While writing the final chapter of my book on
Guaraldi, when it came time to briefly mention the unusual phenomenon of
contemporary musicians who’ve chosen to cover the entire Charlie Brown Christmas score, I paused long enough to wonder
whether this has happened very often.
Granted, jazz is a genre that encourages such
behavior; consider the number of folks who’ve put their own stamp on, say,
Miles Davis’ “All Blues.” But covering an entire album? Surely, that must
be unusual.
And, indeed, it is ... but, by a curious
coincidence, one of my other favorite jazz albums — also a TV score — has
garnered the same attention: Henry Mancini’s iconic soundtrack for Peter Gunn. The series ran for three
seasons, from September 1958 through September 1961, and Mancini actually
produced two albums: The Music from Peter
Gunn (1958) and More Music from Peter
Gunn (1959).
To say that Mancini’s swingin’ themes made a splash
would be an understatement. The first album reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Pop LP
Chart, and suddenly everybody wanted a piece of the action. All sorts of folks covered the groovin' title theme, with Ray Anthony's version spending 17 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart between January 5 and April 27, 1959; it peaked at No. 8 the week of March 2.
Ted Nash, Maxwell Davis and Pete Candoli had released the first cover album, titled simply Peter Gunn, the year before; Nash, Pete and Conte Candoli, calling themselves the Soundstage All Stars, followed with More Peter Gunn in 1959. Drummer Shelly Manne & His Men also released two albums in 1959: Play Peter Gunn and Son of Gunn. The Joe Wilder Quartet joined the fun in 1959, with Jazz from Peter Gunn; Ray Ellis and his Orchestra followed in 1960, with The Best of Peter Gunn.
Ted Nash, Maxwell Davis and Pete Candoli had released the first cover album, titled simply Peter Gunn, the year before; Nash, Pete and Conte Candoli, calling themselves the Soundstage All Stars, followed with More Peter Gunn in 1959. Drummer Shelly Manne & His Men also released two albums in 1959: Play Peter Gunn and Son of Gunn. The Joe Wilder Quartet joined the fun in 1959, with Jazz from Peter Gunn; Ray Ellis and his Orchestra followed in 1960, with The Best of Peter Gunn.
(And if I’ve missed any others, please let me know.)
It’s very simple, really: When listeners really,
truly love a particular score, they can’t get enough of it. Leonard Bernstein’s
music for West Side Story is another
good example; I couldn’t begin to tabulate all the jazz cover versions that
album generated.
We therefore shouldn’t be surprised that Guaraldi’s
beloved Christmas album has received the same treatment, and increasingly more
often during the past few years.
But are they any good?
In most cases, yes, and well worth your time and
money. And since this is the holiday season, it seems an appropriate time to
discuss them all.
But let’s make it a bit more fun, and score the
contestants according to my own whimsical parameters. Points therefore will be
awarded for...
1) Covering all four of Guaraldi’s original tunes:
“Christmas Time Is Here,” “Christmas Is Coming,” “Skating” and “Linus and Lucy”
(5 points each, for a total of 20);
2) Covering all five of the traditional Christmas
songs that Guaraldi arranged and included on the album: “O Tannenbaum,” “What
Child Is This, (aka Greensleeves)” “My Little Drum (aka The Little Drummer
Boy),” “The Christmas Song” and “Hark, the Herald Angels Sing” (5 points each,
for a total of 25);
3) Plus covering Beethoven’s “Für Elise” (25 point
bonus);
4) And presenting them in the same album sequence
(50 point bonus).
Fresh jazz covers of additional Christmas songs are
nice, but count neither toward nor against the total score.
Finally, 10 points will be subtracted for
unimaginatively calling the album A
Charlie Brown Christmas, because that’s confusing. At the very least, the
artist(s) in question should give their work some sort of original title.
Please note, though: The final tally applies solely
to how faithful the cover elements are, and in no way reflects the musicality present. Jim Martinez’s album may
score low in the “perfect cover” department, but it’s one of my favorites on
this list.
Onward!
**********
Jazz pianist
Cyrus Chestnut appears to have been first out of the gate, with the 2000
release of A Charlie Brown Christmas (Atlantic 2A-83366).
The results are
intriguing. Chestnut’s approach to the piano is quite spiritual; his
interpretations of “Hark the Herald Angels Sing” (a duet with tenor saxman
Michael Brecker) and “My Little Drum” are slow, somber and absolutely gorgeous.
He’s equally adept at the up-tempo stuff; his covers of “Linus and Lucy” and
“Christmas Is Coming” are marvelous.
Bryan McKnight
delivers a mellow vocal on “The Christmas Song,” with Chestnut comping
lyrically behind him; flutist Hubert Laws and percussionist Don Alias help give
“Für Elise” a shimmying salsa vibe that’ll have you dancing in the living room.
That said, some
of the stylistic choices are puzzling. I’m no fan of jazz harmonica, and it’s
absolutely not the instrument of choice for “Skating”; a harmonica simply does
not say “ice skating” to me.
Perhaps
worse, the otherwise tasty vibes used in “What Child Is This” are obscured by
the Manhattan Transfer’s gawpy background la-la-la punctuations, which
sound more like something hijacked from a Lawrence Welk disc. I can’t
understand it: You hire one of the jazz world’s finest vocal quartet, known for
tight harmonies and boppin’ arrangements, and use them solely for color? That’s just weird.
On the
other hand, Chestnut delivers a sweet original titled “Charlie Brown and Me,”
first as a poignant solo and then, later in the album, as a lively combo
arrangement that would have been right at home in a Peanuts TV special.
So, the
results: all four Guaraldi songs (20), along with the five seasonal carols (25)
and “Für Elise” (25). But the sequence is different (0), and Chestnut loses 10
points for album title. Final score: 60 points.
Five years
then passed, until the 2005 release of 40 Years: A Charlie Brown Christmas
(Peak Records PKD-8534-2), a compilation album produced by jazz pianist and
current Peanuts music torch-bearer David Benoit, who also performs on many of
the tracks.
(It should be
noted that the version of this album sold at Target contained two additional
tracks exclusive to that big-box store: an early-ish example of the obnoxious
marketing practice that has become increasingly common since then.)
This album is,
ah, interesting, to say the least. Jazz purists will lament the frequent use of
strings and vocal wah-wah accents,
and the percussion is too heavy at times, particularly on “O Tannenbaum,” where
the disco-style beat overwhelms Gerald Albright’s lush sax work.
But a few of the
cuts are quite nice, starting with Benoit’s punchy, swinging cover of
“Christmas Is Coming,” which gets the album off to a great start. Smooth jazz
stalwart Dave Koz delivers an equally lively reading of “Linus and Lucy”;
trumpet player Rick Braun supplies a solid rendition of “My Little Drum”; and
Vanessa Williams brings heart-breaking poignance to the one new song, Benoit’s
“Just Like Me.”
On the other
hand, Toni Braxton destroys “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” — a song
not even in A Charlie Brown Christmas — with a breathy,
microphone-swallowing delivery that sounds as if each word is bursting between
her lips during the height of sexual passion. And as inappropriate as Braxton’s
delivery is, Chaka Khan is even worse on “The Christmas Song”: outrageously
overwrought, her harsh, unappealing voice building to a (literally) shrieking
climax. Ugh.
Tribute
albums always run the risk of tainting pleasant memories of the original
material, and it’s sad, but true: The contributions by Braxton, Khan and The
Rippingtons (“Red Baron”) are so disappointing that they overshadow the rest.
The
results: all four Guaraldi songs (20), but only four seasonal carols
(“Greensleeves” is missing) (20) and “Für Elise” (25). The sequence is different
(0), but Benoit avoids the penalty by supplying a fresh title. Final score: 65 points.
Pianist Jim
Martinez also made his fondness for Vince Guaraldi public in 2005, with his self-released
A Jim Martinez Jazzy Christmas (www.jimmartinez.com). Martinez handles
piano and bass; thanks to the magic of post-production, it sounds like two
different people performing. Harold Jones contributes solid drum work on most
cuts, with Guy Kowarsh filling in on two.
Although it’s
hard to tell from the outside, this album is a sorta-kinda cover of A
Charlie Brown Christmas. Martinez offers up his readings of “Christmas Is
Coming,” “Christmas Time Is Here” — a truly lovely piano solo — and the more
rambunctious “Skating,” along with versions of “O Christmas Tree,” “The
Christmas Song” and “Greensleeves,” all of which display echoes of Guaraldi’s
handling of the same tunes.
Indeed,
Martinez’s “Christmas Time Is Here” segues smoothly into a solo piano intro of
“O Christmas Tree,” which then kicks into gear with a trio reading that borrows
just enough from Guaraldi to make fans smile with recognition. But make no
mistake: Martinez’s bridges and noodlings are very much his own, and quite
enjoyable.
Martinez and his
band perform quite frequently in church settings, and so the rest of his lovely
album features his arrangements of traditional carols such as “O Holy Night,”
“O Come, O Come Emmanuel,” “Go Tell It on the Mountain” and others. I
particularly enjoy his up-tempo handling of “O Little Town of Bethlehem,” which
includes a cute quote from “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.”
“Joyful, Joyful,
We Adore Thee” truly cooks, while Evelyn White adds a rich vocal to the
gospel-hued “Go Tell It on the Mountain.” She only sings at the beginning and
conclusion; Martinez bridges her contribution with a sprightly keyboard solo.
Everything about
this set suggests a program assembled for a live performance ... and, as the
years have passed, I’ve been lucky enough to catch him numerous times in person.
(Martinez travels a lot; check his web site to see if he’s coming to your
area.)
The results,
then: only three Guaraldi songs (“Linus and Lucy” is on one of his other
albums, and so only 15 in this category), and only three seasonal carols (“My
Little Drum” and “Hark, the Herald Angels Sing” are missing, and so only 15
here) and no sign of “Für Elise” (0). The sequence is different (0), and the
album title is quite distinct (no penalty). Final score: 30 points.
Which simply
means than Martinez gets an A+ for eschewing a carbon copy and blazing his own
holiday jazz trail.
Bassist Rob
Swanson was drawn to jazz after the first time he watched A Charlie Brown
Christmas on television; he repaid that debt, years later, by forming a
band called the Christmas Cartoon Trio and booking gigs that focused on jazz
interpretations of several seasonal animated classics.
The best
arrangements have found their way onto 2008’s self-produced disc, Cartoon Christmas Trio, which is
certain to be embraced by Guaraldi fans. The familiar Guaraldi compositions and
arrangements are augmented by songs that popped up in a few other animated
Christmas specials, with some additional holiday tunes tossed in to build an
album. The result is mostly enjoyable, allowing for a few hiccups and a
tendency for drummer Jackie Browne to indulge in the sort of solos beloved by
high school garage bands.
Fortunately,
Browne's occasional excesses are overshadowed by Jeff Knoettner's keyboard work
— on both acoustic and electric instruments — and Swanson's excellent bass work.
Several of the arrangements
are quite clever. “Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer” emerges as a cute, heavily
percussive New Orleans strut in 4/4 time, while “You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch”
opens with some hilariously ominous electronics before settling into a moody,
bass-driven delivery. A lengthy rendition of “Sleigh Ride” gives all three
musicians plenty of room to breathe, and also boasts another fine bass solo by
Swanson.
“Santa Claus Is
Comin’ to Town” is a delightful boogie-woogie strut: a heavy two-beat that
suggests the corpulent Jolly Red Elf’s impressive size. But while a salsa-hued
“Frosty, the Snowman” begins well, it suffers from the sort of monotonous mid-point
drum solo that ruins too many Latin arrangements.
Most of the
tracks are bouncy and quite engaging trio jazz, very much in the vein of the
arrangement of “Jingle Bells” that closes the album: a kick-ass piano solo by
Knoettner, which builds to a rocketing tempo as Swanson and Browne join the fun
and bring the track home.
The results,
then: only three Guaraldi songs (“Christmas Is Coming” is missing, and so only
15 in this category), and only two seasonal carols (“Greensleeves,” “The
Christmas Song” and “My Little Drum” are missing, and so only 10 here) and no
sign of “Für Elise” (0). The sequence is different (0), and the album title is
quite distinct (no penalty). Final score: 25 points.
The Lenny Marcus
Trio’s 2009 album, Comfort and Joy, evokes
very fond memories of Guaraldi’s long-ago 1965 album. That said, Marcus makes
this music his own; his inventive arrangements include echoes of Guaraldi, but
then spin into pleasant new directions.
Marcus and his
mates get things off to a lively start with a bouncy, attention-grabbing
version of “Christmas Is Coming,” and Marcus shows his piano chops with an
entirely different bridge in this up-tempo finger-snapper.
Bassist Scott
Trayer shines during “O Tannenbaum” and “Little Drum,” the latter demonstrating
how Marcus likes to mix things up; both “Little Drum” and “Christmas Time Is
Here” open as slow and simple carols, before kicking into gear with midpoint
tempo and style changes.
Marcus’
arrangement of “God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen” digs into the hymn’s wintry mood,
and he concludes a charming version of “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,”
blended with a few bars of “Jingle Bells.”
Marcus mixes the
eight combo numbers with three piano solos: a boogie-woogie reading of “Santa
Claus Is Coming to Town” and two Beethoven classics, “Für Elise” and the Sonata Pathétique. The latter is a bit
self-indulgent on a holiday jazz album, but it certainly brings things to a
solemn conclusion.
The results:
only two Guaraldi songs (“Skating” and “Linus and Lucy” are missing, and so
only 10 in this category), and only three seasonal carols (“Hark, the Herald
Angels Sing” and “The Christmas Song” are missing, and so only 15 here), but
Marcus rebounds with his cover of “Für Elise” (25). The sequence is different,
of course (0), and the album title is quite distinct (no penalty). Final score: 50 points.
Pianist Eric
Byrd takes his Guaraldi homage quite seriously, and in fact has turned it into
a cottage industry. His trio worked a few selections from A Charlie Brown
Christmas into a holiday concert back in 2000, and that led to an annual
themed show that has become enormously popular ... particularly in Westminster,
Maryland where the whole thing began. (Just try to get tickets!)
The show’s
success, in turn, led to the 2009 release of Byrd’s self-produced album, A Charlie Brown Christmas. It isn’t a slavish
reproduction, and that’s to Byrd’s
credit; he and his band mates honor Guaraldi’s arrangements and original themes
while still leaving themselves plenty of room to breathe.
The result is
both familiar and different, and a great deal of fun.
Byrd opens with
a solo piano introduction to “O Tannenbaum,” just as Guaraldi did, but then
kicks into gear with a fresh arrangement that grant solos to himself, acoustic
bassist Bhagwan Khalsa and drummer Alphonso Young Jr.
That model is
followed throughout, and I’m particularly impressed by Byrd’s handling of “My
Little Drum” and “Greensleeves,” both of which boast plenty of solid improv
work.
Many Christmas
songs have simple, often redundant melodies; after all, they were designed to
be sung. The trick, when presenting an instrumental arrangement, is to hold the
listener’s attention through inventive improv chops. Byrd and his trio do this
quite well. Even Guaraldi’s original compositions — “Linus
and Lucy,” “Christmas Is Coming” and “Skating” — retain
just enough familiar melody line before launching into completely original
bridges.
The iconic
“Christmas Time Is Here” is presented twice: both as a gentle
instrumental — Khalsa’s bowed bass adding a nice touch — and
as a vocal, with the singing handled by Byrd’s 6-year-old son, Jason. I’m
normally not a fan of little children making guest vocals on jazz albums, but
Jason melted my curmudgeonly heart; he has such a sweet little voice that his
performance is impossible to resist.
Too bad I live
on the West Coast; I’d love to catch these guys live.
The results: all
four Guaraldi songs (20), but only three seasonal carols (“Hark, the Herald
Angels Sing” and “The Christmas Song” are missing, and so only 15 here), and no
sign of “Für Elise” (0). The sequence is different (0), but Marcus loses points
(-10) for the album title. Final score: 25 points.
Fairness demands
that I also mention another 2009 release, although it barely fits the core
parameter ... because it ain’t really jazz. A Peanuts Christmas was Zunior’s 2009 holiday album, an annual project that
benefits the Toronto, Canada, Daily Bread Food Bank. Alt-music fans and folks
who love to ferret out cutting-edge indie performers will adore this
collection, which is heavy on electronics and all sorts of other, ah, inventive
touches.
The album art is
a smile, with its nightclub scene showing the Peanuts gang’s twentysomething
selves: Sally bellying up to the bar, while Linus polishes glasses with his
blanket; and waiter Charlie Brown bringing an order to Lucy, who is draped
across Schroeder’s piano; while Snoopy snoozes beneath the large Christmas
tree. Charles Schulz would have been horrified, of course, but it’s in good
seasonal fun.
My occasional
wincing aside, Wayne Petti’s handling of “What Child Is This” is quite lovely,
and Dave Merritt and the Quiet Revolution have a lot of fun with “Linus and
Lucy,” although I could have lived without the infant vocal inflections. The
Awkward Stage contributes an unexpectedly moving vocal reading of “Christmas
Time Is Here,” and the Violet Archers contribute a sweet reading of “Hark, the
Herald Angels Sing.”
On the other
hand, Mike O’Neill’s handling of “Skating” — a sort of dubba-dubba vocal scat — leaves much to be desired, as does
Construction and Destruction’s “Greensleeves”; Ben Gunning rather destroys
“Christmas Is Coming”; and Jill Barber’s cover of “The Christmas Song” sounds
just fine ... until she begins to sing.
As for Ruth
Minnikin’s approach to “Für Elise” ... don’t even ask.
The results: all
four Guaraldi songs (20), all five seasonal carols (25) and “Für Elise” (25).
Zunior follows Guaraldi’s album sequence precisely (50), and there’s no penalty
for the album title. Final
score: 120 points (sigh!).
Nashville-based
pianist Lori Mechem joined the fun in 2011, with Christmas Is Coming: A Tribute to A Charlie Brown Christmas (Green Hill Music GHD5705). Her album
skips a few of Guaraldi’s shorter tracks — notably the children’s vocal on
“Hark, the Herald Angels Sing” — and supplements with one additional Peanuts
theme and three more holiday standards. The result works best when Mechem
resists the impulse to slavishly copy Guaraldi’s original charts; at times — as
with her handling of “O Tannenbaum” and “Skating” — her keyboard flourishes are
too close to Guaraldi’s work, down to some of his single-note
affectations.
In most cases,
though, Mechem’s own personality and style emerge, particularly in the
improv-laden bridges for “Linus and Lucy” and “Christmas Is Coming.” And
although she once again follows Guaraldi’s piano lead at the beginning of “My
Little Drum,” her quartet — bassist Roger Spencer (Mechem’s husband), guitarist
Andy Reiss and drummer Chris Brown — lays down a pleasant, samba-hued
percussive backdrop that gives the song a fresh atmosphere.
The “extras”
include a lovely, lyrical cover of “Snowfall”; a gentle arrangement of “Winter
Wonderland,” with percussive sleigh bells elements; and a playful handling of
“The Christmas Waltz,” which opens with a piano solo and then blossoms into a
swinging toe-tapper that boasts solid work by the entire quartet.
Mechem
previously recorded half a dozen of these tunes on her 2005 holiday album, Brazilian
Christmas, but the instrumentation and arrangements are new here: more of a
traditional jazz combo approach, with (thankfully!) no strings. Very pleasant
listening.
The results: all
four Guaraldi songs (20), but only four seasonal carols (“Hark, the Herald
Angels Sing” is missing, and so only 20 here), and no sign of “Für Elise” (0).
Because I’m making up the rules, I’m giving Mechem half-credit for sequence,
because her first five tracks are identical to those on side A of Guaraldi’s
album (25). And there’s no penalty for the album title. Final score: 65 points.
The Ornaments — Jen Gunderman, piano; James
Haggerty, bass; and Martin Lynds, drums — also delivered their own brand of
Guaraldiana in 2011: A Vince Guaraldi Christmas: Live at Middletree (Alderman Records), recorded a few days
before Christmas in 2010, at Nashville’s Middletree Studio.
The listening experience is strongly familiar but
not slavish, thanks to some additional instrumental shading by guests Pete
Finney (guitar) and Jimmy Bowland (sax). Indeed, the disc’s best track — a
sweet reading of “Christmas Time Is Here” — boasts the full quintet, and
includes lovely solos on guitar, sax and bass, all not present in Guaraldi’s
original arrangement.
A spirited run at “Skating” also benefits from
Bowland’s deft sax bridge and Gunderman’s keyboard solo, and everybody gets a
crack at “O Tannenbaum.” “My Little Drum” displays similar instrumental depth,
thanks to Finney’s guitar comping.
You’ll smile at the familiar, if subtle echoes from
the 1965 album: the gentle cymbal tap that concludes “Linus and Lucy,” and the
cute piano filigree at the end of “O Tannenbaum.”
The mimicry isn’t entirely successful, however.
“Christmas Is Coming” is a bit stiff, and not nearly as rousing as Guaraldi’s
original; and the kid’s-vocal approach to “Hark, the Herald Angels Sing” —
although authentic to how the song is performed in the TV special —doesn’t ring
quite true here.
But these are minor quibbles. Since it’s impossible
to catch Guaraldi and his trio at this distant remove, I’d happily book a date
with The Ornaments. The group’s Peanuts-themed holiday concerts have become a
Nashville tradition for the past several years; here’s one California kid who
wishes they’d bring their act to the West Coast.
The results: all
four Guaraldi songs (20), all five seasonal carols (25) and the oft-ignored “Für Elise” (25). Best of all, The Ornaments
follow Guaraldi’s album sequence precisely (50), and there’s no penalty for the
album title. Final
score: a whopping 120 points!
As of 2016, we can add jazz pianist Jose “Juicy” Gonzales, who has presented Charlie Brown Christmas concerts for several years now, in his home town of Seattle, Washington.
Linus and Juicy: A Holiday Album covers almost all of Guaraldi’s score — “What Child Is This”/“Greensleeves” was left behind — along with some apt extras. The versatile Gonzales is ably supported by bassist Michael Marcus and drummer Matt Jorgensen, both of whom get plenty of chances to demonstrate their own chops. The album opens with a ferocious double-time reading of “White Christmas” that positively roars, and offers lively keyboard and bass solos: just a taste of further delights to come.
Given how many hundreds (thousands?) of soloists, combos and bands have covered “Linus and Lucy,” this album’s highlight may well be “Linus and Juicy,” Gonzales’ playful and marvelously unique arrangement of that tune: a wild re-interpretation also highlighted by another of Marcus’ sleek bass solos. The trio’s handling of “Skating” is buoyant and lyrical; “Christmas Is Coming” is aggressively peppy, with a terrific swing bridge dominated by Marcus’ walking bass.
Jorgensen sets an infectious march tempo for “Little Drummer Boy,” adding tasty percussion touches behind Gonzales’ lyrical keyboard noodling; “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” is suitably thoughtful and majestic. Gonzales opens “O Tannenbaum” with gentle solo piano, in a respectful echo of Guaraldi’s arrangement, and then “expands” the tune with some delectable swing that invites a tasty bass solo, which segues to lively byplay between keyboard and drums.
A lengthy, 7-minute arrangement of “Christmas Time Is Here” is properly gentle, offering plenty of lyrical improv by both Gonzales and Marcus. Unexpectedly droll and up-tempo readings of “O Come, O Come Emmanuel” and “Silent Night” deliver more sizzle than we generally expect from these two reverential carols.
Gonzales adds enthusiastic but clearly untrained vocals to “The First Noel” and “The Christmas Song,” which may raise eyebrows; although his delivery is heartfelt, Tony Bennett and Harry Connick Jr. have nothing to worry about. But that’s a minor quibble, given the finger-snapping “juice” that characterizes the rest of the album.
The results: all four Guaraldi songs (20), but only four seasonal carols (“Greensleeves”) is missing) (20), and no sign of “Für Elise” (0). The sequence is different (0), but Gonzales also avoids the penalty by supplying a fresh title. Final score: 40 points.
Well. When it comes to delivering a true
cover album, we have a tie between Zunior and The Ornaments. But when it comes
to pleasant listening, The Ornaments and Gonzales win, hands down.
For now, anyway.
Who knows what the future will bring?
[Note: All these reviews are extracted from my annual coverage of new holiday jazz, an increasingly lengthy feature I've been writing since the 1990s. If you've read this far and would like to have your egg nogged with a lot more swingin' seasonal music, check out this year's column here.]
**********
Publicity for my
Guaraldi book went international on November 26, when I was included in a brief
discussion of A Charlie Brown Christmas
on Deutschlandfunk. The result is rather trippy; each time I began to talk, the
first words are at regular volume, and then my voice dials back for a radio station
voice-over in German. You can hear the 5-minute spot here, and read the
transcript here ... assuming you read German, of course!
Today I discovered that you, Derrick, wrote a biography about Vince: I just ordered the paperback @ amazon. And I'm here in my office, and "A Charlie Brown Christmas" is playing on my laptop. On my iPod, this morning while coming to the office, I was listening to "Alma-Ville". I am glad that you wroth the biography, and I'm eager to read it. I do my best as I can to spread knowledge about Vince Guaraldi and his music - his piano play is divine.
ReplyDelete"A Charlie Brown Christmas," "Alma-Ville" and my Guaraldi bio on its way to you ... Pasqualino, it sounds like you know how to celebrate the holiday season in style! Thanks for getting in touch, and be sure to investigate all the great information to be found at my various Guaraldi web pages; everything can be accessed from http://fivecentsplease.org/dpb/guaraldi.html
ReplyDeleteEnjoy!
Interesting data on The Peter Gunn Theme, which was my favorite song our junior high band played. Ray Anthony actually had the only hit single of that theme, reaching number 8 in 1959, but I don't think he put out a full album based on that hit.
ReplyDeleteIndeed yes, Bob, and I'm grateful for the reminder. A bit of research revealed that Anthony's single enjoyed a robust 17 weeks in the Billboard Hot 100, and I added a sentence to that effect above.
ReplyDelete