Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Jackie Gleason - To A Sleeping Beauty


Album Title: To A Sleeping Beauty
Catalog Number: EAP-1-871
Artist: Jackie Gleason
Genre: Monolog
Format: 7", 45 RPM, EP
Year: 1956
Record Label: Capitol Records






TRACKLISTING:
A. (5:03) To A Sleeping Beauty
B. (4:11) Apology At Bedtime

Playing Time.........: 00:09:15

MATRIX NUMBERS:
A Side Center Label: F1-871
B Side Center Label: F2-871
A Side Run Out Etching: F1-871-D6
B Side Run Out Etching: F2-871-D6#2

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Banjo Sing-A-Long Starring The Bob Cain Singers


Album Title: Banjo Sing-A-Long Starring The Bob Cain Singers
Catalog Number: 14081
Artist: The Bob Cain Singers
Genre: Folk
Format: LP, Stereo
Year: 1961
Record Label: Golden Tone Records




TRACKLISTING:

Side A
A1. (02:30) Margie
A2. (02:38) Toot Toot Tootsie
A3. (01:51) That Old Gang Of Mine
A4. (01:59) Oh Dem Golden Slippers
A5. (01:24) There Is A Tavern In The Town
A6. (01:39) After The Ball

Side B
B1. (02:20) De Camptown Races
B2. (01:32) Shine On Harvest Moon
B3. (02:01) Oh Susanna
B4. (02:23) Swanee River
B5. (01:46) Dixie
B6. (01:40) In The Good Old Summertime

Playing Time.........: 00: 23:51

MATRIX NUMBERS:
A Side Center Label & Run Out Etching: 14081-A
B Side Center Label & Run Out Etching: 14081-B

CREDITS:
Produced By: Precision Radiation Instruments Inc., Los Angeles, California

ADDITIONAL NOTES:
(From the back of the album jacket)

Golden Tone Stereo
Golden Tone stereophonic records are the finest recordings and the greatest value available in the record world today. All original Golden Tone Stereophonic recordings are recorded on dual track magnetic Ampex tape recorders operating at fifteen inches per second. The tapes are then carefully mastered by a Westrex 45 x 45 feedback cutter and heated stylus on a Scully variable pitch lathe to insure the very finest high quality reproduction in transferring the ultimate in sound from the tape to the vinyl. A frequency response is produced of 20 to 20,000 cycles per second. This system is acclaimed by recording engineers as the best in stereophonic record production. Golden Tone stereo albums are tested for quality on Permoflux Stereo Amplifiers and Royal Blue High Fidelity matched Stereo speakers.

Additional Hours Of Musical Enjoyment Available To You On Golden Tone Stereo Albums

14004 - Roaring 20's
14005 - Jerry Gray Plays Glenn Miller Favorites
14006 - Polka Party
14007 - Nutcracker Suite
14009 - HonkyTonk Piano
14010 - Organ Favorites
14013 - Strauss Waltzes
14014 - Echoes From Italy And France
14021 - Dixieland
14023 - Oklahoma And South Pacific
14028 - Around The World In Eighty Days
14036 - Eddie Duchin Favorites
14037 - lnk Spots
14040 - Echoes From Spain
14041 - March Favorites
14042 - Cha Cha Cha
14043 - Waltz Favorites
14044 - Everybody Sing
14048 - Al Jolson Favorites
14049 - Rhumba Favorites
14050 - Cha Cha Favorites
14051 - Cole Porter Favorites
14052 - Sing Along With The Busy Beavers
14054 - Nearer My God To Thee
14055 - Barber Shop Favorites
14058 - Latin Carnival
14077 - Come Dance With Us
14081 - Sing - A - Long
14082 - Let's March Along
14083 - Everybody Polka
14084 - A Dance Tribute To Glenn Miller
14085 - Barroom Piano
14086 - Hawaiian Holiday
14087 - Banjo And Percussion
14088 - Madame Butterfly
14089 - H. M.S. Pinafore
14090 - Pirates of Penzance
14091 - Mikado
14092 - Come On Everybody Let’s Twist
14093 - George Gibbs
14094 - The Three Suns
14095 - Lawrence Welk
14097 - Jack Teagarden
14098 - Artie Shaw
9582 - Kirby Stone Four
9587 - Holiday In Brazil
9609 - James Melton
9615 - Mel Torme
9628 - Johnny Desmond
9632 - Columbia Pictures Hits
9641 - Porgy And Bess
9644 - Billy Daniels
9654 - Flirty 30’s
9655 - Beatrice Kay
9656 - Best Of Broadway
9658 - Little Buckaroo's
9667 - Gilbert And Sullivan
617 - Dance In Dorsey Style
626 - National Emblem March
655 - Latin Favorites In Percussion
658 - Hawaiian Holiday
664 - Piano Percussion In Rhythm
665 - Stereo Sound Spectacular


Sunday, October 16, 2011

Hank Williams - 24 Karat Hits


Album Title: 24 Karat Hits
Catalog Number: SE-240-2
Artist: Hank Williams
Genre: Country
Format: 2×Vinyl, LP, Stereo, Compilation, Gatefold
Year: 1970
Record Label: MGM Records




TRACKLISTING:
Record 01 - Side A
A1. (02:46) Your Cheatin' Heart
A2. (02:32) Lonesome Whistle
A3. (02:27) I'll Never Get Out Of This World Alive
A4. (02:42) Lovesick Blues
A5. (02:39) Lost Highway
A6. (02:33) Kaw-Liga

Record 01 - Side B
B1. (02:48) Cold, Cold Heart
B2. (02:31) Mansion On The Hill
B3. (02:35) You Win Again
B4. (02:34) My Bucket's Got A Hole In It
B5. (02:28) Crazy Heart
B6. (03:06) Ramblin' Man

Record 02 - Side A
C1. (02:44) Half As Much
C2. (02:34) Window Shopping
C3. (02:58) There'll Be No Teardrops Tonight
C4. (02:46) I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry
C5. (02:44) Howlin' At The Moon
C6. (02:48) I Don't Care (If Tomorrow Never Comes)

Record 02 - Side B
D1. (02:55) Jambalaya (On The Bayou)
D2. (02:51) A House Without Love
D3. (02:43) I Won't Be Home No More
D4. (02:41) Long Gone Lonesome Blues
D5. (02:08) Honky Tonk Blues
D6. (02:42) Settin' The Woods

Playing Time.........: 00:52:05

MATRIX NUMBERS:
A Side Run Out Etching: SE-24000-2 SIDE-1 MGS-1666
B Side Run Out Etching: SE-24000-2 SIDE-2 MGS-1667
C Side Run Out Etching: SE-24000-2 SIDE-3 MGS-1668
D Side Run Out Etching: SE-24000-2 SIDE-4 MGS-1669

CREDITS:
Director Of Engineering: Val Valentine
Cover Art: AKM ASSOCIATES

ADDITIONAL NOTES:
(From the album jacket)

Stereo, Limited Edition, 2 Record Set.

24 Karat Hits - A Double Dozen Of All Time Best Sellers By Hank Williams.

This Recording contained in this album were previously released on the following MGM albums: SE-4377, SE-4429, SE4481 and SE-4529.

This record has been engineered and manufactured in accordance with standards developed by the Record Industry Association Of America, Inc., a non-profit organization dedicated to the betterment of recorded music and literature.

Manufactured by MGM Records Division; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc., 1350 Avenue Of The Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019

Thursday, October 6, 2011

The Cathedrals Individaully


Album Title: The Cathedrals Individually
Catalog Number: 830581
Artist: The Cathedrals
Genre: Southern Gospel
Format: LP
Year: 1983
Record Label: Eternal Records






TRACKLISTING:
A1. (3:20) Time Has Made A Change In Me
A2. (3:12) Keeper Of The Well
A3. (4:15) Look For Me
A4. (2:36) Poor Rich Man
A5. (2:16) Standing In The Loading Zone
B1. (3:35) Rumormill
B2. (2:54) Walking Down Here, Thinking Up There
B3. (2:47) I've Got More To Go To Heaven For
B4. (3:35) I Go To The Rock
B5. (2:05) I'm In The Gloryland Way

Playing Time.........: 00:30:35

MATRIX NUMBERS:
Run Outs A-Side: ***830581A TPH
Run Outs B-Side: ***830581B TPH

Recorded At – Artist's Recording Co.
Manufactured By – Artist's Recording Co.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Charlie Barnet - Charlie Barnet Presents A Salute To Harry James

Album: Charlie Barnet Presents A Salute To Harry James
Catalog Number: CST-160
Artist: Charlie Barnet
Genre: Big Band
Format: LP, Stereo, Red Vinyl
Year: 1959
Record Label: Crown Records




TRACKLISTING
A1. (02:40) - Sleepy Lagoon                         
A2. (02:39) - Easter Parade                          
A3. (04:19) - One On The House                      
A4. (03:18) - Flatbush Flanagan                     
B1. (03:10) - Music Makers                          
B2. (03:59) - Back Beat Boogie                      
B3. (02:25) - The Mole                              
B4. (04:20) - Blues For Sale                        

Playing Time: 00:26:53

MATRIX NUMBERS
A Side Center Label: CST 160-1
B Side Center Label: CST 160-2
A Side Run Out Etching: CST-160-1 Δ 1629
B Side Run Out Etching: CST-160-2 Δ 1628

CREDITS
Photography: Steve Sokol
Recorded: Hollyiwood, Calif.
Cover Design: Rosentswieg

ADDITIONAL NOTES
(From the back of the album jacket)

Charlie Barnet Presents A Salute to Harry James

The man who has done so much for so many people in the music business . . . the "mad Mab of the Mill Pond' ... a title given him in Sandusky, Ohio, many years ago . . . Mr. Charlie Barnet . . . continues his giving ways as here he salutes the talents of one of the greatest jazz trumpet players alive . . . Mr. Harry James.

Harry James . . . owner of a stable of racing horses . . . married to a lovely movie star ... is still one of the greats in the music world. Why? Because of his lyrical and at times driving trumpet.

A salute to Harry James.

Who can forget the memorable night in December of 1 938 when the Benny Goodman Band played their first concert in Carnegie Hall in New York City. And who was the star sideman . . . Harry James. For it was only a matter of weeks later that Harry James went on the road with his own band.

Perhaps it has been forgotten but it was Harry James who hired a young and thin singer from the "log cabin" in New Jersey to sing with the band. His name . . . Frank Sinatra. So it was Harry James who started Frankie on his way to stardom.

But throughout all of the years it has been the golden tones of the Harry James trumpet that have kept him on top of the heap. Other bands have come and gone . . . but still Harry James is the one musician who has stayed on top. And musician is used carefully in this case . . . for he is indeed a consumate musician. His tone and his knowledge of music have not faltered through all of the years.

And so this is one musician's salute to another as Charlie Barnet offers a salute to Harry James.

FRANK EVANS

CROWN RECORDS STEREODISCS
9317 W. Washington Blvd.,
Culver City, Calif.

Made in Hollywood, U.S.A.

THIS IS STEREO

THE FULFILLMENT OF STEREO
Stereophonic sound is almost exactly "true" sound. Always before, you have heard the music as it was recorded—not as it was played. Now, in Stereo, you can hear music just as it is played. And you have more than a coveted front row seat—you are practically in the orchestra! If this is your first experience with Stereo, you're in for a thrill I

HOW DOES STEREO WORK?
Instead of one central sound that is the same no matter how many speakers you use, Stereo sound adds "left" and "right." This gives Stereo depth, dimension, and exciting realism—just as your two eyes and two ears provide depth in both seeing and hearing. Depth is achieved by recording separate "left" and "right" versions of the same music at the same time, and putting the different versions into the same groove.

STEREO VS. MONAURAL
In your old monaural records, the same sound was on both sides of the groove, and the needle wiggled sideways slightly, but picked up the same sound on both sides. In Stereo, the needle is actually two needles in one, and wiggles both sideways and up-an-down. With a different pick-up, preamp, amplifier and speaker for each separate side of the groove, your ears pick up the two sides of the sound and combine the differences for stereo "depth."

MORE THAN CONCERT FIDELITY
In listening to a concert you hear different instruments at the extreme left and right, but much of the music comes right down the middle. In Stereo, too, the recording mikes each pick up part of the middle section of the sound. So in hearing this Stereo record you will find that you not only hear left and right, you also hear part of the sound right between the speakers. The sound surrounds you and you almost become part of it. In hearing a concert you are never as close as the recording mikes. So when the mikes are ex­pertly placed you get more total sound from Stereo than you do at an actual concert!

TUNING THE SPEAKERS
You may find that the left speaker has slightly less volume than the right. This has been done so you can tune the speakers to an exact balance. The effect will vary according to the room, the place­ment of the speakers, and the position of the listener. The speakers must be placed at least 36 inches apart to achieve the bare mini­mum Stereo sound. Two speakers alone do not make Stereo. You must have Stereo pickup needles and heads. It is possible (but not ad­visable) to play this Stereo record on a monaural set. The sound will not be Stereo, and the pickup may not be compatible. We recom­mend playing this disc only with Stereo pickups.

TECHNICAL DATA
This disc was recorded on an Ampex stereo tape recorder from 15 CPS bottom to 25,000 CPS top; transferred to disc with Scully lathe plus a Westrex 3A cutting head, and utilizes the standard 'RIAA' playback curve. The disc was pressed from the finest virgin vinyl, in a process that removes surface noise and distortion. A microgroove-stereo pickup with a .0007 tip radius +.0001 is recom­mended for finest results, with a stylus weight of not more than 4 grams. Handle this disc with great care, especially avoiding touch­ing the playing surface with fingers (skin oils damage the vinyl). Use a soft, damp cloth to clean the disc, and store it carefully in this jacket at moderate temperature. With proper care this high fidelity stereophonic disc should last indefinitely.

Monday, September 12, 2011

The Dukes Of Dixieland Featuring Pete Fountain

Album: The Dukes Of Dixieland Featuring Peter Fountain
Catalog Number: LSP-2097(e)
Artist: The Dukes Of Dixieland
Genre: Dixieland
Format: LP, Stereo
Year: 1961
Record Label: RCA Victor

(more images)



Tracklisting
A1. (03:30) At The Jazz Band Ball
A2. (03:23) Beale Street Blues
A3. (04:30) Muskrat Ramble
A4. (02:53) Blue Prelude
A5. (04:15) That's A-Plenty
A6. (03:26) Original Dixieland One-Step
B1. (03:43) Panama
B2. (02:54) Wolverine Blues
B3. (03:20) Fidgety Feet
B4. (06:51) Tin Roof Blues
B5. (03:36) Tiger Rag
B6. (03:53) When The Saints Go Marching In

Playing Time.........: 00:46:14

Matrix Numbers:
A Side: Center Label: M2PY-3092 LSP2097
B Side: Center Label: M2PY-3092 LSP2097
A Side: Run Out Etching: M2 PY3092-1S
B Side: Run Out Etching: M2 PY3093-1S

Credits
Trumpet: Frankie Assunto
Trombone: Freddie Assunto
Clarinet: Pete Fountain
Piano: Artie Seelig
Bass: Bill Potter
Drums: Roger Johnston

Additional Notes
Reissue of "At The Jazz Band Ball" released in 1955

The Dukes of Dixieland obviously get a tremendous wallop out of music-making. They have always been able to kick into the ensembles like the liner United States plowing into twenty-foot waves. But it was during the time that they were spark-plugged by the hard-driving, albeit soulful and expressive, clarinet of Pete Fountain that they were in their peak form. Here are The Dukes as they were heard during their finest period—the era when their unbeatable combination of great enthusiasm and enormous ability made theirs one of the truly fine jazz groups of all time.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Pee Wee Hunt - Dixieland Kickoff

Album Title: Dixieland Kickoff
Catalog Number: ST-1265
Artist: Pee Wee Hunt
Genre: Dixieland
Format: LP, Stereo
Year: 1959
Record Label: Capitol Records





Tracklisting
A1. (02:25) Illinois Loyalty (University Of Illinois)
A2. (02:39) Notre Dame Victory March (University Of Notre Dame)
A3. (01:55) As The Backs Go Tearing By (Dartmouth College)
A4. (02:27) The Victors (University Of Michigan)
A5. (01:59) The U. Of M. Rouser (University Of Minnesota)
A6. (02:02) Across The Field (Ohio State University)
B1. (02:20) Down The Field (Yale University)
B2. (01:58) Iowa Corn Song (State University Of Iowa)
B3. (02:26) Fight On For U.S.C. (University Of Southern California)
B4. (02:40) Our Director (Harvard University)
B5. (02:59) The Princeton Cannon Song (Princeton University)
B6. (02:12) On Wisconsin (University Of Wisconsin)

Playing Time.........: 00:28:02

MATRIX NUMBERS:
A Side Center Label: ST1-1265
B Side Center Label: ST2-1265
A Side Run Out Etching: ST1-1265-D1#2
B Side Run Out Etching: ST2-1265-D1


Additional Notes
(From the back of the album jacket)

Kickoff! The home team snags the ball, smashes its way back to midfield in a brilliant return, and loyal alumni rise and roar as the college band breaks into the old school fight song. Ah, what memorable moments! And here's all the high-spirited fun of a Saturday afternoon as the redoubtable Pee Wee and his team invade the nation's campuses and give the Hunt two-beat treatment to a dozen of the country's rousin'est collegiate fight songs.

Pee Wee has picked these favorite tunes primarily for their musical zest, but they range across the country from the Ivy League to Southern Cal. And, the happy thing is, his skedaddlin' style and march-down-the-field tempos will stir up those zippy game-day get-togethers just as much even if you're headed out to cheer for old Slippery Rock High. And if you're one of those people who think a split T is a minor golfing catastrophe, you'll still find this the good time album of any season.

So whether the agenda calls for dancing, cheering yourself hoarse in the crackling outdoor air, or just listening, let's break up the huddle, put the record on, and get a real ball rolling...45...78...33...Hike!

STEREO NOTE: Pee Wee's bounding trombone leads every play to a win as he calls the signals from the fifty-yard line, with close support from trumpet and clarinet. Bass and drums hold down the end zone on the right, piano and guitar are on the left.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Al Hirt - Struttin' Down Royal Street

Album Title: Struttin' Down Royal Street
Catalog Number: CAS-2138
Artist: Al Hirt
Genre: Dixieland
Format: Vinyl
Year: 1967
Record Label: RCA Camden Records





TRACKLISTING:

A1. (02:43) Keep On The Firing Line
A2. (02:52) There's A Great Day Coming
A3. (03:12) This World Is Not My Home
A4. (02:25) I Shall Not Be Moved
A5. (03:02) Just A Closer Walk With Thee
B1. (02:38) Do Lord
B2. (02:50) Just A Little While
B3. (02:33) Lily Of The Valley
B4. (02:12) Pleyel's Hymn
B5. (02:35) Oh, Didn't He Ramble

Playing Time.........: 00:27:08

MATRIX NUMBERS:
A Side Center Label: CAS2138 UCR-3652
B Side Center Label: CAS2138 UCR-3653:
A Side Run Out Etching: UCR-3652-1S A2 R
B Side Run Out Etching: UCR-3653-1S A1 R

ADDITIONAL NOTES:
(From the back of the album jacket)

STRUTTIN' DOWN ROYAL STREET        AL HIRT

Mono CAL-2138

Stereo CAS-2138

Orchestra Conducted by Marty Paich

Arrangements Adapted by Marty Paich



"Did he ramble? Did he gamble? Did he lead a good life?" Listen to this strange and exciting music.



A fascinating sidelight to musical Americana is commemorated in this album by a man who witnessed it many times as a boy.



Al Hirt says, "The New Orleans Negro funeral is something that I grew up with. It was really something to see—and hear. Although it was, first of all, an event, it was the music, the strange and exciting music, that really made it what it was.



"Here in this album, we have tried to capture the sound and flavor of the spectacle. Using a big band—with clean playing and intonation—we tried to create the same exciting beat, the idea and feeling."



The pattern of the funerals was a firmly established tradition. On the way to the graveyard, the musicians played slowly and solemnly, following the trumpeter or cornetist who was always the leader. Generally, there were one or two cornets, one or two clarinets, banjo, tuba and drums. After the burial—to the accompaniment of such rhetorical questions as "Did he ramble? Did he gamble? Did he lead a good life?"—the band would turn around and march back toward the center of town, swinging bombastically and contagiously all the way.



Such ceremonies, common not only in New Orleans but all over the South and as far west as Colorado, have not died out entirely. To find authentic source material, Hirt and his clarinetist Pee Wee Spitelera checked with members of the Eureka Brass Band, which, to this day, plays for funerals.



"We included just about all of their repertoire," says Al. "Mostly Baptist hymns, plus a few others that fit the idea—Do Lord, Great Day Coming, Pleyel's Hymn, Keep on the Firing Line."



Some tracks are composed entirely of after-the-funeral march music with a strong pre-ragtime flavor; others include the introductory pre-funeral dirge. Typical of the latter is Just a Closer Walk with Thee, with its somber drum roll, spirited solos and the strange, almost calliope-like unison sound of the clarinets, the hard-driving last chorus and the return to a march feeling with the percussive ending.



The big size of the band in this album, incidentally, is not incongruous. One veteran New Orleans guitarist has stated that it was not unusual to see funerals that had several bands in the procession, because the deceased was active in a large number of social clubs, all of whose members offered their services. On such occasions, had the participants been equipped with first-class instruments, plenty of time to work together, and the general level of musicianship that prevails throughout this album, it is not unreasonable to speculate that this is the way they would have wanted to sound.



I wish it were possible to bring this studio band to New Orleans, send it struttin' down Royal Street (which is a continuation of St. Charles Street going downtown from Canal), and watch the crowds gather under the Pied Piper-Samson-Tarzan leadership of Al Hirt. It would probably raise the greatest ruckus since 1917. That, you may recall, is the year Storyville was closed down forever.



LEONARD FEATHER



IMPORTANT! RCA Camden's monophonic records can be played on stereophonic phonographs. RCA Camden's stereophonic records must be played on phonographs equipped for stereophonic reproduction.



Library of Congress Card Numbers R67-2849 (Mono) and R67-2850 (Stereo) apply to this recording.



TMK(S) ® Radio Corporation of America • Marca(s) Registrada(s) ©1967, RCA, New York, N.Y. • Printed in U.S.A. 

Sunday, August 21, 2011

10" LP: Decca Curtain Call Series - Volume 2

Album Title: Decca Curtain Call Series - Volume 2
Catalog Number: DL-7019
Artist: Various Artists
Genre: Jazz
Format: 10", LP, Mono, Compilation
Year: 1956
Record Label: Decca Records


 (More Images)


TRACKLISTING:
A1. (3:11) Bing Crosby – I Surrender Dear
A2. (3:13) Andrews Sisters, The – Bei Mir Bist Du Schön (Means That Your Grand)
A3. (3:11) Ink Spots, The – If I Didn't Care
A4. (1:47) Mills Brothers, The – Tiger Rag
B1. (3:18) Bing Crosby – Where The Blue Of The Night
B2. (3:04) Andrews Sisters, The – (I'll Be With You) In Apple Blossom Time
B3. (2:47) Ink Spots, The – Do I Worry?
B4. (2:41) Mills Brothers, The – Paper Doll

Playing Time.........: 00:23:12

MATRIX NUMBERS:
A Side Center Label: MG2395 DL 7019
B Side Center Label: MG2396 DL 7019
A Side Run Out Etching: MG2395T5
B Side Run Out Etching: MG2396T6

ADDITIONAL NOTES:
(From the back of the album jacket)

DECCA CURTAIN CALL SERIES
The Decca “Curtain Call” Series is devoted to the great performers of our times and the recorded songs which helped to make them famous. Here is the music with which America’s most popular singers have been identified. Here are musical events which were actually milestones in their careers and in Show Business – songs which vibrate with excitement and project the thrill of an experience recaptured…a Curtain Call especially for you.
BING CROSBY
Although well over a hundred songs have been distinguished by the Bing Crosby treatment, two special numbers immediately are recognized as Bing's particular property. They are '"Where the Blue of the Night Meets the Gold of the Day" and "I Surrender. Dear." Both date back to the year 1931 and both have been countlessly revived. The first was the result of a three-part collaboration, joining the talents of Roy Turk, Fred Ahlert, and Bing Crosby him serf. Everyone knows that it became Bing's theme song, in fact, this ''signature melody" is probably the best known of any artist's identifying melody. Bing himself has sung it in many versions and against many settings, including Hawaiian style. Here the background is furnished by John Scott Trotter and his orchestra. "I Surrender Dear," a song of the same vintage, was almost a family affair. The words were by Gordon Clifford, the music by Bing's musical team-mate, Harry Barris, and Bing himself had a part in it. According to Ted Crosby, it was Bing who suggested the theme and it was Barris who pointed out that the song was ideally suited to the singer's voice. Like Bing himself, both songs have become as perennial as spring and as popular as popcorn.
ANDREWS SISTERS
On November 24, 1937, Maxene, Patty, and La Verne Andrews entered one of the recording studios at Decca for the first time to give out with a brisk, happy-go-lucky version of an old Yiddish song, "Bei Mir Bist Du Schön." Within an hour the girls had waxed the English version which became identified with the trio from that time on. From the mo-lent the record hit the airways, via disc jockey shows, the Andrews Sisters were the hottest thing in Swingdom. People mobbed record counters, struggling for the few "Bei Mir" platters which remained only a few hours after their release.
For quite a while the sisters were known as vivid exponents of highly syncopated tunes, hot singers developed in the swing era. No one could surpass them in the field of jazz. Suddenly they made an abrupt departure. In 1940 they waxed a recording of "In Apple Blossom Time" in a version that was as tender as it was straightforward. From that time on the Andrews Sisters were as celebrated for their sweet stylings as for their hot numbers.
INK SPOTS
It was a long time before the Ink Spots found their own unique style. For quite a while their singing was fast, hot, and jumping with jive. The group never dreamed that their specialty would ever be the mellow kind of ballad which made them famous.
In 1939, "If I Didn't Care" became a tremendous hit. It established itself among the best-selling tunes of the day—and it established the Ink Spots. The quartet changed its style to conform with this discovery, and they began to adapt the slow, sweet manner implicit in Jack Lawrence's persuasive "If I Didn't Care." Within a year—in 1940, to be exact —the Ink Spots came up with another overwhelming success: Cowan and Worth's "Do I Worry?" Although the Ink Spots have recorded scores of records for Decca as well as several collections ranging from popular hits to religious songs, they have never done anything more appealing or effective than the two songs coupled here.
MILLS BROTHERS
The Mills Brothers are a many-gifted group and they have a special gift when it comes to the selection of songs. They are particularly happy when they breathe new life into old numbers, when they take a song which has been almost worn out by repetition and give it fresh meaning and impetus because of their unique interpretation.
"Tiger Rag" was popular as far back as 1917. It was one of the hottest items in the repertoire of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band. The song lay dormant until the Mills Brothers created their phenomenal vocal interpretation, imitating instruments with the human voice. This brought them an immediate popularity which has never ebbed. John Black's "Paper Doll" was first heard in 1924 and was a surprise hit every time it was revived. It became a spectacular success in 1943 when, according to Sigmund Spaeth, in A History of Popular Music in America, "it began a phenomenal reincarnation that even its publishers could not explain." Perhaps the Mills Brothers could have explained it—at least their rendition of these two numbers brought the tunes to the attention of q public which relished the new and vivid Mills Brothers treatment.