Posts Tagged ‘1920s’

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Steve Martin and Bernadette Peters – "Tonight You Belong to Me" (1979)

2010/07/19


This is one of those songs you're going to hear from time to time. It has been covered by many many artists and it bound to be played to the end of time. Of all the versions I overheard my sister-in-law playing yesterday, I still think my favorite is the first one I remember hearing, the simple and pure ukulele version by Steve Martin and Bernadette Peters. The full scene is here, but you should really see the whole movie if you never have. It is hilarious to this day!

The song is well suited to the ukulele and thus has become a favorite for ukelele players as indicated by this instructional video by Janet Klein:

…and also by the awesome cover and video by Dario y Rocio:

However, the original version was sung by Gene Austin (and written by Lee David and Billy Rose) in 1927, and it is quite unlike its ukelele covers:

Some of the covers in the 1950s and 1960s pay tribute to the original version though and are well worth a listen if you like the song.

Here is a version by Patience and Prudence in 1956 that reached #4 on the Billboard charts ensuring this song would be covered over and over:

Here is a version by The Lennon Sisters in 1956 on the Lawrence Welk Show which also added some fuel to the fire:

Here is a great version by Nancy Sinatra (Frank Sinatra's daughter) in 1963:

Here is another by The Honeys in 1969:

Dottie West's country style cover in 1977 is also quite good:

And finally, the last version I'd like to point out is much more recent, released in 2008 by one of my recent obsession bands, The Bird and the Bee:


Song Recommendations

If you like this song, I also suggest the music genre:


Click here for more info on Steve Martin and Bernadette Peters – "Tonight You Belong to Me" and all the other artists and versions mentioned.

The MP3 may be purchased here…

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Leo Reisman & His Orchestra – "Happy Days Are Here Again" (1929)

2010/04/28


This song was first associated with the repeal of Prohibition, and then as a campaign song for FDR's initial run for the office of president. It comes to me now for a much less monumental purpose, but still grand to me…

As I have been eluding to for months now, I have been searching for a new job. Yesterday I finally received an offer, a great offer in fact, and put my pen to paper to accept it. While the day was coming to a close, I then raced back to my current employer to submit my resignation. I was walking around with a big dumb smile all night, after celebratory eating and shopping for some necessary new clothes for my new position. Although originally I had started looking for openings around town because of my discontent, the position my new employer has granted me as part of an institution of higher learning is just too good to pass up even if I wasn't itching for new employment.

Regardless, I now feel that "Happy Days Are Here Again"!

PS: Although the above video is the original version, I found this one by Harry Hudson's Melody Men to be of higher quality and perhaps a little better even:


Song Recommendations

If you like this song, I also suggest:

I also suggest the music genre:


Click here for more info on Leo Reisman & His Orchestra – "Happy Days Are Here Again".

The MP3 of a version by "Benny Merroff and His Orchestra" (because I could not find one for sale of the original Leo Reisman or Harry Hudson versions) may be purchased here…

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Rudy Vallée – "The One That I Love Loves Me" (1929)

2010/04/20


I feel like another time today. I tire of this post-modern world. I'd like to try another time for a while.


Song Recommendations

If you like this song, I also suggest:

I also suggest the music genre:


Click here for more info on Rudy Vallée – "The One That I Love Loves Me".

The MP3 may be purchased here…
Rudy Vallée

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Carl Stalling and Walt Disney – "Minnie's Yoo Hoo" (1929)

2009/11/12


I was raised watching the old Disney cartoons, including the really old Silly Symphonies. I can't remember if they were just on TV or tape, but I recently decided to watch a number of them to reminice and remember. Tonight G and I were watching some of the earliest Disney cartoons, including the infamous Steamboat Willie.

It is funny how often something happens in the old cartoons you probably would not see in today's cartoons. Characters chewing tobacco, or Minnie's under garments getting caught in a hook and then used to suspend her in the air for example. The obsession that both Mick and Pete (Micky's frequent adversary) seem to have with getting Minnie to kiss them, sometimes trying to force her to kiss them, is something you just would not see in a cartoon today. Mickey was a hot dog vendor in one of the cartoons and the hot dogs could dance and do tricks (like dogs) and then upon command would rub their "butts" in mustard and jump into sandwich bread. Then when the one hot dog was disobedient, Mickey pulled back the casing and spanked it on the "butt". G was appalled. She was appalled several times. I find it all fascinating how things that were not appropriate then are more accepted today, and other things are not appropriate today but were totally okay then. It may seem like we're more and more accepting across the board, but really things like sexual harassment and political correctness act to take us in the other direction at the same time. It is not so simple.

What did tickle our fancy with each cartoon was hearing "Minnie's Yoo Hoo" song at the opening credits. I like the sped up version (above) but you can hear the original too (below). And what a coincidence that we are considering getting some chickens. (More fowl things to come on that later!)

Here are the words if you want to sing along …but not me …at least not in public…

I'm the guy they call little Mickey Mouse
Got a sweetie down in the chicken house
Neither fat nor skinny
She's the horse's whinny
She's my little Minnie Mouse!
When it's feedin' time for the animals
And they howl and growl like the cannibals
I just turn my heel to the henhouse steal
And you'll hear me sing this song

Oh, the old tomcat with the meow, meow, meow!
Ol' hound dog with the bow-wow-wow!
The crow's caw-caw!
And the mule's hee-haw!
Gosh what a racket like an ol' buzz saw!
I have listened to the cuckoo cuke his coo-coo!
And I've heard the rooster cock his doodle doo-oo
With the cows and the chickens
They all sound like the dickens when I hear my little Minnie's Yoo-Hoo!

PS: It is Minnie's "Yoo Hoo", "Hoo Hoo", though that would be funny too. Inappropriate but funny.


Song Recommendations

If you like this song, I also suggest:

I also suggest the music genre:


Click here for more info on Carl Stalling and Walt Disney – Mickey's Follies – "Minnie's Yoo Hoo".

The DVD may be purchased here…

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Louis Victor Jules Vierne – "Toccata in B Flat Minor" from "Pièces de Fantasie" (1920s)

2009/10/31


Some music for all you trick-or-treaters out there. Oh wait… you're out and about and not sitting at the computer looking for Halloween music. Damn. Well then this post is for next year! Let the preparations begin!

Organ music is frequently associated with Gothic music (what with organs being very popular in Gothic cathedrals). Even playing a "light" piece of music can result in the song coming across as very foreboding and heavy. In a cathedral the power of the organ helps convey that sense of an immense power all around you (AKA God). Very clever I think.

I listened to many organ pieces in search of the best one I could find for Halloween. This piece by French composer Louis Victor Jules Vierne and performed by Olivier Latry struck me as heavy, dark and perfect!


Song Recommendations

If you like this song, I also suggest:

I also suggest the music genre:


Click here for more info on Louis Victor Jules Vierne – "24 Pièces de Fantasie" – "Toccata in B Flat Minor".

The CD may be purchased here…