Showing posts with label Dean Martin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dean Martin. Show all posts

January 12, 2021

45 RPMs 54: Don Cherry ~ Band of Gold

 ~      
7" vinyl 45 rpm record 
photo by Styrous®

 
Don Cherry was born on this date in 1924 in Wichita Falls, Texas. He started in his early 1920s as a big band singer in the orchestras of Jan Garber and Victor Young. In 1951, he recorded his first solo hits, Thinking of You and Belle, Belle, My Liberty Belle. In 1955, he recorded his biggest hit, Band of Gold, which reached No. 4 on the Billboard chart. It sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc. The track peaked at No. 6 in the UK Singles Chart.          
 
Band of Gold is a classic pop song, with music by Jack Taylor and lyrics by Bob Musel. It was published in 1955. It was used in the television series, Mad Men.    
 
 

Don Cherry ~ Band of Gold
7" vinyl 45 rpm record label
photo by Styrous®
 
 
He had a fantastic tenor voice with a dreamy quality that had a touch of Dean Martin, only better! He was also a good looking man.   


date & photographer unknown

  
However, his career never rose to stardom as a singer and he is better known as a golfer. He was one of America’s top-ranked amateur golfers and was in contention to win the 1960 U.S. Open before eventually finishing tied for ninth along with Ben Hogan, four strokes behind winner Arnold Palmer        


Don Cherry - 1953 
photo: Augusta Nationall/Getty Images


Cherry published his biography, Cherry's Jubilee, with co-writer Neil Daniels. He was a good friend of Willie Nelson, and had collaborated on three albums with him, Augusta (1995), The Eyes of Texas (2002), and It's Magic (2007).         
 
In 1970, Freda Payne recorded a song with the same title, Band of Gold, written and composed by former Motown producers Holland–Dozier–Holland but it was a totally different tune. Where The Cherry song is positive, the Payne one is not.      


Don Cherry ~ Rumble Boogie
7" vinyl 45 rpm record 
photo by Styrous®


His son, Stephen, was a casualty of the 9/11 attacks when American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the North Tower. Don Cherry died at a Las Vegas hospice on April 4, 2018; he was 94 years old.         


Don Cherry ~ Rumble Boogie
7" vinyl 45 rpm record label
photo by Styrous®

        
Tracklist:

Side 1:

A - Band Of Gold, written by Musel*, J. Taylor*

Side 2:

B - Rumble Boogie, written by E. Curtis*

Companies, etc.
  
    Published By – Ludlow Music, Inc.
    Pressed By – Columbia Records Pressing Plant, Bridgeport

   
Credits:


    Orchestra – Ray Conniff & His Orch.*

Notes:



Barcode and Other Identifiers
        
        
    Matrix / Runout (Label Side A): ZSP 37224
    Matrix / Runout (Label Side B): ZSP 37223
    Matrix / Runout (Stamped Side A): ZSP37224-1D
    Matrix / Runout (Stamped Side B): ZSP37223-1E     
      
      
      
  
Viewfinder links:       
         
Don Cherry        
Ray Conniff       
Dean Martin          
Willie Nelson        
     
Net links:       
         
Amature Golf ~ Don Cherry dies at 94        
     
YouTube links:      
        
Don Cherry ~   
    Band of Gold         
    Belle My Liberty Belle          
    Rumble Boogie    
Freda Payne ~ Band of Gold       
      
      

Styrous® ~ Tuesday, January 12, 2021






      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

September 8, 2020

Patsy Cline ~ Still Walkin' After Midnight!

~
Patsy Cline - late 1962 
photo by Shane Collins


Patsy Cline, was born Virginia Patterson Hensley on this day, September 8, in 1932, in Winchester, Virginia. She is considered one of the most influential vocalists of the 20th century and one of the first country music artists to successfully cross over into pop music; her records are responsible for the advent of the Nashville Sound, which blended country and pop music and introduced country to a whole new audience in the early 1960s.  

Regarding the Nashville sound, the record producer Owen Bradley stated:
"Now we've cut out the fiddle and steel guitar and added choruses to country music. But it can't stop there. It always has to keep developing to keep fresh." -Owen Bradley
      
Owen Bradley & Patsy Cline - early 60's 
photographer unknown

            
According to the documentary Remembering Patsy, Cline couldn't read sheet music. She was self-taught and had perfect pitch even as a child. Her first professional performances began at the local WINC radio station when she was fifteen. In the early 1950s, Cline began appearing in a local band led by performer Bill Peer.        


Patsy Cline & Bill Peer  
date & photographer unknown


Various local appearances led to featured performances on Connie B. Gay's Town and Country television broadcasts. It also led to the signing of her first recording contract with the Four Star label in 1954.     

She moved to Nashville, Tennessee, to further her career. Working with new manager Randy Hughes, Cline would become a member of the Grand Ole Opry and then moved to Decca Records in 1960. 
 

Patsy Cline & Randy Hughes
date & photographer unknown


Under the direction of producer Owen Bradley, her musical sound shifted and she achieved consistent success. The 1961 single I Fall to Pieces was her first to top the Billboard country chart. As the song became a hit, Cline was severely injured in an automobile accident, which caused her to spend a month in the hospital. After recovering, her next single release Crazy, written by Willie Nelson, would also become a major hit.    

Between 1962 and 1963, Cline had hits with She's Got You, When I Get Through with You, So Wrong and Leavin' on Your Mind. She also toured and headlined shows with more frequency. 
 
In March 1963, Cline appeared at a benefit show in Kansas City, Kansas. To return home, she boarded a plane along with country performers Cowboy Copas, Hawkshaw Hawkins and manager Randy Hughes. Upon hitting rough weather, the plane crashed outside of Camden, Tennessee, killing all those on board. Cline was thirty years old and her entire music career was only three years but what an impact she made on music!

In 1973, Patsy Cline became the first female performer to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.           

In 1985 a biographical film on the life of Patsy Cline featuring her music was made with Jessica Lange as Cline; it also starred Ed Harris, Ann Wedgeworth, David Clennon, James Staley, Gary Basaraba, John Goodman, and P. J. Soles of Carrie and Rock 'n' Roll High School fame (link below).        
 
Cline did a cover of You Belong To Me, one of my favorite songs from the fifties originally recorded by Joni James in February of 1952; it was covered later that year by Jo Stafford, Patti Page and Dean Martin. My favorite version was by Page (link below).    

 
     
     
Viewfinder links:       
        
Owen Bradley       
Patsy Cline       
Jessica Lange   
Willie Nelson      
Rock 'N' Roll High School       
P. J. Soles           
Jo Stafford       
Walkin' After Midnight              
        
Net links:       
       
Country Music Hall of Fame ~ Patsy Cline       
Discography       
NPR ~ Patsy Cline: A Country Career Cut Short       
      
YouTube links:       

Patsy Cline songs ~      
   Crazy   
   I Fall To Pieces    
   She's Got You
   You Belong To Me
   Your Cheatin' Heart      
   Walkin' After Midnight      
     
       
FOX4 News Kansas City ~ Remembering Patsy Cline       
Patti Page ~ You Belong To Me       
Remembering Patsy: The Official Patsy Cline Biography (Excerpt)
Sweet Dreams documentary (40:21)      
       
       
      
Styrous® ~ Tuesday, September 8, 2020 
         
       

  
     
     


November 30, 2017

20,000 Vinyl LPs 118: Jim Nabors ~ A goofy guy with a big voice

vinyl LP album cover 
album cover photo by Leigh Wiener 
photo of album cover by Styrous®

       
James Thurston Nabors died today, November 30, 2017. He played a dopey character but he had a rich baritone voice from heaven (YouTube links below). He was discovered by Andy Griffith while working at a Santa Monica nightclub, and he later joined The Andy Griffith Show as Gomer Pyle.    


vinyl LP album back cover 
album cover photos by Leigh Wiener 
photo of album cover by Styrous®


He was an American actor, singer, and comedian born and raised in Sylacauga, Alabama, but because of his asthma, he moved to southern California and worked as a film cutter for NBC. He was discovered by Andy Griffith while working at a Santa Monica nightclub singing and acting in cabaret theater, and he later joined The Andy Griffith Show as Gomer Pyle. The character proved popular, and Nabors was given his own spin-off show Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.. The show, which placed Nabors' bungling, naive character opposite Sergeant Vince Carter (Frank Sutton), was also popular.    


Jim Nabors - left, Frank Sutton - right


Nabors revealed his fantasatic voice first on the February 24, 1964, "The Song Festers" episode of The Andy Griffith Show and on April 8, 1964, on The Danny Kaye Show, and subsequently capitalized on it with numerous successful recordings and live performances. Most of the songs were romantic ballads, though he sang pop, gospel, and country songs as well.          

Although he was known for his portrayal of Gomer Pyle, he became a popular guest on variety shows which showcased his voice in the 1960s and 1970s, including two specials of his own in 1969 and 1974. He subsequently recorded numerous albums and singles, most of them containing romantic ballads.    


vinyl LP album back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®


Because he was typecast from his role as Gomer Pyle, Nabors found his subsequent roles mostly comedic; The exception was in a 1973 episode of The Rookies, where he played his first "serious" role, a man called on to be an assassin after the death of his sister. He abandoned television jobs for nightclub and concert engagements and a role in a touring production of Man of La Mancha.     


vinyl LP album back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®
 

In the 1980s, Nabors appeared in three feature-length films starring his friend Burt Reynolds, at the latter's request. In The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982), about a sheriff (Reynolds) who falls in love with a brothel madam (Dolly Parton), Nabors played Deputy Fred, a character similar to Gomer Pyle. Though the film was given mostly unfavorable reviews, Nabors garnered some positive comments for his performance.         

In 1983, he was cast as an auto mechanic in Stroker Ace, starring Burt Reynolds as a race car driver who fights a fried-chicken chain entrepreneur. The film was panned, and Nabors earned a Golden Raspberry Award for his performance. In Reynolds' star-studded Cannonball Run II (1984), about a cross-country car chase, Nabors made a cameo appearance alongside such celebrities as Dom DeLuise, Jackie Chan, Shirley MacLaine, Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, and Andy Griffith Show co-stars Don Knotts and George Lindsey. Like the two previous Reynolds films Nabors appeared in, Cannonball received mostly negative reviews.            



vinyl LP album back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®



Nabors married his partner of 38 years, Stan Cadwallader, at the Seattle, Washington Fairmont Olympic Hotel on January 15, 2013, a month after same-sex marriage became legal in Washington. A longstanding rumor maintains that Nabors "married" Rock Hudson in the early 1970s, shortly before Nabors began his relationship with Cadwallader.     

According to Hudson, the story originated with a group of "middle-aged homosexuals who live in Huntington Beach", who sent out joke invitations for their annual get-together. One year, the group invited its members to witness "the marriage of Rock Hudson and Jim Nabors", at which Hudson would take the surname of Nabors' most famous character, Gomer Pyle, becoming "Rock Pyle" (personally, I think this is hysterical). The rumor was spread by those who failed to get the joke, and because Nabors was still closeted at the time and Hudson never publicly admitted to being gay (despite widespread suspicion that he was), the two never spoke to each other again. ¡Que Lastima!  




vinyl LP, side 1
photo by Styrous®






vinyl LP label, side 1
photo by Styrous®







vinyl LP, side 2
photo by Styrous®






vinyl LP label, side 2
photo by Styrous®

Jim Nabors ‎– Shazam! Gomer Pyle U.S.M.C.
Genre: Pop, Folk, World, & Country
Style: Country, Vocal
Year: 1965

Tracklist:

Side 1:

Hoo How, What Now? - 2:00
It Takes All Kinds To Make A World - 2:35
Hot Dog Heart - 1:53
Shazam! - 1:48
Heart Insurance - 1:46
Reincarnation - 1:50

Side 2:

If You Want Me To - 1:40
The Waltz Of Miss Sarah Green - 1:55
All Of This For Sally - 2:51
You Can't Roller Skate In A Buffalo Herd - 1:32
Old Blue - 2:54
Gomer Seys Hey! - 2:09

Notes:

360 Stereo, in white printing. 2nd pressing
Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Label Code (2nd Pressing): 360 Stereo, in white printing



Jim Nabors died at his Honolulu, Hawaii, home on November 30, 2017. The United States Marine Corps released a statement on Nabors: "Semper Fi, Gomer Pyle. Rest in peace Jim Nabors, one of the few to ever be named an Honorary Marine." He was 87 years old.     

       
       
Net links:       
        
Jim Nabors website       
NY Times Gomer Pyle Is Dead        
Variety ~ obit
CNN ~ obit            
CBS News ~ obit        
          
YouTube links:       
        
The Impossible Dream       
500 miles From Home       
Oh Holy Night        
Shazam!         
Hot Dog Heart           
Reincarnation     
          
       
         
           
             
Styrous® ~ Thursday, November 30, 2017