Robert561 wrote:Joe,
Appreciate the info you have provided. I knew it was a long shot. I thought I would try anyway.
Somewhere out there is a disc in someone's attic waiting to be discovered!
Many thanks!
Bob
Hi Bob:
Keep checkin' back here. You never know what might turn up. In the meantime...
there's an interesting article that appeared in
Time Magazine in the September 22, 1930 issue--at the time the record was released for sale.
FROM:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/artic ... 41,00.htmlSheik Scoop "That the late, woman-worshiped Cinemactor Valentino may have died at just the right time—before talking & singing pictures came in—for his memory to remain inviolate in countless lovelorn breasts, was indicated last week when Wanamaker's department store in Manhattan made this unexpected announcement:
"First and exclusive release of the only recording of the voice of Rudolph Valentino singing his favorite ballad
"Kashmiri Song, in English
"Also El Relicario, in Spanish."
A natural question was: If such a recording existed, why was it not released until four years after Valentino's death?
The story: In 1923, Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co. asked Valentino, then, the rage in The Sheik and The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, to try making records. They rehearsed him on operatic arias but were not pleased. He slurred, mumbled, muffed, his diction was atrocious. Finally the Kashmiri Song (because he sang it mutely in The Sheik) and El Relicario (because of his Latin cast) were chosen. To Conductor Ralph Mazziotta who coached him, Valentino inscribed a photograph "In remembrance of my first record. (Hope it is a good one!)"
Conductor Mazziotta carefully kept the photograph but when he listened to Valentino's record he looked sad. It just would not do. The record was shelved.
At Valentino's fantastically elaborate funeral someone regretted that the voice of the dead sheik was stilled forever. "But no," declared another mourner, "he made a record! I heard. . . ." But memory failed as to where or when, and alert Walter King, president of Celebrity Recording Co. (Hollywood) who had overheard the remark, could learn no more.
Then began a search that took President King from Atlantic to Pacific. But no Valentino record did he find. By pure, accident the master record was unearthed in a dusty corner of a storeroom at Brunswick's factory in Muskegon, Mich. President King bought the rights for his company—but last week the Valentino "scoop" awaited a public that seemed not to care. What Brunswick had rejected and forgotten as unworthy of its standard, Wanamaker's vended--not very successfully. In the first three days less than 1,000 records were sold. Valentino singing as with a mouthful of spaghetti seemed not to have the appeal of the sleek silent Sheik of the oldtime cinema."