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Merry Christmas from Doc Severinsen and The Tonight Show Orchestra
Doc Severinsen
első megjelenés éve: 1991
(1991)

CD
3.324 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  Winter Wonderland
2.  The Christmas Song
3.  Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy
4.  The Little Drummer Boy
5.  Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!
6.  White Christmas
7.  Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
8.  O Come, All Ye Faithful (Adeste Fideles)
9.  Sleigh Ride
10.  Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas
11.  March of the Toys
12.  Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
13.  Santa Claus Is Coming to Town
14.  Joy to the World
15.  Silent Night
16.  Jingle Bells
Jazz / Christmas

Doc Severinsen - Conductor, Flugelhorn, Liner Notes, Trumpet
Abe Appleman - Viola
Allysen Jones - Bells, Handbells
Ambre Leffler - Bells, Handbells
Amy Shulman - Harp
Andrew Byron Peebles - Trombone
Andy Post - Engineer, Second Engineer
Ann Leathers - Violin
Ann Roggen - Viola
Artemis Theodos - Violin
Arthur J. Flacco - Cello
Bill Perkins - Clarinet, Flute, Sax (Alto)
Brian Golub - Bells, Handbells
Brian Smith - Bells
Bruce Paulson - Trombone
Carol Pool - Violin
Children's Choir - Performer
Chris Schultz - Bells, Handbells
Chuck Findley - Flugelhorn, Trumpet
Conte Candoli - Flugelhorn, Trumpet
Corine Metter - Violin
Dann Thompson - Engineer, Second Engineer
David Duke - French Horn
Desert Bells International - Performer
Don Ashworth - Clarinet, Flute, Sax (Bass), Sax (Soprano)
Eamonn Andrews - Handbells
Ed Shaughnessy - Drums
Elena Barere - Violin
Elliott Rosoff - Violin
Eric Cowden - Engineer, Second Engineer
Ernie Tack - Trombone (Bass)
Faith Fraioli Glassman - Violin
Frank Szabo - Flugelhorn, Trumpet
Gene Estes - Percussion
George Burnette Dillon - Trumpet
George Wozniak - Violin
Gilbert Falco - Trombone
Hank Cicalo - Engineer, Mixing
Holly Leffler - Bells, Handbells
James Sawyer - Trombone
Jeanne LeBlanc - Cello
Jeff Tyzik - Producer
Jennifer Johnson - Handbells
Jerry Peel - French Horn
Jill Jaffe - Viola
Jim Atkinson - French Horn
Joel DiBartolo - Bass
John Bambridge - Arranger, Clarinet, Flute, Sax (Alto)
John Montagnese - Production Assistant
John Reed - Cello
John Thomas Johnson - French Horn, Tuba
Julia Winterberg - Arranger, Handbell Arrangement
Kate Barry - Handbells
Katherine Davis - Handbells
Katie Davis - Bells
Leonard Silver - Executive Producer
Los Angeles Children's Chorus - Performer
Louann Montesi - Violin
Mark Giannini - Violin
Maurey Harris - Flugelhorn, Trumpet
Maurice Harris - Flugelhorn, Trumpet
Olivia Koppell - Viola
Pacific Brass - Performer
Pete Christlieb - Clarinet, Flute, Sax (Tenor)
Phil Magnotti - Engineer
Phil Teele - Trombone
Philharmonic Strings - Performer
Rebecca Thompson - Director
Richard Henrickson - Violin
Richard Perissi - French Horn
Rick Winquest - Engineer, Second Engineer
Robert A. Karon - Trumpet
Ross Tompkins - Celeste, Cello, Piano
Shelly Cohen - Orchestra Manager
Snooky Young - Flugelhorn, Trumpet
Spring Berv - Strings, Violin
Stephan L. Tieszan - Violin
Suzanne M. Tenca - Viola
Tab Smith & His Orchestra - Handbells
Tedi Lynn Cook - Bells, Handbells
Tom Peterson - Clarinet, Flute, Sax (Tenor)
Tom Ranier - Organ
Tom Rizzo - Guitar
Tommy Newsom - Arranger, Clarinet, Flute, Sax (Alto)
Tonight Show Band - Performer
Tracy Golub - Bells, Handbells
Wally Snow - Percussion
Wally Traugott - Mastering

Like Doc himself, Merry Christmas from Doc Severinsen and the Tonight Show Orchestra is a brassy, stylish and shamelessly enjoyable album. Severinsen never takes risks -- the swaggering arrangements will be familiar to anyone who watched Johnny Carson's Tonight Show, and all the songs are staples -- but he's made an entertaining album. He's not alone on this one either -- the L.A. Children's Chorus, the Philharmonic Strings and the Desert Bells help out on individual tracks. When all is said and done, there might not be much unexpected here, but it's all quite fun.
---Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide



Doc Severinsen

Active Decades: '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s
Born: Jul 07, 1927 in Arlington, OR
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Nostalgia, Big Band, Instrumental Pop, Bop, Swing, Traditional Pop

For 25 years, Doc Severinsen was arguably the best-known trumpet player in America, appearing on television every weeknight as the leader of the Tonight Show Orchestra. Known for his exceptionally loud wardrobe, Severinsen often bantered good-naturedly with host Johnny Carson, while supplying the show's incidental music (bridging commercial breaks, introducing guests, etc.). Despite the musical limitations of that format, the Tonight Show Orchestra was increasingly considered one of the best big-band jobs available as time passed: generous exposure, steady work, and declining options elsewhere. Severinsen maintained a side career to allow himself to stretch out, recording bop, big-band swing, and crossover-friendly instrumental pop for a series of labels beginning in the '60s. When The Tonight Show was on hiatus, he toured with smaller groups and guested with numerous jazz and pops orchestras around the country. He had his critics in the jazz world, partly because his albums weren't strictly jazz, but also partly because he didn't display his chops very often; he was an able bebop soloist with a bright, clean tone and a tremendous range in the upper register of his horn. In the mid-'80s, he finally brought the Tonight Show Orchestra into the studio for a series of popular and well-received recordings. When the orchestra broke up in 1992, Severinsen hit the road with a select group of alumni, and also continued his guest appearances around the country.
Carl Hilding "Doc" Severinsen was born on July 7, 1927, in Arlington, OR, and was initially nicknamed "Little Doc" after his father, a dentist. Starting music lessons at age seven, Severinsen originally wanted to play the trombone, although his violin-playing father urged him to take up that instrument instead. As it turned out, the trumpet was the only brass instrument available in their small town, and Severinsen got so good so quickly that he was performing with the local high school band while still seven years old. At age 12, he won the Music Educators' National Contest, and as a high schooler, he toured with Ted Fio Rito's orchestra. Upon finishing school, he joined a succession of touring big bands starting in 1945, including Tommy Dorsey (where he was a featured soloist), Charlie Barnet, Benny Goodman, and Noro Morales. In 1949, he settled in New York, where he worked as a staff musician for NBC and a recording session sideman, backing the likes of Dinah Washington and Anita O'Day. He moved over to television in 1952, and appeared on the original, Steve Allen-hosted Tonight Show as a member of Skitch Henderson's orchestra.
In 1962, when Carson took over the show, Henderson made Severinsen his assistant orchestra leader. Around the same time, Severinsen cut the first of a series of albums for the Command label; his earlier efforts were largely standard big-band swing, but by the late '60s he had moved into groovy, swinging instrumental pop in the so-called "now sound" vein, often arranged by Dick Hyman. In 1966, Henderson abruptly departed The Tonight Show under still-mysterious circumstances. Milton DeLugg briefly took over as his replacement, but Severinsen was promoted to the post of orchestra leader and musical director in 1967. His outlandish, brightly colored wardrobe and easy comic chemistry with Carson quickly cemented him into the job, where he would stay for the next 25 years.
In the meantime, Severinsen moved from Command over to RCA in the early '70s, and then went to Epic for 1975's Night Journey, a surprisingly credible foray into jazz-funk fusion. Even more surprisingly, Severinsen landed some disco play with the dance-club hits "I Wanna Be With You" and "Night Journey" in 1976. The follow-up LP, 1977's Brand New Thing, offered more of the same. In 1985, Severinsen recorded an album for Passport with a new fusion group called Xebron. The following year, he brought the Tonight Show Orchestra into the studio for their long-awaited first recording sessions, cutting a number of swing standards. The resulting album, The Tonight Show Band, was released on Amherst and sold briskly, also winning a Grammy for Best Jazz Large Ensemble Recording. A second, similar album, The Tonight Show Band, Vol. 2, was released in 1987. Facets, which found Severinsen working with crossover fusion ensembles and string orchestras, was a Top Ten jazz hit in 1988.
Severinsen returned to the studio with the Tonight Show Orchestra in 1991 for the well-reviewed Once More...With Feeling!; they followed it in 1992 with Merry Christmas From Doc Severinsen and the Tonight Show Orchestra. It proved to be their last hurrah together; Carson's retirement that year ushered in major changes at The Tonight Show, and new host Jay Leno let Severinsen and the band go. Severinsen quickly gathered some of the band's most prominent members, and embarked on a sort of farewell tour of America. He would continue to tour with many of them during the '90s, most notably trumpeters Conte Candoli and Snooky Young, drummer Ed Shaughnessy, saxophonists Ernie Watts and/or Bill Perkins, and pianist Ross Tompkins. Additionally, Severinsen cut an album with the Cincinnati Pops (1992's Unforgettably Doc) and served as guest conductor for symphony orchestras in Minnesota, Milwaukee, Buffalo, and Phoenix; he also made numerous guest appearances as an instrumentalist, led brass workshops and clinics, and even moved into designing and manufacturing trumpets. After a lengthy hiatus from recording, he returned with 1999's Swingin' the Blues, which featured a generous selection of Tonight Show Orchestra alumni.
--- Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Weboldal:Amherst Records

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