Looking back at all this material listening to it now my preference:
SRP late 70s both BBC, and their own commissions. Those guys, Bernard Ebbinghous, Norrie Paramor, John Fox, David Francis (London Strings), golly that is nice stuff. I know why it was kept away from public sale, radio business models at that time, sure it was genius; but darn it all we lost out on a huge fan base that would live on today in my worthless opinion.
Greater Media’s Beautiful Hits, in my opinion the Sbarra/Gregory/Barber material is what SRP would have made into the 80s if such had been done. The qualities so enduring in the BBC and Paramor/Fox/Douglas fashion, they live on in those arrangements all the way into Ingman and Eales.
As big as Bonneville was the Million Dollar Sound “keeping up” with the times is a little too soft rock for me. More smooth-jazz, I like the quality of the early DeAzevedo material, especially 82-84, it became to synthesized for me in the late 80s. The 90s Ultra stuff, Valentino, Blom, Vanacore, and so forth is really not beautiful music, It lost its original meaning, and chased the original audience off that never really wanted it, and the old fellas were left to street for pickup it seemed. I get it, back in 1990 it was urgent at the time, I just wish radio was a different medium not so dependent on change to be financially responsible. We needed Spotify in 1983. Bonneville did greatly obviously and Marlin is an awesome friend and it’s so nice to correspond with him. The Fox late 80s material is astonishing, kept him recording and that was nothing short of a gift. I always enjoyed talking to John Fox, he and his wife Joy were amazing people.
My old friend said it right, when everyone removed the group-vocals that was too bad. Some of those like my mother used to say when I was little boy in 1980, “preachy”, but not all were and frankly today listening to them now, excellent stuff. Mike Sammes, Midas Touch, Neil Richardson, Encore, it’s great. A very important part of the sound that made us come back for more. It’s kept me on this quest since it all went away where I lived in Iowa around 1986 as a 10 year old. You programmers reached me, touched my soul, and I am never letting go of it.
Thank you guys for keeping the music in discussion alive. I am trying to share what I can on YouTube and Archive.net, it’s a load of work and a huge burden in my mobile data plan. But I keep adding more artifacts.
God bless you all.
Erik