Artist's albums
My Love
1973 · album
Easy Listening... but Super!
2023 · compilation
Summer Place '76
1975 · album
Questioning - O Holy Night
2021 · album
Malagueña: The Music of Cuba / Kismet
2015 · album
By Special Request: Percy Faith & Robert Farnon
2014 · compilation
The Essential Percy Faith
2014 · album
The Golden Age of Light Music: War and Peace - Light Music of the 1940s
2010 · compilation
The Golden Age of Light Music: Amor, Amor: Music for Romance
2007 · compilation
Corazón
1973 · album
Music Until Midnight
1954 · album
It's So Peaceful In the Country
1956 · album
The Columbia Album Of George Gershwin
1957 · album
American Serenade
1963 · album
Plays Latin Themes For Young Lovers
1964 · album
More Themes for Young Lovers
1964 · album
Music Of Christmas Volume II
1965 · album
Christmas Is...
1966 · album
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Biography
Percy Faith was one of the most popular easy listening recording artists of the 1950s and '60s. Not only did he have a number of hit albums and singles under his own name, but Faith was responsible for arranging hits by Tony Bennett, Doris Day, Johnny Mathis, and Burl Ives, among others, as the musical director for Columbia Records in the '50s. Born and raised in Toronto, Canada, Faith was a child piano prodigy, giving his first recital at Massey Hall at the age of 15 and playing various movie theaters, providing the soundtrack to silent films. His career as a concert pianist was cut short when he injured his hands in a fire when he was 18. Faith moved into arranging, beginning with local hotel orchestras but quickly moving to radio. It was here where he developed his lush pop-instrumental style. For most of the 1930s, he worked on Canadian Broadcast Company. At the end of the decade his radio show, Music by Faith, was also being aired within the United States. Upset with CBC slashing the budget of his program, Faith moved to Chicago in 1940. Shortly afterward, he relocated to New York; by 1945, he had become an official U.S. citizen. Working for NBC in New York, he arranged and conducted for a number of shows and singers, including Coca-Cola's radio show and Buddy Clark. During the late '40s, he recorded for both Decca and RCA Victor. Faith joined Columbia Records as musical director and a recording artist in 1950. While he arranged traditional pop songs as well as show tunes and folk songs for the label's vocalists, Faith became a pioneer of easy listening "mood music" with his own albums. In addition to popularizing the light, orchestrated pop, he was the first to record albums solely consisting of songs from Broadway shows; he also was one of the first mainstream composers/arrangers to experiment with Latin rhythms. Faith had his first number one single, "Delicado," in 1952. In the mid-'50s, he began composing film scores, beginning with the Oscar-nominated collaboration with George Stoll, Love Me or Leave Me. But he had his biggest hit of the 1960s with a piece of music written by another film composer. His late-1959 recording of Max Steiner's "The Theme from 'A Summer Place'" became a number one hit in 1960 and earned Faith his first Grammy. As rock & roll took over popular music in the early '60s, his musical quotient remained high, thanks in large part to Faith's arranging skills and penchant for picking good material. Faith slowly withdrew from a professional career in the late '60s, but continued recording until just before his death in 1976. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Cub Koda, Rovi