Saturday, December 14, 2024

From 2020: A Pickwick, SPC, and Spear Records Christmas!

 So, before I could ask, "What else can go wrong?" my main desktop PC (the one set up for track-ripping, editing, etc.) conked out--and it's currently at Best Buy, getting fixed.  Well, I hope, anyway.  That is, I hope it's a fixable issue.  Naturally, I have yet to receive a progress report...

Meanwhile, on this sluggish but still-working downstairs PC, I discovered a handful of Christmas zips that I had, for some reason, downloaded here.  This is one of those zips, which was twice deleted by Workupload.  At least two repeat tracks, but...

Four Pickwick LP tracks, followed by various 45 rpm singles and EPs.  Now, let us travel back to 2020 (echo: 2020, 2020, 2020, 2020...).


This time, more kiddie stuff, some of it performed by kiddies, including three Pickwick tracks which appeared on both Playhour Records (in mono) and on this two-record set (in stereo):

The Joyous Season was a Pickwick special, by which I mean it was Pickwick at its... Pickwick-est.  Not only are there no artist credits to be found, there isn't even a label name--that is, unless The Joyous Season was supposed to pull double duty as both the set title and the label name.  With Pickwick, any act of cheapness is possible.  By the way, my copy made it to Goodwill with only one record in the fold-out packet, so I guess I could call mine The Semi-Joyous Season.  Miraculously, the single, sleeveless record is in like-new condition.  Except for the missing record, someone took good care of this.  (Maybe they never played it.)

Anyway, we get stereo versions of Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, Up on the Housetop, and--especially for Bryan--The Twelve Days of Christmas.  All appeared on Pickwick's Playhour label in mono mixes, and I've included the mono mix of The Twelve Days.  What's cool about this is the novelty of hearing a Pickwick children's track in actual stereo, and you can hear how the mono mix gives the voices a more strident quality.  If Pickwick had never issued The Joyous Season, we might never have had the chance to hear any of the group's kiddie efforts in stereo, so... this is cool.  It rocks my world, anyway.  My therapist told me, "Whatever excites you--so long as it's legal."


Next, Spear Records, which Discogs tells us was connected to Spear Products.  Going to Spear Products, we learn that Spear Products was connected to Spear Records.  Going to Spear Records, we learn that Spear Records was connected to Spear Products.  So, going to Spear Products, we... (Somebody stop me... Help!!)  Whew.  And, so, we--or, at least, I--know zilch about Spear Records, except that it was a very, very cheap operation which managed to convince some talented folks to record for it, which only goes to show that there are more talented people than labels to feature them.  Something like that.  The Spear sides are fun and short.  Their 45s were co-released with six-inch 78s in the manner of Golden Records.  Which was connected with Golden Products, which was connected with Golden Records, which was connected with... just kidding.

Spear's choral direction was by Hugh E. Perette, who also recorded for Mayfair and Mercury.  One of his Mayfair sides was Kiddie Konga, on which he backed June Winters (left), who was married to Hugo Peretti, one of the writers of Elvis' Can't Help Falling in Love.  What stories these cheap labels tell.

Then, Laura Leslie--who recorded Baby, It's Cold Outside with Don Cornell on RCA Victor--somehow finds herself at SPC (Synthetic Plastics Co.), recording charming but poorly pressed Peter Pan Records sides like Sleigh Ride, which I really love in this version.  Actually, I love it in any version.  I'll have to jump down so I can combine the label image with text.  Here I go.

What a cool pic label.  And someplace, buried or tucked away in all my stuff, is the cool pic sleeve for this side.  I'll have to swipe the Discogs image and see if I can coax over here, on this side. 

Well, I almost did it.  There it is, directly below.  Note the cruder but fun "period" art.  Then, one of my all-time favorite low-budget kiddie holiday sides, Sing a Kris Kringle Jingle, written by none other than J. Fred (Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town) Coots.  According to the seven-inch Peter Pan 78 I ripped, the singer is Bobby Stewart.  According to the 45 rpm edition, the singer (who gets one or two short solo spots) is Gabe Drake.  I'm going with Drake, because it's clearly the same guy who did the Prom fake-hit version of Rock Around the Clock--the best of the RATC fakes--though this assumes he was actually named Gabe Drake.
Next, La Dee Dah and Love Is Strange.  And what are these two numbers doing in a holiday playlist?
Simple--they were both issued by SPC with Christmas art on the labels.  I have no idea why.  Logic would suggest that SPC simply screwed up, or... that it ran out of regular labels and decided to use a stack of leftover Christmas-themed labels (waste not, want not).  As I'm always saying, the cheapie labels saved money on quality control by not having any.  Very clever strategy.  See labels below.

On Peter Pan, Gabby Dixon and the Crickets (pre-Buddy Holly?) give us When Santa Claus Gets Your Letter, a fairly well known song by Johnny (Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer) Marks.  And I guess I figured that Pickwick had trademarked "Crickets" and all variations thereof (Cricketones, etc.), but I'm looking for order in the cheap-label world, and I already know there's none to be found...



And here are four later (post-1950s) SPC efforts, from an EP whose sleeve art makes me cringe.  I don't know why.  Rudolph is supposed to look cute, but... I don't know.  Something's wrong with the art.  For one thing, he doesn't look like a reindeer.  Maybe that's it.  And did I say post-1950?  Yes, except for the same ol' Johnny Kay version of 'Twas the Night Before Christmas, which likely showed up in so many different issues, someone could write a book about it.  Or at least a long chapter in Johnny Kay--a Discography. Kay was the SPC singer with Perry Como's voice but not his looks--he looked more like Johnny Desmond, but with less sex appeal.  Not knocking his looks--Kay had nothing to worry about in that department, but we all know that singing stars need more than excellent pipes if they're going to make it big.  Oh, and Rudolph's Christmas Party may not set new standards for terribleness, but then again... Other than Kay (who, of course, is not credited), the artists on Rudolph are the usual unknown kid singers.  We have to wonder if there was a special musician's union for uncredited artists.  

Then, we hear what I regard as the second-best recording of Carol of the Drum, under its much better known stolen title (not quite sure how to put that), The Little Drummer Boy.  This is allegedly by the Peter Pan Caroleers, but this sounds very recorded-in-Europe, and the choir is simply too good to be Peter Pan regulars.  Otherwise, I can't figure how such a superb rendition would end up on the cheapest of the kiddie labels.  It has a fairly cool picture sleeve.  Well, actually, it's not very good, really...






12 comments:

musicman1979 said...

Praying that your PC issues will be resolved soon. Looks like an interesting cheap-label Christmas playlist. Thanks for letting me know about the composers of "When Santa Claus Gets Your Letter" and "Sing A Kris Kringle Jingle": I have seen these songs so often on various SPC/Diplomat Christmas albums that I assumed that they were written by songwriters employed by the company. Was totally surprised to find out who wrote them. And fake hits with Christmas labels on them! That should be a fun listen. My favorite version of "Sing A Kris Kringle Jingle" is by SPC's Monterey Brass on an album that Ernie posted on Epiphany earlier this year.

Lee Hartsfeld said...

musicman1979,

I think "Kris Kringle Jingle" was J. Fred Coot's attempt to follow up the success of "Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town." A quick Google search gave no year of composition, since there's a more recent band composition by that name. And I'm not in the mood to mess with the new, epically dysfunctional Google search engine. It wants to take my on 300 trips around the block to find a single piece of simple information. Yeah, I just tried a more focused search, and TWO useless matches. Remember when that search engine actually ANSWERED search queries? Those were the days. At any rate, it's a Coots follow-up, and it was obviously successful, though not on par with "SC is Comin' to Town." And "Letter" was probably Johnny Marks' attempt to further cash in on "Rudolph." It's amazing to consider the thousands of Xmas songs that never went anywhere vs. the small group of Tin Pan Alley hits. And, anymore, ANY Christmas number is considered a "carol." Carols, in fact, should refer to numbers like "Deck the Hall" and "The First Noel," as opposed to pop numbers or holiday hymns like "Silent Night," "It Came Upon a Midnight Clear," etc. For one thing, carols like "Fum Fum Fum" refer to the wilder holiday celebrations of, say, the 15th century. Back when Christmas was a hell-raising rite of passage similar to Halloween. Nowadays, lots of people love to "debunk" the notion that Christmas was always a popular holiday (never mind that it's endured for 17 centuries) and just because the Puritans objected to the event as a too-worldly and rowdy event. Their objection wasn't simply based on the fact that Christmas, as a celebration, is not mentioned in the Bible--They hated its long-standing tradition of unrestrained merry-making. As far as I know, the non-Puritan Pilgrims (contrary to received history) had no problem with Christmas, since they weren't as uptight or so strictly scripture-based. Not that they raised hell on December 25, but they did conduct an outgoing celebration, with musket shots and other sounds of exuberant festivity.

Lee Hartsfeld said...

dc-animal,

Mine is dead in the water after five years, and apparently because of an atypical style of C drive--a replacement for which BB doesn't have on hand. This, despite the fact that BB SOLD me the PC. Anyway, BB has been unable to replace that special C drive with a conventional one, since the (I think) motherboard won't allow it. My only option is a new PC. That is, unless I want BB to make expensive changes to my current desktop, which I do not. I could hammer them over the point that, "Hey, you SOLD me this thing, and you're telling me you don't have access to the necessary C-drive type?" But what would be the point? Anyway, assuming I choose a new PC tonight (and I'm thinking maybe a laptop, since laptops have become powerful enough to handle all the software and gear--external sound card, etc.--I'm using for the blog), then it's another three days. As in, 48 hours, and not counting today. I.e., 72 hours. My holiday posting may be toast. And something told me this PC would turn out to be unfixable--I just had a hunch. Maybe the tech gave this impression when I talked to him. That, or I have decent tech intuition. Something told me, "This device is doomed." By the way, i followed your 600 x 600 pixel advice for the added images, but those showed up out of focus. In increase things to 900 x 900, but... the same problem. Since 900 x 900 is more a more than adequate pixel count (and, apparently, "resolution" is not the right term, somehow), I can only conclude that this PC's media player (not to be confused with the Media Player app) isn't working correctly.

Lee Hartsfeld said...

dc_animal,

And "this PC" is the slower downstairs Lenovo, which makes for an adequate temporary backup but which is useless for ripping and editing.

Bryan,

Thanks for your comment, which I'll answer after I've returned from Best Buy (hopefully, with good news).

Ernie said...

Hope you get back on-track soon, Lee. My PC is pushing 12 years old as well, so I think each year will be it's last. This year I've gotten notices that several important pieces of software on it will no longer be supported, and it's been almost five years since the OS went out of date, so I think this will be the year. Not looking forward to it.

Lee Hartsfeld said...

My PC was only five years old, and the motherboard (to quote the Best Buy tech) "is crap." I've purchased a laptop which was on sale at half price, and now it's a matter of transferring my old PC's data to the new one. It honestly seems as if everyone except me enjoys many years of use from their devices, whereas mine inevitably conk out before their time. But, of course, it's always a logical error to generalize from a string of bad events. In this case, to conclude that I'm "cursed" with bad luck. The burden of proof is much broader than a small number of PCs which have unaccountably died on me. I'd be generalizing from five or six examples. The rational conclusion is that, to date, I've had shitty luck in the realm of personal computers. Not that fate is out to get me. Though, of course, that possibility can never be totally removed. There's at least a 1 in 5 billion chance that I'm a victim of an old Gypsy curse placed on my family line. The odds are tiny, but then a longstanding curse WOULD explain my lack of luck in the area of PCs. (-:

Bryan said...

Hi Lee...
What, a computer with years of life.
I have gone through an Acer laptop, a Sony large and small laptop, 2 Lenovo's, and I am on my 3rd Lenovo now. Plus my Lenovo tablet is not as I expected it to be. So every 3-5 years max were my laptops good for. Sony's were the most expensive in Euro, and the worst performing. I keep going back to Lenovo, because they claim to be one of the best. But 3 of them, I must be nuts.

Bryan said...

Oh, I do not buy the extended warranty, because their shelf life is only maybe 2 years. So, if I get 3 years from it, I win.
On the other hand, I do not know how it works in the USA, but once the laptop ships from the factory, the factory warranty has already started. So, with this current Lenovo, the warranty was already used up by 3 months as it sat around in the warehouse or store shelf before I got it. Not fair, not fair indeed.

musicman1979 said...

Here is some "rare" Ferrante and Teicher Christmas music that you can enjoy when you have a minute to relax from all of your PC issues this season. Freshly posted by Ernie on his blog:

https://ernienotbert.blogspot.com/2024/12/hi-fivories.html

musicman1979 said...

Paul Whiteman Christmas music!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vu7SHmNSdJ4

Lee Hartsfeld said...

musicman1979,

Thanks for the links! And, no, I'm still waiting my new PC (a laptop) to have my old PC's data loaded onto it. Looks like Xmas posting is over me this year...

Bryan,

Sorry you've had such bad PC luck. Normally, I'd have expected my HP to last longer than five years, but... This downstairs PC is at least ten years old, and though it's not running superbly, it's doing its job. Slowly... but surely. And I'm down to one cat, I'm afraid. Old age, cancer, and one guy who upped and disappeared on me (Arlo). Arlo often spent much time outdoors, so I didn't miss him until his second days of absence. No idea what happened to him, though he was pretty old, so he may have simply... died. Or (I'm hoping) he jointed the barn cats up the hill, where a very expensive home was built some time back, then added to. The "barn" is bigger than my old farmhouse! Anyway, my cat Raul is a fine friend, and he seems to be doing well.

Lee Hartsfeld said...

"Over for me," I mean (Christmas posting).