Dick Schory – Repercussion

Click here to download the MP3 of Dick Schory's Amazon Tributary

I should have several upcoming posts for those masters of exotica, including Lalo Schiffrin, Henry Mancini, Enoch Light, Les Baxter, and of course – Richard Schory.

Dick Schory’s Repercussion is a great example of where more exotica records could have gone, exemplified by the track Amazon Tributary. Baxter and Schory were masters for composing, arranging, and production in the world of exotica LP’s.

The biography below is from SpaceAgePop.com:

Schory was a classically trained percussionist who moved easily from symphony to experimental music to popular recordings. He served in the percussion section of the Chicago Symphony, worked as educational and advertising director for the Ludwig Drum Company, formed the New Percussion Ensemble and commissioned contemporary composers to write pieces for it, and wrote and recorded musical backgrounds for radio and television commercials.

Schory was a major influence on both classical and popular percussion music. He moved comfortably from the concert hall to the recording studio, and worked closely with music educators to broaden acceptance and understanding of percussion instruments and compositions. He wrote in 1960,

There are no limits when it comes to instrumentation in the amazing new field of percussion ensembles. Everything from auto brake drums, inverted rice bowls, and even a manifold from a ‘46 Chevrolet are included with surprisingly good musical results. If it can be struck and can be classified as a percussion instrument, someone, somewhere has scored for it.

Schory’s albums for RCA offer choice samples of this music, sometimes simply enhancing standard studio band arrangements with percussion accents, but often rebuilding the whole piece around the percussion ensemble. Critic R. D. Darnell of High Fidelity magazine was one of Schory’s strongest supporters, writing of the album, Wild Percussion and Horns A’Plenty,

At first glance, Schory’s program conforms more closely to current trends (which he pioneered long before the now-dominant “Persuasive” and “Provocative” series) but he consistently transcends these in musical taste, verve, unfailing wit, and superb sense of dramatic stereogenics.

While we might now cringe at the thought of anyone practicing “stereogenics” of any kind, dramatic or not, we can certainly recognize Schory’s ability to bring the highest level of professionalism in his mastery of percussion to space age pop.

Basement Dweller Bio:

I am the creator and site administrator at The Basement Rug. I have been collecting LP's and CD's for more than 30 years. I post themed compilations and out-of-print and otherwise hard to find albums.