Sweet Smell of Success (soundtrack) explained

Sweet Smell of Success
Type:soundtrack
Artist:Elmer Bernstein/Chico Hamilton Quintet
Cover:File:Sweet_Smell_of_Success_Soundtrack_Bernstein.jpg
Caption:Elmer Bernstein sound track cover art
Released:June 12 & July 12, 1957
Genre:Film score
Label:Decca
DL 8610 & DL 8614
Producer:Hecht, Hill & Lancaster
Prev Title:Fear Strikes Out
Prev Year:1957
Next Title:The Tin Star
Next Year:1957
Chronology:Elmer Bernstein

Sweet Smell of Success is the soundtrack to the 1957 Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions film of the same name. The music from the film was released by Decca Records in June 1957 on two separate long play records; one featuring Elmer Bernstein's score, the other with Chico Hamilton Quintet's music.

Production and release

The film score was composed, arranged and conducted by Elmer Bernstein, but the picture also featured jazz themes performed and recorded by the Chico Hamilton Quintet. The music was published and copyrighted through producers Harold Hecht and Burt Lancaster's own music publishing company, Calyork Music, which was affiliated with BMI.[1] Calyork Music's third partner, Loring Buzzell, was responsible for securing the release of the music on soundtrack albums through Decca Records.[2] It was a landmark event in the soundtrack industry; the first film to have two separate soundtracks, each featuring completely different music.[3] One LP featured Bernstein's score, the other LP featured Hamilton's band.

Sweet Smell of Success spanned two soundtrack LPs and two promotional singles.[4] The first soundtrack LP was released in July 1957 by Decca Records (catalog DL 8610) and featured the jazz score composed by Elmer Bernstein.[5] That same month, the lead single was released by Decca Records with the songs "The Street" and "Toots Shor's Blues" (catalog Decca 30379).[6] The second soundtrack LP featured music composed and performed by the Chico Hamilton Quintet, who also appeared in the film. Decca Records released this LP in August 1957 (catalog DL 8614) and promoted it with a single by Mark Murphy featuring "Goodbye Baby" on the A-side and "The Right Kind of Woman" on the B-side (catalog Decca 30390).[7] [8]

The liner notes of the 2008 compact disc reissue state that the Bernstein score was recorded on June 12, 1957, and the Hamilton tracks on July 12, 1957, but that is inaccurate. The same reissue also omits one of the Hamilton tracks from the disc. The film premiered June 27, 1957, so the music had already been long-recorded. The dates provided in the compact disc liner notes most likely reflect the original LP release dates, which coincide with mentions in Billboard magazine.

Critical reception

In a retrospective review, Allmusic's Blair Sanderson noted, "The soundtrack to Alexander Mackendrick's 1957 motion picture Sweet Smell of Success combines orchestral music by the versatile Elmer Bernstein and modern jazz by the Chico Hamilton Quintet, including numbers performed in the film's club scenes. Both provide a moody backdrop to the cynical showbiz drama and intersect at several key points through the use of a common theme, the tune 'Goodbye Baby'." More specifically about Bernstein's music, he wrote of the film score composer employing "richly dissonant big band sonorities and nocturnal urban blues in his score, and much of his music has the hard-edged, gritty sound that was associated with big city life in the 1950s. Hamilton's exploratory improvisations and Bernstein's studio orchestrations make this a highly sophisticated film score".

In a 2008 review for The Guardian, John L. Walters called the soundtrack compilation "the sonic equivalent of a well-mixed Manhattan: seven cool cues by drummer Chico Hamilton's adventurous band, and 14 orchestral blasts by Elmer Bernstein".[9]

Track listing

Music from the Sound Track Sweet Smell of Success

Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[10]

The Chico Hamilton Quintet Plays Jazz Themes Recorded for the Sound Track of the Motion Picture Sweet Smell of Success

Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[11]

Personnel

Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[12]

The Elmer Bernstein Orchestra

Featured on the first LP's tracks 1, 3—9, 12 & 14

The Chico Hamilton Quintet

Featured on the first LP's tracks 2, 10, 11 & 13 and on the second LP's tracks 1—8

Notes and References

  1. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard/50s/1957/Billboard%201957-06-17.pdf "2 Soundtracks for Same Flick"
  2. Edwards, D., Callahan, M., Eyries, P., Watts, R., & Neely, T. Decca Album Discography, Part 4: Main 12-inch 8000 Series (1949–1960) accessed August 11, 2015
  3. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard/50s/1957/Billboard%201957-07-01.pdf "Decca Debuts Double Feature"
  4. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard/50s/1957/Billboard%201957-07-08.pdf "Major Decca Focus on Pic LPs, Singles"
  5. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard/50s/1957/Billboard%201957-08-05.pdf "Reviews and Ratings of New Popular Albums"
  6. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard/50s/1957/Billboard%201957-07-15.pdf "Pop Records Reviews"
  7. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard/50s/1957/Billboard%201957-08-19.pdf "Reviews and Ratings of New Jazz Albums"
  8. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Billboard/50s/1957/Billboard%201957-07-22.pdf "Pop Records Reviews". Billboard, July 22, 1957. p. 72.
  9. Walters, J. L., The Guardian Review February 29, 2008
  10. Book: Sweet Smell of Successliner notes. Decca Records. 1957.
  11. Book: Sweet Smell of Successliner notes. Decca Records. 1957.
  12. Book: Sweet Smell of Successliner notes. Decca Records. 1957.