Blog Post

Tony Thomas: The Recordings

Jon Burlingame

Source: The Cue Sheet - Vol. 13, No. 4 October 1997, pp. 37-44

Publisher: The Film Music Society


Copyright © 1997. Text reproduced by kind permission of the author, Jon Burlingame

Tony Thomas produced and promoted a great number of film music recordings, LP vinyl and CD format, starting with the Citadel series in 1976. Varèse Sarabande took over distribution in 1979 (CT-7006), repackaging and remastering some earlier releases. The label remained until 1986, and in 1995 Tom Null, former Varèse executive, took over control of compact-discs.

The following discography, courtesy of Jon Burlingame, was originally complied with input from Andrea Thomas, Rudy Behlmer, David Schecter, Preston Neal Jones, David Mitchell, Craig Spaulding and Tom Null.


CITADEL


CT-6001 Hungarian Serenade (Miklos Rozsa, Nuremberg Symphony)

CT--6002 Conversations in Hollywood (interviews with Nelson Eddy, Jeanette MacDonald, Robert Taylor, Agnes Moorehead, Bud Abbott, Fredric March, Francis X. Bushman)

CT-6003 Alfred Newman: Hollywood Maestro

CT-6004 Alice Faye and the Songs of Harry Warren

CT-6005 Robert Russell Bennett: Violin Concerto (Bernard Herrmann, London Symphony Orchestra; soloist, Louis Kaufman)
CT-6006 Bell, Book and Candle (George Duning)
CT-6007 Newfoundland Rhapsody & Other Scenes of Canada
CT-6008 The Blue Max (Jerry Goldsmith)
CT-6009 Wunderkind! The Earliest Compositions of Erich Wolfgang Korngold (Antonin Kubalek, piano)
CT-6010 Smetana: Memories of Bohemia (Antonin Kubalek, piano)
CT-6011 North Country: The Music of Canada (Victor Feldbrill, Toronto Symphony Orchestra)
CT-6012 Art of the Alto Saxophone (Ralph Gari)
CT-6013 The Boyd Neel Touch (Hart House Orchestra of Toronto)
CT-6014 Forbidden Games: Themes of Love & Longing (John Perrone, guitar)
CT-6015 The Night Visitor / Touch of Evil (Henry Mancini)
CT-6016 The Midas Run (Elmer Bernstein)
CT-6017 Maya (Hans J. Salter)
CT-6018 Harold Lloyd's World of Laughter (Walter Scharf)
CT-6019 Freud (Jerry Goldsmith)
CT-6020 The Cassandra Crossing (Jerry Goldsmith)
CT-6021 Classic Film Themes for Saxophone (Ralph Gari, soloist)
CT-6022 Wichita Town (Hans J. Salter)
CT-6023 Film Music by Alex North
CT-6024 The Legendary Victor Young
CT-6025 A Walk With Love and Death (Georges Delerue)
CT-6026 Music for Frankenstein, Dracula, The Mummy, The Wolf Man and Other Old Friends: Horror Rhapsody (Hans J. Salter) and Horror Express (John Cacavas)
CT-6027 Antonin Kubalek in Recital (works of Brahms, Schumann)
CT-6028 A Patch of Blue (Jerry Goldsmith)
CT-6029 Conversations in Hollywood, Vol. 2 (Bing Crosby and Jack Benny discuss their careers)
CT-6030 Songs by Harry Warren (Harry Betts orchestra, chorus)
CT-6031 Blood on the Sun (Miklos Rozsa)
CT-7001 Paderewski: Sonata in E-Flat Major/Variations & Fugue (Antonin Kubalek, pianist)
CT-7002 The Kalman Touch (orchestral suites from Eric Kalman's operettas, Willi Stech, conductor)
CT-7003 The Errol Flynn Album (radio versions of "They Died With Their Boots On" and "Gentleman Jim")
CT-7004 Miklos Rozsa: Crisis (instrumental soloists Albert Dominguez, piano; Daryl Denning, guitar; Ralph Gari, clarinet)
CT-7005 Film Songs by Erich Wolfgang Korngold and Max Steiner (Maria Martino, soprano; William Teaford, piano)
CT-7006 Bell, Book and Candle (George Duning)
CT-7007 The Blue Max (Goldsmith)
CT-7008 A Patch of Blue (Goldsmith)
CT-7009 Captain Horatio Hornblower (Robert Farnon)
CT-7010 Film Music for Piano (by Rozsa, Korngold, Steiner; Albert Dominguez, piano)
CT-7011 Freud (Goldsmith)
CT-7012 Horror Rhapsody (Salter) and Horror Express (Cacavas)
CT-7013 Cry of the Banshee / Edgar Allan Poe Suite (Lex Baxter)


COMPOSER COLLECTIONS / PROMOTIONAL


CT-MR-1 Film Music: Miklos Rozsa (The Power, Sodom and Gomorrah)
TT-MR-2 The Lost Weekend (Rozsa)
TT-MR-3 Miklos Rozsa: Two Classic Film Scores (Brute Force, The Naked City)
TT-MR-4 Miklos Rozsa: Music for Films (The Killers, Dark Waters, Time Out of Mind)
DEL/F 25410 (1975 Max Steiner Music Society) Max Steiner: The RKO Years 1932-35 (Symphony of Six Million, Bird of Paradise, King Kong, Morning Glory, Lost Patrol, Of Human Bondage, Little Minister, Three Musketeers)
CT-MS-2 Max Steiner: The Warner Years (Dive Bomber, Santa Fe Trail, One Foot in Heaven, Adventures of Mark Twain, Glass Menagerie, Flame and the Arrow)
CT-MS-3/4 Since You Went Away (Steiner)
CT-MS-5 Music by Max Steiner (Pursued, The Searchers)
CT-MS-6 The Magic of Max Steiner (Tovarich, Gold Is Where You Find It, Young Man With a Horn, They Died With Their Boots On, Garden of Allah, Rocky Mountain, Saratoga Trunk, Deep Valley, Woman in White)
CT-MS-7 Max Steiner Revisited (Lady Takes a Sailor, So Big, Ice Palace, Spencer's Mountain, City for Conquest, Operation Pacific, Life of Emile Zola)
CT-MS-8 Beyond the Forest (Steiner)
TT-MS-9/10 Max Steiner: Music for Westerns (Dallas, San Antonio, Oklahoma Kid, Jim Thorpe: All American, Charge at Feather River, Lion and the Horse, Distant Trumpet, Violent Men, Virginia City, Silver River, Raton Pass)
TT-MS-11 Adventures of Don Juan (Steiner)
TT-MS-12 The Letter (Steiner) &A Sound Portrait of the Composer
TT-MS-13/14 Max Steiner: Four Classic Film Scores (Tomorrow Is Forever, Treasure of Sierra Madre, Johnny Belinda, The Fountainhead)
TT-MS-15 Music from Mildred Pierce and Other Melodramatic Ladies (Without Honor, Caged, Breaking Point, Four Daughters)
TT-MS-16 The Steiner Touch (Jezebel, Dark Victory, My Reputation, Marjorie Morningstar)
TT-MS-17 Max Steiner...Memories (Escapade in Japan, Dr. Ehrlich's Magic Bullet, Dispatch From Reuters, Arsenic and Old Lace, Fighter Squadron)
TT-HS-1/2 The Film Music of Hans J. Salter (Ghost of Frankenstein, Magnificent Doll, Bend of the River, Against All Flags)
TT-HS-3 The Ghost of Frankenstein (Hans J. Salter)
TT-HS-4 The Classic Horror Music of Hans J. Salter (Creature From the Black Lagoon, Incredible Shrinking Man)
CT-JF-1 The Nightcomers (Jerry Fielding)
CT/JF-2/3 Four Film Suites by Jerry Fielding (Lawman, The Mechanic, Straw Dogs, Chato's Land)
CT-JA-1 The Seven Per Cent Solution (John Addison)
TT-JA-2 Joseph Andrews (John Addison)
CT-GD-1 Toys in the Attic (George Duning)
CT-GD-2 3:10 to Yuma (George Duning)
TT-ST-1/2 The Film Music of Herbert Stothart (Mutiny on the Bounty, David Copperfield, Anna Karenina, Viva Villa)
CT-OFI-1 The Golden Age of British Film Music (composers: Anthony Hopkins, William Alwyn, John Greenwood, Robert Irving, Mischa Spoliansky, Arthur Bliss, Ernest Irving, Lambert Williamson, Benjamin Frankel, John Addison, Georges Auric, Bruce Montgomery, Richard Addinsell, Clifton Parker)


MEDALLION


ML 301 Hollywood Hotel (Dick Powell radio show 12/18/36)
ML 302 Hitler (Hans J. Salter)
ML 303 Scarlet Street (Hans J. Salter)
ML 304 Captain Blood (Lux Radio Theater 2/22/37)
ML 305/6 Bird of Paradise (Max Steiner)
ML 307 The Sound of History 1914-1945 (documentary)
ML 308 British Agent Errol Flynn (Lux Radio Theater 6/7/37)
ML 309 The Film Music of Max Steiner (Santa Fe Trail, A Star Is Born, Life With Father, Bird of Paradise)
ML 310 Oscar Levant For the Record (piano concerto plus Charlie Chan at the Opera excerpts)
ML 311 King of Kings (Brigham Young University a capella choir)
ML 312 The Fantasy Film Music of Hans J. Salter (The Golden Horde, Black Shield of Falworth, Prince Who Was a Thief)
ML 313 Far Horizons: The Western Film Scores of Hans Salter (Battle of Apache Pass, Walk the Proud Land, Man Without a Star, Bend of the River, The Spoilers, Day of the Badman, The Tall Stranger, Untamed Frontier, Oklahoman, Four Guns to the Border, Far Horizons)
ML 314 Double Life (Miklos Rozsa) (Strange Love of Martha Ivers, piano sonata)


DELOS


F-25409 The Adventures of Robin Hood (Requiem for a Cavalier / Symphonic Suite conducted by Erich Wolfgang Korngold)
F-25410-2 Max Steiner: The RKO Years 1932-1935
F-25411 Captain From Castile (Alfred Newman)
F-25412 Voices from the Hollywood Past (Edward G. Robinson, Basil Rathbone, Walt Disney, Buster Keaton, Stan Laurel)
F-25413 Mr. Sousa (marches and documentary)
F-25419 Classic Film Themes (Gaylord Carter at the Simonton Grand Wurlitzer)
F-25420 The Film Music of Hugo Friedhofer (Von Richtofen and Brown, Private Parts)
F-25421 The Film Music of Bronislaw Kaper (composer at piano: San Francisco, Mutiny on the Bounty, Lili, Glass Slipper, Butterfield 8, Auntie Mame, Chocolate Soldier, Invitation, Brothers Karamazov, Green Door, The Swan, Lord Jim)


MISC


Orion ORS-74166 Korngold: Sonata for Violin and Piano (also four pieces from Much Ado About Nothing)
Genesis GS-1063 Korngold: Quintet for Piano and Strings; Sonata #3 for Piano
BAX LB-1000 Black Sabbath (Les Baxter)
Four Jays HW-601 Songs by Harry Warren
Four Jays HW-602 Summer Holiday (1948 MGM musical)
Antilles AN 7009 Harry Warren's Piano Vignettes (Hugh Delain, soloist)


COMPACT DISCS: SELECTION
CAMBRIA


CD-1032 From The Operas of Erich Wolfgang Korngold
CD-1034 Miklos Rozsa - Chamber Works (Pennario, Granat, Thomas)
CD-1050 Sodom and Gomorrah Soundtrack (Rozsa)
CD-1053 The Sound Of History - 1914-1945
CD-1054 Hollywood Hotel - Dick Powell Radio Show 12/18/36
CD-1066 Korngold in Vienna
CD-1093 Leonard Pennario - Film Themes and Variations
CD-1121 Lenox Avenue: The Music of William Grant Still (remastering of Bay Cities BCD 1003)
CD-153 Marian Anderson Documentary
CD- 169 Edward R. Murrow Documentary

AB-7002 George Sanders - The Memoirs of a Professional Cad - Read by Tony Thomas (Audio Book on cassettes)


RHINO


R2 72243 Erich Wolfgang Korngold: The Warner Bros. Years (elaborately packaged 2-CD set of excerpts from 16 of Korngold's original scores)


BAY CITIES


BCD 1020 Miklos Rozsa: Double Life (includes The Private Life of J. Edgar Hoover)
BCD 1032 Miklos Rozsa/Erich Wolfgang Korngold (chamber works; soloists include Antonin Kubalek and Gregg Nestor)
BCD 1033 Lenox Avenue: The Music of William Grant Still


KOCH


3-7365-2 Shane: A Tribute to Victor Young (includes For Whom the Bell Tolls, Samson & Delilah, The Quiet Man, Around the World in 80 Days)
3-7376-2 Wuthering Heights: A Tribute to Alfred Newman (includes Prince of Foxes, David & Bathsheba, Dragonwyck, The Prisoner of Zenda, Brigham Young)


VARESE SARABANDE


VLC 9201.11 The Film Music of Alfred Newman (includes Captain from Castile and nine other themes)
VCD-47269 Knights of the Round Table (Rozsa; with Lydia)


INTRADA


MAF 7054D Creature from the Black Lagoon: A Symphony of Film Music by Hans J. Salter (also includes The Black Shield of Falworth, Hitler, The Incredible Shrinking Man)


FACET


FCD 8100 George Gershwin Remembered (written/narrated by Tony Thomas)
FCD 8105 The Film Music of Hugo Friedhofer (Von Richtofen & Brown; Private Parts)

by Pascal Dupont 10 May, 2024
Charles Allan Gerhardt English version adapted by Doug Raynes - FRENCH VERSION AND COLLECTION had a reputation as a great conductor, record producer and musical arranger. His major work at RCA on the Classic Film Scores series earned him recognition from film music devotees of Hollywood’s Golden Age, as well as other renowned conductors of his day. Born on February 6, 1927 in Detroit, Michigan, Charles Gerhardt developed a passion for music and percussion instruments from an early age. At the age of five, he took piano lessons, and by the age of nine, had established a solid reputation as an orchestrator and composer. He spent his early school years in Little Rock, Arkansas, then after 10 years, having completed his schooling, moved with his family to Illinois for his military duties, he served in the U.S. Navy during World War II as a chaplain's aide in the Aleutian Islands, then became an active member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He went on to study at the University of Illinois, at the College of William and Mary, and later at the University of Southern California. Throughout his time at school Gerhardt was attracted not only to music, but also to the sciences. Passionate about the art of recording, he joined Westminster Records for five years, until the company ceased operations, and then joined Bell Sound. One day, he received a phone call from George Marek to meet with the heads of Reader's Digest, to discuss producing recordings for their mail-order record business; a contact that was to secure his musical future and a rich career spanning more than 30 years. Gerhardt's first job for Reader's Digest was to produce a record; “A Festival of Light Classical Music”; a 12 LP box set that he produced in full. One of Gerhardt's finest projects was the production of another 12 LP box set, “Les Trésores de la Grande Musique (Treasury of Great Music)”, featuring the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by some of the leading figures of the day: Charles Munch to Bizet and Tchaikovsky, Rudolf Kempe to Strauss and Respighi, Josef Krips to Mozart and Haydn, Antal Dorati to Strauss and Berlioz, Brahms 4th Symphony by Fritz Reiner and Sibelius’ 2nd Symphony by Sir John Barbirolli. In the 1950s he conducted works by Vladimir Horowitz, Wanda Landowska, Kirsten Flagstad and William Kapeli. In the early 1960s, Gerhardt lived in England, where he made most of his recordings, but kept a foothold in the United States, mainly in New York. Often, when he went to the United States after a period of recording sessions, he would stop off in Baltimore and spend some time listening to cassettes of his new recordings. Gerhardt loved percussion instruments, especially tam-tams. One of his favorite recordings was the Columbia mono disc of Scriabin's Poem of Ecstasy, with Dimitri Mitropoulos and the New York Philharmonic. He had great admiration and respect for the many conductors he worked with, starting with Arturo Toscanini, with whom he worked for several years before the Maestro's death. It was Toscanini who suggested that Gerhardt become a conductor, which he did! His career as an orchestra director began when he had to replace a conductor who failed to show up for rehearsals. It was a position he would later occupy for various recording sessions and occasional concerts. His classical recordings include works by Richard Strauss, Tchaikovsky, Wagner, Ravel, Debussy, Walton and Howard Hanson. Hired by RCA Records, he transferred 78 rpm recordings of Enrico Caruso and other artists to 33 rpm. He took part in recordings by soprano singer Kirsten Flagstad and pianist Vladimir Horowitz. He worked with renowned conductors such as Fritz Reiner, Leopold Stokowski and Charles Munch, from whom he learned the tricks of the trade. Still at RCA, he assisted Arturo Toscanini, with whom he perfected his conducting skills. Then, in 1960, he produced recordings for RCA and Reader’s Digest in London, and joined forces with sound engineer Kenneth Wilkinson of Decca Records (RCA's European subsidiary), The two men got on very well and shared a passion for recording and sound quality, making an incredible number of recordings over a 30-year period. Also in 1960, RCA and Reader's Digest entrusted him with the production of a 12-disc LP box set entitled “ Lumière du Classique (A Festival of Light Classical Music) ”, sold exclusively by mail order. With a budget of $250,000, Gerhardt assumed total control of the project: repertoire, choice of orchestras and production. He recorded in London, Vienna and Paris, and hired such top names as Sir Adrian Boult, Massimo Freccia, Sir Alexander Gibson and René Leibowitz. The success of this project, in terms of both musical quality and sound, earned him recognition from his employers. Other projects of similar scope followed… A boxed set of Beethoven's symphonic works with René Leibowitz and The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. A boxed set of Rachmaninoff's works for piano and orchestra with Earl Wild, Jascha Horenstein and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, the above mentioned 12 LP disc set “Trésor de la Grande Musique (Treasury of Great Music)” with the Royal Philharmonic conducted by some of the greatest directors of the time: Fritz Reiner, Charles Munch, Rudolf Kempe, Sir John Barbirolli, Sir Malcolm Sargent, Antal Dorati and Jascha Horenstein, with whom Gerhardt had sympathized. In January 1964 in London, Gerhardt joined forces with Sidney Sax, instrumentalist and conductor, to form a freelance orchestra. This successful group went on to join the National Philharmonic Orchestra of London, an impressive line-up that would later become Jerry Goldsmith's orchestra of choice. With Peter Munves, head of RCA's classical division, he conceived the idea of recording an album devoted exclusively to the film music of Erich Wolfgang Korngold, one of his favorite composers. Enthusiastic about the project, Munves gave Gerhardt carte blanche, and was offered a helping hand by George Korngold, producer and son of the famous Viennese composer, who owned all the copies of his father's scores. The Adventure Began : The Sea Hawk: Classic Film Scores of Erich Wolfgang Korngold. For this first disc, Gerhardt selected 10 scores by Korngold, which he recorded in the Kingsway Hall Studio in London, renowned for its excellent acoustics. The disc thus benefits from optimal recording conditions, favoring at the same time the performances of the National Philharmonic (and its leader, Sidney Sax), a formidable orchestra made up of London's finest musicians and freelance soloists. Each album was recorded in the same studio, with Kenneth Wilkinson as sound engineer and George Korngold as consultant/producer. As soon as it was released, the album's success received strong acclaim in classical music circles and received a feature in Billboard No. 37, a first in this category in December 1972. It took no less than a year to sell the first 10,000 copies in all the specialist record suppliers and the album went on to sell over 38,000 copies, making it the fifth best-selling album in the “classical” category in 1973. On the strength of this success, Peter Munves and RCA entrusted Charles Gerhardt with the production of further discs devoted to other world-renowned composers of Hollywood music. The program includes several albums dedicated to Max Steiner and Erich Wolfgang Korngold plus one each to Miklos Rozsa, Franz Waxman, Dimitri Tiomkin and Bernard Herrmann, followed by 3 volumes associated with specific film stars such as Bette Davis, Errol Flynn and Humphrey Bogart. Then, a disc devoted to Alfred Newman, a composer who was a pillar of the famous Hollywood sound, who Gerhardt admired and had met: “Newman was a charming man, full of good humor. He was friendly, fun and always had a joke. With his eternal black cigar in hand, he was a composer by trade, down-to-earth, discussed little about himself but was a first-rate advisor in my life. “ Gerhardt would consult certain composers in advance about how to recreate suites from their works, or when this wasn't possible, he would rearrange the suites himself and submit them to the composers for approval. "Some critics complained that my suites were too short, but my aim in the case of each album was to present a well-split 'portrait' of the composer, highlighting his many creative facets". Although Korngold, Newman and Steiner were no longer around to lend their support, Gerhardt was lucky enough to still work with Herrmann, Rózsa and Tiomkin as consultants who turned up at the recording studio to lend a hand. Gerhardt also had the idea of creating albums focusing on a single film star. Three specific volumes were devoted to music from the films of Humphrey Bogart, Errol Flynn and Bette Davis. Although these albums suffer from too great a diversity of genres, they still offer the chance to hear and discover rare and previously unpublished compositions. The best conceived album was arguably the one devoted to Bette Davis. Conscious of the important role played by music in her films, the legendary actress took part in the conception of the album, knowing that it favored scores by Max Steiner designed for Warner Bros. The Collection Begins ! Gerhardt's passion for certain composers knows no bounds, but he soon envisages a disc devoted to Miklos Rozsa, including suites for “Spellbound” and “The Red House”, one of his favorite scores, which he will exhume to create one of the longest suites in the series. At the same time, he received various fan wish lists and films to watch, such as “The Four Feathers”, which he had never seen and which gave him the opportunity to discover a splendid score by Miklos Rozsa that he had never heard before. He was disappointed, however, not to be able to conceive a longer “Spellbound” sequel for rights reasons. Despite RCA's full approval, Gerhardt realized that it was not easy to record film music in its original form, as few were ever edited, played and made available for rental. For The Sea Hawks album, things were simpler, as Georges Korngold had copies of his father's scores, and Warner Bros had also archived material in good condition. From the outset, Gerhardt encountered other major problems in the search for and discovery of scores hidden away in other studios, often with the unpleasant surprise of discovering missing or incomplete conductors, or others heavily modified by orchestrators during recording sessions, or the surprise of discovering, in certain cases, instrumentation information noted in shorthand on the edges of the conductor score. For the disc dedicated to Max Steiner, for example, the conductor score for “King Kong” had disappeared from the RKO archives, having been shipped in 1950 to poorly maintained warehouses in Los Angeles where it had become totally degraded and illegible. With the help of Georges Korngold, Gerhardt was able to reconstruct a substantial suite from the piano models left by Steiner at the time. This experience was repeated when the conductor score for Dimitri Tiomkin's “The Thing” was discovered in the same warehouse, in an advanced state of disintegration. Fortunately for Gerhardt, Tiomkin, who was still alive, had been able to provide precise piano maquettes with orchestration information in shorthand, revealing a complex and highly innovative style of writing. Tiomkin always composed at the piano, inscribing very specific information and signs on the edges of the scores in pencil, an ingenious system of his own invention that was difficult to decipher. “Revisiting the score of ‘The Thing from Another World’ was a complex task, involving experimental passages and an unorthodox orchestra. You can understand that I had a huge job on my hands. When I approached the recording sessions, it was not without some trepidation. However, the composer present made no criticism or comment on my work, and was delighted. He was delighted.” For “Gone With The Wind”, Steiner was against the idea of remaking a complete soundtrack, as he felt that too many passages were repeated. It was an opportunity for him to revisit his own score, integrating his favorite melodies. This synthesis gave him the opportunity to revitalize his music by eliminating the least interesting parts of the score. Conceived as long suites or isolated themes, the discs reflect the essence of the composers' work. The “Classic Film Scores” series by Franz Waxman, Bernard Herrmann and Miklos Rozsa etc will become a big hit with collectors. For Gerhardt, this will be an opportunity to unearth forgotten or rare scores such as Herrmann's “The White Witch” and “On a Dangerous Ground”, Hugo Friedhofer's “The Sun Also Rises” and early recordings for Waxman's “Prince Valliant” and Rozsa's “The Red House”, all with new, impeccable acoustics. For “Elisabeth and Essex”, Erich Korngold had already prepared a suite in the form of an Overture, which was given its world premiere in a theater. The suite for “The Adventures of Robin Hood” also pre-existed. Franz Waxman created his own suite for “A Place in the Sun”, which was also performed in concert. Dimitri Tiomkin, Miklos Rozsa and Bernard Herrmann acted as consultants and contributed arrangements to their scores. For the continuation of “White Witch Doctor”, Bernard Herrman added percussion to link the different musical tableaux. He did the same for the different parts of “Citizen Kane”. Miklos Rozsa saw an opportunity to add a male choir to the suite from “The Jungle Book”, based on an idea by Charles Gerhardt. For the record dedicated to Errol Flynn, Gerhardt re-orchestrated the theme “The Lights of Paris” from Hugo Friedhofer's “The Sun also Rises”, as the original was no longer available. “I wanted to go back to that time and systematically explore the very substance of the great film scores of the late 30s and 40s, sending them back directly to their images as dramatic entities. The desire to rediscover tunes we know and to take into account the contexts in which they were originally used. I decided to recreate these scores with their original orchestrations, and this could only be done by returning to the ultimate sources, as the composers had originally conceived them.” Keen to open up the collection to other genres, such as science fiction, Gerhardt dedicated two further albums to the series in 1992. The first featured contemporary sequels to “Star Wars” and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind”, promoting the work of John Williams, a leading composer of new film music. Then another called “The Spectacular World of Classic Film Scores”, presenting a disappointing compilation of scores that had already been recorded, except for the creation of a sequel to Dimitri Tiomkin's “The Thing From Another World” and Daniele Amfitheatrof's rarely heard theme “Dance of the Seven Voiles” from Salome. In 1978, the collection was published in Spain by RCA Cinema Treasures. In the USA and Europe, the Classic Film Scores LP series was reissued in the early 80s with a black art deco cover and colored star index. All Volumes in the First Series Were Reissued : By the end of the '80s, the series was running out of steam, and Charles Gerhardt planned to relaunch his collection with albums dedicated to famous American actresses, a new volume for Max Steiner and the Western, a volume reconstructing the score of Waxman's “The Bride of Frankenstein”, followed by volumes devoted to Alex North, Hugo Friedhofer, Victor Young and Elmer Bernstein... But RCA would not support Gerhardt in these projects, preferring to release the collection on CD for the first time. In early 1990, RCA asked Gerhardt to supervise and co-produce the collection, which he saw as an opportunity to revisit some of the volumes, inserting tracks that had not appeared on the LPs or extending certain suites. The volume devoted to Franz Waxman, “Sunset Boulevard”, was the first to be released. The CD did not benefit from any particular promotion, but sold very well, as did the other CDs that followed... A collection marked by a new design in silver pantone. The CDs series was reissued in 2010, still under the RCA Red Seal label, but distributed by Sony Music Entertainment. RCA Victor's Classic Films Scores series represents a unique collection in the history of film music recordings. 14 recordings of rare quality, produced by Georges Korngold and Charles Gerhardt to become one of the revelations of the reissue phenomenon. Other Concepts... Later, Gerhardt spent most of his time in London, continuing to make recordings. After retiring from RCA in 1986, he returned to independent work for Readers Digest and other record labels, a position he held in production and musical supervision until 1997. Since 1991 he had lived in Redding, California. In later years, he did not appear professionally, refusing all public invitations because of his desire to remain discreet. In his entourage he was close to three cousins, Lenore L Engel and Elizabeth Anne Schuetze, both living in San Antonio, and cousin Steven W Gerhardt of St. Pete Beach, Florida. In late November 1998 Charles Gerhardt was diagnosed with brain cancer and died of complications following surgery on February 22, 1999. He was 72 years old. Thus ends this tribute to Charles Gerhardt and the most famous collection of film music records: The Classic Film Scores series.
by Doug Raynes 24 Jan, 2024
Following on from Tadlow’s epic recording of El Cid, the same team – Nic Raine conducting and James Fitzpatrick producing – have turned their attention to a completely different type of epic film for the definitive recording of Ernest Gold’s Academy Award winning score for Otto Preminger’s Exodus (1960). The score is something of a revelation because aside from the main theme, the music has received little attention through recordings. Additionally the sound quality of the original soundtrack LP was disappointing and much music was deleted or cut from the film.
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