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| Gordon Jenkins | Primary Artist, Piano, Conductor |
| Stuart Foster | Vocals |
| Gordon Jenkins & His Orchestra | Performing Ensemble |
| Bob Grabeau | Vocals |
| Bobby London | Vocals |
| Shirley Mitchell | Vocals |
| Beverly Mahr | Vocals |
| Bill Lee | Vocals |
| Elliott Lewis | Vocals |
| Tabby Calvin | Vocals |
| Ralph Brewster Singers | Vocals |
| Bob London | Vocals |
| Pitch Pipes | Vocal Ensemble |
| Gordon Jenkins | Composer |
| Bobby Naret | Composer |
| Tony Velona | Composer |
| Gun Finlay | Composer |
| Roy Alfred | Composer |
| Al Frisch | Composer |
| Robin Cherry | Remastering |
| Craig Hewitt | Graphic Design |
| Jessie Barnes | Composer |
| Chuck Sweeney | Text |
| Bruce Jenkins | Liner Notes |
| Mark "Moose" Charlap | Composer |
| Johnny Jr. Owens | Liner Notes |
Editorial Reviews
All Music Guide
Gordon Jenkins' Manhattan Tower is a musical milestone in several respects. It is a unique blend of elements, part pop orchestral, almost classical suite, and part radio-styled narrative, part musical, and part operetta. It began life in 1946 as a four-part suite on a 78 rpm set of Decca Records, featuring a small cast headed by actor Elliott Lewis. This modestly ambitious set took hold in the hearts of New Yorkers and earned Jenkins the Key to the City in 1950, presented to him after a semi-staged version of Manhattan Tower appeared on Talk of the Town, an early version of Ed Sullivan's televised weekly variety show. Manhattan Tower, with its implication of romance and its lush and tasteful evocation of a kind of ...