Larry Kart Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WgTvKk8PV1g Quote
Larry Kart Posted December 19, 2007 Author Report Posted December 19, 2007 I find her singing far more strange than her trombone imitation. Also this You Tube clip elicited a potentially ambiguous response from someone who seemed to be familiar with the band: "Natalie was always so eager. How she managed to remain so perfectly coiffed and groomed will forever be a mystery." Eager? Hmm. Quote
Free For All Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 I'm just amazed that there was a time when someone thought it would be cool to imitate a trombone. Quote
rockefeller center Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 I'm just amazed that there was a time when someone thought it would be cool to imitate a trombone. Quote
JSngry Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 And dig the up-on-one-leg flamingo imitation from the pink lady at the end. Quote
JSngry Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 I find her singing far more strange than her trombone imitation. Also this You Tube clip elicited a potentially ambiguous response from someone who seemed to be familiar with the band: "Natalie was always so eager. How she managed to remain so perfectly coiffed and groomed will forever be a mystery." Eager? Hmm. You know that she was gettin' macked by Gene Ammons doncha'? That megaphone thing on that particular song was just a "symbol" of her "drinking from the Jug", if you get my drift. Them Welk chicks was crazymad hornilicious, them was. Quote
Jim Alfredson Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 Did not need that. Oh yes you did. Quote
Larry Kart Posted December 19, 2007 Author Report Posted December 19, 2007 Them Welk chicks was crazymad hornilicious, them was. That was my guess, although some Internet searching suggests that the guy who posted that comment on You Tube is an utterly sincere fan, a big admirer of Patti Page and Joni James and thus unlikely to have meant what I was thinking he did. On the other hand, that flamingo thing! Also Ms. Nevins apparently was another of the female singers whom Welk unceremoniously dismissed, a la Alice Lon. The full story is not within my grasp as yet, but apparently Nevins missed (or "missed") a tour stop, and that was it. Quote
DukeCity Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 I'm just amazed that there was a time when someone thought it would be cool to imitate a trombone. Ummm....I don't think anything ever put on the Welk show was done so because of its "cool" factor. Quote
Free For All Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 "OK boys, "Stablemates"..........a-one, a-two....." Quote
Rooster_Ties Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 Ummm....I don't think anything ever put on the Welk show was done so because of its "cool" factor. Doesn't mean they didn't try... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yf2kbBinvI4 Quote
Free For All Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 Ummm....I don't think anything ever put on the Welk show was done so because of its "cool" factor. Doesn't mean they didn't try... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yf2kbBinvI4 Wow, that is............sublime. On so many levels.....the dancers, the clarinet dude, the Tiajuana Brass treatment. Amazing. Quote
B. Clugston Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 Ummm....I don't think anything ever put on the Welk show was done so because of its "cool" factor. Doesn't mean they didn't try... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yf2kbBinvI4 Note the word "Geritol" above the band. There's something oddly fascinating about Welk. Beyond square. Quote
AllenLowe Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 well, my favorite was after the black tap dancer did his thing and Welk came on and said, "that boy sure can dance." I was watching with grandma, circa 1969, and I almost fell off my chair - Quote
The Magnificent Goldberg Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 I'm really worried about you Americans, you know... MG Quote
catesta Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 I'm just amazed that there was a time when someone thought it would be cool to imitate a trombone. You mean that time has passed? Quote
Larry Kart Posted December 19, 2007 Author Report Posted December 19, 2007 There were some players in Welk's band. Off the top of my head -- trombonist Bob Havens, trumpeters Dick Cathcart and Warren Luening, clarinetist Peanuts Hucko, bassist Buddy Clark. However, the Bobby Burgess who worked with Welk was a dancer, not the former Kenton trombone player. If it had been Kenton's Bob Burgess, I think we might have had the real-life template for Lenny Bruce's jazz-musician-meets-Welk routine ("We like animals in the band"). Quote
Rooster_Ties Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 The Lawrence Welk Show singers, from the "Salute To Nashville" episode from 1977, do a disco-flavored square dance....RIGHT ON! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMuObcMwGxA You read right, a "disco-flavored, square dance Salute, to Nashville"... Quote
Teasing the Korean Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 Ummm....I don't think anything ever put on the Welk show was done so because of its "cool" factor. No, but by the law of averages the sheer number of shows he did guaranteed that he would have to do one or two cool things over the course of 50 years, even if accidentally. Quote
MoGrubb Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 Welk's infamous announcement, "Take a Train" is usually good for a snicker. Quote
JSngry Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 I'm just amazed that there was a time when someone thought it would be cool to imitate a trombone. Ummm....I don't think anything ever put on the Welk show was done so because of its "cool" factor. Now on that one, you might be wrong. I remember on of the last shows, deep into the syndicated years, when Paul Humphrey (yeah, that Paul Humphrey) was the drummer & Welk actually let the band swing on a few numbers, there was one of the occasional "jam session" #s that would get thrown out/in every few months or so, and they did "How High The Moon" with a combo (Questa, HAvens, LaVang - who along w/Humphrey must be the only musicians to work w/both Lawrence Welk & Frank Zappa, I forget who else), and on the out-chorus, they hit it with "Ornithology". I nearly shit my pants, I kid you not. Quote
JSngry Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 Ummm....I don't think anything ever put on the Welk show was done so because of its "cool" factor. Doesn't mean they didn't try... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yf2kbBinvI4 Not a live performance. A lip-sync w/o lips, if you will. I repeat - not a live performance. Oh, the fraudulence of those who perpetrate! Quote
JSngry Posted December 19, 2007 Report Posted December 19, 2007 Ummm....I don't think anything ever put on the Welk show was done so because of its "cool" factor. Doesn't mean they didn't try... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yf2kbBinvI4 Wow, that is............sublime. On so many levels.....the dancers, the clarinet dude, the Tiajuana Brass treatment. Amazing. You know, the one thing about Welk that I kinda dig (make that "dig", ok?) is that the arrangements were always in flux in terms of texture. The arrangers had all these....sounds to work with, so they did. Every 8 bars or so, same old shit, yeah, but with a different instrumentation and a different texture. Voices, strings, keys, brass, woodwinds, percussions, you name it, they'd use it. Even if it was in the service of Musical Novacaine, there was still a certain "ingenuity" there that I gotta give some kind of props to. Quote
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