The previously unpublished autobiography and additional essays by the
orchestrator-composer of some of America's most important musical
theatre productions.
The remarkable career of composer-orchestrator Robert Russell Bennett
[1894-1981] encompassed a wide variety of both "legitimate" and
popular music-making in Hollywood, on Broadway, and for television.
Bennett is principally responsible for what is known worldwide as the
"Broadway sound" and for greatly elevating the status of the theater
orchestrator. He worked alongside Jerome Kern, Cole Porter, George
Gershwin, Irving Berlin, Richard Rodgers, and Frederick Loewe on much of
the Broadway canon, eventually providing orchestrations for all or part
of more than 300 musicals between 1920 and 1975. This work is the first
publication of Bennett's autobiography, which was written in thelate
1970s. It also includes eight of his most important essays on the art of
orchestration. George J. Ferencz is Professor of Music at the University
of Wisconsin at Whitewater.