Glenn Miller & the Andrews Sisters - Chesterfield Broadcasts
Facts
| Artist(s) | Glenn Miller & the Andrews Sisters |
| Studio | RCA |
| Release Date | August 5, 2003 |
| UPC Code | 828765430623 |
| Buy this item | $19.98 at Amazon.com As of Dec 4 23:34 EST (details) 2 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
Disc 1- Introduction - Glenn Miller, Miller, Glenn [1]
- Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny, Oh! - Glenn Miller, Olman, Abe
- I've Got No Strings - Glenn Miller, Harline, Leigh
- Begin the Beguine - Glenn Miller, Porter, Cole
- Indian Summer - Glenn Miller, Dubin, Al
- Chico's Love Song (Ma-La-Ja-Fah-La-Pas-Ka-Lah-Tah) - Glenn Miller, Shapiro, Dan
- Bei Mir Bist du Schön - Glenn Miller, Secunda, Sholom
- Beer Barrel Polka - Glenn Miller, Brown, Lew
- In the Mood - Glenn Miller, Garland, Joe
- I Love You Much Too Much - Glenn Miller, Olshanetsky, Alexan
- The Donkey Serenade - Glenn Miller, Forrest, George
- Tuxedo Junction - Glenn Miller, Dash, Julian
- Say "Si Si" (Para Vigo Me Voy) - Glenn Miller, Lecuona, Ernesto
- The Rhumba Jumps! - Glenn Miller, Carmichael, Hoagy
- Hold Tight (Want Some Sea Food, Mama) - Glenn Miller, Brandow, Jerry
- Yodelin' Jive - Glenn Miller, Raye, Don
- One O'Clock Jump - Glenn Miller, Basie, Count
- Closing Announcements - Glenn Miller, Douglas, Paul [Voca
- Introduction - Glenn Miller, Miller, Glenn [1]
- The Little Red Fox (N'Ya N'Ya Ya Can't Catch Me) - Glenn Miller, Porter, Lewis
- Verbal Introduction/Ciribiribin - Glenn Miller, Pestalozza, Alberto
- South of the Border - Glenn Miller, Carr, Michael
- It's a Blue World - Glenn Miller, Forrest, George
- The Woodpecker Song - Glenn Miller, Adamson, Harold
- Well All Right (Tonight's the Night) - Glenn Miller, Faye, Frances
- South American Way - Glenn Miller, McHugh, Jimmy
- Little Brown Jug - Glenn Miller, Finegan, Bill
- Little Sally Waters - Glenn Miller, Cooper, Al [1]
- I Want My Mama (Mama Yo Quiero) - Glenn Miller, Paiva, John
- Three O'Clock in the Morning - Glenn Miller, Robledo, Julian
- Sweet Potato Piper - Glenn Miller, Burke, Johnny
- Down by the Ohio - Glenn Miller, Olman, Abe
- Let's Have Another One - Glenn Miller, Raye, Don
- Joseph! Joseph! - Glenn Miller, Casman, Nellie
- Runnin' Wild - Glenn Miller, Gibbs, Arthur
- Run, Rabbit, Run - Glenn Miller, Gay, Noel
- Do I Love You? - Glenn Miller, Porter, Cole
- Farewell Blues - Glenn Miller, Mares, Paul
- Closing Announcements - Glenn Miller, Douglas, Paul [Voca
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Another time magically recaptured |
| Great nostalgia, great music, great fun |
Glenn Miller is in his prime in these recordings and the Andrews Sisters are just hitting their peak. Together they are fantastic and one wishes there were more recordings of them together.
From the opening song, "Oh Johnny, Oh" through "Hold Tight -- Hold Tight" and "I Want My Mama" and concluding with "Farewell Blues," these are truly classics, 35 of them (with intros, conclusions and ads for Chesterfields mixed in).
The sound quality is superb and the enclosed booklet with liner notes includes vintage photos. Indeed this compilation's strongest selling point in how creates a bygone era. The recordings are so good that one feels transported back in time. You'll feel as if your sitting in front of the big family radio, enjoying the show, perhaps while scanning the newspaper and reading about the war in Europe.
A strongly recommended purchase for Miller fans, Andrews Sisters fans and all swing fans.
July 27, 2004
| Atmosphere of time well caught |
| Like Chesterfields, Glenn Miller Always Satisfies... |
That's not to say Miller fans will be slighted by this collection -- they get to enjoy versions of "Tuxedo Junction", "Farewell Blues" "Runnin' Wild" and "Little Brown Jug" with solos that vary from the ones you will be familiar with from the Bluebird recordings made by the band. Plus, other numbers not featuring the Andrews Sisters have been added to "re-create" the Chesterfield Broadcast atmosphere, such as Ray Eberle singing "Indian Summer", or the Marion Hutton/Tex Beneke duet of "The Rumba Jump" -- both nearly identical to the Bluebird recordings put out by the band. Interestingly, one odd defect in this attempt to recreate the Chesterfield atmosphere was the omission of any "Old, New, Borrowed and Blue" medleys -- how can you have a Chesterfield broadcast without one of those?
But, that is a minor quibble, especially if the real reason you bought this CD, as I did, was to find out what happens when two huge talents link up. And that is what this collection is really all about.
And, it turns out, the results are spectacular, even if the Miller sound gets eclipsed by the cheerful style of the terriffic Andrews Sisters. The liner notes credit only the vocal arrangements for the Sisters to Vic Schoen, but I didn't hear much of the hand of Glenn Miller or Bill Finnegan in the numbers featuring Patti, Maxine, and LaVerne -- EXCEPT for Patti's solo on "I Love You Very Much", which resulted from the refusal of her sisters to turn up for a broadcast after a family rumpus the previous night that landed their father in jail! The liner notes give you pretty fun information about such goings-on "behind the scenes." Apparently the fallout from the family fight (and the sisters not speaking to one another for a while!) resulted in the ad agency sponsoring these broadcasts refusing to renew their contract after the initial 13 weeks, thus letting Miller's Band get the full limelight in future broadcasts.
What I loved about these selections was the chance to hear Miller's band and the Andrews Sisters together on lesser known numbers that likely aren't available elsewhere on record by these two huge talents, such as a cover of the song "The Little Red Fox", made famous by Kay Kyser's band in their 1939 movie "That's Right, You're Wrong." If you are a Kyser fan, as I am, you'll be disappointed that the Andrews Sisters version leaves out most of the original song lyrics beyond "Nyah, Nyah, Nyah, you can't catch me!", but then Kay Kyser novelties simply can't be expected to survive the translation into the swing idiom of the Andrews Sisters and the Miller Band.
Beyond the more familiar numbers that the Andrews Sisters are famous for, such as "Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen", "Beer Barrel Polka" or "Hold Tight", the collection includes great vocal harmonies on numbers like "The Donkey Serenade", "(Down By The) O-H-I-O (O-My-O!)", "Run, Rabbit, Run" and "I've Got No Strings" from the movie "Pinocchio". Also, it was fun to hear the sisters try to launch a follow-on hit to "Beer Barrel Polka" in the form of "Let's Have Another One", which, though similar in spirit and bonhomie, seems to have been long forgotten.
All told, this compilation is like a time machine taking you back to the first three months of 1940 -- so many of the popular hits of that time are included here. Plus, it is a chance to savor some great talent working together to make a scary time a little happier through songs and good cheer. The depression may have been hanging on in its tenth year, work was hard to find, and war had already broken out in Europe, but on the radio or at New York's Paramount Theater, in February, 1940, you could forget about all that for a few minutes and tap your feet to the infectious harmonies and driving swing rhythms of the Andrews Sisters and Glenn Miller's fantastic band. Makes me kinda envious of those folks back in 1940, but the CDs in this collection are the best you can do today to experience what that moment in time was actually like. September 8, 2003
| A Moment in Time |
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