[78-L] Canadian music

David Lennick dlennick at sympatico.ca
Sat Feb 15 09:32:45 PST 2014


Claude Champagne's Gaspe Symphony was rumoured (note I used the Canuckistanian 
spelling) to have been recorded on 78 but I've never seen it. Aside from Victor 
c. 1942, the CBC was the only institution to record any Canadian Classical 
material in the 40s and get it out there, mostly to embassies and other 
broadcasters (and the Victors were of Holst, Elgar, Byrd and Faure). London had 
actually begun recording dance bands, country music and French performers 
(including Charles Aznavour) in Toronto and Montreal by 1950 but with pretty 
mediocre sound quality. And obviously this one (which I really have seen a 
number of times) didn't sell well enough to encourage any follow-up.

dl

On 2/15/2014 12:26 PM, DAVID BURNHAM wrote:
> Ah yes, I remember them well!
>
> Okay, everyone, hands up anybody who has ever seen this record!  Iturbi's "Polonaise in A flat" turns up frequently, as does Jan Peerce's "Bluebird of Happiness" and Toscanini's almost anything, but I've been going through records all my life, as dl well knows and I've never seen it before.  For someone who goes through records as often as you do, (Dave), I'll bet the best you can say is that it turns up "occasionally".
>
> Of course there are probably lots of examples of Canadian Popular songs recorded by Canadian ex-pats in the USA - Guy Lombardo, Percy Faith, etc., but I'm talking about Canadian "Classical" music.  About the only other country I can think of in the Western World whose music has such a hard time penetrating out through its borders is Holland.  I'm sure Holland has produced some fine music and it has its share of artists who are well known all over the world; it has one of the world's greatest orchestras and finest concert halls, but I would certainly be hard pressed to hum any tune written there.  I'm familiar with the name Sweelinck, but don't know any of his music.  For a while I thought Herold, (who wrote the Zampa Oveture), was from Holland but then I found that no, there was another composer who was a far less famous namesake.
>
> db
>
>
>
> On Saturday, February 15, 2014 8:41:18 AM, David Lennick<dlennick at sympatico.ca>  wrote:
>
> I have exactly the same situation with the Crepitation Contest...I knew Syd
>> Brown in the 60s but didn't know until later that he'd made that recording (of
>> another kind of Canadian music).
>>
>> That Godden turns up frequently. I wonder if it was sold anywhere else but
>> Canada? I have an acetate of him playing his own music, with introductions.
>> Unlabelled, found it in a thrift shop. You'd have also wanted to ask him about
>> the Board Of Education recordings he made with Scott Malcolm in the 40s. We all
>> marched around the gym to those.
>>
>> dl
>>
>>
>> On 2/15/2014 1:47 AM, DAVID BURNHAM wrote:
>>> I just came across a record in very clean condition which claims to be the first recording of Canadian Music by a Canadian artist recorded outside of Canada.  It's an English London pressing recorded in England of Kenneth Peacock's "Bridal Suite" and Barbara Pentland's "Studies in Line" played by Reginald Godden around 1950.  I worked with Reg Godden in the late '70s and I would love to have discussed this record with him.  I wish these people wouldn't die so soon, (though if Godden were alive today he would be 109 years old).
>>>
>>> db
>>> ______
>> _______________________________________________
>> 78-L mailing list
>> 78-L at klickitat.78online.com
>> http://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l
>>
>>
>>
>>
> _______________________________________________
> 78-L mailing list
> 78-L at klickitat.78online.com
> http://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l
>
>



More information about the 78-L mailing list