EPISODE 1: "Listen to What's There"
In this pilot episode of Rearranged, Lawrence Lanahan explores the life and music of someone who helped Miles Davis create some of his most unforgettable music: arranger Gil Evans. Lanahan uses "Moon Dreams," the Johnny Mercer tune that Evans rearranged into a work of art on Davis's "Birth of the Cool" album, to consider the underappreciated art of arranging…and to investigate the deepest meanings of the human song.
Guest:
Larry Hickok is the author of Castles Made of Sound: The Story of Gil Evans [https://www.dacapopress.com/titles/larry-hicock/castles-made-of-sound/9780306809453/], DaCapo Press, 2002.
Thanks to:
* Glenn Askew, author of Johnny Mercer: Southern Songwriter for the World [https://ugapress.org/book/9780820349732/johnny-mercer/], Professor of History at Georgia State University, and director of the GSU World Heritage Initiative
* Kevin S. Fleming, Popular Music and Culture Archivist, Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library
* Andrea Appleton
* Bruce Wallace
The theme music and other scoring music for Rearranged was written and recorded by Lawrence Lanahan.
Music discussed:
* Bonnie “Prince” Billy, Master and Everyone [https://www.dragcity.com/products/master-and-everyone], Drag City, 2003,
* Miles Davis, Birth of the Cool [https://shop.capitolmusic.com/products/miles-davis-birth-of-the-cool-back-to-black-vinyl-reissue-series-lp], Capitol/Blue Note, 1957
* Martha Tilton, The Capitol Recordings [https://www.amazon.com/Capitol-Recordings-Martha-Tilton/dp/B07VH26T4M], Capitol, 2000,
* Glenn Miller, Army Air Force Band, Capt. Johnny Desmond and the Crew Chiefs, “Moon Dreams,” V-Disc
* Miles Davis, Sketches of Spain [https://www.milesdavis.com/albums/sketches-of-spain/], Columbia, 1960
* Claude Thornhill and His Orchestra 1947, Hindsight [https://www.amazon.com/Claude-Thornhill-His-Orchestra-1947/dp/B002N8XL9E], 1978
Research notes:
* Much of this episode is drawn from Hickok, Castles Made of Sound.
* “Mercer…once said, ‘I fool around on the piano…’”: Gene Lees, Portrait of Johnny: The Life of John Herndon Mercer, Pantheon, 2004: 156.
* “Recorded at the very first Capitol Records session”: Robert Kimball, Barry Day, Miles Krueger, and Eric Davis, The Complete Lyrics of Johnny Mercer, Knopf, 2009: 128.
* “This one was likely arranged by Weston”: Glenn Askew, personal communication, “That would be my hunch”
* Paul Weston and mood music: https://www.spaceagepop.com/weston.htm [https://www.spaceagepop.com/weston.htm]
* Weston as “almost avant-garde”: Lees, 160-161.
* “higher standards…Whiting,” Askew, 195-196.
* “Pete Rugolo,” Askew, 218.
* “Moon Dreams” from Gil Evans memorial service in 1988: https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=rt3pK9SXjI8 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=rt3pK9SXjI8]
* “Boplicity” from Gil Evans memorial service in 1988: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zenzUq6tn20 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zenzUq6tn20]