Home   >   Music   >   Glenn Miller Orchestra - In The Digit...
Glenn Miller Orchestra - In The Digital Mood (Limited Edition) (Gold CD)
Click photo to enlarge

Glenn Miller Orchestra - In The Digital Mood (Limited Edition) (Gold CD)

Facts

In The Digital Mood (Limited Edition) (Gold CD)
Music Price: $18.98
As of Oct 14 5:41 EDT (details)

Buy from Amazon.co.ukBuy from Amazon.co.uk
Artist(s)Glenn Miller Orchestra
StudioGrp Records
Release DateApril 30, 1991
UPC Code011105200424
Buy this item$18.98 at Amazon.com
As of Oct 14 5:41 EDT (details)
1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours,
 

Tracks

  1. In The Mood
  2. Chattanooga Choo-Choo
  3. The American Patrol
  4. String Of Pearls
  5. Little Brown Jug
  6. (I've Got A Gal In) Kalamazoo
  7. Tuxedo Junction
  8. At Last
  9. St. Louis Blues March
  10. Pennsylvania 6-5000
  11. Moonlight Serenade

Similar CDs

Unforgettable Glenn Miller & His OrchestraThe Essential Glenn MillerThe Glenn Miller StoryGlenn Miller - Greatest HitsThe Very Best of Benny Goodman
Unforgettable Glenn Miller & His OrchestraThe Essential Glenn MillerThe Glenn Miller StoryGlenn Miller - Greatest HitsThe Very Best of Benny Goodman

 

User Reviews

Average user review: 4.5 (23 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteAs Close to the sound but digital recordingQuote
I bought this CD when it was first released in 1990. They went to great pains to try to get the original "sound" in a digital recording. The even found vintage electro-voice mikes to record the album. I lent this CD out once and I never got it back. I had recorded this on my reel to reel but I final purchased another. A great album I recommend it highly
November 14, 2007

rating: 5 QuoteBig Band Swing in the Digital AgeQuote
The Big Band Sound LIVES! For years I have listened to a cassette recording of the vinyl "Glenn Miller: Pure Gold" whenever the Big Band mood struck me.

It's a breath of fresh air to ehar these great songs freshly recorded by a new generation of musicians populating the on-going Glenn Miller Orchestra.

"String Of Pearls" has always been a favorite of mine, and here it's updated very well.

I miss the vocal of Ray Eberle on "At Last", but here the band still serves up a fine instrumental rendition of a great love song.

"Pennsylvania 6-5000" retains the telephone ring, with a fun touch-tone thrown in at the end.

"Moonlight Serenade" has never sounded better.

I did not grow up during the original Big Band heyday - my parents did.
I'm a child of Rock & Roll, and I always will be. But my old man turned me on to some cool jams from his youth, too.

As somebody once said, "Back then, recording techniques were in their infancy. But today - WE can record music as it IS - as YOU hear it!
Crisp and clear with every note as bright as the stars in the eyes of the lady you're dancing with!"

Yeah. That says it, man!

Buy this CD, and dig how cool the Big Band Sound really is!

August 8, 2007

rating: 1 QuoteDon't Do It!Quote
Glenn Miller had several great bands. This is not one of them.
These have to be the most soulless, sterile, uninspiring versions of these songs available. Yeah, it was recorded digitally, but so what? Everything sounds close-miked and unbalanced. Did the drummer on these tracks ever even HEAR an original Miller recording?? Man...way off.
Could have been a good idea, but badly executed. The 15-track Greatest Hits CD (RCA), on the other hand, is remastered with care and sounds a lot better than this plastic recording, Hi-Fi
or not. February 8, 2005

rating: 3 QuoteBuy it for the booklet and not the musicQuote
My number-one question is, Why did they bother to produce a recording by studio musicians who, regardless of their abilities, don't really have a feel for the Miller sound? The music is technically perfect, but lacking not just the "soul" of the original orchestra but even that of the follow-on bands led by Ray McKinley, Tex Beneke, and Larry O'Brien. Anyone who wants to hear the TRUE Miller sound would be much better served by buying any of the dozens of albums available by the original civilian and AAF orchestras. The sheer number that are for sale, some 60 years on, are a far greater tribute to Glenn Miller's talent than is this CD.

I did assign 3 stars, primarily for the accompanying booklet. It goes far beyond the normal recitations of Miller's life and tragic disappearance, providing insights into his personality along with a treasure trove of little-known facts. For example, how many fans are aware that he authored a reference book about arranging techniques, or that "In the Mood" was originally titled "Tar Paper Stomp"?

Unfortunately even the booklet is not without its problems. There are at least a half-dozen major factual errors, including an entire paragraph referring to Skip MARTIN, rather than Skip NELSON, as the vocalist who followed Ray Eberle in the final months of the civilian band's existence. Yes, there was a Skip Martin in the band as well, but he played sax for a while around 1940 - hardly the same role or time frame. If the music were better I might excuse the gaffes, but I can't. October 5, 2002

rating: 5 QuoteAlways in the mood for this cdQuote
My brother first got this album and was playing it one Christmas when all the family was home. This united the generations and had everyone dancing to its rich, full beat.

It pulsates, it moves, it's good stuff! February 4, 2001

More reviews at Amazon.com ...