So Who Likes Lounge and Easy Listening Music?

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Apparently the tower is still there in Wauwatosa, WI. lol

Listening now from my MP3 player stuff from chn 77 XM. Which is great because it records the songs individually and labels them. I probably delete 1/2 the stuff.

listening to "Thanks for the memory" by Gordon Langfor, his Piano and Orchestra.

Few "cool" names like U2, cheap trick, Aldo nova, AC/DC, deaf leopard. LOL

but very NICE music.

now "It must be him" Frank Pourcel

(Where is HE, is it Robert's cute cop from the MN airport?)

now "ruby" Beegie Adair - I have no idea, but I'm not deleting it from MP3.
 
cool & gotcha

63 I understand now.

You were mentioning the Capitol Ultra-Lounge compilations. I LOVE those!

You do have some neat Lp's there. I sold that Anita O-Day one a few years ago on ebay and it went for, like, 35 bucks.

Bob
 
Now "forever" Little Dippers

Just before that

"Like a Sad Song" John Fox

OK have a good morning everyone
 
"Oxydolfan - I swear to GOD I had a dream with you in it last night - that's how big an impact you've had on me, and I wake up this morning and BAM - here you are. I need theremin music right here."

But how can you have a dream with someone in it that you've never actually met, LOL?

Well, hopefully I used my powers for good and not for evil...

It has been at least fifteen years since I thought of theremin music!
 
"The other day I was at a grocery store, a "small one" really. You know the type that have 3 storys and no drop ceiling. (not real energy efficient) Which is better than the 5 story ceilings that you might find at a 'newer' store.
They didn't have nice music. It was like rock. Led Zepplin or something and it wasn't exactly subtle."

My local supermarket plays an endless diet of 50s doo-wop and oldies. The Pathmark in Atlantic Center in Brooklyn often does a "Soul Central Station" sort of mix, but in a good way, with generous helpings of Billie Holliday and the like.
 
re: Janet Blair

"Flame Out" How appropos for this group!

We're listening to the Lennon Sisters right now. Well, we've heard only one voice for a couple of numbers. Maybe she locked the others in the closet for this session. That dirty little wh*re. She's not all that and a bag of chips without the others. Who the h*ll does she think she is... oh, wait, there's another one.

nevermind......

Chuck (tiny tee-hee)
 
Chuck, what are you listening to them on?(heavy breathing)Please tell me it's a Magnavox............please............(internet photo borrowed from Magnavox Collector of HGTV fame.)

9-1-2007-09-11-57--63getelevision.jpg
 
Weren't the Lennon Sisters the ones on "The Lawrence Welk Show"?

I remember hearing somewhere that, as the girls got married and started having babies, it became a problem for Welk, as he didn't think it was appropriate to have women in "that condition" on TV. So they all took to wearing those empire waisted gowns, with the pregnant ones posing behind plants or pianos.

Love those old Lawrence Welk albums, by the way. Great for housecleaning.
 
back from doing errands.

Now "It might be you" Stephen Bishop (from Tootsie)

next "Song for Anna" Johnny Pearson

and making BLT with baked bacon made earlier in the week.

I gotta do more packing for the move.

....lying on the sand, watching seabirds fly,
wishing there would be,
someone wait home for me....
 
I think I have all of Percy Faith's albums...there is certainly a shelf full of them! The variety of his work is amazing, and there is always something rewarding going on in his arrangements. The albums before the 1970s were the best, without a doubt, especially the Latin ones.

Morton Gould also had some good ones.
 
I like eqasy listening music as background music in stores, but some of the grocery stores have started playing some new crap with vocals (is there a better term?) and it makes it very difficult for my damaged brain to filter out the lyrics while trying to concentrate on what I need and locating it amidst constantly changing product placement on shelves. The aisles are further congested with inane cardboard displays (which I do not mind knocking over, especially when trying to get around someone oblivious to the world at large while talking too loudly on a cell phone). I think stores need a loud source of white noise like from air conditioning and refrigeration compressors so that cell phone use is rendered impossible except in small sound-insulated phone booths where shopping activity must stop. It would spare the rest of us and probably shorten the conversations saving everyone a lot of time which is so valuable to the cell phone users that they have to talk while driving, shopping, going to the bathroom and maybe while engaging in reciprocal amorous relations (a teacher's term from the late 60s). In Silver Spring, MD the call letters WGAY were at the top of the World Building and for decades the station played a wonderful mix of instrumental music all of the time, but the market audience was deemed too small and too old so they changed the format. When the station changed to a rock mix, many listeners were taken by surprise. John said that there were probably old console stereos where the tuner had been on WGAY got so long that it was frozen in that position.
I, too remember when WSB AM radio in Atlanta had good music, news and information. There were great songs we heard for the first time like The Poor People of Paris, Wonderland by Night, Cherry Blossom Pink and Apple Blossom White and a hauntingly sad group of songs like The Ship That Never Sailed and Jamaican Farewell. Even the Rock and Roll or top 40 stations like WQXI AM and WLS played a mix in the early 60s. Yes there was the usual Elvis, and the Beach Boys type music, but also songs sort of sung by Walter Brennan like Momma Sang a Song and Old Rivers and Me. There was just a lot of diversity that is not present today. It is strange when hit songs of the 60s and 70s that were associated with wild youth are used as music in commercials.

Funny that shot of a George Maharis album should show up this week.
 
And George Chakiris! Here is some Latin music, a Magnavox demo, and a Curtis Mathis demo, the demos dating from around 1962.

9-1-2007-15-27-18--63getelevision.jpg
 
Oh, my god, I forgot all about The Lennon Sisters---those mainstays of the Lawrence Welk Show back in the '60s. We had the 'Sad Movies' (don't recall if that's the real title, but the song Sad Movies was on it) album when I was a kid and I listened to that thing a million times. Chuck and Rich, you are guys of varied tastes, that's for sure!
 
And that would have been Sue Thompson singing Sad Movies. Was driving me nuts trying to think of the singer. She also had a hit with the song "Norman."

I also love the lounge sound! We could add Esquivel to the list. For those with XM radio, on their internet site, check out Channel 79 "On the Rocks," it's only online, but has some very nice stuff on it. It went from playing Quincy Jones, doing a bossa nova version of On the Steet Where you Live, to a retro Civil Defense commercial, of how to survive when the Bomb drops. Ah, now we're back to Nancy Wilson, doing Wave.
 
Mika!

Great Happy and easy listening stuff, love the whole album.

Been In love with my Hoover Turbo Power U1222 since I got it that I havnt been hoovering with the radio on as loud as I usually have it, but this morning this came on Signal 1 and I just had to whack it up LOL!!!

 

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