Ray: The Gaudeamus Igitur rehearsal from The Student Prince certainly hasn't been released on any commercial CD, but you may well have heard it before on one of the Damon Lanza Productions private discs. There is only one outtake floating around that I'm aware of, and we included it here for the sake of completeness.
For those who are interested in purchasing this CD, here are some more details.
As most Lanza fans know, the 1954 RCA Student Prince (and Other Great Musical Comedies) LP wasn't a true soundtrack album. To be sure, it was a great album (with only one poor choice on its Side B: the Coke "Yours Is My Heart Alone"), but RCA's meddling on various tracks was unfortunate, even if it was necessary on the two duets, due to Ann Blyth's voice having to be replaced. "Deep in My Heart, Dear" was particularly unsatisfying, since only Mario's intro was used (and then clumsily repeated at the end). And there was no need for the duplications that occurred on "Drink! Drink! Drink!" and "Gaudeamus Igitur," both of which featured some embarrassing edits perpetrated by RCA to extend these recordings. On "Drink!" an abrupt orchestral section was inserted in the middle of the song (after the point at which Mario had actually finished his one-take rendition), and then bits of Mario's recording were simply repeated to create a longer song, while his rendition of a single verse of "Gaudeamus" was repeated so that it became Mario-Chorus-Mario. Thus, we ended up with the same verse sung three times!
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The RCA album also omitted "Ergo Bibamus" (sung by Mario with the male chorus) and the Martin Luther hymn "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God" (only a third of which is heard in the movie). Other complete film numbers that could not be included on the album for contractual reasons were Ann Blyth's two solos ("Come Boys" and the Summertime in Heidelberg" reprise) and the students' marching song "To the Inn."
Over the years Sepia Records has received many requests for a "complete" Student Prince film CD to complement their excellent reproduction of Mario's 1959 RCA remake of The Student Prince, but the sticking point was always the absence of the two film duets with Blyth---and, for completeness, the non-Lanza items. Instead Sepia had to make do with releasing outtakes of "Summertime in Heidelberg" and "Deep in My Heart, Dear."
The situation changed, however, when Sepia's owner recently came into the possession of a collection of acetates, which included the elusive film versions of the two duets, various solos, such as "Golden Days," and a number of non-Lanza items, including an outtake of "To the Inn We're Marching." (A snippet of the "Golden Days" acetate is attached here in its raw form, complete with Lanza's throat-clearing.) Thanks to the magic of DES (Digitally Extracted Stereo), which often allows for scratches and other unwanted noises to be assigned to a separate "stem" and then deleted, we were able to clean up these acetates to an impressive standard and then convert all of the recordings with orchestral accompaniment to stereo.
For me the sonic standouts on this CD from the MGM film are "Serenade," "Golden Days," "Drink!," "Summertime in Heidelberg," "Beloved," "Deep in My Heart, Dear" and "I'll Walk With God"---all of which sound truly magnificent in stereo. In fact, several of them now sound better than the reproductions in the film, which was the previous gold standard. With "Drink! Drink! Drink!", for example, we were able to remix the recording so that the male chorus and Mario occupy different "stems" of the same recording. In other words, Mario's voice is now left free to soar in the centre, while the chorus sings around him (as one might expect to hear on a true stereo mix). The result is truly thrilling.
It's also fun to hear the non-Lanza numbers in stereo, particularly Ann Blyth's "Come Boys, Let's All Be Gay, Boys" and her sweetly rendered "Summertime in Heidelberg" reprise.
Other revelations on the CD include Lanza's 1946 live radio rendition of "Serenade," which is really quite a remarkable piece of singing for a 25-year-old neophyte (as I belatedly realised while working on this CD), and which has never sounded more thrilling, together with the five 1959 recordings, all of which have been freshly remastered for this CD.
We chose to include only two tracks from Lanza's 1959 stereo remake of The Student Prince---"Thoughts Will Come to Me" and "Just We Two"----given that he didn't perform these songs in the film. Repeating anything else from the 1959 album, however, would have put Mario in competition with himself, and let's face it: the MGM recordings are definitive.
The remaining three 1959 recordings (featured in the bonus tracks section) have never sounded better. Anyone who is fond of Mario's "Nocturne," "Love Me Tonight," or "One Alone" will be impressed by the improvements in these stereo remixes. (I can't stop listening to them.)
Finally, the four 1956 Cavalcade of Show Tunes numbers that conclude the CD all sound as though they were born for stereo. They are stunningly reproduced, and I hope to provide a preview at some point of samplings of these and other tracks on the CD.
Lest anyone reading the above cynically assumes that my enthusiasm is due to a financial interest in this CD, please be assured that I, Steve Cutler, Armando Cesari, Vince Di Placido and everyone else involved in the recordings, notes, and photos for this disc will not be receiving a cent of any profits. We simply provide Sepia with the materials for their long-running series of Lanza releases because we want to honour the finest tenor that we have ever heard. And the class act that is Sepia never lets Mario Lanza down.
Derek