Showing posts with label John Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Williams. Show all posts

May 25, 2024

101 Reel-to-Reel Tapes 124: Star Wars Episode IV ~ A New Hope

 ~  
Reel-to-Reel front cover 
 cover design by Theodor Lloyd Glazer
photo of album cover by Styrous®


Forty-seven years ago today, on May 25, 1977, the blockbuster film, Star Wars Episode IV - A New Hope, was released and Sci-Fi films would never be the same again.          
 
I vividly remember standing in line with thousands of other Sci-Fi fanatics to see this new marvel, not really knowing what was in store for me (link below). It seems it was only yesterday that I watched the opening of the film crawl which was a throw back to the old 1930's Flash Gordon series (link below) as the film began and I heard the dramatic music of John Williams explode then slowly dwindle out and the huge Empire warship slowly emerge from the top of the screen; I can still feel the goose bumps that popped out on my arms.    
 
 
Flash Gordon poster -1936
 
        
I was completely sucked in and have written extensively about the film, it's participants and, certainly not least, it's marketing items (link below) for the last few decades.       
 

Reel-to-Reel front cover detail
 cover design by Theodor Lloyd Glazer
detail photo of album cover by Styrous®


Star_Wars  ~ Episode IV – A New Hope was the first film released in the Star Wars film series and the fourth chronological chapter of the "Skywalker Saga".           


Reel-to-Reel back cover 
 cover design by Theodor Lloyd Glazer
photo of album back cover by Styrous®




Reel-to-Reel back cover detail
 cover design by Theodor Lloyd Glazer
photo of album back cover detail by Styrous®



I think the score for the film, by John Williams, is one of the greatest film scores ever written, surpassed only by Bernard Herman for The Day the Earth Stood Still. Actually, I think Star_Wars is the greatest score Williams EVER wrote; he never surpassed it.       




Other collaborations with Spielberg include Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), the Indiana Jones franchise (1981–2023), Jurassic Park (1993), Saving Private Ryan (1998), Catch Me If You Can (2002), War Horse (2011), Lincoln (2012), and The Fabelmans (2022). His work as a film composer includes Valley of the Dolls (1967), Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1969), The Cowboys (1972), The Long Goodbye (1973), and The Towering Inferno (1974). He received five Academy Awards for Best Original Score for Fiddler on the Roof (1971), Jaws (1975), Star Wars (1977), E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial (1982), Schindler's List (1993), Superman (1978) and the first three Harry Potter films (2001–2004).        
                  

Reel-to-Reel box cover interior
photo by Styrous®


With Henry Mancini, he recorded the scores of Peter Gunn (1959), Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), Days of Wine and Roses (1962), and Charade (1963), and played the piano part of the guitar-piano ostinato in Mancini's Peter Gunn title theme.              


Reel-to-Reel box cover interior
photo by Styrous®


The music from Star_Wars has been covered dozens of times. The film came out at the height of the disco era so, of course, there is a disco version by Meco (Domenico Monardo) (link below) and the latest iteration I know of is a hard rock cover by Galactic Empire with a really fun video for the song on YouTube (link below).              
        

Reel-to-Reel box cover interior detail
photo by Styrous®






   
Tracklist:
       
Side 1:
        
A1 - Main Title
A2 - Imperial Attack
A3 - Princess Leia's Theme
A4 - The Desert And The Robot Auction
A5 - Ben's Death And The Tie Fighter Attack
A6 - The Little People Work
A7 - Rescue Of The Princess
A8 - Inner City
A9 - Cantina Band
       
Side 2:
       
B1 - The Land Of The Sandpeople
B2 - Mouse Robot And Blasting Off
B3 - The Return Home
B4 - The Walls Converge
B5 - The Princess Appears
B6 - The Last Battle
B7 - The Throne Room And End Title
       
Companies, etc.
       
    Recorded At – Soundstream, Inc.
    Mastered At – Soundstream, Inc.
    Mastered At – Sheffield Lab Matrix
       
Credits:
       
    Composed By, Conductor – John Williams (4)
    Design [Cover Design, Illustration] – Theodor Lloyd Glazer
    Orchestra – Boston Pops Orchestra
    Photography By – William Shisler
    Producer – George Korngold
       
Notes:
       
℗ 1977 20th Century Records
CRC denotes Columbia House club edition
"For The United Kingdom, licenses for the use of recordings for public performances may be obtained from Phonographic Performance Ltd., Ganton House, 14-22 Ganton Street, London.

London Symphony Orchestra – Star Wars
Label:    20th Century Records – 1R2 6693
Format:    Reel-To-Reel, 3 ¾ ips, ¼", 4-Track Stereo, 7" Cine Reel, Album, Club Edition
Country: US
Released: 1977
Genre: Classical, Stage & Screen
Style: Modern Classical, Contemporary, Soundtrack

         
Viewfinder links:        
        
All things Star Wars         
The Day the Earth Stood Still          
Carrie Fisher        
Harrison Ford         
Bernard Herrmann            
Henry Mancini          
Meco           
Star Wars (the movie)         
John Williams             
        
Net links:        
        
Galactic Empire         
Star_Wars site        
        
         
        
        
YouTube links:        
         
Flash Gordon/Star Wars crawl           
Galactic Empire ~ Star Wars          
Meco ~ Star Wars   
Star Wars ~               
         Opening Crawl        
         Cantina       
        
         
           

         
        
        
Styrous® ~ Saturday, May 25, 2024       
       
 
 














December 17, 2020

20,000 vinyl LP 260: Arthur Fiedler ~ Pops Goes Christmas

~       
vinyl LP front cover 
cover photo by David B. Hecht 
photo of album cover by Styrous®


Today is the birthday of Arthur Fiedler who was born in n Boston, Massachusetts, in 1894, to parents who were Austrian Jewish immigrants. His father was a violinist who played in the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and his mother was a pianist.         
 
What better tribute to this event at this time of year than his Christmas album? All the songs are standards so nothing to really say about them other than his treatment of them.   


vinyl LP back cover 
back cover photo by David B. Hecht 
photo of album back cover by Styrous®


The one stand out on the album is the now traditional song, The Toy Trumpet. The song was written in 1937 by Raymond Scott who was an American composer, band leader, pianist, record producer, and inventor of electronic instruments (link below). The trumpet solo is by Al Hirt who uses a trumpet mute so that it sounds distant, however, the arrangement is jazzy and fast. A very nice treatment of the song. 
 
In the finale of the 1938 film, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Shirley Temple and Bill Robinson sing and dance to the song and they use the original version by Scott. The  musical comedy film was directed by Allan Dwan and in addition, it starred  Randolph Scott (no relation to Raymond) and Jack Haley who would portray the Tin Man the following year in the MGM film The Wizard of Oz.   
 
 
Randolph Scott & Shirley Temple ~ Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm                                                       
 
 
                                         Bill "Bojangles" Robinson ~ Shirley Temple ~ Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm 


The original version of The Toy Trumpet was recorded by The Raymond Scott Quintette in New York City on February 20, 1937 (link below). It was much faster, jazzier and stopped for a vamp stroll near the end. It featured Pete Pimiglio on clarinet, Dave Harris on sax, Dave Wade took the trumpet part, Raymond Scott played piano and Johnny Williams was on drums. Williams would later be the father of film score composer and Boston Pops Conductor John Williams. Funny how things come around.  
            

   

A Christmas Festival was written by Leroy Anderson, in 1950. It was first performed on June 12, 1950, and recorded by Arthur Fiedler & the Boston Pops on June 19 of the same year. It is a medley of standard Christmas songs and ends with Joy To the World and a grand organ.       
 
        


  


  




  
Tracklist:

Side 1:

        Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – A Christmas Festival - (8:34)
A1a    Joy To The World   
A1b    Deck The Halls   
A1c    Good King Wenceslas   
A1d    God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen   
A1e    Hark! The Herald Angels Sing   
A1f    The First Nowell   
A1g    Silent Night   
A1h    Jingle Bells   
A1i    O Come, All Ye Faithful    

A2    Arthur Fiedler And His Chorus And Orchestra* – The Little Drummer Boy - 2:28
A3    Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – What Child Is This? - 5:34
A4    Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – The Toy Trumpet, Trumpet – Al Hirt - 2:32
A5    Arthur Fiedler And His Chorus – Carol Of The Bells - 1:10
A6    Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – March Of The Toys - 3:46

Side 2:

B1    Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – White Christmas, Violin – Alfred Krips - 2:46
 
        Arthur Fiedler And His Chorus And Orchestra* – Medley - (5:05)
B2a    Here We Come A-Caroling   
B2b    O Christmas Tree   
B2c    I Saw Three Ships    

B3    Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – Parade Of The Wooden Soldiers - 3:52
B4    Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – Sleigh Ride - 2:52
B5    Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer - 2:08
B6    Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town - 2:35
B7    Arthur Fiedler, Boston Pops Orch.* – Winter Wonderland - 2:54
B8    Arthur Fiedler And His Chorus And Orchestra* – Silent Night - 2:20

Companies, etc.

    Copyright © – RCA Records
    Pressed By – RCA Records Pressing Plant, Indianapolis

Credits:

    Conductor – Arthur Fiedler
    Engineer [Recording] – Bernard Keville
    Photography By – David B. Hecht
    Producer – Peter Dellheim

Notes:

 ℗ © 1972, RCA Records

The label style, with "RCA" above the center hole to the left of Nipper and "Red Seal" on its side to the right of the center hole, indicates a 1976 to late-1980s pressing.
 
Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Matrix / Runout (Side A label): BRRS-3815
    Matrix / Runout (Side B label): BRRS-3816
    Matrix / Runout (Side A runout, etched): BRRS-3815-7S I A1
    Matrix / Runout (Side B runout, stamped except "I" and "K" etched): BRRS 3816 36 I A1K
    Rights Society: ASCAP
    Pressing Plant ID (Etched in runouts): I
 
Arthur Fiedler / Boston Pops* And Arthur Fiedler Chorus* And Orchestra* – Pops Goes Christmas
Label: RCA Red Seal – LSC-3324
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue
Country: US
Original release: 1972
Released: 1976 - 1980
Genre: Pop, Classical
Style: Religious, Choral, Light Music
 
   
         
Viewfinder links:        
         
Leroy Anderson          
Arthur Fiedler         
Al Hirt         
Bill Robinson        
Randolph Scott        
Raymond Scott        
Shirley Temple         
John Williams       
    
Net links:        
        
Boston Pops ~ A Brief History of the Boston Pops        
PBS.org ~ Once Upon a Sleigh Ride: Leroy Anderson       
    
YouTube links:        
         
Arthur Fiedler & The Boston Pops ~       
       Medley: A Christmas Festival          
       The Little Drummer Boy         
       What Child Is This          
       The Toy Trumpet         
       Carol Of The Bells           
       March Of The Toys          
       White Christmas                
       Medley              
       Parade Of The Wooden Soldiers          
       Sleigh Ride            
       Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer                
       Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town               
       Winter Wonderland            
       Silent Night                      
Raymond Scott Quintette ~ The Toy Trumpet             
Shirley Temple & Bill Robinson ~ The Toy Trumpet      
       
       
       
       
       
       
Styrous® ~ Thursday, December 17, 2020       
       















 
 
 
 
 
 
 

July 14, 2020

A boy & his dinosaurs ~ memories of a spunky youth @ 80

~

When I was a kid, between the time I wanted to be a cowboy (blame Bing Crosby for that) or a space cadet . . .


 The Cowboy - 1887


. . . (ended up being a space cadet, anyway) . . . 


Frankie Thomas - 1952  


. . . and the time I wanted to be an archaeologist, I wanted to be a paleontologist. I loved dinosaurs; I thought they were the coolest things ever. Unfortunately, dinosaurs first appeared during the Triassic period, around 243 million years ago, a little before my time. 
     
Any movie that had a dinosaur in it was OK with me. The reasons I loved King Kong, aside from the fact that he was WAY cool, was that he fought one as Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) watched and screamed her head off at the top of a tree stump. Jessica Lange would reprise the role 43 years later. Plus the score by Max Steiner dramatically amplified the action (probably one of the films that made me fall in love with movie sound scores) (YouTube link below).         


King Kong & friend - 1933
with Ann Darrow on the tree stump


Then there was the 1940 film, One Million B.C.! WOW! I loved that movie! Although in real life mankind came millions of years after the age of the dinosaur, the film had Tumak, Victor Mature, battling one or two of them (links below) with Carole Landis as his main squeeze;  Lon Chaney, Jr. was also in the film and Werner R. Heymann wrote the score. Of course, there was the obligatory erupting volcano to keep the plot moving. It was released in Britain as, A Man and His Mate.   
      



D.W. Griffith began directing One Million B.C. under the title When Man Began but Hal Roach and his son, Hal Roach, Jr. finished directing it. Roy Seawright and Frank Young stuck fins on various crocodiles, lizards and iguanas and photographically enlarged them. This inspired the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to ban such gruesome uses of these animals, so the footage from this film was later recycled over and over in many films including the 1953 movie, Robot Monster, a really wretched movie often called the worst one ever made (rivaling Plan 9 From Outer Space directed by Ed Wood with Bela Lugosi).




The saving graces that rescued Robot Monster from men in gorilla suits (groan, this one wore a diving helmit) (links below): it was the first Sci-Fi movie with stereophonic sound, it was filmed in 3-D, it featured a half-naked, Hollywood hunk, George Nader . . .


publicity photo


. . . and the biggest surprise of all, the score was by Elmer Bernstein.!!!!!! To be fair, it was during the notorious McCarthy era Hollywood Black List; Bernstein needed to work in order to eat.    

Another surprise is in 2017 the film was made into a musical (links below) with music, lyrics and book adaptation by Rich Silverman; it doesn't fair any better than the original movie!!!!! 




Marcus Chavez (Ro-Man) & Jamie Miller


Before MTV had enough music videos to fill their day they scheduled the most amazing specials and events. In 1982 MTV aired a TV special; Videography Studios and 3D Video pooled their resources and shot 3D footage entitled, Robot Monster - The Special Edition, to wrap around the 1950s Sci-Fi classic, Robot Monster. The rock group, SPACE CADET star as the guys in silver lamé.... with Bob Burns in the famous Tracy the Gorilla suit from the kid's TV series, The Ghost Busters (link below), however, you need 3D glasses to view it!          

Returning to One Million B.C., it was remade in 1966 by the British production group, Hammer Film Productions (of gothic horror film fame) with a new title, One Million Years B.C.   




The special effects by Ray Harryhausen were pretty good for the time (link below); it starred John Richardson as Tumak and his sweetheart was Raquel Welch.




The movie stank but Welch was a knockout! The film made her an international sex symbol. She was chased by a dino or two in it . . .       


 


. . . and the movie had the volcano eruption as well; Hollywood had a thing about dinosaurs and volcanoes and passed the concept on to the rest of the world (links below).   

By the time Godzilla came along in 1954 I was past dinosaurs as a possible profession. I was deep into Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, the Incas and the Aztecs by then; I was still into ancient civilizations (actually, I still am) when the King Tut exhibition tour was in San Francisco in 1976 which blew me away.   


King Tut funerary mask
exhibition tour, San Francisco - 1976
 
      
I will always have a soft spot in my heart for a movie with a dino or two in it. In 1993 Jurassic Park, directed by Steven Spielberg, satisfied that fondness in spades; the movie isn't so great but the special effects by Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) are terrific and the Brontosaurus (main theme) by John Williams of Star Wars, is grand, regal and beautiful! (links below).    




I recently saw a film on TV, Cowboys Vs. Dinosaurs, made in 2015 (links below). It was pretty cheesy with the hero, Val Walker (portrayed by Rib Hillis of Sharktopus vs. Pteracuda and Dinocroc vs. Supergator fame), actually lassoing a dinosaur! Can you believe it?  
    
        


The amazing thing about this movie is he lassoed them in Japan . . .  


. . . and in Korea with Sara Malakul Lane helping him.

 

For serious consideration, however, there is the 1999 six-part nature documentary television miniseries on BBC Earth devoted to the age of the dinosaur titled, Walking with Dinosaurs (links below). The special effects are superb, however, it tells it like it was; it is not at all romanticized. Squeamish beware! The series won two BAFTA Awards, three Emmy Awards and a Peabody Award in 2000.  



            
            
Viewfinder links:           

Lon Chaney, Jr.
Bing Crosby                      
Ray Harryhausen             
Bela Lugosi              
Victor Mature
George Nader         
Star Wars @ 40           
John Williams        
Ed Wood                   
       
Net links:           
Rotten Tomatoes ~ One Million B.C.           
WSU.edu ~ One Million BC      
           
YouTube links:           
            
The Animal World ~ The Prehistoric Sequence 1956              
BBC ~ Walking With Dinosaurs:           
      Allosaurus ambushes its prey       
      Argentinosaurus ~ Biggest Dinosaur Ever!  
      Argentinosaurus vs. Mapusaurus gang   
      Carcharodontosaurus    
      Dinosaur Cannibalism    
      Dinosaur Massacre
      Diplodocus Herd: Ballad of Allosaurus    
      Oviraptorid Fights to Protect Nest   
      Sinornithosaurus: A poisonous bite       
      Spinosaurus fishes for prey        
      Spinosaurus vs Carcharodontosaurus
      The vegetarian T-Rex        
Cowboys vs. Dinosaurs         
Jurassic Park ~   
      Main Theme     
      Welcome to Jurassic Park Scene     
Bing Crosby - I'm An Old Cowhand (From The Rio Grande)    
KC and the Sunshine Band ~ Space Cadet           
King Kong ~                  
      Beauty Killed the Beast Scene         
      Kong vs. T-Rex Scene     
One Million BC (1940)    
One Million BC (colorized Trailer) (1940)      
One Million Years B.C. (1966)        
Robot Monster trailer (1953)      
Robot Monster complete (1953)              
Robot Monster the Musical ~
      I Always Walk Alone    
      Official Trailer   
      Official Trailer Two   
      Robot Monster the Musical Reviews       
Robot Monster - The Special Edition     
Whatever Happened to Ro-Man? (7 mins., 30 secs.)      
       
         
           
dinosaur stampede

     

Ye! Haw!

       
           
Styrous® ~ Sunday, July 12, 2020