Radio and television mirror (July-Dec 1948)

Record Details:

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Camarata's insatiable desire to learn more about music led to further schooling at the Juilliard School, where he earned a trumpet fellowship, and to study with the late Cesar Sodero, who conducted the Italian wing of the Metropolitan Opera Company for many years. After leaving the Dorsey band, Tutti continued to arrange and conduct for Der Bingle's record dates. His musical background attracted many other artists to him. He arranged or conducted for such talent as Dick Haymes, Tony Martin, Vic Damone, Eugenia Baird, Andy Russell, Helen Forrest, Jean Sablon, Hazel Scott, Evelyn Knight, Anne Shelton, Beryl Davis and many bands. When J. Arthur Rank decided to produce a musical film in the American fashion, Camarata was hired to arrange and conduct for "London Town." His work on the film and his background as musical director for Decca, caused London Records to engage Camarata as musical director. His original compositions, "Rumbolero," "Rhapsody For Saxophone," "Fingerbustin' " and "Tall Trees" have gained for Tutti recognition as a great new talent among modern composers. "The greatest kicks I've had," muses Tutti, "were either the days with Jimmy Dorsey or, more recently, while conducting the Kingsway Symphony Orchestra in London. As for all the greats I've worked with, I guess Bing was the easiest. He doesn't need any rehearsal. Once through a song and he walks up to the mike and makes the final record. "Right now, though, I'm concentrating on some more original music. At the suggestion of publisher Al Brackman I'm writing an American Railroad Suite. It will be in four movements and is intended to tell the story, in music, of the many peoples who worked on building the fabulous network of track that criss-crosses America. There is so much wonderful material about which to write that my problem is one of omission rather than inclusion. I should like to write about such events as the race between the Pony Express and the first mail train. It's the most intriguing work I've attempted." * . # * There'll be no shortage of Guy Lombardo records for at least another two years, if the current record ban lasts that long. In addition to about 50 as yet unreleased recordings of new tunes which Guy waxed during the last months of 1947, Decca has on hand about 75 sides that were recorded four years ago and never released. These are "standards" and feature the everpopular music of Gershwin, Kern, Rodgers and Berlin. loome fo a, $€1/14™ When it comes to boxing you can include the Three Suns out, as Morty Nevins has discovered. Morty, who plays the accordion in the musical trio, started taking boxing lessons as a means of keeping fit and flat waisted. He was doing all right until Lloyds of London laid down the law. The boys had recently insured their hands for a total of $500,000 and, since boxing is considered "undue risk to the fingers," Lloyds said no boxing or no policy. Morty'll have to do push-ups. * * * Frank De Vol's no fool. Barbers are always offering him tonics and panaceas for his baldness, but Frank turns them all down. "With hair," says the maestro, "I'd be just another orchestra leader — and with a great deal less value in comedy." * * * Meredith Willson's supporting cast for his new show is all signed for an ABC run starting in September. It includes Paulena Carter, piano prodigy. Josef Marais and Miranda, African folk singers, and the famous "Talking People." * * * People are talking about the amazing rise of Illinois Jacquet. A little over a year ago he was with Count Basie, and this year he'll gross a million dollars with his own band. If you like folk music, don't miss Alan Lomax's new ballad book, Folk Song; U.S.A. Lomax has dedicated the volume . . . "To ballad-makers, long dead and nameless; to the jockey boys whose smiles are dust; to the singers of the lumberwoods, the cattle trail, the chain gang, the kitchen; to fiddlers in buckskin; to banjo pickers; to lonesome harmonica blowers; and to the hornyhanded, hospitable, generous, honest, and inspired folk-artists who carved these songs out of the rock of their lives, we dedicate this, their own book." Which makes Lomax somewhat of a writing artist, in our book. The Jerry Wayne Show with Alvy West, which Columbia put on the air in a five a week musical series, the early part of June, is rounding up a series of outstanding vocalists and instrumentalists, as if Jerry's voice and Alvy's Little Band hadn't enough admirers of their own. It adds up to quite a fifteen minutes, beginning at 7:30 P.M., EDT. * * * Pretty Patti Clayton has been bitten by the quiz bug and is now part of the cast of Sing It Again, the intricate hourlong program which calls for twicesung old favorites, telephone calls and a Mystery Voice. ALICE REINHEART and LES TREMAYNE are having a few friends to dinner in their New York apartment — and you'll be there, too, with the September RADIO MIRROR on sale August 11th