Monday, 16 September 2024

Cy Walter born 16 September 1915

Cy Walter (September 16, 1915 – August 18, 1968) was an American café society pianist based in New York City for four decades. 

Through the course of a musical career spanning some four decades (from 1929 through 1968), many sobriquets have been applied to describe Cy Walter’s talent, among them the “Art Tatum of Park Avenue”; the “darling of New York supper clubs”; the “champion of the genre”; the “poet of the piano”; the “Michelangelo of music”; the “grand master of harmony”; and the “Dean of Cocktail Pianists”. One WNEW radio announcer, struggling for an apt yet new accolade, even likened Cy Walter to Diogenes. 

Although sometimes categorized as a “jazz improvisationalist”, Cy preferred to characterize himself as a “stylist of show tunes”. The reality of Cy’s piano playing, however, was that his creative style was unique, largely defied stereotyped definition, and set its own standard. He was praised for his extensive repertoire (with an emphasis on show tunes) and improvisatory skill. His long radio and recording career included both solo and duo performances, and stints as accompanist for such elegant vocal stylists as Greta Keller, Mabel Mercer, and Lee Wiley. 

Born Cyril Frank Walter in Minneapolis, Minnesota, he grew up in a musical family and received early classical training from his mother, a professional piano teacher. In 1934, after a summer job playing piano on the overnight New York to Boston night cruise, he enrolled briefly at New York University but soon accepted an offer to join the Eddie Lane Orchestra on a full-time basis. Four years later, he formed a two-piano team with Gil Bowers and played at Le Ruban Bleu when it opened. Solo engagements followed at upscale bars and supper clubs like the Algonquin, the Blue Angel, and Tony's on West 52nd Street. In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Walter explored other musical surroundings: as pit pianist with the Jerome Kern musical "Very Warm for May," as accompanist for Mabel Mercer and Greta Keller, and as leader of his own orchestra at the night club La Martinique. 

In 1942, Cy opened his own nightclub, Cy Walter’s Night Cap, whose days were numbered as Cy was called into the Maritime Service for, as he described it, “1 year, 2 months, 5 days, 22 hours, and 10 minutes”.  From 1944 to 1952, Walter appeared regularly (as part of a duo piano team with Stan Freeman, and later with Walter Gross) on ABC's popular weekly radio series Piano Playhouse. Reaching an international audience over Armed Forces Radio, and with commentary by Milton Cross, Playhouse featured (in addition to the anchor duo) notable guest pianists from the jazz and classical worlds, teamed up "in all sorts of unusual combinations as duos, trios and quartets." Richard Rodgers, Cy Walter, and Stan Freeman on the Piano Playhouse Show, performed before a live audience, circa late 1940s. 


                                    

Walter found an ideal showcase for his talents when he opened the elegant Drake Room of New York's Drake Hotel on December 21, 1945. The following year, a Metronome profile noted that "The Cy Walter appeal can be summed up with two t's: taste and the tune. ...

 Sinatra, Whiting and other bigtimers are constantly dropping by... to pick up on some obscure show tune that he has resurrected from the vast storehouse of his musical mind... obscure little melodies that never made the Hit Parade and great timeless songs that have been lost in the shuffle." Walter continued at the Drake Room from 1945 until 1951, building a reputation as the "dean of Manhattan's piano professors," according to The New Yorker (1950).He also played on Frank Sinatra’s Radio show from late 1946-7. 

By then a fixture on the New York music scene, Walter spent the rest of the 1950s performing at various Manhattan venues and recording both as a solo pianist and accompanist—-for example, on Ahmet Ertegun's fledgling Atlantic label. While not a prolific songwriter, he also crafted a number of songs in an advanced harmonic style. For example, he composed both words and music for "Some Fine Day" (1953), and collaborated with Alec Wilder on "Time and Tide" (1961) and Chilton Ryan on "You Are There" (1960) and "See a Ring Around the Moon" (1961). 

In 1959, Walter was invited to resume playing solo piano at the Drake Room. "I guess by now I know how to work the Drake Room," he quipped with typical understatement to an interviewer in 1966. This six-nights-a-week engagement would continue until a week before the pianist's death from lung cancer in 1968.  

From his earliest (and coveted) Liberty Music Shop 78 rpm records, through his last 33 1/3 rpm Cy Walter At The Drake LP release in 1966, Cy’s solo piano performances revealed an highly original musician whose compositions, and variations on well-known standards, had no parallel. 

(Edited from Wikipedia & cywalter.com)

4 comments:

  1. For “Cy Walter - Piano Moods & Holiday for Keys” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/g2keb

    Piano Moods (1951 Columbia)

    1. That Old Black Magic
    2. This Nearly Was Mine
    3. So In Love
    4. You Are Never Away
    5. Happy Talk
    6. You'll Never Walk Alone
    7. Let's Begin
    8. I Dream Too Much
    9. Cheek To Cheek

    Bass – Bob Haggart
    Drums – Johnny Blowers
    Piano – Cy Walter

    Holiday For Keys (1951 Columbia)

    1. Nice Work If You Can Get It
    2. Music For Twilight
    3. Sometimes I'm Happy
    4. While We're Young
    5. They Can't Take That Away From Me
    6. Alone Together
    7. Mrs. Malaprop
    8. Isn't It Romantic?

    Piano – Cy Walter

    A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday pianist and for the loan of the above two albums.

    For “Cy Walter - At The Drake (1966 MGM)” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/iqfrD

    1. It's Delovely
    2. Bess, You Is My Woman Now
    3. I'll Take Romance
    4. Mrs. Malaprop
    5. Dafne's Waltz
    6. All The Things You Are
    7. Moon River
    8. My Favorite Things
    9. What's A Nova Bossa?
    10. My Geisha
    11. Sweet Lorraine
    12. My Man's Gone Now
    13. When A Man Has Done You Wrong

    Thanks to calinawan @ The Internet Archive for the loan of above LP

    ReplyDelete
  2. Here’s My contribution….

    For “Cy Walter – Sublimities: Centennial Tribute Volumes 1 & 2 (2015 Harbinger) (@192)” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/eGCwe

    Volume 1
    1 Cy Walter –All The Things You Are
    2 Cy Walter –Begin The Beguine
    3 Cy Walter –Body And Soul
    4 Cy Walter –Dancing In The Dark
    5 Cy Walter –I Got Plenty O' Nuttin'
    6 Cy Walter –I'll Be Around
    7 Cy Walter – Music For Twilight
    8 Cy Walte r–Lover
    9 Cy Walter –The Way You Look Tonight
    10 Cy Walter –Crazy Rhythm
    11 Cy Walter –Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas
    12 Cy Walter –I Married An Angel Medley
    13 Cy Walter –The Song Is You
    14 Cy Walter –Warsaw Concerto
    15 Cy Walter –Intro To "Tea For Two"
    16 Cy Walter –Tea For Two
    17 Cy Walter –Intro To "Through The Years"
    18 Cy Walter –Through The Years
    19 Cy Walter –Intro To "Liza"
    20 Cy Walter –Liza
    21 Charlie Star –Intro To "Bess, You Is My Woman Now"
    22 Cy Walter –Bess, You Is My Woman Now
    23 Frank Sinatra– Intro To "Falling In Love With Love"
    24 Cy Walter –Falling In Love With Love
    25 Frank Sinatra– Intro To "It's Only A Paper Moon"
    26 Cy Walter –It's Only A Paper Moon
    27 Jack Ward – Intro To "Rachmaninoff Variations"
    28 Cy Walter –Rhapsody And Variations On The Theme From Paganini
    29 Cy Walter –Intro To "It's April Again"
    30 Cy Walter –It's April Again
    31 Hoagy Carmichael, Cy Walter –Intro To "Stardust"
    32 Cy Walter –Stardust
    33 Milton Cross – Intro To "Laura"
    34 Cy Walter –Laura
    35 Milton Cross – Intro To "March Of The Siamese Children"
    36 Cy Walter – March Of The Siamese Children
    37 Milton Cross – Intro To "Mrs. Malaprop"
    38 Cy Walter –Mrs. Malaprop

    Volume 1 focuses on rare recordings, radio appearances and solo performances remastered from original 78s of this dean of cocktail piano players. Considered one of the premier interpreters of the Great American Songbook, Walter considered himself a stylist of show tunes and the first volume presents a rare ringside seat to the many classic performances of Walters early career.

    Volume 2

    1. Blue Skies
    2. Intro to "Lover"
    3. Lover
    4. Over the Rainbow
    5. Rhode Island is Famous For You
    6. Alexander's Ragtime Band
    7. If I Could Be With You One Hour Tonight
    8. Minute Waltz
    9. Oh Lady Be Good/The Waltz in Swing Time
    Keynotes by Carmichael (1950):
    10. Intro to "Ole Buttermilk Sky"
    11. Ole Buttermilk Sky
    12. Intro to "Up A Lazy River"
    13. Up A Lazy River
    Songs by Sinatra (1946):
    14. The Girl That I Marry/Blue Moon/Someone to Watch Over Me -- Frank Sinatra
    Liberty Music Shop Releases (1938-1942):
    15. How to Win Friends and Influence People -- Audrey Christie
    16. A Twinkle In Your Eye -- Wynn Murray
    17. Summertime -- Mabel Mercer
    18. Getting to Know You -- Marlene Dietrich
    Keys of the City (1950):
    19. A Guy is A Guy -- June Valli
    20. While We're Young
    Cy's Compositions:
    21. Don't Think It Wasn't Lovely
    22. I Wish, I Wish, I Wish -- Eileen Farrell
    23. Some Fine Day -- Eileen Farrell
    24. The Next Time Around -- Bob Haymes
    25. Moonbeam
    26. See A Ring Around the Moon -- Steve Ross
    27. Time and Tide -- Buddy Barnes
    28. Intro to "The Astaire"
    29. The Astaire
    30. The Astaire -- Fred Astaire

    Volume 2 celebrates his remarkable career and talents focusing on Walter as accompanist and composer. Considered one of the premier interpreters of the Great American Songbook, Walter considered himself a "stylist of show tunes" and this second volume presents another rare collection of classic song performances with a staggering roster of guest performers attesting to the respect Walters' held among his peers including Hoagy Carmichael, Frank Sinatra, Fred Astaire, Mabel Mercer, Benny Goodman, Art Tatum, and more, Sublimities brings deserved attention to Walters' near 40 year career.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I can't explain why, but this is really hittin' the spot tonight. Thankya Bob!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Despite being a remarkable pianist, Cy Walter never became a household word - a great shame.
    Thank you all for this wonderful post - Bob, Denis and calinawan for your contributions.

    ReplyDelete