- Intro: Charmaine
- Die Fledermaus Overture (Strauss, arr. by Mantovani)
- Moon River
- Hora Staccato (Dinicu)
- Aquarius
- Autumn Leaves
- Gypsy Carnival
- Seventy-Six Trombones
- Greensleeves
- Capriccio Italien Op. 45 (Tchaikovsky, arr. by Milner)
- Theme from "The Virginian" (Percy Faith)
- Fantasy on Italian Melodies: Tarantella / O Sole Mio / A Frangesa / Santa Lucia / Mari, Mari / Funiculi, Funicula
- Charmaine
Conductor, composer, violinist, and pianist Mantovani
was one of the most popular and prolific easy listening artists of all
time. His trademark "cascading strings" (or "tumbling strings") effect
gave him an instantly recognizable sound, and his heavy reliance on the
string section in general helped map out the blueprint for much of the
light orchestral music that followed in his wake. His repertoire did
feature original compositions, but was built chiefly on lush adaptations
of familiar melodies: TV and movie themes, show tunes, pop hits
(chiefly of the MOR variety), classical material, and the like. Starting
his career in the '20s, Mantovani
was very much a product of the recording age: he focused almost
entirely on recording, instead of live performance; he was one of the
first artists to utilize the LP as a primary medium for his releases (as
opposed to singles); he was one of the first popular artists to use
stereo recording technology, and likely the first to sell over a million
records in the stereo format. Fascinated by the studio recording
process, he experimented restlessly with miking methods and other
technical nuances over the course of an astoundingly large discography
-- more than 50 albums from the early '50s until his death in 1980 (not
counting his numerous 78 rpm records, dating back to the late '20s).
Annunzio Paolo Mantovani
was born November 15, 1905, in Venice, Italy. His father was an
accomplished violinist who performed at the legendary Milan opera house
La Scala under the direction of Arturo Toscanini. Mantovani himself began piano and music theory lessons at a young age. In 1912, the family moved to England, where Mantovani's father took over direction of the Covent Garden Orchestra. At age 14, Mantovani
switched from piano to violin; although the latter became his
instrument of choice, he would keep up his piano work for the sake of
composing. Just two years later, he made his professional debut with a
performance of Anton Bruch's "Violin Concerto No. 1." He joined a
touring orchestra and quickly became a featured soloist; by age 20, he
was leading the resident Hotel Metropole Orchestra, and made a few
recordings with the group in 1928. He gave high-profile recitals in 1930
and 1931, performing Saint-Saëns'
"Violin Concerto in B Minor" at the latter, and began to make a name
for himself. Around the same time, he formed a new group, the Tipica
Orchestra, and started a series of regular radio broadcasts from
London's high-profile Monseigneur restaurant.
Mantovani
and the Tipica Orchestra made highly successful appearances all over
England, and recorded for Sterno, Regal Zonophone, and Columbia from
1932-1936; two of those records, "Red Sails in the Sunset" and "Serenade
to the Night," were hits in the U.S. in 1935 and 1936, respectively.
Columbia changed the billing on his records to Mantovani & His
Orchestra in 1937, and in 1940 he moved over to Decca. By World War II,
he was one of the most popular orchestra leaders in England, and in the
'40s he also branched out into theater, serving as musical director for a
number of productions including several by Noel Coward. Once World War II ended, Mantovani
threw his energy into recording, and gradually moved away from live
performances altogether. He experimented with different styles over a
series of popular 78s for Decca, and hit upon his signature sound when
he connected with arranger Ronald Binge, who'd once played accordion in the Tipica Orchestra. Binge was likely the man who devised Mantovani's
dramatic "cascading strings" effect, which the two first employed on
the 1951 single "Charmaine," a song originally written 25 years earlier.
"Charmaine" was a major hit, selling over a million copies and
definitively cracking open the U.S. market for Mantovani's music.
A steady stream of hit singles followed in the early '50s, including
"Wyoming" (1951), "Greensleeves" (1952), the U.K. number one "Song From
Moulin Rouge" (1953), "Swedish Rhapsody" (1953), "The Lonely Ballerina"
(1954), "Toy Shop Ballet" (1956; it helped him win the U.K.'s Ivor
Novello Award), and "Around the World" (1957). Additionally, Mantovani arranged, co-wrote, and backed David Whitfield
on his U.K. chart-topper (and U.S. Top Ten) "Cara Mia" in 1954.
Starting in 1953, he recorded what proved to be a deluge of LPs for
Decca and its London subsidiary. The advent of rock & roll stunted
his success on the singles charts, but his albums sold like hotcakes in
America. From 1955 to 1972, well over 40 Mantovani albums reached the U.S. pop charts; 27 of those reached the Top 40, and 11 made the Top Ten. His biggest sellers included Christmas Carols (1953; it re-entered the charts several times), Strauss Waltzes (1953), Song Hits From Theatreland (1955), Film Encores (1957; his lone number one album), Gems Forever (1958), Mantovani Stereo Showcase (1960), Italia Mia (1961), and the smash Mantovani Plays Music From "Exodus" and Other Great Themes
(1961), a number two hit that sold over a million copies and stayed on
the charts for nearly a year. His version of the "Exodus" theme was just
one of several successful recordings (others were by Ferrante & Teicher and jazzman Eddie Harris).
As the '60s wore on, Mantovani's
brand of pleasant, light orchestral music increasingly diverged from
mainstream tastes in pop, and his chart placings slipped lower and lower
(his last entry was 1972's Annunzio Paolo Mantovani).
Still, he stayed true to his own aesthetic, only adopting those
contemporary trends that he could translate on his own terms. His
recording activities were curtailed after the Decca label was dissolved
and absorbed into MCA in 1973, though he continued to compose for
several years afterward. He passed away on March 30, 1980, in his
country home in Tunbridge Wells, England.
(By



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