Mantovani Explained

Mantovani
Background:non_performing_personnel
Birth Name:Annunzio Paolo Mantovani
Alias:Tulio Trapani
Birth Date:1905 11, df=yes
Birth Place:Venice, Veneto, Italy
Death Place:Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England
Genre:light music
Occupation:conductor
composer
Years Active:1939 - 1980
Associated Acts:David Whitfield

Annunzio Paolo Mantovani (pronounced as /it/; 15 November 1905 – 30 March 1980)[1] was an Italian British conductor, composer and light orchestra-styled entertainer with a cascading strings musical signature.

The book British Hit Singles & Albums stated that he was "Britain's most successful album act before the Beatles ... the first act to sell over one million stereo albums and [have] six albums simultaneously in the US Top 30 in 1959".[2]

Biography

Mantovani was born in Venice, Italy, into a musical family.[1] [3] His father, Benedetto Paolo "Bismarck" Mantovani, was a violinist and served as the concertmaster of La Scala opera house's orchestra in Milan, under the baton of Arturo Toscanini.[3] The family moved to England in 1912,[3] where young Annunzio studied at Trinity College of Music in London. After graduation, he formed his own orchestra, which played in and around Birmingham. He married Winifred Moss in 1934, having two children: Kenneth (born 12 July 1935) and Paula Irene (born 11 April 1939). By the time World War II broke out, his orchestra was one of the most popular British dance bands, both on BBC radio broadcasts and in live performances.[4]

He was also musical director for a large number of musicals and other plays, including Noël Coward's Pacific 1860 (1946) and Vivian Ellis's musical setting of J. B. Fagan's And So to Bed (1951).[5] After the war, he concentrated on recording, and eventually gave up live performance altogether. He worked with arranger and composer Ronald "Ronnie" Binge, who developed the "cascading strings" effect (also known as the "Mantovani sound").[6] His records were regularly used for demonstration purposes in stores selling hi-fi stereo equipment, as they were produced and arranged for stereo reproduction. He became the first person to sell a million stereophonic records.[7] In 1952, Binge ceased to arrange for Mantovani but the distinctive sound of the orchestra remained.

Mantovani recorded for Decca and London Records the US arm of the Decca Record Company, exclusively.[3] He recorded in excess of 50 albums on that label, many of which were Top 40 hits. His single tracks included "The Song from Moulin Rouge", which reached number one in the UK Singles Chart in 1953, the first instrumental track ever to do so;[2] [8] "Cara Mia" (with him and his orchestra backing David Whitfield) in 1954; "Around the World" in 1957; and "Main Theme from Exodus (Ari's Theme)" in 1960.[3] In the United States, between 1955 and 1972, he released more than 40 albums with 27 reaching the "Top 40", and 11 in the "Top Ten". His biggest success came with the album Film Encores, which attained number one in 1957.[5]

Similarly, Mantovani Plays Music From 'Exodus' and Other Great Themes made it to the Top Ten in 1961, with over one million albums sold.[5]

Mantovani starred in his own syndicated television series, Mantovani, which was produced in England and which aired in the United States in 1959. Thirty-nine episodes were filmed.[9] Mantovani made his last recordings in the mid-1970s.[10]

He died at a care home in Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent.[1]

Music style and influences

The cascading strings technique developed by Binge became Mantovani's hallmark in such hits arranged by Binge as "Charmaine". Binge developed this technique to replicate the echo experienced in venues such as cathedrals and he achieved this goal through arranging skill alone.

Author Joseph Lanza describes Mantovani's string arrangements as the most "rich and mellifluous" of the emerging light music style during the early 1950s. He stated that Mantovani was a leader in the use of new studio technologies to "create sound tapestries with innumerable strings", and that "the sustained hum of Mantovani's reverberated violins produced a sonic vaporizer foreshadowing the synthesizer harmonics of space music."[11] His style survived through an ever-changing variety of musical styles prompting Variety to call him "the biggest musical phenomenon of the twentieth century".[12]

From 1961 to 1971, David McCallum Sr was leader of Mantovani's orchestra. At this time, his son David McCallum Jr was at the height of his fame, prompting Mantovani to introduce his leader to audiences with the quip, "We can afford the father but not the son!"[13]

Mantovani is referred to by name in The Kinks song "Prince of the Punks" and Don Black and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Letter Home to England” in Tell Me on a Sunday. He also had a big influence on Brian May, Queen guitarist.[14]

During his lifetime, Mantovani did not always get respect from his fellow musicians. When George Martin first suggested overdubbing Paul McCartney's recording of "Yesterday" with strings, McCartney's initial reaction, according to Martin, was that he did not want it sounding like Mantovani.[15] Martin therefore used a more classical sound, employing a string quartet.

Posthumous publishing

Much of his catalogue has reappeared on CD. There are also many compilations. A large number of CDs are available containing unauthorised recordings, billed as Mantovani or Mantovani Orchestra; for example the CD titled "The Mantovani Orchestra" released in 1997[16] contained a track from the 1980s Andrew Lloyd Webber musical "Cats", which would have required posthumous conducting on the part of Mantovani. There have also been CDs released under the Mantovani name of recordings made by others while Mantovani was still alive.

Following Mantovani's death in 1980, the Mantovani Estate continues to authorise numerous concerts worldwide and recordings using original and newly commissioned arrangements.

Discography

Albums

Light classical music

Christmas music

Singles

YearSingle (A-side, B-side)
Both sides from same album except where indicated
Country
(UK and/or US)
Chart positionsAlbum
US
[17]
US
AC

UK
[18]
1951"Bees in the Bonnet"
b/w "Carriage and Pair"
UK Non-album tracks
"Wyoming (Go to Sleep My Baby)"
b/w "Under the Roofs of Paris"
USWaltz Time
"For You"
b/w "Kisses in the Dark"
UK & US
"Diane"
b/w "Babette"
"Charmaine"
b/w "Just for a While"
10
"At Dawning"
b/w "I Love You Truly"
A Collection Of Favorite Waltzes
1952"Lovely Lady"
b/w "Mexicali Rose"
UK
"Dancing With Tears in My Eyes"
b/w "Dear Love, My Love"
UK & US26
"Love, Here Is My Heart"
b/w "Moonlight Madonna"
"It Happened in Monterey"
b/w "Was It a Dream"
US
"Faith"
b/w "Symphony"
UK & USAn Enchanted Evening With Mantovani
& His Orchestra
"The Agnes Waltz"
b/w "Die Schonbrunner"
UK
"Some Enchanted Evening"
b/w "Gypsy Love Waltz" (from The Music Of Victor Herbert)
US & UK
"La Cumparsita"
b/w "Tango De La Luna"
UKMantovani Plays Tangos
"Tales from the Vienna Woods"
b/w "Morning Papers"
USStrauss Waltzes
"Blue Danube"
b/w "Roses From the South"
UK
"White Christmas"
b/w "Adeste Fideles"
UK & US6Christmas Carols
1953"Gypsy Legend"
b/w "Czardas" (from An Enchanted Evening with Mantovani)
UK Non-album track
"Vienna Blood"
b/w "You and You" (from Strauss Waltzes)
US
"Voices of Spring"
b/w "Artist's Life" (Non-album track)
USStrauss Waltzes
"Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life"
b/w "A Kiss In The Dark"
UK & USThe Music of Victor Herbert
"Love's Dream After the Ball"
b/w "Red Petticoats" (from Mantovani Plays Tangos)
USAn Enchanted Evening With Mantovani
& His Orchestra
"Sweethearts"
b/w "I'm Falling in Love With Someone"
The Music Of Victor Herbert
"Theme From 'The Last Rhapsody'"
b/w "Nalia Waltz (Pas Des Fleurs)"
Both tracks with Stanley Black
Non-album tracks
"Moulin Rouge Theme"
b/w "Vola Colomba"
UK & US81Romantic Melodies
"Royal Blue Waltz"
b/w "Queen Elizabeth Waltz" (from Waltz Time)
"Ramona"
b/w "Chiquita Mia" (from Mantovani Plays Tangos)
"Prelude in C Sharp Minor"
b/w "Simple Aveu"
USMantovani Plays the Immortal Classics
1954"Cara Mia"
UK B: "Love, Tears and Kisses" (Non-album track)
US B: "How, When Or Where"
All sides with David Whitfield
UK & US1Cara Mia
"Swedish Rhapsody"
b/w "Jamaican Rhumba"
UK & US2Romantic Melodies
"Luxembourg Polka"
b/w "Music Box Tango"
UK
"Shadow Waltz"
b/w "Moonlight Serenade"
"Bewitched"
b/w "Dream Dream Dream" (from Musical Modes)
UK & USSong Hits From Theatreland
"Lonely Ballerina"
UK B:"Lazy Gondolier"
US B: "You Stepped Out Of A Dream" (from Candlelight)
16Musical Modes
1955"We'll Gather Lilacs"
b/w "Come Back To Me" (Non-album track)
UKRomantic Melodies
"Softly, Softly"
b/w "Longing" (from Candlelight)
Non-album track
"Lazy Gondolier"
b/w "Longing" (from Candlelight)
USMusical Modes
"Our Dream Waltz"
UK B: "Ma Chere Amie" (from Musical Modes
US B: "Begin The Beguine" (from Musical Modes)
UK & USWaltz Time
"Beyond the Stars"
b/w "Open Your Heart"
Both sides with David Whitfield
8Cara Mia
"Stranger in Paradise"
b/w "The Deserted Ballroom" (from Musical Modes)
UKSong Hits From Theatreland
"Intermezzo"
b/w "Edelma"
Musical Modes
"When You Lose the One You Love"
b/w "Angelus"
Both sides with David Whitfield
UK & US7Cara Mia
1956"Spring in Montmarte"
UK B: "Heart of Paris"
US B: "Candlelight"
Candlelight
"Candlelight"
b/w "Begin the Beguine" (from Musical Modes)
UK
"Song of Sorrento"
UK B: "Blue Fantasy"
US B: "Valse Campestre" (Non-album track)
UK & US
"Toy Shop Ballet"
b/w "Temple of Dreams"
UKNon-album tracks
1957"Around the World"
UK B: "The Heart of Budapest" (from Gypsy Soul)
US B: "The Road To Ballingarry" (Non-album track)
UK & US1220Film Encores, Vol. 2
"Mandolin Serenade"
b/w "The Spring Song"
UKNon-album tracks
"Let Me Be Loved"
UK B: "The Road to Ballingarry"
US B: "Call Of The West"
UK & US
"Souvenir D'italie"
b/w "Dream Dust"
UK
1958"Story of Three Loves"
b/w "To My Love" (Non-album track)
USMusic From The Films
"Cry My Heart" (with David Whitfield)
b/w "Dream Dust"
Non-album tracks
"Love Song from 'Houseboat""
UK B: "A Certain Smile" (from Film Encores, Vol. 2)
US B: "Almost In Your Arms" (with Vera Lynn)
UK & US
"To My Love"
b/w "The Canary"
UK
"Tulips from Amsterdam"
b/w "Only Yesterday" (Non-album track)
USStrictly Mantovani
"Come Prima"
b/w "The Canary" (Non-album track)
Continental Encores
"I Could Have Danced All Night"
b/w "This Nearly Was Mine"
UKGems Forever
1959"Under Paris Skies"
UK B: "Only Yesterday" (Non-album track)
US B: "Separate Tables" (from Film Encores, Vol. 2)
UK & USContinental Encores
"Fascination"
b/w "Separate Tables"
UKFilm Encores, Vol. 2
"Summertime"
b/w "This Nearly Was Mine"
USGems Forever
"Camptown Races"
b/w "Ring De Banjo"
The American Scene
1960"The Orange Vendor"
b/w "In The Spring" (Non-album track)
UKMantovani Tango
"Song Without End"
UK B: "Tania" (Non-album track)
US B: "In The Spring" (Non-album track)
UK & USGreat Theme Music
"The Green Leaves of Summer"
b/w "The Party's Over" (from Strictly Mantovani)
UK
"Theme from 'The Sundowners'"
b/w "Mine Alone" (Non-album track)
US93
"Irma La Douce"
b/w "The Count of Luxembourg Waltz" (from Operetta Memories)
"Main Theme from 'Exodus'"
b/w "Karen"
UK & US31
1961"Theme from 'The Valiant Years'"
UK B: '"The Sound of Music" (from Great Theme Music)
US B: "Non Dimenticar"
UK & USNon-album tracks
"Theme from 'Rocco and His Brothers'"
b/w "Greengage Summer" (Non-album track)
USMoon River and Other Great Film Themes
"Moon River"
b/w "Sail Away" (Non-album track)
US
1962"Fanny"
b/w "Nadya's Theme from 'Rocco and His Brothers'"
UK
"Theme from 'Barabbas'"
b/w "Far Away" (Non-album track)
"Theme from 'Advise and Consent""
b/w "Let Me Call You Sweetheart" (from American Waltzes)
US
"What Kind of Fool Am I?"
b/w "Someone Nice Like You"
Stop the World I Want to Get Off / Oliver
"Summer Night"
b/w "Rickshaw"
UKNon-album tracks
"Love Song From 'Mutiny on the Bounty'"
b/w "Theme from 'Mutiny on the Bounty'"
1963"A Girl Named Tamiko"
b/w "Taras Bulba"
"Take the 'A' Train"
b/w "The Bowery"
USManhattan
1964"Charade"
b/w "The Fall of Love" (Non-album track)
UKThe Mantovani Sound-Big Hits From
Broadway and Hollywood
"I Left My Heart in San Francisco"
b/w "Return to Peyton Place" (from Moon River and Other Great Film Themes)
UK The Incomparable Mantovani
1966"Yesterday"
b/w "Paris Lullaby" (Non-album track)
USMr. Music
"Games That Lovers Play"
UK B: "Somewhere My Love" (Non-album track)
US B: "Ebb Tide" (from Mr. Music)
UK & US122Mantovani's Golden Hits
1967"You Only Live Twice"
b/w "Puppet on a String" (from The Mantovani Touch)
UKHollywood
1968"Theme from 'Villa Rides'"
b/w "Willow Tree" (Non-album track)
UK & US36Gypsy Soul
1969"Chitty Chitty Bang Bang"
b/w "Come September"
USThe Mantovani Scene
1971"Theme from Love Story"
UK B: "Gwendolyne"
US B: "Loss Of Love"
UK & USFrom Monty, With Love
"All Of a Sudden"
b/w "Winter World Of Love"
USTo Lovers Everywhere
1973"Upstairs Downstairs"
b/w "Theme for a Western" (from Annunzio Paolo Mantovani)
UKAn Evening With Mantovani
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released to that territory

Selected filmography

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. 67652. Mantovani, Annunzio Paolo (1905–1980).
  2. Book: Roberts , David . 2006. British Hit Singles & Albums. 19th. Guinness World Records Limited . London. 1-904994-10-5. 348.
  3. Book: The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Colin Larkin. Guinness Publishing. 1992. First. 0-85112-939-0. 1610/1.
  4. "Conductor Mantovani Dies after Long Illness" (1 April 1980) Pacific Stars and Stripes, Tokyo, Japan
  5. Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians (2001) Schirmer, New York
  6. Sailing By – The Ronald Binge Story (Mike Carey, 2000)
  7. "Mantovani, Whose String Orchestras Sold Millions of Record Albums Dead at 74" (31 Mar 1980) The Boston Globe
  8. Web site: Five UK number one hits that you can't sing along to . . 12 October 2023.
  9. Brooks, Tim & Marsh, Earle (1964). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows (3rd ed.). New York: Ballantine.
  10. "Annunzio Mantovani World-famous conductor was bridge to classics" (31 March 1980) The Globe and Mail, Toronto
  11. Book: Lanza, Joseph. Elevator Music: A Surreal History of Muzak, Easy-listening, and Other Moodsong. 2004. University of Michigan Press. 0-472-08942-0. 80.
  12. "Mantovano Dies at 74" (31 March 1980) Altoona Mirror, Altoona, Pennsylvania
  13. https://web.archive.org/web/20120206074046/http://www.hallowquest.com/dmccallum.htm "David McCallum, Violin, Leader"
  14. Web site: Roger Taylor & Brian May Interview – Part 2 . Queenonline.com . 25 March 2011 . 5 June 2015.
  15. Cryer, Max. Love Me Tender: the Stories Behind the World's Favourite Songs. Exisle Publishing (Australia).
  16. Web site: Mantovani: Complete list of all albums, Cds and LP's. 21 August 2012.
  17. Web site: Mantovani and His Orchestra Top Songs . Music VF.com .
  18. Web site: Mantovani . The Official Charts Company .