Hello again!
I have another wide variety of recorded tape to share with you today, lovingly digitized and shared with whatever little part of the world comes to visit.
My first offering is quite the find, I think. I wish the sound quality was better, but even as it is, it's pretty damn special, and as far as I can tell, one of a kind. I consider Stan Freberg to be among the greatest humorists of the 20th Century, and he is one of my favorite recording artists, even though his recorded output is rather small. And Freberg, of course, became a force in advertising after he (mostly) left the comedy record field, pioneering a humorous tone in advertising that pushed aside the hard sell for at least a time.
This recording is a speech that Freberg gave at the San Francisco Ad Club. I don't have a date for this, or, literally, any other information. And again, the sound quality leaves a lot to be desired. But still, other than those who were in the audience that night, and anyone who owned or played the tape before I owned it, this is a recording of Stan Freberg that has gone unheard, up until now.
Download: Stan Freberg at the San Francisco Ad Club
Play:
~~
Okay, now let's spend some time with Barbara Reisman. Who, you might ask is Barbara Reisman? Well, she was only MISS NEWARK OF 1956!!!! I found the following two little segments of tape involving Miss Reisman at the end of a reel of tape which otherwise had nothing of interest on it. There is a local -and I mean really local - newspaper which mentions here here (it's in the middle right on page three). I also found a link to an obituary, but that page wouldn't load. Boo.
Anyway, in the first segment, she is heard talking with a few men and then singing a song, and in the second, she's heard on a radio show, "Club Tel Aviv", after the opening chat from the host and a performance by another person. She plays her cello. Whoever recorded this tape somehow managed to record over the big finish of her piece, so the last few notes are interrupted before you get to hear the very end of her performance. Oh, and is it just me, but does the audience at "Club Tel Aviv" sound like tapes of audiences applauding?
Download: Barbara Reisman, Miss Newark of 1956, Chats with a Few Men and Sings a Song
Play:
Download: "Club Tel Aviv", Featuring Barbara Reisman, Miss Newark of 1956
Play:
~~
Well, after that, perhaps you'd like a drink. Here a tape of a promotions man from Lucky Genuine Draft Beer, who went all the way to Hawaii to promote his product, early in 1966. Maybe that was the best way for him to get to spend a few days in paradise.
Download: Hawaiian Promotional Interview for Lucky Genuine Draft Beer - February 1966
Play:
~~
For those of you who like it, here are two more entries in the series of Australian Shortwave, which I've been parceling out from time to time since not long after this blog began. I'm fairly certain the person who recorded these programs lived somewhere in North America, because all of the shows (up until this posting) were from episodes directed at that continent. But additionally, I wonder now if the person lived on the west coast of North America, because he or she made an effort (on the same tape as a show from 9/5/74), to capture Australia Shortwave during a program broadcast towards Asia and the South Pacific. The quality of the connection during that portion is, as you'll hear, quite poor, but it did come in, at a level and quality that I would guess it wouldn't have been received in the eastern half of the continent.
Download: Radio Australia on Shortwave, 9-5-74 (and another date) for North America
Play:
Download: Radio Australia on Shortwave, Undated, for Asia and the South Pacific
Play:
~~
For my "Acetate of the Month", this time around, I picked one which features an unknown Latin band, (they are not named on the label) and a song I have very much enjoyed since the first time I played it, "El Telfonito", along with its flipside, a rather haphazard performance of something called "Zombie":
Download: Unknown Latin Band - El Telefonito
Play:
Download: Unknown Latin Band - Zombie
Play:
At the end of "Zombie", you can hear an announcer, indicating that these were recorded off the air. Here's the record:
~~
And finally, our "Very Short Reel" for the week. Technically, this isn't a "short reel", as it is excerpted from a tape which was about ten minutes long. "Very Short Segment" is more like it. But this is a real period piece, a moment in time and too good to not share. Anyway, remember Zayre? If you're under 40 years old, the answer is probably "no", and if you're under 35, the answer is definitely "no", since they went out of business 33 years ago. But they were as big as K Mart for awhile (for those of you who remember K Mart, or who live near one of the three remaining K Marts that still exist in the US).
Anyway, remember Rudy Vallee? You're older than 40 if you do. He went out of business a few years before Zayre, but in his time, made some brilliant records, and was as big a star as there has ever been, for a time, that time being 100 years or more ago.
This brief segment brought Zayre and Rudy Vallee together, from what I am guessing was the only time, joined as well by The Ray Charles Singers, a conglomeration formed by a white man named Ray Charles a year or two before that other Ray Charles made his first record.
Download: Rudy Vallee and the Ray Charles Singers - Zayre Commercial
Play:
Thank you for posting this! A few things...Freberg's (great) talk was from 1958. I can find nothing on Club Tel Aviv, but it was probably broadcast from the NYC area. The Lucky piece was interesting--the brewery was based in San Francisco.
ReplyDelete"El Telefonito" is a much-recorded song written by Silvestre Mendez, who was a Cuban working in NYC. It makes sense it would have been recorded from a radio broadcast in that city.
Freberg mentions his Capitol album "The Best of the Stan Freberg Shows" is six months old.The album came out in 1958.
ReplyDeleteLarry Zieff here! Rudy Vallee for Zayre? Yes please! Thanks for posting this forgotten commercial.
ReplyDelete