It's Hallowe'en season again! Here's a triple-decker spook-tacular...with a little chaser!
The first album is a lot of fun...I'm dedicating it to the memory of the trombonist/bandleader Buddy Morrow (born 1919 as Muni Zudekoff, aka Moe Zudekoff) who passed on about a month ago (27 September 2010).
This album is often quite reminiscent of Morrow's previous Impact! and Double Impact! LPs, both of which sold like hotcakes. There are a couple of poems narrated by Keith McKenna, as well as a couple of twistaroos sung by The Skip-Jacks.
POE FOR MODERNS Buddy Morrow Orch RCA Victor LSP-2208
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=XUWU5M62
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=XUWU5M62
1. The Murders In The Rue Morgue
2. Annabel Lee (Keith McKenna, narrator)
3. The Gold Bug
4. A Descent Into The Maelstrom
5. The Bells (The Skip-Jacks, vocal)
6. The Fall Of The House Of Usher
7. The Pit And The Pendulum
8. Ulalume (Keith McKenna, narrator)
9. The Black Cat
10. The Raven (The Skip-Jacks, vocal)
11. Quoth The Raven
12. The Tell-Tale Heart
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=XUWU5M62
2. Annabel Lee (Keith McKenna, narrator)
3. The Gold Bug
4. A Descent Into The Maelstrom
5. The Bells (The Skip-Jacks, vocal)
6. The Fall Of The House Of Usher
7. The Pit And The Pendulum
8. Ulalume (Keith McKenna, narrator)
9. The Black Cat
10. The Raven (The Skip-Jacks, vocal)
11. Quoth The Raven
12. The Tell-Tale Heart
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=XUWU5M62
The other day, I stumbled across another adaptation of Poe's The Raven here: http://www.garagehangover.com/?q=YoYos ...it's a 1966 garage rocker from Brooklyn.
And you can hear Fred Astaire's Raven-inspired Me And The Ghost Upstairs here http://zorchv38.blogspot.com/2010/08/just-fax-maam.html(shameless self-promotion, eh wot?).
The second LP is a rare one, indeed!
It's one of the strangest spoken-word albums I've ever heard...and one of the best. It's by "stand up tragedian" Theodore Gottlieb (1906-2001), who was usually billed as Brother Theodore. There's a very good website about him here http://www.brothertheodore.net/ , so I'll get out of the way and let you listen.
Oh...the first cut is a somewhat Lorre-esque adaptation of Poe's necro-dontal tale Berenice, and The Willow Landscape is from a story by Clark Ashton Smith.
CORAL RECORDS PRESENTS THEODORE Brother Theodore Gottlieb Coral CRL 57322
1. Introduction and Berenice 2. The Willow Landscape
3. Curse of the Toad
4. Quadrupedism
Some may recognize Theodore's distinctive voice from this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLssei0sId0
You'll see a much more recent snippet of his Quadrupedism monologue (along with some other diversions) here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_KrhFBUTe4&feature=related
You can also hear a "straight" reading of Berenice here http://librivox.org/horror-story-collection-005/.
My third album isn't really spooky at all, but there is a neat black cat on the cover:
It's a musical adaptation by Alan Rawsthorne of six of T. S. Eliot's poems from his Old Possum's Book Of Practical Cats...it's short and sweet (and a helluva lot easier for me to enjoy than that Webber thing on Broadway that drew from the same source). The narration is by Mr. Chips, Robert Donat (mmmmm....doughnuts).
OLD POSSUM'S BOOK OF PRACTICAL CATS 10" Angel 30002
Six Poems by T. S. Eliot Musical Setting By Alan Rawsthorn
Robert Donat, speaker.
The Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by the composer
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=PTMTGDUM
1. Overture
2. The Naming Of Cats
3. The Old Gumbie Cat
4. Gus, The Theatre Cat
5. Bustopher Jones: The Cat about Town
6. Old Deuteronomy
7. The Song Of The Jellicles
This LP came in a deluxe box and has a four-page booklet (included in the .zip file).
Since Track 5 is about as cat named Bustopher Jones, and it's on a (big) ten-inch LP, I think I'll give my good friend Buster's blog http://big10inchrecord.blogspot.com/ another plug.
And here's a little lagniappe, borrowed from my good pal, D Burns:
78264 A Cat-Astrophe Columbia Band Columbia A 2855
http://www.4shared.com/audio/IC699ouP/Columbia_Band_-_A_Cat-Astrophe.htmlNYC, January 1919.
The flip side is dedicated to my neighbor, Ronster:
78285-3 Slim Trombone Columbia_Band Columbia A 2855http://www.4shared.com/audio/L_VFuOm_/Columbia_Band_-_Slim_Trombone.html
NYC, 3 February 1919.
And that'll do it for now...hope you dug it (up).