78s to eat a carrot by (it's cheaper than bifocals) --
Now playing, it's 1930 and poor Ruth Etting and her sore feet with "Ten Cents A Dance." And watch out for those bowlegged tailors.
Next, following a commercial for Post Raisin Bran (fruit and cereal all in one package!!), it's a first-rate side from 1936 with Frank Froeba and his Swing Band and "It All Begins And Ends With You." Midge Williams, one of the great forgottens of the era, takes the vocal.
78s to gasp for breath till the allergies clear up by --
Starting off in 1936 with Alice Faye, accompanied by Cy Feuer and his Orchestra taking on a tune better identified with Fats Waller, "Spreadin' Rhythm Around." Alice was the only 20th Century Fox contractee to successfully defy Darryl F. Zanuck's ban on record-making, and she would eventually pay for it. Too bad, because the few discs she cut are quite entertaining. Even if she's no Fats.
Next, following commercials for New Anti-Sneeze Rinso (where can I get some??) and Thayer Slippery Elm Throat Lozenges (likewise), it's back to 1929 with a jaunty rendition of "How Am I To Know," by Phil Ohman and Victor Arden and their Orchestra, vocalized by Scrappy Lambert. Dorothy Parker wrote the lyric. No one will ever confuse her with Dorothy Fields, but it's still a credible job.
Starting off in 1934 with Ted Fio Rito and his Orchestra and one of the jauntier "take that, you bad old Depression" tunes of the moment, "The Big Bad Wolf Was Dead." Muzzy and the Debutantes do their usual routine on the vocal. "I took my gun and I went like this and I shot him thru the head." Nothing like the direct approach.
Next, ahead to 1937 with Connee Boswell, who has no need for Vet and Martha as she delivers an elegantly languid performance of "Whispers In The Dark." Why don't her solo records get the respect they deserve?
Yesterday I´ve found an old tune from my old Doo Wop/ Acapella Group I was singing in.. never knew that it was released on CD... guess I have to buy and frame it
Now playing, it's the Fleischmann's Yeast Hour for June 18, 1936. Among Rudy Vallee's guests are Vincent Price, comedian Joe Cook, sportswriter Bill Corum, author/actress Cornelia Otis Skinner, and Midge Williams, an African-American jazz artiste who specializes in singing hot selections in Japanese. And moderns think they invented "multiculturalism."
Vintage radio to take an evening off after a long day by --
Now playing, one of the most bizarre baseball games ever played, the April 23, 1964 contest between the Cincinnati Reds and the Houston Colt .45s in which Houston pitcher Ken Johnson throws a no-hitter -- and loses. Think about that the next time you think *you're* having a bad day.
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