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Louis Alter (June 18, 1902, Haverhill, Massachusetts - November 5, 1980, New York City, New York) was an American pianist, songwriter and composer. Alter was 13 when he began playing piano in theaters showing silent films. He studied at the New England Conservatory under the tutelage of Stuart Mason. Alter toured in vaudeville as the accompanist for headliners Irène Bordoni and Nora Bayes for whom he worked from 1924 until her death in 1928.[1] Since he had previously written some songs for Broadway shows, Alter decided to concentrate on songwriting after Bayes' death. His first hit was "Manhattan Serenade" (1929), originally an instrumental that later became the theme music of the popular Easy Aces radio program. In 1929, Alter moved to Hollywood, where he wrote songs for films, beginning with The Hollywood Review of 1929, and he continued to provide piano accompaniment for various singers, including Beatrice Lillie and Helen Morgan. His hits include "My Kinda Love," "You Turned the Tables on Me," "Nina Never Knew," "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans" (for the 1947 New Orleans), "Blue Shadows" and "Rainbow on the River." He wrote "A Melody for the Sky" and "Twilight on the Trail" for The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1936). In 1942 "Manhattan Serenade" once again became a hit after Harold Adamson added lyrics. Alter also composed large-scale pieces for piano and orchestra. In later years, he lived in New York and maintained a summer residence on Fire Island. Tw
The Complete Mercury/Clef Recordings
Contrasts
Art Tatum / Live Performances 1934 - 1956 Vol. 1
International Swing Party
Album of Manhattan
The Golden Age of Light Music: Great American Light Orchestras
Bonanza
Misery, a Tribute to Billie Holiday
SHILKRET, Nathaniel: Skyscrapers Symphonic Jazz (1928-1932)
Stephane Grappellis Greatest Hits
The Golden Age of Light Music: War and Peace - Light Music of the 1940s
I Remember Old Russia