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Showing posts with label les paul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label les paul. Show all posts

Monday, May 2, 2011

Les Paul "The new sound" 1950 and "Les Paul's new sound Vol. 2" w/ Mary Ford 1951




*****NEW LINKS NOT ON MEGAUPLOAD*****--1-31-2012


You're gonna enjoy these :)

"The New sound" 1950:

Brazil
Hip-Billy boogie
Swiss woodpecker
Caravan
Sleep
Lady of Spain
Lover
The man on the flying trapeeze
By the light of the silvery moon
What is this thing called love
Nola
South


Les Paul's New Sound Vol.2 w/ Mary Ford 1951:

In the good old summertime
Three little words
Lonesome road
Chicken reel
I'm confessin' (that I love you)
The Carioca
I can't give you anything but love
Just one more chance
I'm forever blowing bubbles
The moon of Manakoora
Don' cha hear them bells
La Rosita









https://rapidshare.com/files/1377968930/lespaul2.zip

Monday, February 28, 2011

Music Depreciation Part 2...........shows from 1945


 First, here is an episode that I was missing until this post (Thank You, "anon"), Dec. 17, 1944 Guests Martha Tilton and Skeets Herfurt
http://www.4shared.com/file/pnOMNiec/OTR-MD-441217SongIfIndia.html

Episodes from 1945:

Jan 07, 1945 Guests Helen Ward and Shorty Sherock

Jan. 14, 1945 Guests The Four Tones and Matty Matlock
http://www.4shared.com/file/r0ilIq9a/OTR-MD-450114TheVolgaBoatman.html

 Jan 21, 1945 Guests Pat Kaye and Mike Riley

*** Missing Jan 28, 1945 episode, guests unknown***

Feb. 04, 1945 Guests The Trasher Sisters and Jack Jenny

Feb. 11, 1945 Guests David Street and Dave Matthews

Feb. 18, 1945 Guests Nora Martin and Andre Previn

Feb. 25, 1945 Guests Mel Torme and the Meltones, and Willie Smith

Mar. 04, 1945 Guests Al Burton and Anita Boyer

 Mar 11, 1945 Guests Mary Ann Mercer and Dave Matthews

Mar. 18, 1945 Guests The Barry Sisters and Neal Hefti
http://www.4shared.com/file/SnLqER-V/OTR-MD-450318DonkeySerenade.html


Mar. 25, 1945 Guests Buddy De Vito and Milton DeLugg

Apr. 01, 1945 Guests Kay Starr and Corky Corcoran

Apr. 08, 1945 Guests Julie Kinsler and Paul Carley

*** Missing Apr. 15, 1945 Guests Unknown*** 

Apr. 22, 1945 Guests The Smart Set and Robert Armstrong
http://www.4shared.com/file/ZI2h1CSf/OTR-MD-450422NationalEmblemMar.html


***Missing Apr. 29, 1945 Last episode, guests unknown, and also the first episode from Oct. 22, 1944, guests unknown***

Saturday, February 26, 2011

A special OTR treat tonight: Frank DeVol, Les Paul, Ruben Gaines.......Music Depreciation...Part 1-1944

A special treat tonight.........Several episodes of Music Depreciation, from the Mutual Network. Featuring The Frank DeVol Orchestra, The Les Paul Trio...........and many guests. Great music, great fun, especially for fans of early Les Paul.......enjoy!




Background

America's fascination with its comparatively young musical heritage reached its zenith with the advent of Broadcast Radio. Though access to classical music venues had been traditionally limited to people of means prior to the 20th century, folk music, jazz, and blues, as well as the rich tradition of religious music, found its way into most people's lives one way or the other.

But it was Radio that exploded American and International music into the homes and offices of exponentially greater numbers of American citizens than ever before.

In fact it was music that was first aired over the earliest Radio receivers. And indeed, music dominated early Radio for its first, stumbling ten years. This was music that seventy percent of America had never even had access to before. The Metropolitan Opera began airing live Opera broadcasts in 1931, hosted by Milton Cross. The Met broadcasts continue to this day--almost 80 years of uninterrupted broadcasts. Milton Cross left the series in 1974, but he was also regularly heard in a fascinating, albeit a bit less stuffy, series entitled The Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street, which ran from 1940 to 1952. The ambitious Works Progress Administration and its Federal Music Project funded and recorded thousands of exemplars of the finest American music ever before assembled in one canon.

As educational as they were entertaining, the better broadcasts, such as those from The Met, and The Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street at the other end of the spectrum, invariably delved into the history of both classic and popular music during the course of each broadcast. Milton Cross had a passion for the history of music and his presence on both of the above mentioned popular programs set a high bar for all such programming that followed them.

The Armed Forces Radio Service was also responsible for creating some of the most extensive and historic collections of jazz and popular music in American history with its Jubilee, Downbeat, and One Night Stand programming, among hundreds of others. Indeed, the various music programs among the vast AFRS and AFRTS canon represent some of the largest single collections of popular music of the era.

Big Band music and literally thousands of Band Remotes aired between 1935 and the end of World War II. Without putting too fine a point on it, its safe to say that America, since the very advent of Radio, has maintained an insatiable appetite for music--in any form.

Music for pure entertainment's sake has understandably remained the most popular format for American audiences. But the more informative and educational musical programming from The Golden Age of Radio remains its most valuable legacy.

Music Depreciation debuts over the Mutual Network

The term 'music depreciation' is an interesting enough play on words in and of itself. Spike Jones and His Orchestra may well have coined the term in the course of their various irreverent, but brilliant send-ups of popular--and traditional--music over the years. Their aim being to both knock some of the most revered classics off their pedestals a notch or two, while at the same time deconstructing some of the most popular classics and contemporary music to their basic common denominators: beat and meter, dynamics, and harmony. Spike Jones, while ostensibly clowning with famous music, was brilliant at breaking down those three key essentials to illustrate what made truly great music great.

Kay Kyser had also been a proponent of musical deconstruction. Over the course of their combined forty years of influence in musical entertainment, they both helped to fire the imaginations of countless music enthusiasts into looking at music, its structure and composition in a far different light. As mentioned above, The Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street often went to great lengths to illustrate these very points.

It was the popular success of The Chamber Music Society . . . that inspired the Don Lee-Mutual network to create a similar program that began airing in the Winter of 1944. Called Music Depreciation, it aired a format very similar to the long-running Chamber Music Society series, but in an even more abbreviated and light-hearted tone. And in a nod to the era, the overarching theme of most broadcasts was Swing Music of the era.

The program was in all likelihood the brainchild of Ruben Gaines, a poet, writer and radio broadcaster with a flair for irony and music education. His previous Meet the Band series over Don Lee equally sought to shed light on not only the history of music, but its proponents as well. Gaines assembled the team for Music Depreciation comprised of the brilliant and versatile composer and arranger, Frank De Vol, and the equally gifted Les Paul and his Trio.

While Frank De Vol had already made a name for himself as a popular arranger, Les Paul was only just coming up in the world of broadcast entertainment. What Gaines couldn't have known is that Frank De Vol had a brilliant gift for comedy as well. Remembered as much for his four Academy Award nominations for Film scoring, De Vol is probably remembered even more fondly for his brilliant deadpan comedy roles during his career as a Film and Television actor.

Ruben Gaines, himself a wordsmith of some repute, enjoyed playing with the names of the ensemble and its guests in each installment: Gaines himself was "Dr. Rubenyi Gaines", Paul was "Professor Leski" and Frank De Vol was, predictably, "Dr. Frankenstein." Each new guest was given their own Rubenesque moniker for the remainder of the twenty-four installment series.

On the 'serious' musical side, the series was a brilliant counterpoint between classical pieces brilliantly arranged by De Vol, countered by Swing and Jazz. The series showcased some of the finest proponents of popular music of the era. Featured were such artists as Peggy Lee, Mel Torme and The Meltones, Neil Hefti, Herb Jeffries, Illinois Jacquet, Margaret Whiting, Martha Tilton, Eddie South, Kay Starr, Andre Previn, Billy May, Helen Ward, and Buddy De Vito among many others.

The format would introduce the guest artist, then launch into a popular classic piece, arranged in a more modern fashion by Frank De Vol and his orchestra. The remainder of the format would combine selections by the visiting artists, with one or two more pieces by Frank De Vol or Les Paul.

The program was by no means the equal of The Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street, but it did showcase some budding talents that would go on to worldwide fame throughout the entertainment industry--Andre Previn, Mel Torme, Peggy Lee, and Neil Hefti to name a few. The series also provides individual showcases of some of the Jazz icons of the era: Illinois Jacquet, Herb Jeffries, Billy May, Eddie South, Murray McEachern, and Margie Hyams, among them. It was also a marvelous showcase of the great female band singers of the era: Helen Ward, Magaret Whiting, Kay Starr, and Martha Tilton.

While the format was apparently unsustainable, it nevertheless provided both Frank De Vol and Les Paul their first nationwide spotlights, in a prelude to what would soon become two of the music industry's great legends. De Vol would go on to great Film scoring success and a third career as a gifted comedic character actor. He'd also go on to back Ginny Simms, Jack Smith, and Dinah Shore over Radio. Les Paul would go on to become a Jazz, Blues and Rock and Roll legend in his own right. Upon completing Music Depreciation, Don Lee-Mutual featured Les Paul in another series, The Feeling Is Mutual, in much the same solid supporting musical role.

Ruben Gaines left the Continental U. S. shortly after the end of the series for Alaska, where he became one of Alaska's most notable broadasters and poets. One comes away from a full listening of this series with an impression of the richness of uniquely American treatments of classical standards from the world over, as well as highly impressed by both De Vol and Paul's versatility.

Gaines' humor, while aparently well received by the show's live audiences, seems to try far too hard to get a laugh with the passage of seventy years, but not for lack a quick mind. The patter simply seems a bit overkill after the first four or five programs. This is the only distraction, however, to a wonderful little half-season gem that was otherwise brilliantly assembled and produced.

Performers:  

Herb Jeffries, Illinois Jacquet, Dale Jones, Eddie South, Pat Kaye, Rafael Mendez, Margie Hyams, Joe Green, Peggy Lee, Murray McEachern, Dan Grissom, Milton Raskin, Debby Claire, Billy May, Martha Tilton, Skeets Herfurt, Margaret Whiting, Andre Previn, Helen Ward, Shorty Sherock, The Four Tones, Matty Matlock, Pat Kaye, Mike Riley, The Thrasher Sisters, Jack Jenny, David Street, Dave Matthews, Nora Martin, Andre Previn, Mel Torme, The Meltones, Willie Smith, Al Burton, Anita Boyer, Mary Ann Mercer, The Barry Sisters, Neal Hefti, Buddy De Vito, Milton DeLugg, Corky Corcoran, Kay Starr, Julie Kinsler, Paul Carley, The Smart Set and Robert Armstrong


And, so............in a two part series.........Music Depreciation!!

Tonight: epsiodes from 1944

Oct 29, 1944 Guests Herb Jeffries and Illinois Jacquet
http://www.4shared.com/file/SCihJ7nX/OTR-MD-441029TwoandOneHalfMinu.html


Nov. 05, 1944 Guests Eddie South and Dale Jones
http://www.4shared.com/file/wc2qUwWJ/OTR-MD-441105BlackandBlueDanub.html

Nov. 12, 1944 Guests Pat Kay and Rafael Mendez
http://www.4shared.com/file/cbSnfGV5/OTR-MD-441112NightRide.html

Nov. 19, 1944 Guests Margie Hyams and Joe Green
http://www.4shared.com/file/CNmb_Bm4/OTR-MD-441119Syncopation_Minue.html
Nov. 26, 1944 Guests Peggy Lee and Murray McEachern
http://www.4shared.com/file/AlX_pfmm/OTR-MD-441126LittleBoyBlue_Sch.html

Dec. 03, 1944 Guests Dan Grissom and Milton Raskin
http://www.4shared.com/file/-aTbaGC4/OTR-MD-441203StrikeuptheBand.html

Dec, 10, 1944 Guests Debby Claire and Billy May
http://www.4shared.com/file/B8400wzL/OTR-MD-441210TheContinental.html



Dec 31, 1944 Guests Margaret Whiting and Andre Previn

http://www.4shared.com/file/E4KIVXeu/OTR-MD-441231BoriBori_Pavanne.html



I just LOVE this series..........I hope you enjoy it, too! :)

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

By request....well, this is the first part of the request....The Les Paul Show-radio 1950

The Les Paul Show NBC  (w/ the Trio...Les, Mary Ford, and Eddie Stapleton)

11 shows from different dates in 1950

Les hosted a fifteen-minute radio program, The Les Paul Show, on NBC radio in 1950, featuring his trio (himself, Ford, and rhythm player Eddie Stapleton) and his electronics, recorded from their home and with gentle humor between Paul and Ford bridging musical selections, some of which had already been successful on records, some of which anticipated the couple's recordings, and many of which presented re-interpretations of such jazz and pop selections as "In the Mood", "Little Rock Getaway", "Brazil," and "Tiger Rag". Several recordings of these shows survive among old-time radio collectors today.

The show also appeared on television a few years later with the same format, but excluding the trio and retitled The Les Paul & Mary Ford Show (also known as Les Paul & Mary Ford at Home) with "Vaya Con Dios" as a theme song. Sponsored by Warner Lambert's Listerine mouthwash, it was widely syndicated during 1954–1955, and was only five minutes (one or two songs) long on film, therefore used as a brief interlude or fill-in in programming schedules. Since Paul created the entire show himself, including audio and video, he maintained the original recordings and was in the process of restoring them to current quality standards up until his death. 

During his radio shows, Paul introduced the fictional "Les Paulverizer" device, which multiplies anything fed into it, like a guitar sound or a voice. Paul has stated that the idea was to explain to the audience how his single guitar could be multiplied to become a group of guitars. The device even became the subject of comedy, with Ford multiplying herself and her vacuum cleaner with it so she could finish the housework faster. Later Paul claimed to have made the myth real for his stage show, using a small(black)box attached to his guitar,which was connected to a sound on sound setting on an echoplex or other tape delay.  He typically would lay down one track after another on stage, in sync, and then play over the repeating forms he had recorded.

Here's a great link to a 1940 Popular Science article on Les Paul's home radio station:


 Oh, here's the shows...........this is part of a larger request for Les and also for some solo Mary (which I'm still doing some detective work to find), from "anonymous".....(boy, there sure are a lot of folks on the 'net with that name ;)

Show #1 Mar 03, 1950
Show #2 May 05, 1950
Show #3 May 12, 1950
Show #4 May 26 1950
Show #5 June 09, 1950
Show #6 June 16, 1950
Show #7 June 23, 1950
Show #8 June 30, 1950
Show #9 July 11, 1950
Show #10 Aug. 04, 1950
Show #11 Aug. 11, 1950