The collaboration Lerner & Loewe is associated as much
with the cinema as the stage. Their success started in 1945 with their
second musical The Day before Spring and more so with the show
that followed, Brigadoon. They went on to produce some of the finest
20th Century musicals of which My Fair Lady is the best
remembered. Their last show, Camelot, worked well on the screen,
given the added attraction of stars like Richard Burton and Julie Andrews.
But its demand for spectacular sets meant that its transfer to the stage
was not so successful and amateur groups equally found it difficult to
promote the musical.
Here we have a series of orchestral selections from
the shows, probably taken from the Chappell orchestral selections. However,
there is evidence that the scoring has been adjusted, with different
instruments playing the usual lines and new decoration added to give
more lustre.
The orchestra to some of the items is somewhat muddy,
and I don’t think that the heavy use of a euphonium/tuba in unison with
bass drum adds anything attractive to the My Fair Lady selection.
In this piece the orchestration is too heavy and more sensitive use
of dynamics to give a contrasting lightness would have been welcomed.
The other pieces have more attractive moments.
Of Richard Hayman, he may be remembered for his recordings
with Mercury Records. As an arranger he has scored for films and television
and was chief arranger for the Boston Pops Orchestra under Arthur Fiedler.
The notes in English, German and French cover good
background material on the collaborators and their shows.
Raymond Walker