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Ray Conniff obit
October 14, 2002: Ray Conniff, bandleader and composer who wrote theme
to 'Dr. Zhivago' dead at 85
By Kate Berry / Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Ray Conniff, the composer, trombone player and
bandleader who won a Grammy Award for his recording of the "Dr.
Zhivago" theme "Somewhere My Love," has died. He was 85.
Conniff died at Palomar Medical Center in Escondido on Saturday after
falling down and hitting his head, San Diego medical examiner's
investigator Angela Wagner told The Associated Press.
Conniff had more than 100 recordings and produced 25 Top 40 albums for
Columbia Records. He rendered such classics as "Besame Mucho," "New
York, New York," and "S' Wonderful," in a career that spanned six
decades. He produced 10 gold and two platinum records. He won CBS
Records' Best Selling Artist for 1962 for the recording, "We Wish You
A Merry Christmas."
The Ray Conniff Orchestra and Singers epitomized the lounge-singing
style of the 1950s and 1960s with a mix of wordless vocal choruses and
light orchestral accompaniment. Though he got his start as a trombone
player in the Big Band era playing with Bunny Berigan, Bob Crosby and
Artie Shaw, Conniff broke out as a solo artist after being hired as a
house arranger with Columbia Records in 1951. He was responsible for
Johnny Mathis' "Chances Are," Frankie Laine's "Moonlight Gambler,"
Johnnie Ray's "Just Walking in the Rain," and Guy Mitchell's "Singing
the Blues."
In 1956, Columbia decided to try out Conniff as a featured performer
with a big-band mix that included guitarists Al Caiola and Tony
Mottola. His debut album, "S'Wonderful," in which he combined a chorus
of four men and four women with a traditional big band mix of 18
instruments, stayed on the Top 20 charts for nine months.
A 1962 article in McCall's magazine described his band as "singers who
'play' their voices as though they were instruments, more like subtly
fluted woodwinds than singing." A few of Conniff's singers were known
studio vocalists including Loulie Jean Norman and B.J. Baker. Jay
Meyer assisted as conductor. Conniff's instrumental arrangements
provided easy listening for a booming adult album market. His
popularity waned with the rise of rock 'n' roll but stars such as The
Carpenters, Simon and Garfunkel, The Fifth Dimension and Burt
Bacharach benefited from his arrangements with recordings of "Laughter
in the Rain," "I Write the Songs," and "I'd Like to Teach the World to
Sing."
Conniff received countless international awards, continued touring and
produced about an album a year. He performed at the White House during
the Vietnam War and in 1974 was the first pop artist asked to record
an album in Moscow. In 2001, he gave a series of concerts in Brazil.
He performed "Somewhere My Love" at the wedding of David Gest and Liza
Minnelli in March.
Ray Conniff links
◦
The Ray
Conniff Page
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Ray Conniff @ Spaceagepop.com
◦
Ray Conniff @ Wikipedia
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Ray Conniff @ Allmusic.com
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