Showing posts with label Merle Travis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Merle Travis. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Popular Songs Of 1948, Vol. 2

Here's the second and final installment in a miniseries of posts featuring the most Popular Songs of 1948. Because 70 years is a long time ago, and these songs are still amazing! Enjoy!  ~  JH



1)  Ernest Tubb  ~  “That Wild And Wicked Look In Your Eye”





2)  Kay Kyser & His Orchestra ft. Gloria Wood  ~  “Woody Woodpecker Song”




3)  Freddy Martin & His Orchestra ft. Glenn Hughes  ~  “On A Slow Boat To China”




4)  Dinah Shore  ~  “Buttons And Bows”




5)  Al Jolson  ~  “Is It True What They Say About Dixie?”




6)  Jimmy Wakely  ~  “One Has My Name”




7)  Frankie Laine  ~  “Rosetta”




8)  Georgia Gibbs  ~  “Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams”




9)  Roy Rogers  ~  “ Blue Shadows”




10)  Merle Travis  ~  “Merle’s Boogie Woogie”




11)  Al Trace & His Orchestra ft. Bob Vincent  ~  “You Call Everybody Darlin’”





12)  Dick Haymes ft. Four Hits And A Miss  ~  “Little White Lies”




13)  Russ Morgan & His Orchestra  ~  “So Tired”





14)  Pee Wee King  ~  “Tennessee Waltz” / “You Belong To Me”





15)  Art Mooney  ~  “I’m Looking Over A Four-Leaf Clover”




16)  Vaughn Monroe  ~  “Someday You’ll Want Me To Want You”




17)  Gordon Jenkins & His Orchestra ft. Charles La Vere  ~  “Maybe You’ll Be There”




18)  The Andrews Sisters  ~  “Toolie Oolie Doolie”




19)  Glenn Miller Orchestra ft. Tex Beneke  ~  “St. Louis Blues March”




20)  Cowboy Copas  ~  “Tennessee Moon”




21)  Hawkshaw Hawkins  ~  “Doghouse Boogie”




22)  Tex Williams  ~  “Talking Boogie”




23)  Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra ft. Harry Prime & The Clark Sisters  ~  “Until”





24)  Bing Crosby  ~  “The Night Has A Thousand Eyes”




25)  Roy Acuff  ~  “Waltz Of The Wind”


Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Popular Songs Of 1947, Vol. 3

Here's part 3 of 3 in the Popular Songs Of 1947 series. Plenty to see and hear here, folks. Enjoy!  ~  JH



1)  Bing Crosby  ~  “But Beautiful”




2)  Merle Travis  ~  “Steel Guitar Rag”




3)  The Mills Brothers  ~  “Across The Alley From The Alamo”




4)  Dorothy Shay  ~  “Feudin’ And Fightin’”




5)  Frankie Laine  ~  “Two Loves Have I”




6)  Sammy Kaye & His Orchestra ft. Billy Williams  ~  “The Old Lamplighter”




7)  Eddy Arnold  ~  “To My Sorrow”




8)  The Andrew Sisters & Danny Kaye  ~  “Civilization”




9)  Buddy Clark ft. Ray Noble & His Orchestra  ~  “Linda”




10)  Dinah Shore  ~  “How Soon Will I Be Seeing You?”




11)  Frank Sinatra  ~  “Mean To Me”




12)  Ernest Tubb  ~  “Don’t Look Now”




13)  Jo Stafford  ~  “Make Believe”




14)  Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five  ~  “Ain’t Nobody Here But Us Chickens”




15)  Tex Williams  ~  “Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! (That Cigarette)”




16)  Guy Lombardo & His Royal Canadians ft. Kenny Gardner  ~  “Frankie And Johnny”




17)  Georgia Gibbs  ~  “Fool That I Am”




18)  Red Foley & The Cumberland Valley Boys  ~  “Freight Train Boogie”




19)  Art Lund  ~  “Mam’selle”




20)  Jimmie Davis  ~  “Bang Bang”




21)  Freddy Martin and his Orchestra ft. Stuart Wade  ~  “Managua, Nicaragua”




22)  Eddy Arnold  ~  “Bouquet Of Roses”



23)  Roy Brown  ~  “Good Rockin’ Tonight”  (This guy was ahead of his time. Sounds remarkably similar to the earliest rock and roll tunes that would come out a full decade later.)




24)  Frankie Laine  ~  “On The Sunny Side Of The Street”




25)  Mary Martin  ~  “Almost Like Being In Love”


Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Popular Songs Of 1947, Vol. 2

Did you like that last batch of Popular Songs from 1947? Good? Then here's more. No? Then don't check these out. More of the same here...and it's all good stuff! Enjoy!  ~  JH 



1)  Nat King Cole  ~  “(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons”




2)  Dinah Shore  ~  “You Do”




3)  Bing Crosby ft. Fred Waring & The Glee Club  ~  “The Whiffenpoof Song”




4)  Frankie Laine  ~  “All Of Me”




5)  Ted Weems Orchestra  ~  “Heartaches”




6)  Ernest Tubb  ~  “I’ll Step Aside”




7)  Al Jolson  ~  “April Showers”




8)  Eddy Arnold  ~  “It’s A Sin”




9)  The Andrews Sisters  ~  “Near You”




10)  Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five  ~  “Texas And Pacific”




11)  Perry Como ft. Dinah Shore  ~  “When You Were Sweet Sixteen”



12)  Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys ft. Tommy Duncan  ~  “Sugar Moon”




13)  Frank Sinatra  ~  “I’ve Got A Crush On You”




14)  The Ink Spots  ~  “Sincerely Yours”




15)  Merle Travis  ~  “Missouri”




16)  James Baskett  ~  “Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah”  (Fun fact: Actor/singer James Baskett became the first African-American male to receive an Oscar, for his performance in this film, Song Of The South.)




17)  Red Foley & The Cumberland Valley Boys  ~  “Have I Told You Lately That I Love You?”




18)  Doris Day & Buddy Clark  ~  “Confess”




19)  Sammy Kaye & His Orchestra ft. Don Cornell  ~  “That’s My Desire”




20)  Jane Russell  ~  “Do It Again”




21)  Dinah Shore  ~  “I Wish I Didn’t Love You So”




22)  Woody Herman Orchestra  ~  “Four Brothers”




23)  Frankie Laine  ~  “A Sunday Kind Of Love”




24)  Jo Stafford  ~  “Ivy”




25)  Eddy Arnold  ~  “I Couldn’t Believe It Was True”


Monday, March 6, 2017

Popular Songs Of 1947, Vol. 1

Continuing with the retro music posts, here's what folks were listening to 70 years ago. Crooners, jazz, swing, as well as country and western music are all represented well here. If you remember these when they came out, well...I don't really have to say it. You already know. Popular Songs Of 1947 begins...NOW!  ~  JH



1)  Frankie Laine  ~  “Shine / We’ll Be Together Again”




2)  Bing Crosby, Dick Haymes, & The Andrews Sisters  ~  “Anything You Can Do”




3)  Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five  ~  “Jack, You’re Dead”




4)  Eddy Arnold  ~  “I’ll Hold You In My Heart (Till I Can Hold You In My Arms)”




5)  Merle Travis  ~  “Sixteen Tons”  (Tennessee Ernie Ford had greater success with this song a few years later, but Travis actually wrote the song and was its original performer.)




6)  Dinah Shore  ~  “The Anniversary Song”




7)  Dick Haymes  ~  “How Are Things In Glocca Morra”




8)  Bing Crosby  ~  “Galway Bay”




9)  Count Basie & His Orchestra  ~  “Open The Door, Richard!”




10)  Perry Como  ~  “Chi-Baba, Chi-Baba (My Bambino Go To Sleep)”




11)  Al Jolson  ~  “Let Me Sing And I’m Happy”  (This song was actually a hit some seventeen years earlier, but in 1946 the biopic The Jolson Story propelled some of Jolson’s old hits back onto the charts in ’47. This was one of those songs.)




12)  Frank Sinatra  ~  “Always”




13)  Jo Stafford ~  “Serenade Of The Bells”




14)  Lonzo and Oscar  ~  “I’m My Own Grandpa”




15)  Ernest Tubb  ~  “Filipino Baby”




16)  Eddy Arnold  ~  “What Is Life Without Love”




17)  Frankie Laine  ~  “Singing The Blues”




18)  Peggy Lee  ~  “Golden Earrings”




19)  Red Foley & The Cumberland Valley Boys  ~  “That’s How Much I Love You”




20)  The Harmonicats  ~  “Peg O’ My Heart”




21)  Doris Day & Buddy Clark  ~  “Love Somebody”




22)  Savannah Churchill & The Sentimentalists  ~  “I Want To Be Loved (But Only By You)”




23)  Hank Williams  ~  “Move It On Over”




24)  Vaughn Monroe  ~  “Ballerina”




25)  Julia Lee And Her Boy Friends  ~  “(Opportunity Knocks But Once) Snatch And Grab It”