Showing posts with label 20000 Vinyl LP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 20000 Vinyl LP. Show all posts

April 30, 2015

20,000 Vinyl LPs 37: Stan Freberg ~ Presents the United States of America Volume One: The Early Years













Stan Freberg died earlier this month on April 7, 2015. Freberg was, in my opinion, the greatest humorist of all time. And his album, The United States of America: the Early Years, was the greatest comedy album of all time. Produced as if it was a Broadway musical, it had all the elements of a great musical.

photo of album cover by Styrous®


Freberg parodies episodes of the history of the United States from 1492 until the end of the Revolutionary War in 1783. The album combined dialogue and song in a musical theater format. The music and dialogue was written by Freberg and released on Capitol records in 1961. Billy May orchestrated the music. In addition to Freberg, the cast included the following performers:


  • Maurice Dallimore
  • Peter Forster
  • John Frank
  • Paul Frees (narrator)


The themes were politically and socially satiric and brilliant! Freberg used anachronistic and self-referential humour in these sketches, such as referring to the Fourth of July weekend in the "Declaration of Independence" sketch, the Thanksgiving Day in the skit on Take an Indian to Lunch, (an hilarious song that would be highly un-PC today) as well as the "Thanksgiving Turkey" portion, and Columbus Day in the "Columbus Discovers America". Freberg also referred to McCarthyism in the "Declaration of Independence" sketch, where Benjamin Franklin says, "You...sign a harmless petition, and forget all about it. Ten years later, you get hauled up before a committee."



Freberg produced many parodies of pop songs of the time; all of them brilliant. There is the hilarious take off of Banana Boat (Day-O) by Harry Belafonte; a send up of Lawrence Welk with his bubble machine on Wun'erful Wun'erful. and his most classic of all, the  lampoon of Jack Webb in St. George and the Dragonet. There are many of them to listen to on YouTube (link below).  


Tracklist:

Side 1:

1 - Overture     2:18
2 - It's A Round, Round World (Columbus Discovers America) - 9:55
3 - Take An Indian To Lunch (Pilgrim's Progress) - 3:24
4 - Under The Double Turkey (The Thanksgiving Story) - 1:12
5 - Top Hat, White Feather, And Tails (The Sale Of Manhattan) - 5:55
6 - The Boston Tea Party - 1:44

Side 2:


1 - A Man Can't Be Too Careful What He Signs These Days (Declaration Of Independence) - 6:27
2 - Everybody Wants To Be An Art Director (Betsy Ross And The Flag) - 2:58
3 - Command Decision (Washington Crosses The Delaware) - 4:43
4 - Yankee Doodle Go Home (Spirit Of '76) - 4:04
5 - The Battle Of Yorktown - 6:43
6 - Finale -  

Capitol W/SW-1573





Net Links:  

Musical numbers on YouTube:  
    
It's A Round, Round World (Columbus Discovers America)    

Top Hat, White Feather, And Tails (The Sale Of Manhattan)       

Take An Indian To Lunch (Pilgrim's Progress)    

United States of America (parts 1 & 2)      
United States of America (parts 3, 4 & 5)

Other song parodies by Freberg on YouTube       




Thanks for all the chuckles and gaffaws you gave us with your psychotic projects, Stan, you made our life a little more sane.



Styrous® ~ Thursday, April 30, 2015

February 27, 2015

20,000 Vinyl LPs 34: Leonard Nimoy ~ The Way I Feel (goodbye Mr. Spock)











photo by Styrous®




Mr. Spock died today. Actually, Mr. Spock will never die; Spock will go on forever. It's the man who portrayed him on the ground breaking TV series, Star Trek, who died. Of course, he did many other fine performances in various productions but it will be his "Spock" that will live in my memory of him.

Of the many wonderful characters on the Star Trek series, and there were many, Spock was my favorite. Being a closet nerd all my life I could relate to him. Thinking about this as I write, I suddenly realize the origins of my current fascination with The Big Bang Theory. I seem to attract/am attracted to nerds.

The Way I Feel is the third studio album by Leonard Nimoy. It was released in late 1968 by Dot Records, the same year Two Sides was released.  

Unlike the first two albums, Nimoy stepped away from his Mr. Spock persona on this album. There are no science fiction, Spock themed songs, or outer space sound effects featured on the album. The album consists of folk songs. However, it is believed that the spoken word tracks, Consilium and Where It's At loosely tie into the Spock persona.

The songs

My favorite music cut from this album was actually written by Nimoy and Don Christopher. Please Don't Try to Change My Mind is a fun, bouncy, country-western feeling tune in which he sounds amazingly like Johnny Cash.

In Where It's At, features Nimoy speaking rather than singing the words, ergo, it's one of the best songs on the album. It is a lovely, gentle kind of beat that wanders around, through and over the words of Nimoy. Very nicely done.

Consilium is also a spoken rather than sung piece. It was written by Nimoy but this  time with Charles R. Grean. The words are beautifully relevant to the reality of everyday survival that holds true today evan as it did then.   

Nimoy's voice is not the greatest you've ever heard nor is it the greatest album ever recorded but it is fun to listen to it in reference to the career of Nimoy.

ø ø ø

Leonard Nimoy died this morning at his home in the Bel Air section of Westside Los Angeles, California. His obit says he was 83, but, no . . .

. . . he was Timeless!

Live long and prosper!


Track listing: 

Side one:

  1. "I'd Love Making Love to You" (David Schudson)
  2. "Please Don't Try to Change My Mind" (Don Christopher, Leonard Nimoy)
  3. "Sunny" (Bobby Hebb)
  4. "Where It's At" (Cy Coben)
  5. "Both Sides Now" (Joni Mitchell)
  6. "If I Had a Hammer" (Pete Seeger, Lee Hays)

Side two:

  1. "Here We Go 'Round Again" (Paul Evans, Paul Parnes)
  2. "Billy Don't Play the Banjo Anymore" (Randy Sparks)
  3. "It's Getting Better" (Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil)
  4. "Consilium" (Leonard Nimoy, Charles R. Grean)
  5. "Love Is Sweeter" (John Hartford)
  6. "The Hitch-Hiker" (David Somerville, Bruce Belland)

Production:

  • Produced by Charles R. Grean and Tom Mack
  • Arranged by George Tipton ("Both Sides Now", "If I Had A Hammer", "Here We Go 'Round Again" and "It's Getting Better"),
  • Arranged by Charles R. Grean ("Where It's At", "Billy Don't Play The Banjo Anymore", "Consilium" and "The Hitch-Hiker"), Ray Pohlman ("I'd Love Making Love To You" and "Please Don't Try To Change My Mind"), and Bill Stafford ("Sunny").
  • Engineered by Thorne Nogar.
Released: 1968
Label: Dot Records
Producers: Charles R. Grean and George Aliceson Tipton    



Leonard Nimoy complete bio on Wikipedia
  
New York Times obituary with video 
  
Star Trek Homepage  

     

Leonard Nimoy songs on YouTube:  

 Please Don't Try to Change My Mind 
Sunny   
Where It's At  
If I Had a Hammer 
Consilium  

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I started the Vinyl LP series because I have a collection of over 20,000 vinyl record albums I am selling; each blog entry is about an album from my collection. Inquire for information here.   

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Styrous® ~ Friday, February 27, 2015