- Cookie-Records Museum
- 10F Jazz Vocal
- The Pete King Chorale / Hits Of The Fabulous Fifties (US, Kapp Records, KL-1179) <1959>
The Pete King Chorale / Hits Of The Fabulous Fifties (US, Kapp Records, KL-1179) <1959>
The Pete King Chorale / Hits Of The Fabulous Fifties (US, Kapp Records, KL-1179) <1959>
(SIDE 1) KL9-1179 A-1 ARC PM
(SIDE 2) KL9-1179 B-1 ARC PM
今となっては無名に近いヒトだと思います。是非はともかく「古き良きアメリカ」時代のコーラス・グループのハーモニーの美しさ、安定感というのを、たまに無性に聴きたくなります。この作品もたまたま見かけたものですが、お気に入りです。
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2T2wtm_1Lk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m-WlmMMKNco
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nw1Ee-jquVw
Pete King(Born 8 August 1914, Greenville, Ohio, Died 21 September 1982, Los Angeles, California)
A reliable craftsman on the Hollywood studio system production line, Pete King arranged and conducted--with and without credit--countless albums in the 1950s and 1960s. He may not have been a household name, but he was highly respected among his peers, elected president of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences in 1967.
Mind If I Make Love to You LPKing studied music at the Cincinnati Conservatory and the University of Michigan, and worked in radio on "The Fred Allen Show" and others. He moved to Los Angeles after World War Two and began working with Jackie Gleason, Bing Crosby, and others.
King was one of those professionals who could be counted on for predictable results, and so his name shows up all over the place: as the leader on albums for Dot, Kapp, Liberty, and Warner Brothers, and as arranger on albums by Billy Vaughn, Lawrence Welk, The Castaway Strings, The Ray Bloch Singers, and many, many more.
He was nominated for a Grammy a remarkble five years in a row, starting in 1960, for his Pete King Chorale album, My Favorite Things, and ending in 1964, for the second of two albums he arranged for Jack Jones. He worked with some of the period's best singers, including Julie London, Kay Starr, Dean Martin, Doris Day, and Bing Crosby.
He also worked in film occasionally, scoring the Jerry Lewis comedy "The Family Jewels" and the spy spoof, "The Last of the Secret Agents." He also provided orchestrations for several movies, starting with "April Love" and "An Affair to Remember" in 1957, and concluding with the film version of "Camelot" in 1967. His career came to a sad end when a stroke left him deaf and he was forced to quit the music business.