Reisman, Joe

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Joe Reisman (b. Dallas, TX, 16 Sept. 1924, d. Los Angeles, CA, 15 Sept. 1987) was raised in Ennis, Texas, and attended Baylor University, Texas Western College and Texas Christian University before starting his music career as a saxophonist and arranger with the Herb Miller band. Through the late 1940s he also toured with and arranged for Jimmy Joy, Bob Crosby, Jack Teagarden, Louis Prima, Glen Gray, Sam Donahue, Frankie Masters and Johnny “Scat” Davis.

Reisman met Patti Page when both were in the Joy band, and from 1950 - 1955 he was her principal arranger and conductor. His arrangements for Page included the major hits Tennesee Waltz, Doggie In The Window, Changing Partners, Cross Over The Bridge, I Went To Your Wedding, Mocking Bird Hill and Mr. and Mrs. Mississippi . He also arranged for her television series Scott Music Hall Presents Patti Page and Oldsmobile Presents Patti Page, and composed and produced the main title and prologue music for the film Indiscretions Of An American Wife (1953), performed by Page.

In 1955, after Reisman arranged Perry Como’s hit Papa Loves Mambo, RCA Victor hired him as Musical Director and Artists and Repertoire producer. He remained there until 1959, when he began a three-year stint as AandR director at Roulette Records, after which he freelanced before returning to RCA in 1963. In 1968 Reisman was promoted to Manager and Executive Producer in charge of RCA’s west coast AandR department. In the early 1970s Reisman left RCA to establish his own company, Manor Productions, where he continued to produce until his death.

In addition to Page and Como, Reisman’s clients over the course of his career included Jack Jones, June Valli, Sunny Gale, the Ames Brothers, Johnny Ray, Julius La Rosa, Vic Damone, the Four Lads, Georgia Gibbs, Lena Horne, Lorne Greene, Rouvaun, Ann Margret, Jimmie Rodgers, Sarah Vaughan, and, for over 20 years and dozens of film, television and album projects, Henry Mancini. As a freelance producer, arranger and conductor he worked with Vic Damone, Robert Mitchum, Jerry Vale and Lou Monte. His work at RCA also produced a series of easy-listening albums for subscribers to Reader’s Digest . In his last years Reisman mainly worked with Henry Mancini and John Williams and the Boston Pops Orchestra. His resume lists at least 18 singles or albums that sold over a million copies.

In addition to producing his clients, Reisman arranged and produced his own records. He released three on Roulette: Great American Waltzes (Roulette R-25089), Joe Reisman Salutes The All-Time Instrumental Favorites (Roulette R-25082) and Instrumental Imports (Roulette R-25114). At RCA he released four more: Party Night At Joe's (RCA LPM-1476), Door of Dreams (RCA LPM-1519), Walt Disney - Songs For The Family (RCA LPM-1119) and Today’s Hits - Tomorrow’s Memories (RCA LSP-2051). He also directed and arranged for the ensemble Orchestra ’70 . Reisman’s composition Joey’s Song was a hit for many other artists, including Bill Haley and the Comets.

Reisman occasionally took on television and theatrical music projects of his own. These included the Sid and Marty Krofft production Les Poupees De Paris (1964), for which he arranged the music of Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen, incidental music for the play Infidel Caesar (1969), and soundtracks for the television series The Cop And The Kid (1975) and The Aeromeds (1976).

Source:

“Joe Reisman”, Space Age Pop Music Page (Accessed 9 Nov. 2005), http://www.spaceagepop.com

From the guide to the Joe Reisman scores, 1945-1986, (The New York Public Library. Music Division.)

Joe Reisman (1924-1987) was a producer and arranger who worked with many popular music acts and artists, including Henry Mancini, Patti Page, Sarah Vaughan, and Perry Como, primarily for RCA Victor and Roulette Records during the 1950s and 1960s, and, from the early 1970s, as an independent producer.

Reisman began his music career as a saxophonist and arranger with the Herb Miller band and later toured and arranged extensively, meeting Page when both were in the Jimmy Joy band. From 1950-1955 he was her principal arranger and conductor, responsible for her major hits for Mercury Records, including Tennesee Waltz (1951) and the novelty song, (How Much Is) That Doggie In The Window (1953). He also arranged, composed, and produced music for several of Page's television and film projects. In 1955, after Reisman arranged Perry Como's hit Papa Loves Mambo, RCA Victor hired him as Musical Director and Artists and Repertoire producer. He remained there until 1959, when he began a three-year stint as A&R director at Roulette Records, after which he freelanced before returning to RCA in 1963. In 1968 Reisman was promoted to Manager and Executive Producer in charge of RCA's West Coast A&R department. His work at RCA also produced a series of easy listening albums for subscribers to Reader's Digest. In the early 1970s Reisman left RCA to establish his own company, Manor Productions. In addition to Page and Como, Reisman's clients over the course of his career were numerous and varied. Perhaps his most notable collaboration was with Mancini, with whom he worked for over twenty years on many types of projects. In addition to producing his clients, Reisman also arranged and produced his own records. He also occasionally took on television and theatrical music projects of his own, including the Sid and Marty Krofft adult puppet show, Les Poupees De Paris (1964), in which he arranged the music of Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen.

From the description of Joe Reisman scores, 1945-1986. (New York Public Library). WorldCat record id: 79427306

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Reisman, Joe. Joe Reisman scores, 1945-1986. New York Public Library System, NYPL
creatorOf NCSA Jazz Ensemble. NCSA Jazz Ensemble [sound recording]. University of North Carolina School of the Arts, Semans Library
creatorOf UNCSA Jazz Ensemble. Jazz Ensemble [sound recording] University of North Carolina School of the Arts, Semans Library
creatorOf Joe Reisman scores, 1945-1986 The New York Public Library. Music Division.
referencedIn Richard Maltby Sr. papers, 1936-2006, 1956-1975 The New York Public Library. Music Division.
creatorOf Joe Reisman collection of noncommercial recordings [sound recording] The New York Public Library. Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound.
referencedIn Eugene Earle Collection, 1939-1980s University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Folklife Collection.
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith American Music Collection corporateBody
associatedWith Cahn, Sammy person
associatedWith Cahn, Sammy. person
associatedWith Como, Perry, 1912-2001 person
associatedWith Como, Perry, 1912-2001. person
associatedWith Earle, Eugene. person
associatedWith Greene, Lorne person
associatedWith Greene, Lorne. person
associatedWith Horne, Lena person
associatedWith Horne, Lena. person
associatedWith Jones, Jack, 1938- person
associatedWith Jones, Jack, 1938- person
associatedWith Maltby, Richard, 1914-1991 person
associatedWith Mancini, Henry person
associatedWith Mancini, Henry. person
associatedWith NCSA Jazz Ensemble. corporateBody
associatedWith Page, Patti person
associatedWith Page, Patti. person
associatedWith Previn, André, 1929- person
associatedWith Previn, André, 1929- person
associatedWith RCA-Victor Company, inc corporateBody
associatedWith RCA-Victor Company, inc. corporateBody
associatedWith Reader's Digest Music corporateBody
associatedWith Reader's Digest Music. corporateBody
associatedWith Roulette (Sound recording label) corporateBody
associatedWith Roulette (Sound recording label) corporateBody
associatedWith UNCSA Jazz Ensemble. corporateBody
associatedWith Valli, June person
associatedWith Valli, June. person
associatedWith Van Heusen, Jimmy, 1913-1990 person
associatedWith Van Heusen, Jimmy, 1913-1990. person
associatedWith Vaughan, Sarah, 1924-1990 person
associatedWith Vaughan, Sarah, 1924-1990. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
United States
Subject
Arrangement (Music)
Arrangements (Popular music and jazz)
Arrangers (Musicians)
Instrumentation and orchestration
Motion picture music
Popular music
Popular music
Popular music
Popular music
Popular music
Sound recording executives and producers
Television music
Occupation
Arrangers (Musicians)
Composers
Conductors (Music)
Sound recording executives and producers
Activity

Person

Birth 1924-09-16

Death 1987-09-25

Active 1945

Active 1986

Americans

Information

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