LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,771
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
78s to wonder why they're suddenly giving two sausage patties for the price of one down at the lunch room by...
First up, Don Voorhees and his Orchestra in 1931 with one of those immensely likable five-minute Durium Hit Of The Week discs, featuring a smooth male quartet on the vocal for "I Found A Million Dollar Baby In The Five And Ten Cent Store." And as Alois Havrilla tells us at the end, another Hit Of The Week Record featuring twice the playing time of an ordinary record, on sale at your newsstand next Thursday.
Next, back to 1929 for Nick Lucas And His Guitar and one of those early-talkie-era melodies just perfect for crooning by a guitar-strumming tenor, "I'm Telling It To The Daisies." Talk about Eddie Lang all you want, but Nick was a pretty dab hand with the strings.
First up, Don Voorhees and his Orchestra in 1931 with one of those immensely likable five-minute Durium Hit Of The Week discs, featuring a smooth male quartet on the vocal for "I Found A Million Dollar Baby In The Five And Ten Cent Store." And as Alois Havrilla tells us at the end, another Hit Of The Week Record featuring twice the playing time of an ordinary record, on sale at your newsstand next Thursday.
Next, back to 1929 for Nick Lucas And His Guitar and one of those early-talkie-era melodies just perfect for crooning by a guitar-strumming tenor, "I'm Telling It To The Daisies." Talk about Eddie Lang all you want, but Nick was a pretty dab hand with the strings.