[78-L] Xmas Music
Tom
nice_guy_with_an_mba at yahoo.com
Thu Dec 25 13:08:53 PST 2008
Great call. "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas" is one of the songs from "Meet Me In St. Louis". It's one of only a few Christmas Carols where I have four versions on my playlist -- the version by Judy Garland along with versions by Frank Sinatra, Kenny G and Ella Fitzgerald.
--- On Thu, 12/25/08, Taylor Bowie <bowiebks at isomedia.com> wrote:
From: Taylor Bowie <bowiebks at isomedia.com>
Subject: Re: [78-L] Xmas Music
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Date: Thursday, December 25, 2008, 4:02 PM
I don't think anyone has mentioned my favorite Christmas record...Judy
Garland's Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas. I prefer the actual
soundtrack version from the movie, and still find it hard to listen to
without getting a little emotional.
It's a Holiday song which, for me, captures the universal meaning of the
season: "Faithful friends who are dear to us, gather near to us once
more."
Something for all of us to share, regardless of what religion, if any, we
belong to.
Taylor B
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tom" <nice_guy_with_an_mba at yahoo.com>
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Sent: Thursday, December 25, 2008 12:25 PM
Subject: Re: [78-L] Xmas Music
I just visited iTunes, so that I could listen to White Christmas and it's
the 1947 version that we all know and which is played the most on the radio,
by far. In my view, the 1947 recording is far superior to the version from
the movie although this stuff is, of course, very much of a personal taste
kind of thing.
You could make the same observation with respect to Nat King Cole's
recording of "The Christmas Song" where the recording that's the
most
popular is apparently a later recording than the original, earliest
recording, which you often find on budget compilation CD's showing that
track on them, although it's always the earlier recording, which isn't
as
good as the one on Nat King Cole's Xmas music album.
I'm still looking for other early (say WW II era or thereabouts, earlier if
possible) recordings of what I'd call "A" side Xmas music
recordings,
comparable to the recordings of "Il Est Ne, Le Divin Enfant" by Edith
Piaf;
"O Holy Night" by Robert Merrill; "Isn't It A Shame That
Christmas Comes But
Once A Year" by Jimmy Durante; and "O Come All Ye Faithful" by
Judy Garland,
which I've just added to my iTunes Xmas music playlist.
Other Xmas music carols from that era, which I've been able to download
from
iTunes are: "At The Christmas Ball" by Bessie Smith; "White
Christmas" by
Bing Crosby (and several other of Bing's Xmas music recordings as well);
"Jingle Bells" by Benny Goodman; "Santa Claus Bring My Man
Back" by Ozie
Ware & Duke Ellington's Hot Five; "Winter Wonderland" by Ted
Weems & His
Orchestra; and, of course, the great Xmas music recordings by Louis
Armstrong (although I think they were recorded later) like "Christmas in
New
Orleans"; "Christmas Night in Harlem"; "Cool Yule";
and "'Zat You, Santa
Claus?". Same thing with Louis Prima's recording of "What Will
Santa Claus
Say (When He Finds Everybody Swingin') -- great Xmas music track, though
I'm
unsure if it dates to the WW II era or post-WW II era.
Other "A" cut suggestions?
Thanks for all the great ideas.
And Merry Christmas!
Tom
--- On Thu, 12/25/08, Bertrand CHAUMELLE <chaumelle at orange.fr> wrote:
From: Bertrand CHAUMELLE <chaumelle at orange.fr>
Subject: Re: [78-L] Xmas Music
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Date: Thursday, December 25, 2008, 2:58 PM
About "White Christmas", the Decca version, it's not clear to me.
DLA3009B is the commonest version, found on Decca 18429, etc. But where
can you find the first take ?
BC
Le 25 déc. 08, à 20:21, David Lennick a écrit :
>
> Margaret LEINHART (not Lenhart) sings on one side, I'll Capture Your
> Heart (the
> one with Fred Astaire). All the other Holiday Inn songs are solos by
> Bing,
> recorded May 25-June 1, 1942..no female voice on White Christmas
> except in the
> movie (and on Sountrak 112, and that was just a good guess on my part
> about
> Martha Mears).
>
> dl
>
> Bertrand CHAUMELLE wrote:
>> Margaret Lenhart was on the Decca sides.
>>
>> Martha Mears recorded the soundtrack (on LP: Sountrak STK112)
>>
>> Bing introduced "White Christmas" on the "Kraft Music
Hall", Christmas
>> 1941.
>>
>> BC
>> Le 25 déc. 08, à 10:53, Taylor Bowie a écrit :
>>
>>> Thanks for the info, David. Of course I know that movie
soundtracks
>>> were
>>> not issued to the public in the 40s, but many of them are
available
>>> to the
>>> public today and I have heard them on sound systems in public
places.
>>>
>>> I have to admit that I never played the record in the album set
and
>>> had
>>> somehow always assumed that it was the same as the one we hear all
>>> the
>>> time
>>> on the radio every Christmas.
>>>
>>> I met a woman here in Seattle some years ago named Margaret
Lenhardt
>>> (sp?)
>>> who either dubbed for Reynolds in the movie, or is on the Decca
>>> album...anyone have the right info on that?
>>>
>>> It's early Christmas Day here in Seattle, and so far no more
>>> snow...sorry,
>>> Bing!
>>>
>>> Taylor B
>>>
>>>
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