Press "Enter" to skip to content

A Boy Named Charlie Brown by Vince Guaraldi Trio Set For Vinyl Reissue

Vince Guaraldi added a new dimension to Peanuts TV specials. There is no mistaking when you hear the theme song, Linus and Lucy. It’s a magical youthful strut to our innocence. Record Store Day 2021 is celebrating the 1964 re-issue of A Boy Named Charlie Brown by Vince Guaraldi Trio Set in vinyl by Craft Recordings. The newly minted LP will come with eight baseball cards. This is sure to be sought after by Peanuts fans. Guaraldi died suddenly on February 6, 1976, at age 47 after suffering a massiveย heart attack.ย  We never truly got to enjoy the rest of his music, who knows what other music he would contribute to the Peanuts universe. He is forever cemented to the world of Peanuts. We are grateful for his contribution that lent a voice to innocence.

Craft Recordings is thrilled toย announce a vinyl reissue of theย PEANUTSย classic,ย A Boy Named Charlie Brown. Featuring nine evocative cues from the Vince Guaraldi Trio, the album has been newly remastered from the original analog tapes by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio.

In stores July 16 and available for pre-order today, the LP also includes a special bonus: eight collectible baseball cards that showcase Charlie Brownโ€™s team of misfits: Snoopy, Woodstock, Peppermint Patty, Linus and Lucy Van Pelt, Franklin Armstrong, Schroeder, and, of course, manager and pitcher, Charlie Brown. On the back of the cards are key stats for each player, including their field position and favorite sandwich.

A Boy Named Charlie Brownย will also be offered in three colorful variants, including a green-grass pressing atย Target, a sky-blue version forย Vinyl Me Please, plus a special baseball mitt-brown edition at theย Craft Recordings Store, limited to 350 units.ย 

Additionally, one of the most memorable tracks off the album, the up-tempo โ€œBaseball Theme,โ€ will be available for the very first time as a standalone, 7-inch singleโ€”exclusively for Record Store Day 2021. Offering the original, 1964 soundtrack version of the song, plus an alternative studio take, the limited-edition release is pressed on white vinyl and housed in a colorful jacket, featuring whimsical, baseball-themed images of Charlie Brown and Snoopy. Visit recordstoreday.com for a list of participating indie retailers.

In the early โ€™60s, Bay Area jazz pianist Vince Guaraldi was a fast-rising star. A frequent collaborator of vibraphonist Cal Tjaderโ€™s, Guaraldi had broken out on his own just a few years prior, releasing several records as a leader. But it was 1962โ€™s Jazz Impressions of Black Orpheus that made Guaraldi a household name. Inspired by the French/Brazilian film Black Orpheus, the album featured both original material and covers from the Academy Award-winning picture, including Guaraldiโ€™s instrumental composition, โ€œCast Your Fate to the Wind.โ€ The song became a breakout hit across the country and earned the artist a GRAMMYยฎ Award.

Concurrently, just across town, producer Lee Mendelson was working on a TV documentary about cartoonist Charles M. Schulz, the creator of the PEANUTS comic strip. But he was still searching for the perfect music to accompany the film. One afternoon, Mendelson caught โ€œCast Your Fate to the Windโ€ on the radio. As soon as he heard it, he knew Guaraldi was the man for the job.

His instinct was spot-on. Guaraldiโ€™s sophisticated recordingsโ€”which also featured the talents of bassist Monty Budwig and drummer Colin Baileyโ€”instantly brought the PEANUTS characters to life. In the 2012 book Vince Guaraldi at the Piano (Derrick Bang, McFarland & Company, Inc.), Mendelson recalled that the score โ€œjust blew me away. It was so right, and so perfect, for Charlie Brown and the other charactersโ€ฆThere was a sense, even before it was put to animation, that there was something very, very special about that music.โ€

While the documentaryโ€”titled A Boy Named Charlie Brownโ€”never made it to the airwaves, Guaraldiโ€™s score was released by Fantasy Records as Jazz Impressions of a Boy Named Charlie Brown in 1964. Several of the albumโ€™s compositions (including the iconic โ€œLinus and Lucyโ€) appeared a year later in the hit TV special, A Charlie Brown Christmas.

Thanks to the massive popularity of the animated holiday classicโ€”and its best-selling soundtrackโ€”the score to A Boy Named Charlie Brown was reissued with the abbreviated title in 1972. By then, the growing PEANUTS animated franchise included multiple spinoffs, including Charlie Brownโ€™s All Stars! (which featured โ€œBaseball Themeโ€); Itโ€™s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brownand Youโ€™re in Love, Charlie Brown.

The album was an instant success, thanks to such memorable tracks as the lilting โ€œOh, Good Grief,โ€ the reflective โ€œHappiness Is,โ€ the lively โ€œCharlie Brown Theme,โ€ and the buoyant โ€œFrieda (With The Naturally Curly Hair).โ€ Guaraldi, meanwhile, would score a total of 15 PEANUTS specials during his lifetime, with 1976โ€™s Itโ€™s Arbor Day, Charlie Brown being his final project. Just hours after completing the recording, Guaraldi died from a sudden heart attack. He was just 47.

While a massive gap was left in the PEANUTS music universe after his death, Guaraldi left behind an immeasurable legacy. Thanks to his vibrant music, generations of children have been introduced to the joys of jazz with every broadcast of the PEANUTS specials. Today, the passion for his enduring work continues to grow. His most popular title, A Charlie Brown Christmas, remains one of the best-selling holiday releases of all time and has the rare distinction of being one of only two jazz albums to be certified 4x platinum by the RIAA.


Discover more from Sandbox World

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Be First to Comment

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *