Saturday, July 16, 2011

Clippings

No music to listen to today, just some interesting advertisements I found online in the Baltimore Afro-American...






...and that's just scratching the surface. There are hundreds of record ads, personal appearance plugs, pictures, and articles out there.

Then I spotted this sad news item:

...it was buried under a large (unrelated) picture on the front page of the 1 January 1927 issue.

I was shocked...the name "Eleanora Gough"
(misspelled on the article) was familiar...and this website explains why http://www.victoriansecrets.net/billiebalto.html . There's even a picture of 219 South Durham Street as it appears today.

I can't add any comment here...it's just sad that the first real newspaper article about Billie Holiday has to be something this awful.

I'll have something more cheerful next time around.

PS. I suppose I should mention this website http://www.accuracyproject.org/cbe-Holiday,Billie.html, which gives the actual information from Billie's birth certificate...she was born "Elinore Harris," although some early documents give other spellings of her first name. "Fagan" was the maiden name of Sadie (Billie's mother), which explains why I usually found that name in Billie's biographies, although "Gough" was in some listings)...Philip Gough married Sadie five years after Billie's birth.




Saturday, July 09, 2011

A dozen silly sides (from Harmony and Diva)

I'm finally getting around to writing again...

I've been quite busy with side projects and have had some weird problems with my scanner. It took the following picture

and promptly gave up the ghost. I've deleted, downloaded and reinstalled new software and drivers for the scanner (several times), but nothing seems to work.

So...I'll use the one picture I have for the time being. Someday, more scans will appear.

This odd old Diva 78 was part of a recent project. I was digitizing some old Columbia dime-store material...sides published under the Harmony and Diva labels (and Velvet Tone, too...but the sides included here aren't on that label). While I was recording these sides, I was struck by how many of them were of silly little novelty songs that few people remember. I thought I'd share some of the sillier ones with you...

Let's start off with the battered Diva above, shall we?

150615-3 Kitty From Kansas City Milt Coleman Diva 3185-G
http://www.4shared.com/audio/pPa8aR9L/Milt_Coleman_-_Kitty_From_Kans.html
150616-3 Around The Corner Milt Coleman
Diva 3185-G
http://www.4shared.com/audio/xOZKW33X/Milt_Coleman_-_Around_The_Corn.html
NYC, 30 June 1930: Milt Coleman, vocal; unknown band.


There's an amusing film clip of Rudy Vallee singing Kitty From Kansas City here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GHKElE2NH8.

The above pair of sides are the only electrically-recorded songs in this post. The next ten were recorded using the old acoustic method.


Here are four really odd songs by Marion Try Slaughter, better known as Vernon Dalhart. Dalhart recorded under several pseudonyms, "Al Craver" seems to have been used exclusively for Columbia's 15000-D Old Time Tunes (country) series, and the Harmony labels used Mack Allen, especially on the novelty numbers...like these:

147055-5 The Frog Song Mack Allen (Vernon Dalhart) Harmony 783-H
http://www.4shared.com/audio/nmQCzXfm/Mack_Allen_-_The_Frog_Song.html
147056-4 Sing Hallelujah Mack Allen (Vernon Dalhart)
Harmony 783-H
http://www.4shared.com/audio/2WhEYiwc/Mack_Allen_-_Sing_Hallelujah.html
NYC, 4 October 1928: Vernon Dalhart, vocal & harmonica; Adelyne Hood, vocal; possibly William Carlino, banjo; unknown, guitar.

148443-1 Ain't Gonna Grieve My Mind Any More Mack Allen (Vernon Dalhart) Harmony 903-H

http://www.4shared.com/audio/5UyRaD5f/Mack_Allen_-_Aint_Gonna_Grieve.html

148444-1 King Of Borneo Mack Allen (Vernon Dalhart) Harmony 903-H
http://www.4shared.com/audio/1yKw8t00/Mack_Allen_-_King_of_Borneo.html

NYC 16 April 1929: Vernon Dalhart. vocal; Adelyne Hood, vocal & piano; unknown, fiddle; unknown, banjo; unknown (Dalhart?), whistling.


I can imagine some of my audience wondering why Harmony was still recording acoustically as late as 1929 (most of the other labels switched over to microphones by 1926 or so). It all goes back to Harmony's parent company, Columbia. In 1923, they started releasing records using their "New Process" of recording and pressing. In 1925, the New Process was already obsolete, replaced by the new syste
m installed by Western Electric. So, rather than completely scrapping the expensive equipment that was less than two years old, the Powers That Be (er, Were) decided that the older equipment could be used to produce cheaper records for the five-and-ten-cent stores. That's why almost all of the Harmony/Diva/VelvetTone records were acoustic (although those by Annette Hanshaw and a few other artists were all electric). Finally, they switched over to electrical recording exclusively in late 1929.

144037-3 Fifty Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong Joe Candullo Orch Diva 2409-G

http://www.4shared.com/audio/PmA0yT7l/Joe_Candullo_-_Fifty_Million_F.html

144035-2
Go Wash An Elephant (If You Wanna Do Something Big) Joe Candullo Orch Diva 2409-G
http://www.4shared.com/audio/eUrwqp0P/Joe_Candullo_-_Go_Wash_An_Elep.html

NYC, 18 April 1927: Joe Candullo, violin & conductor; Izzy Friedman, clarinet & saxes; others (2 trumpets; trombone, 2 saxes; rhythm section) unknown; Irving
Kaufman, vocal.

The vocal on Frenchmen was credited to "Pierre LaFond," but it was our old friend Irving Kaufman. I rather like the opening quote of Gounod's Funeral March For a Marionette (the theme from Alfred Hitchcock Presents) at the beginning of Elephant.

One of the most popular downloads from This Humble Blog is The Whoopee Hat Brigade by The Six Jumping Jacks, a (contractual) pseudonym for Harry Reser's band. They specialized in performing "nut jazz," silly songs with hot solos and strange instrumental effects...and most of their sides have vocals by drummer Tom Stacks.

This pair has Red Nichols sitting in:


142240-1 I'm Just Wild About Animal Crackers Seven Wild
Men (Harry Reser) Harmony 193-H
http://www.4shared.com/audio/Fj8YKv7o/Seven_Wild_Men_-_Im_Just_Wild_.html
142241-2 The Lunatic's Lullaby Seven Wild Men (Harry Reser) Harmony 193-H
http://www.4shared.com/audio/yaLigWq3/Seven_Wild_Men_-_The_Lunatics_.html

NYC 24 May 1926: Harry Reser, banjo & conductor; Red Nichols, cornet; Sam
Lewis, trombone; Larry Abbott. clarinet & alto sax; Norman Yorke, tenor sax; Jimmy Johnston, bass sax; Bill Wirgis, piano; Tom Stacks, drums & vocal.

Ken Gillum sings and plays another version of The Lunatic's Lullaby (complete with the verse and a second chorus!) in a 1931 The Two Daffodils radio show here....

http://randsesotericotr.podbean.com/2008/04/15/the-two-daffodils-pgm-2080/

...listen to the whole show! It's a hoot!

The Rust discographies give a generic personnel listing for the following...it's probably similar to the last record, but Nichols isn't present. Larry Abbott's comb-and-paper is quite audible, though...

143265-2 (Cock-a-Doodle I'm Off My Noodle) My Baby's Back The Night Club Orch (Harry Reser) Harmony 345-H
http://www.4shared.com/audio/mAKU9tk1/The_Night_Club_Orch_-__Cock-a-.html

143267-3 Oh How She Could Play A Ukulele The Night Club Orch (Harry Reser) Harmony 345-H
http://www.4shared.com/audio/NRVMXsiI/The_Night_Club_Orch_-_Oh_How_S.html

NYC, 6 January 1927: Harry Reser, banjo & conductor; featuring Larry Abbott,
comb & reeds; Tom Stacks, drums & vocal.

Well, that's it for now...hope these sides tickled your funny bone.

Oh, I made a CD of these (and a few other amusing American records) and gave it to the British Ambassador of Mirth and Merriment, Neil Innes.
I hope he and his lovely wife enjoyed some of it between gigs.

He was on an extensive tour of the States and Canada. His records (especially with the Bonzos and Rutles) have been favorites of mine for the last 35 years or so...the disc was a token of thanks for the many smiles and belly laughs this gentleman has bestowed.

That's the Ego-Warrior salute, by the way...

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Seven Wonders and Seven Wonderful Sides (and some Yogi as well!)

We in the northeast have been hit fairly hard by Ol' Man Winter this year...we've had three or four substantial snowfalls already (there are still Snowbankzillas here and there two weeks after the last one), and the temperature often hovers in the single digits (Fahrenheit, that is).

When the winter doldrums set in, I like to dig out upbeat music from warmer climes.

Here's a ten-inch LP that followed me home from a yard sale a few months ago:
It's a demonstration record for the 1956 Admiral hi-fi system...and it's also a soundtrack from the Lowell Thomas Cinerama spectacular Seven Wonders Of the World (that's right...it's two! two! two LPs in one! Sorry. it doesn't have a drop of Retsyn.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8zwnXjIjPM&feature=related should explain the reference to an old Certs commercial to non-Yanks.). There are short snippets from (among others) a Watusi ceremony, an Indian wedding, and an Italian tarantella.

SEVEN WONDERS OF THE WORLD Various artists Admiral Hi-Fi Demonstration Record (unnumbered)
1. "Metropolitan Rhapsody", introduction
2. Train Effect
3.
French Can-Can
4.
Percussion Effects
5.
"Genghis Khan" Indian Sequence
6.
Native Elephant School
7.
Native Indian Music and Wedding Procession
9.
Tarantella
9.
Japanese Percussion Sequence
10.
Watusi Native Dance
11. Finale - "Metropolitan Rhapsody"
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=KOJB21DP

All in all, it's a pleasant fifteen-minute excursion to Somewhere (Anywhere!) Besides New England.

There was something maddeningly familiar (to me, anyway) about the (anonymous) announcer's voice. After the third or fourth intro, I realized that he was Hanna-Barbera voiceman Don Messick.

(A few years after this LP was recorded, Messick did the voice-over for some educational film strips made by the Bowman company...they were probably made for some high school auto shop course. I have three or four of the seven-inch soundtrack discs. Messick is credited properly on those labels. I suppose I could post one or two of them if there's enough intere$t.)

Messick did the voice for Yogi Bear's nemesis Ranger Smith and his little pal Boo-Boo, too. And Boo-Boo, Yogi, Ranger Smith and company are all in the following LP that features soundtracks from four Yogi Bear cartoons. I find it a little unsettling when an unfamiliar announcer's voice (Howard Berk, who also wrote the commentary) describes a scene that doesn't translate well to the audio-only world. Still, it's fun to hear these voices (and music and sound effects too) again. And I've always liked Daws Butler...he's also on that Jim Backus Christmas 45 I posted back in 2007.

YOGI BEAR AND BOO BOO Colpix CP-205
1. Big Brave Bear
2. Robin Hood Yogi
3. Brainy Bear
4. Buzzin' Bear
1961: Daws Butler and Don Messick, voices; Howard Berk, announcer; stock music (by John Seely)
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=45917YRD

The front cover had all kinds of extra "decoration" left by a previous owner...

...which came off quickly with a paper towel. The LP itself is, to steal a Yogi-ism, cleaner than the average kiddie record.

"Boo-boos" can also mean little mistakes. Hmmm...I can think of lots of this other type of Boo-Boos on record labels...the info on the label has something wrong with it. I think I'll post a couple of them now.

The boo-boos I'm listing here are real honest-to-goodness mistakes...I'm ignoring items that have the wrong label pasted on the record, or records deliberately issued under pseudonymous credits (usually for contractual reasons)...

This one's a bit weird...it's a classic 78 (well-played by the original owner) by the Benny Goodman Sextet. On the label, there's a credit to trombonist George Auld.
Of course, Auld played tenor sax.

In the Russell and Hicks BG On The Record, they report (slightly edited for clarity):
The initial Columbia release, 36099, erroneously credits George Auld with a trombone, not tenor sax. Later releases corrected this mistake, but George had some fun with it while it was current.

CO 29942-2 A Smo-o-o-oth One Benny Goodman Sextet Columbia 36099
http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/1CEsi-QA/Benny_Goodman_Sextet_-_A_Smo-o.html
CO 29943-1 Good Enough To Keep Benny Goodman Sextet Columbia 36099 http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/V1LF-to4/Benny_Goodman_Sextet_-_Good_En.html
NYC, 13 March 1941: Benny Goodman, clarinet; Cootie Williams, trumpet; George Auld, tenor sax (not trombone); Johnny Guarnieri, piano; Charlie Christian, guitar; Art Bernstein, bass; Dave Tough,
drums.

Of course, Good Enough To Keep was quickly retitled Air Mail Special, but that's a different story.

I recently found this pleasant, if not too exciting country record, which was credited to the wrong singer completely!

There really was a "Doc" Roberts who recorded for Gennett and Champion.
For some unknown reason, Decca, who revived Champion in the mid-1930s, reissued two Dick Parman sides, but put them out under Roberts's name!

14492-A Rock All Our Babies To Sleep "Doc" Roberts (actually Dick Parman)
Champion 45099
http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/_etk6pg3/Dick_Parman_-_Rock_All_Our_Bab.html
14493-B She'll Be Coming 'Round The Mountain "Doc" Roberts (actually Dick Parman)
Champion 45099
http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/erIMOtTY/Dick_Parman_-_Shell_Be_Comin_R.html
Richmond, Indiana, 1 December 1928: Dick Parman. vocal & guitar; Asa Martin, harmonica.

To be fair to the Decca Champion folks, Asa Martin often played harmonica on records by the real "Doc" Roberts...perhaps that's the reason for the confusion.
More Boo-boos some other time.

In the same little stack of 78s which contained the Roberts/Parman record, I found this very unusual item:

Most Publix records had black and gold labels and drew from Columbia's Harmony/Diva/Velvet Tone dime-store stock, but this is obviously quite different!

This Ballyhoo record was sent to Publix theatres in 1929 to advertise Paramount's new feature, Innocents of Paris, featuring Maurice Chevalier. Columbia must have balked at the idea of using any of the soundtrack featuring Chevalier, who was a Victor artist. So they had Irving Kaufman, the usual vocalist for the Harmony labels to sing and announce as well!

176015-1 Innocents of Paris Ballyhoo Uncredited artist Publix unnumbered

NYC 1929: Irving Kaufman (uncredited), vocal and announcement; studio orchestra.
http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/8BRbxXwo/Uncredited__Irving_Kaufman__-_.html
Note the matrix is in that special 17xxxx Personal series Columbia used for paying clients...that Bernie Cummings/Humming Bird Mills Christmas record I posted in 2007 is another.

And the same recording is on the flip side.


Here's a side for Dave Whitney, local trumpeter/vocalist extraordinaire, who also runs a fine blog http://petekellysblog.blogspot.com/ . I know he's a fan of the Three Stooges (I confess that I am fond of some of their short films as well)...I think he'll like this record.

It's the only record that Leroy Shield recorded under his own name. Shield is best remembered for composing and recording all that wonderfully familiar music used in the Hal Roach comedies (Our Gang, Laurel & Hardy, Charley Chase, etc.).

The vocalist on the otherwise snoozy Big Trail is Bud Jamison, who was a regular in the early Stooges shorts. The flip side, the mildly un-PC Sing-Song Girl (James Blackstone is vocalist this time) was covered around thirty years ago by R. Crumb's Cheap Suit Serenaders.

61027-4 Song of the Big Trail Leroy Shield/Victor Hollywood Orchestra
Victor 22548
http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/mg6Lc1pj/Leroy_Shield_-_Song_of_the_Big.html?sId=19eM3S45jIUOzucc
61026-4 Sing-Song Girl Leroy Shield/Victor Hollywood Orchestra Victor 22548
http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/Ej8AJfDr/Leroy_Shield_-_Sing_Song_Girl_.html
Hollywood, 26 September 1930: Leroy Shield, conductor: unknown personnel; James Blackstone or Bud Jamison, vocals.

That's all folks...

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Christmas With The Beers Family

It's Yuletide again, and this year I've been quite busy with all kinds of time-consuming personal stuff (which I won't bore you with)...I did have a little time to digitize a nice holiday-related album for all of yez...

Here's a pleasant (and unfairly forgotten) LP from 1965 or so:

There is hardly any info out there on the Beers Family, other than the standard online biography:
The Beers Family was a traditional folk group active between 1958 and 1972, led by Bob Beers (b. 1920 -- d. May 26, 1972) and featuring his wife Evelyne and their daughter Martha (who joined in 1964). They played traditional Scots-Irish music on traditional instruments like the psaltery. In 1966, they began hosting the Fox Hollow Festival on their farm in the Adirondacks. Bob Beers was killed in an automobile accident in 1972, but his wife and daughter continued to perform and to stage the festival.


Also, Martha (usually known as Marty) was married to folk musician Eric Nagler from 1968-77, and the Fox Hollow Festival ran from 1966-1980. Evelyne Beers died in October 2009.

The liner notes offer a little more info, mostly about the songs:

Christmas With The Beers Family Columbia MS 6335
1965: Robert, Evelyne & Martha Beers, vocals; Robert Beers, psaltery; others unidentified.
1. Three Little Drummers
2. O Holy Night - Cantique de Noel
3. Christmas Hornpipe
4. La Virgen Lava Panales
5. The Holly Bears a Berry
6. What Child Is This?
7. Cherry Tree Carol
8. Away by the Manger So Mild
9. The Seven Joys of Mary
10. Mary's Little Boy Child
11. The Peace Carol
12. Silent Night, Holy Night
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=3RX5MB6D
The Beers Family's Away by the Manger So Mild is a reworked Pharaoh's Daughter...also known as Little Moses on a 1928 Carter Family record. I rather like its almost limerick-like meter...

I had hoped to show a YouTube clip of the Beers Family in action, but apparently any film of them has been yanked by the Powers That Be. I hope the Powers don't yank this album too...only a couple of songs from the LP show up on a Beers compilation CD.

I think this album should be reissued...until that time comes, enjoy it as mp3s.

And Happy Holiday Season to one and all...

Friday, November 19, 2010

Songs from a fine concert...


The other day (6 November), the Circle of Friends Coffeehouse in Franklin, Massachusetts hosted a terrific concert...folk/roots music legends Jim Kweskin and Geoff Muldaur were the headliners.

If, by some sad twist of fate, you don't know them, or the fact that they played together in Kweskin's Jug Band forty-something years ago, here they are in 1967 performing a song familiar to Sanctum readers (from their enigmatically titled LP See Reverse Side For Title):

Never Swat A Fly Jim Kweskin Jug Band
Vanguard VSD-79243
(See Reverse Side For Title)
http://www.4shared.com/audio/EgtezIhG/Jim_Kweskin_Jug_Band_-_Never_S.html
1967: featuring Geoff Muldaur, lead vocal; with Jim Kweskin, Maria D'Amato (Muldaur), Bill Keith, Fritz Richmond.

After the show, I talked for a minute with both musicians, and told them about my blog, mentioning that it had two rare versions of Never Swat A Fly... forgetting that the links to those records I originally posted in 2007 were down (to make room for newer stuff).

Oops!

Those songs are re-posted below:

According to Geoff, the band learned the song from this record:

64608-2 Never Swat A Fly McKinney's Cotton Pickers
Victor 23020
http://www.4shared.com/audio/tgPY4hZ3/McKinneys_-_Never_Swat_a_Fly.html
NYC, 4 November 1930: Don Redman, conductor; Joe Smith, Rex Stewart, Langston Curl, trumpets; Ed Cuffee, trombone; Don Redman, Benny Carter, Edward Inge, Prince Robinson, reeds; Todd Rhodes, piano; Dave Wilborn, banjo; Billy Taylor, tuba; Cuba Austin, drums; Bill Coty, vocal.

The clarinet soloist is a young Benny Carter.

The song came from a rather strange 1930 science-fiction/comedy/musical film, Just Imagine. I got a copy of the film a while back. Frank Albertson and Marjorie White do their version of Never Swat A Fly here...splices and all:

Never Swat A Fly Frank Albertson & Marjorie White Just Imagine soundtrack
http://www.4shared.com/audio/4gWRPzbu/JUST_IMAGINE_Soundtrack_-__Nev.html
1930;

These two versions, from rare Brunswick-recorded radio discs, are reposted especially for Geoff and Jim, with many thanks for a great show:

XE-35018 (excerpt) Never Swat A Fly The Mirth Quakers
from Mirth Quakers, show P, part 4
http://www.4shared.com/audio/kqCgRaOe/Mirth_Quakers_-_Never_Swat_A_F.html
NYC ca. 4 November 1930: Jerry Macy, Norman Brokenshire, vocal; probably Murray Kelner, violin; others unknown.

Notice how they changed the lyrics from "with you" to "with Sue!" not that anything's wrong with that!

XE-35335 (excerpt) Never Swat A Fly Irving Kaufman
from Novelty Special, show J, part 2
http://www.4shared.com/audio/K2LtgxBR/Irving_Kaufman_-_Never_Swat_a_.html
NYC 7 November 1930: Irving Kaufman, vocal; personnel uncertain, but my guess is that the band contains Mike Mosiello, trumpet; Andy Sannella, alto sax; and (definitely) Joe Venuti, violin.

Kaufman muffs the words "Here is the motto," somehow getting it "Here is the mos' moto." It's interesting that Brunswick didn't do a retake. They probably figured that the record would be played once over the air, and that would be it...the records were supposed to be returned or destroyed.

Kweskin and Muldaur didn't swat flies that night, but they did perform a whole bunch of other fine stuff. I think I'll post the original versions of some of those other songs:

Here's some fine hot fiddlin' by the legendary hellraiser Prince Albert Hunt:

400435-A Blues In A Bottle Prince Albert Hunt's Texas Ramblers OKeh 45230
http://www.4shared.com/audio/jDydUtx1/Prince_Albert_Hunt_-_Blues_In_.html
San Antonio, 8 March 1928: Archie "Prince" Albert Hunt, fiddle & vocal; unknown, guitar.
Frank Stokes and Dan Sane recorded several sides as the Beale Street Sheiks for Paramount...Kweskin and Muldaur played two Stokes songs that night (Downtown Blues was the other):

4773-1 Sweet To Mama The Beale Street Sheiks (Stokes and Sane) Paramount 12531
http://www.4shared.com/audio/cF1FbBoQ/Beale_Street_Sheiks_-_Sweet_To.html
Chicago, ca. August 1927: Frank Stokes, guitar & vocal; Dan Sane, guitar.

The Jug Band recorded this Leroy Carr song on that See Reverse Side For Title album
C-6092- Papa's On the House Top Leroy Carr & Scrapper Blackwell Vocalion 1593 http://www.4shared.com/audio/3tjK7FV4/Leroy_Carr_-__Papas_On_The_Hou.html
Chicago, 9 September 1930: Leroy Carr, piano & vocal; Scrapper Blackwell, guitar.

Poultry in motion!!
The Chicken Mississippi John Hurt Vanguard VSD 79248 (The Immortal Mississippi John Hurt)
1966: Mississippi John Hurt, vocal & guitar.

Oddly enough, two of the songs performed that night were originally recorded in Johnson City, Tennessee on the same day, probably within minutes of each other! The first was the classic version of Cuckoo by Doc Watson's mentor, Clarence (Tom) Ashley:

149251-2 The Coo-Coo Bird Clarence Ashley Columbia 15489-D
http://www.4shared.com/audio/zGYxrAmE/Clarence_Ashley_-_Coo_Coo_Bird.html
Johnson City, TN, 23 October 1929: Clarence (Tom) Ashley, vocal & banjo.

There is apparently nothing known at all about the Bentley Boys, other than the fact they recorded only two sides on the same day (and nothing else)...

149254-2 Down On Penny's Farm The Bentley Boys
Columbia 15565-D
http://www.4shared.com/audio/MZUAvfnp/Bentley_Boys_-__Down_On_Pennys.html
Johnson City, TN, 23 October 1929: Unknown, banjo, guitar & vocal.

Folding money (and not some weird tarnish) is the subject of the next goodie, by the great Memphis bluesman, Furry Lewis.
42425-2 I Will Turn Your Money Green Furry Lewis Victor V-38506
http://www.4shared.com/audio/FwvM-cqP/Furry_Lewis_-_I_Will_Turn_Your.html
Memphis, 28 August 1928: Walter (Furry) Lewis, vocal & guitar

Oh, did you ever see the Burt Reynolds comedy W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings? Furry's featured fairly prominently...

The perennial folkie favorite Fishing Blues was in the playlist too...
C-2003- Fishing Blues Henry Thomas ("Ragtime Texas") Vocalion 1249
http://www.4shared.com/audio/OtLT92bP/Henry_Thomas_-_Fishing_Blues.html
Chicago, 13 June 1928: Henry Thomas,
vocal, quills (panpipes) & guitar.

I should mention that I also thoroughly enjoyed the opening act, Eric Royer's one-man band. At one point in the set, he asked for requests. I yelled out "Pretty Polly!" Eric's off-the-cuff rendition was one of the best I've ever heard.

There are several recorded versions of this old murder ballad...the one by Dock Boggs is great, but my favorite is the one recorded by B. F. Shelton.

39736-2 Pretty Polly B. F. Shelton Victor 35838
http://www.4shared.com/audio/kb3uARBW/B_F_Shelton_-_Pretty_Polly.html
Bristol, TN. 29 July 1927: B. F. Shelton, vocal & banjo.

If you noticed that this performance seemed a little longer than the average 3-minute 78, you're right. It came out on a 12-inch 78...

By the way, Polly is descended from a much longer ballad called The Gosport Tragedy, first published around 1767...in the longer version, Polly is pregnant, the murderer goes to sea and is followed by Polly's ghost. The Library of Congress has an early broadside of the ballad:

After the show I told Eric that I thought the old Alfred Karnes song We Shall All Be Reunited might be a good end-of-set piece. It would make a good encore, too...

47234-2 We Shall All Be Reunited Alfred G. Karnes Victor V-40076
http://www.4shared.com/audio/vpPg9hi5/Alfred_G_Karnes_-__We_Shall_Al.html
Bristol, TN, 28 October 1928: Alfred G. Karnes, vocal and harp-guitar.

Yes, this song has been posted here before, but it's so good I can't resist. I've used it as a closing for many mix discs and for those Grits Radio shows.

And I close with it this time too.

PS. I turn 54 today...you can cut off my leg and count the rings...

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Hallowe'en 2010

It's Hallowe'en season again! Here's a triple-decker spook-tacular...with a little chaser!

The first album is a lot of fun...I'm dedicating it to the memory of the trombonist/bandleader Buddy Morrow (born 1919 as Muni Zudekoff, aka Moe Zudekoff) who passed on about a month ago (27 September 2010).

This album is often quite reminiscent of Morrow's previous Impact! and Double Impact! LPs, both of which sold like hotcakes. There are a couple of poems narrated by Keith McKenna, as well as a couple of twistaroos sung by The Skip-Jacks.












POE FOR MODERNS Buddy Morrow Orch RCA Victor LSP-2208

1. The Murders In The Rue Morgue
2. Annabel Lee (Keith McKenna, narrator)
3. The Gold Bug
4. A Descent Into The Maelstrom
5. The Bells (The Skip-Jacks, vocal)
6. The Fall Of The House Of Usher
7. The Pit And The Pendulum
8. Ulalume (Keith McKenna, narrator)
9. The Black Cat
10. The Raven (The Skip-Jacks, vocal)
11. Quoth The Raven
12. The Tell-Tale Heart


The other day, I stumbled across another adaptation of Poe's The Raven here: http://www.garagehangover.com/?q=YoYos ...it's a 1966 garage rocker from Brooklyn.

And you can hear Fred Astaire's Raven-inspired Me And The Ghost Upstairs here http://zorchv38.blogspot.com/2010/08/just-fax-maam.html(shameless self-promotion, eh wot?).

The second LP is a rare one, indeed!












It's one of the strangest spoken-word albums I've ever heard...and one of the best. It's by "stand up tragedian" Theodore Gottlieb (1906-2001), who was usually billed as Brother Theodore. There's a very good website about him here http://www.brothertheodore.net/ , so I'll get out of the way and let you listen.

Oh...the first cut is a somewhat Lorre-esque adaptation of Poe's necro-dontal tale Berenice, and The Willow Landscape is from a story by Clark Ashton Smith.

CORAL RECORDS PRESENTS THEODORE Brother Theodore Gottlieb Coral CRL 57322
1. Introduction and Berenice
2. The Willow Landscape
3. Curse of the Toad
4. Quadrupedism

Some may recognize Theodore's distinctive voice from this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLssei0sId0

You'll see a much more recent snippet of his Quadrupedism monologue (along with some other diversions) here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_KrhFBUTe4&feature=related

You can also hear a "straight" reading of Berenice here http://librivox.org/horror-story-collection-005/.


My third album isn't really spooky at all, but there is a neat black cat on the cover:



It's a musical adaptation by Alan Rawsthorne of six of T. S. Eliot's poems from his Old Possum's Book Of Practical Cats...it's short and sweet (and a helluva lot easier for me to enjoy than that Webber thing on Broadway that drew from the same source). The narration is by Mr. Chips, Robert Donat (mmmmm....doughnuts).


OLD POSSUM'S BOOK OF PRACTICAL CATS 10" Angel 30002
Six Poems by T. S. Eliot
Musical Setting By Alan Rawsthorn
Robert Donat, speaker.
The Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by the composer
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=PTMTGDUM
1. Overture
2. The Naming Of Cats
3. The Old Gumbie Cat
4. Gus, The Theatre Cat
5. Bustopher Jones: The Cat about Town
6. Old Deuteronomy
7. The Song Of The Jellicles

This LP came in a deluxe box and has a four-page booklet (included in the .zip file).

Since Track 5 is about as cat named Bustopher Jones, and it's on a (big) ten-inch LP, I think I'll give my good friend Buster's blog http://big10inchrecord.blogspot.com/ another plug.

And here's a little lagniappe, borrowed from my good pal, D Burns:

78264 A Cat-Astrophe Columbia Band Columbia A 2855
http://www.4shared.com/audio/IC699ouP/Columbia_Band_-_A_Cat-Astrophe.html
NYC, January 1919.

The flip side is dedicated to my neighbor, Ronster:
78285-3 Slim Trombone Columbia_Band Columbia A 2855
http://www.4shared.com/audio/L_VFuOm_/Columbia_Band_-_Slim_Trombone.html
NYC, 3 February 1919.

And that'll do it for now...hope you dug it (up).

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

A Helpin' Of Selvin!

My, my, my...things are hoppin' with the Blog...the Wilmoth Houdini Calypsos album has generated a LOT of traffic, thanks to fellow bloggers at http://easydreamer.blogspot.com/2010/09/hot-dogs-made-their-name.html and http://flashstrap.blogspot.com/2010/09/stone-cold-dead-in-market-wilmouth.html (he also loved the Calypso Carnival LP...maybe Sony ought to reissue it?). And my humble blog is in the list at the bottom of the page at http://yourpaldoug.blogspot.com/ .

So, I'm a bit more inspired than usual!
Every now and then, we 78 collectors find strange items like that oddball Ambrose test pressing I posted last month...the matrix number on the label doesn't match the one in the wax. And the title wasn't listed.

Sometimes we find oddities in the discographies, like the following four sides. They're labeled as being performed by three different orchestras, but they're actually all led by the ubiquitous Ben Selvin...and all recorded the same day!
This French Odeon has two Selvin sides, issued in the States on Harmony and Velvet Tone (on consecutively issued records, not back-to-back as they are here).

The first side is of a rather pretty De Sylva-Brown-Henderson composition, If You Haven't Got Love.
351074-2 If You Haven't Got Love Phil Hughes High Hatters (French) Odeon 250.092
NYC, 21 July 1931: Ben Selvin, conductor; large studio orchestra.

There's an interesting clip of Gloria Swanson singing the song here
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QTGjxbWWCWQ

The flip side is a perky Irving Berlin song, Me. The muted trumpet solo is by Manny Klein.
351063-2 Me Frank Auburn Orchestra (French) Odeon 250.092
http://www.4shared.com/audio/r5hwDaqb/Frank_Auburn__Selvin__-_Me.htmlNYC, 21 July 1931: Ben Selvin, conductor; large studio orchestra.

Oh...there were a couple of other future "big names" in this session, as you'll see momentarily. I'm keeping them up my sleeve for the time being.

You might notice that the above two sides are in the mysterious 350000 matrix series that Columbia used for many sides issued by their dime-store labels (Harmony, Diva, Velvet Tone and Clarion) at the time. The following sides are in the conventional Columbia 140000-150000 series.

Here's another version of the same tune...again, it's recorded on the same day with the same orchestra, but with a completely different arrangement.

151695 Me! The Knickerbockers Columbia 2502-D
NYC, 21 July 1931: Ben Selvin, conductor; large studio orchestra.

Notice that the Columbia adds an exclamation point to the title! I think this version is the better of the two, but I'm partial to BG solos.

Also, you'll hear this particular record as part of a Skinner’s Romancers transcribed radio show here http://randsesotericotr.podbean.com/2010/08/12/skinners-romancers-pgm-2/

I'll finish this section with the flip side, a fluffy bit of froth (or is it a frothy bit of fluff?):

151694 Slow But Sure The Knickerbockers Columbia 2502-D

I found this recording in another Skinner show: http://randsesotericotr.podbean.com/2010/09/28/skinners-romancers-pgm-3/
And here's the complete (more-or-less) scoop on the previous four sides:
NYC, 21 June 1931: Ben Selvin, conductor; large studio orchestra featuring (among others) Manny Klein, trumpet; Tommy Dorsey, trombone; Benny Goodman, clarinet; Hymie Wolfson, tenor sax; Dick Robertson, vocal.

While I'm a-Selvin', I think I'll play this rarity...it's in Columbia's short-lived 18000-D Longer Playing Series. Forgive the condition...it's very rough at the beginning and is a little blasty on certain high notes. But records in this series are quite rare...this is the only one I own.

255000-1 Medley - "Face The Music" Ben Selvin Orch, with Kate Smith, Jack Miller, and The Three Nitecaps Columbia 18000-D
http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/fl7OXVv2/Selvin_Smith_Miller_3_Nitecaps.html

I've included pictures of both labels...mainly because I'm too lazy to type out the individual songs...

255001-2 Medley - "Hot-Cha" Ben Selvin Orch, with Kate Smith, Jack Miller, and The Three Nitecaps Columbia 18000-D
http://www.4shared.com/audio/v5Nl9AEP/Selvin_Smith_Miller_3_Nitecaps.html
NYC, 22 March 1932: Ben Selvin, conductor; large studio orchestra; Kate Smith, Jack Miller, and the Three Nitecaps, vocals.

I have a couple of other single items from other rare series...like this Cajun piece from 1929:
110552-2 Poche Town Joe Falcon with Clemo & Ophy Breaux Columbia 40506-F
http://www.4shared.com/audio/7nbLsXKo/Joe_Falcon_-_Poche_Town.html
110553-2 Osson Joe Falcon with Clemo & Ophy Breaux Columbia 40506-F

http://www.4shared.com/audio/MIxW3M3N/Joe_Falcon_-_Osson.html
Atlanta 18 April 1929: Ophy Breaux, fiddle; Joe Falcon, accordion & vocal; Cleoma Breaux (Falcon), guitar.
This was in the rare Columbia 40500-F Arcadian-French Series...all were reissued in OKeh's 90000 series, which are probably just as rare as these are.

Osson is awesome (sorry!)...this one's in such great condition I didn't need to use any noise reduction or other enhancement.

_______________________________________

This lovely record is in the strange Columbia 40000-D series...which was apparently used only on the West Coast...outside of a couple of extraordinarily rare jazz/dance pieces (The Curtis Mosby record in this series is particularly sought-after), it consisted mainly of Hawaiian sides by the likes of Sol Hoopii and Benny Nawahi.

This one features Tau and Rose Moe, recorded in Japan in 1929:















32265 Lei I Ka Mokihana Madame Riviere's Hawaiians Columbia 40005-D
http://www.4shared.com/audio/FvWsenal/Madame_Rivieres_Hawaiians_-_Le.html
32258 Paahana Hula Madame Riviere's Hawaiians
Columbia 40005-D
http://www.4shared.com/audio/yyvavMBF/Madame_Rivieres_Hawaiians_-_Pa.html
Tokyo, 1929: featuring Rose Moe, vocal; Tau Moe, guitar.

Let's stay with Hawaiian music (and return to French Odeon) for this favorite of mine:
According to the liner notes of Tickling the Strings (Harlequin HQ CD 28), not much is known about the husband-and-wife team of Kanui and Lula. They were based in Paris at the time of the recording, and Lula danced the hula and played ukulele.

The Parlophone issue of Oua Oua apparently sold quite well in the UK. Brian Rust mentions it in his book on record labels.
My copy is on French Odeon...
KI 6090-2 Tomi, Tomi Kanui & Lula
(French) Odeon 166.670


http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/u_-bb_AQ/Kanui__Lula_-_Tomi_Tomi.html

KI 6089-2 Oua Oua Kanui & Lula (French) Odeon 166.670
Paris, 21 June 1933: Kanui, guitar & vocal; Lula, ukulele.
http://www.4shared.com/account/audio/IynCOIbK/Kanui__Lula_-_Oua_Oua.html


A few years ago, the Max Brothers did something very weird with this record (which is rather weird itself...to me it sounds like a demented Elvis channelling Lassie)...

I'll finish up with a couple of sides by the "French Bing Crosby," Jean Sablon.
Looking at the label, you'd never guess that this record has some splendid guitar work by Jean-Baptiste Reinhardt...that Django cat.

CL-5487-3 Cette Chanson Est Pour Vous Jean Sablon (French) Columbia DF 1847
CL-5518-1 Rendez-vous Sous La Pluie Jean Sablon (French) Columbia DF 1847
Paris, 12 July 1935: Jean Sablon, vocal; Stephane Grappelly, violin & piano; Django & Joseph Reinhardt, guitars; Louis Vola, bass.

Monsieur Grappelli hadn't changed the spelling of his surname yet, so I'll use the original spelling here.


...and that'll do it for this installment.