Showing posts with label gert jan blom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gert jan blom. Show all posts

Sunday, November 25, 2012

One missing name: Esquivel

After all these years, there's one 'Exotica name' still missing from our catalog: Juan Esquivel: Groove lounge, Latin & Jazz.

Not for much longer tho: Producer Gert Jan Blom (The Beau Hunks, Raymond Scott) is currently in the mixing phase of one of the most spectacular releases in our history.

We're usually very modest when it comes to describing our own releases. However, this release will be the godmother of any Esquivel release that has seen daylight the past years. And we know what we're talking about...we know what is out there - no disrespect intended.

For our release, we're talking the Grammy Award-winning Metropole Orkest, teamed and expanded with world-class soloists and vocals. Painstakingly precise transcribed arrangements. Dutch top sound engineers and studios. Multi Grammy Award-winner Vince Mendoza conducting. No concessions done.

Just like 17 years ago when The Beau Hunks Orchestra set the new standard for the LeRoy Shield and T. Marvin Hatley (Laurel & Hardy / Little Rascals Music) compositions, this album will be also be a landmark album. We expect to be able to share the first promo track with you January '13.


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

New release: Raymond Scott's Suite for Violin and Piano

Suite for Violin and Piano (1950 / 2004)


Raymond Scott created a diverse body of work that included jazz novelties (often considered "cartoon music"), orchestral ballads, a Broadway musical, film scores, commercial jingles, electronic miniatures, and avant-garde musique concrète. However, the Suite for Violin and Piano, composed in 1950 and never commercially released, was unique in his catalog.
The same daredevil who gave the world “The Toy Trumpet” and “Powerhouse” composed this exquisitely crafted classical jewel. True, Scott was a 1931 Juilliard grad, but the closest his prior compositions had inched towards the classics were jazzed-up reinventions of Mozart, Verdi, and Schubert. The five-movement work was publicly performed just once, at Carnegie Hall in 1950, by renowned violinist Arnold Eidus and pianist Carlo Bussotti. The work was then recorded by Eidus and Bussotti, under the supervision of the composer. However, Scott did not release it commercially for reasons historically unknown.

In 2004, after Scott's widow, Mitzi, discovered the score at home, a new recording was produced by Beau Hunks Orchestra leader Gert-Jan Blom in the Netherlands, featuring violinist Davide Rossi and pianist Ramon Dor.

The two versions are now coupled on this 2012 Basta release. The package is adorned with vintage 1940s and '50s music illustrations by noted artist Jim Flora, and features liner notes co-written by Gert-Jan Blom and Scott authority Irwin Chusid.

The cd can be ordered directly from us here.

On a special note, we are offering free copies of the sheet music here.




Release date: November 25, 2012