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CD Review: Arthur Lyman “Many Moods of Arthur Lyman / Love For Sale” (Collectors’ Choice)
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redtunictr...@gmail.com  
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 More options May 16, 1:12 pm
Newsgroups: rec.music.reviews
Followup-To: rec.music.misc
From: redtunictr...@gmail.com
Date: Fri, 16 May 2008 13:12:14 -0400
Local: Fri, May 16 2008 1:12 pm
Subject: CD Review: Arthur Lyman “Many Moods of Arthur Lyman / Love For Sale” (Collectors’ Choice)
Arthur Lyman "Many Moods of Arthur Lyman / Love For Sale" (Collectors'
Choice)

Hawaii-born Arthur Lyman joined with Martin Denny to invent "exotica"
on the latter's 1957 debut album. Exotica combined the melodic sounds
of the islands with unusual percussion (notably the scratching sound
of the guiro), pop changes, and human-voiced bird calls to create a
soundtrack to the late '50s fascination with all things tiki. As a
vibraphonist, Lyman's jazz background added an element of cool to
Denny's classical training. Splitting after their debut release, Lyman
created a new quartet and recorded dozens of exotica-inflected albums
for the Hi-Fi, Life and Crescendo labels. Collectors' Choice latest
series of reissues gathers eighteen of Lyman's releases from Hi-Fi and
Life, fits them two per CD, includes full-panel reproductions of both
album covers, adds a full-panel back cover and new liner notes from
Scram's Kim Cooper and David Smay.

Lyman's eleventh album, 1962's Many Moods of Arthur Lyman followed the
same pattern as his earlier releases. The song list includes show
tunes ("Something Wonderful," "March of the Siamese Children" and
"America"), film hits ("Anna" and "El Cid"), Hawaiian melodies ("Pua
Maiole" and "Ka Anoi"), a Les Baxter composition ("Jungle Flower" from
1952's seminal LP "Ritual of the Savage"), and popular classics that
include "Londonderry Air" (better known as the melody to "Danny Boy")
and "Babalu." The album's most obscure selection, and its most radical
rearrangement, is a drowsy march-time version of the Ink Spots'
western-tinged mid-50s work song, "Planting Rice." The album works its
traditional exotica spell, with bird calls, percussion, and scratching
guiro, and arrangements that range from lush and tranquil to
percussive and forceful. Tracks 3 and 6 are mono.

1963's Love For Sale, originally released (with the same catalog
number) as I Wish You Love, follows a similar pattern of song
selection, though lighter on the exotica vibe and traditional Hawaiian
melodies. There are show tunes ("Love," from the mid-40s Zigfield
Follies), film tunes ("Love Song From Mutiny on the Bounty (Follow
Me)," "Love is a Many Splendored Thing," "Pagan Love Song," "Secret
Love"), American pop classics (Les Brown's "Sentimental Journey", and
a jaunty take on Cole Porter's "Love For Sale"), international themes
("I Wish You Love"), and the requisite Les Baxter composition ("Love
Dance"). Lyman really gives his vibraphone a ride on "Sentimental
Journey," which is one of two songs here that are closely associated
with Doris Day, the other being "Secret Love." Pianist Allan Soares
pulls out all the romantic flourishes he can find on "It's So Right to
Love." The album offers two new touches: the accordion heard on "To
You My Love," and the panning of the guiro back and forth across the
sound stage (ala RCA's Stereo Action, but less frenetic) on "Pagan
Love Song."

This is a solid pair of albums with a serene vibe that's more jazz
supper club than tiki bar. The group's continued dependency on
material from Hollywood, Broadway and tin-pan alley lends the song
list little individual distinction within Lyman's overall catalog.
[(c)2008 redtunictroll at hotmail dot com]


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