Leroy Anderson Sleigh Ride Piano Vocal Guitar chords (Vintage sheet music) Christmas Trad.

Leroy Anderson Sleigh Ride Piano Vocal Guitar chords (Vintage sheet music) Christmas Trad.

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Leroy Anderson: Sleigh Ride – Piano Version

Leroy Anderson: Sleigh Ride – Piano Version Markus Staab, Piano.

“Sleigh Ride” is a light orchestra standard composed by Leroy Anderson. He formed the idea for the piece during a heat wave in July 1946, and finished it in February 1948. Its first performance was by the Boston Pops Orchestra, with Arthur Fiedler conducting, on May 4, 1948.

The original recordings were instrumental versions: it was first recorded in 1949 by Fiedler and the Boston Pops. As a 45 rpm version issued on red vinyl, “Sleigh Ride” was a hit record on RCA Victor Red Seal, and has become one of the orchestra’s most well-known works. The Pops have recorded the piece numerous times, with Fiedler as well as John Williams, their conductor from 1979 to 1995, and Keith Lockhart, their current conductor.

The lyrics, about riding in a sleigh and other wintertime activities, were written by Mitchell Parish in 1950. Leroy Anderson also made arrangements for wind band and piano.

The Ronettes recorded a cover of “Sleigh Ride” in 1963 for Phil Spector’s A Christmas Gift for You, which was commercially successful in the United States and featured in various media. The song has since been associated with the Christmas and holiday season.

Leroy Anderson’s own recording of “Sleigh Ride” was made on September 11, 1950, and was released on his album “Leroy Anderson Conducts His Own Compositions” on the Decca label in 1951. Also released that year as a 78-rpm single, then reissued as a 45-rpm single the following year when it reached #26 on the Cash Box bestsellers’ chart.

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The main melody of “Sleigh Ride” was used, but without crediting Anderson, as the main theme of Victor Young’s score for the 1949 Western Streets of Laredo. Mitchell Parish worked with Young at this approximate time, writing the lyrics for Young’s recording of Hoagy Carmichael’s previously instrumental “Stardust.” In 1950, the Andrews Sisters recorded the first vocal version of “Sleigh Ride”, using the lyrics Parish had written. Although the song is often associated with Christmas and appears on Christmas compilation albums, its lyrics do not mention any holidays.

The piece is noted for the sounds of a horse clip-clopping, and a whip used to get the horse moving. In most performances, a percussionist provides these sounds on temple blocks and a slapstick, respectively. Toward the end of the piece, a trumpet imitates the sound of a horse whinnying.

According to the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), “Sleigh Ride” consistently ranks as one of the top 10 most-performed songs written by ASCAP members. ASCAP named “Sleigh Ride” the most popular piece of Christmas music in the U.S. between 2009 and 2012 based on performance data from over 2,500 radio stations. Anderson’s recording remains the most popular instrumental version, while Johnny Mathis’s has become the most popular vocal version.

Biographer Steve Metcalf said, “‘Sleigh Ride’… has been performed and recorded by a wider array of musical artists than any other piece in the history of Western music.”

“Sleigh Ride” is written in seven-part rondo form (though performers sometimes omit the final B section, effectively rendering it a five-part rondo).

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Leroy Anderson‘s Biography

Leroy Anderson (1908-1975) was an American composer who wrote popular music. He primarily composed short melodic works for symphony orchestra. For many of his compositions, he also made arrangements for solo piano, concert band and other ensembles such as string trios and piano duos. Anderson employed the classical forms of serious music and added 20th century harmonies and rhythms.

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Leroy Anderson was born on June 29, 1908 in Cambridge, Massachusetts.  His parents were Swedish immigrants who had come to the United States as children.  They lived at 269 Norfolk Street in Cambridge.  His father, Bror Anton Anderson (B.A. Anderson), came from Övarp, Norra Strö, near Kristianstad in the province of Skåne.  Bror worked as a postal clerk at the Central Square post office in Cambridge and played the mandolin. He changed the spelling of his first name to Brewer, the pronunciation of which was similar to his Swedish name – Bror.  Leroy’s mother, Anna Margareta (Jönsson) Anderson, came from Stockholm.  Anna was an organist at the Swedish Mission Church in Cambridge.  Brewer Anderson and Anna Jönsson (now Johnson) met at the Swedish Mission Church and were married there in 1907.  Leroy was born in 1908.  Brewer and Anna Anderson moved from Norfolk Street to 12 Chatham Street when Leroy was one year old.  Another son, Russell Brewer Anderson, was born in 1911.  Cambridge would continue to be the center of Leroy Anderson’s world for the next three decades.

Leroy Anderson lived at 12 Chatham Street with his parents and brother Russell from 1909 until 1936, when he moved to New York City. “We were a musical family,” Leroy said. “My father played the mandolin, mother played the guitar and I accompanied them on the piano.  Those were happy evenings doing Gilbert and Sullivan, ‘Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes’ and all the other songs in ‘The Golden Songbook.’ Radio was in the earphone stage then and we had to make our own entertainment.”

The Anderson family attended the Swedish Mission Church in Cambridge which Anna Anderson’s father Bengt Johnson had helped to establish.  Brewer Anderson and his brother Nils Olof Anderson (N.O. Anderson) had built the three-story home at 12 Chatham Street where Bror and Anna lived with their children Leroy and Russell.  N.O. Anderson went on to create a successful business building homes in Belmont, Watertown and Lexington, Massachusetts.  Leroy’s grandfather Bengt Johnson had built fine furniture in Stockholm before emigrating to Massachusetts.  In Cambridge Bengt worked for the Ivers and Pond Company building piano cases decorated with detailed carvings.  With a grandfather who made fine furniture and an uncle who built houses, it is no wonder that later in life Leroy Anderson enjoyed woodworking as a hobby.  Leroy built his own desk, wood working bench, cabinets and numerous custom projects for his children.

Leroy often returned to 12 Chatham Street where his parents continued to live.  It was at this house that he arranged many Broadway show tunes for Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Orchestra, and where he composed his Irish Suite in eleven days.

Leroy’s mother Anna gave Leroy his first piano lessons starting at age five, “as soon as his feet could reach the pedals.”  One day Anna and Brewer heard Leroy playing a song on the piano quite well.  However it was a song that Anna had not taught her son to play.  When asked how he knew this song, Leroy replied “it’s just something I heard.”  Brewer and Anna Anderson discussed their son’s increasingly apparent musical talent and decided that Leroy should have professional music lessons.  Floyd Bigelow Dean of the New England Conservatory of Music was engaged to give Leroy private piano lessons in 1919 when Leroy was 11 years old.

“My first composition was a minuet for string Quartet which I wrote at the age of 12.  I showed it to my piano teacher at the New England Conservatory of Music, Floyd Bigelow Dean, and he took it to George W. Chadwick, who was then the director of the Conservatory.  As a result I received a year’s scholarship to study music harmony with Mr. Dean.”

Leroy said that he received all his education on one street – Broadway, Cambridge.  He attended Harvard Grammar School, at the corner of Harvard Street and Broadway.  In 1921 he entered Cambridge High and Latin School (now Cambridge Rindge and Latin School) as a Freshmen.  The Latin School (once also called the Cambridge Classical School) was located at the corner of Broadway and Trowbridge Streets.  During his years in the Cambridge Latin School (administered jointly with the Cambridge High School beginning in February 1911), Leroy Anderson followed “a course of study that had been created for the express purpose of meeting the admission requirements of Harvard University.”  Leroy was an honors student.  While Leroy had learned to speak Swedish at home as a young boy, at CHLS he studied and mastered Latin under his teacher Cecil Thayer Derry and French, becoming president of the French Club.

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 Leroy was at CHLS when his father Brewer Anderson bought him a trombone so that Leroy would have to play in the front row of the Harvard University Band.  B.A. Anderson wanted to be sure that his son Leroy would be easy to see while he marched in the band at Harvard football games.  Leroy studied music at CHLS under John A. Whoriskey.  Leroy belonged to the Glee Club, the Mandolin Club and played trombone in the school orchestra.  

Whoriskey needed a double-bass player and convinced Leroy to take the instrument home for the weekend to practice.  When Anderson returned to school on the following Monday, he played the double bass so well that one would have thought he had practiced all year.  At Whoriskey’s suggestion Leroy wrote a song for the graduating class of 1923.  Whoriskey appointed Anderson as leader of the school orchestra that year.  Anderson composed a different song for the graduating class in 1924 and again for his own graduation in 1925.  He conducted the school orchestra himself each time.

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1926 – 1930    Harvard Years

At Harvard Leroy studied musical harmony with Walter Spalding, counterpoint with Edward Ballantine, canon and fugue with William C. Heilman, and orchestration with Edward B. Hill and Walter Piston. Leroy received a B.A., Magna cum laude in 1929 and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He earned an M.A., Music in 1930. In Harvard University Graduate School, he studied composition with Walter Piston and Georges Enesco. He studied organ privately with Henry Gideon of Temple Beth Israel in Boston. He studied double-bass privately with Gaston Dufresne of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

He continued his studies at Harvard through the early 1930’s working toward a PhD in German and Scandinavian languages (Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic and Old Norse), while working as a music tutor at Radcliffe College (1930-32).  A gifted linguist, Leroy eventually mastered Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic, German, French, Italian, and Portuguese in addition to the English and Swedish of his upbringing.  Not thinking that a career in music held much promise, Anderson intended to become a language teacher.  He applied for and was offered a position teaching German and Latin at a private school in Pennsylvania.  With encouragement from Arthur Fiedler, Leroy decided to continue his focus on music for another year and sent his regrets to the school in Pennsylvania.  This turned out to be a pivotal decision for him.

1931 – 1939    Boston Pops Orchestra arranger

As a graduate student Leroy resumed his role as Director of the Harvard University Band in 1931 and wrote numerous clever arrangements for the band that brought him to the attention of Arthur Fiedler, Director of the Boston Pops Orchestra.  His first arrangement for Fiedler in 1936 was a medley of Harvard songs – Harvard Fantasy.  In 1938 the Boston Pops performed his first composition, Jazz Pizzicato.  It was an immediate hit.  Fiedler encouraged him to write original compositions for the orchestra.  Leroy wrote Jazz Legato in 1939.  This was followed by a succession of compositions which have become well known.  Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Orchestra were the first to perform and record many of these compositions.

During the 1930’s, Leroy worked as an arranger for popular dance orchestras, alongside his brother, Russell, who played double bass.  Together, they played in the orchestra on the Hellig Olav of the Copenhagen-based ship company Scandinavia Line crossing between New York and Scandinavia in 1930. 1  Leroy said that he enjoyed making use of his fluency in Scandinavian languages by conversing with the crew who came from Norway, Denmark and Sweden.  

(Note:  1.  Earlier versions of this page stated that Leroy Anderson and his brother Russell played in the orchestra aboard ships of the Norwegian Line in 1930 and 1931.  Further research in the Leroy Anderson archives shows that the ship was the Hellig Olav owned by the Danish ship company Scandinavia Line.  Leroy spent the summer of 1930 playing in the orchestra on ships of the Scandinavia Line, crossing from New York to Oslo and back by way of Copenhagen.)

“While taking graduate courses in German and the Scandinavian languages preparatory to a career teaching languages, I was playing in and conducting orchestras part time in and around Boston.  One Spring after a performance of the Hasty Pudding Show which I had conducted, Mr. George Judd, the manager of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, came up to speak to me.  He said he had heard my arrangements played by the Harvard Band at the Stadium football games and asked me to make a symphonic setting of Harvard songs for the 25th reunion of his class and to conduct the number at the class special night at the Pops.  Thus I met Mr. Fiedler, who conducted the concert except for the “Harvard Fantasy”, to which he listened off-stage.  After the concert I went to the librarian’s office and found Mr. Fiedler examining my score intently “This is very good”, he said.  “I’m glad to find someone who has ideas and knows how to orchestrate”.  Then he urged me to write more for the Pops concerts, especially original compositions, and promised to perform my music if he thought it suitable.”

“After the “Harvard Fantasy” I wrote two more numbers for Harvard Night at the Pops: a selection of the Hasty Pudding Show tunes written by undergraduates, and “Harvard Sketches”, a set of original pieces describing the “Lowell House Bells”, a “Freshman in Harvard Square”, the “Widener Reading Room”, and the “Class Day Confetti Battle”.  Meanwhile I had thought of writing a number for the strings in which the players lay down their bows and pluck the strings throughout in the style of Delibes’ “Pizzicato Polka” — but in modern jazz idiom.  Mr. Fiedler thought the idea a good one and worth trying.  The result was “Jazz Pizzicato”, which has been played for several seasons at the Pops.  After Mr. Fiedler recorded “Jazz Pizzicato” its popularity spread rapidly throughout the country.” – L.A., 1947; Leroy Anderson Archives.

1940 – 1945    WW II – Military Intelligence

At the start of World War II Leroy was drafted into the U.S. Army, which made use of his fluency in languages.  He married Eleanor Jane Firke before shipping off to Iceland where he served as a translator and interpreter in the U.S. Army Counter Intelligence Corps, beginning in 1942.  While there he wrote an Icelandic Grammar for the U.S. Army.

“I was sent to Iceland as an agent of the Counter Intelligence Corps with the grade of corporal and, since I knew Icelandic, was assigned to translating the Icelandic papers for the G-2 section and to censoring scripts of the Icelandic Broadcasting Company (Ríkisútvarpið (RÚV)) in the interest of military security.  Because I knew Icelandic I was assigned to Headquarters in Reykjavik where I had duties involving contact with the Icelandic population.  My only musical activity in Iceland was attending performances of the Bach “St. John Passion” and Haydn’s “The Seasons”, both given by local church choirs and the Reykjavik orchestra.  I seldom thought about music during the war because all my assignments were full-time jobs that took most of my energies.” – L.A., 1947.

Leroy returned to the USA and graduated from Officer’s Candidate School on September 14, 1943.  He was assigned to the Pentagon in September 1943 as Chief of the Scandinavian Department of Military Intelligence.  Anderson wrote Promenade and The Syncopated Clock in 1945.  Leroy sent the manuscripts to Arthur Fiedler for him to use in rehearsal with the Boston Pops Orchestra.  Leroy then travelled to Boston to conduct the Boston Pops in the premieres of The Syncopated Clock and Promenade.  Soon Leroy was promoted to the rank of Captain.  Eleanor Anderson gave birth to their first child, Jane, who was born while the Andersons lived in Arlington, Virginia.  Leroy was offered the position of Assistant U.S. Military Attaché to Sweden but declined, deciding that composing was now to be his sole occupation.  He was released from active duty in the Army in 1946.  The Andersons next moved to New York City.  Their son Eric was born here.

  Reference Article: Leroy Anderson Military Service 

1946 – 1952    International Success

The Andersons spent the summer of 1946 at Painter Hill in Woodbury, Connecticut.  It was here that he started Sleigh Ride during a heat wave, first conceiving of the middle section.  After the summer of 1946 was over, Leroy and Eleanor moved to New York City where they lived at 19 Parade Place in Brooklyn in an apartment that had been rented by Eleanor’s uncle who had recently died.  Leroy Anderson completed Sleigh Ride here in February of 1948.  Arthur Fiedler conducted the premiere of Sleigh Ride with the Boston Pops Orchestra’s in May of 1948.  By December of 1948 New York City department stores were playing Sleigh Ride.

Two years later the Andersons settled in Woodbury permanently, first living with Eleanor’s mother in a home on Painter Hill.  Sons Rolf and Kurt were born in the early 1950s.  Leroy and Eleanor hired architect Joseph Stein to create a modernist home for the growing family.  The Andersons moved into their new home at Grassy Hill in Woodbury in October 1953.  The Andersons furnished the house with Danish modern furniture.  Wanting to ensure a quiet environment in which to orchestrate, Leroy had his work room sound-proofed with extra insulation in the walls.  “Yes, I guess you could call it splendid isolation. It’s the kind of place a composer needs. In my youth I lived in a Brooklyn apartment and tried to write music while the girl upstairs took turns practicing voice and piano. I was never sure which of her musical aspirations was more frustrating to my work.”

During these years at Grassy Hill in Woodbury, Anderson wrote many of his best-loved compositions, among them Serenata, Belle of the Ball, Bugler’s Holiday, The Typewriter and Forgotten Dreams.Sleigh Ride was slowly growing in popularity, not only in the USA and Canada, but also in Europe.  While the music remained unchanged, Leroy allowed translations of the lyrics or new lyrics to Sleigh Ride to be created in French (La Promenade en Traineau), Italian, Dutch, German, Icelandic, Swedish (two versions – Släd färd på två and Jingeling-Tingeling) and Finnish (Rekiretki).  Orchestras in such diverse places as Reykjavik, Iceland, Stockholm, Sweden, Lahti, Finland, Geneva, Switzerland, Liege, Belgium, in England, France, Russia, and Japan – all perform Sleigh Ride and Anderson’s A Christmas Festival each winter.

Leroy formed a string quartet with violinists George Weigl, Dr. Joe James and violist Irma Holst.  Leroy played cello and led the ensemble in performances of classical standards in the large living room at Grassy Hill.  With Anderson and Dr. James living in Woodbury and Weigl and Holst living in Southbury, the group decided on the name Southwood Quartet.  Having played double bass, trombone and tuba during high school and college, Leroy now played the cello beautifully with the quartet.  As he told a reporter once, “It is a great advantage to play a string instrument when writing for the orchestra.  There is nothing like the feel of the bow.  It is also advantageous to know how to play a wind instrument.  Then you know how to control the breath.”

Arthur Fiedler continued to premier Leroy’s works including Sleigh Ride, Fiddle-Faddle and Trumpeter’s Lullaby, until 1950.  After that Leroy conducted the premieres of his works when he recorded them for Decca Records.  Among these pieces were Belle of the Ball, Blue Tango, Bugler’s Holiday, Forgotten Dreams, Horse and Buggy, Plink, Plank, Plunk!, Serenata, The Typewriter and Waltzing Cat.  It was his own recording of Blue Tango that made #1 on the Hit Parade of 1952.  The popularity of Leroy Anderson’s music was rapidly spreading around the world.  By 1952 Leroy had established himself as the pre-eminent American composer of light concert music.

1953 – 1959    Piano Concerto and Musical Theater

Though Leroy primarily utilized the medium of “orchestral miniature”, he also experimented with the longer form in his most ambitious work – Concerto in C major for Piano and Orchestra in three movements – Allegro moderato, Anadante and Allegro vivo.  It received its premiere on July 18, 1953 in Chicago by the Grant Park Symphony with Anderson as conductor and Eugene List as soloist.  Anderson conducted another performance of the concerto in Cleveland in 1954.  After mixed reviews he withdrew the composition with intentions to revise it.  He later remarked that he thought the composition had great merit but that it could be slightly improved.  Although he never got around to making the intended changes, the Anderson family released the work posthumously (unrevised) in 1988.  The Concerto in C has been recorded by Erich Kunzel and the Cincinnati Pops with Stewart Goodyear, pianist,; Leonard Slatkin and the BBC Concert Orchestra with Jeffrey Biegl, pianist; Skitch Henderson and members of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra with Catherine Wilson, pianist; Paul Mann and the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra with Simon Tedeschi, pianist.  It is now performed many times around the world each year.

He wrote Goldilocks, his only musical, with Walter and Jean Kerr.  It opened October 11, 1958 in New York City.  While the story was criticized as being weak, critics praised Anderson’s score.

1960 – 1969    Television and Guest Conducting

Over the years, Leroy’s pieces have been employed as themes in both radio and television.  In the early 1950’s, CBS-TV Channel 2 in NYC chose The Syncopated Clock as the theme for its program of movies called”The Late Show”.  CBS used it for more than 25 years.  Plink, Plank, Plunk! was known to many in the ’50’s as the theme for the TV game show “I’ve Got a Secret”, and The Typewriter has become a favorite for a variety of radio news productions.

During these years Leroy often took his family to New York to see Broadway shows and to visit the sites of the city he and his wife had come to know.  In 1968 the Andersons spent the summer in Europe where the composer introduced his children to a continent where he fit right in.  Back home in Woodbury he was an active member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church which the family regularly attended.  He guest-conducted orchestras throughout the United States, Canada and Sweden.  In the late 1960s Leroy served on the boards of the New Haven and Hartford Symphonies and also as acting manager of the Waterbury Symphony Orchestra.

As Leroy Anderson could read, write, speak and translate ten languages, one might reasonably think that he was inclined to speak a great deal and in more than one language.

“Even the most bookish person speaks very much more than he writes”. [Brook G.L., A History of The English Language, Oxford University Press; 1958; from Leroy Anderson’s Library, Woodbury, Connecticut.]

The truth is that he was not at all talkative. He was either busy scoring music, working over musical ideas in his mind, or reading – possibly his favorite recreational pastime. He expressed himself best and most often in his music.

1970 – 1975    Recognition
Leroy Anderson -Evening at Pops

In 1972 the Boston Pops Orchestra paid tribute to Leroy in a televised concert that was broadcast nationwide.  Leroy appeared on the program and guest-conducted one piece.  It was, as he said to his wife Eleanor, “the most important evening of my life.”  Leroy returned to Cambridge the following year to conduct the orchestra at Cambridge Rindge and Latin School in 1973.  Anderson continued to compose and to conduct his music throughout North America until his death from cancer in 1975.

1976 – 2006    Honors and Tributes
Leroy Anderson Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Leroy Anderson received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960 at 1620 Vine Street for his contribution to the recording industry. Among those that were also inducted that day were Leonard Bernstein, Duke Ellington, Auturo Toscanini and Benny Goodman.
Leroy was elected posthumously to the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1988.

In 1995 Harvard University named its new Harvard University Band headquarters the Anderson Band Center in honor of Leroy Anderson.

Cambridge, Massachusetts Mayor Michael Sullivan and the Cambridge City Council dedicated the corner of Chatham and Crawford Streets as Leroy Anderson Square on May 31, 2003. Mayor Sullivan said in part that the naming of Leroy Anderson Square was “in honor of one of America’s greatest composers of light music and the most inventive arranger for the Boston Pops.”

In the June 9, 2003 edition of The Boston Globe, Richard Dyer wrote about the naming of Leroy Anderson Square:

“Dignitaries, neighbors, and passersby at the intersection of Crawford and Chatham streets gathered, along with the composer’s widow, Eleanor, and her children and grandchildren as Mayor Michael A. Sullivan addressed the crowd, which was also serenaded by members of the Harvard University Band under Thomas Everett. Anderson was conductor of the Harvard Band when the ingenuity of his arrangements attracted the attention of Pops conductor Arthur Fiedler.”

Speaking at the dedication, Boston Pops conductor Keith Lockhart said, “The voice of Leroy Anderson became the voice of the Boston Pops in its dual commitment to approachability and to excellence.”

Also at the dedication, composer and former Boston Pops conductor John Williams said “He was an American original. Leroy Anderson is one of the great American masters of light orchestral music. Though we have performed his works countless times over the years at the Boston Pops, his music remains forever as young and fresh as the very first day on which it was composed.”

Leroy Anderson’s grave is in Woodbury’s New North Cemetery.

2007 – 2009    Leroy Anderson Centenary
Leroy Anderson Centenary

During the Leroy Anderson Centenary, orchestras throughout the world performed tribute concerts during the 2007-2009 concert seasons which celebrated the composer’s musical legacy.  The Boston Pops Orchestra presented a tribute to Leroy Anderson at Symphony Hall in June of 2008.  Keith Lockhart conducted several of the composer’s pieces after presenting a short film about his life.  The Boston Landmarks Orchestra, under the direction of conductor Charles Ansbacher, performed a September 2008 tribute to Leroy Anderson at the Hatch Shell on the Esplanade in Boston.  The United States Military Academy Band from West Point, New York performed a “A Tribute to Leroy Anderson” in Anderson’s hometown of Woodbury on the composer’s birthday, June 29, 2008.

 Conductor Leonard Slatkin recorded all of Leroy Anderson’s compositions with the BBC Concert Orchestra which were released on five CDs by Naxos Records.  In September 2006 Kultur released the biographical video “Once Upon a Sleigh Ride” on DVD with additional material not on the original VHS tape.  The Yale University Music Library honored the Leroy Anderson Centenary with a special exhibit.  The American Swedish Institute brought the special exhibit to Minneapolis where it was presented with other physical memorabilia of Leroy Anderson.  The reception for the opening of the American Swedish Institute exhibition about Leroy Anderson included a performance of Leroy Anderson’s music.  A year-long festival for Leroy Anderson in Kristianstad, Sweden near Leroy’s father’s birthplace, was the largest celebration for the composer in the world.  Several Anderson family members from the USA attended a special performance in Kristianstad on April 26, 2008 with over 700 musicians performing Leroy Anderson’s music for an audience of 2,000 people.

The Legacy of Leroy Anderson
Leroy Anderson

The music of Leroy Anderson is firmly entrenched in American popular culture and is enjoyed by millions of people throughout the world.  His music continues to be extensively recorded and performed by a wide range of musicians.  Among them are symphony orchestras, concert and marching bands, classical and jazz ensembles, vocalists of many styles, virtuosi of almost every instrument as well as music students of all ages.

Anderson’s music is frequently used to entertain visiting dignitaries at the White House as well as to greet U.S. Presidents when visiting foreign countries.  Its use by radio and television as background music for commercials and theme music for many programs ensures Anderson’s music remains familiar with each new generation.  More than 50 years after Anderson wrote many of his compositions, in the words of John Williams, composer and laureate conductor of the Boston Pops – “Anderson’s music remains as young and fresh as the very day on which it was composed.”

Forty-seven years after Leroy Anderson’s death, his music has taken on a timeless quality. “It’s hard to imagine that someone actually wrote Sleigh Ride,” remarked one listener. “It’s as though it came from the ether. Sleigh Ride is one of those pieces of music that seems as though it has always been around; just another wonderful part of everyday life.”  It is safe to say that somewhere in the world someone is either performing or listening to Leroy Anderson’s music every moment of every day.

Anderson sensed during his later years that the music he wrote had achieved an identity and a popularity that surpassed his own fame as the composer.  At the time he was probably right.  In recent years however, the awareness of Leroy Anderson has increased dramatically.  This is due in part to new recordings of his music, re-releases of Anderson’s original recordings on compact disc, numerous concerts of his works, a PBS video about him broadcast to millions each year since 1999, a book about the composer, and to this website.

The National Park Service in Washington, DC announced on January 11, 2013 that the Leroy Anderson House1 in Woodbury, Connecticut has been named to the National Register of Historic Places.  The listing became effective on December 31, 2012.  The house qualified under two criteria: as an example of a mid-20th century modernist home; and as the place where American composer Leroy Anderson lived and wrote much of his music which has become part of the standard repertoire for orchestra and band throughout the world. 1 (NPS NRHP Property ID #12000361)

Leroy Anderson, Conductor

Although Leroy Anderson was known primarily as a composer, he excelled at conducting.

Cambridge High and Latin School (CHLS), 1921 – 1925

During his years in the Cambridge Latin School (administered jointly with the Cambridge High School beginning in February 1911), Leroy Anderson followed “a course of study that had been created for the express purpose of meeting the admission requirements of Harvard University.” 1  Anderson studied music at CHLS under John A. Whoriskey who in June of 1923 conducted the school orchestra in the graduating class song which Leroy Anderson had written. Anderson composed a different song for the graduating class in 1924 and again for his own graduation in 1925. He conducted the school orchestra himself. 2  In 1973 his alma mater asked him to conduct the school orchestra in a concert that was recorded. Leroy Anderson led the CHLS orchestra in performing Sandpaper Ballet, Blue Tango, works by Mozart, Bernstein, Haydn, Rossini, Tchaikovsky, Vivaldi and Bordodin. 3

Harvard University, 1925 – 1935

Leroy Anderson became Director of the Harvard University Band in 1929, the year he graduated with a B.A. in Music from Harvard.  As a graduate student, Anderson was again named Director from 1931-1935.  This position gave him the opportunity to develop his conducting technique even though he had not studied conducting.  His conducting repertoire featured many of his own arrangements that he wrote for the band. 4

Raymond Walter Spalding, one of Anderson’s music professors at Harvard, wrote in 1935 that “Anderson has a remarkable inborn sense of rhythm and magnetic authority as a conductor.” 5  During these years Anderson regularly conducted a dance band at Bostons Ritz Carlton Hotel. Reviews by music critics in Boston newspapers were generally neutral. 6

Boston Pops Orchestra (BPO)

Leroy Anderson had his first major appearance as a conductor on May 12, 1936 when he conducted the Boston Pops Orchestra in Symphony Hall, Boston, Massachusetts. Anderson conducted his arrangements of music from the 1936 Harvard Hasty Pudding Show “The Lids Off” by Newbury ’37, Sargent ’36, and Bacon ’37. 7  From 1935 to 1937 Anderson wrote a total of 38 arrangements for the Hasty Pudding Show (35 for Dance Orchestra and 3 for Voice and Piano). 8

Anderson returned to Symphony Hall on June 16, 1936 when he led the Boston Pops Orchestra in the premiere of Anderson’s arrangement “Harvard Fantasy”. 9  On May 23, 1938 Anderson conducted the BPO in “Dance of the Buffoons” by Rimsky-Korsakov, “Vienna Life” by Johann Strauss, Jr., and his Harvard Fantasy arrangement. 10  As an encore he conducted the premiere of his first original composition “Jazz Pizzicato”11

On May 15, 1939 Leroy Anderson conducted at another annual “Harvard Night” concert. He led the BPO in “Die Fledermaus Overture” by Johann Strauss, Jr., the premiere of Anderson’s “Harvard Sketches”, and “Up the Street” by Morse, arranged by Anderson.  Anderson returned on June 20, 1939 to conduct the second performance of his “Harvard Sketches”, “Jazz Pizzicato”, and “Wintergreen for President” by George Gershwin, arranged by Anderson. 12

In Spring of 1945 Anderson was in the US Army and was assigned to the Department of Military Intelligence at the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.  He had written “The Syncopated Clock” and “Promenade” in April of 1945 and sent the two scores to Arthur Fiedler.  Fiedler invited Anderson to come to Boston to conduct the premiere of these two pieces.  Anderson was granted a “leave of absence” from the Army for this concert on May 23, 1945 during the annual “Harvard Night at the Pops”. 13  He conducted “Die Fledermaus Overture” by Johann Strauss, Jr., Anderson’s own compositions “Jazz Pizzicato” and “Jazz Legato”, his arrangement “Harvard Fantasy” and “Fair Harvard” by Gilman, arranged by Anderson.14  He then gave “Promenade” and “Syncopated Clock” their first performances. 15  Anderson conducted this Boston Pops concert wearing his Army uniform

July 3, 1945 Leroy Anderson conducted the “Army Night” concert of the BPO at Symphony Hall.  He conducted “Field Artillery March” by Sousa, “Overture to Light Calvery” by von Suppé, Scherzo from “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” by Mendelssohn, the Finale from “Symphony No. 4” by Tchaikovsky, “Wine, Woman and Song” waltzes by Johann Strauss, Jr., Anderson’s own works “Jazz Pizzicato”, “Jazz Legato”, “Promenade” and “Salute to Our Fighting Forces” arranged by Peter Bodge.  As Leroy Anderson was still serving in U.S. Army Military Intelligence at the Pentagon, he needed to receive a “leave of absence” for this engagement.  First Lieutenant Anderson conducted this concert in his Army uniform.

The following year Anderson conducted the BPO on June 27, 1946. He conducted “Blue Danube” by Johann Strauss Jr, Anderson’s own compositions “Promenade”, “The Syncopated Clock”, and “Carousel” by Richard Rodgers, arranged by Anderson.16

May 14, 1947 Leroy Anderson conducted the BPO at Symphony Hall in Anderson’s “Harvard Sketches”, “Serenata”, and “Annie Get Your Gun” by Irving Berlin, arranged by Anderson. Arthur Fiedler had given “Serenata” its first performance 4 nights earlier on May 10, 1947.  June 30, 1949 Leroy Anderson conducted the BPO at Symphony Hall in the second and third thirds of the program. He conducted 3 movements of his “Irish Suite”, “South Pacific” by Richard Rodgers arranged by Anderson and Anderson’s “Sleigh Ride” which Fiedler had premiered a year before.17  “Irish Suite” had been premiered by Fiedler in 1947. Anderson originally wrote four movements in just 12 days before that 1947 concert as a work commissioned by the Eire Society of Boston. He later wrote two more movements which Fiedler premiered in 1949.18

By now a friendly competition between Fiedler and Anderson was beginning. Rather than allow Anderson to give the premiere of each of his compositions with the Boston Pops, Fiedler started to give Anderson’s new works their first performances and their first recordings. This, along with the many arrangements Anderson was creating and conducting with the Pops, began to give many observers the impression that Anderson was a staff arranger and composer for Fiedler. This was not the case. Leroy Anderson was always an independent composer and arranger. While Fiedler may have made suggestions to Anderson for works by other composers that Anderson could arrange for the Pops to perform, most of Anderson’s work belonged to him. His earliest arrangements for the Harvard Band belong to the Harvard Band, including Anderson’s excellent medleys of other schools’ football “fight” songs.

Decca Records, 1950 – 1962

Leroy Anderson’s composing career took a major step up in 1950 when Decca Records offered Anderson a contract to record his music for Decca.  From 1950 to late 1962 Anderson’s compositions received their first performances during recording sessions conducted by Anderson.  Decca arranged for a studio orchestra for these recording sessions.  The musicians were in many cases the “first chair” of their particular section of New York’s world famous orchestras.

USA, Canada and Sweden, 1946 – 1975

music conductor Leroy Anderson

From 1946 to 1975 Leroy Anderson conducted over 70 concerts including the symphony orchestras of Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Hartford, Kansas City, New Haven, New Orleans, St. Louis, Stockholm, Toronto, and Washington DC (National Symphony)19  Anderson would most often conduct the works of other composers during the first half of the performance.  These included works by Berlioz, Bizet, Brahms, Chabrier, Elgar, Grieg, Handel, Haydn, Offenbach, Rossini, Schubert, Sibelius, Strauss, Tchaikovsky and Wagner.  Anderson would then conduct some of his own compositions during the second half of the program. 20

Many music critics gave generally favorable reviews of Leroy Anderson as conductor.  After Anderson gave a concert in 1947 at the Yale Bowl, the New Haven (CT) Register wrote: “Anderson displayed an authoritative beat though his conducting was characterized by a minimum of hand motions and no attempt at showmanship. Mr. Anderson favors slightly accelerated tempos.” New Haven Register’ music critic Gordon Armstrong described Anderson in 1947 as being a “triple threat in music – arranger, composer, conductor.” 21  June 19, 1952 saw Anderson conducting the United States Air Force Band on its 10th anniversary to an audience of 10,000 in front of the US Capitol22

After a concert Leroy Anderson conducted with the St. Louis Symphony, music critic Charles Menees wrote “On the podium, he was an impressive conductor with an intelligent approach to everything he played.” 23  Edward Ireland observed about Anderson that he “conducted with vigor and fine musicianship in a rousing performance of Sibelius’ Finlandia.” 24.  Edward Ireland also wrote that Anderson “conducts Tchaikovsky with sensitiveness and authority.”  25 George W. Stowe wrote “His beat was decisive and his cues right to the point.  Obviously he knows what he is doing on the podium.” 24  George Weigl wrote that as a conductor, Anderson “inspires each player and out of him gets the utmost, learning his capabilities and shortcomings after the first few measures of the first rehearsal. He knows how to rehearse an orchestra.” 27

Some critics were less favorable in their reviews of Anderson’s conducting.  Arthur Darack wrote that Anderson conducted the Cincinnati Symphony “as though he was going through the motions until he could get to the second half.” 28  Edward Brooks wrote about Anderson that as guest conductor “the going wasn’t too smooth, technically speaking, for conductor Anderson in the first half of the program.” 27  Doris Reno wrote that “Anderson is a music-writer by profession and not a conductor, and when he does conduct, undoubtedly is accustomed to a crack studio ensemble which delivers at the mere flick of a baton, or even without it.  Hence his reign over the local ensemble was not tight enough.” 30

Although Leroy Anderson enjoyed performing as a guest conductor, he did not accept every invitation to conduct. As he said to his family, “If I had accepted every offer that I received to guest conduct, I would never have had the time I needed to compose music.”

Browse in the Library:

Total Records Found in the Library: 12470, showing 120 per page
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