
John Wallowitch & Bertram Ross
Wallowitch & Ross
© 2002 Miranda Music (659057370521)
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John Wallowitch and Bertram Ross put their hilarious cabaret magic on CD: a collection of songs from Tin Pan Alley, Hollywood, contemporary selections, and 7 Irving Berlin rarities.
tracks
- 1 A Cup of Coffee, a Sandwich, And You
- 2 Turn on the Heat
- 3 You Stepped out of a Dream
- 4 Panamania
- 5 On the Swing Shift
- 6 I Wish I Had Died at the Altar
- 7 Who Are You?
- 8 Too Good for the Average Man
- 9 Holiday For Strings
- 10 The Pussycat Song
- 11 Egyptian Ella
- 12 Tokio Blues
- 13 Cohen Owes Me Ninety-Seven Dollars
- 14 The Monkey Doodle-Doo
- 15 I Can Always Find a Little Sunshine in the YMCA
- 16 I'll Take You Back to Italy
- 17 An Orange Grove in California
- 18 In My Harem
- 19 Did Anyone Ever Really Know Joan?
- 20 The Red Rose Rag
- 21 Bend Down, Sister
- 22 Up Yours
- 23 I'm Only Happy, That's All
- 24 Some Little Bug Is Going to Find You Someday
- 25 You Must Remember to Forget
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notes
When a Julliard-trained pianist and composer teams with Martha Graham's longtime lead dancer and choreographer for an evening of song, you might not expect to hear such titles as "Monkey Doodle-Do," "Bend Down, Sister," and "Up Yours." But John Wallowitch and Bertram Ross are on no lofty perch. Long before his shiny head and droll, deadpan singing became familiar in Manhattan through his late-night public-access TV show, John's Cabaret, and longer still before Tony Bennett, Shirley Horn, and Dixie Carter started recording his songs, John collected sheet music. Scavenging in yard sales and memorabilia shows, he found songs from Tin Pan Alley and Hollywood that sounded hilarious, often unintentionally.
Who knew in 1967, when he met the partner of Martha Graham, that he had found another elegant clown to share his passion? John and Bertram's love story, both on and off stage, is told in Richard Morris and Sue Gandy's 1998 documentary, Wallowitch & Ross: This Moment. It shows the two stars performing at the former Ballroom, the cabaret where their act debuted in 1984. Just to see them is to smile. John sits at the piano looking like a naughty professor; Bertram, handsome as a statue of a Roman general, stands erect with a tongue-in-cheek hauteur. Then he'll point a finger and sing, in the voice of a Yiddish businessman on his deathbed: "Cohen owes me ninety-seven DOLLAHS/And it's up to you to see that Cohen pays!" Now all these songs that have delighted us are finally on CD. Years before he and Bertram united, John had traded the struggles of a so-called “serious” music career for work in Greenwich Village cabarets. He coached aspiring performers (notably the future TV and theater star Dixie Carter); accompanied such artists as Joanne Beretta, a bewitching singer of some very intense ballads; and wrote his own recherché songs, while hoping to get them heard. Blossom Dearie, a singer-pianist of exquisite, offbeat taste, was among the first to recognize how special they were; through the years she has recorded many.
The New York Times would eventually compare him to an English icon, Noel Coward. But only the devoted New Yorker that John is could have dreamed up such characters as Binky, a surgically enhanced East Side dowager; or Bruce, a cross-dresser guided by Diana Vreeland. If John's comic portraits are often surprisingly poignant, his ballads are poetic cries of the heart, with every defense shattered. Many of his love songs tell of the most idealistic love imaginable. It's a love he knows all about, because he found it with Bertram. Dancing in Graham's Clytemnestra, Circe, and other works he helped create, Bertram looked imperious, unattainable. At least, that's what John thought before they met.
After leaving Graham in 1973, Bertram opened his own dance company, while practicing songs, coached by John. It was Greg Dawson, the brainy, risk-taking owner of the Ballroom â one of the most adventurous cabarets ever to grace New York â who encouraged John and Bertram to put together an act. They dedicate their CD to Greg. "We want him to know how very committed and thankful we are to him," John says.
Mention must also be made of their idol Irving Berlin, who wrote several of the rarities here. For years, John, Bertram, and a gang of friends have made Christmas Eve vigils to the Berlin home at 17 Beekman Place to sing "White Christmas." But not all the tunes on this album are antiques. Murray Grand, a sardonic singer-composer who has spiced up New York's nightlife for decades, contributed "Up Yours," "You Must Remember to Forget," and the barely double-entendre "The Pussycat Song." Only one Wallowitch song is included: "Did Anyone Ever Really Know Joan?," a stark glimpse of a woman's broken dreams.
"I hope you write that Bertram Ross is the love of my life," said John by phone in January 2002. He was at the Beverly Hills home of Dixie Carter, with whom he was giving some concerts. An ill Bertram had stayed behind in the brownstone apartment he and John share near Manhattan's East River. To John, this album is one more permanent document of all Bertram means to him. For us, it's a lot of fun.
James Gavin is the author of Deep in a Dream: The Long Night of Chet Baker, published by Alfred A. Knopf.
reviews
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- author: Joan Juengert
Received it; love it; sound a little hard to hear. Needs better sound at recording time. Thanks
What a pleasure to listen!
author: Francesca AmariWhat a delightful treat to hear these fabulous men and these awesome songs! LOVED IT!!!
If you like old time funny cabaret songs, you will like this CD
author: MarioVery enjoyable. I like the old vaudeville music and these folks are good. I ordered it for the song Some littel bug is going to get you someday, but the Pussycat Song is absolutely hysterical!
Inspiring humor and musicality for all singers. Brilliant piano work.
author: Dr. Ron BowmanSinging is about communication, and Wallowitch and Ross present a unique unified voice in their presentation of the material. Loved it, inspired, every singer, from opera to cabaret, can learn from this entertaining pair! The performances seemed live, but I missed the audience response on the CD. I'm sure they were laughing hysterically...I was!
I love the CD and have been driving to work with them everyday.
author: Joseph LeahyEverytime I listen I enjoy the CD more and more! Some of my favorites: , Egyptian Ella, Back in Italy...and my #1 favorite The Pussycat song! These boys are very entertaining. I loved it and I have had them playing in my car since I opened the case.