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August 27, 2005
A Master of Making Old Tunes New Again
By FRANK J. PRIAL
SWARTHMORE, Pa. - Ward Marston shut down his turntable, pulled off the
record and said, "I'll be singing 'Night and Day' for the rest of the
week." 
Mr. Marston's compliment was for Cole Porter, who wrote the song, and for
Fred Astaire, who recorded it in 1932. But not for the recording itself,
one track on a remastered CD. "The sound is thin and the surface
scratchy," he said.
And Ward Marston should know. By almost any measure, he is considered one
of the best in the small but worldwide group of music lovers and sound
engineers dedicated to finding new life in old phonograph records.
Mr. Marston had not worked on the old Cole Porter disc, which irritated
him, he said, because he would have liked to "clean it up." He works
mostly with classical recordings, and his output over the years has been
prolific. There was the reworking of Arturo Toscanini's entire recording
career, ultimately 35 long-playing records, done for the Franklin Mint in
conjunction with the Toscanini family. There was the complete set of
Leopold Stokowski's broadcasts with the Philadelphia Orchestra, which
eventually led to 58 one-hour programs on a local National Public Radio
affiliate. "When Stoky died," he said, "they replayed the whole thing." 
Mr. Marston, who has been blind since shortly after birth, first came to
prominence in his field in 1979 when he successfully restored the first
known stereophonic record, made by the Bell Telephone Laboratories in
1932. He has restored old recordings for labels including EMI, BMG,
Biddulph and CBS. He restored all of Rachmaninoff's recordings. "The
producer got the Grammy on that one," he said.
He gathered and reworked everything the tenor Enrico Caruso ever sang
into a microphone or, in the early days, a recording machine horn. A
decade later, he redid the entire Caruso collection using more
sophisticated equipment and adding a rare Caruso recording recently found
in a barn. Yet another project was his restoration of the complete
recording of the legendary soprano Lucrezia Bori. For another project, he
restored most of the very early records for a 93-record collection of the
works of the pianist Arthur Rubinstein. 
In 1997, he garnered a Grammy nomination for his work on a collection of
old Fritz Kreisler recordings for BMG. Separately, he did all of
Kreisler's European recordings for a British label. For Naxos, he
restored much of the recording done from 1926 to 1937 by Willem
Mengelberg and the Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam. From 1937
through 1943, Mengelberg and the Concertgebouw recorded for Telefunken,
and he worked on many of those recordings as well. 
Improving the sound of old records - in fact, discovering sounds no one
knew were there - demands both technical skill and a high degree of
musical sensitivity. In the past, Mr. Marston said, it was left mostly to
recording engineers, some of whom, in his words, "wouldn't know
Mussorgsky from Mozart." 
"You have to try to know what the composer wanted," he said, "and what
the artist tried to achieve." 
This does not mean he plays down the technical side of the work. "I come
from a musical, not a technical, standpoint," he said, "but I'm not at
all spooked by the technical part." Indeed, he quickly leaves a layman
behind when he talks about technical achievements in sound reproduction.
"We've come far in recent years, but there are going to be incredible
strides in the next 10 to 15 years," he said.
Restoring an old record, Mr. Marston said, begins very simply - with a
bath. Solutions are used to clean years of dirt and grime that have
collected in the record groves. After that, the bulk of the
rehabilitation is relegated to a computer. "Once the recording has been
digitalized," he said, most of the work can be done from the keyboard,
using sophisticated software. 
His own studio is filled with electronic gear, turntables and speakers.
He uses some 15 custom-ground styluses - phonograph needles to most of
us. And he invented and built a device that safely plays his old and
extremely delicate wax cylinder recordings. "But I'm no one-man band," he
said. "I can't do it all. I'm a musician and a historian, and I do have
perfect pitch, but I'm always learning from the engineers. For instance,
there's a guy out in California who can remove pitch flutter from a
recording. He's amazing." 
Mr. Marston, 53, was born in nearby Bryn Mawr into an old Philadelphia
family. "Actually," he said, a bit sheepishly, "my name - my full name -
is Henry Ward Marston IV."
"My father was a banker and his father was, well, a rebel. He loved
singing, and in the days before the First World War, he fled to Paris,
where he apparently sang some minor roles at the Opéra Comique," he said.

Mr. Marston said he taught himself to play the piano when he was 4. At 7,
he began lessons in piano and organ. "In Paris, in 1968, I got to play
the organ at Notre-Dame, and I took lessons with Pierre Cochereau, the
cathedral's organist," he said.
He seemed destined for a concert career, but it held no appeal.
Paraphrasing Yogi Berra, he said, "Life took a fork." Still a teenager,
he played in clubs and piano bars, "anything to make a living." His
blindness has never affected his career. The few things he can't do, like
driving, are handled by his partner and business manager, Scott Kessler.
"I wasn't born blind," he said, "but I was born prematurely. Too much
oxygen in an incubator did the rest." 
At Williams College he majored in history and ran the radio station,
mostly so he could play his own records. Even then, his collection was
impressive. It still is: his basement in Swarthmore holds 35,000 CD's and
records, many of them rare 78's he hopes to restore one day and sell
under the Marston label he created two years ago. 
Almost as a sideline, he has restored and produced a series of recordings
of historical events and excerpts from political speeches. The remastered
discs were made for the Annenberg School for Communication at the
University of Pennsylvania. On one CD, for example, he has recaptured
presidential campaign speeches from 1908 by William Jennings Bryan and
William Howard Taft, and from 1912, by Taft, Woodrow Wilson and Theodore
Roosevelt. 
But Mr. Marston must turn elsewhere to earn his living. In fact, he turns
to the piano, from which he leads the Ward Marston Trio, which plays
nationwide. The group was in the Hamptons recently and has a full
calendar for the months ahead. Expanded, it becomes the Lester
Lanin-style Ward Marston Orchestra. As a former concert pianist turned
saloon player, Mr. Marston is a fan of Oscar Peterson, Art Tatum and
Erroll Garner, but he reserves the top spot in his pantheon for Cy
Walter, a club pianist of a few years back. "He is my God," Mr. Marston
said. He also admires the late Bobby Short, for whom he occasionally
substituted at the Cafe Carlyle in Manhattan.
Playing in clubs - with his trio or solo - provides something vital,
aside from pulling in the dollars, for a man who spends most of his time
in libraries or a sound studio. It provides live music.
"I've always tried to keep the sound of live music in my ears," he said.
"Recordings, even the best of them, are a pale imitation of what real
music sounds like."
From [email protected]  Sat Aug 27 14:39:33 2005
From: [email protected] (Morgan Davis)
Date: Sun Dec 24 13:10:58 2006
Subject: [Phono-L] Ward Marston in the Wall Street Journal on 8/25/
References: <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>

Take me off your list.  WMD
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
  To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
  Sent: Saturday, August 27, 2005 2:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [Phono-L] Ward Marston in the Wall Street Journal on 8/25/


  In a message dated 8/27/2005 5:01:06 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
  [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> writes:


  > Okay... I admit it... I don't know a lot about our hobby, and don't know
  > the names of many of the grand masters... But I haven't seen this article
  > mentioned and thought -- given what he does -- that some of you would
  > like to know the article appeared.  A friend of mine did the caricature
  > that appears with the story.
  > 

  **************
  also in the NY Times, 8/27!  w/ 2 photos...

  Allen
    www.phonobooks.com<http://www.phonobooks.com/>

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