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Article on Vince Guaraldi & Charlie Brown Christmas music

Good article about Guaraldi, the origin of the Peanuts music, and the early days of the Charlie Brown Christmas Special.

I particularly love this music because my dad was a jazz pianist, and I remember him playing "Linus and Lucy" for me, one of my favorite songs as a little kid. He still does it whenever kids are around, and if they're young enough, they'll all immediately drop what they're doing and start dancing. 🙂 Guaraldi has always been one of my favorite jazz artists (along with Brubeck). Cast Your Fate and Black Orpheus rank up in my top 5 favorite tunes, easily.

Link

The jazzman who captured Charlie Brown's wistful soul
By Matt Schudel

When it was first broadcast in December 1965, no one was quite sure what to make of "A Charlie Brown Christmas," the first "Peanuts" tale ever shown on TV. Untrained children did the characters' voices, there was no laugh track, and it had an overtly religious theme, highlighted by Linus' recitation of the Nativity story from the Gospel of Luke. Network executives were certain it would flop.

Then there was the soundtrack. Producer Lee Mendelson invited a pianist named Vince Guaraldi to compose the music, opting for grown-up jazz instead of cartoon-y music. Guaraldi's high-spirited "Linus and Lucy" theme has become almost as recognizable as the "Peanuts" kids themselves.

"The music was absolutely essential to its longevity," says Mendelson, who has been the executive producer of every "Peanuts" TV project since the beginning. "It didn't catch on right away. It was all serendipity."

After four decades, Guaraldi's subtly infectious soundtrack has just gone double platinum, with sales of 2 million. It was recently released in an expanded and remastered version with a brighter sound that gives fresh clarity to Guaraldi's inspired work. (The sidemen have finally received proper credit as well.)

Perfectly pitched to the moods of the show, the music underscores the humor, innocence and wisdom residing within Charlie Brown and the rest of cartoonist Charles Schulz's world. Virtually every American has heard the soundtrack, but the story behind it ? and the career of the late jazzman Guaraldi ? remains largely unknown.


A bossa nova fan


In 1963, Lee Mendelson was a young San Francisco filmmaker working on a documentary about Schulz, whose "Peanuts" cartoon strip was becoming a national craze. He needed music for a two-minute animated segment of his film. Driving across the Golden Gate Bridge, he heard a jazzy tune on the radio called "Cast Your Fate to the Wind," which was written and performed by Guaraldi, who also lived in the Bay Area.

Guaraldi, then 35, was a journeyman jazz pianist who had toured in the 1950s with Woody Herman's Thundering Herd and with vibraphonist Cal Tjader and trombonist Bill Harris. He had made a few recordings with his own groups and was one of the first American musicians to discover the swaying rhythms of the Brazilian bossa nova.

In 1962, Guaraldi released "Jazz Impressions of Black Orpheus," interpreting music from the 1959 Brazilian film. To fill out a short album, he wrote a tune that was packaged as the B-side of a single. (About the same time, he grew a handlebar mustache, which became his signature look.) That throwaway tune was "Cast Your Fate," which caught on with listeners and went on to sell 500,000 copies. It reached No. 22 on the pop charts ? one of the last instrumental jazz tunes to be a crossover hit ? and earned Guaraldi a Grammy Award in 1963 for best original jazz composition.

"Cast Your Fate" had the qualities Mendelson was looking for ? "both adult and childlike" ? so he asked Guaraldi to write something for his Schulz documentary. Within two weeks, Guaraldi called back.

"He asked if he could play something over the phone," Mendelson recalls. "I told him I didn't want to hear it over the phone. He said if he didn't play it, he might forget it. He played the 'Linus and Lucy' theme. It was so perfect. Somehow, in my soul, I knew this was going to have a deep impact on what we were going to do."

As it turned out, Mendelson's documentary never made it to TV. (It's now on DVD.) But Guaraldi recorded an album originally called "Jazz Impressions of a Boy Named Charlie Brown," which came out in 1964 and, with its swinging whimsy, may be his true "Peanuts" masterpiece.

"He was really a genius," Mendelson says.


A classic in 15 minutes


In April 1965, CBS decided to do a "Peanuts" special for Christmas. Mendelson and Schulz worked out the story line in one day, and Guaraldi was brought in for the music.

He reprised the "Linus and Lucy" theme, rearranged some familiar holiday tunes and added new compositions ("Christmas Time Is Here," the buoyant jazz waltz "Skating" and the infectious dance number "Christmas Is Coming"). Mendelson wrote the lyrics for "Christmas Time Is Here" on the back of an envelope in 15 minutes.

Guaraldi was a short man, about 5 feet 6, with thick glasses and a sly, understated sense of humor. He had been a regular reader of "Peanuts" since its debut in the early 1950s, and it's fair to say he took the plight of the beleaguered Charlie Brown to heart. His compositions contained a palpable depth of feeling.

"I want to write standards, not just hits," he once said.

His style proved ideal for the film's wistful tone.

"With the music, you're able to crawl inside the cartoon character," recalls David Guaraldi, who runs a Web site devoted to his father's career.

The musicians in Guaraldi's trio ? bassist Fred Marshall and drummer Jerry Granelli ? sensed that something special was coming together, but no one knew what to expect from the overall project. CBS was lukewarm, and even the production team had doubts.

"We thought we ruined Charlie Brown," says Mendelson. "We thought it wasn't a good show."

An early screening for CBS execs was greeted with silence.

"Then one of the animators, who had had a few drinks, stood up in the back and said, 'You guys are crazy,' " Mendelson recounts. " 'This is going to be around for a hundred years.' "


Enduring music


When the special aired on Dec. 9, 1965, it drew a 50 share, meaning half the country was watching. Critics loved it, and the "Peanuts" franchise was launched. Four decades later, "A Charlie Brown Christmas" still scores high in the ratings and has entered our culture as the television-age equivalent of Dickens' "A Christmas Carol." (The special ran this year on Nov. 28 on ABC.) Cartoonist Robert Smigel has called it "the greatest half-hour American TV has ever produced."

Like the show, Guaraldi's music has taken on an extended life of its own. Since its debut in 1965, his Christmas album has become a holiday classic and has introduced two generations of Americans to jazz. Guaraldi's tunes have been recorded by, among others, David Benoit, Dave Brubeck, Diana Krall, Vanessa Williams, Wynton Marsalis, George Winston, Patti Austin, Rosemary Clooney, Mel Torme and B.B. King.

With his Grammy Award in 1963 and the success of the "Peanuts" soundtracks, Guaraldi had a flash of fame in the mid-'60s. "He wasn't just doing 'Peanuts,' " says his son. "He was at the height of his career in '65 and '66. He was constantly busy all the time."

Mostly, he stayed close to home in Northern California, where he had two children and a steady series of "Peanuts" projects ? 16 in all. He kept working in jazz clubs and was appearing at a place called Butterfield's in Menlo Park, Calif., on the night of Feb. 6, 1976. The previous night, he'd been at Mendelson's house, discussing their next "Peanuts" project.

At Butterfield's, Guaraldi left the stage for a break between sets and never returned. He was dead of a heart attack at age 47.

Since then, even as younger generations have embraced his work, Guaraldi has receded into the past, something of a forgotten man. Still, after all these years, his music continues to exert a poignant appeal and ? like Charlie Brown himself, you might say ? remains eternally young and filled with hope.
 
One of my favorites. Got the Peanuts Christmas album and have the Charlie Brown theme as my ringtone. 😀
 
I'd love to be able to play piano like that. I'm still trying to master 'Linus and Lucy' but I'm extremely rusty and it's not exactly the easiest piece to break my way back into playing with.
 
Definately one of my favorites.

You should also check out David Beniot. He took over for Vince G doing the Peanuts shows in the 80s. He adds a bit more contemporary beat to Vince's music, which actually turns out quite well.
 
Originally posted by: HotChic
Originally posted by: Queasy
One of my favorites. Got the Peanuts Christmas album and have the Charlie Brown theme as my ringtone. 😀

You mean "Linus and Lucy"? 🙂

No, there's actually another song that is Charlie Brown's theme music. I'm having a PITA trying to find it now though because everything keeps pointing back to "Linus & Lucy".

edit: Here we go...I don't know why I just didn't go to Amazon.com to begin with.
 
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