Tiomkin

  • Tiomkin Ballet Music Premieres

     

     

    Tiomkin: Paris Under the Stars—Ballet Music for Albertina Rasch
    Slovak National Symphony Orchestra/William Stromberg
    Intrada 7158
    Disc One Total Time:  45:58
    Disc Two Total Time: 36:54
    Recording:   ****/****
    Performance: ****/****

     

     

    Hollywood composers of the Golden Age often honed their skills either as concert composers and performers, in jazz groups, in musical theater, or in the early days of radio.  Most all would try their hand at concert music when the opportunity arose.  Over the last couple of decades such music has surfaced by Korngold, Waxman, and Rosza with much of the latter’s music finding its way onto a series of Naxos releases.  Now Intrada has provided us a window into another great film composer whose early career had connections in modern dance and ballet.  Dimitri Tiomkin (1894-1979) is best known today for scores like those for High Noon, Dial M for Murder, and The Alamo.  Many of his greatest scores have managed to find their way to release.  This new release though provides a picture of Tiomkin’s early style from the late 1920s into the 1930s in a collection of music composed for the Albertina Rasch Dancers.

     

    Rasch (1891-1976) was one of the early pioneers of modern dance and would adapt her technique to Broadway theater and film.  Her troupe performed on vaudeville as part of Ziegfield productions and they even appeared at the Moulin Rouge.  Early projects included work on George White’s Scandals.  Prior to heading to Hollywood, she began conceiving intriguing abstract choreography for pieces like Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue.  Tiomkin was one of the duo piano act that came with the Rasch dancers.  It was he who suggested some of the musical staging of Gershwin’s music to Rasch.  This would lead to her developing what would come to be referred to as “American Ballet” blending classical ballet movements with those of American jazz and popular dance.  Tiomkin would compose a number of ballet works for her troupe and these are now being resurrected for the present album.

     

    Most of the music on this Intrada release is seeing its world premiere recording.  The scores have been lovingly reconstructed by Patrick Russ where applicable.  He also created the score editions from the original manuscripts and supplemented orchestrations as needed.  With William Stromberg on hand to shape the music with this Slovak orchestra, one can hope for a rather fascinating collection of early 20th-Century music.  The pieces here come from a period between 1927 and 1932.  A period filled with many potential directions for concert music, Tiomkin’s work here demonstrates familiarity with current modernist trends as well as nods to classical repertoire and modern jazz.  Within Tiomkin’s own style, one can hear the likes of Antheil and Gershwin blending into a unique musical tapestry.

     

    Disc one kicks off with the delightful “Snow Ballet”, a work that was originally intended for a 1930 MGM musical revue (The March of Time) but was shelved and inserted eventually into a 1933 film, Broadway to Hollywood.  The music features a variety of sounds and percussion effects to create a wintery atmosphere.  Antheil’s concert jazz of the 1920s is a distant cousin to the music that Tiomkin wrote for the Mars Ballet.  Originally for another MGM short film, the ballet sequence was cut, but the music itself would be performed at a Hollywood Bowl concert in 1932.  It is the only one of the pieces in this collection that received a recording.  Though brief, it makes for a fascinating blend of modernist techniques within a jazz idiom.  A more substantial piece is the foure-movement Choreographic Suite which was premiered in 1930 by the Los Angeles Philharmonic.  Each movement intends to create various moods and to that extent it works quite well.  Of the movements, the final “Exotica” is perhaps the most fascinating with its bluesy blends of sound and a post-impressionist feel.  Tiomkin’s Ukrainian roots are filtered into the beautiful waltz here as well.  In the Land of the Narcissus was orchestrated by Hans Spialek and is a rather brief colorful tone poem miniature.  Tiomkin explores Spanish rhythms and melodies in another equally wonderful concert piece, the Fiesta Suite.  The different movements all have connections to different film projects that Tiomkin was involved with in the 1930s (Search for Paradise, Ziegfield Follies).  The final “Fandango” is really an excellent piece of music that features fun, shifting rhythms and firmly has a wonderful folkloric element blending jazz and rumba dance rhythms in an exciting conclusion.  The suite here is certainly an excellent candidate for pops performances.  An early piece originally for a 1929 Colortone Review short follows (The Heart of the Dancing Doll).  The music here has a nice blend of musical theater lushness and engaging thematic writing.  Spialek provides a great deal of fascinating orchestral color in his arrangement.  The music may recall silent film scoring for some.  The disc concludes with the brief Toe Dance, possibly his earliest piece of this collection.  The music was created for a 1926 performance by Rasch’s troupe.  Another wonderfully light piece that has beautiful orchestral writing and melodic invention.

     

    The album takes its title from the piece which opens disc two, Paris Under the Stars.  Tiomkin wrote this for a 1927 musical review that was presented at the Moulin Rouge.  Four pieces make up this piece.  First is a more European-style orchestral tone poem with Mexican musical references in “Tampico”.  A brief second number presents the “Albertina Rasch Girls”.  It features a fine trumpet solo with banjo and light orchestral style, something one might here in musical theater (more Herbert with some Paul Whiteman-like orchestral style).  American musical styles appear in “Hell Bent”.  The piece concludes with a “Romance”.  In this rather fascinating blend of American jazz and blues with European music, one can get a window into what was fascinating to French composers in this period, especially the group that would form Les Six.  There is an open quality to the sound here that is not overly rich orchestrally and which presents clear rhythmic punctuations and syncopations that certainly were fascinating to those hearing this music in its time.  Of course, sometimes the music seems like it could easily accompany an animated short from Warner Brothers with its excellent quick changes of mood and descriptive musical gestures.  Creoles Blues is another of these early works that was not used in the Moulin Rouge program.  Tiomkin would perform this as part of a piano suite in 1929 and there was sheet music published of this as well.  Russ had his work cut out for him in pulling together workable music for Duet (Sitting on a Garden Wall).  He has reconstructed this music from songs that Tiomkin wrote for a 1930 film, Hell’s Angels.  The Rasch Specialty is of interest to film music fans for several reasons.  It was first performed in 1927 and its orchestration is by Edward Powell.  Powell would head to Hollywood where he would have a long career as an orchestrator on hundreds of films.  The melody here would also reappear in Tiomkin’s Choreographic Suite heard on disc one, and even in the “Min Title” of his score for the 1946 film Duel in the Sun.  Some classic examples of theater music appear in the three Vaudeville Dances that follow.  Each are great examples of the sort of music that was commonplace for stage shows at the time.  The last three selections present Tiomin exploring specific rhythmic dances and adapting jazz harmonies and syncopations from the brief 1928 Bolero, to a ragtime-influenced Cakewalk (1932), and a intriguing modernist Scarlet Jazz number to bring things to a close.

     

    Intrada’s sound here is really quite superb.  The music is captured in a way that really lends itself to the style of this music with just enough crispness for the rhythmic vitality of the music and a nice imaging of the orchestra across the sound picture.  The orchestra seems to be having a great deal of fun with this music as well which further adds to the excellent energy and beauty that Stromberg gets from them.  Truly a labor of love for all involved, this is a release that should have great appeal.  Fans of 1920s and 1930s music that comes from the theatrical worlds and popular jazz music of the time will find a great deal to enjoy here.  This is the sort of music that was becoming the “rage” and was further spurred on by Paul Whiteman’s famous 1924 concert.  Ferde Grofe, who was also involved in that concert arranging some of Gershwin’s work, was also instrumental in some of the arranging work on these pieces originally.  But really, one can hear Tiomkin’s embrace of the American musical styles of this time quite well.  Melodic ideas are also engaging even when the music is simply working as support for a dramatic stage interpretation.  All around this is an excellent release that is likely to fly under the radar.  This is a welcome release that is certainly among the finest work Stromberg has also done and one can only hope there is more to come.

  • Tiomkin's "Wild is the Wind"

    In a welcome change from more recent releases, La-La Land has turned to a score from one of the masters of the mid-20th Century, Dimitri Tiomkin.  Tiomkin’s music is oft admired by fans of film music of the 1940s-1960s.  His distinct orchestral style, informed a bit by his Russian heritage, is unique from many of the other composers working at the time.  Similar to Victor Young’s penchant for crafting popular songs from his film themes, Tiomkin’s best known film pieces are themes that became popular songs, especially from his many western scores.  Still, today, his music is perhaps less likely to appear which makes this release of 1958’s Wild is the Wind all the more significant.  The release may encourage new fans to seek out this important Hollywood composer.

    George Cukor’s Wild is the Wind (1957) began life as a potential remake (of the 1947 Italian film Furia) that intended to find another American project for Italian actress Anna Magnani after her successful appearance in Hal Wallis’ recent The Rose Tattoo.  The end result featuring a rewritten script by Arnold Schulman (Cimarron), his first screenplay, was set in Nevada where a sheep rancher (Anthony Quinn) brings home an Italian wife but his neglect eventually opens the door for a love triangle with his hired hand (Anthony Franciosa) and her.  The film received Golden Globe nominations for “Best Drama” and Best Actess and 3 Academy Award nominations for Quinn, Magnani, and Ned Washington and Tiomkin’s title song (up against a strong set of now classic songs:  “An Affair to Remember”, “April Love”,  and “Tammy”, and the winner “The Joker is Wild”).

    The opening track features a vigorous sweep of romantic Hollywood scoring before shifting into a lighter folk-like melodic idea that follows Quinn’s character laying flowers at his wife’s grave.  There is a slight Italian feel to the mandolin melodic statement that is a touching theme for Rosan(n)a (sic), the deceased wife.  Her music will cast itself across the score as it proceeds.  The familiar title song appears here in its originally intended orchestral form (replaced by Mathis’ vocal version in the film).  One gets a sense of the sweep of this gorgeous theme and the way Tiomkin suggests some of the turmoil that is to come as it moves to unusual arrival points and even winds around chromatically.  The title theme appears in unique ways (including a radio source that brilliantly blurs diagetic and non-diagetic music) and Tiomkin manages to help shape that theme so that we are always aware of this tumultuous romantic triangle that will tear things apart.  There are some delightful light moments as well in “Sheep Country”—with even a little musical animal “color”; and “Horse Chase”.  The more haunting music of Rosanna recalls a more film noir style at times, especially in the scoring of “Pictures of Ros(s)anna”.  The orchestral colors in the score are equally engaging blending a romantic orchestral narrative with touches of Italianate scoring and a variety of interesting variations that add extra flourishes around the full textures here.  The final bars of “Let Him Go” are the beginning of the more intense dramatic hints at the gathering storm and darkness to come that begin to appear in the score.  Often there are familiar film tropes to help ratchet up tension made more effective by snippets of thematic material masterfully incorporated into the textures and adding to the emotional depth of the scenes they support.  There is even a little Italian film music in the “Canzona Neapolitana/Scaptricciatiello”.  The latter receives a “bonus” instrumental track to round off disc one.

     

    At the time, Columbia records produced an LP of portions of the score.  That album makes up disc two here allowing fans a chance to hear this recording in improved sound.  It kicks off with Johnny Mathis’ hit cover of the title song.  Many of these score tracks feature some slightly different endings and adjustments to make them more appropriate for their appearance apart from the film.  As many of the original sequences were often dialed out earlier in the film, fans now get a chance to hear Tiomkin’s original intent.  The music is always quite fascinating to  listen to how the primary thematic material is woven into the fabric of this score and how they become colored by the intensity of the relationships as things play out.  The result is a score that works quite well on its own here, even more so than the LP, though it does provide a nice nostalgia value and makes this release even more complete and desirable.  This is a must have for lovers of classic film scoring and a great way to hear one Tiomkin’s equally fine scores.  La-La Land's limited edition of 2500 copies is now available from the label's website and other specialty outlets.