Information: Riverview
Records is a recording company based in Toledo, Ohio. Their first recording project
features the music of Alec Wilder. The instrumental music of Alec Wilder has
been deemed unclassifiable since he began writing it in the late 1930s. His unique
and always interesting Octets began a musical odyssey that lasted until his death
from lung cancer in 1980. Born in 1907 to a wealthy Rochester family, Wilder
grew up a musical dilettante, never really studying either musical instruments
or composition. He picked up the banjo-as well as the piano. Eventually, he sought
out advice from composers and theorists teaching at the famed Eastman School of
Music. While not an actual student at Eastman, Wilder spent a lot of time there
and got to know many of the instrumental music students. While there he met and
befriended John Barrows (horn), Mitchell Miller (oboe/English horn), James Caruana
(who changed his name to Jimmy Carroll to avoid being teased about the rhyme with
Marajuana), and many other musicians who went on to play leading roles in big
bands, orchestras, commercial music, and the recording industry. Wilder's
early success came as a composer of 'pop' tunes. Some of his songs were made hits
by Frank Sinatra and remain standards. Songs like I'll Be Around and Moon
and Sand. The composition of the aforementioned Octets arose out of Wilder's
friendship with oboist Mitch Miller. At one pont, during an audition in a hung
over state, Wilder was asked if he could write instrumental works-and thus the
Octets were born. These snappy little pieces, just the right length for one
side of a 78rpm recording, featured the totally oddball ensemble of oboe, flute,
bassoon, clarinet, bass clarinet, harpsichord, bass and drums. Solidifying their
status as 'off the wall' were the titles Wilder gave to his works: Neurotic Goldfish,
Dance Man Buys A Farm, Jack, This Is My Husband, and so many more. The greatest
turn in Wilder's career came when the young and upcoming Frank Sinatra heard airchecks
of a few of Wilder's octets while relaxing between performances in New York City.
He immediately perked up, asking who wrote the music he was hearing. Sinatra was
so taken with the octets, he called Columbia Records and fairly insisted they
issue an all instrumental, all Alec Wilder, long playing record. Columbia executives
felt a sure fire 'bomb' being proposed by their hottest new star, so in order
to keep Sinatra happy they agreed, but with on condition: that Sinatra conduct
the ensemble. It was Sinatra's first and only performance with the baton. But
it helped to bring Wilder's instrumental music to thousands of people who would
otherwise not have gotten to hear it. Jump ahead some fifteen years to the
beginnings of the Rock and Roll revolution. The record companies, smelling millions
of new dollars, began dropping their cultured song composers as fast as they could.
Revenue for serious composers of song fell dramatically as new young musicians
like Bill Haley, Buddy Holly, and Elvis Presley began to reap all the rewards.
In that climate, Wilder began to heed the call of his instrumental friends and
turn his talents toward instrumental works. Though he'd written some in his younger
days, and of course the world famous Octets, the composition of serious works
for winds and strings was a frightening new tact for the self doubting composer.
But with the steadfast encouragement from his great friend, the French hornist
John Barrows, Wilder wrote-and wrote, and wrote some more. Due to the influence
of one of his composition teachers in Rochester, Herbert Inch, Wilder had a great
love of counterpoint, a technique he would use extensively in many of his instrumental
works, including nearly all of the works on this disk. The six works heard here
(most in their first recorded performance!), range in composition dates from 1947
(Clarinet Suite), to 1968 (Suite No. 2 for Tenor Sax and Strings).
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