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Friday, 18 November 2022

A MOMENT IN TIME – Introducing the Al Lloyd Orchestra

 A MOMENT IN TIME – Introducing the Al Lloyd Orchestra

What happens when the styles of Burt Bacharach and Quincy Jones meet the arrangements of the Frank Chacksfield and Norrie Paramor Orchestras somewhere between 1971 and 1975?


Making its debut on the easy listening stage this year, the Al Lloyd Orchestra delivers a magical response. Premiering as an EP (i.e. Extended Play format of 30 minutes of music or less) on CD, as well as all the usual online streaming platforms, four original compositions by fledgling composer and musical arranger Mr Alex Lloyd signal a welcome return of the instrumental orchestral sound of the early 1970s. Alex Lloyd – or Al Lloyd as he prefers to be known in the music world – has worked with the likes of the Chairmen of the Board, the Drifters and the Motown Studio Band, The Funk Brothers. His recent productions include hits for Hayley-Ria Christian and Dayton Grey which includes 2 number 1 R&B hits on the Amazon R&B chart as well as a top 20 UK Soul Chart Hit.   (www.alexlloydsongs.com)

Speaking to Al before putting out this review, he tells me his music for the EP and earlier orchestrations for Dayton Grey and Steve King (the former lead singer of the Drifters) should best be described as ‘Easy Listening Soul’. Listening to the four tracks on this instrumental debut EP, one literally hears a variety of influences from the big soul ballads of Dionne Warwick, Gladys Knight, and Aretha Franklin. (See back cover picture below of the CD.) ‘I Count the Tears’ evokes the Stylistics’ signature ‘Break Up to Make Up’, Smokey Robinson’s ‘Tracks of my Tears’ and a strong hint even of ‘Kiss and Say Goodbye’ by The Manhattans. The expansive solo of the trombone works that evocative sense of treading the musical line between heartfelt disappointment and hope for coming back together in a second time romance. The listener’s mind races quickly to connect this slow groove with Bacharach’s majestic ‘A House is Not a Home’. The next big ballad, ‘You Don’t Have to Prove I’m a Fool’, nods faithfully to Bacharach in singing out the empathy and bittersweet feelings of lost loves. Al’s arrangement of weaving long flowing, gently grooving violin and piano passages together stages an aurally scintillating space for the unnamed singer on this tune. Again, the lyrics are cleverly reminiscent of Bacharach’s ‘In Between the Heartaches’ dressed up in a very sassy way by that unnamed vocalist.

Addressing more directly the easy listening crowd, are the remaining two numbers, ‘Yesterday Feels like Yesterday’ and ‘Rain on Piccadilly Circus’. One hears a bridge literally connecting the five-decade gap between the mid-late 1970s renditions of the Frank Chacksfield and Norrie Paramor Orchestras and Al’s compositions. The sound of strings become mellower, with plenty of oboe and gentle piano to evoke the sentimentality of mood music capturing the emotions ranging between regret and longing for a happier time in one’s life. Is this still Soul? It should be, while also being easy listening.

One hopes this EP release will transform into a full-blown Album/CD release at some point in the future. Given Al Lloyd’s immense talent and crossover inspirations, one can only look forward to more stellar productions from this up-and-coming orchestral genius.

ALAN

November 2022

Saturday, 10 September 2022

Japan’s BGM Series: Nordisle Bois Orchestre and the DENON NIPPON COLUMBIA Orchestras and Ensembles

 Japan’s BGM Series: The Nordisle Bois Orchestre and the DENON NIPPON COLUMBIA Orchestras and Ensembles

The Denon Nippon Columbia company of Japan organized several orchestras for their decade long output of easy listening releases from roughly 1986 to 1995. Their chief characteristics were (a) their mostly DDD quality studio recordings produced according to very demanding audio standards, (b) their moniker of a label for light orchestral easy listening – BGM, standing for ‘Background Music’ – while in fact the arrangements of the tunes were anything but ordinary background listening; a third characteristic was (c) the compiler’s ability to produce themed sets of their exclusive recordings.

The BGM series was also distinctive for its definition of ‘mood’ through its cover art. This featured simple portraits of homely elegance, such as a flower vase by a scenic window with the background dressed in soft hues by the photography, or a wine decanter with accompanying glasses ready for an intimate evening at home. Alternatively, flowers dress up a breakfast table filled with a plate of eggs done ‘over easy’ accompanied with a cup of tea and a diary. Other moods were scenic: arresting portraits of wild lilies, panoramic snapshots of New York’s Brooklyn bridge, London’s Thames bridges shrouded in early morning mist, or scenes of a highway winding through parkland, or they could be snapshots of meadows, train journeys over rivers, palm beaches or landscapes from night dining scenes in Rome, Paris, Brussels or New York. BGM is music to go with the simple joys of everyday moments of beauty and beautiful landscapes.




Who are the artistes in the Denon BGM roster? Here are some of my guesses from listening and reading the English track listings, without referring to translations from the Japanese liner notes:

Nordisle Bois Orchestre/Tommy Oscar Grand Orchestra: a moniker for a string and percussion orchestra that sports a mostly ‘pop rhythm’ with plenty of baroque influences from tightly scripted twinkling flourishes in the piano notes to featuring harpsichord and violins being played on a pop tempo. If you are collecting music by this orchestra, their interpretations of Madonna’s hits ‘Papa Don’t Preach’ and ‘La Isla Bonita’ are stunning for their string orchestrations. The same goes for their renditions of Whitney Houston’s ‘Greatest Love of All’ and ‘I Wanna Dance with Somebody’. Equally inspiring are their choral-themed arrangements on ‘I Like Chopin’ – very different from Gazebo’s original or Paul Mauriat’s fluid, semi-jazz piano, string and drum treatment – and the Patti Labelle and Michael MacDonald hit ‘On My Own’. The very lush, almost baroque, interpretation of the Julio Iglesias-Diana Ross hit ‘All of You’ is also a stunning collectable for all fans of easy listening.

The Gene Cosmann Orchestra: a mostly trumpet and saxophone fronted orchestra with a large wind section. If the arrangements for particular tunes permit, Gene Cosmann goes for a big band sound ala Glenn Miller and Benny Goodman. This orchestra takes on mostly 1950s and 1960s hit melodies that are transformed instrumentally. I think it is also a fine testimony of how far reaching the US pop influence was on Japanese instrumental players from the era of the 1950s onwards.


Jun Norsiah Strings/ a.k.a. Croad Terry Grand Orchestra/ a.k.a. Movin’ Dream Orchestra: Their sound is crafted to interpret 1960s and 1970s film themes. This orchestra arranges melody for mostly strings and solo piano, with almost zero percussion. The latter is substituted for by the extensive use of the double bass and the plucking of violin strings. Some of their outstanding interpretations are 'Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head' and 'Summertime in Venice'.

The Columbia Ballroom Orchestra: an act of simply ballroom flair – waltzes, rhumbas, paso doble, foxtrot and cha-cha! They have also been released under the exclusive ‘LET’S DANCE’ DENON series containing Volumes 1-10.   

Ensemble Jack and Jill’s/The Baroque Ensemble: This name sounds like a folk group that performs for children but it actually is a classical ensemble of brass, violins, piano and a little percussion. According to information on discogs.com, they were formed by a domestically renowned violinist and music composer in Japan. They interpret classics in light arrangements that often have a swinging tempo. They sound like a 10 member group. They play everything from Brahms, Mozart to Vivaldi, plus the occasional crossover composition from John Bettis and Glenn Miller.

The Sea Mailmen: An enigmatic name for what sounds like a quintet that covers the same repertoire as the Ensemble Jack and Jill’s. Why the association with the sea? It is anybody’s guess or it might be deliberately evocative of maritime  postmen who play music in between deliveries!

South Sea Island Orchestra: I heard them for the first time in the above-mentioned BGM MORNING compilation playing a track named ‘Morning Dew’. The vibe was immediately Hawaiian with modern laid back arrangements with bass guitar, percussion, subdued strings. Of course, the ukulele-like croon of the double stem electric guitars associated with the style of Marcel Bianchi take centre stage. Some Internet research reveals that the guitar style of Bianchi, reproduced by BGM Denon’s South Sea Island Orchestra, is simply either the steel guitar or the slide guitar.

Fighting Cats’ Band: a moniker for the pure pop music combo of guitar, synthesizer, piano, drums. The cover everything from pop hits of the 1980s to movie themes from action films of that decade like ‘Top Gun’, ‘Back to the Future’, and ‘Ghostbusters’ to Latin jazz fusion.


         There you have it! The BGM series is all about music that dresses up in elegance all of life’s moments from gentle awakenings in the mornings to lazy lounging afternoons, to city vibes in urban drive-arounds, to romantic walks by the lamps of the riverside promenade. The sonic clarity is first rate. This is clearly something that the Japanese engineers at Denon Nippon Columbia worked hard on. Collect the BGM series and you’ll be collecting life’s memories all the same, and in crystal clear recollection.

ALAN

SEPTEMBER 2022

Friday, 24 June 2022

The Soft Pop Serenades of James Last and His Orchestra: Romance in the Clouds

 The Soft Pop Serenades of James Last and His Orchestra: Romance in the Clouds

For some of us who grew up in the mid-1970s, the James Last sound was always associated with the disco dance party albums he produced during that decade. It is only now that I have finally laid hands on remasters of Mr Last’s softer romantic productions, aside from his arrangement of classical music for a ‘pop’ audience. These have been put together very creatively by POLYGRAM/POLYDOR and its subsidiary labels. What a surprise this has turned out to be! The James Last orchestra sounds by turns, an ethereal romantic sound floating among the clouds, a typically 1970s string and chorus wall to wall soundstage of love, or a smoochy disco slow dance. I review four albums here, with perhaps a sequel to follow at some point.

First up, ‘JAMES LAST & HIS ORCHESTRA. Liebe Ist… (Love is…)’. Compiled from Last’s many LPs and remastered as part of the James Last - Ein Sound Geht Um Die Welt series. Made and released in West Germany in 1989 by Polydor as catalogue number 841 344-2. This is one of a few rare compilations of 100% love songs by the James Last orchestra. Better still, this one being released in 1989, collects only his LP remastered releases from the 1970s and 1980s. Looking over the selection of tunes, you will realize this is Last’s eclectic and romantic touch through and through. Even though one might not associate Neil Diamond’s hit ‘Holly Holy’ as a standard romantic song that comes to mind, Last brings out a fresh colour to the tune by employing his choir to sing Diamond’s famous chorus line. The same art of arrangement for strings and choir was employed for ‘Seasons in the Sun’ where the choir’s tone is aligned to bring out the spirit of the song’s play with innocence and illicit love in its original English lyrics… ‘Love Must be the Reason’ and the Carpenters’ hit ‘Close to You’ also get a dreamy string and choir treatment bringing these tunes to new dimensions of aural enjoyment that are quite distinct from their original vocal versions – indeed it is time to break out the champagne and candlelight…Or simply sit on a patio overlooking your favourite summer garden and watch the swans go by on a lazy sunny day… Other gems include the extremely mushy slowed down version of ‘You Make Me Feel Brand New’, the bouncy ‘The More I See You’, the swinging and lightly waltzing ‘Fly Me to the Moon’ with strings in the lead, the soulful ‘Sexual Healing’, and finally the symphonic surprise on ‘MacArthur Park’ featuring an unforgettable trumpet solo from renowned musician Derek Watkins who has also played with Sinatra, the Beatles, Streisand, Elton John as well as the Ted Heath and John Dankworth big bands, and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra….Indeed Love is…to dream on! 

TRACK LISTING:

1

Games That Lovers Play

2:25

2

Seasons In The Sun

3:59

3

You Make Me Feel Brand New

5:27

4

Sexual Healing

4:20

5

Holly Holy

4:47

6

The Best of My Love

3:51

7

Make This Night Last Forever

2:53

8

The More I See You

2:31

9

Elizabethan Serenade

2:37

10

Fly Me to The Moon

3:21

11

Love Must Be the Reason

4:13

12

Close To You

3:13

13

When Irish Eyes Are Smiling

2:33

14

Let It Be

3:30

15

Spanish Eyes

2:58

16

MacArthur Park

Soloist on Trumpet – Derek Watkins

7:35

One of the tracks above actually lends itself as the title of LOVE MUST BE THE REASON, the 1972 Vinyl LP released on POLYDOR as 2371281. This has actually been faithfully remastered by POLYDOR/POLYGRAM’s subsidiary SPECTRUM records in Germany and sold worldwide in limited quantities. No wonder I had never seen it before – till now. The track list:

1

Wedding Song (There Is Love)

3:37

2

It's Going To Take Some Time

2:45

3

Love Theme From ''The Godfather'' (Speak Softly Love)

2:49

4

Close To You

3:13

5

The Summer Knows

2:50

6

Heart Of Gold

2:57

7

Without You

2:52

8

Face In A Crowd

2:54

9

The Way Of Love

2:28

10

I Don't Know How To Love Him

3:37

11

Love Must Be The Reason

 

Typically, of productions from the 1971-2 period, hits by the CARPENTERS and CAROLE KING and the classic love them from THE GODFATHER movie had to be featured. But James Last softens and slows down the original somewhat to dress these familiar pop songs in the mood of a gentle romantic evening in late summer. This album is impressive also for the employment of a female chorus on 10 out of 11 tracks. The James Last chorus does not imitate Ray Conniff or the Geoff Love Singers, but deliberately arranges his chorus to sing in mostly mid-register with a female sound. I do not know what this technique is called in musicology. But what it does is to bring out an emotional lament and poetry not found in the original vocal versions of these songs. Take Andrew Lloyd-Webber’s ‘I Don’t Know How to Love Him’, the Carole King/Carpenters hit ‘It’s Going to Take Some Time’ for instance, the singers elicit a whole new dimension to these songs. The first becomes a torchy ballad, the second a melancholic yet hopeful plea for a second time romance. The Harry Nilsson ballad ‘Without You’ undergoes a fresh makeover of heartbreak emotion with this choral treatment too.

Thirdly, another compilation from 1984, simply titled ROMANTIC LOVE SONGS (POLYDOR 835 977-2) takes the listener into romance at cloud level – if I may be allowed to exaggerate in a good way! This set draws you in with mostly string arrangements that are pitched like Mantovani in its familiar passages and then interspersed with Fender Rhodes keyboards, solo violins, trumpet and chorus. Wonderful surprises include the disco ballad treatment of ’I Only Have Eyes for You’; a live (with audience applause at the start and finish), emotionally charged interpretation of a saxophone led ‘Endless Love’; the lightly Latin flavouring in ‘Love Story’ through the use of massed guitars a la Manuel and the Music of the Mountains in a mid-tempo rendition of the Francis Lai classic; and the cheerful choral rendition of ‘I Just Called to Say I Love You’ which I dare say, sounds better than Stevie Wonder’s original. Finally, ‘Ballade pour Adeline’ and ‘What Now My Love’ send you to romantic France on a bed of strings that seem to reach infinitely into the upper atmosphere of dreamy consciousness.

Finally, we end this review on a romantic Parisian night – PARIS MON AMOUR – in which James Last serenades you with strings aplenty – with a side trip to the disco ballroom with ‘Charmaine’ from his 1978 WORLD HITS IN DISCO LP. In this set, Last absolutely stands apart from Lefevre, Caravelli, Pourcel or Mauriat by sticking to the idea of a consistently string and trumpet arrangement played softly for after dinner dancing in between the candlelit tables and the backlit Champs Elysees. All these popular French chansons define romance in a subtle wordless way as only maestro James Last can elicit from them. One closing gift by James Last: the vocal crooner’s solo on ‘If You Go Away’ – the famous Jacques Brel composition – is enough to justify owning this album alone.

ALAN

June 2022


Sunday, 13 March 2022

SOUNDBOXES XIV: The Sensational COPERNICUS Speakers from Emmespeakers of Italy

SOUNDBOXES XIV: The Sensational COPERNICUS Speakers from Emmespeakers of Italy


Everyone who has been awed by the famous Da Vincis produced by this boutique Italian Hi Fi company would have made the connections between Milan and its glamour as one of several world fashion capitals and the artistic vibes of Emmespeakers’ designers, the Martinelli brothers.

I had originally wanted to post this review three years earlier but given the relative newness of this product from their range of speakers dedicated to ‘human genius’, I wanted to find the perfect match between the COPERNICUS and the vintage amplifiers my blog specializes in. Rest assured, those of you reading this blog and owning modern amplifiers from renowned brands such as Ayre, yBA, Prima Luna and the like will encounter no difficulty finding the perfect union of sound with the COPERNICUS: punchy bass, versatile reproduction of mid ranges and high frequencies and wide soundstage etc. When these speakers first arrived at my favourite retailer in Singapore, they were indeed tested with the aforementioned brands in tandem with SILTECH, Kimber, MIT Cable and Crystal Cable supplying interconnects and power cords.

 

Adapting to Vintage Amplifiers

With vintage amplifiers, it took a slightly longer journey to find the perfect match. Many SANSUIs and LUXMANs produced harsh upper frequencies through the COPERNICUS. I could not explain why this was the case. I suspect it had to do with the newfangled asynchronous crossover system used to direct the front and rear drivers. According to the Mono and Stereo review site these are the “2 inch ceramic mid-tweeter by Accuton, and two 10 inch aluminum woofer in asynchronous mode and front-rear layout”. Recordings had to be dynamic enough to adapt to such a sophisticated manner of reproducing sound. Also, the stated nominal impedance of 4 Ohms could mean that the COPERNICUS would be ideally matched with amplifiers designed with the same resistance. This is a matter of speculation and opinion. Most audiophiles and engineers tell me that few speakers are built today with specific bands of resistance in the design. Usually, 4 Ohms speakers can accommodate 6 and 8 Ohms amplifiers without strain. My other all-time favourite from Emmespeakers, the Da Vinci, boasts the nominal 6 Ohms and has never had problems mating with any vintage amplifiers to date.

Before I go on about the strengths of the COPERNICUS, I should state which amplifiers I tested the COPERNICUS with. My results – and I emphasize these are my own subjective findings through simple home listening with no firm scientific measurement involved – is in favour of this ascending order of perfection: 3. SANSUI AU-999; 2. KENWOOD KR4200; 1. PIONEER SA-8500. With the exception of the Kenwood, the other two are integrated amplifiers with no tuner section. What the three had in common was that their specifications mentioned that these were 4 Ohms amplifiers or accommodated 4 Ohms speakers and upwards.




Initially the three vintage amps were matched to a combination of SILTECH and Crystal Cable for both interconnects and power cords. The harshness was reduced significantly by the sheer compatibility of these amps with the COPERNICUS. But the harshness disappeared completely once I started experimenting by switching the power cords and speaker cables to Western Electric wires (the 1960s Nassau and 1940s US Navy vintage versions) supplied by an independent local online retailer in Singapore.  And this is where my review begins in earnest.

 
                              Box Shape Sound Enhancement (BSSE)

         After the COPERNICUS premiered at the 2015 Munich High End Show, I was immediately impressed by its shape. It reminded me of the family of medieval musical instruments collectively known as the Lute. Mr Lorenzo Martinelli confirmed that the Lute was indeed the inspiration for the COPERNICUS. And as I researched on the Internet, the Lute was also featured in the famous painting by the Italian Baroque artist, Caravaggio. The Mandolin is of course one of the most famous versions of the Lute. Its shape was distinctive: an elongated boat-like main body, not unlike a long serving bowl sealed with a flat top, and a hole over which musical strings were tautly overlaid in neat rows; additionally, the stem where the strings terminated at the upper end was vastly shorter than the boat-like main body. Compared to the acoustic guitar we are all familiar with in the hands of a Francis Goya, John Williams or the Romero family of guitarists, the Lute seemed bloated and certainly looked heavy. Yet the Lute was designed to fill medieval chambers with an expansive, pure, plucked musical sound. The large, bloated body functioned as a massive resonance chamber ensuring that its sound travelled widely and in unmistakable notes. The history of the Lute has it that it was traditionally played by a male singer who also sung in high pitch.

         Emmespeakers believes that speakers’ shapes have to make full use of the physical setting they are put into. Hence their buzzword ‘BSSE’ as I have spelt out in the subtitle of this section. Like the Lute, the COPERNICUS speakers radiated sound naturally across the entire listening room with jaw dropping naturalness, doing justice to the Lute. When one listens to classical music, the impression of the Baroque and the beautiful simplicity and air of the violin, flute, and of course the Lute, transport you blissfully to the musical chambers of old. Listen to oboe music, you will feel the soul in classical music right away too. The accompanying information sheet signed by the Emmespeakers’ Chief Product Officer suggests that the speakers should be positioned 80 centimetres from any rear wall. My experience concurs completely with this advice. I would even add that the BSSE design allows this set of speakers to be positioned comfortably in even small listening rooms without losing musical coherence. A small room in my estimation should be as big as, or no smaller than, a single occupant hotel room in a four-star hotel.


Realism via Asynchronous Output between Front and Rear Drivers

         Typically, of Emmespeakers’ original three piece range of the Da Vinci, COPERNICUS and the Galileo, their speakers were meant to accentuate the realism in every recording whether it was streamed digitally, reproduced through CD or vinyl.  Additionally, the rear facing large bass driver was an innovation rarely seen in most modern loudspeaker designs. The brilliance of a bipolar direction of reproducing sound is said to mimic how a live concert should be. Concert halls seldom fully damp or successfully direct the sound from the stage to every corner of the seated audience. So much depends on reverberation, randomness of the spill over and radiation of sounds from all kinds of room surfaces. I hate to admit it, but this is why live performances are always special and the benchmark against which HiFi listening at home is always assessed against. The COPERNICUS plays to this expectation. This is also why this pair of speakers challenges vintage gear to match its sophistication.

         I played the early (i.e. late 1980s) Japanese remasters of Perry Como’s And I Love You So LP and a compilation of the Anita Kerr singers titled The Sound of Silence – both on CD – for this review and was deeply impressed by the analogue clarity of these recordings. I chose these recordings because they would always be reproduced in dull tones accompanied by lots of instrumental detail by more modern amplifiers. With the COPERNICUS, it was almost as if these 70s singers were present in three dimensions in my listening room. Every artistic exaggeration of vowels and consonants was captured and revealed in surprising detail along with a thrilling soundstage. This is of course, also a fine testimony to the engineering genius of vintage amplifiers of the 1970s. The sound of Anita Kerr’s singers is particularly exacting because they were trying to blend a classical soprano style with a jazzy swinging sound without trying to copy Ray Conniff or the Gunter Kallman Singers.    

Transparency

         The COPERNICUS are extremely transparent speakers, but they are also slightly demanding on volume outputs. All three vintage amplifiers tested here required volume settings at least number two to bring out the best in the COPERNICUS. But the transparency in every recording from Tina Turner, to ABBA, to Mantovani, Paul Mauriat and even Taylor Swift is astounding in the dream combination of vintage amplifiers, the COPERNICUS, and Western Electric cables. If a HiFi system can trick the mind into time travel listening mode, this is as close as it can get.

Some of you may wonder how COPERNICUS compares with the Da Vinci I raved about in earlier reviews on this blog. First of all, both are veritable art objects with their gilded metal leaf designs and worth keeping for life, each colour choice customized to your taste. The Da Vincis are vastly easier to match with virtually every amplifier I have ever owned and sold, sketching a sonic presence far larger than its almost bookshelf size. But the COPERNICUS is a statuesque presence unto itself – a postmodern celebration of the medieval Lute – and an exceptionally demanding pair of speakers that rewards you with living presence stereo once you make the right pairing. Under the creativity of the Martinellis, this pair of speakers are more than worthy of their historical namesake, the mathematician Nicolaus Copernicus. Moreover, it is dressed up with a therapeutic circle of blue light for mood effects which can be turned on or off with a simple switch at the back of each speaker. In my modest review here, I am also offering you the reader three gorgeous samples of 1970s analogue amplifiers matched to a timeless pair of audio sculpture – try them in combination, you won’t regret it. 




ALAN

March 2022