Thursday, December 22, 2022

Christmas 2022--Various Artists, Part 2: Dolan, The Wesley Bell Ringers, Jan Cyman and the Musicalaires, Clark Gassman

 





Another round of assorted artists, starting with the 23-member Wesley Bell Ringers choir of Christ UMC, Salt Lake City UT--we'll hear three very cool selections, starting with my all-time favorite Yuletide song, Jingle Bells.  What can I say?  It's the catchiest melody ever devised.  The bell choir is beautifully recorded, especially for a private-pressed 1979 effort, and, at times, its sound is downright surreal.  I say that as a big compliment.  At the time of this recording, the choir had a bass boom-a-gong to add low tones.  Far out.  We also have the return of Ferde Grofe's 1934 Christmas Eve, as expertly played by organ master Barron Smith on "The world's largest concert organ," the John Wanamaker Organ, Philadelphia.  And the organ indeed sounds awesome.  No year given at Discogs, but a past eBay listing mentioned 1956, which seems probable.  Here's the lowdown on Christmas Eve.  As with his Grand Canyon suite, Grofe appended a very old-fashioned play-by-play text of the type dating back to the late 1700s!

Plus, three selections by Jay Cyman and the Musicalaires. And if that sounds like a polka group, you are correct!  New York polkas, to be precise.  My favorite Cyman track: Jolly Old St. Nicholas, whose words come from an 1865 poem by Emily Huntington Miller, as published in the children's periodical, The Little Corporal.  I'll need to check my Little Corporal stash to see if I have that one or not; I've acquired a good number of them over the years, and mainly for the picture stories, drawn in silhouette, which exactly resemble modern comic strips.  Children were to guess the narrative, which would be published in the next issue, from the visuals.  Cool, Christian-style magazine of a politically progressive type--not unusual for its time.

Two marvelous tracks by the Evangelical Festival Choirs, from a Christian Faith LP gifted to me by Diane: Christians Awake! and There's a Song in the Air.  If you love rock-solid, old-fashioned Christmas choral singing, this group brings it.  Then the RCA Camden studio concoction The Organ Masters (Music for Skaters, 1969) with Waltz of the Flowers.  Very cool, Readers-Digest-boxed-set type of stuff.  And we have Dolan (aka, Bob Dolan) with three holiday numbers, many with close friend Celia Fisher, who is pretty consistently in the background, though she's only formally credited for three tracks, with Bob's other close friend, Sonny Charles, getting a single official citation.  Perhaps the highlight of Dolan's LP is the Duane Eddy-influenced God Rest You Merry Gentlemen, with twangy guitar and percussion effects accomplished by the drumming of fingers on a table (?).  Or maybe an amplifier chassis.  I considered ripping the entire Dolan LP, and I may still.  Bob signed, and his script isn't the easiest to make out, though what first looked like "To Siesan" is most likely "To Susan."  Like I have any room to judge--at my age, my cursive is hopeless.

Clark Gassman, on the Moog Synthesizer in 1970, performs a Ralph Carmichael arrangement of Handel's Hallelujah Chorus (The New Hallelujah) which is quite fun, and the Northminster Presbyterian Choir of Tucson AZ gives us our second rendition of Jingle Bells.

I labeled the "Dolan Presents..." sides as by Bob Dolan, as they're credited on the label, even though his back-cover pic identifies him as "Dolan."  Whatever.  The main point is, Merry Christmas!


DOWNLOAD: Various Artists, Part 2--Christmas 2022


Jingle Bells--The Wesley Bell Ringers, Dir. E.J. Duncan, 1969

Christmas Season Polka--Jan Cyman and the Musicalaires, 1978

Waltz of the Flowers--Grand Valse--The Organ Masters, 1969

Here Comes Santa Claus--Bob Dolan, Celia Fisher, Sonny Charles, 1967

Sleigh Ride--The Wesley Bell Ringers, Dir. E.J. Duncan, 1969

Christmas Eve (Ferde Grofe, 1934)--Barron Smith, John Wanamaker Organ, Philadelphia, 1956?

Christians Awake! Salute the Happy Morn--Evangelical Festivals Choir, Dir. John Lunberg

I Saw Three Ships--Wesley Bell Ringers, Dir. E.J. Duncan, 1969

Jolly Old St. Nick Polka--Jan Cyman and the Mucicalaires, 1978

The New Hallelujah (Arr: Carmichael)--Carl Gassmant, Moog Synthesizer, 1970

Jingle Bells--Northminster Presbyterian Church Choir (Tucson AZ)

Footsteps on the Roof Polka--Jan Cyman and the Musicalaires, 1978

There's a Song in the Air--Evangelical Festivals Choir, Dir. John Lunberg

God Rest You Merry Gentlemen--Bob Dolan, 1967

Little Drummer Boy--Bob Dolan, 1967




Lee

Thursday, December 15, 2022

Languages of Christmas--Taiwan, Tanzania, Nigeria, Madagascar, Japan, etc.! (Augsburg Publishing House 23-1660; 1973)

 


"Though united in its expression of Christmas joy, this album is a collection of songs from various cultures, languages, and musical backgrounds...Voices from the Far East, the Middle East, Africa, and the Pacific islands join in an international chorus of praise to the Christ child."--LP notes.  That about sums up this 1973 gem.  For some reason, I was afraid that this collection would be too... bland or contrived.  Or even boring.  I have memories of lackluster, tedious, same-sounding "world music" segments on the radio, circa 2005, and I hoped this wouldn't be an example of same.  And I'm happy to report that it is not!  It is the antithesis of such programs--fresh, fascinating, and totally worthy of the season.

Sources include a live television broadcast, plus radio studio and field recordings.  Hard to pick my favorite tracks--I suppose the Taiwanese, Nigerian, Japanese, and New Guinean please me the most.  Sound quality is mostly outstanding, even if I didn't detect much stereo, compatible or otherwise.  But since the jacket indicates stereo, I didn't sum the channels.

The different (i.e., non-Western) choral approaches, even when Western harmony is involved, are fascinating, and the Pidgin English Hark! The Harald Angels Sing (New Guinea) is an amazing combination of Western and non-Western vocalizing.  Let's Be Happy, Jesus Is Born (Ethiopia) has a quasi-hoedown feel (how's that for an adjective?) with its on-the-beat clapping and use of the gapped pentatonic scale.  For me, one of the many surprises on this 1973 LP.

Only the two Lebanon tracks fail to move me--they sound too off-key.  Of course, off-key is a relative thing--it's one culture's notion of proper pitch relationships vs. another's.  And, of course, I can't judge Lebanese Christmas selections from two examples.

No "world music" monotony here.  A varied and vibrant program, and don't let the 20-track playlist put you off!


DOWNLOAD: Languages of Christmas (Augsburg Publishing House 23-1660; 1973)


TAIWAN

Silent Night

Stars of Ice

O Come, O Come, Emmanuel

TANZANIA

A Swahili Carol

Lo, How a Rose

NIGERIA

Christmas Has Come

Why Are We Together?

MADAGASCAR

The Day of My Savior

Child Jesus

JAPAN

Joyful, Joyful Christmas

Sheep Sleep on Beds of Grass

ETHIOPIA

Joy to the World

Let's Be Happy, Jesus Is Born

NEW GUINEA

Wise Men Follow a Star

Baby Jesus Come to Earth

Harim Ensel Mekin Song (Hark! The Herald Angels Sing)

LEBANON

We Three Kings

O Come, All Ye Faithful

INDIA

The Morning Star

The Wise Men Adored



Lee


Monday, December 12, 2022

Brunswick Concert Band: "Kiddies' Patrol"/"Kiddies' Dance" (1920), plus the VMB

 





Strange times call for strange measures--my out-of-nowhere Windows hassle has knocked my blog posting off course, naturally (I should be one LP-rip ahead at this point).  And so I'm offering this six-selection zip file which, in fact, only contains one Christmas title--the rest are 12-inch non-holiday Victor Military Band gems, all new to the blog.  What happened was, I just ripped the Brunswick Concert Band's Kiddies' Patrol/Dance for YouTube, and I decided to post it here, as well (in non-video form).  And I figured, why not add the VMB sides?  So I did.

This Brunswick Concert Band "descriptive" number was penned by Walter B. Rogers (Victor's "house" band leader--and, I think, arranger--until 1916), with Rogers the likely director, since he worked in a Victor-style capacity for Brunswick starting in 1919.  I combined sides A and B (Kiddies' Patrol--Christmas Eve/Kiddies' Dance--Christmas Morning) into a single file, and because one of these two sides (the B side?) is at Amazon for download, I got a copyright claim notice at YT, though I was still allowed to post.  This is ridiculous, of course, because all pre-1923 recordings are pubic domain.  By law.  But I somehow don't feel like arguing the point with YT, since my channel isn't monetized, anyway.

The 1913-1914 VMB sides are terrific, and I'm quite satisfied with my rips.  Also, even though I understand why Hits of 1915 was thus titled, despite having been recorded in late 1914, I still find the situation amusing.


DOWNLOAD: Kiddies' Patrol/Dance, plus VMB


Kiddies' Patrol (Christmas Eve)/Kiddie's Dance (Christmas Morning) (Walter B. Rogers)--Brunswick Concert Band, approx. Oct., 1920

Hits of 1915--Medley--Victor Military Band, Dir. by Edward T. King, 1914

Dengozo--Brazilian Maxixe (Ernesto Nazareth)--Victor Military Band, Dir. Rogers, 1914

Destiny Waltz (Sidney Baynes)--Same

The Night Owls (Vincent Scotto)--Same



Lee

Sunday, December 11, 2022

Unwanted keyboard "help"--Update

So... The Microsoft support person told me that the auto-complete feature was enabled by my browser (which is something I had suspected, though I could find no way to disable any such function in Edge).  Anyway, long story short, I am now using Chrome as my browser, and the problem seems to have vanished.

On the other hand, suddenly my type looks kind of funky.  Not as sharp.  I have no idea why that would be.  It's as if font quality is less.  Every other aspect off the display is fine, save for the lettering.

Maybe there's a setting for font/type.  But I don't feel like messing around with settings at this point.

The tech also suggested that the auto-complete feature is unique to a given "chat" page.  And I guess Blogger would qualify as such?  Don't ask me.  I never thought of Blogger in terms of a chat page.  Strange.

At any rate, I am no longer being dogged by word and phrase suggestions.  But what an adventure--I had to download the app which permits the tech/user interface, insert an activation code, AND then I had to come up with a new Microsoft password.  I'm lucky that I'm bald on top, or I'd have been tearing out my hair.

Then our chat connection failed, but the tech was still able to communicate with me on the Word pad, or whatever you call it.  This was flat-out surreal.

Maybe I dreamed the entire thing.  Any moment now, I'll wake up... (Hm.  Nope, I must already be awake.)


Lee

Saturday, December 10, 2022

Christmas 2022: Various Artists, Part 1: Merv Griffin, Clebanoff, Lew White, Julius La Rosa, Dixie Dean, more!

 




Various Christmas 45s and album cuts today, and... And this is totally, utterly UNREAL.  Suddenly, Windows 10 is trying to anticipate what I'm going to type.  I went into Settings and turned off this inane feature called "Typing insights"--a feature I did NOT activate in the first place--and it's continuing to mess with my text.  I it turned OFF, and yet it is still messing with my typing.  (Cue Twilight Zone title music.)  The extent to which I do not need this cannot be expressed in mere words.  Unintelligible grunts, maybe.  I have to know how to stop this.  This just started today.  Again, I turned off the "Typing insights."  It should be disabled.  Why isn't it?  (Relax.  Breath in, breath out.  Slowly.  Repeat.)

Tomorrow, I'll have to contact Microsoft's help desk, or whatever it's called, and demand an answer to this idiocy.  A number of unwanted typing features were suddenly activated as of today, and it must have been the last round of updates--because I sure as heck didn't turn this stuff on.

Does Microsoft know the difference between assisting and harassing?  I know, I know--get an Apple.

So... there are two tracks I ripped--one which involved much manual splicing--and then I decided to axe them.  Copyright risks.  This includes the Les Brown track requested by musicman, I'm afraid--You Forgot Your Gloves.  It had no vocal, anyway.  But it must be an in-demand item.  That's all I can guess.

Anyway, Les Paul and Mary Ford start things out with Jungle Bells.  (That's right--Jungle.)  From 1953, and virtually a tutorial on rock-era guitar-and-amplifier shenanigans (to suggest animal noises).  Wonderfully weird.  Then, the excellent Freedom Quartet from, whenever (a private pressing minus a formal label title), doing Charles H. Gabriel's wonderful The Star and the Wise Men (shortened to The Star, to save ink), which I previously featured in an LP by a Mennonite choir.  Gabriel is my favorite gospel songwriter, in case I've never revealed this before.  Then, from Christmas at Quinto, the expert concert accordion of Dixie Dean gracing a combination Hallelujah Chorus/Joy to the World arrangement.  It's quite clever, but as we all know by now, Handel had nothing to do with Joy.  Nor did Lowell Mason write the tune, as I once thought--rather, he arranged an existing melody.  And keep messing with me, "Typing insights."  I'll silence you yet, you unwanted nuisance.

The "insights" feature has something to do with Artificial Intelligence.  Well, I get the "Artificial" part, but I have issues with the second word.

Where were we?  Okay, from the same LP, virtuosity on the marimba by Gene Jordan in a majorly enjoyable O Come, All Ye Faithful.  Then, Fran Alexandre with Christmas Everywhere, a 1958 classic that I posted, um, two years ago, but here it is again, because I love it.  And maybe you missed it last time around.  It is a not-to-be-missed-out-on 45, and I sure puzzled "Typing insights" with that one.  It had no idea where I was going.  (Here I am, reduced to outguessing Windows 10.)

The Brigham Young University (good job, Microsoft, on anticipating "University") A Cappella Choir (I guess "A Cappella" is past the AI IQ threshold) sings Make We Joy Now in This Fest.  If you've heard of this one, then you're ahead of me (and Microsoft).  "Fest" must have been 16th century hep talk for "festival."  We switch gears for my all-time favorite Pickwick kiddie Christmas track, The Sleigh Bell Song, ripped from an EP from the 50 Christmas Favorites boxed set on Pickwick's Playhour label.  Next, Merv Griffin's wonderful Christmas City, recorded by Merv in 1962 for the annual Christmas City of the North Parade in Duluth, Minnesota. And every time I listen to Merv singing, "Come this Christmas, and you'll suddenly find your youth," I hear "...you'll suddenly find you're you."  Which is a nice thing to discover.  (Hey, I'm me!)  Merv is followed by Julius La Rosa in terrible 1966 MGM stereo with We Need a Little Christmas.  And, to be honest, I'm not in love with the song, but I dig the elaborate, everything-but-the-kitchen-sink treatment.  It's classic old-fashioned holiday overkill!  Pre-light shows and giant amplifiers and first-row-seat hearing loss.

Tracks 10 and 12 feature the great Lew White on the RCA Organ Studio in the Paramount Theater (the first track does, anyway).  On Victor Herbert's mega-classic March of the Toys, Lew is assisted by Harry Breuer on drums.  Ripped from the Camden LP, Famous Melodies.  The album's surface was an essay in light crosscuts, but VinylStudio got 'em all.  I don't go for this notion of vinyl sounding more authentic with clicks/ticks and pops--I can live happily without the "full experience" of analog audio media.  And we (almost) close with the delightful Bobsled, from the 1961 Clebanoff and His Orch. LP Strings Afire.  It's from the stereo edition, which actually came out in 1962, but the mono LP is from 1961, and I'm assuming ditto for the stereo version.  Ha! I totally stumped "Typing insights" with "assuming ditto."  

Oh, and the DAHR entry for Lew White's 1938 Waltz of the Flowers lists a vocal chorus which does not appear on the reissued cut, but I'm assuming this is a solo from the same session.  Or that maybe the RCA Victor files were mistaken?  (No, not "mistakenly," darn it!)  Must... destroy... Typing insights.


DOWNLOAD: Various Artists, Part 1: Christmas 2022 (I'm inverting the blog title line)


Jungle Bells--Les Paul and Mary Ford, 1953

The Star (Charles H. Gabriel)--The Freedom Quartet, from ?

Joy to the World--Dixie Dean, Concert Accordion, 1960

O Come, All Ye Faithful--Gene Jordan, Marimba, 1960

Christmas Everywhere--Fran Alexandre, 1958

May We Joy Now in This Fest--Brigham Young University A Cappella Choir.

The Sleigh Bell Song--Playhour Records TB-5-11

Christmas City (Don Peterson)--Merv Griffin, 1962

We Need a Little Christmas (Herman)--Julius La Rosa With the Choraliers, 1966

March of the Toys (Victor Herbert)--Lew White, Organ, and Harry Breuer, Drums, 1941

Bobsled--Clebanoff and His Orchestra, 1961

Waltz of the Flowers (Tchaikovsky)--Lew White, Organ, 1938



Lee