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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Les_BaxterLes Baxter - Wikipedia

    Controversy. According to Milt Bernhart, Nelson Riddle was a ghostwriter for Baxter when Baxter was working for Nat King Cole, although while Baxter was working and was credited as a conductor for Nat King Cole, he never was officially credited as a composer or arranger.

  2. Jun 9, 2021 · One wonders what the eminent philosopher might have made of both the content and the (unimprovably tacky) cover art of this early 1950s Tinseltown technicolor “triumph” from American composer, arranger and conductor Les Baxter (1922-1996).

  3. On January 15, 1996, Baxter died at the age of 73, from a heart attack caused by kidney failure. The music Baxter pioneered had begun making a popular comeback in the 1990s, marked by the 1996 release of Capitol Records' The Exotic Moods of Les Baxter.

  4. Apr 3, 2024 · Les Baxter was a true genius of the music industry and his contribution to the exotica genre cannot be overstated. He was a pioneer who created a unique sound by combining traditional music with modern technology, and his influence can be heard in countless recordings today.

  5. Les Baxter’s artistic problems had nothing to do with his skills, which remained formidable to the last. It had more to do with living on the hamster wheel that is life in the low-budget film industry. His tenure at American International unfairly stigmatized him as a B composer.

  6. Feb 22, 2021 · Les Baxter was not only a singer and musician but also, of course, a composer, arranger, conductor, and producer of music. He wrote more than 250 scores for radio, television, and movies, including music for the Bob Hope and Abbott and Costello radio shows.

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  8. Les Baxter, far a field from his native Texas, was the most sophisticated of world travelers – being equally at home in New York, Paris, Rome, Buenos Aires, Rio, or Marakesh – and his music has always reflected the lavish and exotic colors and sounds found in the far-flung corners of the world.