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displacedvermoter
(3,568 posts)For the soundtrack as much as the video footage. And great narration, too.
Sneederbunk
(15,871 posts)The way they were. Greatest Generation indeed.
madamesilverspurs
(16,181 posts)Dad was a Navy buff, and the show was required viewing in our household every week. I used to have a vinyl record of Richard Rodgers' Victory at Sea, magnificent music.
Thanks for the headsup.
.
Glorfindel
(10,074 posts)We didn't miss a single episode, though, as my mother's two brothers were in the Navy and in the Pacific at that time.
One of them was a junior officer on the Enterprise, stationed at Pearl Harbor, and thank goodness it was out to sea at the time of the attack. My father's younger brothers were in the Army, so didn't participate in the victory at sea. Thanks for letting us know!
Aristus
(69,306 posts)Loved the music. My whole family were Rogers & Hammerstein fans, so that helped.
usonian
(16,371 posts)Most famous theme was Under the Southern Cross, later singled out as "No Greater Love"
Salomon also signed Richard Rodgers, fresh off several successful Broadway musicals, to compose the musical score. Rodgers contributed 12 "themes"short piano compositions a minute or two in length; these may be examined in the Rodgers Collection at the Library of Congress.[6] Robert Russell Bennett did the orchestrating, transforming Rodgers's themes for a variety of moods, and composing much more original material than Rodgers,[7] as may be observed in Bennett's holograph scores, archived with his papers at Northwestern University and microfilmed at the Library of Congress.[8] Episode No. 18, for example, is entirely of Bennett's creation, and uses none of Rodgers's twelve themes. Bennett nonetheless received credit only for arranging the score and conducting NBC Symphony Orchestra members on the soundtrack recording sessions, and many writers still refer erroneously to "Rodgers's thirteen-hour score".[1] In 1954, Rodgers recorded the VAS "Symphonic Scenario" medley (scored by Bennett) with the New York Philharmonic for Columbia Records, but it was Bennett who conducted the much more familiar RCA Victor recordingsthe first (1953) with NBC Symphony Orchestra musicians who played for the soundtrack sessions, and later with members of the Symphony of the Air, an orchestra created in the autumn of 1954 from former NBC Symphony members, identified on the albums as the RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra.
RCA has released and reissued the Rodgers-Bennett musical score several times on LP and CD. The listing below is based on the 1992 RCA remastered recordings titled Victory at Sea (13 tracks) and More Victory at Sea (11 tracks). Selections from More Victory at Sea are marked by an asterisk (*). Note that the More Victory at Sea album also includes "Special Effect Battle Sounds" as part of many of the tracks.
The movements and approximate timings in the RCA Victor Symphony performance are as follows:
The Song of the High Seas 5:02
The Pacific Boils Over 5:43
Fire on the Waters 5:58
Guadalcanal March 3:07
Pelelieu* 3:37
Theme of the Fast Carriers 6:44
Hard Work and Horseplay 3:46
Mare Nostrum 4:29
Beneath the Southern Cross 4:04
Mediterranean Mosaic 5:52
Allies on the March* 5:15
D-Day 5:55
The Sound of Victory* 6:12
Victory at Sea 6:14
Voyage Into Fate* 6:20
Rings Around Rabaul* 6:06
Full Fathom Five* 7:08
The Turkey Shoot* 5:18
Ships That Pass* 4:53
Two If By Sea* 6:27
The Turning Point* 5:24
Symphonic Scenario* 10:34
Danger Down Deep 4:53
The Magnetic North 5:4
...
Rodgers's "Beneath the Southern Cross" theme was given words by Oscar Hammerstein, titled "No Other Love", and put into their 1953 musical, Me and Juliet. The May 1953 recording by RCA Victor recording artist Perry Como became a "Number One" hit on the pop charts later that year.
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Bad News
Though the original series Victory at Sea is in the public domain because its copyright was never renewed, the copyright on the original musical score was renewed and thus only the music remains under copyright.
ThoughtCriminal
(14,458 posts)Which I would describe as "restrained outrage" at the Axis.
mitch96
(15,012 posts)so it meant someting to me. An insight into what they did in the war...
Thanks!!
m
pfitz59
(11,351 posts)In submarines, flying aircraft and riding surface ships Knew this stuff inside out.
WeCanDoIt
(1 post)Millions got fooled into thinking of Richard Rodgers as the "composer" of nearly 13 hours of Victory at Sea music. He really did only compose twelve 1-minute piano tunes, while the great musician Robert Russell Bennett "arranged" them to death while composing more than nine hours of the orchestra music himself. The new "Music for Victory at Sea" book finally tells the whole story----and I wish it had written decades ago, so the Greatest Generation would know the truth!