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This volume presents the life and works of Robert Russell Bennett,
whose prolific career as composer and arranger spanned much of the
twentieth century. George J. Ferencz chronicles how Bennett's
concert works, orchestrations, and commercial scores both reflected
and enhanced the musical vitality of New York City, where he spent
most of his professional life. Although Bennett enjoyed commercial
success, his stylistic preferences embraced the classics, and
Ferencz appropriately focuses his study on Bennett's original
concert works rather than his popular scores. Ferencz introduces
the artist with a lengthy biographical profile, followed by a
complete list of works and selected performances which features
compositions rather than arrangements in an effort to document
those works most representative of Bennett's singular talent. All
of Bennett's known commercial recordings are cataloged in the
discography, and an annotated bibliography highlights writings
about the composer and his works. Subsequent appendixes list
commercial orchestrations and original scores for shows, film, and
television, and a full index completes the work.
The previously unpublished autobiography and additional essays by
the orchestrator-composer of some of America's most important
musical theatre productions. The remarkable career of
composer-orchestrator Robert Russell Bennett [1894-1981]
encompassed a wide variety of both "legitimate" and popular
music-making in Hollywood, on Broadway, and for television. Bennett
is principally responsible for what is known worldwide as the
"Broadway sound" and for greatly elevating the status of the
theater orchestrator. He worked alongside Jerome Kern, Cole Porter,
George Gershwin, Irving Berlin, Richard Rodgers, and Frederick
Loewe on much of the Broadway canon, eventually providing
orchestrations for all or part of more than 300 musicals between
1920 and 1975. This work is the first publication of Bennett's
autobiography, which was written in thelate 1970s. It also includes
eight of his most important essays on the art of orchestration.
George J. Ferencz is Professor of Music at the University of
Wisconsin at Whitewater.
This long-awaited study explores the creation of NBC-TV's landmark
1952-53 WWII documentary series, with particular attention to its
evocative Rodgers-Bennett score. Victory at Sea, NBC-TV's
innovative 1952-53 WWII documentary, was eventually broadcast to
more than 100 million viewers worldwide. Its episodes chronicled
the war's conflicts while highlighting the US Navy's contributions,
NBC having sourced footage from the military, governments, and
newsreel agencies of fourteen nations. Victory's special
distinction was its music, with each episode's nonstop score
recorded by the acclaimed NBC Symphony Orchestra. The music was
credited to Richard Rodgers-then at the height of his fame-as
composer, and Robert Russell Bennett as arranger and conductor. In
fact, Rodgers composed twelve piano themes; Bennett developed these
endlessly for orchestra and, in addition, composed many hours of
the score outright. Part One chronicles Victory's gestation and
production at NBC, its reception, the series' afterlife in
syndication and home video, and the score's "Gold Record" sales
success on RCA records. Part Two examines each episode in turn,
focusing on how the Bennett-scored music pairs with screen action.
Every transformation of the much-used Rodgers themes is cited,
along with the episodes' musical inter-relationships. The hundreds
of musical examples generously sample the score's 11½ hours of
music. NBC's Victory has been neglected by Richard Rodgers's
biographers and by film historians. As the series celebrates its
70th anniversary, the Rodgers-Bennett score here finally receives
recognition for its artistry and power.
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