The J.H. Squire Celeste Octet, from 1928--"Absent" and "La Cinquantaine"
In other news, I have some golf courses for sale on the planet Jupiter. Golf on Jupiter--It's a GasĀ®.
Anyway, here we have a dreamy, elevator-y ("elevator-y"??) treatment of the 1899 hit Absent, and years before Kostelanetz and Gould were doing the same thing to the songs of Gershwin, Porter, and Kern:
Absent (John W. Metcalf), J.H. Squire Celeste Octet (1928). From Columbia 78.
The flip side is La Cinquantaine (The Golden Wedding) by French composer Jean Gabriel-Marie in 1887. Again, classic mood-music fare, though not, obviously, written for that genre:
La Cinquantaine (Gabriel-Marie), J.H. Squire Celeste Octet (1928).
While we're on the subject of early, early lounge music, here's a 1907 recording by Chris Chapman that, if given a Sydney Torch or David Carroll treatment, could pass for a hi-fi-era novelty instrumental. The record is pretty hammered, but I got a listenable file from it:
Dance California (George W. Gregory, 1894), Chris Chapman, Bells with orchestra, 1907. From Victor 78.
Sounds a little like the 1916 hit Nola, no? (Nola No? Wasn't that a musical comedy by Vincent Youmans?)
Anyway, the roots of lounge are right here at... Vintage Lounge.
Lee