Showing posts with label Tito Coral. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tito Coral. Show all posts

January 9, 2021

1,000,001 CDs 18: El Raunch Oh! Grande & The Love Handle Lounge

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El Raunch Oh! Grande
   
         
A while back I did an article on a recording by Mae West (link below). I actually hadn't listened to the album for decades, that happens when you have 20,000 albums. One of the songs on the album rang a bell but my brain wouldn't make any connections. Then, I woke up in the middle of the night and a clear vision of being in a record store and coming across this CD, El Raunch Oh! Grande . . . Latin Songs for Gringos, popped into my mind. I rummaged around until I found the CD and there it was: Mae West doing her thing with Tito Coral gloriously singing Havana For A Night.          
 

Tito CoralMae West - 1935
film still 
photo: Getty Images


The reason I so clearly remember buying the CD is when I saw it in the store ten years or so ago, I burst out laughing! At first because of the title then after reading the info on the CD, because of the series, The Love Handle Lounge In Hi-Fi! After my guffaws settled down I read the track list and discovered there was some really good music on it and it was produced by Rod McKuen, so, even though it was pressed by a low budget music company, LaserLight Digital, I went ahead and bought it. I believe I only paid a dollar or something like that, so, I didn't have much to lose.      

Aside from the humorous theme of the CD, there are real gems on it. One is the Mexican Bolero song You Belong To My Heart composed by Mexican songwriter Agustín Lara with Xavier Cugat, his orchestra and Bing Crosby singing (link below). This song is dear to me because I remember my mom and dad dancing romantically to it in the living room when I was a little kid in the forties. I also remember them dancing to the song Frenesi by Artie Shaw at Sweets Ballroom (later called The Uptown Nightclub) on Telegraph Avenue at 19th Street in Oakland during the War (link below).   
 
photo by John Pratt/Keystone Features/Getty Images
 
 
Frenesi was composed by Alberto Domínguez for the marimba, and adapted as a jazz standard by many artists. A hit version recorded by Shaw (with an arrangement by William Grant Still) reached number one on the Billboard pop chart on December 21, 1940, staying for 13 weeks and was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1982. The Shaw recording was used in the soundtrack of the 1980 film based on the life of Jake LaMotta, Raging Bull (link below) starring Robert De Niro and directed by Martin Scorsese.       
 
Raging Bull - 1980
 photographer unknown


And, of course, there is the classic of all time, Rum & Coca Cola by the the Andrews Sisters. Even though I was just a little kid I loved this song! I did not understand the song was about drinking or the subtle political implications; I just loved the rhythm and the harmonizing of the girls. I think it was the first song by them I knew.      
 
  
 Andrews Sisters - 1947 
publicity photo
 
 
Rum & Coca Cola is a calypso song composed by Lionel Belasco with lyrics by Lord Invader. The song was copyrighted in the United States by entertainer Morey Amsterdam and was a big hit in 1945 for the Sisters.       

I discovered there are other pressings in The Love Handle Lounge series with hilarious titles, Love Organs (all the songs have an organ in it somewhere), Safe Sax (ditto for this with a sax), How Big Is Your Woofer? and other double entendres Mae West would have just adored. The interesting thing all the songs on the various albums are straight and on the level; obviously, McKuen had a terrific sense of humor!   
   
        
        
Tracklist:

1 – The Clebanoff Strings - Brazil   
2 – Eddie Gomez - Los Maric'ones   
3 – Mae West With Tito Coral - Havana For A Night   
4 – Artie Shaw - Frenesi   
5 – Marty Robbins - Up In The Air   
6 – Xavier Cugat, Vocal By Dinah Shore - Yours (Quiereme Mucho)   
7 – Eddy Howard - My Adobe Hacienda   
8 – The Mertons - I’ll Catch The Sun   
9 – Xavier Cugat & The Boys* / Pearl Bailey - El Rancho Grande   
10 – Bing Crosby With Xavier Cugat - You Belong To My Heart   
11 – The Andrews Sisters - Rum & Coca Cola   
12 – Georgia Gibbs - Kiss Of Fire   
13 – The Clebanoff Strings - Solamente Una Ves   

Credits:

    Producer – Rod McKuen

Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Barcode: 018111281027     

Label: LaserLight Digital ‎– 12 810
Series: The Love Handle Lounge In Hi-Fi –
Format: CD, Compilation
Country: US
Released: 1996
Genre: Jazz, Latin, Pop
Style: Bossa Nova, Bossanova, Cha-Cha, Easy Listening, Mambo, Samba, Space-Age, Vocal, Ballad, Latin Jazz
      
      
Viewfinder links:      
       
Morey Amsterdam       
The Andrews Sisters         
Tito Coral          
Bing Crosby             
Xavier Cugat         
Rod McKuen     
Marty Robbins          
Martin Scorsese         
Artie Shaw             
Dinah Shore           
      
YouTube links:      
      
The Andrews Sisters ~ Rum & Coca Cola             
Xavier Cugat ~            
     w/Pearl Bailey ~ El Rancho Grande        
    
w/Bing Crosby ~ You Belong To My Heart       
     w/Dinah Shore ~ Yours (Quiereme Mucho)        
Lord Invader - Rum and coca cola      
Mae West w/Tito Coral ~ Havana For A Night          
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
Styrous® ~ December 30, 2020


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August 17, 2020

Tito Coral articles/mentions

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Mae West: Queen of the Double Entendres  
El Raunch Oh! Grande & The Love Handle Lounge    
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown


















20,000 vinyl LPs 237: Mae West ~ The Fabulous Mae West: Queen of the Double Entendres

~       
vinyl LP front cover detail
cover photo: Alembert Studio
detail photo of album cover by Styrous®


Today, August 17, is the birthday of actress, singer, playwrite, screenwriter and "Innuendo Queen", Mae West, who was born in 1893, in Brooklyn (either Greenpoint or Bushwick, before New York City was consolidated in 1898).             


vinyl LP front cover
cover photo: Alembert Studio
photo of album cover by Styrous®


She was known for her lighthearted, bawdy double entendres and breezy sexual independence, and often used a husky contralto voice. She was active in vaudeville and on stage in New York City before moving to Los Angeles to pursue a career in the film industry.      

West was one of the most controversial movie stars of her day; she encountered many problems, especially censorship. She once quipped, "I believe in censorship. I made a fortune out of it." She bucked the system by making comedy out of conventional mores, and the Depression-era audience admired her for it. When her film career ended, she wrote books and plays, and continued to perform in Las Vegas and the United Kingdom, on radio and television, and recorded rock 'n roll albums. In 1999, the American Film Institute posthumously voted West the 15th greatest female screen legend of classic American cinema.        



vinyl LP front cover detail
cover photo: Alembert Studio
detail photo of album cover by Styrous®


She sings most of the songs "straight" but displays her aptitude for naughty insinuation to great extent in most of them which have male chorus backup.              


vinyl LP back cover
back cover photo: Alembert Studio
photo of album cover by Styrous®


My favorite cuts on the album are Pecado (Sin) and Havana For A Night (Vereda Tropical) which are Latin flavored tunes with Tito Coral singing solo and West chiming in with not so soto voce asides that would be totally innocuous if it wasn't for the WAY she says them (links below). More on Coral in a future article.                 





vinyl LP back cover detail
back cover photo: Alembert Studio
detail photo of album cover by Styrous®


There is the classic torch song and jazz standard, All of Me, written by Gerald Marks and Seymour Simons in 1931. Believe it or not she does NOT let loose on it but sings it with an upbeat feeling as opposed to the classic original first introduced by Belle Baker when it was broadcast over the radio in 1931. Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra recorded the song on December 1 that year, with vocalist Mildred Bailey; this went to the top of the US pop charts.            

vinyl LP back cover detail
back cover photo: Alembert Studio
detail photo of album cover by Styrous®


Last, but certainly not least, is Criswell Predicts! It is a blusey song with crazy lyrics based on the character; Jeron Criswell King (born Jeron Criswell Konig, August 7, 1907 – October 4, 1982), known by his stage-name The Amazing Criswell /ˈkrɪzwɛl/. He was an American psychic known for wildly inaccurate predictions. In person, he went by Charles Criswell King, and was sometimes credited as Jeron King Criswell.  He appeared in two films by Ed Wood, Plan 9 from Outer Space and Night of the Ghouls.      




Criswell was flamboyant, with spit curled hair, a stentorian style of speaking, and a sequined tuxedo. He owned a coffin in which he claimed to sleep. He grew up in a troubled family in Indiana with relatives who owned a funeral home, and said that he became comfortable with sleeping in caskets in the storeroom. There's a video of the Criswell Predicts! song with images that match his crazyness (link below).         
           
          
   
Tracklist:

Side 1:

A1     Love Is The Greatest Thing    
A2     I'm In The Mood For Love    
A3     Pecado (Sin)    
A4     My Daddy Rocks Me (With One Steady Roll)    
A5     All Of Me    
A6     They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk

Side 2:

B1     Frankie And Johnny    
B2     I Want You - I Need You    
B3     Havana For A Night (Vereda Tropical)    
B4     A Guy What Takes His Time    
B5     If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)    
B6     Criswell Predicts

Credits:

    Directed By [Quartet And Orchestra] – Sy Oliver
    Producer – Milt Gabler
 
 
   
         
Viewfinder links:        
   
Tito Coral         
Mae West        
Ed Wood        
        
Net links:        
             
ABC News ~ PBS invites you to come up sometime       
American Heritage ~ The Immortality Of Mae West          
Big Bands & Big Names ~ West, Hargitay & Tito Coral    
Biography ~ Mae West Facts        
PBS ~ Mae West Biographical Timeline                  
Vanity Fair ~ Mae West: “When I’m Bad, I’m Better”                 
Vogue ~ Mae West Ruled Fashion in 1933              
        
YouTube links:        
         
         
      
  
"If I asked for a cup of coffee, 
someone would search for the double meaning."
                   ~ Mae West
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Monday, August 17, 2020