Who is Peter Tevis: Part II

Last month, I posted a message from
Bob Cumbow
regarding American singer/songwriter Peter Tevis, who influenced the sound of the Spaghetti Western through his association with Italian composer Ennio Morricone. Bob forwarded the post to Peter, who responds with his own take on the story. With
his permission, I am posting it here.

*****

Here's the true story of "A Fistful of Dollars." I was working at
the Teatro De Opera as a stereo stage manager at about 24 years
of age in 1961, when I was introduced to an Italian lady who had established herself by helping singers get started. She made an appointment for me to go to RCA, to meet Pierrot Ricordi. I remember putting my foot on his desk and singing my own rendition of "Pastures of Plenty." He offered me a contract of
two singles. He also made an appointment for me to see Morricone. We cut the record and I was lost for a while.

At this time, Sergio Leone needed a score for his film Per Pugno di Dolari, better known to us as A Fistful of Dollars, and he didn't like any of the ones Morricone had written so far. While trying to find something that
was "different" and could work for Leone's film, my single "Pastures of Plenty" happened to get played. At
this point I had developed a bombastic way of playing guitar. From what I've heard, when Leone heard the single he cried out, "That's
it!" and thus was the score to A Fistful of Dollars born.

At about this time, I went to the movies in Italy and heard my song played as the background music for the opening sequence. Except, they had removed my voice and the lyrics to the song, and replaced them with the whistling we hear when we see the
film today. I went to RCA claiming that I was going to file a suit, but according to them there's an Italian clause that says "The injured party must gain something from the other party" and
so they asked me what I wanted. I said I'd like to make an album with Morricone, and so I got my wish and he and I made the Fistful LP record. My original "Pastures of Plenty" was suppressed, otherwise that first single would have appeared on the LP.

As naïve as I was, I had no idea that it would become one
of the biggest films in cinema history. I felt that Ennio was
under pressure to produce a cheap soundtrack as he had no
idea how the movie would do either. I often wonder what happened to all those 45's containing my "Pastures of Plenty."



Endnote: Thanks to Bob for the original message and to Peter
for the follow-up. For more on Morricone, I recommend "Water Drops on Burning Rocks" in the 07/06 Sight & Sound. About the song, Guido Bonsaver writes, "A couple of notes from the whistled melody for Fistful of Dollars (1964) brings the entire tune to mind, but a second listening reveals the piece's sophistication. While the light-hearted tone chimes with Leone's demystification of the Western tradition, the use of non-orchestral sounds such
as whipcracks and church bells demonstrates Morricone's own interest in experimentation." Image from Wikipedia.
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