May 2009

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Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra. The single biggest recording act of the 1920s. In movies, when they want to evoke the sound of the era, this is who they play. I won’t say he was bigger than the Beatles — he was a chubby, balding, middle-aged man, so his appeal was on quite a different level — but his sound was the standard of the age, and many great names worked with him over the years, including Bix Beiderbecke and Bing Crosby.

Whiteman’s version of the song was not the biggest seller — that honor goes to Ben Selvin and His Orchestra, which made the song famous in 1920. (In those days, everyone had an orchestra. It was mandatory, like getting a Social Security Number.) Read the label on this video, and you’ll note that the song is designated as a Foxtrot. Which it was, after all. Not that anyone cares about such things these days.

Frankly, the Ben Selvin version of the song is better, and I’ll get around to posting that one one of these months. But you can hear the standard Whiteman approach, with competence oozing from every element, as the musicians swap solos in the usual jazzband style of the day.

Anyhoo, here it is. Click to play, Dummy!

I don’t know if many of you caught the celebrity sighting here on KillThisBlog some months ago. It came in a comment on this post, made way back when, when we were led into a discussion of the fabulously obscure musical ensemble, The Roto Rooter Good Time Christmas Band. Yes, that highly demented Rootoid, Dr. Mabuse, d.o.a., dropped by to comment:

Nice to be “re-discovered”. The RRGTCB can still be heard on the syndicated Dr. Demento show. We did his theme as discussed on this site. “Pico and Sepulveda” without the Demento references is also on the 1974 Vanguard LP. Demo version available on our self-produced CD “Retro Rooter - 1972-1976? currently available on GEMM.com. All of us are alive and (mostly) well and 5 of us still get together to jam be-bop.

Since then I’ve had occasion to re-listen to the RRGTCB’s sole album, and I’m extremely happy to say it’s better than I remembered it. Maybe my tastes have changed, or maybe my tolerance for weirdness has increased, but there’s something exciting and eclectic about it — the range of influences it draws on, from classical music to The Great American Songbook to rock and roll are impressive. And did I say weird?

We need more wind instruments in our world… where’d they all go?

Turns out, too, that the Roto Rooters have claimed some space on YouTube, and have placed therein some viddies of their vintage performances. I do not know the provenance of these clips, but it looks like they’re in a church basement somewhere, performing with all appropriate gusto. Apparently, it’s from a local public television show, circa 1975.

Here’s one of their signature songs, The Martian March. Dig the fella playing the tuba through a gas mask:

Here they are performing another favorite, The Beer Bottle Polka. That’s Dr. Mabuse, d.o.a. himself, doing the Lawrence Welk imitation:

Finally, here they are singing Happy Trails, in a performance that was aped pretty much note for note by those rascals from Van Halen a few years later:

These guys need more attention. Here are some cool RRGTCB links:

RRGTCB on MySpace

Dr. Mabuse, d.o.a.’s Roto Rooter Good Time Christmas Band Blog

Retro Rooter, CD available on GEMM.com