Franklyn Baur may best be known as a member of
The Revelers, an extremely popular group of the 1920s (four singers and a pianist). Members of the group had been recording as The Shannon Four when pianist Frank Black recruited Baur and wrote new, jazz-oriented arrangements. The group's new sound, highlighted by Baur's enthusiastic vocals (embellished with his own syncopated effects and punctuations) revitalized the group, which soared in popularity. (A 1928 estimate by Victor Records reported that The Revelers typically sold 71,900 copies of any given record, while the label's other vocal stars sold as few as 10,740 copies.) The Revelers with Baur also sang under numerous pseudonyms and sponsorships. The Revelers, with Baur unobtrusively conducting the group with rhythmic hand gestures, appeared in three pioneer movie musicals, filmed by
Vitaphone in 1927. Only the first one is available for viewing today:
The Revelers (1927), recently restored by The Vitaphone Project, is a one-reel short showing the group performing "Mine," "Dinah," and "No Foolin'." Due to the limitations of the primitive sound production, the group was forced to perform the entire nine-minute set in one continuous, uninterrupted take, with the camera in a fixed position. The second short, filmed the same day and also titled
The Revelers, awaits restoration. It features another three songs: "I'm in Love Again", "De Gaspel Train", and "
Nola". The third Vitaphone reel, yet again titled
The Revelers, was held back from release until October 1928. The short features "Sing", "Just Around the Corner", and "Oh! Miss Hannah".
Abel Green of
Variety reviewed the third Vitaphone short and gave Franklyn Baur a glowing notice: "Baur, by the manner of direction and incidental expression, aside from his vocal prowess, is a corking talking-screen bet. The tenor last season was in a Broadway musical and now impresses anew for the screen. He is of the
Conrad Nagel-
Wally Reid personality class." The film had been produced in 1927 but held back from release until October 1928, by which time Franklyn Baur had already left The Revelers to pursue a solo career. ==As soloist==