Tiomkin

  • Stunning New Hitchcock Music Disc From John Mauceri

    Toccata Classics has done the film music community a great service by bringing back John Mauceri to classic film music recordings.  Mauceri led the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra through many great film works during his 16 years as music director there with some 300 performances.  Some of his recordings with that orchestra were filled with a great variety of classical and film selections, as well as Broadway tunes, that often were unique and faithful to their originals.  The present release, with the Danish National Symphony Orchestra, was recorded in concert in November 2013.  Many of the pieces on the program are the first recordings Mauceri has made of this repertoire.

    There are a great many familiar selections on this release paying homage to the great Alfred Hitchcock and his films from the 1950s.  Many of them are in new editions by Mauceri and are making debut appearances here.  One of them, the concert overture from Herrmann’s The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956) kicks the album off with great excitement.  This is a modified version of the oft-performed “Prelude”.  Stunning though is what can best be said of the exquisitely performed music from Waxman’s Rebecca (1940) in a suite of music from that classic score.  The orchestra is simply superb with perfect articulation and well-balanced as it enters into some of the great climactic music and subsequent mad waltz.  This is probably one of the best performances of this suite on record.  Of course, we are only ten minutes into this program.
    The music changes style and course for a suite from Waxman’s brief score for Rear Window (1954) this Bernstein-esque music simply bubbles along here with great brass playing and delightfully-realized solo wind lines.  The suite is separated out into four tracks (Prelude; Lisa-Intermezzo; Ballet; Lisa-Finale).  The saxophone work here is certainly spot on noir recreation with perfect balance of romanticism and mystery.  Two new premiere suites of music by Tiomkin follow from Strangers on a Train (1951) and Dial M for Murder (1954).  The former features some of Tiomkin’s delightfully comic writing with a bit of jazz and engaging thematic material that make this one of the composer’s memorable works.  A beautiful waltz opens the latter score with great Romantic gestures and additional fine playing makes a great case for this wonderful score as well.  That waltz helps provide unity in this often gorgeous dramatic music that is superbly unique from the other styles on the disc.

     

    A great more Herrmann follows, the composer having been Hitchcock’s most frequent collaborator until the falling out over Torn Curtain caused the two to part ways.  It would not be a Hitchcock disc with the inclusion of some music from Vertigo (1958) and Mauceri includes the “Prelude” and mesmerizing “Scene d’Amour” here.  The latter features some great dynamic shading as it shimmers before its Wagnerian swells.  Of additional interest is a newly restored concert work from Herrmann’s Psycho score, expanded into a work just under 16 minutes and given the subtitle: A Narrative for String Orchestra.  The composer recorded this himself.  Mauceri uses his own newly-edited version, and one of the first digital recordings of the piece.  The visceral attacks are quite effective in this performance.  Some might find the piece itself overlong, but it is an excellent example of Herrmann bringing together a more interesting musical narrative for concert use.  The “Main Titles” from North By Northwest (1959) precede the work.  It is followed by Herrmann’s arrangement of the Storm Clouds Cantata music by Arthur Benjamin that played an important role in The Man Who Knew Too Much in Hitchcock’s original version, and reedited for the 1956 remake.  This is simply wonderful music that is often quite striking with its Wagnerian references, but sumptuously recorded and played here makes it sound like a masterpiece all the same.  Klaudia Kidon’s performance is equally excellent, well balanced with the choir and orchestra.  Finally, the album closes off with “End Credits” music from Danny Elfman’s Hitchcock score—the film being set during the making of Psycho helps give the music some context.  It is also a mark of Mauceri’s continued support of new film music in the concert hall.  The result is a rather nice bonus for an already generous album.

     

    Over the years there have been a number of Hitchcock-based compilations.  Some, like this one, tend to cover the basics, others delve into rarer territory.  None of them are as amazingly recorded as this new Mauceri disc.  The Psycho and Benjamin sections may not be everyone’s cup of tea, but you will not find better performances currently on disc.  Toccata Classics makes one wish for the days when a release like this was not such a rare occurrence, and perhaps we can hear more from Mauceri’s concert performances in the future.  The Danish orchestra really seems to relish this music and its many styles made possible by Mauceri’s own appreciation of the selections on this program.  The cover is a bit typical, the Hitchcock portrait silhouette, and a list of works, not unlike other label’s Hitchcock releases.  Sometimes releases like this can feel too pops like with a light feel, but here things are taken quite seriously with attention to detail, individual composer style, and dramatic flair.  The booklet notes are equally superb and intelligently written.  There are very few releases that have this much great synergy going for them and even fewer that can boast an 81 minute playing time!

  • Sony Plays it Again with Repackaged Catalogue Material

    Falling under the category of corporate synergy, a new Sony Classical release is a reduced-price 2-disc set featuring a variety of music from classic films in honor of TCM’s “Twenty Years of Classic Movies”.  Oddly, but not surprising, none of the material here on the aptly titled Play it Again comes from the original soundtracks but consists of a variety of re-recordings, many from Sony’s 1990s catalogue.  However, some news for fans of the Charles Gerhardt classic film music series is the appearance of several tracks from his 1970s RCA recordings.

    Disc one is exclusively performed by Charles Gerhardt and the National Philharmonic Orchestra.  A majority of the disc focuses on the music of Korngold and here is where some of the previously unavailable recordings surface.  First of these is a suite of music from Of Human Bondage (1946).  Gerhardt’s LP release featured just “Nora’s Theme” but here we get a better re-edited version he made shortly before his death.  The suite adds the main title, “Christmas”, “Sally”, a lullaby, and the finale.  Also expanded is music for The Sea Hawk (1940) now a suite some 15 minutes in length.  Gerhardt’s Steiner recordings are also mined for music from Gone With the Wind, Casablanca, and King Kong all appear on disc two.

    Otherwise, the second disc features a few more recent recordings, though most are more than 10 years old now themselves.  Esa-Pekka Salonen’s classic Bernard Herrmann release is represented with appropriate classic sequences from Psycho (“The Murder”) and Vertigo (“Scene d’Amour”).  From Maurice Jarre’s 1987 Royal Philharmonic recordings comes music from Dr. Zhivago (“Prelude/Lara’s Theme”) and Lawrence of Arabia (“Overture, Part II”).  Sony’s Morricone album with the Santa Cecilia Orchestra is the source for the “MainTitles” from The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly.  Elmer Bernstein is represented with his iconic main title (including “Calvera’s Visit”) from a recording with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. Finally, the Boston Pops are heard with John Williams conducing “The Dialogue” from Close Encounters and in a 1962 release with Arthur Fiedler of Rozsa’s “Parade of the Charioteers” from Ben-Hur.  The whole collection is finished off with Mancini’s famous “Moon River” from Breakfast at Tiffany’s from his 1961 release—the closest to an “original soundtrack” recording in the entire set.

    First off, this is a great set to introduce classic film music to, especially some Korngold.  Some film music fans will want to grab this for the extended Gerhardt releases here.  It is just too bad that Sony could not see fit to provide a 2-disc set conceived in the 21st century where 70-80 minutes is the expected norm and with such a huge catalogue to mine anyway.  Furthermore, there is not much to get excited about in the meager liner notes.  This is somewhat more bizarre given that the release is supposed to be celebrating something.  What is there is cursory at best.  The conceit here is that this is a bargain 2-for-1 deal, but with little work needing to be done the result feels like a cut and paste job through and through.  All of that said, the selections are well-chosen pieces and at least performance and original recording information is provided here.  It is just too bad that these albums are longer and perhaps really explored the back catalogue of classic recordings a bit more.  That said, the Korngold extended suites may be enough sugar to entice fans to pick this release up.