Saturday, November 13, 2010


After nearly two years of inactivity it's pretty clear there's no time to tend this plot on the Internet. So, no new posts, and more unfortunately, no time to respond to requests for re-ups. Hope you've enjoyed what was here while it was here, and perhaps some day there will be hours to come back and continue.

-Soapy-

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Various Artists
The Exotic Trilogy, Vol. 2
KB Zed, 1997


This is the second disc in what was planned to be a six volume series documenting the three pillars of exotica: “Quiet Village,” “Taboo,” and “Caravan.” You can find Volume 1 here. Unfortunately, volumes 3 through 6 never seemed to have turned up – anyone seen them?

Tracks
Ted Aulette – Quiet Village
Douglas Gamley – Tabu
The 3 Suns – Caravan
Tommy Garrett – Quiet Village
Billy May – Tabu
Living Guitar – Caravan
Bill Justis – Quiet Village
Hal Shutz – Tabu
Marty Gold – Caravan
The Aliis – Quiet Village
The Ensemble of 7 – Tabu
Enoch Light – Caravan
Ferrante & Teicher – Quiet Village
Geri Galian – Tabu
Lloyd Burry – Caravan
Hawaiian Brass – Quiet Village
Orizaba – Tabu
Hal Mooney – Caravan
Al Bollington – Quiet Village
Al Hirt – Tabu
George Wright - Caravan

1/1 #aloha (192kbps, 92.4MB)

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Various Artists
The Exotic Trilogy, Vol. 1
KBZ 200, 1995


This terrific volume turned up in select retail stores in 1995, and features seven versions each of the three pillars of exotica: “Quiet Village,” “Taboo,” and “Caravan.” A second volume turned up the next. They are each as hypnotically irritaining as the liner notes promise. Anyone have the promised volumes 3 through 6?

Here are the original liner notes, which are quite a hoot:
The Mouldy Vexations of Vinyl Rot

Welcome to the irritaining world of KBZ 200. A world where only three songs are played, over and over again, in a seemingly endless train of masterful and inventive cover versions. Only three songs. Sounds boring, you say? Give it a listen.
We think you'll change your mind, and maybe even your attitude.

That's because the producers and musicians featured on this disk have been through a lot. They've toured more than four countries on two continents, presenting these same three songs in 18 hour 'Vexations-style' events, manipulating cover version after cover
version of Quiet Village, Taboo, and Caravan. Oh sure, sometimes the KBZ 200 has managed to bug people a bit: getting physically thrown out by club owners after only nine hours or so, or having their event interrupted after thirteen hours by an overly zealous control freak DJ who decides to put a non-trilogy song on the turntable and refuses to remove it.

But in general, the KBZ 200 has experienced many successes. These tracks are selected from a 3-volume set of cassettes (the cassettes feature 81 different versions altogether of the same 3 songs!) that the KBZ has been putting out since 1991. An initial offering is being released now on CD because the KBZ is tired of answering the endless stream of requests for more cassettes of the original Exotic Trilogy volumes. People who bought cassettes only one or two weeks before, come by asking for more copies because their original ones were stolen. This happened so many times in the past that we decided to do a survey. It turns out that a majority of Exotic Trilogy cassette owners have had their original copies stolen, obviously by thieves who couldn't be bothered finding out where they can buy their own copy.
So, a word of caution: keep this disk in a safe place. If you have to take this music over to a friend's place, bring a back-up copy on cassette only.

Why only three songs, you may ask? That's because the KBZ 200 pays attention to important trends in music history.
This particular trend begins in Paris, in 1893. That's when Erik Satie composed Vexations, a one page piano piece that is repeated 840 times.
This takes about 18 hours. In Erik's time, recording technology had yet to be invented, but that didn't stop him from conceiving of background music, or musique d'ameublement (furniture music), as he called it. Composing a piece to be played 'live' in the background, over and over again, while people were supposed to converse and socialize in its presence was a pretty radical idea, if not downright avant-garde, at the time. An 18 hour work in repetitive form like this was not an ordinary thing for western classical music. It did, however, draw a parallel to some music rituals of exotic cultures. Many non-western cultures have musical and theatrical performances that sometimes continue for days.

What happened to this once-avant-garde concept called back¬ground music? It turned into something called Muzak. Pretty un¬avant-garde. But some Muzak has a link to another once-popular genre: Exotica. Any student of the Exotica movement would note that the three songs the KBZ 200 feature are important landmark anthems of this ersatz genre. And any of these three songs may also be considered as typically representative of the Muzak genre, as well. So why not seize upon these associations and do a Vexations of Mouldy Vinyl, thus acknowledging Muzak's implementation of Satie's concept?

This CD compilation is a portion of the entire utility required to realize the mouldy impactedness of ersatz Gesamtkunstwerk. As such, it is your personal passport to Instant Baghdadianism. To create your own Tableau of Mouldy Exoticism at home, try adding a few extra touches: a flaming Tiki head is, of course, obligatory, as are the screening of south sea travelog flims and 3D exotic slides, the cooking of exquisite cuisine on Volcano Wok, augmented at the right moment with the injection of Taboo Sauce, pumped through the Coconut Bra of an exotic goddess. Employ as many musicians as possible to perform live versions of the Exotic Trilogy, but please take care to appoint a control freak stage manager who will 'pull the plug' on any musician not playing one of the three songs. To prevent the gathering from becoming too predictable, always be prepared to embrace the principle of 'Theater of Total Failure'. Remember: you are on a rudderless voyage through the glittering desert of artcrust.

So pop this disk in your CD player, select endless repetition, and sit back and enjoy the irritainment. Play it at your next get-together for a big hit - guaranteed to make new friends (and a few enemies)!

Thanks to: Funny Farm, Laura & Gordon, Gordon W., Rob, Larry, Fabio, Egnekn, Sir Spinner, John, Eric, Michael, tENTATIVELY, Maria, Alex, Roland, Riksaraj, Stiletto, Kerstin, Hans Otto, Kai, Bastiaan & Megan, Robin, Lars, Otillie, Paul, Tim, Steve & Tim, Gargoyle, Martin, Tony, Rüdiger, Werner, Klaus, Elizabeth, Roger, Peter, Matthias, Ingrid, FGM, Frank, Helle, Eimer, Shelley, Peter, David, Andreas, Karen and all other charter members of KBZ 200 too numerous to mention here...
Tracks
The Surfmen – Quiet Village
Robin Richmond – Taboo
Irv Cottler – Caravan
Len Stevens – Quiet Village
The Aliis – Taboo
Sir Julian – Caravan
The Ensemble of Seven – Quiet Village
The South Sea Serenaders – Taboo
Buddy Merrill – Caravan
Eddie Baxter – Quiet Village
The Flying Guitar – Taboo
Jack Anderson – Caravan
‘Vinnie’ Bell – Quiet Village
Tarragano & His Orchestra – Taboo
Billy Vaughn – Caravan
The Exotic Guitars – Quiet Village
Terry Snyder – Taboo
Dick Hyman – Caravan
The Clebanoff Strings – Quiet Village
Winifred Atwell – Taboo
Eddie Layton - Caravan

Quiet Village written by Les Baxter
Taboo written by Margarita Lecuona, Bob Russell
Caravan written by Ellington, Tizol, Mills

1/1 #aloha (192kbps, 94.3MB)

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Dick Schory’s New Percussion Ensemble
Percussion From Melody to Madness: Music to Break Any Mood
RCA Victor LSP-2125 (Stereo), 1960


Schory’s second album for RCA is another dynamic percussion spectacular! This stereo edition complements the mono version posted earlier. The liner notes for the stereo version substitute the following for the mono version’s “WORLD’S BIGGEST HI-FI” section:
In the early days of stereo there was much ado about the so-called ping-pong effect. Record people were simple enough to think that listeners with two speakers were only interested in hearing something different come out of each speaker. And many of the early musical arrangements were great for table tennis fans. Well, this record would be more like water polo.

Our every effort has been to keep the space three-dimensional, instead of two. East-to-west placement of instruments is clear, of course, but so is a spacious sense of depth. If the celesta was sitting southwest of the four marimbas, that’s where you’ll hear it. With such a setting, kettle drums come up like thunder; the harp swoops and soars as we’ve always been told it’s supposed to in its original celestial setting.
And substitute the following for the “IMPORTANT NOTICE” section:
This record contains the new revolutionary anti-static ingredient, 317X, which repels dust, helps prevent surface noise, and helps insure faithful sound reproduction. This is a TRUE STEREOPHONIC RECORD specifically designed to be played only on phonographs equipped for stereophonic reproduction. This record will also give outstanding monaural performance on many conventional high fidelity phonographs by a replacement of the cartridge. See your local dealer or serviceman.
Side 1
Caravan (Ellington, Tizol, Mills)
Speak Low (Weill, Nash)
South Rampart Street Parade (Allen, Bauduc, Haggart)
Walkin’ My Baby Back Home (Turk, Ahlert)
Fascinating Rhythm (G. Gershwin, I. Gershwin)
Safari Anyone? (Stevens)

Side 2
A Foggy Day (G. Gershwin, I. Gershwin)
Autumn in New York (Duke)
Fly Now, Pay Later (Stevens)
I’ll Remember April (Raye, De Paul, Johnston)
Tortilla (Simpson)
Stranger in Paradise (Wright, Forrest)

1/1 #windycity (320kbps, 75.1MB)

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Dick Schory’s New Percussion Ensemble
Percussion From Melody to Madness: Music to Break Any Mood
RCA Victor LPM-2125, 1960


Schory’s second album for RCA is another dynamic percussion spectacular! (Check out his first RCA album here.)

Original liner notes:
This record is for people who are: (check one or more)
[ ] too happy
[ ] too sad
[ ] too romantic
[ ] too stimulated
[ ] too tranquilized
[ ] too much

The fact is, this is an album which can establish or shatter (as you wish) a great gamut of moods—for yourself or an expendable friend. It’s especially good for getting rid of wholesome guests or keeping incorrigibles entertained.

And it’s all done with new percussion sounds: some soft and caressing (Autumn in New York, Speak Low) others big and wild (Safari Anyone?, South Rampart Street Parade). Instruments include virtually everything which can be stroked, plucked, poked or banged.

Some, in the trade, have called this America’s first bang-along record. We earnestly hope it won’t start a movement of proportions similar to the recent sing-along fad. Even though twelve virtuoso percussionists are hard at work on twelve pop songs, there is really only a moderate amount of banging going on. At least half the selections feature creamy vibes and lush harp arrangements. Most are extremely danceable—at least for those who have had a recent physical checkup.

THE GONG ON THE COVER
The bands, when they do come along, go all the way. You’ll hear the gong on the cover in the first number, Caravan. It is not the girl’s gong. In fact, she was not even at the session—unfortunately. If it were her gong, she would jolly well know better than to get so close.

After striking the monster there is an extended period while it “revs up” and one can hear this awesome sound wash out over the vast acoustic cavern of Orchestra Hall in Chicago. Once it has spoken, the mighty vibrations roll out strong and low for minutes afterward. Finally, our engineer had to deliberately fade the gong; otherwise the prolonged reverberation would have run into considerable overtime. Three men with three puffy cushions quieted the giant down sufficiently to start the next “take.” Those brave enough to stand nearby said they experienced an almost indescribably pleasure. With the highest fidelity equipment, similar sensations have been reported in the home with this record. To our knowledge nothing like this has ever been offered on disc before.

WHO DID IT
Lew Layton, the engineer who’s responsible for some of our most glistening symphonic recordings from Boston, Chicago, Rome and New York, said he felt as if he had a souped-up jet job under his instrument panel. We trust his experience with Walkin’ My Baby Back Home will have no untoward effect on his next Beethoven cycle.

Every selection was a completely new production with different microphoning, new scrimmage formations for the players—even new instrumentation (percussionists double on everything). Modern recording musicians are used to music they’ve never seen before. In this case they’d never seen some of the instruments before either… a musical steel oil drum from Trinidad, for example. There were, in all, over one hundred instruments (see inventory, right-hand column), known and unknown, put to hard use during the two days and nights spent in making this album.

We flew Phil Kraus specially from New York for the sessions. He’s the vibe solo on I’ll Remember April, the timpani melody on Caravan, the bongos on Safari Anyone? Dave Black was already in Chicago appearing with Bob Scobey’s band. He’s the dance beat on rhythm drums most of the way, with a special contribution on Fly Now, Pay Later. Frankie Rullo stars on vibes, xylophone, bongos, cow bells, rhythm drums—anything we put in front of him. The rest of the team included Hubert Anderson, Earl Backus, Jose Bethancourt, Russell Crandell, John Frigo, John Gray, Donald Knapp, Martin Rubenstein, Robert Wessberg and David Poskonka.

The idea of making lush quiet music with hammers, or beating up a storm with sticks, is second nature to Dick Schory, our leader. He just naturally expresses himself with mallets. In addition to masterminding the musical adventures of his New Percussion Ensemble, he also drums a wide swath through: The Chicago Symphony, radio and TV commercials, and the Ludwig Drum Company, Dick is one of those who keeps several careers boiling at once. You might see (or more likely, hear) him any place in the country. He might be conducting percussions seminars as Educational and Advertising Director of Ludwig in one city, giving a serious concert with his boys in the next, or doing a TV jazz program in yet another. There are very few who better understand the chain reactions of combining percussion colors and rhythms—as explosive specialization which Schory says he can express most fully on recordings.

WORLD’S BIGGEST HI-FI
It is true that the big gong may be the world’s biggest sounding sound on record. But so is the sprightly music all around it. It has a sound and a size which cannot be duplicated by any other group, any place, on any other record (except perhaps Schory’s first volume*). The secret? … The magnificent, specious acoustics of Chicago’s Orchestra Hall and the luscious Schory instrumentation. The result? … How can we describe it? Autumn in New York was never mellower; A Foggy Day was never brighter. It’s a whole brace of top pop melodies set in fresh new sounds for the young at heart.

-Bob Bollard

* Also hear Dick Schory’s MUSIC FOR BANG, Baa-rOOM AND HARP (LPM-1866)
Side 1
Caravan (Ellington, Tizol, Mills)
Speak Low (Weill, Nash)
South Rampart Street Parade (Allen, Bauduc, Haggart)
Walkin’ My Baby Back Home (Turk, Ahlert)
Fascinating Rhythm (G. Gershwin, I. Gershwin)
Safari Anyone? (Stevens)

Side 2
A Foggy Day (G. Gershwin, I. Gershwin)
Autumn in New York (Duke)
Fly Now, Pay Later (Stevens)
I’ll Remember April (Raye, De Paul, Johnston)
Tortilla (Simpson)
Stranger in Paradise (Wright, Forrest)

Produced by Bob Bollard

Recorded in Orchestra Hall, Chicago.
Recording Engineer: Lew Layton

IRWIN KOSTAL arranged Caravan and Autumn in New York
MIKE SIMPSON: Walkin’ My Baby Back Home, South Rampart Street Parade, A Foggy Day, Tortilla
WILLIS CHARKOVSKY: Speak Low
RUSS CASE: Fascinating Rhythm, I’ll Remember April
GILBERT STENES: Stranger in Paradise, Fly Now, Pay Later, Safari Anyone?

Instrument inventory: Piano • Celesta • String Bass • 2 Guitars • 2 Banjos • Harp • Complete Dance Outfit • Piccolo Xylophone • 3 Standard Xylophones • 4 Marimbas • 4 Vibraphones • 3 Sets Orchestra Bells • 2 Sets Chimes • Tuned Cow Bells • 12 Timpani • Piccolo Snare Drum • Tenor Drum • 2 Alto Snare Drums • Field Drum • Concert Bass Drum • 4 Tuned Tom Toms • 3 Conga Drums • 2 Sets Bongos • Timbales • 6 Tuned Rhythm Logs • Claves • Guiro • Maracas • Boo Bam • Soprano Steel Drum • Alto Steel Drum • Bass Steel Drum • Tambourine • 3 Woodblocks • 4 Triangles • Catanets • Temple Blocks • Wind Machine • Small, Medium and Large Gong • Giant 6-foot Gong • 5 Suspended Symbols • Double Cymbals • Antique Finger Cymbals • Sleigh Bells • Slapstick • Police Whistle • Siren Whistle • Assorted Sound Effects.

Our thanks to the Ludwig Drum Company, Musser Marimba Company, G.C. Jenkins Company, and Wanger Music Equipment Company for use of their fine products.

IMPORTANT NOTICE—This is a “new Orthophonic” High Fidelity recording, designed for the phonograph of today or tomorrow. Played on your present machine, it gives you the finest quality of reproduction. Played on a “Stereophonic” machine, it gives even more brilliant true-to-life fidelity. You can buy today, without fear of obsolescence in the future.

1/1 #windycity (320kbps, 75.2MB)

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Dick Schory’s New Percussion Ensemble
Music for Bang, baa-rOOM and Harp

RCA Victor LSP-1866, 1958


Dick Schory is a classically trained percussionist whose work with the Chicago Symphony and the Ludwig Drum Company led to the formation of the New Percussion Ensemble. This is his first album for RCA, and it’s a highly-dynamic, Living Stereo percussion spectacular. Though briefly available on CD, it’s now out of print; this transcription is taken from the original 1958 vinyl.

Original liner notes:
STOP CODDLING YOUR HI-FI SET!
There are sounds in this album never before heard in the home. Tap dancers haven’t, to my knowledge, been recorded before—at least not two of them on the stage of Chicago’s immense Orchestra Hall, surrounded by twelve working percussionists.

But the taps are only incidental. And possibly there are some die-hards who are not entranced by the idea of two live hoofers in their living room anyway. Basically, this is a record of what happens when a dozen virtuoso percussinoists are turned loose on two truckloads of instruments or bang.

All the tunes are “pops” except on (Typee*)… the arrangements, as uninhibited as possible. Several are even danceable, depending on how you dance.

It really did take two moving vans to arm us with instruments—and these were in addition to the regular complement of timpani, chimes, gongs, etc., already housed at Orchestra Hall. The vast stage which comfortably accommodates the full Chicago Symphony was a jam-packed jigsaw puzzle of xylophones, marimbas, chimes, tambourines, tom-toms and tam-tams. Two guitars, harp and bass were the only plucked hybrids.

Two large banquet tables were crammed with the little gadgets: blocks, horns, slapsticks, whistles, poppers, tuned automobile brake drums. Some had probably never seen a microphone before—the musical logs on Baia, for example, antique finger cymbals, and one polished metal item none of the musicians could identify. When conductor Dick Schory appeared with the scores he nonchalantly identified it as a manifold from a 1946 Chevrolet… and handed its music to percussionist number 7. Between takes the men dashed for the tables to sort cut their ammunition for the next number.

Microphone placement was more like planning football plays than a recording session. There were twelve completely different mike set-ups and balances, one for each selection. The movement of men and matériel was a major undertaking for every number.

The original idea was to avoid a set “orchestra.” Each of the four arrangers was to feel free to use percussion in any combination. They did! If one number called for three oversized marimbas on the left, for the next tune they were replaced with two fat sets of pedal kettle drums. (I think it was this no-hold-barred feature which persuaded Skitch Henderson to compose and arrange two selections for us.)

Mostly we used as few microphones as possible, balancing the blend by changing the grouping rather than with the easy but treacherous “add-another-mike-for-what-you-don’t-hear” approach. A three-track Ampex was used and mostly Telefunken 47’s, wide open.

We experimented.

In spite of all the hoopla there have been precious few real explorations of stereo during an actual recording session. It can get mighty uncomfortable for arrangers, engineers, musicians and producer feeling their way into new territory when a slip can cost thousands. But the superficial gimmick of hearing something “different” from each speaker is a shallow excuse for stereo, a trick which wears thin very quickly.

The big contribution of stereo is space. It’s true that stereo can “place” different instruments on opposite sides of your living room. But only when each instrument or group is surrounded with its own envelope of space do we get the real, live, round sound. Without the sense of space around and between we just have two monaural recordings playing side by side.

That’s why we tried movement—tap dancers ricocheting from one side to another (Buck Dance), and drummers marching in from a distance (National Emblem March). We tried to utilize space—two complete sets of dance band drums battling it out from different positions (Duel on the Skins). (We cheated on Tiddley Winks, which called for a soft-shoe chorus. We used sand blocks; the live dancer we tried with real sand on the floor just sounded gritty.)

And there were other effects, some subtle (April in Paris), some contrapuntal (Skitch Henderson’s Holiday in a Hurry), and some just plain corny (Way Down Yonder in New Orleans)… all with the help of the remarkable acoustics of Orchestra Hall. This famous concert hall is a phenomenal and sensitive sound setting, one which very possibly can’t be matched anywhere. Moving a microphone or instrument only a couple of feet one way or another can change tone color and texture.

There were many factors which made this recording possible, many people who resonded above and beyond the call of duty. Mr. George Kuyper, Manager of Orchestra Hall, heads the list. Joe Wells and his Chicago crew handled the engineering. Charlie Pruzansky somehow managed to snatch the three-track equipment still warm from Van Cliburn’s New York recordings and have it appear at 7 a.m. Monday morning in Chicago. The Ludwig Drum Company and the Musser Marimba Company both put their splendid instrumental resources at our disposal. And there was the man who kept pumping coffee into us for the two days we didn’t see daylight.

An approximate instrument inventory:

Piano; String Bass; 2 Guitars; Banjo; Harp; 2 Complete Dance Outfits; Celesta; 3 Vibraphones; 3 Xylophones; 2 Marimbas; 2 Sets Orchestra Bells; Chromatic Cowbells; 8 Timpani; 4 High Tom-Toms; 4 Low Tom-Toms; 4 Medium Tom-Toms; 3 Snare Drums; 2 Field Drums; 2 Tenor Drums; Concert Bass Drum; Scotch Bass Drum; Bongo Drums; Conga Drums; Quinto; Boo Bam; Timbales; Rhythm Logs; Maracas; Guiro; Claves; 2 Pr. Antique Finger Cymbals; 6 Pr. Double Cymbals; 8 Suspended Cymbals; Boka-di-Bok Cymbals; 4 Gongs; 5 Temple Blocks; 4 Woodblocks; 4 Tambourines; 4 Triangles; 4 Pr. Catanets; Auto Brake Drums; 3 Auto Horns; 2 Slapsticks; Rachet; Bell Plate; Anvil; coo-Coo Whistle; Siren Whistle; Slide Whistle; Assorted Sound Effects.

The New Percussion Ensemble is the creation of Dick Schory, a uniquely talented young man to whom percussion has become a way of life (see cover). His group of twelve has been together almost two years. Many divide their time between the Chicago Symphony and the top recording and broadcasting bands. Ed Metzenger, Reiner’s top timpanist, is considered a dean of the percussive art and started many in the group on their present careers.

Dick Schory also appears with the Chicago Symphony, composes, conducts, has lecture tours, writes books, is advertising and educational director for Ludwig. The impressive thing is—he does these all at once.

--Bob Bollard

* Typee: An original by Schory and Christian based on Melville’s book of the same name which describes the author’s four-months captivity by a primitive tribe of savages living in the valley of Typee on the island of Mukuheva, one of the Marquesas islands in the South Seas. The music is meant to describe the setting of Typee, with its exotic environment and hostile population.

Recorded in Orchestra Hall, Chicago, June 2 and 3, 1958.
Produced by Bob Ballard
Side 1
National Emblem March (Bagley)
Baia (Barroso)
Way Down Yonder in New Orleans (Creamer, Layton)
Ding Dong Polka (Charkovsky)
April in Paris (Harburg, Duke)
Holiday in a Hurry (Henderson)

Side 2
Buck Dance
Duel on Skins (Christian)
September in the Rain (Dubin, Warren)
Tiddley Winks (Charkovsky)
The Sheik of Araby (Smith, Wheeler, Snyder)
Typee (Schory, Christian)

Arranged by Mike Simpson (1, 5, 7)
Arranged by Dick Schory and Willis Charkovsky (2)
Arranged by Bobby Christian (3, 8, 11)
Arranged by Willis Charkovsky (4, 10)
Arranged by Skitch Henderson (6, 9)
Arranged by Dick Schory and Bobby Christian (12)

Willis Charkovsky (piano)
Harold Siegel (string bass)
John Frigo (string bass)
Earl Backus (guitar, banjo)
John Gray (guitar)
Russell Crandall (harp)
Carol Baum (harp)
Bobby Christian (percussion, drums-8)
Edward Metzenger (percussion)
Dale Anderson (percussion)
Hubert Anderson (percussion)
Frank Rullo (percussion, drums-8)
Bob Wessberg (percussion)
Tom David (percussion)
Jim Ross (percussion)

1/1 #windycity (320kbps, 72.8MB)

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Al Anthony
Swingin’ Hi-Fi
Liberty LRP 3090, 1958


Al Anthony is a multi-instrumentalist, though the focus here is on his easy swinging organ playing. This copy of Swingin’ Hi-Fi has some wear that wasn’t easily removed; it’s quite listenable, but you’ll notice patches where surface rubs make several rotations.

Original liner notes:
Al started playing the organ in a Waukegan, Illinois church at the age of twelve. After graduating from high school, he attended college in Minneapolis, studying music and playing football. Deciding his future lay in the music field, he left college and formed a trio which won him popularity in supper clubs in Chicago, New York, Las Vegas and eventually the West Coast.

Al spent the entire 1956 winter season laying at the Hotel La Paz in Palm Springs, California, where he won the title of “Palm Springs’ Most Popular Entertainer”… and the summer seasons of ’56 and ’57 gaining new fans in Paris, Copenhagen, Rome and other European resorts. Guest appearances on Hollywood television shows followed and led to his own West Coast TV show, motion pictures, a recording contract and now, his first and very exciting Liberty album—“Swinging’ Hi-Fi.”

Al Anthony’s musical diversity is well displayed in this album… clever tricks and a crazy humor in “You’re Driving Me Crazy”… an authentic Latin touch in “Baia” and “Tropical Merengue”… spectacular wind, storm and even sea gull effects are produced by the Hammon in “Ebb Tide”… his obvious love for progressive jazz in “Ev’rything I’ve Got Belongs to You”… a “rockin’” arrangement of “I Can’t Believe That You’re in Love With Me,” happily dedicated to his teenage fans… and, if you are lucky enough to have this album in stereo, you’ll swing back and forth from speaker to speaker in the Al Anthony original “Swingin’ Hi”… actually written during one of the recording sessions.

Here, in your hands, is the musical personality of Al Anthony… filled with musical enthusiasm and closely integrated with Howard Roberts’ guitar, Mel Lewis’ drums and Buddy Clark’s bass—and all Swingin’ Hi to the fresh arrangements of the gifted Al Anthony.
Side 1
Vanessa (Doris Fisher, Fred Fisher)
Carmelita (Percy Faith)
I Can’t Believe That You’re in Love With Me (Sammy McHugh, Clarence Gaskill)
Camptown Races (Foster)
Tropical Merengue (Rafael Munoz)
Baia (Ray Gilbert, Ary Barrosa)

Side 2
Sabre Dance (Aram Khatchaturian, Arr. Al Anthony)
You’re Driving Me Crazy (Walter Donaldson)
Ebb Tide (Robert Maxwell)
Ev’rything I’ve Got (Belongs to You) (Rodgers, Hart)
Swingin’ Hi (Al Anthony)
Eleanora (Arendo)

Producer: Ted Keep
Cover Art: Bill Pate
Engineer: Ted Keep

Transistorized Spectra-Sonic-Sound… The Ultimate in High Fidelity

1/1 #waukegan (320kbps, 69.8MB)