Amazon.com Customer Reviews
What memories! - Review written on March 28, 2007
Rating: 5 out of 5
4 customers found this review helpful.
Anyone who lived through WWII will bond with this CD. The first time I heard the music, I was with the Red Cross providing entertainment for the wounded patients at Walter Reed Army Hosp. in Washington DC shortly after the war. Of course, our Navy did tangle with German subs & ships in the Atlantic, but to me Richard Rodgers' music spells the conflict on the other sea, which resulted from the Japanese devastating attack on Pearl Harbor. Mr.Rodgers was a genius in composing this music. There is no mistaking the sound of the big guns going off, the torpedo attacks, the anguish of all personnel, and then - victory. One hears several singable melodies, the most popular & memorable being the one that later became a hit popular song: "No Other Love Have I." To this day, my heart aches when I listen to this CD. Much of it, of course, is in the minor mode, til ...a VICTORY! This music reminds me of the tremendous sacrifice made by so many thousands of our American youth, one of which was my pure, 20-year-old cousin, killed on Luzon in May 1945. This is a prize CD.
Rodgers' score for Victory at Sea is glorious, moving..... - Review written on April 13, 2004
Rating: 5 out of 5
59 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.
Although Richard Rodgers will always be remembered for his brilliant musical theater collaborations with Lorenz Hart and Oscar Hammerstein II, particularly with the latter (South Pacific, The Sound of Music), he also had a successful career as a composer of incidental music, and Victory at Sea is perhaps his best-known orchestral score.
Rodgers composed 13 hours' worth of music for "Victory at Sea," NBC-TV's 26-episode documentary which premiered in 1952 and was a staple of the pre-cable late night hours on independent televisions such as WCIX-TV in Miami. Each episode ran for 30 minutes and focused primarily on the U.S. Navy's participation in the then-still recent Second World War, from the fight against German U-boats in the North Atlantic to the fierce struggle for domination of the Pacific between American and Japanese fleets.
Renowned conductor and arranger Robert Russell Bennett's name has forever been linked with Rodgers' Victory at Sea score, for it was Bennett who conducted the NBC Symphony Orchestra during the original soundtrack's recording, and early LP and cassette editions of the score were credited to this now defunct ensemble. Later recordings, including this 1992 BMG re-issue, were later performed by the RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra, but still under the energetic and expert baton of conductor Bennett.
This first of two Victory at Sea BMG CDs contains all of the tracks contained in the 1950s-era RCA LP album, starting with the iconic "sweep of wind and wave" motif that started each episode. Even without the visual input, if you listen to "The Song of the High Seas," you can conjure up mental images of windswept white-capped waves as warships large and small sail across the oceans. Track one also features the menacing "U-boat" motif, which is played in the minor keys and conveys a sense of "danger down below" as a German submarine tracks its prey -- more than likely an Allied cargo ship -- and sinks it with a salvo of torpedoes.
Rodgers portrays various battles and aspects of naval warfare magnificently, capturing the emotional impact of Japan's early victories in "The Pacific Boils Over" (track 2), the resolute comeback of the Americans after Midway and the long struggle for a South Pacific island in the rousing "Guadalcanal March" (track 3), the "Hard Work and Horseplay" that were part of the sailors' and Marines' daily lives (track 5), and the awesome power of American naval aviation in "Theme of the Fast Carriers" (track 6), a stirring motif that conveys not only the big carriers and the air groups that fought so many crucial battles, but the awful price paid in blood as planes and ships were lost in action in such engagements as the Battle of the Coral Sea, "The Great Marianas Turkey Shoot," and the bloody campaigns for Iwo Jima and Okinawa.
Perhaps the most popular piece from Victory at Sea is "Beneath the Southern Cross," (track 7), a strangely sensuous and romantic tango-like composition. It was such a lovely and evocative melody that Rodgers later "borrowed" it and transformed it into a hit song ("No Other Love"), which would be covered by Perry Como.
There are also several tracks ("Fire on the Waters," "Danger Down Deep," "Mediterranean Mosaic," and "Magnetic North") that were not in any previous recording that I'd owned, and even though they feel tacked on (the producers should have placed them before track 9, in my opinion), they are still very powerful compositions. I would recommend this album to any fan of either film/television scores or American music of the 20th Century.
Victory at Sea - Revisited - Review written on August 25, 2003
Rating: 3 out of 5
17 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.
Well, they certainly DO get "Better than This" (in response to a previous reviewer). I grew up listening to the original score and soundtrack from the 1952 TV series.
This re-arrangement for the movie fall short of the depth, excitement, and vision of R. Roger's original composition.
Athough the music on this CD is still wonderful to listen to, it doesn't capture the same feeling for someone like myself who expected to hear the fine nuances in the spectacular music I grew up with nearly 50 years ago.
Unfortunately, I don't think the original soundtrack is available on CD, only on the upcoming original TV series to be released on DVD this fall.
Get Them Both - Review written on August 19, 2003
Rating: 5 out of 5
I only have two "buts" about this and its companion "More Victory at Sea," but later on that. "Victory" was originally released as 3 LPs. This is Volume 1 and side 1 of Volume 2. "More" is side 2 of Volume 2 and all of Volume 3. Rodgers was probably the most versatile of American composers, doing television scores, instrumental music (both in his shows and other places), and of course musicals from the 1920s through 1979. This is a great score front to back, superbly orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett. After all, how many tv series do you know that filled THREE complete orchestral albums? It's highly recommended that you get both, which leads to the first "but": why didn't RCA just go ahead and make it a double CD in the first place? As for the other "but": it would be really great to see the original album issued on CD. The Volume 1 LP is actually a re-recording (and slight reorchestrating) of the actual soundtrack album. The selections, arranger and conductor were all the same on the original, but it was done by the NBC Symphony Orchestra, not the RCA Victor Symphony. Even with the two "buts", though, get both this and "More Victory at Sea." Note to RCA/BMG: how about giving us the original version, too?
They just don't get any better than this! - Review written on September 24, 2001
Rating: 5 out of 5
20 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.
Richard Rodgers, the musical one-half of the Rodgers & Hammerstein team, composed the thirteen-hour score for the 26 one-half hour editions comprising the Victory at Sea television series aired first in 1952 by NBC, long before stereophonic recordings were released to the public. His score was arranged by Robert Russell Bennett, and then rearranged by Robert Russell Bennett for the motion picture subsequently released because of the popularity of the television series. Whether this score is from the arrangement for the TV series or that for the motion picture is not clear. Either way, let's face it, a television series based on compilations of spliced black and white film footage from the only recently concluded World War II was not the cause for the incredible success of this television series; it was this very music! The score contains a myriad of motifs akin to Peter and the Wolf, but far more subtle and ingenious. Included in the Rodgers' actual musical composition are motifs of waves swelling and crashing, torpedoes launching, running and exploding, Morse code signaling, aerial searches and dives by fighters and dive bombers, storms at sea followed by clearing skies and dripping rain, horseplay by sailors, burials at sea, loneliness of crewmen, long naval runs under the Southern Cross, and reunion with loved ones in jubilation at war's end. The music is magnificent and well worth the listen, notwithstanding the addition of actual sound effects by a well-intended producer apparently unfamiliar with the motifs already existent in the score. I only wish more score could have been included in the collection!
Big Disappointment - Review written on June 13, 2001
Rating: 1 out of 5
21 customers found this review helpful, 5 did not.
Having been a fan of the original "Victory At Sea" series on the TV documentary version, and having owned the original LP versions of both Victory At Sea, Volume I and Volume II, as well as the cassette versions, I have to say that this CD version is, at best, mediocre. Somehow in the process of "remixing" this CD with Dolby Sound, the quality of the music is much less satisfying than the original versions. I realize that the listening public today wants to hear their music via CD and in stereo format, but the original mono versions of Victory At Sea as released by RCA Victor many years ago had a power and crispness that this version sorely lacks. Even the order of the tracks is different than the original. Bottom line, to me, is that this CD was a "good try, but no cigar".
A Score that Demands Your Attention - Review written on July 01, 2000
Rating: 5 out of 5
21 customers found this review helpful.
This CD contains selections from the 1950's television series by the same name. The music was not only perfect for the series, it is just as spectacular by itself.
Rodger's score is strong, demanding, and ever changing. The first track, "The Song of the High Seas," is a perfect example of a diverse style blended perfectly. The track begins strong, then hits hard, and ends with a very solid but noticeably lighter ending. It is a good track to show off the talent of every section of this orchestra.
It has been said that this CD is all march. That statement would be in error. "Guadalcanal March" is a good example of Rodger's ability to compose marches. However, on the opposite side of the spectrum, "The Magnetic North" is nothing like a march. That track ends with one of the most quiet, controlled endings that one might hear in modern music. There is a wide variety of styles on this CD.
Technically, the CD was recorded before 1972 in the A D D format. Those two facts made me hesitate before purchasing this CD. Don't let those two factors stop you from buying this CD. The recordings may be old, and in analog, but the CD sounds crisp and clear. You should have no trouble hearing the details of the music and enjoying this recording.
Brialliantly moving scores. - Review written on December 16, 1998
Rating: 5 out of 5
31 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.
Richard Rodgers has successfully captured the tragedy of defeat and elation of victory in this album.
His passages not only tell a story, they convey powerful emotions, best felt by those who were there. The recurring themes vividly identify the elements in the passages.
I loved the Victory At Sea score as a kid, and I still do today. It is truly a contemporary classical masterpiece.