- The Syncopated Clock
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"The Syncopated Clock" is a piece of light music by American composer Leroy Anderson, which has become a feature of the pops orchestra repertoire.
Contents
Composition
Anderson wrote "The Syncopated Clock" during 1945[1] while serving with the U.S. Army and assigned as Chief of the Scandinavian Desk of Military Intelligence in Washington. Anderson had been invited by Arthur Fiedler to guest-conduct the Boston Popular ("Pops") Orchestra during their annual Harvard Night. Anderson wanted to introduce a new work to Fiedler and composed a song about a clock with a syncopated rhythm. The idea of the title reportedly occurred to him before he wrote the music. In a few hours he wrote the music, scored it for orchestra and then mailed it to Symphony Hall in Boston. Fiedler had the orchestra parts copied from the score. Then, with a 3-day pass, Anderson traveled from his home in Arlington, Virginia to Boston where he conducted the premiere on May 28, 1945. Anderson recorded the work for Decca Records during 1950 with the best musicians selected from various New York orchestras. This was true for all of his recordings for Decca, collected as "Leroy Anderson and his Orchestra." Anderson's "orchestra" was an assemblage of musicians hired by Decca specially for Anderson's recordings.[2]
The album, catalog number 16005, was entered the charts on March 23, 1951 and spent 14 weeks on chart, maximizing at number twelve,[3] while a version credited to the Boston Popular Orchestra itself (released by RCA Victor Records as catalog number 10-3044) entered on June 1, 1951, spent 2 weeks on the charts, and maximized as number 28.[3]
When "The Syncopated Clock" was recorded during 1950, it was noticed by the producers of a new WCBS-TV program called the "Late Show," a nightly program with a format of old movies that was to be the station's first venture into late night television. The piece was chosen as the theme music for the "Late Show" and that helped publicize Anderson's music. The "Syncopated Clock" was used by the show for the next 25 years, and became a piece that many Americans could readily hum or whistle, even if few would have known the name of its composer.[2]
Movie theme
Listeners are probably most familiar with the version recorded by Percy Faith during 1951 (released by Columbia Records as catalog number 39328, with the flip side “On Top of Old Smokey”[4]). It is this version that CBS (for whose Columbia Records label Faith recorded) chose to introduce The Late Show -- the late night movie -- on some of its owned-and-operated stations, most notably WCBS-TV in New York City ([1], [2]), and WBBM-TV in Chicago.
Structure
The arrangement requires temple blocks to be used as the sound of the clock which is heard throughout the number, except for a brief section in the middle. The piece is in 4/4 time; the opening establishes a perfectly regular "tick-tock" accompaniment, beginning with a roll off the orchestra's staccato strike of an A chord, creating an expectation that it will continue. In the sixth measure, there is an eighth-note rest on the second beat, and two syncopated "ticks" are heard before the "clock" returns to its normal rhythm. As the piece proceeds, the "clock" continues to indulge in brief moments of syncopation. Some are expected by the listener (as the tune repeats the passage in which the first syncopation occurred); others are not, creating a whimsical and comic effect. The song's basic arrangement and comical effect makes it a favourite for school bands.
Lyrics
During 1951, Mitchell Parish added rarely-used lyrics:
There was a man like you and me
as simple as a man could ever be
and he was happy as a king
except for one peculiar thing
He had a clock that worked all right,
It worked all right, but not exactly quite;
Instead of going "tick, tock, tick",
The crazy clock went—"tock, tick, tock".
The poor old man just raved and raved, because nobody could say
Why his silly clock behaved that hickory dickory way....
But now a famous man is he,
He owns a public curiosity;
From far and wide the people flock
To hear the syncopated clock
Tick-a-tock, tick-a-tock
There's a zing in the swing of that clock
Tock-a-tick, tock-a-tick
Don't you think it's a marvelous trick?
Ting-a-ling, ting-a-ling
There's a zong in the bong of that ring
Ling-a-ting, ling-a-ting
Don't you think it's a wonderful thing?
The experts came to hear and see,
But none of them could solve the mystery.
They called professor Einstein too,
He said: "There's nothing I can do"
But soon the fickle human race,
Will find another freak to take its place,
And one fine day the man will hock,
The poor old syncopated clock.Other recordings
- Eileen Barton (recorded December 1950, released by National Records as catalog number 9152, with the flip side “Lock the Barn Door”[5])
- Capitol Symphony Band (released by Capitol Records as catalog number 984, with the flip side “Sleigh Ride”[6])
- Louis Castelucci (released by Capitol Records as catalog number 1620, with the flip side “Sleigh Ride”[7])
- Ken Griffin (recorded April 1951, released by Columbia Records as catalog number 39386, with the flip side “Red Sails in the Sunset”[4])
- Perez Prado (as "The Syncopated Clock Mambo," 1951) (released by RCA Victor Records as catalog number 20-4196, with the flip side “Broadway”[8])
- David Rose and his orchestra (released by MGM Records as catalog number 30353, with the flip side “Mask Waltz”[9])
- Ethel Smith (Decca Records catalog number 27583[10]) in 1951.
- The Three Suns (released by RCA Victor Records as catalog number 20-4090, with the flip side “March of the Cards”[8])
- Rosemary Clooney, as a track on a 4-record compilation of children's music released by Columbia Records
- On an extended-play 45 RPM record (Peter Pan Records, aimed at children); on the same side was "Grandfather's Clock", and on the flip side were "Arkansas Traveler" and "Red River Valley". This version of "Syncopated Clock" did have a vocal, using the lyrics listed above.
References
- ^ List of Leroy Anderson's published music works
- ^ a b Speed, Burgess; Eleanor Anderson, Steve Metcalf (September 2004). Leroy Anderson: A Bio-Bibliography. Praeger. ISBN 0-313-32176-0.
- ^ a b Whitburn, Joel (1973). Top Pop Records 1940-1955. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research.
- ^ a b Columbia Records in the 39000 to 39499 series
- ^ National Records in the 3001 to 25000 series
- ^ Capitol Records in the 500 to 999 series
- ^ Capitol Records in the 1500 to 1999 series
- ^ a b RCA Victor Records in the 20-4000 to 20-4499 series
- ^ MGM Records in the 30000 to 30499 series
- ^ Decca Records in the 27500 to 27999 series
Categories:- 1945 songs
- Songs with lyrics by Mitchell Parish
- Songs with music by Leroy Anderson
- 1945 compositions
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