[78-L] Christmas Music

Bertrand CHAUMELLE chaumelle at orange.fr
Sun Dec 28 12:36:02 PST 2008


Would Lena Horne's modern version do ?

If you're interested: chaumelle at orange.fr

BC
Le 28 déc. 08, à 21:19, Tom a écrit :

>
> 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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