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Favourite record

Posted: 06 Mar 2010, 20:41
by nigelb
When I was around 3 or 4 my favourite record was "The Blue-Eyed Blonde Next Door" by George Formby and today happens to be the anniversary of his death. http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/date ... 777445.stm

"Dan The Dairy Man was the flip side. My mother (from Liverpool) never appeared to be phased by the lyrics, which to her generation, must have been a bit risqué.

I was given that record along with a stack of 78 rpm's accompanied by a Decca portable clockwork gramophone by a great aunt. I still have those 78's and the clockwork gramophone.

For the youngsters, 78 rpm's were mostly eithrer 10 or 12 inch diameter disks made of shellac that would break if you dropped them. They would not play in a CD player, you needed a turntable and needles and things. :lol: Playing records was rather a ritual: You had to wind up the player after every record and you were supposed to change the steel needle also.

This was the start of my life long love of music. By the time I was 5, I had become a little more sophisticated and my favourite was the Barcarolle by Offenbach.

How about you, do you recall your very first favourite record?

Nigel²

Re: Favourite record

Posted: 06 Mar 2010, 21:56
by DaveB
:lol: :lol:

Oh dear.. this is gonna open up a can of worms :lol: I can remember the first record I bought which I guess must have been my favourite of the day though I can't claim the same affection now. It was a 45 by Peter and Gordon.. A world Without Love :worried:

ATB

DaveB B)smk

Re: Favourite record

Posted: 06 Mar 2010, 22:43
by Molyned
You're right Dave -
My first record I bought was by Acker Bilk for my new Dansette player :rock: . I was first inroduced to 'music' a) by my great aunts with their wind-up playing Gilbert & Sullivan and b) my brother-in-law playing early American big-band jazz - much more like it :thumbsup:
Cheers
Dave M(oly)

Re: Favourite record

Posted: 06 Mar 2010, 23:44
by DaveB
Ah.. Acker Bilk :rock: I remember being fond of one of his my nan used to have.. 'Midnight in Moscow'. Still a great tune to this day :thumbsup:

ATB

DaveB B)smk

Re: Favourite record

Posted: 06 Mar 2010, 23:58
by JimCooper
Not really a favourite, but I remember finding it highly amusing to listen to "My Old Man's a Dustman" on a Dansette but playing it at 78 instead of 45 so it sounded like The Chipmunks.

Re: Favourite record

Posted: 07 Mar 2010, 00:24
by nigelb
DaveB wrote:Ah.. Acker Bilk :rock: I remember being fond of one of his my nan used to have.. 'Midnight in Moscow'. Still a great tune to this day :thumbsup:

ATB

DaveB B)smk
*-) If memory serves "Midnight in Moscow" was done by Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen. Acker Bilk was famous for "Stranger On The Shore" Both are British Artists. Kenny Ball reached #2 on the US charts and Acker Bilk was the first British artist on the US Bilboard charts to have a #1 hit. I suppose that makes him the vanguard of the British Invasion.

Just checked my collection of 45 rpm's - yep, the above is correct. so there! ;)

Oh Dave, I also brought "World Without Love" and I think I was around 17 at the time. The records given to me by my great aunt when I was 3 or 4 were old and dated from 1912 to the 1930's. Just in case anyone thinks I am as old as Graham, I did not come along until 1947. ;) :lol:

Nigel²

Re: Favourite record

Posted: 07 Mar 2010, 01:27
by speedbird591
My brother and I shared an old wind-up 78 gramophone and the first record we bought with our pocket money was Tommy Steele - A Handful of Songs. When a 45 Dansette appeared one Christmas we rushed down to the record shop and bought Cliff Richard's Please Don't Tease on the day of release.

Image

Nigel - how could you force that memory out of me. I've spent a lifetime trying to suppress it 8)

Ian :$

Re: Favourite record

Posted: 07 Mar 2010, 08:57
by DaveB
Grief Nige.. how the memory fails :(( You're bang on mate. My nan had both records and I remember playing DJ at christmas on her GUS Stereogram :lol: My DJ'ing was probably rubbish.. more your nausiating little tick :worried: It played 78's too so Bridge over the River Kwai got some airtime! ;)

ATB

DaveB B)smk

Re: Favourite record

Posted: 07 Mar 2010, 09:49
by 511Flyer
There was a wind-up gramophone in a holiday cottage that we rented. There was a stack of records with it, and one of them was "The river of no return" by Tennessee Ernie Ford, or something like that, and I liked that one a lot.

It was very loud, and my wife was forever telling me to turn it down. She just couldn't understand why it wasn't possible to do it.

:tunes:

Re: Favourite record

Posted: 07 Mar 2010, 11:10
by nigelb
511Flyer wrote:It was very loud, and my wife was forever telling me to turn it down. She just couldn't understand why it wasn't possible to do it.

:tunes:
Yep, when I brought "Singing The Blues" around 1957, my parents were always telling me it was too loud - I don't think they cared for that record. Of course there was nothing I could do about the volume. HMV did sell needles in tin boxes and you could buy "Loud", "Medium" or "Soft". Naturally I always brought the "Loud" ones. :rock:

Incidentally, I could not afford the Tommy Steele or Guy Mitchell versions on my 2/6 a week allowance, so I settled for the four shilling David Rose & his Orchestra version on the Embassy label - Woolworth's house brand. It actually rocked a lot more than it's competitors.

Time to stop geezing, Nigel! :dunno: :shhh: :hide:

Nigel²