Thursday, November 19, 2009

SILVER AND A BIT OF BLUE

Silver: Some songs about silver here and a bit more background on blue as in that great song Blue Smoke.

Teressa Brewer - By the light of the silver moon
Billie Joe Spiers - Queen of the Silver dollar
Steve Conway - Look for the silver lining


Blue: As in Blue Smoke which I featured at the very start of this blog way back when??. Actually 18 January this year - when I started this blog - so not so long ago.
Recorded 3/10/48 - Processed 23/2/49 - although these dates can be disputed.

Jim Carter, who turns 90 this year, played played the first notes on our first homegrown hit record when he played the slow-waltz introduction to Blue Smoke out of his lap-steel guitar. He opened the song with a variation on Ruru Karaitiana’s simple melody and his final run deftly leads vocalist Pixie Williams into the famous lines:

Blue smoke goes drifting by, into the deep blue sky
And when I think of home I sadly sigh
Oh, I can see you there with tears in your eyes
As we fondly said our last goodbyes
And as I sailed away with a longing to stay
I promised I'd be true and love only you

Blue smoke goes drifting by, into the deep blue sky
My memories of home will never die

It is just such a marvellous song and record - it was the first song Karaitiana had written, the first time Williams had sung professionally, (and she sang skies instead of sky), the first record on the new Tanza (To Aid New Zealand Artists) label and the first commercial recording of a New Zealand song to be manufactured locally.To back up its Kiwi-ness the label design had a bright green and silver label with a tui on top flanked by ferns.

It marked the real birth of our own record industry and was a massive hit. with sales topping 50,000 copies while many others overseas recorded cover versions. The B side had a song called Senorita also written by Ruru Karaitiana.

The band is called the Ruru Karaitiana Quintette, but it was Carter’s Hawaiian band, hired for the session. Others on the session apart from Carter (lap steel guitar) were Gerry Hall (rhythm guitar) George Artridge (ukelele) John McNeeley (double bass) and Noel Robertson also on bass - he was usually a drummer but no drums were required for the record.

It was a DIY production. Some takes of Blue Smoke were allegedly ruined by the noise of a fridge next door, another by Karaitiana himself. “He came in at the end before we’d finished and said, ‘Oh, that’s a good one.’ So that killed that!” said Carter.

I acknowledge some of the information supplied for the above from a brilliant article in the N Z Listener.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

XMAS IS COMING

Not too many days until Xmas now. Of course down under it is a warm Xmas.
Today some Xmassy music here -

Tommy Steele - Must be Santa
Billy Idol - Silent night - It is said that a relatively modern song, "Fairytale of New York" by the Pogues is the best Christmas song of all time. My thoughts are that you can't know if that is right for 100/200 years. If the Pogues song is still one of the best in a couple of hundred years then maybe it is a great song. That's why I go for Silent Night as it is still as popular today as it was when it was written in 1818. This is a superb version of what I consider the greatest Xmas song of all time.
David Whitfield - O come all ye faithful
Jose Feliciano - Feliz Navidad
Bing Crosby - White Christmas. Supposed to be the biggest selling record of all time.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

SYSTEM CHANGE

I have from the last post changed the system.

Previously when you clicked the link it took you to that song/s only. Now clicking the links will take you not only to the specific folder but will reveal every song in every folder.

I think this is a better system.

I am still unable to find my songs using a search engine?? Don't know why - however if specific enough the blog will occasionally come up in Google.

C & W - R & R




Carl Mann
Conway Twitty

Some Country and Western songs rock and rolled by Carl Mann and Conway Twitty.

Carl is live with South of the Border and You win again while from the studio he performs Till I waltz again with you.

Conway Twitty (born Harold Jenkins and died young at 59) has his famous rock version of Mona Lisa and Its only make believe - which was the B side of his record but luckily somebody turned it over and he was on his way.
(Link in the previous post)

Friday, November 6, 2009

FOUR KIWIS

Ray and his group were the first Kiwis to top the Ozzie charts with the fantastic She's a mod.

Ray Columbus and the Invaders - I wanna be your man and I saw her standing there

Bill and Boyd - Chulu Chululu and Cloudy summer afternoon
Listen here

Sunday, October 25, 2009

From 30's to fifties

Some more oldies starting with Bing (not the Search Engine) Crosby with the wonderful Andrews Sisters - Quicksilver.

Kingston Trio - MTA
Jimmy Young - Man from Laramie
David Whitfield - Rags to riches (Tony Bennett and Gene Pitney also have a great version)
Ricky Nelson - Honeycomb from 1957
Anthony Newley - Saturday Night Rock a Boogie from the film Idle on Parade.
Beverley Sisiters - Greensleeves (written by Henry the Vlll
And from the musical Cabaret - Tomorrow belongs to me






Thursday, October 8, 2009

MORE KIWIS AND SOME ODDITIES.

The Keil Isles again here with Your cheating heart, My heart cries for you and Pretty Suzie Sunshine.

Plus some odds with
Johnny Tillotsen and his Take 1 (previously unreleased) It keeps right on a hurting,
Tiny Tim with Great balls of fire, he of the strange falsetto voice who had ahit with Tiptoe thru the tulips
Norman Greenbaum and a Demo Version of his Spirit in the sky,
The Brothers (Dean & Mark) with Tell him no, not as good as Travis & Bob
Sousa - The stars & stripes forever,
Terry Lightfoots Jazzmen and True Love, a great more up-tempo version
Rusty Draper-In the middle of the house.