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re: Interesting article about composer Leroy Anderson
Last Edit: WaymanWong 05:48 pm EDT 04/23/20
Posted by: WaymanWong 05:44 pm EDT 04/23/20
In reply to: Interesting article about composer Leroy Anderson - Billhaven 10:34 am EDT 04/23/20

I love Leroy Anderson (1908-75). His 1958 score to ''Goldilocks,'' with lyrics by Jean and Walter Kerr and Jean Ford, is full of gems.

''I Never Know When,'' which Elaine Stritch originally sung, is a beauty. Every now and then, it pops up in a cabaret act. Tom Andersen does a wonderful rendition, and Karen Akers has recorded it, too. ... Years ago, I threw a cabaret party at Eighty Eight's and asked my N.Y. Daily News colleague, theater critic Howard Kissel, to sing a song, and he did a delightful job with ''Shall I Take My Heart and Go?'' from ''Goldilocks.''

But most of all, I adored the musical miniatures that Anderson wrote for pops orchestras. They only lasted a few minutes but created a whole world of whimsy and wonder. Among my favorites: ''The Waltzing Cat,'' ''Bugler's Holiday,'' ''The Syncopated Clock,'' ''Sleigh Ride,'' ''Belle of the Ball,'' ''A Trumpeter's Lullaby,'' ''Forgotten Dreams,'' etc. His hypnotic ''Blue Tango'' earned him a No. 1 spot on the Billboard charts in 1951 and was the first instrumental recording to ever sell a million copies. As a writer, I was especially tickled by his clever piece, ''The Typewriter,'' a nostalgic novelty number written for the clackety-clack of a typewriter's keys and bell; it still pops up on concert programs around the world. (See YouTube.)

You can't listen to Anderson's light and bright music without smiling, and his melodies were lovely and lilting.
Link Leroy Anderson & His Orchestra: Greatest Hits (featuring 20 of his classics)
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