Just a short blog today, partly because I am away from home
currently but also because I wanted to get another couple in before we begin
our annual Christmas Cavalcade. But mostly because I am staying in a Hallmark
Hotel.
Today’s disc is something a bit special, all four tracks
from a mid-to-late-period EP from the Halmark song-poem studio. Well, I had
assumed that, it’s impossible to tell for sure, but a little research shows
that the disc was minted around 1973, so that would be right. Plus a couple of
the music beds utilised on this particular release from Ted Rosen’s song-poem
company are among the more rare of their regular accompaniments. I certainly cannot
immediately recall having heard the tune used behind the astounding The
Suffering of a Serviceman’s Wife or opening track Honeymoon On The Moon before.
Those two cuts are the standout tracks on this EP, both sung
by Halmark staffer Mary Kimmell. My friend Bob Purse had previously blogged
this, and as he rightly noted all four tracks are credited to Bob Storm on the
disc’s label, despite two of them clearly being sung by a woman. The other two,
much more pedestrian cuts – the wonderfully-titled Trench Coat, Umbrella and
Boots and the eminently forgettable Unapproachable – do indeed come from
Halmark’s regular male solo vocalist Bob Storm. Those last two songs were both copywrited
by “arranger” Jerry Dee in 1973... the cheeky beggar: the arrangements for
these and pretty much every disc ever issued by Halmark (and subsidiary labels
Chapel and Grand) cam straight of an open reel of ½ inch tape. Anyway, at least
it helps us date the disc.
The tune used on the final cut on the EP, The Suffering
of a Serviceman’s Wife sounds like it could have been written for a
third-rate James Bond rip-off, but the 60s spy flick ambience is a little at
odds with the lyrics, which tell the harrowing tale of a (rather selfish, if
you ask me) young woman bemoaning her lot now that hubby is back from Vietnam, somewhat
the worse for wear. My mind boggles at why she would chose to call him ‘half a
man’, the thoughtless trollop, but maybe he lost something fundamental to her
happiness overseas.
These particular cuts come from my own copy of the EP. I’ve
given it a bit of a clean up and I hope it isn’t too crackly for you!
Enjoy!
Download side one HERE
Download side two HERE
I do believe that the most interesting research regarding a song-poem record is to find some facts about the composers. Alas, I've found nothing on Karen I. Davis...
ReplyDeletethese are great; I have heard the James Bond theme before (In Nights Of Starshine is one) but this is a truly epic version. And I never have heard the music bed that's used on "Honeymoon".
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