Anna Russell (born Anna Claudia Russell-Brown; 27
December 1911 – 18 October 2006) was an English–Canadian singer and comedian.
She gave many concerts in which she sang and played comic musical sketches on
the piano. Among her best-known works are her concert performances and famous
recordings of The Ring of the Nibelungs (An Analysis) – a humorous 22-minute
synopsis of Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen – and (on the same album)
her parody How to Write Your Own Gilbert and Sullivan Opera.
Russell was born in London, England, though her long
association with Canada meant that her birthplace was sometimes given as London,
Ontario. Her father, Claud Russell Brown, was an enthusiastic pianist; her
Canadian mother, Beatrice, had a difficult relationship with her only child,
referring to her as "Toad". But the family soon noted Anna's musical
abilities. Taken to the premiere of William Walton's Façade in 1923, she was
entranced by Edith Sitwell's nonsense lyrics, and started to compose and write
songs herself.
An accident on the hockey field at St Felix school,
Southwold, resulted in a fractured nose and cheekbone, which "had to be
reconditioned from the inside, and it ruined my acoustics". At the Royal
College she studied composition with Ralph Vaughan
Williams. Another of her teachers was Arthur Benjamin, but it was the principal, Sir Hugh Allen, who suggested she would be better off auditioning at the London Palladium.
Williams. Another of her teachers was Arthur Benjamin, but it was the principal, Sir Hugh Allen, who suggested she would be better off auditioning at the London Palladium.
Although she made some appearances as a concert singer in
the 1930s, it was a disastrous experience as an understudy in a touring
production of Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana that first showed Russell what
could be made of operatic parody. As the tragic heroine, she was supposed to be
cast to the floor by the diminutive tenor; not anticipating her to be so heavy,
he fell himself, bringing down part of the scenery, and causing such merriment
that the performance came to a halt.
At the start of the second world war, she went to her
mother's family in Canada, and after one false start in the chorus of a musical
comedy, found her first celebrity on a radio programme entitled Round the
Marble Arch. As a comic folksinger, she launched such songs as Don Bonzo
Alfonzo the Matador (with castanets) and I'd be a Red-Hot Mama if I hadn't got
these Varicose Veins. Christmas Box concerts with the Toronto Symphony
Orchestra were followed after the war by a New York debut at the Carnegie Recital
Hall and a one-woman show at the Vanderbilt theatre.
During these early touring seasons, Russell launched some
of her most famous skits: How to Write your own Gilbert and Sullivan Opera, For
Loud Singers with no Brains (introducing the aria, Ah, Lover, from the mythical
operetta The Prince of Philadelphia), For Singers with Tremendous Artistry but
no Voice (with a German lied, Schlumpf, and a French chanson, Je n'ai pas la
plume de ma tante).
Her greatest triumph, though, came with her lecture on
Wagner's Ring cycle. This included such celebrated moments as her description
of Wotan and Erda: "Weiche, Wotan, Weiche, which means be careful, Wotan.
She then bears him eight daughters." Once Siegfried has met Gutrune in
Götterdämmerung, Russell reminded her listeners, "She's the only woman
that Siegfried's ever come across who isn't his aunt."
When challenged by Wagnerites who felt she was ridiculing
sacred art, she replied: "I merely tell the story as accurately as
possible and play the bits of music exactly as written. I can't help it if the
story is absurd." The doyen of Wagner critics, Ernest Newman, complimented
her accuracy, and Birgit Nilsson, the foremost Brünnhilde of the time,
recommended her
students to listen to Russell in order to lose their inhibitions. Russell received the Canadian Women's Press Club Award in 1956 as the best Canadian comedy writer of the year.
students to listen to Russell in order to lose their inhibitions. Russell received the Canadian Women's Press Club Award in 1956 as the best Canadian comedy writer of the year.
Later parodies included a folksong, I Gave my Love a
Cherry Without a Pit, in which she accompanied herself on an Irish harp. When
the instrument was unexpectedly confiscated at US customs, she went on stage
and mimed it, thereafter including this as part of the act. In Wind Instruments
I have Known, she claimed to have learned to play the the bagpipes - "a
most unsanitary instrument" - from the Encyclopedia Brittanica.
Here’s “For Singers With Tremendous Artistry But No Voice: Schlumph; Ja N'ai Pas La Plume De Ma Tante” from above EP.
Not everyone was enchanted. The American composer Ned
Rorem, for example, bracketed Russell with Liberace as a "musical
grotesque". None the less, she toured the world, always returning to
Canada. She announced her retirement in 1986, but as late as 1998
made a guest appearance at the Ford Centre, Toronto. By then she had moved to Unionville, where a street was named after her. Her books include The Power of Being a Positive Stinker (1955), The Anna Russell Songbook (1960), and I'm Not Making This Up, You Know (1985), the last her Wagner catch-phrase.
made a guest appearance at the Ford Centre, Toronto. By then she had moved to Unionville, where a street was named after her. Her books include The Power of Being a Positive Stinker (1955), The Anna Russell Songbook (1960), and I'm Not Making This Up, You Know (1985), the last her Wagner catch-phrase.
Both her marriages ended in divorce. Her happiest
association was with Deirdre Prussak, a fan who became her secretary and a
"sort of adopted daughter" and who cared for her in her final years.
They were friends for 51 years. In her last years she moved to Australia where
she lived in Batemans Bay, New South Wales, until her death from natural causes
on October 18 2006 (aged 94).
(Edited mainly from article in The Guardian by Patrick
O'Connor with a sprinkling of Wikipedia)
FOR “Anna Russell’s Guide To Concert Audiences (1954) ” GO HERE:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.upload.ee/files/9350199/AnRussell.rar.html
01 Not For Your Benefit
02 La Donna Nanella
03 Guide For Concert Audiences
04 Nacht Und Tag
05 Trink
06 The English Repetoire
07 Oh Night! Oh Day!
08 When You Go To An Evening Party
09 The Tender Snowdrop
10 Music Hall, I'm Only A Faded Rose
11 La Danza
12 French Art Song, Je Ne Veaux Pas Faire L'Amour
13 Food, The Bergeret Style
14 Bergerette
15 L'Amour De La Low Life, Ma Dernier Cigarette
16 Spanish Song Styles
17 Bagga Bagga Bona
18 Flamenco, Guarda La Bella Tomato
19 What Happened, Carmen At The Met
20 Habanera Howdown
A big thankyou to Cheerful Earful for original post
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FOR “Anna Russell, Jimmy Carroll And His Miserable Five – A Square Talk On Popular Music Or The Decline And Fall Of The Popular Song (1955)” GO HERE:
https://www.upload.ee/files/9350174/AnnaRussel_SquareTalk.rar.html
1. Feeling Fine
2. Red-Hot Mama
3. Chloryphil Solly
4. End Of The Line
5. Two Time Man
6. Maladjusted
7. Please Santa Claus
8. Mad
9. Let Us Hang The Holly
10. Come Lovely Death
11. Wir Gehen In Den Automaten
12. Yesteryear
13. O Gentle Bird With Feathered Breast
14. Anaemia's Death Scene
15. Aria From "The Psychiatrist"
Thanks to audiotut for mp3s.
I had not heard of this artist. She is hilarious. Thank you.
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