[78-L] Christmas Music
Tom
nice_guy_with_an_mba at yahoo.com
Sun Dec 28 12:19:16 PST 2008
Shifting focus for a moment, I'm listening to the programs another member had linked, one at a time, called Forward Into the Past, and am finding some recordings I'd like to get.
One of them is a recording of "Let It Snow" by Connie Boswell. I've looked on iTunes but it doesn't seem to be available on there for download.
What do you guys do in this kind of circumstance? Do you download an MP-3 editor software program off the internet and spend a few hours learning how to use it so that you can edit the larger (half hour or so, in this case) MP-3 file and figure out how to extract the song you want from it or is there some other way of finding a copy of the song that I can download?
I've already done an internet search for this one, without success, incuding looking on You Tube.
Any ideas or suggestions would be welcome.
Tom
--- On Sun, 12/28/08, David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca> wrote:
From: David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca>
Subject: Re: [78-L] Christmas Music
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Date: Sunday, December 28, 2008, 1:27 PM
That's odd..the Warner-Spector issue wasn't hard to find in Canada as a
single
LP in (I think) the late 70s or early 80s.
And I forgot to list Little Saint Nick. Suffice to say that rock stations
continued to play "the hits" with the odd Christmas record mixed in
even
through Christmas Day for many years.
dl
Tom wrote:
> I had tried to buy the Phil Spector Christmas album back in either 1984 or
1985, not too many years before the advent of the CD, and was told by the sales
clerk at the record store (this was at Tower Records on Sunset Blvd. which was
at the time probably THE premier record store in Los Angeles) that it was only
available as part of a package including all of Phil Spector's other LP
recordings.
>
> As recently as then, it wasn't sold separately.
>
> No wonder it didn't catch on till later, especially among those of us
who weren't exactly Ronettes-deprived to begin with.
>
>
>
> --- On Sun, 12/28/08, David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca> wrote:
>
> From: David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca>
> Subject: Re: [78-L] Christmas Music
> To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
> Date: Sunday, December 28, 2008, 1:11 PM
>
> Michael Biel wrote:
>
>
>> The tradition of the Christmas radio programs began before more than a
>> very few people could record them, and the tradition of Christmas tv
>> shows began before the VCR and DVD. If anything, having Christmas
>> records had very little effect beyond being able to hear them
throughout
>> the rest of the year when nobody was performing or broadcasting
>> Christmas music. But how many people play them the rest of the year??
>>
> There was even a time when radio stations didn't play Christmas music
until
>
> (gasp) mid December! By the mid sixties, it would be ONE PER HOUR in the
first
> week of December, gradually stepped up over the next couple of weeks..on
MOR
> stations like CFRB. Rockers had far less to choose from other than the
> Chipmunks, Brenda Lee, Bobby Helms and the Phil Spector album (which, as I
> recall, didn't take off until reissued in the 70s).
>
> dl
>
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