AMERICAN TENOR RICHARD CROOKS (1900-1972) VOL. 2 CDR

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RICHARD ALEXANDER CROOKS (TRENTON, NEW JERSEY, JUNE 26, 1900 – PORTOLA VALLEY, CALIFORNIA SEPTEMBER 29, 1972)         He first gained attention as a boy soprano in a church choir and later served in the American Air Corps during World War I. After the war, he studied with Frank La Forge, Léon Rothier,…

Description

RICHARD ALEXANDER CROOKS (TRENTON, NEW JERSEY, JUNE 26, 1900 – PORTOLA VALLEY, CALIFORNIA SEPTEMBER 29, 1972)

 

 

 

 

He first gained attention as a boy soprano in a church choir and later served in the American Air Corps during World War I. After the war, he studied with Frank La Forge, Léon Rothier, and Sidney Bourne in New York. He became a soloist at the Presbyterian church in New York and, despite financial difficulties, declined to appear in the musical The Student Prince on Broadway.

His career took off in 1923 when he achieved sensational success by performing in nine concerts with the New York Symphony Orchestra under Walter Damrosch. In 1926, he embarked on a European concert tour, and in 1927 he made his operatic stage debut at the Stadttheater in Hamburg as Cavaradossi in Tosca. That same year, he performed the tenor solo in Beethoven’s 9th Symphony under Toscanini in New York and in 1928 took part in the American premiere of Gustav Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde under Willem Mengelberg.

Following guest appearances in Berlin, Riga (1928), Warsaw, Prague, Stockholm, Copenhagen, and various venues in Holland, Belgium, and England, he joined the Philadelphia Opera in 1930, debuting once again as Cavaradossi in Tosca. His career continued with great success at the Metropolitan Opera in New York from 1933 to 1946, where he debuted as Des Grieux in Massenet’s Manon. During his time at the Met, he appeared in 51 performances across nine roles, including Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni, Faust, Alfredo in La Traviata, Wilhelm Meister in Mignon, and Carlo in Linda di Chamounix.

In addition to his Met career, he performed at the opera houses of Chicago (1940-1943) and San Francisco (1934), and made guest appearances in Australia in 1936 and 1938. He even embarked on concert tours in Africa. He retired from the stage in 1946, after a distinguished and far-reaching career.

 

 

TRACKLIST

 

 

Dubarry (Millöcker) Without your love (w. Moore) 1615 BS74707-2 Victor, USA 1932-12-19

Elegie (Massenet) 11-8490-B Victor

Elisir d’amore (Donizetti) Heimlich stahl aus ihrem Auge E. W. 76 Electrola

Faust (Gounod) Salut! Demeure chaste et pure 15542 1937 a Victor

Fedora (Giordano) Amor ti vieta DA1769 1939 a HMV

For Love Alone (Seiver-Thayer) I have so little to give D.A.1436 OA92544 HMV 6 28 1935

For you alone (Geehl) 45422 B29615-13 Victor, Camden NJ 1924-05-23

Forgotten (Cowles) CVE34280-5 Cat 9008 Victor, 19 January 1926

Garden of happiness (Lockton) D.A.1449 OA87396 HMV 1 17 1935

Gipsy moon (Borganoff) DA1283 0B4240-2 HMV, London 1932-09-30

Gypsy Songs, Op. 55 – No. 4, Songs My Mother Taught Me (Dvořák) 1806 MVKT19831-1c Victor, 16 September 1936

Have you seen but a whyte Lilie grow (Anon) 2178 BS056120-1 Victor, 16 September 1940

I Bring a Love Song (Hammerstein – Romberg) 1500-B Victor 9 31 930

Irish Love Song (Margaret R. Lang) 45373-B Victor 7 24 1923

Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair (Foster) 1828 BS010356-1 Victor, 27 May 1937

Jocelyn (Godard) Angels guard thee DA2093 1933 b HMV

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