to be able to enjoy the personal touch that Sanders brings to this handful of perennial standards.

Further reading

For more information on The George Sanders Touch, the blog Big 10-Inch Record includes a very interesting post about this album, which you can access here.