106
   

WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 03:29 pm
I'm looking in at the close of day....

Letty, you are to be congratulated (again) for hosting the fastest-moving thread outside of the hot political-arena threads, and you outlast these anyway. Yours is much nicer too.

I loved the old Dave Brubeck quartet, and saw them play in Glasgow when I was about 18. Paul Desmond was a lyrical genius, and such a lovely tone. Joe Morello, the most tasteful of drummers.

I saw a new computer today I might buy (in Tesco's)
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 04:18 pm
Ah, McTag. You are indeed a scholar and a gentleman. It must be quite late in Manchester, so thank you so much for dropping by our studio. When you get that new pc, you'll be ready to roll, honey.

Don't forget now. We're still looking for that clue to soccer. <smile>

Which reminds me, listeners. There was a delightful poet in our vast audience whose moniker was Joe from Glasgow. I know his lady had suffered a stroke, and neither has been heard from in a long while.

Incidentally, a tsk tsk to Walter for not having identified Destry Rides Again.

Niger is pronounced "NeeGere". Let's do a song for them, folks.

From ToTo:
I hear the drums echoing tonight
But she hears only whispers of some quiet conversation
She's coming in 12:30 flight
The moonlit wings reflect the stars that guide me towards salvation
I stopped an old man along the way,
Hoping to find some long forgotten words or ancinet melodies
He turned to me as if to say, Hurry boy, it's waiting there for you


CHORUS:
It's gonna take a lot to drag me away from you
There's nothing that a hundred men or more could ever do
I bless the rains down in Africa
Gonna take some time to do the things we never had


The wild dogs cry out in the night
As they grow restless longing for some solitary company
I know that I must do what's right
As sure as Kilimanjaro rises like Olympus above the Serangetti
I seek to cure what's deep inside, frightened of this thing that I've become


CHORUS


(Instrumental break)


Hurry boy, she's waiting there for you


It's gonna take a lot to drag me away from you
There's nothing that a hundred men or more could ever do
I bless the rains down in Africa, I passed some rains down in Africa
I bless the rains down in Africa, I passed some rains down in Africa
I bless the rains down in Africa
Gonna take some time to do the things we never had
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 04:35 pm
Letty wrote:
Good afternoon, Francis. Leon Uris was a great author and I think that he also wrote The Source, but that one is vague in my mind.

Isn't it odd, listeners, how many of us did our heaviest reading at an early age?

I can almost remember every book that I read as a child, and you?


"The Source" was James Michener's book, Letty. (history of Jews up to the 1948 creation of Israel.) I read that one and most of Leon Uris's novels when I was a young'un and yes, I remember the books I read way back then better than what I read last week. Very Happy

Leon Uris (August 3, 1924 - June 21, 2003) was an American Jewish novelist, known for the amount of research he did for his novels.

Leon Uris was born in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of Wolf William and Anna (Blumberg) Uris. His father, a Polish immigrant, was a paperhanger and then later a storekeeper. William spent a year in Palestine after World War I before entering the United States. He derived his surname from Yerushalmi, meaning man of Jerusalem. "He was basically a failure", Uris said later of his father. "He went from failure to failure."

Uris attended schools in Norfolk, Virginia, and Baltimore but never graduated from high school having flunked English three times. At the age of seventeen Uris joined the United States Marine Corps. He served in the South Pacific at Guadalcanal, Tarawa, and New Zealand from 1942 to 1945. While recuperating from malaria in San Francisco, he met Betty Beck, a Marine sergeant. They married in 1945.

In 1950, Esquire magazine bought an article from him and this encouraged him to work on a novel. The result was the best seller Battle Cry, graphically showing the toughness and courage of U.S. Marines in the Pacific and The Angry Hills, a novel set in war-time Greece. As a screen writer and a newspaper correspondent, he became intensely interested in Israel which led to his best-known work, Exodus, which is about the founding of the state of Israel.

Later works include Mila 18, a stirring account of Jewish courage in the Warsaw ghetto, Armageddon: A Novel of Berlin, which reveals the detailed work by British and American intelligence services in planning for the occupation and pacification of post WWII Germany and in particular of Berlin, Trinity, an epic novel about Ireland's struggle for independence, QB VII, a chilling novel about the role of a Polish doctor in a German concentration camp, and The Haj, with insights into the history of the Middle East and the secret machinations of foreigners which have led to todays turmoil.

He also wrote the screenplays for Battle Cry and Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.

Curiously in some of his books a likeable character is associated with the number 359195: for example, Danny Forrester's (Battle Cry) and Clinton Loveless's (Armageddon) service numbers and Dov Landau (Exodus) registration number in Auschwitz.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 05:14 pm
ah, Raggedy. Thanks for the correction. I am totally shocked to find out that Uris flunked English three times. Wonder if his teachers were ever a bit embarrassed with his ultimate success.

I think I must have gotten Uris and Mitchner confused because of their commonality in tracing Jewish history. Later, however, Mitcher got a little too historic in his book Chesapeake, and I lost interest.

Let's see, Raggedy. In first grade, it was when we graduated from the primer to the hard back books, but even before that it was fairy tales.

At eleven years of age, I became preoccupied with archaeology and continually checked out Lost Cities and Vanished Civilizations. The librarian said that I was the only kid that was interested in that stuff.

Also, at eleven I read Kon Tiki. Ah, well, listeners, it would take a long time for me to list them all.

speaking of Mitchner, I think he tried to be a little too popular with the rebels at Kent State. Anyone remember this song?

lyrics by Neil Young

--------

Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming,
Four dead in Ohio.

Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are gunning us down
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her
And found her dead on the ground
How can you run when you know?

Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are gunning us down
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her
And found her dead on the ground
How can you run when you know?

Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming,
Four dead in Ohio.
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 05:24 pm
Great song, Letty. Puts me in the mood for some earlier Neil Young music ...


For What It's Worth
-- Buffalo Springfield

There's something happening here
What it is ain't exactly clear
There's a man with a gun over there
Telling me I got to beware

I think it's time we stop, children, what's that sound
Everybody look what's going down

There's battle lines being drawn
Nobody's right if everybody's wrong
Young people speaking their minds
Getting so much resistance from behind

I think it's time we stop, hey, what's that sound
Everybody look what's going down

What a field-day for the heat
A thousand people in the street
Singing songs and carrying signs
Mostly say, hooray for our side

It's time we stop, hey, what's that sound
Everybody look what's going down

Paranoia strikes deep
Into your life it will creep
It starts when you're always afraid
You step out of line, the man come and take you away

We better stop, hey, what's that sound
Everybody look what's going down
Stop, hey, what's that sound
Everybody look what's going down
Stop, now, what's that sound
Everybody look what's going down
Stop, children, what's that sound
Everybody look what's going down
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 05:30 pm
Great, Tico. I am not familiar with that song, but I'm certain that a lot of our listeners are.

Has it to do with street gangs?

dj, is right. Most lyrics say more than melodies.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 05:45 pm
Coincidence or more synchronicity, audience. Just found this news update:

BROOK PARK, Ohio - The rash of violence in Iraq this week has taken an especially brutal toll on a Marine battalion based in this working-class town: Twenty members from the unit were killed over two days.


Grief and anger shook the town as families and residents anxiously awaited answers after learning that 14 Marine reservists were killed Wednesday by a roadside bomb ?- one of the heaviest blows suffered by a single unit in the war. Two days earlier, six others from the battalion were killed while on sniper duty.

The sorrow in Brook Park, a Cleveland suburb of 21,000 people, was painfully clear Wednesday among the line of customers sipping their morning coffee at the counter of a doughnut shop down the street from the battalion's headquarters. Nearly everyone at the counter said they knew someone who was connected to the battalion.
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 05:48 pm
Letty wrote:
Great, Tico. I am not familiar with that song, but I'm certain that a lot of our listeners are.

Has it to do with street gangs.


Anti-establishment social unrest. I know you've heard it many times ... just not recognizing the lyrics.

Quote:
The lyrics from the Buffalo Springfield's 1967 hit For What It's Worth have come to symbolize the turbulent decade of the 1960s. Employed in virtually every documentary, television special, and feature film (including Forrest Gump and Oliver Stone's Born On The Fourth Of July) chronicling that era in America, For What It's Worth has transcended the pop charts to become an anthem, a touchstone for an entire generation. In 1967, the Buffalo Springfield captured the restless, confrontational mood of that generation railing against the establishment and went on to be revered as one of rock music's most influential groups. The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock 'N' Roll cites the band among a handful of seminal rock pioneers. A glance at rock's greatest movers and shakers of the 1970 and 80s reveals just how significant the Buffalo Springfield legacy has been: Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young, Poco, Loggins and Messina, Souther, Hillman & Furay, Neil Young & Crazy Horse. All arose from the ashes of the Springfield.


LINK.


Quote:
"For What It's Worth" is a song by Buffalo Springfield, written by Stephen Stills. It was first released on their 1966 self-titled album.

While the song has come to symbolize worldwide turbulence and confrontational feelings regarding events during the 1960s (particularly the Vietnam War), Stills reportedly wrote the song in reaction to escalating unrest between law enforcement and young club-goers relating to the closing of Pandora's box, a club on Los Angeles, California's Sunset Strip.

"For What It's Worth" has been featured in a number of documentaries and films, including Forrest Gump and Born on the Fourth of July.

The rap group Public Enemy sampled "For What It's Worth" in their song "He Got Game." That song also featured Stephen Stills performing the bridge.


From Wikipedia.
0 Replies
 
CalamityJane
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 05:56 pm
I just have gotten around to listening to Tico's mp3.song.
That's one of my favorite instrumental songs - great to hear.
Little Jane loves Jazz and is dancing to the tunes right now.

It is always such a pleasure to tune into your station
Miss Letty.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 06:03 pm
Tico, I read every single bit of that background. Perhaps if you would hum a few bars. <smile>

Now the light dawns:

antidisestablishmentarianism. WOW!

Thanks, buddy, for apprising us of Buffalo Springfield as the fountainhead of the turbulent years.
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 06:14 pm
Letty wrote:
Tico, I read every single bit of that background. Perhaps if you would hum a few bars. <smile>


How does one hum on A2K? Hmmm?

The song is s ranked #63 on Rolling Stones' 500 Greatest Rock Songs Ever, and their site appears to have a sound clip of the song.

link
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 06:19 pm
Tico, I was just jokin with ya, cause I didn't know the particular song that you played. Indeed I will play that sound clip when I return from having my late supper, and I know that our listeners will appreciate the memory jog as well.

Don't touch that dial, folks. More to come on our radio.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 07:12 pm
Drat, Tico. My little boom box will only accommodate Windows media player and not real player.

I promise by hook or by crook I'll listen to that song now that you have my cat curiosity piqued.

I hear most of those protest songs in my head, folks, and my synapses are not properly firing tonight, so how about another that I do know, and can hear.

Graham Nash
TITLE: Chicago
Lyrics and Chords


So your brother's bound and gagged
And they've chained him to a chair
Won't you please come to Chicago just to sing
In a land that's known as Freedom
How can such a thing be fair
Won't you please come to Chicago for the help that we can bring

/ Am F Am F / Am F Am - / G - - - Am F Am F / 1st, 2nd /
/ G - - - Am F Am - /

We can change the world
Rearrange the world
It's dying - to get better

/ G - F - Em - - - / G - F - Em - / D - - - - - - - /
/ Am F Am F /

Politicians sit yourselves down
There's nothing for you here
Won't you please come to Chicago for a ride
Don't ask Jack to help you
'Cause he'll turn the other ear
Won't you please come to Chicago or else join the other side

{Refrain}
We can change the world
Rearrange the world
It's dying - if you believe in justice
It's dying - and if you believe in freedom
It's dying - let a man live his own life
It's dying - rules and regulations
Who needs them, open up the door

/ G - F - Em - - - / G - F - Em - / D - Dsus4 - / / / /
/ G - - - F - - - /

Somehow people must be free
I hope the day comes soon
Won't you please come to Chicago, show your face
From the bottom of the ocean
To the mountains of the moon
Won't you please come to Chicago, no one else can take your place

{Refrain}

We can change the world (4x)

/ G - F - Em - - - / :

Hey, folks. I didn't know that Graham Nash was a Brit. <smile>
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 07:33 pm
"For What It's Worth"- media player format
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 07:54 pm
Oh, yes, Tico. I most certainly do know that song. Love it and thank you so much for providing me with the proper plug in.

Wow! Hey, listeners. Please have a listen when you can.

Speaking of what's going down, folks. I guess that Letty must get down, and I mean in the bed.

This is a lovely way to spend an evening,
Can't think of anything I'd rather do, but

It must be goodnight...........

From Letty with love.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 08:40 pm
Universal Soldier - Buffy Sainte-Marie

He's five foot-two, and he's six feet-four,
He fights with missiles and with spears.
He's all of thirty-one, and he's only seventeen,
Been a soldier for a thousand years.

He'a a Catholic, a Hindu, an Atheist, a Jain,
A Buddhist and a Baptist and a Jew.
And he knows he shouldn't kill,
And he knows he always will,
Kill you for me my friend and me for you.

And he's fighting for Canada,
He's fighting for France,
He's fighting for the USA,
And he's fighting for the Russians,
And he's fighting for Japan,
And he thinks we'll put an end to war this way.

And he's fighting for Democracy,
He's fighting for the Reds,
He says it's for the peace of all.
He's the one who must decide,
Who's to live and who's to die,
And he never sees the writing on the wall.

But without him,
How would Hitler have condemned him at Dachau?
Without him Caesar would have stood alone,
He's the one who gives his body
As a weapon of the war,
And without him all this killing can't go on.

He's the Universal Soldier and he really is to blame,
His orders come from far away no more,
They come from here and there and you and me,
And brothers can't you see,
This is not the way we put the end to war.
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 Aug, 2005 01:30 am
"... The Wrigley Building, Chicago is
The Union Stockyard, Chicago is
One town that won't let you down-
It's...
My Kind of Town!"
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 Aug, 2005 01:41 am
Letty wrote:
Ah, McTag.
Don't forget now. We're still looking for that clue to soccer. <smile>



Well, it's this. (I had typed this out before, and due to a computer malfunction, I lost it.)

The word "soccer" comes from a particular slang, for want of a better word, or mode of speech popular about 120 years ago among the English middle classes (and was no doubt used ironically even then by the masses- and that's why we don't use the word in spoken English much, preferring to refer to "football") by which Rugby Football was referred to as "rugger" and Association football as "soccer".
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 Aug, 2005 03:11 am
Louis Armstrong
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Louis Daniel Armstrong (August 4, 1901[1] - July 6, 1971) (also known by the nicknames Satchmo and Pops) was an American jazz musician. Probably the most famous jazz musician of the 20th century, Armstrong was a charismatic, innovative performer whose musical skills and bright personality transformed jazz from a rough regional dance music into a popular art form. Armstrong first achieved fame as a trumpeter, but was also one of the most influential jazz singers, and towards the end of his career was best known as a vocalist.


Life

Armstrong was born to a poor family in New Orleans, Louisiana. His youth was spent in poverty in a rough neighborhood of uptown New Orleans. He first learned to play cornet in the band of the New Orleans Home for Colored Waifs where he had been sent after firing a pistol into the air to celebrate at a New Year's Eve celebration. He followed the city's frequent brass band parades and listened to older musicians every chance he got, learning from Bunk Johnson, Buddy Petit, and above all Joe "King" Oliver, who acted as a mentor and almost a father figure to young Armstrong. Armstrong later played in the brass bands and riverboats of New Orleans, and first started traveling with the well regarded band of Fate Marable which toured on a steamboat up and down the Mississippi River; he described his time with Marable as "going to the University" since it gave him a much wider experience working with written arrangements. When Joe Oliver left town in 1919, Armstrong took Oliver's place in Kid Ory's band, regarded as the top hot jazz band in the city.

In 1922, Armstrong joined the exodus to Chicago, where he had been invited by Joe "King" Oliver to join his Creole Jazz Band. Oliver's band was the best and most influential hot jazz band in Chicago in the early 1920s, at a time when Chicago was the center of jazz. Armstrong made his first recordings, including taking some solos and breaks, while playing second cornet in Oliver's band in 1923.

Armstrong was happy working with Oliver, but his wife, pianist Lil Hardin Armstrong, urged him to seek more prominent billing. He and Oliver parted amicably in 1924 and Armstrong moved to New York City to play with the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra, the top African American band of the day. Armstrong switched to the trumpet to blend in better with the other musicians in his section. During this time, he also made many recordings on the side arranged by an old friend from New Orleans, pianist Clarence Williams; these included small jazz band sides (some of the best pairing Armstrong with one of Armstrong's few rivals in fiery technique and ideas, Sidney Bechet) and a series of accompaniments for Blues singers.

He returned to Chicago in 1925 and began recording under his own name with his famous Hot Five and Hot Seven with such hits as "Potato Head Blues", "Muggles" (a reference to marijuana, for which Armstrong had a lifelong fondness), and "West End Blues", the music of which set the standard and the agenda for jazz for many years to come.

Armstrong returned to New York in 1929, then moved to Los Angeles in 1930, then toured Europe. After spending many years on the road, he settled permanently in Queens, New York in 1943. Although subject to the vicissitudes of Tin Pan Alley and the gangster-ridden music business, he continued to develop his playing.

During the subsequent thirty years, Armstrong played more than three hundred gigs a year. Most of his touring after the late 1940s was with a small stable group called the All Stars, which included Barney Bigard, Jack Teagarden, Earl Hines, Trummy Young, and Barrett Deems. During this period, he made many recordings and appeared in over thirty films.

Armstrong kept up his busy tour schedule until a few years before his death. While in his later years, he would sometimes play some of his numerous gigs by rote, but other times would enliven the most mundane gig with his vigorous playing, often to the astonishment of his band. He also toured Africa, Europe, and Asia under sponsorship of the US State Department with great success and become known as "Ambassador Satch".

Armstrong died of a heart attack in 1971 at age 69. He was interred in the Flushing Cemetery, Flushing, New York.

Personality

The nickname Satchmo or Satch is short for Satchelmouth (describing his embouchure). Early on he was also known as Dippermouth. These are all references to his large mouth. Friends and fellow musicians usually called him Pops, which is also how Armstrong usually addressed his friends and fellow musicians (except for Pops Foster, whom Armstrong always called "George").

The "Satchmo" nickname and Armstrong's warm Southern personality, combined with his natural love of entertaining and evoking a response from the audience, resulted in a public persona ?- the grin, the sweat, the handkerchief ?- that came to seem affected and even something of a racist caricature late in his career. He was also criticized for accepting the title of "King of The Zulus" (in the New Orleans African American community an honored role as head of leading black Carnival Krewe, but bewildering or offensive to outsiders with their traditional costume of grass-skirts and blackface makeup satirizing southern white attitudes) for Mardi Gras 1949.

The seeming racial insensitivity of Armstrong's King of the Zulus performance has sometimes been seen as part of a larger failing on Armstrong's part. Where some saw a gregarious and outgoing personality, others saw someone trying too hard to appeal to white audiences and essentially becoming a minstrel caricature. Some musicians criticized Armstrong for playing in front of segregated audiences, and for not taking a strong enough stand in the civil rights movement suggesting that he was an Uncle Tom. Billie Holiday countered, however, "of course Pops toms, but he toms with class."

Armstrong in fact was a major financial supporter of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights activists, but mostly preferred to work quietly behind the scenes, not mixing his politics with his work as an entertainer. The few exceptions made it more effective when he did speak out; Armstrong's criticism of President Eisenhower, calling him "two-faced" and "gutless" due to his inaction during the conflict over school desegregation in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1957 made national news. As a protest, Armstrong cancelled a planned tour of the Soviet Union on behalf of the State Department saying "The way they're treating my people in the South, the government can go to hell" and that he could not represent his government abroad when it was in conflict with its own people.

He was an extremely generous man who was said to have given away almost as much money as he kept for himself. Armstrong was also greatly concerned with his health and bodily functions. He made frequent use of laxatives as a means of controlling his weight, a practice he advocated both to personal acquaintances and in the diet plans he published under the title Lose Weight the Satchmo Way.

Music

In his early years, Armstrong was best known for his virtuosity with the cornet and trumpet. The greatest trumpet playing of his early years can be heard on his Hot Five and Hot Seven records. The improvisations which he made on these records of New Orleans jazz standards and popular songs of the day, to the present time stack up brilliantly alongside those of any other later jazz performer. The older generation of New Orleans jazz musicians often referred to their improvisations as "variating the melody"; Armstrong's improvisations were daring and sophisticated for the time while often subtle and melodic. He often essentially re-composed pop-tunes he played, making them more interesting. Armstrong's playing is filled with joyous, inspired original melodies, creative leaps, and subtle relaxed or driving rhythms. The genius of these creative passages is matched by Armstrong's playing technique, honed by constant practice, which extended the range, tone and capabilities of the trumpet. In these records, Armstrong almost single-handedly created the role of the jazz soloist, taking what was essentially a collective folk music and turning it into an art form with tremendous possibilities for individual expression.

Armstrong's work in the 1920s shows him playing at the outer limits of his abilities. The Hot 5 records, especially, often have minor flubs and missed notes, which do little to detract from listening enjoyment since the energy of the spontaneous performance comes through. By the mid 1930s Armstrong achieved a smooth assurance, knowing exactly what he could do and carrying out his ideas with perfectionism.

As his music progressed and popularity grew, his singing also became important. Armstrong was not the first to record scat singing, but he was masterful at it and helped popularize it. He had a hit with his playing and scat singing on "Heebie Jeebies", and sang out "I done forgot the words" in the middle of recording "I'm A Ding Dong Daddy From Dumas". Such records were hits and scat singing became a major part of his performances. Long before this, however, Armstrong was playing around with his vocals, shortening and lengthening phrases, interjecting improvisations, using his voice as creatively as his trumpet.

During his long career he played and sang with the most important instrumentalists and vocalists; among the many, singing brakeman Jimmie Rodgers, Bing Crosby, Duke Ellington, Fletcher Henderson, Bessie Smith, and notably with Ella Fitzgerald. Armstrong recorded three albums with Fitzgerald: Ella & Louis, Ella & Louis again, and Porgy and Bess for Verve Records. His recordings Satch Plays Fats, all Fats Waller tunes, and Louis Armstrong Plays W.C. Handy in the 1950s were perhaps the last of his great creative recordings, but even oddities like Disney Songs the Satchmo Way have their musical moments. For the most part, however, his later output was criticized as being overly simplistic or repetitive.

Armstrong had many hit records including "Stardust", "What a Wonderful World", "When the Saints Go Marchin' In", "Dream a Little Dream of Me", "Ain't Misbehavin'", and "Stompin' at the Savoy". "We Have All The Time In The World" featured on the soundtrack of the James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service, and enjoyed renewed popularity in the UK in 1994 when it featured on a Guinness advert. It reached number 3 in the charts on being re-released.

In 1964 Armstrong knocked the Beatles off the top of the charts with "Hello, Dolly", and in 1968, he had one last popular hit with the highly sentimental pop song "What A Wonderful World". The song gained further currency in the popular consciousness when it was used in the 1987 movie Good Morning Vietnam, its subsequent rerelease topping the charts around the world. Saxophonist Kenny G used it to record a virtual duet with Armstrong in 1999. In 2002, the song was used by documentary film-maker Michael Moore in Bowling for Columbine, accompanying a segment illustrating military interventions by the United States around the world.

Armstrong enjoyed many types of music, from the most earthy blues to the syrupy sweet arrangements of Guy Lombardo, to Latin American folksongs, to classical symphonies and opera. Armstrong incorporated influences from all these sources into his performances, sometimes to the bewilderment of fans who wanted Armstrong to stay in convenient narrow categories. Armstrong was inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as an early influence. Some of his solos from the 1950s, such as the hard rocking version of "Saint Louis Blues" from the WC Handy album, show that the influence went in both directions.


Legacy

The influence of Armstrong on the development of jazz is virtually immeasurable, but his irrepressible personality both as a performer, and later in his career as a public figure, was so strong that to some it overshadowed his contributions as a musician and singer.

As a virtuoso trumpet player, Armstrong had a unique tone and an extraordinary talent for melodic improvisation. Through his playing, the trumpet emerged as a solo instrument in jazz. He was a masterful accompanist and ensemble player in addition to his extraordinary skills as a soloist. With his innovations, he raised the bar musically for all who came after him.

Armstrong is considered to have essentially invented jazz singing. He had an extremely distinctive gravelly voice, which he deployed with great dexterity as an improviser, bending the lyrics and melody of a song for expressive purposes. He was also greatly skilled at scat singing, or wordless vocalizing. Before Armstrong, singers simply sang the song; after him, they were free to put their own stamp on it.

Armstrong appeared in more than a dozen Hollywood films, though few of particular note, usually playing a band leader or musician. He was the first African American to host a nationally broadcast radio show in the 1930s. He also made assorted television appearances, especially in the 1950s and 1960s, including appearances on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Louis Armstrong has a record star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on 7601 Hollywood Blvd.

Many of Armstrong's recordings remain popular, and decades after his death a larger number of his recordings, from all years of his career, are in print than at any time in his life. His songs are broadcasted and listened everyday all around the world, and are payed homage by various movies, tv series, commercials, and even anime and computer games. For example, the Armstrong song "A Kiss to Build a Dream on" is used as the theme song for the computer game Fallout 2, and the song "What a Wonderful World" is featured in the Vandread anime. His 1923 recordings with Joe King Oliver and his Creole Jazz Band continue to be listened to as documents of ensemble style New Orleans jazz. All too often, however, Armstrong recorded with stiff, standard orchestras leaving only his sublime trumpet playing as of interest. "Melancholy Blues," performed by Armstrong and his Hot Seven was included on the Voyager Golden Record sent into outer space to represent one of the greatest achievements of humanity.

Armstrong set up a non-profit foundation for educating disadvantaged children in music, and deeded his house and substantial archives of writings, books, recordings, and memorabilia to go to Queens College, New York after the deaths of him and his wife Lucille. The Louis Armstrong archives have been available to music researchers, and his home in Corona, Queens opened to the public as a museum on 15 October, 2003.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Armstrong

What a Wonderful World
George David Weiss and Bob Thiele

I see trees of green........ red roses too
I watch 'em bloom..... for me and for you
And I think to myself.... what a wonderful world.

I see skies of blue..... clouds of white
Bright blessed days....warm sacred nights
And I think to myself .....what a wonderful world.

The colors of a rainbow.....so pretty ..in the sky
Are there on the faces.....of people ..going by
I see friends shaking hands.....sayin'.. how do you do
They're really sayin'......I love you.

I hear babies cry...... I watch them grow
They'll learn much more.....than I'll never know
And I think to myself .....what a wonderful world

(instrumental break)

The colors of a rainbow.....so pretty ..in the sky
Are there on the faces.....of people ..going by
I see friends shaking hands.....sayin'.. how do you do
They're really sayin'...*SPOKEN*(I ....LOVE....YOU).

I hear babies cry...... I watch them grow
*SPOKEN*(You know their gonna learn
a whole lot more than I'll never know)
And I think to myself .....what a wonderful world
Yes I think to myself .......what a wonderful world.


Louis Armstrong recorded this song in 1968, it was his last big hit,
topping the charts in the UK.
He recorded it once more in 1970.
0 Replies
 
Francis
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 Aug, 2005 03:16 am
That song suits me well, Bob, my friend.
0 Replies
 
 

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