๐ŸŽถ Up A Lazy River โ€“ Si Zentner And His Orchestra (1961) ๐ŸŽถ

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๐ŸŽถ Up A Lazy River โ€“ Si Zentner And His Orchestra (1961) ๐ŸŽถ

Professor Howdyโ€™s latest musical bouquet is a glowing river of melodies, drifting from stately marches to Parisian romance, from Hollywood tenderness to sunrise over the Grand Canyon. This carefully curated album delights with both familiarity and discovery.

โ€œUp A Lazy Riverโ€ โ€“ Si Zentner And His Orchestra (1961)
We begin with zest and swing! Trombonist and bandleader Si Zentner brings his big band brilliance to Hoagy Carmichaelโ€™s classic, a tune that glides along with carefree warmth and jazzy sparkle.

โ€œPavaneโ€ โ€“ Humbert Lucarelli, Susan Jolles, Frank Morelli
The lilting courtly dance of Gabriel Faurรฉโ€™s Pavane is here given new life through woodwinds and harp, performed with refined beauty by Lucarelli, Jolles, and Morelli.

โ€œPomp and Circumstance March No. 1โ€ โ€“ Arthur Fiedler
No one captured pageantry like Arthur Fiedler with the Boston Pops. Elgarโ€™s march has long become a hymn of triumph, pride, and ceremony, here bursting with jubilant grandeur.

โ€œUnchained Melodyโ€ (From Ghost) โ€“ Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, Erich Kunzel
Erich Kunzel, the โ€œPrince of Pops,โ€ leads the Cincinnati Pops in one of cinemaโ€™s most tender love themes. The orchestral sweep magnifies the songโ€™s timeless yearning.

Chopin / Douglas Arr.: Les Sylphides โ€“ Grande valse brillante, Op. 18 โ€“ Philharmonia Orchestra, Robert Irving
This brilliant waltz, sparkling and effervescent, reminds us of Chopinโ€™s genius for grace and lyricism. Under Irvingโ€™s baton, the Philharmonia plays with ballet-like elegance.

โ€œCanon in D Majorโ€ โ€“ Various Artists
The immortal Pachelbel Canonโ€”its gentle layering of voices like ripples on a still pondโ€”remains one of the most beloved pieces ever penned. (Listed simply as โ€œVarious Artists,โ€ but its beauty speaks for itself!)

No. 15, Final Waltz and Apotheosis โ€“ Mariinsky Orchestra, Valery Gergiev
Few conductors carry more fire than Valery Gergiev. Here, with the Mariinsky Orchestra, the closing waltz rises to a glorious apotheosisโ€”radiant, sweeping, and majestic.

โ€œFaust: Waltzโ€ โ€“ Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Richard Hayman
Gounodโ€™s Faust waltz shimmers with high spirits and operatic flair. Hayman and the Slovak Symphony make it glitter like a ballroom chandelier.

โ€œUnder Paris Skiesโ€ (2016 Remaster) โ€“ 101 Strings Orchestra
The 101 Strings bathe this French classic in lush orchestration, conjuring moonlit strolls along the Seine and the perfume of romance in the air.

โ€œThe Theme from: โ€˜The Unforgivenโ€™ (The Need for Love)โ€ โ€“ Don Costa
Don Costa, famed arranger for Sinatra, here reveals his gift for cinematic drama and tenderness, blending sweep with sentiment.

โ€œPomp and Circumstance March No. 4 in G Majorโ€ โ€“ Barry Tuckwell, London Symphony Orchestra
Elgarโ€™s martial splendor returns in March No. 4, triumphant and noble, given full resonance by horn virtuoso Barry Tuckwell and the mighty LSO.

โ€œRรชverie, L. 68 (Arr. for Orchestra)โ€ โ€“ The Philadelphia Orchestra
Debussyโ€™s dreamy Rรชverie glows under the Philadelphia Orchestraโ€™s velvet sonority, an instrumental sigh that drifts like clouds across a summer sky.

โ€œUnder Paris Skiesโ€ โ€“ The Paris Musette
Here, the chanson returns to its roots, with accordion and French flairโ€”bringing the bustling cafรฉs and cobblestone streets of Paris vividly to life.

โ€œGrand Canyon Suite: I. Sunriseโ€ โ€“ Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, Erich Kunzel
Ferde Grofรฉโ€™s masterpiece paints the dawning of day over the Grand Canyon. Kunzel and the Pops capture its majesty, from stillness to blazing glory.

โ€œUnder Paris Skies (Sous le ciel de Paris)โ€ โ€“ Mantovani & His Orchestra
Finally, Mantovaniโ€™s signature cascades of strings close the program, bathing us once more in the romance of Parisโ€”tender, luminous, unforgettable.

This album, with its mixture of marches, waltzes, love songs, and tone poems, is not merely a playlist, but a flowing river of memory, beauty, and joy. Professor Howdy once again proves himself a master of bringing timeless music to the screen, adorned with high-definition visual poetry.

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