Twenty memorable mono sides, ripped from 45 rpm discs in my collection. As usual, no unifying theme, save that all but two are from the 1950s, starting with the 1957 paean to marital fidelity, Hello, Is That You? by the (Original) Red Tops, recorded (I seem to recall) at Sun. Then, a jazzy Capitol country side from 1951--a pre-Maybellene take on Ida Red called Freight Train Breakdown. And I made sure to use the correct pre-RIAA response curve for the early-50s Columbia and Capitol singles. (To my slight surprise, Columbia was still using a 300 Hz bass turnover as late as 1954!)
And... the original 1950 Tony Bennett Boulevard of Broken Dreams, which Google's AI describes as Tony's breakthrough hit on Columbia. (His 1958 Greatest Hits LP utilizes a different arrangement altogether.) I prefer this original, if only for the way Tony belts it out. Then, Steve Lawrence does his best Bobby Vee impression with the King-Goffin Poor Little Rich Girl, whose lyrics portray a class-divided romance as doomed--in contrast to June Valli's From the Wrong Side of Town, which asserts (in so many words) that class distinctions are irrelevant.
Way to the Stars (from the 1945 movie) is magnificent 1954 (?) mood music by George Melachrino, while Sometimes is too-smooth-to-be-doo-wop doo-wop. (Think the Four Lads crossed with the Five Satins.) The Four Voices' 1962 remake of their 1956 hit Lovely One is especially elegant doo-wop, though it does register as/in that style. Further in the list, we have "real" doo-wop from Lee Andrew and the Hearts (the brilliant Nobody's Home). An incredibly tight performance, backed by the famous Pancho Villa Orchestra, best known for the 1957 hit, After School Rock (not in this list).
Brother Fats is a fascinating hybrid: Not quite rock and roll, but not quite big band, either. Peggy King's 1957 Zero Hour is a movie theme gorgeously (and seductively) crooned, while Rock, Pretty Baby pushes all the right 1956 American Bandstand buttons. Which is logically impossible, actually, since AB didn't start until the next year. And the songwriter was Sonny Burke!
Tamboo is a superb 1955 piece of concert exotica, while the Leiber-Stoller Bazoom! is a fine Larry Elgart cover of the Cheers hit. And for anyone wondering what Rock Around the Clock sounded like before it was revamped by Bill Haley, we have Bill Coates sticking to the original verse and chorus (with piano embellishments) from... well, I don't know. Sometime in the '50s, surely.
Rosemary Clooney's rockin' version of Tennessee Ernie Ford's Shot Gun Boogie has an R&B-style backing led by none other than Mitch Miller, and Kay Star's "pop" cover of the Clovers' Fool, Fool, Fool is almost as good as the original (penned by the co-founder of Atlantic Records). And there's fine middle-of-the-road jazz vocalizing on The Glow-Worm, followed (two entries later) by the weird but fun Tokyo Melody, the second 1960s side in our list.
DOWNLOAD: Memorable Mono Media.zip FLAC
Hello, Is That You?--The (Original) Red Tops, V: Rufus McCay, 1957
Eddie Kirk--Freight Train Breakdown, 1951
The Boulevard of Broken Dreams--Tony Bennett, Orch. directed by Marty Manning, 1950
Poor Little Rich Girl (Goffin-King)--Steve Lawrence, 1963
Way to the Stars (Nicholas Brodszky)--The Melachrino Orch., 1954
Sometimes--The Bachelors, 1958
From the Wrong Side of Town--June Valli w. Joe Reisman's Orch. and Chorus, 1956
Lovely One--The Four Voices, 1962
Brother Fats--Ray Anthony and His Orch., V: Gloria Craig, The Skyliners, 1951
Zero Hero--Peggy King w. Frank De Vol and His Orch., 1957
Tamboo--American Symphonic Band of the Air, Dir. Willliam D. Revelli, 1955
Bazoom! (I Need Your Lovin')--Les Elgart and Orch., 1954
Rock, Pretty Baby (Sonny Burke)--Jimmy Daley and the Ding-a-Lings, 1956
Rock Around the Clock--Bill Coates at the Console
Fool, Fool, Fool--Kay Starr w. The Lancers, Lee Young and His Band, 1952
Hesitation (Winterhalter)--Hugo Winterhalter and His Orch., 1952
Nobody's Home--Lee Andrews and the Hearts, 1958
The Glow-Worm--The Paulette Sisters and Dick Style, Larry Clinton Orch., 1952
Shot Gun Boogie--Rosemary Clooney, Orch. under direction of Mitch Miller, 1951
Tokyo Melody--Helmut Zacharias and His Orch., 1964
Lee











%201944.jpg)








