Wednesday, October 31, 2007

A Hard Days Night of the Living Dead

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Ming Tea - BBC

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Drum Battle: Gene Krupa vs Buddy Rich

Two of the greatest drummers of all time show their stuff on the Sammy Davis Jr Show in 1956

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Andy Griffith - Darlings - There Is A Time

One of the best aspects of the Andy Griffith Show was the music, more often than not provided by "The Darlings" fictional mountain folk. This is one of the prettiest examples.

Luciano Pavarotti - RIP

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Jack Benny and Liberace 1969

Two master showmen!

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Sophie Milman - My Heart Belongs to Daddy

My new favourite artist. The band has a real Nelson Riddle sound happening. Heard this number on AM 740 the other night and fell in love with it!

Sophie Milman - Ochi Chernye

Absolutely beautiful arrangement of this Russian song. Love the smiles on the faces of the band.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Superchic(k) -One Girl Revolution

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Flavour of the Week


I know this blog is mostly just videos I found on youtube so far, but hey every journey of a thousand miles starts with one step, right?


As I told some friends, either Blogspot got easier to use or I got smarter (which is improbable).


My flavour of the week?


Turbo folk


Whats that?


I didn't know either.


But the BBC had a fascinating program about it the other day.


Read about it here:




Its certainly something different, a mix of rock, mediterranean and even seems a bit influenced by the Middle East.


The main feature of the music seems to be leggy women who have shall we say, been "artificially enhanced."


The undisputed star seems to be Ceca (tse-tsa). Lots of her videos on youtube. She was married to a Serbian strongman, who lost his standing in a dispute with a lead projectile (or two).


Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Rock Around the Clock (1955)

Monday, August 6, 2007

Shotgun Boogie

A classic by Tennessee Ernie Ford

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Ian Thomas - Right Before Your Eyes (Live)

Absolutely beautiful song by Ian Thomas. Brings back memories of High School.

The B-52s - Rock Lobster (Live)

The Spoons - Old Emotions

More Spoons!

Just a Pretty Voice on the Radio?

To hear Lale Anderson, Zarah Leander (discussed below) and a number of versions of Lili Marleen...go to: http://www.germaniaclub.homestead.com/

The following items were taken from my Ontario DX Association column (originally "Listening In", now "Programming Matters") between 1999 and 2001. It took me a while to find these files. Some things might be a bit out of date, like a reference to Napster :-P

Occasionally, a cultural phenomenon comes along that is both unexpected and virtually unexplainable. Sometimes it is a result of an extraordinary talent (The Beatles 1964) or unusual circumstances. Let us go back to Christmas 1943 in Italy as the Canadian Army fights its way towards Ortona...

"One of the nightly events at Campobasso which has fascinated us all is the languorous sexy singing of Lilli Marleen preceding the German news in English...It is a must for everyone who can get near the signals truck or a radio...Our German interrogators sing it in German. Most of us have one or another of the many English translations, some with the beauty of poetry, others perversely obscene. All finding consolation in an extraordinary enemy love song, which has become the favourite of two opposing armies." (Maj. Charles Comfort quoted in the documentary No Price Too High about Canadian participation in World War II.)

In 1941, German troops attacked Yugoslavia (delaying the invasion of Russia by six weeks...a fatal error for Hitler as it turned out) and took over the Belgrade radio station, which became Soldatensender Belgrad (Soldiers Station Belgrade). They only had a handful of records to play, which they found in an old box. One turned out to be a song recorded by Lale Andersen based on a poem written by Hans Liep in 1915 and set to a tune by Norbert Schultz written in twenty minutes in 1938. Known as the "Sentry Song" or Song of the Sentry", it was played nightly and became incredibly popular with not only German troops in the Balkans but with Rommel's Afrika Korps and the British Eighth Army.

A 1941 article in Signal, the glossy Nazi picture magazine, published in English and several other languages and designed to be read abroad (but in actuality, only distributed in the Channel Islands) the song was described thus:

"About four years ago in a Berlin cafe a certain song was sung for the first time. The audience liked it but it did not make a very lasting impression. Lale Andersen, the cabaret singer, however, recorded it for the gramophone. In spite of all, it was just another song among millions. It was called `Lili Marleen`.

"The words were taken from the volume of poetry 'The Little Harbor Organ' by the Hamburg poet Hans Leip, the music is by Norbert Schultze.

"Three years later in summer 1941 the German soldiers radio station Belgrade was put on the air. Everything happened rather suddenly: among the hastily assembled equipment was a case of more or less (chiefly less) up-to-date recordings including "Lili Marleen". The song was broadcast. After a few days dozens of letters came from the soldiers asking for the "song with something about a lamp-post in it". Then came a regular deluge of field-post letters from France, Norway, Crete and the Ukraine, "Broadcast Lili Marleen" Now for many months, at 10 p.m. every evening, the Belgrade station has beenbroadcasting to all fronts the "Sentry Serenade", to quote two of the many names by which the song is known, and hundreds of thousands of German soldiers are never tired of hearing it. All over Europe people are whistling it and humming it and Lale Andersen has to sing it at least twice wherever she appears...

"What is the secret of its success? Lale Andersen's voice? But she has sung many other songs. The song itself?? It has been known for years before it became famous." (Signal: Hitler's Wartime Picture Magazine, Edited by S. L. Mayer, Prentice Hall 1978)

There is a movie by Werner Fassbinder and starring Hanna Schygula in the title role called “Lilli Marleen” which occasionally shows up on CBC TV, which is based on Andersen's perhaps imaginative autobiographical “Der Himmel hat vielen Farben.”

Lale Andersen was born near Bremerhaven in 1905 and died in Vienna in 1972.

The popularity of her version of the song led, reportedly, to Vera Lynn's stellar career, as it was felt that British soldiers needed someone to listen to other than Lale.

The song also appeared in the film "Judgement at Nuremberg" starring Spencer Tracy and Marlene Dietrich. I also came across an unsubstantiated report that German troops in Kosovo had a radio station that was known to play the song...almost exactly 58 years after an earlier generation of German troops visited the area." I found that in a German language website that may or may not be run by the EXTREME left in Germany...not sure I trust my German or the internet on that one.

Lale Andersen and another singer/actress Zarah Leander not only are mistaken for each other but vie for the title of "the German Vera Lynn". The careers of these three women are related in a rather complex manner, which I'd like to expand on and tie in with the tragic story of Iva d'Aquino (Tokyo Rose) in a future column.

(December 1999)

Last month I spoke about Lale Anderson and Lilli Marleen. Another famous singer/actress of Nazi Germany was Zarah Leander. She appeared in many German films of the era and was known for her deep, sultry voice...at one time she was considered a rival of Marlene Dietrich...except she remained inGermany. I was first put on to Zarah by an ODXA member (who saw her films and heard her music in occupied Holland, perhaps two to three years ago, a Mr. Hylkema, I believe who speculated that she disappeared after the war, no doubt caught up in the de-Nazification of the entertainment industry.

Truth is stranger than fiction. I have a book, which shows Zarah in Sweden after the war...she was in fact a Swedish national. She got out of Germany when things started to go sour in 1943-44. She was later barred from entry to Germany or Austria for a few years after the war, but eventually made a return to stage and screen. She died in 1981, and has more recently become something of a gay icon. Female impersonators like to portray Zarah, because of her deep voice.

While on the internet I came across a website for a gay bar in Oslo, the highlight of which is the Zarah Leander room!

But wait...it gets more interesting...see the following article:

Was Zarah Leander a Soviet spy?

Copenhagen-Mar 2-(BANNS)-Zarah Leander, the Swedish singer and actress, was known for her German sympathies during World War II, but new evidence indicates she may also have been involved with the Soviet Union, according to daily Dagens Nyheter's internet service Tuesday.

Newly opened documents in files of the Swedish intelligence service, SÄPO, show that the service received several indications from anonymous sources and defence intelligence that Leander had contacts with well-known communists.

According to the archives which were studied by Goran Elgemyr, a Swedish radio journalist, Leander was suspected of being both a German and Russian spy. Conflicting documents describe her as being respectively a Nazi, an anti-Nazi, a communist, and in the press she was even rumoured to be a British agent.

Her allegedly Soviet connection was supported by the fact that Sweden's Communist Party gave her a certificate at her return from Germany in 1943 stating that she was "a true democrat" and not infested by Nazism.

According to the report, American military intelligence supplied information in the 1950s that Leander was suspected of being a Soviet spy.

Leander (1907-81) was a popular actress in German films from 1937 to 1943.

(By Ulla Plon BkNNS - The Baltic and Nordic News Service. This material may be used provided BkNNS is quoted as source.)

There (was) a television series on CITY-TV in Toronto, which airs at 6am Sunday mornings called The War Years that I watch regularly (thank goodness for VCRs!). In the episode on the Battle of Britain they showed German pilots relaxing between sorties listening to Zarah. (Sadly this series is not shown anymore).

I checked this out, there are a number of songs available on the internet by both Lale Anderson and Zarah Leander via napster.com Check them out, and see what I mean about Zarah's deep voice. (fw)

Spy vs Spy vs Spy - Babes of World War II - Episode 4

Zarah Leander - Swedish by birth, starred in German films in the 1930s and 40s til the war started turning against Germany.

Here's the interesting part. She was probably spying for the Germans. Or was she. Evidence suggests she was a double agent working for Britain, spying for them and pretending to spy for Germany. But wait! There's more!! She may also have been a Soviet spy!

Check out this interesting article here.

http://hnn.us/readcomment.php?id=15033&bheaders=1

The Spoons - Nova Heart

I saw them live in Ottawa in 1983. Great band.

Babes of World War II - Episode 2



The real Lale Anderson, singing "Einmal sehen wir uns wieder" in the Eurovision song contest in 1961.

Babes of World War II - Episode 1

Actress Hannah Schygulla (sp?) in the role of Lale Anderson in the film "Lili Marleen"

This song became popular on both sides of the war in many languages and versions.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

The One and Only George Formby

True story. I was in the parking lot of a local mall. A PT Cruiser went by, with the radio (CD?) cranked. What was this kind soul sharing with the world? George Formby!

Shows Worth Hearing Pt 2

Remember When - 3AW, Melbourne, Australia

4 am in Canada on Sunday morning, 6pm in Melbourne, Australia, local time.

Each week Bruce and Phil and assorted guests, Remember the "Good Old Days". Some music, callers, old radio shows and reminiscing about the past.

http://www.3aw.com.au

Sounds of the Sixties

Saturdays on BBC 2, on demand online until the following weeks' show.

Host Brian Matthew was there, co-hosting early Beatles shows on the BBC and brings his wealth of knowledge about the music to the table. 2 hours of great tunes.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/shows/sounds60s/

A String of Pearls - BBC Radio Wales

Sunday mornings and on demand untilthe following week's show.

An hour of music from the Big Band Era. Dewi Griffiths is a treasure.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/radiowales/sites/stringofpearls/

Marion's Attic

WBCQ Shortwave, Saturday nights at 9pm

A trip down memory lane...assuming you are extremely elderly. "Marion" plays the earliest recordings, cylinders, 78s, all kinds of vintage material.

http://members.aol.com/marionweb/

Big Band Panorama - AM 740 7pm Eastern

On Toronto's AM 740 (CHWO) Tuesday night means Bob Sprott's Big Band Panorama, featuring music from his vast collection.

http://www.am740.ca

Louis Armstrong and Bing Crosby - Now You Have Jazz

Brenda Russell - Piano in the Dark

Fastball - The Way

Screamin' Jay Hawkins

Shows Worth Hearing Pt 1

Shake Rattle and Roll - BBC Radio 2

Mark LaMarr hosts this look at music from the 50s, Rock and Roll, Rockabilly and the like from both sides of the "pond". Keep an eye on the BBC website, Mark does 10 shows at a time, then goes on hiatus for a few weeks/months. I'll post a heads up when it returns.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/shows/lamarr/

Treasure Island Oldies

Michael Godin's 4-hour on-line excursion into the "Lost Treasures" of music from the 50s, 60s and 70s.
Sundays at 9pm Eastern, 6pm Pacific. Recent shows archived on the website.

http://www.treasureislandoldies.com

Randy's Vinyl Tap

CBC Radio One Saturdays at 7pm local (depending on what time zone you are listening in). Or listen online at http://www.cbc.ca/local/ Just pick a city at the correct time in that city.

Who is Randy? Randy Bachman of The Guess Who and Bachman Turner Overdrive. Each show runs 2 hours, and usually has a theme. Randy plays lots of music, and presents the show in a conversational way, often strumming his guitar as he speaks. Great stuff!

Hits in Germany

Deborah Friedman hosts this look at the German pop scene from the English Service of Deutsche Welle. Weekly on Tuesdays, archived online until the next show airs.

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/0,1595,4703,00.html#

Prime Time Bandstand

AM740 Toronto Fridays at 7pm (online at http://www.am740.ca )

Brian Peroff presents great music from the fifties and sixties each week.

What A Wonderful World

What A Wonderful World...Louis at the end of his life still had it!

Louis Armstrong - A Rhapsody in Black and Blue (1932)

"In prime early form, Satch sings "(I'll Be Glad When You're Dead) You Rascal You," "Shine," and plays "Chinatown, My Chinatown." Another plus is that Louis' generally sorry-sounding OKeh-era big band seems to be having a particularly good day. (On the minus side, everything else about this short - from its "plot" to the settings - is stuffed with stereotypes that may offend 21st-century sensibilities.) Regardless how one feels about the trappings of the day, Louis - as always - rises far above the nonsense surrounding him below." (WhenSwingWasKing)

Monday, July 30, 2007

Amazing Guitar Duet #1

A young Jeff Healey and Stevie Ray Vaughan

Hide the Women Folk!

The Killer at his best...well almost his best...

Drum Boogie!

Drum Boogie - Mr Gene Krupa

Corb Lund Band

Alberta's Corb Lund with a cute song.

More Caravan

This time with Nat King Cole!