Helping the 1130 Detroit-born conductor Richard Hayman will do pops arrangements for the Israel Philharmonic. C L SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to The Jewish News Richard Hayman, who conducted the Meadow Brook Music Festival pops concert last Sunday, is plan- ning a trip to Is- rael. He will be working with the Israeli Philhar- monic Orchestra, arranging, con- ducting, perform- ing and recording. "The orchestra wants to start a pops cata- logue of its own and develop a record series," explained the non-Jewish maestro, whose conducting career began in Detroit. "Because I've been the principal arranger for the Boston Pops since 1949, they wanted me to do that type of music and sought me out. "I'm very anxious to go there, and I hope it will be in the fall or early spring. It should take two to four weeks." Mr. Hayman, 72, divides his time traveling from one concert to another and being principal pops conductor of the St. Louis and Grand Rapids symphony orchestras and the Calgary Philharmon- ic Orchestra. His Meadow Brook pro- gram included big band hits of the '40s. They will be among those Mr. Hayman has planned for Israel, where he also will concentrate on Broadway show tunes, mo- tion picture themes, light Richard Hayman: Arranging in Israel. classical pieces and folk music. Although the arranger/ composer/conductor has ap- peared in many countries, this will be his first trip to Israel. "Every program I do is especially tailored to the place I'm going or to whatever the management or audience requests," said the New York-based entertainer, who can find himself schedul- ed for a different city every week over long stretches of time. "Then, of course, the songs have special meanings for dif- ferent people because they are reminiscent of events earlier in their lives." Whenever Mr. Hayman returns to the Motor City, he is reminded of his start in show business. At age 18, he began touring the country with the Borrah Minevitch Harmonica Rascals, and his third professional appearance was at the Fox Theatre in 1938. For the past few years, he has been appearing at the Fox each Monday before Thanksgiving to present a holiday program in conjunc- tion with the lighting of the Christmas tree downtown, which has personal signifi- cance in terms of his Chris- tian upbringing. "When I was in school, every kid carried a harmoni- ca," Mr. Hayman recalled. "I am self-taught and just kept going after it." Hired as a musician for the Harmonica Rascals, he soon was writing music for the ensemble. After arranging for performers in Las Vegas and Hollywood, he was asked by MGM to orchestrate for movies, later lending his talents to other studios and in 1960 getting his own star along Hollywood's Walk of Fame. His most successful recor- ding, "Ruby," which renewed interest in the harmonica, was from the movie Ruby Gentry. Of the compositions he has written, his favorite is "Dansero," a collaboration with Lee Daniels and Sol Parker. While pops conductor for the Detroit Symphony from the late '60s into the '80s, he worked with Motown Re- cords, an association that followed his arranging and performing for many other labels. "The orchestra is very flex- ible," said Mr. Hayman, who did whole arrangements and conducted symphony musi- cians for recordings made locally. "It can play any style of music from Beethoven to boogie-woogie to rock and rap. "We did commercial tapes and. regular records, some- times as backup artists for singers. I remember working with Stevie Wonder and Lit- tle Richard. "On a lot of these records, they used strings, and they were always culled from the Detroit Symphony." His most recent recordings are on 50 compact discs, pro- duced, for economic reasons, in Czechoslovakia and Poland for a company based in Hong Kong. "They have the same types THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 67 tiL