When Jack Paar took over Tonight, he brought on his good friend from USO days José Melis to be the show's musical director. They had worked together, with the same job dynamic, previously on both radio and television. Alongside his career beginnings as a musical director after World War II, Melis recorded instrumental singles with Mercury Records, first packaged together as an album and released in 1947 as Piano Classics – The South American Way. (The album and other contemporary singles were re-released in 1952 as a proper LP rather than just a set of 7"s.)
On the heels of the Good Neighbor Policy and a boom in popular Latin Orchestras in the United States, José Melis mixes his classical training with Latin rhythms (as the album's title implies.) On the six songs that make up the first album's release, the "South American Way" is driven just as much by the continual conga rhythm and bass as by Melis on the piano. It feels like the conga drums often force Melis away from his classical comforts into syncopation and staccato touches. Still, the piano arrangements do their part to make the genre mix work while also showing off Melis's virtuosity.
It's on the later singles (that appear on the re-release) where the piano arrangements take Melis's virtuosity to vaudevillian levels. The piano also takes over for the drums as the crucible for genre mixing, this time adding a sprinkle of jazz to the blend. The jazz, though, is mostly found on the aftertaste of the arrangement, the spare saxophone or guitar, and not from the piano itself—unless you mistake tasteful flourishes for jazz. The recordings as a whole are a fine dish of skill mixed in such a bland way as to not be any flavor in particular. Though, with all those runs, you'd expect there to have been a little more heat.
Here is the discography surrounding José Melis's debut album:
Hungarian Dance No. 6 (1946 single with His Latin-American Ensemble)
Hungarian Rhapsody (1946 single with His Latin-American Ensemble)
Prelude in G Minor (1946 single with His Latin-American Ensemble)
Stardust (1947 single with His Latin-American Ensemble)
Piano Classics – The South American Way
Eli Eli (1947 single)
Cumana (1947 single with His Orchestra)
Don't Call It Love (1947 single with His Orchestra)
Pasion Oriental (1947 single with His Orchestra)
Tamanaco (1951 single)
The Hour of Parting (1952 single)
Piano Classics - The South American Way (1952 album re-release)
Run Away (1954 single)
José Melis Interprets the Classics the South American Way (compilation album with His Latin-American Ensemble)
"Anitra's Dance" by José Melis and His Latin-American Ensemble
"Pasion Oriental" by José Melis and His Orchestra
"Keyboard Kapers" by José Melis and His Latin-American Ensemble
Pass the Headphones!!
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