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Showing posts with label A Charlie Brown Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Charlie Brown Christmas. Show all posts

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Christmas Cheer - Part 1

My 2023 holiday mix is now complete and ready for you to review and/or download! It’s called My Christmas Dream, it includes 37 tracks and runs almost exactly one hour and 20 minutes. For more details and links to the mix itself visit the “Latest” page of my holiday music website.

Now that the 2023 mix is available it’s time for this blog to turn its attention to what is, after all, its primary purpose — namely, providing a little background on each of the this year’s holiday tracks. We’ll cover anywhere between two and five tracks each day over the next four weeks, except on those days when I don’t feel like writing. Hopefully we’ll share a little something about all 37 tracks by Christmas Eve. Sometimes we make it. Sometimes we don’t. But I’ve got a good feeling about this year’s endeavor.

One quick and silly note about presentation before we get started. In previous years, for reasons I can’t begin to recall, we posted each day’s track listings in reverse order. So, for example, if we opted to post notes on the first four tracks on Monday and the next two tracks on Tuesday, Monday’s post would cover Track 4, Track 3, Track 2 and Track 1, in that order, and Tuesday’s post would begin with Track 6, followed by Track 5. Crazy. This year, the tracks will be simply be posted in numerical order. Despite the overwhelming weight of evidence to the contrary, I’d like to think this shows I haven’t completely lost my mind.

Ready, set … here we go!


Track 1
Jingle Bells, Sonny & Cher (1972)

During the 1960s and ‘70s, network television was the country’s chief source of popular entertainment, and all three networks worked tirelessly to prepare the nation for Christmas each December. Regular weekly series programs, whether comedy or drama, typically offered at least one holiday-themed show each year; each network offered a variety of annual animated shows including such favorites as “A Charlie Brown Christmas,” “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” and “The Little Drummer Boy”; some of Hollywood’s biggest names starred in annual variety specials; and, of course, major sponsors tied the whole package together with an endless stream of holiday-themed advertising, some of which was at least as popular as the programming the ads supported. Among the most popular of the variety show programs during this period were the shows hosted by Sonny & Cher, both together and individually. The first track of my 2023 holiday mix is the introduction to the 1972 Sonny & Cher Christmas Special, which features the duo performing a swinging version of “Jingle Bells.”

Of course, Sonny & Cher had been popular entertainers long before their 1972 holiday special aired, and  they would go on to enjoy even greater success afterward. They met in late 1962 while they were both working as background singers for legendary producer Phil Spector. They soon became romantically involved and started recording and performing as a duo. Sonny, who was 11 years older than Cher, managed their career and wrote a number of original songs they performed. In the summer of 1965 they released their first album, “Look at Us,” and topped Billboard’s Hot 100 with a tune of Sonny’s called “I Got You, Babe.” This initial success led to more, and they followed their first smash with another album, a string of hit singles including the Top 10 hit “The Beat Goes On,” and appearances on many of the biggest TV variety shows, clubs and concert venues.

By the summer of 1967, however, their career had begun to stall. This was the famous summer of love, and pop music’s embrace of psychedelic rock and edgier, more controversial styles left Sonny & Cher looking slightly passé by comparison. Nonetheless, the couple continued to tour and successfully established themselves as a popular act among more traditional audiences. In 1970, CBS programming chief Fred Silverman caught their stage act and was sufficiently impressed to offer them their own variety show, “The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour,” as a summer replacement program. It did well enough to be picked up for the CBS fall schedule, where it consistently landed among the Top 20 shows each week. Each episode featured a collection of comedy sketches and musical performances built around Sonny, Cher and a rotating variety of guest stars. The show was produced by an experienced group of television professionals, but it was the undoubtedly chemistry of the two hosts that made the show a big hit.

Unfortunately, by start of their show’s third season the couple’s personal relationship had begun to come apart. In late 1974, they formally separated. (I don’t know whether this was a factor in their relationship problems, but it’s worth noting that Cher released a bunch of successful solo records during the first half of the 1970s that Sonny didn’t produce, and three of her solo singles hit #1 on Billboard’s Hot 100 during that same period.) Not surprisingly, the end of the marriage meant the end of the show. Both Sonny and Cher were each given their own network shows in 1975, but these were short lived. By 1976, the couple were back on speaking terms and they returned to television with “The Sonny & Cher Show,” which had a similar format to the former “Comedy Hour.” The new show remained on the air for nearly two years, after which Cher turned to acting and Sonny became involved in politics.

The Sonny & Cher franchise produced several successful Christmas specials during the 1970s, including “Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour” programs in 1972 and 1973, a Cher holiday special in 1975, and a “Sonny & Cher Show” holiday broadcast in 1976. All of these specials followed the same general pattern with an opening song and welcome from the host(s) followed by anywhere from five to eight comedy bits and musical numbers featuring a variety of familiar guests before an emotional send-off.

Among the performances from the 1973 special is a medley of holiday carols featuring William Conrad, star of the popular ‘70s detective series Cannon. This number has become almost legendary thanks to the colorful description Paul Shaffer repeatedly offered each year as one of the many holiday traditions of The Late Show with David Letterman. I wrote about Shaffer’s bit several years ago, and you can read about it HERE. You can also watch the entire 1973 special below. The medley Shaffer discussed begins at 17:50. 


Here’s the first of the Sonny & Cher holiday shows from 1972, with the intro I use to kick-off “My Christmas Dream” at the very beginning:



Just to bring things current, Cher recently released her first album of holiday songs called “Christmas.” She noted on Twitter that while she’d previously been reluctant to record a holiday album, she’s pleased with result and thinks it’s as good as any of her other releases. Darlene Love, Stevie Wonder, Cyndi Lauper and Tyga appear with Cher on this one, and you can preview the album HERE.

Watch Cher’s 1975 CBS Christmas Special, featuring Red Foxx

Watch The Sonny & Cher Show Christmas Special from 1976

Buy The Sonny and Cher Christmas Collection DVD on Amazon

Buy Cher’s Recent CD of Holiday Songs Called Christmas on Amazon


Track 2
I Wish You A Merry Christmas, Big Dee Irwin, featuring Little Eva (1963)

The second track on this year’s mix is a fun little number by New York native Big Dee Irwin. Irwin got his start as a member of The Pastels, a group he formed in 1955 with a bunch of air force buddies on Greenland’s Narsarsuaq Air Base. In 1957, The Pastels won a recording contract as the first prize in a military talent show. The song they recorded, “Been So Long” became a hit on the R&B charts and the group hit the road to promote the record, appearing in Alan Freed’s Big Beat Show with Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry and others.

In 1958, Irwin set off on his own, and over the next 20 years he released a string of records, mostly soul and R&B, while also writing songs for stars including Ray Charles, Bobby Womack and The Hollies. On several recordings, he teamed with Little Eva Boyd, best known for her 1962 version of “The Locomotion,” written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin. The first of these was their version of the old Bing Crosby song, “Swinging on a Star.” Another was a 1963 song written especially for Irwin called “Happy Being Fat.” The third release with Little Eva was this one, “I Wish You a Merry Christmas,” released in late 1963 as the B-side to “The Christmas Song.” Toward the end of this record, Little Eva jokingly returns to the subject of Irwin’s weight by asking:

Big Dee, did anyone ever tell you you was big … strong … handsome … kindhearted – and FAT!? 



Irwin’s last record was released in 1978, though he continued to make live appearances for another 15 years or so after that. He died in 1995.

See Big Dee Irwin Perform The Pastels’ Hit “Been So Long” in 1991


Track 3
Holiday Greetings from Shirley MacLaine

If you’ve listened to any of my previous mixes you know that I like to break things up a little by inserting brief holiday greetings from various celebrities between the regular songs. They give listeners a chance to relax for a moment in much the same way that commercials do on television. It’s surprisingly difficult to find such clips in the form I’m looking for. To work as an audio clip, each celebrity needs to identify themselves by name and pass along some kind of holiday wish. The recording must also be free of excessive background noise and irrelevant content. The first greeting on this year’s mix is from Shirley MacLaine.

Shirley MacLaine
I’ve been a fan of MacLaine’s for years. She’s a terrific actor, singer and dancer, of course, and I especially loved her work in Being There (1979), Terms of Endearment (1983), Steel Magnolias (1989) and Postcards from the Edge (1990).  Wikipedia notes that MacLaine is known for “her portrayals of quirky, strong-willed and eccentric women,” which may explain her great success as an actress – after all, who better fits the “quirky, strong-willed and eccentric” description than MacLaine herself!

As a child, it was MacLaine’s love of dancing that led her to pursue a life in show business. She started ballet school at the age of three and says it was the fun of performing that really grabbed her interest. She scored her first Broadway gig before graduating high school. Her next job was as understudy for one of the major roles in the musical The Pajama Game (the character who sings “Hernando’s Hideaway”). As luck would have it, the lead suffered an ankle injury that kept her out of the show for several weeks, and a noted film producer who saw MacLaine filling in signed her to a deal with Paramount Pictures. Her first role was in the Hitchcock thriller The Trouble with Harry, for which she won a Golden Globe — and she was off! 

MacLaine was nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award five times for her work in Some Came Running (1959), The Apartment (1981), Irma la Douce (1964), The Turning Point (1978) and Terms of Endearment (1984), winning for the last of these. She also won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety Special for her 1976 show “Gypsy in My Soul.” In 1998, she earned a Cecil B. DeMille Golden Globe Award, and in 2013, President Obama awarded her the Kennedy Center Honors for her contributions to American culture.

For me, MacLaine’s professional achievements are only part of her appeal. I also enjoy her forceful personality, her political activism and her unique range of interests and enthusiasms. She’s a genuine character, and we’re all the better for having her among us.


Track 4
Christmas Cheer, The MSR Singers (1978)

Folks who follow this blog and/or listen to my annual mixes know that I’m nuts about “song poems,” an offbeat and sometimes outlandish subgenre within the larger and increasingly popular category known as “outsider music.” Outsider music refers basically to material created outside the professional music industry, often by members of marginalized or disfavored communities. Song poems typically feature lyrics written by non-professionals that are set to music and recorded for a fee by companies set up for that purpose.

Throughout most of the 20th century, song-poem companies advertised in the back of pulp and other general interest publications offering to set amateur poems to music to satisfy the demand for new music and help would-be lyricists become famous and rich. The going rates were generally between $100 and $500 in exchange for which the submitting poet would get a couple of 45 RPM discs of their fully realized songs. The quality of the final product varied wildly, of course, as did the submitted lyrics. But thanks to the song poem, more than a few ordinary citizens had the thrill of hearing their words come to life as actual songs on the family stereo.

Well, this year’s mix is truly top-heavy with song poems — nine in all — and this first one, “Christmas Cheer,” is a true classic. Released in 1978 as part of a full album of holiday song poems, “Christmas Cheer” was produced by an outfit known as MSR, one of the largest song-poem factories. The performance is credited to The MSR Singers, a group of paid employees who sang on dozens if not hundreds of songs MSR created from lyrics they received from their paying customers. The lyrics of this little gem are by Joan Tomaini, and they’re truly special, indeed:

 

Christmas is a glad time,

Christmas is a sad time,

It’s a time of joy,

For every girl and boy.

 

But how about the lost souls,

The ones whose lives never unfold,

Does anyone ever think of those

whose life compares to a dead rose?

 

They’re living, too.

And every day gets duller and duller in every way.

Who is going to bring them cheer?

Isn’t that why you and I are here?

 

Think of them at Christmas time,

As you go bustling in your prime,

And when somebody says, “Brother, can you spare a dime?”

That this could happen to you sometime.

 

Now, the sentiment that folks should help cheer the less fortunate at Christmas is a common holiday theme. There’s nothing novel about that. What makes this song incredible is its dramatic descriptions. “Does anyone ever think of those whose life compares to a dead rose?” Wow. “Every day gets duller and duller in every way.” This is the kind of Christmas cheer I suspect many of us would just as soon do without! 



Check back over the next few days, and I'll try to post some information about the next few tracks once I clean up from Thanksgiving dinner!


Sunday, December 25, 2022

The Time When a Draft Dodger Visited the Bunkers for Christmas Dinner

As a child of the '60s and '70s, I've always appreciated Nick at Nite and TV Land for celebrating the television fare I grew up with. I don't watch much TV of any type these days, and I didn't watch a whole lot after about the 10th grade. But I do enjoy the old shows, which take us back to a simpler time and provide a virtual escape from today's challenges. 

A few years ago, TV Land put together its Top 10 Holiday Moments from the shows of the classic television era. Included in the list were moments from The Andy Griffith Show, Sanford and Son, Cheers and several TV specials including The Andy Williams Christmas Show and A Charlie Brown Christmas. The list also included an especially emotional episode of All in the Family, which featured a Christmas visit from a friend of Mike Stivic's who was dodging the draft in Canada:


It's worthwhile remembering that the deep divisions we see among Americans today are not wholly new. We've had divisions before. However, we seemed to have enough in common to overcome or at least overlook the divisions of the past. It seems different somehow, today. Perhaps we can look to the holiday spirit to put things in some perspective and agree that there still is much more that unites us than the things that divide us.

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Be a Santa, Part 5

We seem to have some momentum now, so allow me to share some quick comments on another trio of tracks from my latest mix, Be a Santa!

Track 15
Holiday Greetings from George Murphy and the Folks at MGM

George Murphy (2nd from left)
I was born and raised in Massachusetts, where politics and government attract lots of attention. I now live in California, where the entertainment industry is king. Lots of folks are wary of those two lines of work intersecting. Conservatives in particular complain that too many "Hollywood types" seem to be getting involved in politics. Historically, however, most of the actors who've sought and won political office has been Republicans, not Democrats. Remember Ronald Reagan? How about Arnold Schwarzenegger? Each of these actors was elected governor of California as a Republican with little or no prior government experience. They each did OK, too. Hell, they both rank up there with Washington, Lincoln and Jefferson compared to the TV star we elected president in 2016. But Ronald Reagan wasn't the first actor to be elected to high office in the United States. In 1964, two years before they elected Reagan as governor, California voters elected actor and noted song and dance man George Murphy to the U.S. Senate, defeating Pierre Salinger, former press secretary to the late President Kennedy. Like Reagan and Schwarzenegger, Murphy was a Republican; and, like Reagan, he had formerly served as president of the Screen Actors' Guild.

Track 15 features a brief holiday greeting from Murphy that was recorded while he was still working primarily as a contract actor for MGM. I like inserting these sorts of greetings between songs as they tend to break up the mix a bit and make it a little more fun.

Murphy served only a single term in the Senate. In 1970, he was defeated by John V. Tunney, the son of famous boxer Gene Tunney, after it was disclosed that Murphy had continued to receive a salary from his former employer, Technicolor, while serving as senator. In 1976, Tunney, too, was defeated after serving a single term by S.I. Hayakawa, a Semantics professor and political outsider. Murphy died in 1992 at the age of 89.



Track 14
Christopher the Christmas Tree, by George Bowers (1982)

I'm not sure we properly appreciate how awesome it is to have such easy access to such a wealth of information and entertainment these days via the internet. I ran across this song on YouTube several years ago and as I was searching for a link to the song this afternoon I discovered that it's now available on YouTube in a longer video format. What's more, it's remarkably easy to import the video into this blog:


It's a cute little story about a scrawny evergreen whose dream of becoming a Christmas tree appears destined to fail. It's overlooked year after year as all the fuller and more attractive nearby trees are selected until one year when he's told he's grown too big to fit in anyone's house and will instead be cut up into firewood. Fortunately, the many birds and animals the tree had sheltered over the years spring into action and a very happy ending is arranged.

You can hear the shorter version of the story that I've included in this year's mix HERE.


Track 13
Linus and Lucy (from "A Charlie Brown Christmas"), by Los Straitjackets (2015)

When I was growing up, watching A Charlie Brown Christmas was one of our family's most anticipated activities during the lead-up to Christmas — right up there with decorating the tree. I'm pretty sure our family wasn't alone in that respect, In fact, this delightful show has become a true holiday institution. No doubt a big part of the show's success is the sublime soundtrack written by Vince Guaraldi,and performed by the Vince Guaraldi Trio, including the memorable song "Linus and Lucy":



This year's mix includes an interesting version of the song by Los Straitjackets, an American instrumental rock band founded in Nashville in the late 1980s. While this version of the song isn't necessarily immediately recognizable as a Christmas song, but fans of the Peanuts holiday classic will figure it out soon enough.


Thursday, January 4, 2018

It's Christmas Time Again, Part 7

Christmas may indeed be over but we're only about half-way through the tracklist of my latest CD, "It's Christmas Time Again." Here are some observations on a few more tracks.

Track 23
Spending Christmas with the Blues, by Floyd Miles and Gregg Allman (1996)
Gregg Allman's life was rarely easy. Born in Nashville to a family of modest means, his father was shot and killed by a hitchhiker when Gregg was only two years old. His mother eventually put Gregg and his older brother, Duane, in a military academy in order to attend college and become a CPA. Gregg interpreted his mother's decision as a sign that she didn't love him, and he found the school to be incredibly difficult and unpleasant. Fortunately, Duane watched out for him and the two forged a tight bond that eventually expanded into a shared love of music. They founded the Allman Brothers Band in 1969, but just two years later, as they first began to experience real success, Duane was killed in a motorcycle accident. Raised in these circumstances, it's easy to imagine how Gregg developed an affinity for the blues.
Music is my life's blood. I love music, I love to play good music, and I love to play music for people who appreciate it. And when it's all said and done, I'll go to my grave and my brother will greet me, saying, "Nice work, little brother—you did all right." I must have said this a million times, but if I died today, I have had me a blast.


Track 22
What Lucy Really Wants for Christmas, by the Cast of Peanuts (1965)
If you grew up in the '60s, chances are you spent at least several nights in front of your TV each year during the lead-up to Christmas watching a litany of hard-to-forget holiday cartoon specials -- broadcasts that were as much a part of the Christmas holiday season as your Christmas stocking and the family advent calendar. You know the ones I'm talking about here -- they were on every year, you never missed a one of them, and they each featured a song or two that you can still sing today as easily as "Silent Night" or "Joy to the World." There was "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" (1964), "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" (1966),  "The Little Drummer Boy" (1968), "Frosty the Snowman" (1969), and perhaps the most beloved of them all, "A Charlie Brown Christmas" (1965). That's the broadcast this very short clip was taken from, and it remains a great favorite of mine to this day.

If you don't already own your own copy of this holiday classic, I recommend that you buy the 50th Anniversary Deluxe edition from amazon.com today, It's now available for less than ten bucks and it includes a feature titled "A Christmas Miracle: The Making of a Charlie Brown Christmas," which I found to be entertaining and chock full of interesting details.

Buy the 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition from amazon.com

See TIME Magazine's list of the 10 Greatest Christmas TV Specials from Your Childhood 



















Track 21
I've Got Some Presents for Santa, by Sarah Taylor and Bill Mumy (1994)


Bill Mumy (fifth from left) and the cast of Lost in Space (1966).
You know, I think it's true when they say that once you start to lower your standards it becomes easier and easier to continue in that same downward direction. Once I decided to let some adult content sneak through the back door in the form of the Drive-By Truckers' "Mrs. Claus's Kimono" it didn't seem like such a big deal to look the other way when this sexy little number climbed in through a basement window. At first listen, it's a pretty little tune about a young woman's hospitality as she offers a brief respite to Santa during his big package delivery runs every December. But upon closer inspection of the lyrics, the truth emerges. The plain truth is that while the tune may be pleasing, the lyrics are downright nasty! The only package this woman cares about is the one Santa carries back with him to the North Pole each year -- you know, the one most of us thought only Mrs. Claus was familiar with.

I couldn't resist including this song in the mix -- not so much because of the naughty element, although that was surely a factor -- but rather because the song was written and performed by Sarah Taylor and Bill Mumy. If Mumy's name sounds familiar to you I'm not surprised. He was the star of one of my favorite TV shows growing up -- the '60s classic "Lost in Space," on which he played the pre-teen astronaut Will Robinson. He also played young Anthony Fremont in "It's a Good Life," one of the most memorable episodes of another cult classic, "The Twilight Zone." But in recent years, Mumy's been more of a musician than an actor, and once the kids are in bed, this isn't such a bad little song to stick on the Victrola. Give it a listen HERE.

Watch Bill Mumy discuss the Twilight Zone episode "It's a Good Life"

Listen to Bill Mumy Discuss His "Lost in Space" Castmates


Track 20
Hasmonean (A Hamilton Hanukkah), by The Maccabeats (2016)

The Maccabeats have done it again! Several years ago, this Orthodox Jewish a cappella group hit it big with the Hanukkah-themed "Candlelight," which was a take-off on the the Taio Cruz smash hit "Dynamite." This year, they've turned the score of the biggest Broadway show in years into yet another catchy celebration of December's most popular eight-night holiday. As with "Candlelight," "Hasmonean" is more than merely entertaining. There's a solid history lesson here, too along with a heavy dose of the kind of special energy that's made Lynn Manuel Miranda's "Hamilton" such a runaway success.



We'll be back with additional commentary sometime soon.