Harry Simeone

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The Little Drummer Boy 03:23 Tools
Carol Of The Bells 02:22 Tools
'Twas The Night Before Christmas 06:58 Tools
Little Drummer Boy 02:59 Tools
Little Drummer Boy / Peace on Earth 02:59 Tools
Mary's Little Boy Chile (Calypso Christmas Song) 02:31 Tools
What Child Is This ? 02:07 Tools
The Little Drummer Boy (Re-record) 02:31 Tools
Christmas Tree 02:37 Tools
The First Christmas Carol 03:02 Tools
Hallelujah 02:11 Tools
Red Lips / When You're Smiling 02:24 Tools
Christmas Is A Birthday 02:08 Tools
O Bambino (One Cold & Blessed Winter) 02:59 Tools
Santa Claus Is Comin’ To Town 02:59 Tools
Little Drummer Boy/Peace On Earth 02:59 Tools
That's My Mammy 02:59 Tools
Mary's Little Boy Child (Calypso Christmas Song) 02:59 Tools
The Little Drummer Boy (Carol of the Drum), carol 02:59 Tools
What Child Is This? 02:59 Tools
The Little Drummer Boy (Single Version) 02:05 Tools
Onorati / Arr McCarthy: The Little Drummer Boy 02:59 Tools
O Bambino (One Cold and Blessed Winter) 02:59 Tools
Davis: The Little Drummer Boy 02:59 Tools
L'enfant au Tambour (Little Drummer Boy) 02:59 Tools
The little Drummerboy 02:59 Tools
Davis, Katherine, K., Onorati, Henry & Simeone, Harry / Arr Pasatieri: The Little Drummer Boy 02:59 Tools
Do You Hear What I Hear? 02:59 Tools
El Pequeño Tamborilero 02:59 Tools
Happy Days Are Here Again 02:05 Tools
The Little Drummer Boy - Harry Simeone 02:05 Tools
El niño del tambor (Little Drummer Boy) 02:05 Tools
Oh du fröhliche 02:05 Tools
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This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (April 2009) Harry Moses Simeone (May 9, 1911, Newark, New Jersey - February 22, 2005, New York City, United States) was a distinguished music arranger, conductor and composer, best known for arranging the famous Christmas song "The Little Drummer Boy", for which he received co-writing credit. Initiated by his childhood passion for the Metropolitan Opera, Simeone sought a career as a concert pianist and eventually attended the Juilliard School of Music for three years before leaving to begin work at CBS as an arranger for bandleader Fred Waring. After garnering vocal and music arrangement credits for the 1938 RKO motion picture Radio City Revels, Simeone relocated to Hollywood with his wife Margaret McCravy, who was Benny Goodman's first singer using the stage name Margaret McCrae, and later a Fred Waring vocalist. Once there, he had various music production jobs for several Paramount films from 1939 to 1946, including some that starred Bing Crosby. During 1948, Simeone joined NBC's "The Swift Show" as the program's orchestra leader, and during 1952, he joined NBC's The Firestone Hour as conductor and choral arranger. When 20th Century Fox Records contracted Simeone to make a Christmas album during 1958, he assembled the Harry Simeone Chorale and searched for recording material. After being introduced to an obscure song by friend and credited song co-author Henry Onorati titled "Carol of the Drum", Simeone recorded the tune as "The Little Drummer Boy" for his album Sing We Now of Christmas. He received co-writing credit for the album, although he did not actually compose the song. The "Little Drummer Boy" single quickly became extremely popular and scored on the U.S. music charts from 1958 to 1962. The Simeone Chorale had another Christmas success during 1962, with their rendition of the then-new song "Do You Hear What I Hear?". In 1960, Simeone joined a revived half-hour version of The Kate Smith Show on CBS television, produced by Smith's long-time manager, Ted Collins. Though the program had good reviews, audience levels lagged at an early evening time, and the show was cancelled after some six months on the air.[1] A group known as the Harry Simeone Songsters, whose style was similar to that of the Ray Conniff Singers, produced a baseball-oriented song during 1960 called "It's a Beautiful Day for a Ballgame". The song is on one of the Baseball's Greatest Hits CDs and is still played at major league baseball parks. On May 22, 2000, Harry and Margaret McCravy Simeone officially established the Harry and Margaret Simeone Music Scholarship at Yale University by bestowing a gift of US$1 million. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.