Production information
Produced by His Master’s Voice
Record production number: CLP 1830
Release date: 1964
Country of production: Great Britain
Format: monophonic
Orchestra and chorus conductor: Tutti Camarata
Composed by Frank Churchill, Leigh Harline, Larry Morey, and Paul J. Smith
Sound engineer: Allan Emig (uncredited)
Assistant sound engineer: Brian Ross-Myring (uncredited)
Artists
Norma Zimmer (uncredited)
Bill Lee (uncredited)
Bill Kanady (uncredited)
Back to British Records

This album is a British edition of 1963’s BV4023. This time, the sleeve doesn’t open, and the cover features a drawing of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs as they appear on the Quad crown poster for the film’s 1964 British re-release. The text of the original album is reproduced in an abridged and modified version:
Walt Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
In early 1937 the news spread through Hollywood that the young cartoon maker, Walt Disney, already famous for Mickey Mouse and The Three Little Pigs, was trying to produce a full-length motion picture cartoon feature. Amid much shaking of heads, the Hollywood pundits immediately dubbed the project “Disney’s Folly.” It was rumored to be costing millions… and who would sit through a feature length cartoon anyway?
In December of 1937 at the Carthay Circle Theatre in Los Angeles, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was premiered, not without trepidation on the part of Walt Disney and his entire staff, for this was an all-or-nothing gamble. The triumph which Walt Disney and his fellow workers enjoyed that night will certainly never be forgotten by them, and the box office bonanza which Snow White proved to be, became the financial basis for Walt Disney Productions’ future growth into the entertainment institution it is now.
SNOW WHITE’s success was not confined to the United States. The film has been a box office smash hit all over the world and foreign language versions have been made in French, German, Italian, Swedish, Danish, Finnish, Dutch, Polish, Czechoslovakian, Spanish, Portuguese and Japanese.
SNOW WHITE has been before the public in the United States four times. It was first released in 1938, and then reissued in 1944, 1952 and 1958. SNOW WHITE has also been reissued all over the world, where it always does fantastic box office business.
When Walt Disney entered the record business in 1956, one of the first albums to be released was the original sound-track of SNOW WHITE. Sales of this record through the years since then have been tremendous ; this, despite the fact that the music was initially recorded in 1936 on optical film, which with its high noise level makes it seem archaic by today’s recording standards.
There is no question but that the score of SNOW WHITE is the greatest of any Disney motion picture. No less than six of the songs were on the hit parade in 1938 and many of the tunes have become best selling standards. In view of the advent of magnetic tape for recording, the Disney organization felt that it was time for a brand new recording of Walt Disney’s most famous score. Tutti Camarata, musical director of Walt Disney’s record activities, assembled an orchestra for this recording made up of the finest musicians in Hollywood. Soloists are well known artists but contracts with other record companies prevent us using their names. The master of this record was made at Sunset Sound Recorders, now acclaimed as one of the finest recording studios in Los Angeles.
A word about Camarata
Tutti Camarata has been Musical Director and Artist and Repertoire chief for Walt Disney’s record operation since its inception. His musical career began early when he played lead trumpet with big name bands by night and studied at Juilliard and the Institute of Musical Art by day. This unusual ability to perform successfully in the jazz and popular field and the light classical and classical field has continued to this day.

Track listing

Side 1:
- Snow White Overture (4:03)
- I’m Wishing (2:59) by Norma Zimmer
- One Song (2:58) by Bill Lee
- With a Smile and a Song (2:34) by Norma Zimmer
- Whistle While You Work (2:11)
- Buddle Uddle Um Dum (2:01)
Side 2:
- Heigh Ho, Heigh Ho (2:11) by Bill Kanady & Bill Lee
- Prayer at Evening (2:35)
- The Silly Song (2:08)
- Some Day My Prince Will Come (3:08) by Norma Zimmer
- One Song (1:28) by Bill Lee
- Snow White Finale (4:12)
