Wednesday, January 05, 2022

Not your everyday Christmas audio relic: Billy Four--A Record for Christmas (1948)


(A repost from 2019.  I don't find many home recordings in my thrift searches, and this one is pretty special and, I think, worth a re-up.)

Once upon a time, people used disc-cutting machines to cut their own discs.  Eventually (during the 50s?), people switched to magnetic tape for home recording.  That's the history as I know it--it's probably a bit more complicated than that.  But here's a home-made Christmas disc by a very young man named Billy.  I know this, because on the second side Billy introduces a piano piece (nothing I recognize; sounds like a by-ear number) with the words, "This is Billy, making you a record for Christmas of (in?) 1948."  Thus, I know the recording year.  Of course, Billy could have simply been the engineer, but I suspect he's the ivory tickler, at least on side 2.  He's a decent player for a kid.

I'm designating the piano solo as side 2 because it contains no writing on the label (some random logic for you, there); the flip (above) lists White Christmas and Jingle Bells as the pieces, and what looks like "Billy Four" as the artists.  So I'm assigning it side-1 status.  Problem is, there are only two musicians--tenor (?) sax and piano, so maybe "Four" (or "Lour"?) is Billy's last name.  Will we ever know?

Condition isn't very good (Maybe I should have employed some hiss filtering), but I used the curve marked "AFRS Transcriptions #1" in my VinylStudio program, and it brings the music out loud and clear over the disc noise.  AFRS, of course, is Armed Forces Radio Service, which eventually became Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS), or "A-Farts," as we called it in the Navy.  I remember from my days on my first ship (a long-gone Fast Frigate) that AFRTS would send us videos to play over the ship's closed-circuit system.  Typically, these consisted of semi-successful syndicated series from who-knows-where.  (One of them seems to have been made for Australian TV.)  And there were movies, of course.  One night, I was on video duty in the ET compartment, running a program for the crew while watching a tape on another machine.  Meaning to fast-forward the other tape, I accidentally fast-forwarded the AFRTS program.  Knock on the door--a crewmember.  "Could you please reshow the last five minutes or so?" he asked.  Oops.

AFRTS programs always included Navy recruiting spots, and you can imagine the responses they received in our TV lounges.  Anyway, of course this disc has nothing to do with AFRS, but the curve sure matches up beautifully.  Groove to the holiday sounds of the Billy Four.



To Billy and the Billy Four: A Record for Christmas of 1948





Lee

7 comments:

Larry said...

Thank you for posting this. I love homemade stuff

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Larry,

Sure! I love these things, too--they have a spooky kind of immediacy. They pull the listener right into the moment, even after 70-plus years.

Ernie said...

Cool stuff for sure! Do you think maybe he was four years old when he recorded this? Seems pretty young though...

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Ernie,

Yes, he does sound older than four. But who knows?

rbarban said...

I should send you my late mom's "home/studio" 78 recording.

Unknown said...

hey, Lee...a little off-topic, but since you mentioned it, I felt compelled to ask...since I also served in the Navy aboard an FFG, I was curious which frigate you were on board, if you feel comfortable sharing that info...mine was the now-defunct Crommelin, FFG-37.

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Sure--I served on the USS Lockwood, FF-1064. On line, it reports that the Lockwood began life as a destroyer escort, prior to being redesignated a fast frigate in 1975. She's long gone by now. My chief memory, besides our EW antennas five levels above the ship, was the cramped quarters!

http://www.navsource.org/archives/06/images/06021064/0602106412.jpg