Search This Blog

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

The Goodman years....Early Peggy Lee 1941-1943

Peggy Lee

Peggy Lee (May 26, 1920 – January 21, 2002) was an American jazz and popular music singer, songwriter, composer, and actress in a career spanning six decades. From her beginning as a vocalist on local radio to singing with Benny Goodman's big band, she forged a sophisticated persona, evolving into a multi-faceted artist and performer. She wrote music for films, acted, and created conceptual record albums—encompassing poetry, jazz, chamber pop, and art songs.

Lee was born Norma Deloris Egstrom in Jamestown, North Dakota, the seventh of eight children of Marvin Olof Egstrom, a station agent for the Midland Continental Railroad. Her mother, Selma Amelia (Anderson), died when Lee was four years old. Her father was Swedish American and her mother was Norwegian American.

Lee first sang professionally over KOVC radio in Valley City, North Dakota. She later had her own series on a radio show sponsored by a local restaurant that paid her a "salary" in food. Both during and after her high school years, Lee sang for paltry sums on local radio stations. Radio personality Ken Kennedy, of WDAY in Fargo, North Dakota (the most widely heard station in North Dakota), changed her name from Norma to Peggy Lee. Thereafter, Lee left home and traveled to Los Angeles at the age of 17.

She returned to North Dakota for a tonsillectomy, and later made her way to Chicago for a gig at The Buttery Room, a nightclub in the Ambassador Hotel East. There, she was noticed by bandleader Benny Goodman. According to Lee, "Benny's then-fiancée, Lady Alice Duckworth, came into The Buttery, and she was very impressed. So the next evening she brought Benny in, because they were looking for a replacement for Helen Forrest. And although I didn't know, I was it. He was looking at me strangely, I thought, but it was just his preoccupied way of looking. I thought that he didn't like me at first, but it just was that he was preoccupied with what he was hearing." She joined his band in 1941 and stayed for two years.

In 1942 Lee had her first #1 hit, "Somebody Else Is Taking My Place", followed by 1943's "Why Don't You Do Right?" (originally sung by Lil Green), which sold over a million copies and made her famous. She sang with Goodman's orchestra in two 1943 films, Stage Door Canteen and The Powers Girl.

In March 1943 Lee married Dave Barbour, a guitarist in Goodman's band. Peggy said, "David joined Benny's band and there was a ruling that no one should fraternize with the girl singer. But I fell in love with David the first time I heard him play, and so I married him. Benny then fired David, so I quit, too. Benny and I made up, although David didn't play with him anymore. Benny stuck to his rule. I think that's not too bad a rule, but you can't help falling in love with somebody."

Some notes on Lee's Goodman years from: http://www.peggyleediscography.com/Goodman.html

GENERAL NOTES
Peggy Lee's Career As Canary With The Benny Goodman Orchestra, 1941-1943
Peggy Lee joined The Benny Goodman Orchestra about halfway through August 1941, in Chicago. From July 25 to August 28, 1941, the leader and his band played a month-long engagement at The Sherman Hotel's College Inn - Panther Room. Mindful of the crowds and the publicity hounds, Goodman stayed not at the Sherman but at another hotel with the same management, The Ambassador East. Across the street from the Ambassador East was The Ambassador West and its Buttery Room, where resident thrush Peggy Lee could be heard during evenings.

Also staying at The Ambassador hotels was the soon-to-be Mrs. Benny Goodman (née Alice Hammond, though known then as Lady Alice Duckworth, due to her previous marriage). Soon after seeing Peggy Lee performing at The Buttery Room, Alice Hammond told Goodman to go and see Lee, too. The couple came back together with a party that included the band's young pianist, Mel Powell. Decades later, Lee remembered singing "These Foolish Things" on that evening. While dining with his fiancée and associates, and listening to the singer with a preoccupied look, Goodman was heard to mumble the words "I guess we've got to get somebody for Helen."

On August 1, 1941, Goodman had received a resignation notice from his current canary, Helen Forrest. A very unhappy Forrest was adamant about leaving the band as soon as possible, and stipulated that her resignation was effective immediately. (Or so says the singer, whose autobiography goes at length about her profound dislike of Goodman's personality.) However, Forrest's contract forced her to stay until the end of this engagement, which had barely started. Resistant to doing any further singing under Goodman's leadership, Forrest opted for fulfilling her contractual obligation by attending the concerts at the Sherman, without actively participating in them. She silently sat next to her replacement, Peggy Lee, and to the band's male vocalist, Tommy Taylor. Patrons of course asked why she, a hugely popular canary, was not singing. According to Forrest, the patrons were told that she was suffering from a bad cold, or from laryngitis -- a lie.

Normally, a bandleader in need of a new canary would have held auditions. Goodman certainly did so on many other occasions, but not this time. Granted that he was on the road and thus away from the capitols of the music industry (New York & Hollywood), such a large and musically rich city as Chicago would have still been a viable location to hold auditions. But perhaps the lack of female vocals during the Sherman engagement became an issue in urgent need of a solution. Since the very popular Forrest was no longer willing to sing with the orchestra, the bandleader might have felt that, to appease audience demand, the next best option was to require "sick" Forrest's attendance onstage while simultaneously supplying a vocal replacement, at least for the duration of this engagement.

The next morning after Goodman had come to see her at The Buttery Room, Peggy Lee received a phone call from The King Of Swing himself. He asked her to join the band. On the phone, Goodman asked Lee to show up right away, on the next evening, ready to sing with the band at The Sherman's Panther Room. Such short notice could be taken as a vote of confidence from Goodman, based on what he had just seen her do at the Buttery Room. For Lee, the prospect was a dream come true. She was to perform with an act that she had long admired and which, even more importantly, ranked among the top bands in the nation.

From a professional standpoint, the situation was not an ideal one, however: Lee was being asked to sing without rehearsal, and was expected to handle arrangements in Helen Forrest's key. Unbeknownst to her, Lee would also be facing a sometimes disappointed, sometimes hostile audience, who had come with the expectation of listening to the highly praised stylings of Helen Forrest. To make matters worse, Forrest herself, in the flesh, would be sitting right next to Lee. Not surprisingly, Goodman's new canary was struck with stage fright and with what she later described as a psychosomatic cold. She still went on, performing various songs on that debut evening, including "My Old Flame."

Feeling that she had done a poor job, an embarrassed and tearful Lee asked Goodman to let her go. He refused. (The exact day on which she made her request is unclear. I am inclined to believe that it happened on the first night, or in one of the earliest nights.)

About a week after hiring time, Lee was asked to participate in what became her debut recording session -- and, just a few more days later, on her sophomore session. Those first two sessions (August 15 and 20, 1941) were marred by the singer's high state of anxiety, yet they still produced recordings good enough to be deemed worth releasing.

Despite the (temporarily) adverse reception that the nervous singer met from audiences, critics, band members and even from the sessions' producer (see notes under aforementioned Chicago sessions), Benny Goodman stuck to his guns and took the singer on the road with the band -- at a pay cut -- as they moved from Chicago to the New York - New Jersey area.

In her new East Coast setting, Benny Goodman's new canary flourished in the recording studio and, more gradually, in front of live audiences. (For specifics, see notes under New York sessions, starting with Lee's third recording date, held on September 25, 1941.)

Dating: Peggy Lee's Working Period With Benny Goodman And His Orchestra
Peggy Lee worked as the female vocalist of The Benny Goodman Orchestra for over a year and a half (mid-August 1941 to mid-March, 1943). Lee's debut performance with Goodman's band obviously took place some time during the first half of August. The exact day in which Lee joined the band is unknown, but in this section I will attempt to arrive at an approximate estimate. (Also unclear is the date of Lee's final concert with the orchestra; see next section.)

Lee's documented appearances with the band can be traced back to

- Sunday, August 24, 1941. Earliest extant live performance (radio broadcast).
and
- Friday, August 15, 1941. Debut recording session.

Lee's autobiography does not give any clues about her first date with the band, but the singer's narration of events strongly suggests that it was a live engagement -- not the recording session from August 15. The autobiography also contains a direct quote from pianist Mel Powell in which he declares, in passing, that Lee had spent only one or two days with the band when she went to her debut recording session. It is not clear, however, if this bit is meant to be taken as a precise, accurate bit of information, or as more of a loose estimation on Powell's part.

As previously mentioned, Helen Forrest had given notice of resignation in or around August 1, 1941. Her last recording session with Goodman had taken place in June. Bio-discographer D. Russell Connor elaborates: "Although Helen does not again record with Benny, she continues to appear with him, both in the Sherman [Hotel] and on the House Warming [radio] programs and sustaining broadcasts. According to a program log, she did so as late as August 17, two days after Peggy Lee had made her first record with the band. That is her last logged performance, but she claims Benny had her sit on the bandstand until the end of the Sherman engagement [August 28], but did not permit her to sing. Benny says he does not remember it that way." Forrest is also heard in August 8 and 10 broadcasts from the Sherman.

Since Forrest was still being heard in (presumably live) broadcasts from August 8 and 10, I am inclined to believe that, at least until the 10th, she was the only one female vocalist on the bandstand. (As for the sustaining broadcast from August 17 that features Forrest, no songs are listed in the program log that Russell Connor consulted. The lack of specifics allows for speculation as to the accuracy of the information provided. Could it be that Forrest's name was mistakenly entered when Lee was the female onstage instead? ... Or perchance Forrest was included in the list of names merely because she was present, though no longer singing, whereas Lee was erroneously ommitted? ...)

In my estimation, Lee is likely to have debuted with the band on one of four days, between Monday, August 11 and Thursday, August 14, 1941.

Peggy Lee's Departure From The Benny Goodman Orchestra
Over the years, the reasons given for Lee's departure from the Goodman ensemble have varied. After Goodman passed away, Lee more overtly shared what seems to have been the main reason. Goodman had established a strict policy that forbade band members to become romantically involved with the band's canary. Due to that policy, he had fired Lee's then-boyfriend (and soon-to-be-husband) Dave Barbour. His last-known date with the band seems to have taken place in January, or perhaps in February 1943. The couple got married on March 8 of that year. According to discographer D. Russell Connor: "[w]ith her (first) husband, Dave Barbour, out of the band, [Peggy Lee had] given Benny three weeks' notice in March." In a radio broadcast from an unknown March day in 1943, Goodman himself publicly announces that Lee, who sings various numbers during the show, has just gotten married.

According to the unsubstantiated claim of another vocalist whose work also goes back to the big band era, Goodman and Lee had been romantically involved. This claim has no backing, and is also suspect: the singer in question, once friends with Lee, had a falling out with her, and is known to have made this claim years after the falling out. For her part, Peggy Lee always denied that she was ever romantically involved with Goodman. (From the start of Lee's working period with the band, Benny Goodman had been engaged. On March 21, 1942, he married his fiancée, the former Lady Alice Duckworth, who was producer John Hammond's sister.)

Adds bio-discographer D. Russell Connor: "For some 20 months Peggy had been a stalwart performer and the band's foremost popular attraction; now it was time for her to capitalize personally on the public's acceptance." Her last known live performance as The Benny Goodman Orchestra's canary took place on a March 20, 1943 radio broadcast. (See page for Radio Broadcasts with Goodman, once that page opens for viewing.)

That 1943 broadcast was by no means the end of Peggy Lee and Benny Goodman's professional partnership, however. Over the ensuing years, they occasionally performed together on radio, on television, and even jointly in concert. More studio recording work took place as well, though not at Columbia, but at Capitol. (See the 1947 Capitol sessions dated March 28, September 12, and December 2 in this page; see also this page, specifically the note under the ca. June 1944 session that resulted in "Two Silhouettes" and "Johnny Fedora & Alice Blue Bonnet." Search as well for their joint performances in this discography's pages for radio, film, television, and live appearances, once they open for full viewing.) In the autumnal years of their respective careers, they would further be seen in events that paid tribute to either one or the other.

Statistics: Number Of Songs Recorded, As Benny Goodman's Canary, By Peggy Lee
This discographical page lists 32 masters featuring vocals by Peggy Lee, recorded over 18 sessions, between August 1941 and July 1942. Also listed are 58 alternate takes, including 4 to which I have given the special designation secondary master, explained at the bottom of this page.

The number of masters with Peggy Lee's canary vocals would have been substantially higher, had it not been for an industry ban which prevented recording activity during the last third of Lee's employment as Goodman's canary. See explanatory section below.

Not included as entries in this discography are the many breakdowns, also extant, from those 19 sessions. However, I have made mention of them in the Masters notes under each session. I have also made an exception for just one breakdown of "That Did It Marie." Because of its potential interest to Lee fans, I've felt that it deserved to have its own entry in this sessionography. See session dated November 13, 1941.

The AFM Recording Ban
The Benny Goodman Orchestra made no studio recordings during Peggy Lee's last eight months as their vocalist (August 1942 - March 1943). Effective August 1, 1942, The American Federation of Musicians (AFM) had declared a ban over recording activity by union musicians.

Exempt from this ban were recordings made for The Armed Radio Forces Service and for film soundtracks. Also exempt from the musicians' ban: solo vocalists. However, in the absence of backing musicians, their companies were reduced to have them do a cappella recordings, or otherwise with foreign or non-unionized musicians.

Though there were no studio recordings, Goodman's and the other orchestras did continue playing -- in concert, on the radio and for films. Thus Lee's vocals from the ban period have been preserved in sources other than studio recordings -- specifically, in live performances that were broadcast over radio, and in a couple of film soundtracks. See this discography's pages for Radio Broadcasts, once those pages open for viewing.

The ban was not officially lifted until November 11, 1944. The industry in general, including Columbia's (Benny Goodman's label at this time) settled with AFM on that date, but a few labels had settled earlier: Decca (on August of 1943) and Capitol (on September of 1943). Capitol's early settlement allowed Peggy Lee to record, on January of 1944, her earliest known post-Goodman recordings. Peggy Lee thus began her transition from band canary to solo vocalist as the ban period neared its end.

Popularity: Peggy In The Polls
After joining the nationally famous Benny Goodman Orchestra, Peggy Lee's name promptly made an appearance in Downbeat's popularity polls.

In 1941, she debuted at #14 in the twenty-five-slot poll for female singers. Lee had received 114 votes. Among the names below hers were Lee Wiley and Maxine Sullivan (tied with 40 votes, and placing at the very end of the poll, in the #24 and #25 positions), Helen Humes (at #19, with 60 votes), and Jo Stafford (at #23, with 50 votes, and like Lee, also a debuting artist this year). Among those above Lee were Ivie Anderson (# 8), Mildred Bailey (#7), and Dinah Shore (#5). The top four consisted of Anita O'Day (making a huge debut on the poll, with 1670 votes), Billie Holiday (1871 votes), Helen Forrest (2236 votes) and, at the very peak with 3226 votes, Helen O'Connell.

On the following year (1942), Forrest and O'Connell switched places at the top of the Band, Female poll. Forrest had received 2226 votes. O'Day, the poll's highest debut in the previous year, climbed one more spot, causing Holiday to drop to #4. The two other debutants from the previous year shot up to positions #5 (Jo Stafford, with 654 votes) and #6 (Peggy Lee, with 609 votes).

In 1943, the two debutants continued their fast climb: Peggy Lee reached #2 with 2710 votes and Jo Stafford earned the #1 position with 2815 votes. The previous two chart toppers fell to #3 (Helen Forrest, with 2276 votes) and #6 (Helen O'Connell). Anita O'Day and Billie Holiday also dropped one place each, respectively landing at #4 and #5.

Lee's name also appears in Billboard's Collegiate polls, starting with one published on the May 2 1942 edition of the magazine. At #5, her debut in the poll for female vocalists was auspicious, with all other 'debutants' behind her: Anita O'Day (#6), Yvonne King (#8), and Jo Stafford (#9). The magazine also published a gender-blind top 10 that placed her at #8, not too far from more established crooners and canaries such as ray Eberle (#2), Frank Sinatra (#3), Ginny Simms (#6) and Helen Forrest (#7). Helen O'Connell topped both lists.

In 1943, Peggy Lee shot up to #3 in the female collegiate poll, trailing behind just Helen Forrest and Helen O'Connell.

The Frank Sinatra Event And The Rising Popularity Of Vocalists
Peggy Lee happened to be present, in the sidelines, during an important event in the history of popular music.

Starting on Wednesday, December 30, 1942, The Benny Goodman Orchestra was the main musical attraction in New York City's Paramount Theatre. The orchestra's canary was, of course, Peggy Lee. The bill also included screenings of the movie Star Spangled Rhythm, and comedy from the team of Moke and Poke, with The Radio Rogues.

Billed as an "extra-added attraction" was Frank Sinatra. At a time when the big bands remained the most popular acts in the nation, he was a burgeoning artist who had left The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra just three months earlier. Encouraged by ever-increasing success as a crooner on radio and record, he had been performing solo at small venues in his native state, New Jersey, and was now making his first major appearance as a solo act in New York.

Unfortunately, there is no extant audio from this Paramount engagement. Moreover, only Sinatra's repertoire is known in full. (Accompanied by Jess Stacy on piano, he sang a thoroughly romantic program: "For Me And My Gal," "Where Or When," "I Had The Craziest Dream," "There Are Such Things," "She's Funny That Way" and "When The Lights Go On Again.") As for the repertoire played by The Benny Goodman Orchestra, few titles are known. The sextet played a version of "Paradise," possibly with a guest vocal by Sinatra. Peggy Lee is said to have sung "Where Or When" and "Why Don't You Do Right?," the former with the sextet and the latter with full orchestra. Lee might or might have not sung other numbers. (At other Goodman engagements during the period of November 1942 to February 1943, Peggy Lee was singing "Don't Get Around Much Anymore," "That Soldier Of Mine" and "As Time Goes By.") In passing, it should be noted that "Why Don't You Do Right?" was not yet a hit at this point in time. On the contrary, New York audiences were possibly hearing it for the first time. Although recorded some six months earlier, the song had been rescued from oblivion during this very month of December 1942, when The Benny Goodman Orchestra and Peggy Lee had filmed a performance of it for the upcoming movie Stage Door Canteen.

The Paramount engagement became Sinatra's apotheosis as a singer. With the help of his savvy press agent George Evans (who, at this early stage, might have hired teenagers to publicly swoon for the crooner, thereby starting the Bobbysoxers craze), the bill's "added" attraction became not only the main event, but also a nationally touted phenomenon. Initially hired to sing for two weeks, Sinatra's contract was extended for the full month and, when those four weeks were over, the crooner was retained for an additional month. (For his part, Goodman moved on to a pre-scheduled engagement at The Chicago Theatre.)

In her autobiography, Peggy Lee refers to the Paramount events as follows: "the bobby soxers were storming the Paramount Theatre in Times Square. I was there with Benny Goodman. Frank Sinatra was the 'Extra Added Attraction,' and he certainly was! [...] We used to lean out the windows of the dressing room to see the crowds of swooners, like swarms of bees down there in the street, just waiting for the sight of Frank. [...] Everything that led up to Frank's performance seemed not quite so important. Benny played as great as ever, I sang my songs and got some attention, but it was electric when Frank came out on stage. One day I had the flu and became violently ill. [...] That's when Frank discovered I was really having a bad time in my dressing room, and, from that time until I was well, he was my special nurse. First he brought me blankets to stop the shivering. Then, when it was possible, a little tea; later a piece of toast. Meantime, he was out there singing from six to eight shows a day in that huge theatre with the cheering crowds [...] I'll especially never forget what he did for me in the middle of his first great triumph."

This Paramount engagement is generally perceived as a turning point in the history of American music: the moment in which vocalists took over the world of pop music, thereby pushing the big bands down the path to oblivion. Such a perception of the event is a simplification, of course. The process in question had been long in the making, and would still continue to evolve. (For one, other vocalists had been hugely popular before Sinatra -- most notably, Sinatra's own idol, Bing Crosby. The fan swooning that sensationalized this and other Sinatra appearances was nothing new, either. It had been widely reported in the case of matinee idols such as Rudolph Valentino and, from the music world, Russ Columbo.) Ultimately, the Paramount engagement is just a symbolic marker -- though a fascinating and suitably dramatic one.

More fundamental to the vocalists' increase in popularity was the war and its effect on music listening. Brought about by drafting for military service, the separation from loved ones created a nationwide yearning for heartfelt, personalized messages-in-song -- i.e., a demand for the type of intimate singing favored by vocalists such as Peggy Lee and Frank Sinatra. In Lee's case, her way with ballads came in vogue toward the end of the war, when she became a solo act. No longer hindered by the dance-oriented charts of Goodman's orchestra, she freely sang in the same bluesy, slow and lyrical manner which she had cultivated before she had joined the band, and which Goodman had allowed her to bring only to her two ballads with the sextet ("Where Or When" and "The Way You Look Tonight").

Soooo.......not a full bio of Ms. Lee, this morning. Just the years leading up to her departure from Benny's band. As you've probably guessed by the title of this, today's post involves only the early recordings with Goodman. These, for the most part, are not my favourite recordings by Peggy, but it is a good place to start. So sit back, relax, and enjoy the genesis of her genius :)

Elmer's Tune-
My Old Flame-
I See A Million People (But All I Can See Is You)-
How Deep Is The Ocean-
That's The Way It Goes-
Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)-
Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love) 2-
I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)-
My Old Flame-
How Deep Is The Ocean-
Shady Lady Bird-
Somebody Else Is Taking My Place-
Somebody Nobody Loves-
How Long Has This Been Going On-
That Did It, Marie-
Winter Weather-
Ev'rything I Love-
Not Mine-
Not A Care In The World-
Blues In The Night-
Where or when-
On the Sunny Side of the Street-
The Lamp of Memory (Incertidumbre)-
If You Build a Better Mousetrap-
When the Roses Bloom Again-
My Little Cousin-
The Way You Look Tonight-
I Threw a Kiss in the Ocean-
We'll Meet Again-
Full Moon (Noche De Luna)-
There Won't Be a Shortage of Love-
You're Easy to Dance With-
All I Need Is You-
Why Don't You Do Right-
Let's Say a Prayer-


http://www.megaupload.com/?d=B70LV765





Ella Fitzgerald & the Lou Levy Quartet Amsterdam (Concertgebouw) 18 February, 1961


Ella Fitzgerald & the Lou Levy Quartet Amsterdam (Concertgebouw) 18 February, 1961

Introduction (Norman Granz)
Unknown (trio)
Too Close For Comfort
On A Slow Boat To China
How Long Has This Been Going On
Heart And Soul
You're Driving Me Crazy
That Old Black Magic
Lover Come Back To Me
My Funny Valentine
I've Got A Crush On You
Lorelei
Mr. Paganini
Mack The Knife
St. Louis Blues


Monday, October 10, 2011

Early rockin' Lulu.......1964-1966

Lulu

Lulu Kennedy-Cairns, OBE (born Marie McDonald McLaughlin Lawrie, 3 November 1948, Lennoxtown, Stirlingshire), best known by her stage name Lulu, is a Scottish singer, actress, and television personality who has been successful in the entertainment business from the 1960s through to the present day. She is internationally identified with the song "To Sir, with Love" from film of the same name and with the title song to the James Bond film The Man with the Golden Gun. In European countries she is also widely known for her Eurovision Song Contest winning entry "Boom Bang-a-Bang" and in the UK for her first hit "Shout".

Lulu grew up in Dennistoun, Glasgow, where she attended Thomson Street Primary School and Onslow Drive Junior School. She lived in Gallowgate for a while before moving to Garfield Street. At the age of 12 or 13 she and her manager approached a band called the Bellrocks seeking stage experience as a singer. She appeared with them every Saturday night: Alex Thomson, the group's bass player, has reported that even then her voice was unbelievable.

Under the wing of Marion Massey, she was signed to Decca Records and when she was only fifteen her version of The Isley Brothers' "Shout", delivered in a raucous but mature voice, reached the UK charts. Massey guided her career for more than 25 years, for most of which time they were partners in business, and Massey's husband, Mark, produced some of Lulu's recordings.

In 1966 Lulu toured Poland with The Hollies, the first British female singer to appear live behind the Iron Curtain. In the same year she recorded two German language tracks, "Wenn du da bist" and "So fing es an", for the Decca Germany label. All her Decca recordings were made available in 2009 on a 2-CD entitled Shout!, issued on RPM Records. After two hit singles with the The Luvvers Lulu launched her solo career.

She left Decca after failing to chart in 1966 and signed with Columbia to be produced by Mickie Most. In April 1967 she returned to the UK singles chart reaching number 6 with "The Boat that I Row", written by Neil Diamond. All seven singles she cut with Most made the UK Singles Chart. However, in her autobiography I Don't Want To Fight, published in 2002, she described him as "cheap" and had little positive to say about their working relationship, which she ended in 1969 after her biggest UK solo hit. Nonetheless when Mickie Most died in 2003, Lulu was full of praise for him and told the BBC they had been very close.

In 1967 she made her debut film in To Sir, with Love, a British vehicle for Sidney Poitier. She had a major hit, the title song reaching number one in the United States. In the UK, it was released on the B-side of "Let's Pretend", a # 11 hit, but "To Sir, With Love" sold over a million copies and was awarded a gold disc. In the meantime she continued her thriving pop career in the UK and had several television series of her own. After appearing on the BBC in 1967 in a successful TV series that featured music and comedy, Three Of A Kind, Lulu was given her own TV series in 1968, which ran annually until 1975 under various titles including Lulu's Back In Town, Happening For Lulu, Lulu and It's Lulu, which featured Adrienne Posta. Her BBC series featured music and comedy sketches and star guests; one episode remains famous for Jimi Hendrix's unruly live appearance where, after playing about two minutes of Hey Joe, Hendrix stopped and announced "We'd like to stop playing this rubbish and dedicate a song to The Cream, regardless of what kind of group they may be in, dedicate to Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce". He then broke into Sunshine of Your Love. With the studio director signalling for Hendrix to stop he continued. Unrepentant, Hendrix was told he would never work at the BBC again. He told his girlfriend Kathy Etchingham "I'm not going to sing with Lulu. I'd look ridiculous". From 30 June to 2 July 1967 she appeared with The Monkees at the Empire Pool, Wembley, and her brief romance with Davy Jones of The Monkees during an concert tour of the USA in March 1968 received much publicity in the UK press. Lulu described her relationship with Jones as "He was a kind of boyfriend but it was very innocent - nothing untoward happened. It faded almost as soon as it had blossomed".

On 29 March 1969, she represented the United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest performing the song "Boom Bang-a-Bang", written by Peter Warne and Alan Moorhouse, the song chosen from a selection of six by viewers of her BBC1 variety series Happening for Lulu and on a special show hosted by Michael Aspel in which she performed all six one after another. One song, "I Can't Go On...", written by Elton John and Bernie Taupin, came last in the postcard vote but was later recorded by Cilla Black, Sandie Shaw, Polly Brown and Elton John himself as well as by Lulu. In Madrid Lulu was accompanied by Sue and Sunny while the orchestra was conducted by Lulu's musical director Johnny Harris.
I had a series on TV, and Bill Cotton was the Head of Light Entertainment [at the BBC], and he said to my manager: "I'd like her to do the Eurovision Song Contest, on the series". And she came to me and I went "Why? What do I want to do that for?"... and she said that he said that "you'll get good ratings, and he is the boss, and he wants you to have good ratings. Maybe I could have said no, but I felt I didn't really have a choice in the matter. And I thought... I was full of myself, thinking ratings isn't what it's all about... But, you know, Elton John and Bernie Taupin wrote a great song that didn't go through... I had this amazing band, like 20 pieces. We did all these different songs... every single one of us said "Which one is gonna win? Which one is gonna win?" and we all laughed and went: "Bet you it's that Boom boom bang a bang a bang a bang..." But then it won. Somehow there was an intelligence working there... and it was a huge success.
"Boom Bang-a-Bang" was a winner, though three other songs, from Spain, ("Vivo cantando" by Salomé), the Netherlands, ("De Troubadour" by Lenny Kuhr) and France, ("Un jour, un enfant" by Frida Boccara) tied with her on 18 votes each. The rules were altered to prevent such ties but the result caused Austria, Portugal, Norway, Sweden and Finland not to enter the 1970 contest. Lulu's song came out the best in sales, with German, French, Spanish and Italian versions alongside the original English. Later she told John Peel; "I know it's a rotten song, but I won, so who cares? I'd have sung "Baa, Baa, Black Sheep" standing on my head if that's what it took to win.... I am just so glad I didn't finish second like all the other Brits before me, that would have been awful." Despite her dislike it is her second biggest UK hit to date, reaching number two on the chart in 1969.

In 1975 Lulu herself would host the BBC's A Song for Europe, the qualifying heat for the Eurovision Song Contest, in which The Shadows would performe six shortlisted songs. In 1981 she joined other Eurovision winners at a charity gala held in Norway and she was a panellist at the 1989 UK heat, offering views on two of the competing eight entries. In 2009 she provided comment and support to the six acts shortlisted to represent the UK at Eurovision 2009 on BBC1 TV.

Weeks before her Eurovision appearance Lulu had married Maurice Gibb of the Bee Gees in a ceremony in Gerrards Cross. Maurice's older brother Barry was opposed to their marriage as he believed them to be too young. Their honeymoon in Mexico had to be postponed because of Lulu's Eurovision commitment. Their careers and his heavy drinking forced them apart and they divorced, childless, in 1973 but remained on good terms. . In 1969, she recorded New Routes an album recorded at Muscle Shoals studios: several of the songs, including a version of Jerry Jeff Walker's "Mr. Bojangles", featured slide guitarist Duane Allman. The album was recorded for Atlantic's Atco label and produced by Jerry Wexler, Tom Dowd and Arif Mardin.

Lulu began 1970 by appearing on the BBC's highly rated review of the sixties music scene Pop Go The Sixties, performing "Boom Bang-A-Bang" live on BBC1, 31 December 1969. She recorded another Jerry Wexler, Tom Dowd and Arif Mardin album in the USA, Melody Fair, and scored a US Top 30 hit, "Oh Me Oh My (I'm a Fool for You Baby)", (later covered by Aretha Franklin, Buster Poindexter, and John Holt) and collaborated with the Dixie Flyers on "Hum a Song (From Your Heart)"

Four more German language tracks, ("Ich brauche deine Liebe", "Wach' ich oder träum' ich", "Warum tu'st du mir weh", and "Traurig, aber wahr") were recorded on the Atlantic/WEA label.

She was one of the main artists invited to appear on the BBC's anniversary show Fifty Years Of Music in 1972. The same year she starred in the Christmas pantomime Peter Pan at the Palace Theatre, Manchester and repeated her performance at the London Palladium in 1975, and returned to the same role in different London-based productions from 1987 to early 1989. She made an appearance on the Morecambe and Wise Show in 1973, singing "All the Things You Are" and "Happy Heart".

In 1974 she performed the title song for the James Bond movie The Man with the Golden Gun.Two slightly different versions of the song were used, at the start and end respectively - the end song actually name-checking James Bond. The same year she covered David Bowie's songs "The Man Who Sold the World" and "Watch That Man". Bowie and Mick Ronson produced the recordings.  Bowie played saxophone and provided back-up vocals and rumours of a brief affair were confirmed in her 2002 autobiography.  "The Man Who Sold the World" became her first top 10 hit in five years, peaking at number three in the UK chart in February 1974 and was a top 10 hit in several European countries.

On 31 December 1976 Lulu performed "Shout" on BBC1's A Jubilee Of Music, celebrating British pop music for Queen Elizabeth II's impending Silver jubilee.

In 1977 Lulu became interested in Siddha Yoga and married hairdresser John Frieda. They divorced in 1991. They had one son, Jordan Frieda.

Lulu's chart success waned but she remained in the public eye, acting and hosting a long-running radio show on London's Capital Radio station. She was associated with Freemans fashion catalogue during the late 1970s and early 1980s. In August 1979 after a performance in Margate, Kent she was in a car accident that nearly took her life, colliding head-on with another car on Brooksend Hill and spent a week in hospital recovering. That same year, she recorded for Elton John's label Rocket Records and seemed about to hit the charts again, with the lauded "I Love to Boogie", but surprisingly, despite critical acclaim and much airplay, it did not make the top 75.

Notable London stage appearances came in the early 1980s in Andrew Lloyd Webber's Song and Dance and the Royal National Theatre's Guys and Dolls. She damaged her vocal cords while performing in the Webber show, requiring surgery that threatened her singing voice. She co-hosted a revived series of Oh Boy! for ITV in the early 1980s. In 1981 she returned to the US charts with "I Could Never Miss You (More Than I Do)", a Top 20 hit that also reached number two on the Adult Contemporary chart despite stalling at number 62 in the UK. Early the following year she had a more modest US hit with "If I Were You", which just missed the Top 40, appeared in the video for "Ant Rap" alongside Adam and the Ants and was nominated for a Grammy for "Who's Foolin' Who" from the "Lulu" album.
 
She won the Rear of the Year award in 1983 and re-recorded a number of her songs. These included "Shout," which reached the Top 10 in 1986 in the UK, securing her a spot on Top of the Pops. Lulu was one of only two performers (Cliff Richard being the other) to have sung in the Top of the Pops studio in each of the five decades that the show ran. A follow up single to "Shout", an updated version of Millie's 1960s hit "My Boy Lollipop", failed to chart and Lulu stopped recording until 1992, focussing instead on TV, acting and live performances. These tracks were released on the Jive Records label. Lulu has had hits on the Decca, Columbia, Atco, Polydor, Chelsea, Alfa, Jive, Dome, RCA, Mercury and Universal labels. She has also released singles for GTO, Atlantic, Globe, EMI, Concept, Lifestyle, Utopia and Rocket, and Epic in the US. For a while, she held the record for the most number of hit labels in the UK charts. In 1987 she played Adrian Mole's mother on television (replacing Julie Walters).

In 1993 she made a recording comeback with the single "Independence" which reached number 11 in the UK charts. This was the title track from the Independence album, all four singles released from this album reached the UK charts, as did two later singles released in 1994.

Later that year she guested on the cover version of the Dan Hartman song "Relight My Fire", with boy band Take That. The single reached number one in the British charts and Lulu appeared as Take That's support act on their 1994 tour. At this time she also appeared as an unhappy public relations client of Edina Monsoon in two episodes of the BBC television programme Absolutely Fabulous and teamed with French & Saunders many times, including their send up of the Spice Girls (The Sugar Lumps) for Comic Relief in 1997, when she took the role of "Baby Spice", mimicking Emma Bunton. An album, provisionally titled Where the Poor Boys Dance was completed in late 1997 and due for release in early 1998 but was postponed by the record label Mercury. "Hurt Me So Bad" was released in April 1999 and a year later the title track from the album reach number 24 in the UK.

In 1999, Lulu returned to BBC1 to host their Saturday night National Lottery game show Red Alert and co-wrote and recorded a duet with UK pop singer Kavana entitled "Heart Like The Sun", but it was not released commercially until Kavana's 2007 "greatest hits" collection, Special Kind Of Something: The Best of..

Now known as Lulu Kennedy-Cairns (her late mother's birth name before she was adopted by the McDonald family), in 2000 she was awarded an OBE by Queen Elizabeth. Her autobiography, published in 2002 was titled I Don't Want to Fight after the hit song she and her brother wrote with hit songwriter Steve DuBerry for Tina Turner, a song that Lulu herself released in 2003 as part of her The Greatest Hits album. Her 2002 gold album Together was a collection of duets with Elton John and Paul McCartney among others, tracks from which were performed in a high profile TV special for ITV, An Audience With Lulu, which saw Lulu reunited with her first husband Maurice Gibb for a live performance of "First of May".

In 2004, she released the album Back on Track and went on a UK-wide tour to celebrate 40 years in the business, the album charting at a low No 68. In late 2004 she returned to radio as the host of a 2-hour radio show on BBC Radio 2, playing an eclectic blend of music from the 1950s to the 2000s. In 2005, Lulu released A Little Soul in Your Heart, a collection of soul classics that entered the UK Albums Chart at number 28. In March 2006 she launched her official MySpace profile.

Lulu continued to act occasionally and starred alongside Tom Courtenay and Stephen Fry in the British movie, Whatever Happened to Harold Smith?. She also appeared in the BBC's reality TV show Just the Two of Us in 2006 as a judge and in late June and early July 2006 appeared on Take That's UK and Ireland tour to perform their song "Relight My Fire". She appeared on American Idol Season 6 on 20 March 2007 as a mentor for the female contestants and the following night performed "To Sir, With Love". Later in 2007 she appeared in the UK as a guest for Jools Holland in a series of concerts and features and on Holland's CD release "Best of Friends", performing "Where Have All the Good Guys Gone?"

Lulu's complete Atco recordings (made between 1969 and 1972) were released on 12 November 2007. The two CD set included previously unreleased and demo versions of some of her recordings from this period. In December 2007 she released a download single on iTunes in the UK, called "Run Rudolph Run". At this time Lulu was also promoting a range of beauty products on QVC (UK), called "Time Bomb", and appeared on a 2007 Christmas television advertisement for Morrisons, the UK supermarket chain.

In February 2008 Lulu fans created an online petition to get Lulu an Outstanding Achievement Award from The Brits. This can still be signed at Lulu Brit Award Petition Online.

In November 2008 Lulu was announced as one of a number of Scottish celebrities to feature in the advertising campaign for Homecoming Scotland, a year-long event to encourage people around the world with Scottish heritage to return to Scotland. Also in November 2008, Lulu posted the following message on her website, celebrating the election of Barack Obama as President of the USA: "Barack Obama Is In – Yippee, now we have got hope in the World. I’ve just turned 60, Obama is the new president of the USA and I think its going to be a fantastic year. Love Lu X". In both the 1979 and 1983 UK General Elections, Lulu had been a supporter of British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Conservative Party.

In January 2009, Lulu began a four week stint as an advisor/coach on the BBC show Eurovision: Your Country Needs You, helping to choose the singer to represent the UK at the 2009 Eurovision Song Contest.

In the summer of 2009, Lulu guest presented on STV's daily lifestyle show The Hour, alongside main anchor Stephen Jardine. She appeared between 27 and 31 July. The Scottish magazine programme airs weekdays at 5 pm. As of 2009, she continues to pitch her range of "Lulu's" anti-ageing products and other cosmetics through the QVC (UK) home shopping channel, using her youthful appearance as a promotional tool.

After appearing at an Abba tribute concert in Hyde Park, London during September 2009, Lulu announced that she would be touring the UK in a Here Come the Girls alongside Chaka Khan and Anastacia. The trio promoted the concert series on UK TV, ahead of the first performance in November 2009, which took in 20 different dates.

In early 2010, Lulu performed the theme "The Word Is Love" to the movie Oy Vey! My Son Is Gay!! and toured the UK a second time with Here Come the Girls alongside Anastacia and Heather Small. In November 2010 she hosted the BBC TV series "Rewind the 60s" . Each episode focused on a year during the 1960s highlighting the social and political issues of the decade as well as music and interviews with personalities from the decade.

On 26 February 2011 Lulu appeared in the second heat in the third series of Let's Dance for Comic Relief. She danced to Soulja Boy's hit Crank That. In May 2011 made an appearance on the ITV2 program Celebrity Juice and in July 2011 she performed at the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod in Wales.

Lulu appeared on Channel 4's Chris Moyles' Quiz Night on 5 August 2011; closing the show dueting Bad Romance with Cuba Gooding, Jr.

On 6 September 2011 it was announced that Lulu would take part in the 2011 series of Strictly Come Dancing, partnering Brendan Cole.

Ok...........hella long bio. On that note, here's the Lulu of a list.....1964-1966 only....just the early rocking stuff.  DIG IN !! :)
After you
Call Me
Can I Get A Witness
Can't hear you no more
Choc Ice
Don't answer me
Dream Lover
Forget me baby
He don't want your love
He's Sure The Boy I Love
Heatwave
Here Comes The Night
I am in love
I'll Come Running Over
Leave A Little Love
Lies
Night Time Is The Right Time
Not In This Whole World
Nothing to do but cry
Satisfied
She Will Break Your Heart
Shout
So fing es an
So In Love
Stealing my love from me
Surprise, Surprise
Tell Me Like It Is
That's really some good
The Only One
The trouble with boys
Tossin' and turnin'
Try To Understand
Wenn du da bist
What a wonderful feeling
What's easy for two is hard for one
When he touches me
You Touch Me Baby
You'll Never Leave Her


Friday, October 7, 2011

Lunchtime video jukebox with...Lulu

 Hmmmm...food for thought...did she make a pact with the devil to look better at 63, than at 15?? lol!!










Oh, Ja.........more Schlager!

It's been awhile since I've tortured you all with any British and American artists singing in German...better late than never, I say! :)



The Spencer Davis Group- Der Wassermann (Aquarius)
Donny Osmond-Bleib bei mir, little Girl (Go away little girl)
Gene Pitney-Bleibe bei mir (Town without pity)
The Liverpool Beats-Boys (Yup, The Beatles version of The Shrielles song)
Chubby Checker-Der Twist beginnt (Let's twist again)
James ( Jimmy ) Darren-Der Zirkus hat ein Ende (Goodbye, cruel world)
Peter, Paul & Mary-Die Antwort weiss ganz allein der Wind (Blowin' in the wind)
Petula Clark-Geh in die stadt (Downtown)
Beach Boys-Ganz allein (In my room)
Dionne Warwick-Geh vorbei (Walk on by)
The Swinging Blue Jeans-Good Golly Miss Molly-o
Lesley Gore-Goodbye, Tony (You don't own me)
The Honeycombs-Hab ich das Recht (Have I the right)
Terry Jacks-In den Gärten der Zeit (Seasons in the sun)
Joey Dee-Joey's Party
The Supremes-Jonny And Joe (Come see about me)
Brenda Lee-Kansas City
Millie Small-My Boy Lollipop
Bobby Vinton-Rosen sind rot (Roses are red)
The Everly Brothers-Sag auf Wiedersehn
Bobby Darin-Schatten auf den Wegen (Eighteen Yellow Roses)
Manfred Mann-Sie (She)
Lulu-So fing es an
The Searchers-Süss ist sie (Sugar and spice)
The Searchers-Tausend Nadelstiche (Needles and pins)
Dusty Springfield-Warten und hoffen (Wishin' and hopin')
Johnny Cash-Wer kennt den Weg (I walk the line)




Thursday, October 6, 2011

Hard rockin' Conway Twitty Part 2............

w/ Chubby Checker and Dick Clark

Here's Part 2...........

(I Wanna) Live Fast, Love Hard, Die Young
Give me some love take 1-as Harold Jenkins
Goin' Home
Golly Gosh Oh Gee
Got My Mojo Working
Great Balls Of Fire
Halfway To Heaven
Hallelujah,I Love Her So
Handy Man
Heartbreak Hotel
Heavenly
Hey Little Lucy (Don'cha Put No lipstick on)
Hey Miss Ruby
I Almost Lost My Mind
I Can Hear My Heart Break
I Got A Woman
I Hope, I Think, I Wish
I Need Your Lovin'  Kiss-as Harold Jenkins
I Need Your Lovin'
I'd Still Play The Fool (earlier)
I'll Try
I'd Still Play The Fool (later)
I'm In A Blue Mood
Is A Blue Bird Blue
It's Only Make Believe
It's Too Late
Its Drivin Me Wild
The Girl Can't Help It

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=LIZNE2IG

Harlem Hamfats........Part 2

Here's another one..........Part 2

I Believe I'll Make a Change-
I Don't Want You Loving Me-
I Feel Like A Millionaire-
I Feel Like Going To Town-
I Knocks Myself Out-w/ Frankie "Half-Pint" Jaxon
I Love That-
I'd Rather Be with You-o
I'm In So Much Trouble Now-o
I'm So Glad-o
If You Want To Live-
If You're A Viper-
It Was Red-
It Will Never Happen Again-w/ Rosetta Howard
It's Your Turn-
Jam Jamboree-
Keep It Swinging Round and Round-
Lake Providence Blues-
Let me feel it-
Let Your Linen Hang Low-w/ Rosetta Howard
Let's Fall In Love Again-
Let's Get Drunk And Truck-
Little Girl (2)-
Little Girl-
Live And Die For You-
Mellow Little Devil-
Move Your Hand-
My Daddy Was A Lovin' Man-
My Old Lady Blues-

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Timi Yuro Part 7..........

 
And..........here's part 7

A  ribbon for my hair
Satan Never Sleeps
Se tu non credi ame - unreleased
She Really Loves You
She's Got You
Should I Ever Love Again
Smile
Smoke gets in your eyes
So Ashamed
Solamente una vez (you belong to my heart)
Something Bad On My Mind
Somewhere Over The Rainbow
Southern lady
Spoil me- unreleased
Stardust
Teardrops 'Till Dawn
Tears on my pillow
Tenderly
Thank you for calling, Goodbye
That's amore- unreleased
That's Right, Walk On By
The right time
There goes my  heart  
There Must Be a Way
Thirteenth Hour
Ti Credo

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=85Y130HS

Honey, would you be meshuga tonight?......early Jewish/American popular recordings .

A Dance for Everyone-Abe Schwartz Orchestra
A Vaibele a Tsnien-Abe Ellstein Orchestra, Bagleman (Barry) Sisters, Dave Tarras
A Yid Bin Ich Gegboiren-Alex Olshanesky Orchestra, Dave Tarras, Michl Michalesco
Czortkow'er Chusid-Art Shryer's Yiddish Orchestra
Dancing with the Bride-Art Shryer Modern Jewish Orchestra
Dem Monastrishter Rebin's Chosid'l-o
Dem Rebens Tanz-Art Shryer
Der Trombenik-Aaron Lebedeff
Die Goldene Chasene-Abe Ellstein Orchestra, Dave Tarras
Die Reize Nuch Amerkia-Abe Schwartz's Orchestra; Dave Tarras
Erinerung Fun Kishenev-Abe Katzman Bessarabian Orchestra
Fon der Choope-Abe Orchestra Elenkrig
Gelebt und Gelacht. Frehlichs-Abe Schwartz Orchestra
Hopkele-Abe Ellstein Orchestra, Dave Tarras, Seymour Rechtzeit
In Gorten Fun Liebe Potpourri-Alex Olshanesky Orchestra
In Odess-Aaron Lebedeff
Marry a Yiddish Boy-American Quartet
Mazel in Liebe-Alex Olshanesky Orchestra, Dave Tarras
National Hora I-Abe Schwartz Orchestra
Ruchel-Aaron Lebedeff
Russishe Shehr-Abe Schwartz Orchestra
Second Avenue Square Dance-Abe Ellstein Orchestra, Dave Tarras
Selection of Hebrew Dances, No. 2-Ambrose & His Orchestra
T'khies Ha-Meysim-Avrom Segal
Tantst, Tantst, Yidelekh-Abe Schwartz Orchestra
Tanz-A-Freilachs-Abe Schwartz Orchestra
Unzer Toirele-Abe Schwartz's Orchestra; Dave Tarras
Vie Iz Dos Gessele-Abe Moskowitz
What Can You Mach- S'Is America-Aaron Lebedeff & Alexander Olshanetzky Orc.
Yiddishe Hora & Sarba Maracinei-Alex Olshanetsky’s Orchestra
Yoshke Fort Avek-Abe Moskowitz
Zapfenstreich-Art Shryer
Zetz-Annie Lubin

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=ZMMLII2U

Alix Combelle Part 2.................


Yup...here's part 2..............remember, if you've been downloading the continuing Django Reinhardt series, you're likely to find quite a few duplicates between those lists and this one.... :)


Panassie Stomp-Alix Combelle And His Swing Band w/ Django Reinhardt
Petit Mensonges(Little White Lies)-Quintette du Hot Club de France w/ Alix Combelle
Pour Vous (Exactly Like You)-Quintette du Hot Club de France w/ Alix Combelle
Quatre tickets-Alix Combelle And His Swing Band w/ Django
Reflets-Trio De Saxophones Alix Combelle w/ Django
Riviera-Aimé Barelli, Christian Bellest, Raoul Coucoulle, Aimé Barelli, Maurice Gladieu ,Alix Combelle 
Rock-a-Bye Basie-Alix Combelle And His Swing Band w/ Django Reinhardt
Rockin' At The Apollo 1956- (Quite a bit later than most of this list...very nice, tho)
Sur les bords de l'Alamo (On the Alamo)-Trio De Saxophones Alix Combelle w/ Django
Sweet Sue-Quintette du Hot Club de France w/ Alix
Swing 41-Quintette du Hot Club de France w/ Alix
Swing De Paris-Quintette du Hot Club de France w/ Alix
Take That Last Note-Alix Combelle Et Son Orchestre
Tel Quel (En Plein sur le Nez)- And His Swing Band w/ Django Reinhardt
The Sheik Of Araby- Alix Combelle Et Son Orchestre w/ Django
The Sheik Of Araby 2-Alix Combelle Et Son Orchestre w/ Django
Tiger Rag-Alix Combelle Et Son Orchestre w/ Django
Vendredi 13-Quintette du Hot Club de France w/ Alix
Weekend Stomp-And His Swing Band w/ Django Reinhardt
What A Difference A Day Made-Et Son Orchestre w/ Django
When You're Smiling-Alix Combelle's Hot Four

A little Rose "Chi Chi" Murphy list................by request from Patrick (Ravel) in Montreal


Rose Murphy

Rose Murphy (born May 7, 1913 in Xenia, Ohio, USA–died November 16, 1989 in New York City, USA.)  was a pianist and vocalist most famous for the song 'Busy Line'.

Described by Allmusic’s Scott Yanow as having “a unique place in music history”, Rose was known as “the chee chee girl” thanks to her habit of regularly singing the phrase “chee chee” in many of her numbers. She began her musical career in the late 1930’s, playing intermission piano for such performers as Count Basie, and achieved strong popularity in both the US and UK in the late 1940’s.Despite being a very talented pianist, she is best known for her high pitched singing style, which incorporated a range of jazz style ad lib scat, giggling, and percussive sound effects. ‘Busy Line’, one of her most well known songs, made use of perhaps her most famous vocal sound effect: the ‘brrp, brrrp’ of a telephone ring. A version of the song was later used in 1990 by BT (British Telecom) in one of their television adverts. The advert was such a success that RCA reissued Rose’s original recording of the song.

From the fifties to the 80s, Rose continued to play at “many of the top clubs of New York, like the Cookery, Michael’s Pub, Upstairs At the Downstairs, and was “usually accompanied by bassist Slam Stewart or Morris Edwards." These were interspersed with engagements in London and tours of the Continent. During a two week engagement at Hollywood Roosevelts Cinegrill in June 1989, she became ill and returned to New York City.

She was 78 when she died, and, though married 4 times, left no direct descendants.

So here ya go, Patrick in Montreal.......wish I had more for you......Thanks for a great idea for a nice list :)

A Little Bird Told Me-
A precious little thing called love-
Baby, Baby-
Busy Line (a remix by G Swing....just for fun!)-
Busy Line-
Cecelia-
Don't stop-
Gee, I Wonder What the Trouble Can Be-
Girls Were Made to Take Care of Boys-
Hey! Mama (He's Tryin' to Kiss Me)-
Honeysuckle Rose-
I Wanna Be Loved By You-
If you were only mine-
Is I in Love I Is (2)-
Is I in Love I Is-
Me and my shadow-
Miss Annabelle Lee-
Not tonight-
Pennies from Heaven-
Rosetta-
Seasons Greetings-
Sweet Georgia Brown-
Time On My Hands-
You Were Meant for Me-
You, Wonderful You-



Sunday, October 2, 2011

A note for mothers of African American/biracial daughters on hair...natural/relaxed/texturized

Ok....My daughter is multiracial, African American/Caucasian/Native American. I'm Caucasian (Duh..pretty obvious). Usually that's a recipe for disaster on the daughter's hair, unless the mother is a hairstylist, or at least pays for a good stylist who understands "ethnic" hair. Sometimes the kid's hair is a disaster even if the mother is African American herself...not everyone knows what's right to keep hair healthy and looking good. I've been a licensed stylist/barber for many years, with a lot of experience doing black hair. That being said, I've never been happy completely with any products I've used for Sarah's hair...Most products are toooooo heavy, or contain awful ingredients...animal, mineral, never actually organic, or naturally based.....you get what you pay for, and most of the time it is cost-cutting chemicals that don't absorb into the hair and skin. Really. Sarah is 13, her natural hair is medium/fine textured, with a very porous, non-locking fuzzy curl. Not a lot of shine, and very effected by humidity. She has been using a light relaxer, and most recently a little bit of permanent haircolour (about one shade lighter than her natural). Her hair is very long...about mid back length, and very healthy...no breakage, trims about every 6 weeks.

I've always stuck with strictly natural products for maintenance....high grade Shea butter for wrapping it.....100% Argan Oil for daily wear. It absorbs well, doesn't leave any greasy after effect. Good stuff. It gets expensive, but a little goes a long way. Use only a tiny bit, and you will get the effect you need...additionally, both oils are great for skin, especially for ashy knees and elbows.

I'm writing this because I'd like to mention a recipe of natural oils that I just purchased and combined, after doing a bit of research. All of these can be found online, or even at Whole Foods, or a natural grocery store fairly easily. I'm finding that this combination is working VERY well for us, so I'd like to share it.

This is the combination I'm using:

Each one of these oils, at 100% strength will cost you about 10-20$ per once...sounds expensive, but again, a little goes a long way...these 5 oils will come to about 6oz total, combined, and I would recommend combining them in a base of almond, coconut, or olive oil, if you want to stretch them a bit (I don't...just the 5 combined. poured into an empty bottle, and used sparingly)

100% Argan Oil 1oz. (from Morocco...pretty easily found these days $10-20 per oz)
Tamanu Oil (South Pacific/Polynesian.....not that hard to find)
Baobob Oil (from Africa...again, fairly easy to locate)
Rosehips oil (I use some imported from Chile...easy to find)
Macadamia Nut oil (mine is from Kenya, I think you can find it pretty easily)

Sooo....this is about a $50/plus investment....it might be a bit dear for some, but it's working well, especially on split ends, and at temple and nape. I'd recommend it on relaxed hair, as it causes no reversion, and I think it would be wonderful on natural hair, as it is very light and contains no non-natural ingredients........give it a try :)

-Laura
 Now THAT'S some healthy relaxed hair.....no weave...no unatural products....no problems :)

***I do want to add that I'm not advocating relaxed hair, hair colour, or in any way commenting negatively on natural hair. My daughter made the call on, and paid her own money to start using chemicals over my objection.....I know the results, and what can happen once one starts down the path of chems. I also wanted my child to accept the natural beauty of the hair she was born with. We differed on this, and I allowed her to make her own choice and live with the result.....I hope that one day  she changes her mind and goes natural.....meanwhile, I hope that education and knowledge of hair health, the ingredients that we both ingest, AND use topically, help her down the path to adulthood.***