[78-L] B side became the hit, was Re: Double Sided Dance Band Discs - swing era

Rodger Holtin rjh334578 at yahoo.com
Wed Nov 14 15:14:00 PST 2012


OK, a worthy enough thread nonetheless, so anybody want to list the B sides that became overshadowing hits from the big band era?
 
Kinda hard to tell on Columbias/ ARCs, though.
 
...and I have a few 45s from the 1970s with split artist sides as well.  The radio station librarians hated it, as I know from first-hand experience.  And early Chipmunks had David Seville and His Orchestra on the flips, so the exceptions just kept on rolling.

Rodger

For Best Results use Victor Needles.

.

--- On Wed, 11/14/12, David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca> wrote:


From: David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca>
Subject: [78-L] B side became the hit, was Re: Double Sided Dance Band Discs - swing era
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Date: Wednesday, November 14, 2012, 2:32 PM


Tangent here..Patti Page's "Tennessee Waltz" was the reverse of something 
called "Boogie Woogie Santa Claus".

dl

On 11/14/2012 3:27 PM, Ron L'Herault wrote:
> And speaking of Christmas, although the same artist,  If It Doesn't Snow on Christmas backed by its "B" Side, Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer.    I happen to like If it doesn't snow... but few people know it today compared to the continuing popularity of Rudolph.
>
> Ron L
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: 78-l-bounces at klickitat.78online.com [mailto:78-l-bounces at klickitat.78online.com] On Behalf Of David Lennick
> Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2012 3:06 PM
> To: 78-L Mail List
> Subject: Re: [78-L] Double Sided Dance Band Discs - swing era
>
> Santa Claus is Comin' to Town by Tommy Dorsey was backed with Jingle Bells by Benny Goodman, but that was a Christmas combo. I suspect that retailers might have been vocal in hating the split combinations.
>
> One very late oddball pairing (early 50s) is on A-Bell, joining Sam Ulano's drumming narrative The Three Bears with an instrumental by Will Lorin's Orchestra, Poughkeepsie Pizzicato. And Ricky Nelson recorded only 3 sides for Verve, so one of them was backed with an instrumental led by Barney Kessel. Not swing era but odd splits nonetheless.
>
> dl
>
> On 11/14/2012 2:59 PM, Rodger Holtin wrote:
>>
>> I’m attempting to assemble a program or two of swing era “hits†with their flop-side counterparts - kind of a best-of/worst-of.  So far, so good, and got lots to choose from.
>> We’re all familiar with the practice of early dance band records of
>> Whiteman on one side and Roger Wolfe Kahn on the other, and during the Depression they coupled artists in medleys and stuff just to generate any kind of sale.  Remember the guy who wrote to The List about 10 years ago in total bewilderment that Victor would put the Vaughan Quartet on the Back of a Stamps Quartet record?  Anyway, all that pretty well went away by the time of the swing era, with a  few notable exceptions: Stardust by TD and BG on Victor 25320 and All The Things You Are by TD and Shaw on 20-1561, f’rinstance.  The only other one I know is 25518 Josephine by Wayne King and Miracles Sometime Happen by Roy Fox. So, today’s multi-part question for the Resident Experts of 78-L: save for special items (as noted above), albums and coin operator issues, when did the practice of mixing artists on a single issue cease to be a common practice?  Do we know why?  Any written policies extant that may clue us in to
 this marketing decision?  
Seems “common sense†to us today, but maybe wasn’t always so “obvious†as it is to our latter-day eyes with perfect 20-20 hindsight.
>>
>> Rodger
>>
>> For Best Results use Victor Needles.
>>
>> .
>
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