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Saturday, November 2, 2024

Everybody's Talkin' - Mario Said

 

The Fool On The Hill

Everybody's Talkin'
Mario Said
Producer: Tommy Oliver
Orchestra Arranged and Conducted by Tommy Oliver
Engineer: Lanky Linstrot
Art Direction: Woody Woodward
Design: Halmos
Cover Photography: Bernie Negler
Back Liner Photography: John Engstead
Liberty Records LST-7601
1969

From the back cover: It is beginning to seem that the world owes a great deal to Latin America... not only in terms of festivals in Rio, summer skiing in Portillo, or beaches in Peru; but in terms of music and talent, there may soon be no equal to what Latin America has given to the rest of the world. And it terms of Mario Said, the gift has been a big one. For over the past four years, Mario Said has become one of the most respected pianists in the musical community.

Born in Colon, the Republic of Panama, it was Mario's parents who first encouraged him to pursue the course of studying music. Within several years, both his talent and his interest had grown to such an extent that while he was still in high school, he formed a small band and toured the U.S. Army Bases in and around the Panama Canal Zone. Later, he continued his studies at the Conservatory Of Music in Panama for the next eight years, and later performed in the National Theater of Panama. His playing since that time has become well known and respected for its creative combinations of Latin rhythms mixed with classical and contemporary sounds. For in all of Mario Said's renditions of any of the songs in this album, there is the relaxed presence of a mind at ease, and the creative expertise with which Mario Said is able to play.

The fact that there is an orchestra behind Said is no mistake; for along with the artfulness of producer Tommy Oliver, it is an orchestration which lends towards the talents of Mario rather than detracts from them. And one which instead of just filling empty space, blends and enhances the unique playing style of Mario.

But the album ends on a tragic note, not musically, but personally – for it is Mario Said's last album. Shortly after its completion, he passed away – suddenly and unexpectedly. This album commemorates a great man and an outstanding musician.

Ev'rybody's Talkin'
I Say A Little Prayer
Never My Love
Sealed With A Kiss
Every Step I Take (Every Move I Make)
The Fool On The Hill
Promises, Promises
Brown Eyed Woman
Harper Valley P.T.A.
California Soul
The Weight
Montage From How Sweet It Is (I Knew That You Knew)

An Old Fashioned Love Song - Billy Vaughn

 

An Old Fashioned Love Song

An Old Fashioned Love Song
Billy Vaughn
Produced by Tom Mack
Cover Photography by Bill Levy
Paramount Records PAS 6025
1972

Gypsies, Tramps & Thieves
Superstar
Long Ago And Far Away
Peace Train
The Other Face
Butterfly
Margo
An Old Fashioned Love Song
Just Waiting (Dis Madame)
You've Got A Friend
Mammy Blue

Lenny Dee Plays The Hits

 

Patricia

Lenny Dee Plays The Hits
Decca Records DL 78857
1959

When
Non Dimenticar (Don't Forget) (T'ho Voluto Bene)
Near You
(At) The End (Of A Rainbow)
Firefly
Who's Sorry Now
Everybody Loves A Lover
There Goes My Heart
Patricia
Volare (Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu)
It's All In The Game
Tea For Two Cha Cha

Brad Swanson And His Whispering Organ Sound

 

Laura

Brad Swanson
And His Whispering Organ Sound
Produced by Carlton Hamme
Cover Photo: Jerimiah Bean
Thunderbird Records STEREO/THS 9005

Love Makes The World Go 'Round
Laura
Satin Doll
Dream
Theme From Romeo And Juliet
Glory Of Love
Heartaches
Both Sides Now
Boulevard Of Broken Dreams
If We Dream
My Happiness

Porter Wagoner In Person

 

Porter Wagoner In Person

Porter Wagoner In Person
Recorded Live
Recorded Live in West Plains, Missouri
Engineer: Ron Steele
RCA Victor LSP-2840
1964

From the back cover: Porter Wagoner, Norma Jean, Speck Rhodes, Buck Trent and the Wagonmasters travel over 100,000 miles annually to take their show into the largest cities and the smallest crossroads. Reminisce with them about their travels, and you might hear of the times they have driven through heavy snows, flooding rains or 105 degree heat to entertain you in person. Nothing dampens their spirit, not even a flat tire thirty minutes before program time. And nothing can keep folks from coming out to see them. They play to capacity crowds night after night, such as the one that turned out in West Plains, Missouri, the night RCA Victor recorded the show.

Porter is a favorite with people wherever he goes – in person, on records, radio or television. The cover picture here shows Porter and the gang pleasing fans via WSM (Nashville). The Porter Wagoner television show is the largest sponsored "Opry-type" TV program in the world. Porter's rise to fame has been a solid one. His sincerity and easy smile hav endeared him to millions of people.

Do you recall the first country music show you ever saw in person? Perhaps it was a big tent show many years ago, or maybe it was only recently in a new air-conditioned auditorium. Regardless of the date and place, I bet it was a fun-packed experience you like to remember.

Now you can do more than remember. With this album you've got a front-row seat in the audience that saw Porter Wagoner – In Person in West Plains, Missouri, not long ago.

Porter welcome you with Howdy Neighbor Howdy, then strikes a familiar chord with some oldie such as A Satisfied Mind, An Old Log Cabin For Sale. He also includes his most recent single release: Find Out and My Baby's Not Here (In Town Tonight).

The show includes Buck Trent, the only boy who does the twist, plays and tunes the five-string banjo at the same time. Pretty Miss Norma Jean sings her heart out on Talk Back Trembling Lips, Private Little World, Head Over Heels and I Didn't Mean It. No "Porter Wagoner Show" is complete without a few funnies from Sadie's ever-lovin' Speck Rhodes. You'll roll with laughter at Speck's version of Sweet Fern.

Here's almost a full hour of real entertainment at your finger tips. – Jane Dowden, Media Director, Noble & Dury & Associates, producers of "The Porter Wagoner Show."

Howdy Neighbor Howdy
Misery Loves Company
Head Over Heels In Love With You
I Didn't Mean It
Foggy Mountain Top
Comedy - Sweet Fern
Medley - Haven't You Heard; Eat, Drink And Be Merry; A Satisfied Mind
I Thought Of God
Sally Goodin'
Come On In (And Make Yourself At Home)
My Baby's Not There (In Town Tonight)
Private Little World
Comedy
Find Out
An Old Log Cabin For Sale
John Henry

Friday, November 1, 2024

Gee From Haw - Various

 

Gee From Haw

Stars And Guests Of Hee Haw Presents
Gee From Haw
Written by Tom Perryman
Produced by Tom Perryman and Lynn Shultz
Chief Engineer: Thomas Wayne
Assistant Engineer: John Johnson
Nashville NLP 2079
1970

Theme - Banjo Whiz - Bill Emerson
Here's Rattler Here - Grandpa Jones
That's The Way I Feel - George Jones
How Many Biscuits Can You Eat - Stringbean
The Water Closet - Archie Campbell
Theme - Banjo Whiz - Bill Emerson
"Boo" - Minnie Pearl
Sweethearts In Heaven - Buck Owens
Walking In The Dark - Dottie West
The Dis-Orderly House - Junior Samples

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Westward Ho The Wagons

 

Westward Ho The Wagons

Songs From Westward Ho The Wagons
Starring Bob Eberly, Jimmy Blaine, Elton Britt, Rosalie Allen plus Other Great Stars
Plus Other Great Western Song Hits
Cover Photo from Dragoon Wells Massacre, A Lindsley Parson's Production
Starring Barry Sullivan, Dennis O'Keefe, Mona Freeman and Katy Jurado
An Allied Artists Release
Waldorf Music Hall King-Size Records
FDR MHK 33-1213

From the back cover: Heard on this splendidly recorded disc, which, by the way, is pressed on the finest vinyl, is a group of varied voices. Bob Eberly, who sings the title song of Westward Ho The Wagons, has his own radio show on the ABC Network, has been starred on many coast-to-coast television programs, has recently made his own long-playing record for Grand Awards Records, and is fondly remembered by so many lovers of popular music for the many fine recordings he made when a member of Jimmy Dorsey's orchestra.

Loren Becker and Jimmy Blaine have both been seen and heard frequently on the radio and television; the former strictly as a singer; the latter also as one of the country's topflight announcers. Loren was the winner of the first Arthur Godfrey Talent Scouts contest, was featured on the Robert Q. Lewis show, and has been heard on dozens of recordings. Jimmy, of course, has been seen and heard so many times on the Jackie Gleason show and many other outstanding television programs.

Elton Britt is one of the all-time singing stars of cowboy and Western folk music. A native of Arkansas, he was discovered by a Hollywood radio station executive and immediately hustled off to the film capital where he was an immediate sensation on the airwaves and later in the movies. He has been heard on countless radio programs, including his own coast-to-coast show that ran for a good number of years.

Rosalie Allen is one of the best-known of all girl Western singers, and has also made a national reputation as one of the world's outstanding yodelers. More recently she has confined her activities to the East Coast, where she has spread the gospel of Western music via her own radio programs, even converting a large segment of New York City's urban populace to her ways of thinking and singing.

Supporting these singers on many of these performances is an orchestra conducted by Enoch Light, the talented batoneer who is so well versed in all forms of music and who has made a special study of musical recording techniques that has won him wide acclaim in the field.

These, then, are the songs from Westward Ho The Wagons, plus a galaxy of other Western melodies, performed with zest and enthusiasm and much musical know-how by these great artists especially for this brand new Waldorf Music King-Size Record, another in a series of brilliant hi-fi-wax-works.

Westward Ho Wagons
I'm Lonely My Darlin' (Green Grow The Lilacs)
The Ballad Of John Colter
Wringle Wrangle
Pioneer's Prayer
Cool Cool Water
Rose Of San Antone
Cattle Call
Tennessee Waltz
Have You Ever Been Lonely
Cowpoke

To You Forever - Fred Waring

 

Easy To Love

To You Forever
Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians
Produced by Sonny Burke
Cover Photo by Ed Thrasher
Reprise R-6137

From the back cover: Fred Warning fills this collection with grace and beauty, and his album sings as eloquently of love as men and women are privileged to know how to sing. Listen carefully to the compelling tones of the bright new star of the Waring orchestra, Betty Anne McCall, as she weaves the entrancing sounds of her chordo-vox in and out of some of the arrangements.

The Very Thought Of You
Easy To Love
You Do Something To Me
The Nearness Of You
You And The Night And The Music
Embraceable You
You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
You're Driving Me Crazy
There Will Never Be Another You
All Of You
All The Things You Are

Country Ballads - Dusty Owens

 

Would You Hold It Against Me

Country Ballads 
Featuring Dusty Owens
Wyncote Records STEREO W9166

Home
Gotta See A Man About A Dream
Here Comes My Baby Back Again
Half A Mind
I Miss You Already
Would You Hold It Against Me
Big Harlan Taylor
I Don't Believe You've Met My Baby
The Nester
Keeping Up With The Jones

Monday, October 28, 2024

Music For My Love - Paul Weston

 

Goodnight Sweetheart

Music For My Love
Paul Weston
Produced by Lee Gillette
Capitol Records ST 1563

I Love You Truly
For You
Anniversary Song
My One And Only Love
Our Love
I Love You
Let Me Call You Sweetheart
My Darling, My Darling
True Love
On Other Love
Always
Goodnight Sweetheart

Sayonara Farewell Tokyo - The Club Nisei Orchestra & Singers

 

Sayonara Japanese Farewellsong

Sayonara Farewell Tokyo
Souvenir Songs Of Japan
Recorded by Japanese Artists
The Club Nisei Orchestra And Singers
49th State Hawaii Record Co. Hi-Fi LP-3450

From the back cover: The occupation of Japan by American and United Nations armed forces has left a definite and distinct impression upon that country's way of life. Surrender was not easy for the Japanese people to take, but they made their peace and found the occupation not too bitter to take.

Democracy was thrust upon them, and much of their hide-bound traditions and their feudal way of living was cast away into the limbo of discarded things. Whether they recognized that they had made a mistake in living by a fierce and fanatical philosophy is debatable, but on one can gainsay that they took the change in their stride.

After humiliating surrender, the Japanese people found they had a friend in their conqueror. Being a thrifty and hard working people, they soon found they could rebuild and fast. Buttressed by American friendship, guidance, economic help and know how, Japan, in less than two years, achieved a remarkable come-back.

Even her women who had before this an inferior and self-effacing place in the household, were emancipated. They experienced a miraculous metamorphosis and carried their new-found freedom well. Their place in the sun was assured when they gained the suffrage franchise and let their force be felt in politics. Many unreasonable inhibitions have been shed, and the women have blossomed forth into full bloom. Today, Girl may meet Boy at a soda fountain like any American Girl and Boy.

In the cities of Japan, new sounds are heard in the music. No longer is the music tightly compartmentalized, rejecting change and adulteration. During the period of reconstruction, the impression of the music of the nations of the world has influenced the new sounds. However much resistance there is to adulteration, the blossoming of freedom of womanhood has brought a new type of songs that sing of love fulfilled or frustrated, instead of the old nationalistic spirit. And they are most delightful to listen to.

The selections in this and the other albums of Japanese music displayed here on this cover are the most popular and the most enduring of the new songs that have these new sounds. You will enjoy every one of these albums done in high fidelity.

Tokyo Boogie Woogie
Shina No Yoru (China Night)
Japanese Rhumba
Tokyo Serenade
Tanko Bushi
Ginza Kan Kan Musume
Tonko Bushi
Tokyo Ka-Chine-Ka Musume
Doyobi No Yoru
Machie No Hatoba
Hyo-Tan Boogie
Sayonara Japanese Farewell Song

Songs From TV's Villa Alegre Vol. 1

 

Songs From TV's Villa Alegra

Songs From TV's Villa Alegre Vol. 1 
Bilingual Children's Television, Inc.
Original Cast Recording
Peter Pan Records 8170
1975

Villa Alegre - Theme
Mundo Artificial (Artificial World)
Las Vocales (The Vowels)
My Habitat (My Habitat)
Santa Maria, Pinta y Nina
Mi Caballito (My Little Horse)
El Sol (The Sun)
Las Semillas (The Seeds)
Plantas Animals (Plants and Animals)
Cancion de Las Plamaditas (Clapping Song)
Villa Alegre Theme (Close)

Sunday, October 27, 2024

Blues Roots - Dave Burbeck & Gerry Mulligan

 

Journey

Blues Roots
The Dave Brubeck Trio
Featuring Gerry Mulligan
Produced by Teo Macero
Cover Photo: Bill Binzen
Engineering: Frank Laico, Stan Tonkel, Arthur Kendy, Murray Zimney
Columbia Records CS 9749
1968

Dave Burbeck - Piano and Honk Tonk Piano
Jack Six - Bass and Fender Bass
Alan Dawson - Drums
Gerry Mulligan - Baritone Sax

From the back cover: Dave Burbeck and the blues are old friends. He began is professional career playing the blues. He was a nineteen-year-old relief pianist in a club in Stockton, California, sustaining the mood between Cleo Brown's sessions of piano-playing and singing. The blues was Cleo's bag and Dave dug right into the blues, too. They both enjoyed the blues so much that Cleo often stayed on beyond her normal stint to play some four-handed boogie-woogie with Dave.

That was the beginning of Dave's conviction that the greatest statements in jazz are usually blues-based.

"The people that I've like most," he pointed out recently, "people like Charlie Parker and Art Tatum, moved me the most when they played the blues. It's the greatest form in jazz because it's the simplest form. And because of its simplicity, it gives you the greatest freedom. The musician and the audience both know the form so well that all the complexities and the musician gets involved in can be felt and understood by the audience."

During the seventeen years that he led the Dave Brubeck Quartet, the fact that he was working out of a jazz musician's natural wellspring, the blues, was often obscured by the emphasis placed on his use of classical devices and his ventures into unusual time signatures.

But the blues was always at the root of everything he played. It had to be because that's where Dave began as a jazz musician. And this was never more evident than when he recorded with such completely blues-oriented  musicians as Louis Armstrong and Jimmy Rushing.

This session with Gerry Mulligan took both of them back to their blues roots. Some of Gerry's earliest influences were the Jimmie Lunceford band and Jack Teagarden. The rolling swagger of his baritone saxophone has always been colored by a least a touch of the blues. Even when settled on the West Coast early in the 1950's, leading the quartet that – along with the Brubeck quartet – helped to establish the cool sound of West Coast jazz, the blues kept drifting through almost everything that Gerry played.

For both Dave and Gerry, the opportunity to focus the blues gave them the stimulation that comes from real freedom. This was the first time that this group, with Jack Six on bass and Alan Dawson on drums, had recorded in a studio. (Its only other album, Compadres, CS 9704, was made at a series of concerts in Mexico). But, largely because of the easy, old-shoe relationship that both of them have toward the blues, they found that a return to the real fundamentals of jazz created an excitement that is reflected in their playing. 

"You really get to  your roots this way!" Dave exclaimed as he listened to the playback of Blues Roots on which he uses a piano that is given a honky-tonk sound by spreading strips of copper over the strings. "I dig the way I play on that old piano.

"And notice that ending!" he added happily, "It's just like you always had to end the blues in the old days."

The sense of freedom was increased by the fact that Dave's musical relationship with Gerry is developing in a different fashion than his relationship with Paul Desmond in the old Brubeck Quartet.

"Gerry," Dave explained, "loves to play and he get very impatient. He keeps coming in on my solos all the time and I'm kind of digging it. Paul never interrupted me and I never interrupted Paul. But now I'm beginning to interrupt Gerry.

"In the old quartet, Paul and I left each other alone in our solos. For a while we had some improvised counterpoint but that kind of faded away because we liked the rhythm guys to stay out of it and they got bored.

"But in this group nobody cares if the bass player is on the root or if the drummer keeps the beat, so we can make the transition to complete freedom. Now we're going more and more to free improvisation. Sometimes we really sound like the new approach, but the way we do it is harder because we always keep a structure underneath so the listener has something to relate to."

Although the billing of the group is "The Dave Burbeck Trio featuring Gerry Mulligan," Brubeck invariably refers to it as "the quartet." He is thinking of it now more long-range terms than when it was first put together in the spring of 1968 to play a few concerts in Charlotte, New Orleans and Mexico. Then Mulligan seemed to be a visitor whose place might be taken by someone else at other concerts. But he is settling in as a regular part of the format.

"I never through things would work out this way with Gerry," Dave admitted, "He hates piano players." – Willie Johnson

Limehouse Blues
Journey
Cross Ties
Broke Blues
Things Ain't What They Used To Be
Movin' Out 
Blues Roots