Morris Stoloff

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Morris Stoloff was a musical composer. He was born 1 August 1898, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and died April 1980, Los Angeles, California.

Stoloff worked as a musical director at Columbia Pictures from 1936 to 1962. Among space age pop fans, he is best remembered for his 1956 'Top Ten' hit that paired the swing era tune "Moonglow" with the love theme from the movie Picnic.

A child prodigy on the violin, Stoloff was taken under the wing of W. A. Clark. After studying with Leopold Auer for several years, Stoloff was touring the U.S. as a featured soloist at the age of 16, and joined the Los Angeles Philharmonic a year later as its youngest member ever.

When sound came to motion pictures, studios came looking for musicians to provide it, and Stoloff was one of the first to cross over from classical music to movies. He was the first concertmaster on Paramount Studios' payroll, and he worked with setting up the mechanics of a system that had to provide a steady stream of music for everything from epic dramas to serials and comedy shorts.

In 1936, Stoloff moved over to Columbia, where he took the title of musical director, a new position unique to the studio system. As musical director, he was the chief executive responsible for providing musical production support to every film the studio released. This meant matching up composers, orchestrators, conductors, musicians and recording facilities to meet the creative scope of each project as well as its schedule and budget.

Stoloff often took partial credit for a picture's score when he worked closely with a particular composer to work out a theme, motifs, and melodies. As a result, he ranks among some of the most-nominated individuals in the history of the Academy Awards. He won three Oscars for best scores, including those for Cover Girl in 1944, The Jolson Story in 1946, and Song Without End in 1960; he was nominated seven other times.

By the late 1940s, film music was beginning to be recognized on its own, and Stoloff began recording some of the more popular numbers as singles for Decca Records. When long-play albums were perfected, the studios ... on the opportunity to market more than just singles to the listening audience, and soundtrack albums became a hot commodity. Stoloff exercised his privilege as musical director to record these soundtrack albums himself, working with material from the actual scores.

When Frank Sinatra founded Reprise Records in the early 1960s, he hired Stoloff as musical director. One of Stoloff's most noteworthy achievements while at Reprise was the release of a set of re-recordings of great Broadway musicals, including "Kiss Me, Kate" with a studio cast.

[edit] Recordings

  • Picnic, Decca DL-78320
  • Love Sequence, Decca DL-8407
  • This is Kim (as Jeanne Eagels, Decca DL-8574
  • You Made Me Love You, Decca DL-9034
  • Rock-a-bye Your Baby, Decca DL-9035
  • You Ain't Heard Nothin' Yet, Decca DL-9037
  • Fanny, Warner Brothers WBS-1416
  • 1001 Arabian Nights, Colpix SCP-410
  • Song Without End, Colpix SC-506
  • Finian's Rainbow, Reprise FS-2015
  • Miss Sadie Thompson, Mercury MG-25181