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Professionals Together
Milt
Gabler was the man the Kaempferts went to see in New York. Head of A&R
at Decca and someone who knew the entertainment business like the back
of his hand, Gabler immediately recognized what exceptional talent this
man from Germany possessed. He had Wunderland
bei Nacht released as Wonderland By Night
and out of Berthold Kämpfert made Bert Kaempfert and His Orchestra.
And Gabler was proved right: first this instrumental shook the US market
to its very foundations and then rapidly rose to the top of all the relevant
charts worldwide. Bert Kaempfert had made it: his name had now attained
international prestige.
McCartney & Co
Back in Hamburg, Kaempfert was then to make his next
encounter, an encounter that would have far-reaching consequences. At
the Top Ten Club on the Reeperbahn his attention was drawn to Paul McCartney,
John Lennon, George Harrison and Pete Best, four young musicians from
Liverpool. At that time they were known as the “Beat Brothers”
and were providing the backing
for a fellow Briton, singer and guitarist Tony Sheridan. And once again
Kaempfert's instinct did not fail him – he listened to their playing
and produced several songs with these youngsters from the British Isles.
The single My Bonnie, though nobody
could have known it at the time, in fact turned out to be the first official
recording ever made by the Fab Four from Merseyside.
For other musicians such a collaboration would have been
the ultimate high point of their entire career – for Kaempfert,
though, it was little more than an interlude as a talent scout. His “own”
music was naturally the determining factor in his life and his compositions
just seemed to flow from his pen – song after song belying any suspicion
of being mass-produced music. On the contrary.
Two
great “Italians”
In the early '60s the music Kaempfert wrote himself or
the arrangements he made of other composers' music only served to reinforce
his already unimpeachable reputation. His inimitable sound – those
distinctive (“dry-cracking”) figures in the bass, a swinging
rhythm, brass and a blend of choir and strings so meticulously underlaid
that it seemed to hover – continued to land him success after success.
His arrangements of Bye Bye Blues,
Red Roses For A Blue Lady and Three
O’Clock In The Morning set new standards, and the pieces
which he, in whatever form or function, had had a hand in, seemed to take
off virtually of themselves and be guaranteed to climb to the top spots
in the hit parades.
In 1965 the American production company Universal engaged
Kaempfert to write the music for the Hollywood film A
Man Could Get Killed. And it was from this music that a song emerged
that would become one of the most famous songs ever written: Strangers
In The Night. In 1966 it catapulted Frank Sinatra back to
the top of the charts, a singer whose ancestors had once immigrated from
Italy and whose name in recent years had only appeared in the lower reaches
of any of the charts. A few months earlier Kaempfert had also helped another
Italo-American to a worldwide hit: Spanish Eyes
(composed originally as Moon Over Naples)
brought Al Martino back into the limelight with a vengeance. What is more:
there are only a few songs to date that have been covered more often –
estimates put the number of different versions in existence today at around
500…
Sinatra and Martino, however, were no exceptions. Leading
American stars, above all, were eager to perform Kaempfert creations:
Wayne Newton was garlanded by Danke Schoen,
even today still a welcome closing number at the end of all manner of
shows; the great Nat “King” Cole had a triumphal success with
L O V E.,
as did Jack Jones with Lady, Dean Martin
with I Can't Help Remembering You and Sammy
Davis jr. with Lonely Is The Name–
they all could rely on the
high-quality workmanship originating from Bert Kaempfert's pen. And fellow
artists such as Johnny Mathis, Anita Kerr, Pete Fountain and Bobby Hackett,
hardly strangers to success themselves, did not hesitate to fill whole
LPs with exclusively Kaempfert music. Indeed, ever since the mid-'60s,
the repertoires of renowned soloists, bands and orchestras would not be
the same without such songs as Afrikaan Beat,
A Swingin' Safari, That
Happy Feeling and many, many more.
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