Favoriting Sounds Under 64 Not Allowed with Jan Turkenburg: Playlist from February 18, 2021 Favoriting

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Going back to the pre-multitrack era at 4680 rounds per hour.

On WFMU's Sheena's Jungle Room
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Favoriting February 18, 2021: 072

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Playlist image Favoriting

Artist Track Year Images Approx. start time
Josephine Bradley Dance Orchestra  It's A Hap Hap Happy Day   Favoriting 1940 
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0:00:00 (Pop-up)
Alice Verlet  Filles de Cadix (Delibes)   Favoriting 1916 
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0:04:01 (Pop-up)
Hans van Assenderp Combo  Exactly Like You   Favoriting 1945 
Hans van Assenderp
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Hans van Assenderp
0:07:06 (Pop-up)
Mitch Miller (vocal - Bernadine Read)  Blackberry Winter   Favoriting 1955 
Bernadine Read
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Bernadine Read
0:09:48 (Pop-up)
 
Jacques Gerlagh Combo (guitar - Eddy Christiani)  In The Mood   Favoriting 1941 
Eddy Christiani
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Eddy Christiani
0:15:14 (Pop-up)
Chic Winters Orchestra  Faded Cherry Blossom   Favoriting 1926 
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Wild Bill Moore  Rock And Roll   Favoriting 1949 
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Billy Murray  Tra La La La   Favoriting 1913 
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Yvonne de Trebert  Stop   Favoriting 1943 
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George Formby  Bell Bottom George (radio broadcast)   Favoriting 1943 
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0:32:54 (Pop-up)
Johnny Claes Clae Pigeons (vocal - Benny Lee)  Whistler's Mother In Law   Favoriting 1942 
Johnny Claes
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Johnny Claes
0:35:47 (Pop-up)
Rudy Starita Marimba Players  African Lament   Favoriting 1931 
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Heinrich Knote  Winterstürme Wichen Dem Wonnemond (Wagner - Ring des Nibelungen)   Favoriting 1906 
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0:44:48 (Pop-up)
Vico Torriani  Granada   Favoriting 1953 
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0:46:54 (Pop-up)
Venetian Instrumental Trio  Sweet Longing   Favoriting 1913 
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0:50:28 (Pop-up)
United States Marine Band  Ride Of The Thuringia Hussars   Favoriting 1913 
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0:54:50 (Pop-up)
 
Louis Davids  Wordt nooit verliefd   Favoriting 1922 
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1:01:56 (Pop-up)
J Frank Hopkins xylophone  Mr Dooley   Favoriting 1903 
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1:04:35 (Pop-up)
Charlie Christian guitar (+ Men From Minton's)  Up On Teddy's Hill   Favoriting 1941 
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1:06:40 (Pop-up)
Rudi Schuricke  Frauen Und Wein   Favoriting 1952 
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1:12:52 (Pop-up)
 
Bonnie Lou  Papaya Mama   Favoriting 1953 
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1:18:07 (Pop-up)
Willy Derby  Loe Loe Ja Moe (Maggie Yes Ma)   Favoriting 1923 
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1:21:15 (Pop-up)
Naftule Brandwein & Abe Schwartz' Orchestra  Firn Die Mekhutonim Aheym   Favoriting 1923 
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1:23:40 (Pop-up)
Mendelssohn Mixed Quartet  Refuge   Favoriting 1903 
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1:26:48 (Pop-up)
 
Victor Minstrel Company  Rubetown Minstrels   Favoriting 1913 
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1:31:33 (Pop-up)
Eugene Jaudas & Eugene Rose violin and flute  Mountain Echoes   Favoriting 1903 
Eugene Jaudas
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Eugene Jaudas
1:36:05 (Pop-up)
Toots Paka's Hawaiians  Moani Ke Ala   Favoriting 1913 
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1:38:07 (Pop-up)
Fritz Kreisler violin  Dance Of The Marionettes (Winternitz)   Favoriting 1928 
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1:41:58 (Pop-up)
 
Will F Denny  Just One Girl   Favoriting 1902 
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1:46:03 (Pop-up)
Xavier Cugat  Adios Muchachos   Favoriting 1932 
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1:48:32 (Pop-up)
Vess Ossman & W P Hunter banjo duet  By the Sycamore Tree   Favoriting 1903 
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1:51:16 (Pop-up)
Willy Derby (+ Ramblers)  Oh Mama   Favoriting 1938 
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1:54:05 (Pop-up)
Rhythm Club (NL)  If I Had You   Favoriting 1949 
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1:56:35 (Pop-up)





Lots and lots of other audio antiquities on WFMU:

Centennial Songs - The Antique Phonograph Music Program contextually presented by Michael Cumella

The Ragged Phonograph Program with Mike Haar Original ragtime, jazz, and pop music from the first quarter of the 20th century, with historical background on vaudeville-era artists

Thomas Edison's Attic The audio curator at Edison National Historic Site rummages through the archives of the legendary Edison Laboratory of West Orange, New Jersey

The Old Codger: playing 78 RPM records like they're going out of style!

Music from the 1920s in the January 7, 2020 episode of Continental Subway with David Dichelle

Music and other recordings of Lynda Barry in the june 7, 2020 episode of Canibal Stew with DJ ARB

and you might want to check out the Surface Noise archives with DJ Joe McGasko from 2008 and 2009


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Listener comments!

Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:01am
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi everyone!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:04am
chresti:

Hi Jan! Over/unders! Making coffee..
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:05am
Jan Turkenburg:

Good morning chresti!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:06am
Jan Turkenburg:

I'm having tea, "Russian Earl Grey" (?)
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:09am
MHLee:

Discovered this show quite by accident the other day. Lovely idea for a show. Introduced me to Yma Sumac in her glory.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:10am
Jan Turkenburg:

Welcome MHLee!
  10:16am
zzmz:

hello, snow storm again!
  10:17am
Listener Robert:

Oof! Considering how "derp" has come to be used in recent years, and the pre-existing meanings of "ass", "Assenderp" now is a name ready-made to be made fun of in English.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:17am
Jan Turkenburg:

Yes, Yma Sumac was unique! I will certainly play more recordings of her in the future.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:18am
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi zzmz! Hi Listener Robert!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:19am
Jan Turkenburg:

I wasn't aware of that Robert. Derp = dorp, the Dutch word for village.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:21am
Lizardner Dave !:

I went to New Dorp High School in Staten Island. We have a few Dutch names around here, the Arthur Kill, the Kill Van Kull, Todt Hill to name three. Oh, good morning all!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:22am
Jan Turkenburg:

and I just looked up: Assen was an old dialect word for ash tree
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:22am
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi Dave!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:22am
Lizardner Dave !:

When people asked what my high school name (and the name of the surrounding neighborhood) meant I said "New Town, pretty boring eh?"
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:23am
Jan Turkenburg:

Arthur Kill, the Kill Van Kull, Todt Hill, don't sound Dutch to me...
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:24am
Lizardner Dave !:

I was told "Kill" = body of water in Dutch and "todt" was "death" in school, is that not true? Maybe it just was in 1600s Dutch?
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:25am
Lizardner Dave !:

Ah, a quick google says "todt" is actually German. Which is weird because I don't think we had many German settlers here in the 1600s..
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:25am
Jan Turkenburg:

That's German
  10:26am
Listener Robert:

A "kill" is more specifically a FLOW of water. Now I live near the Paulinskill.
  10:27am
Martinibomb:

Hello Folx!
  10:27am
johnk77:

great show selecter
we live near the bronx kill
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:27am
Lizardner Dave !:

Yep! Wikipedia says "kill" is from "kille" in Middle Dutch. "A kill is a body of water, most commonly a creek, but also a tidal inlet, river, strait, or arm of the sea. The term is derived from the Middle Dutch kille (kil in modern Dutch), meaning "riverbed" or "water channel". It is found in areas of Dutch influence in the Netherlands' former North American colony of New Netherland, primarily the Hudson and Delaware Valleys."
  10:28am
Martinibomb:

My last name begins with Kil
  10:29am
Listener Robert:

That's interesting, Lizardner. Maybe "kill" is related to "keel" in the navigation sense.

In the NY-NJ area the geographic names are often some mixture of Dutch and the local Indian dialect.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:31am
chresti:

What about Dork Town, is there a Dork Town?
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:34am
MHLee:

This the most earnest I've ever heard George
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:35am
Jan Turkenburg:

Well in Middle Dutch Dorc/dork could mean sediment...
  10:37am
Listener Robert:

Wiktionary traces "keel" in the nautical sense to a Proto-Indo-European root meaning "vessel". The Middle Dutch "kille" it traces to something that seems unrelated.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:37am
chresti:

Ask, and you get an answer on wfmu!
  10:41am
Listener Robert:

Wow, Wiktionary also relates "gill", the volume measure to either a Medieval Latin word for "jar" or a Gaullish word for "vessel". So it's likely that "kill" in the sense of watercourse is related to "gill" in the sense of liquid measure.
  10:42am
zzmz:

these music convince me xylophone and marimba were star instruments back then.
  10:45am
zzmz:

i used bass marimba once. at pianissiomo roll, its drone sound was unworldy.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:45am
Jan Turkenburg:

Robert, I like this kind of inquiries!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:47am
MHLee:

There was a story I read the other day where a guy tries to go back in time to save Elvis's twin. He ends creating a timeline where Elvis dies and Jesse popularized opera as the dominant force in music.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:47am
Jan Turkenburg:

hahahaha, great story MHLee!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:49am
Jan Turkenburg:

I can imagine, zzmz!
  10:51am
Martinibomb:

Happy 88th Birthday to Yoko Ono today
Avatar 10:52am
Ursula1000:

good morning Jan!!!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:54am
Lizardner Dave !:

Looked into the Todt Hill thing here, one version says the Dutch put a cemetery there in the 1700s (which is still there and I have family members buried in it) and used the German word for "death" for some reason. The church there is Moravian which is a version of Protestantism that had its origins in Germany so maybe that's why?
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:55am
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi Ursula! (and I just realized I haven't officially welcomed Martinibomb! ;-) )
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:58am
Jan Turkenburg:

@Dave, Who knows...
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:59am
MHLee:

In older English Dutch and German are used interchangeably... there are the old rumor t's because English couldn't understand Deutsch... but it was more of how you might say Dutch is a Germanic language, but instead people were referring to German as a Dutch language... if I remember correctly...
  11:00am
Martinibomb:

Yeh! You're way late Jan! Hah <3 Good chance I am picking up a 1976 Old Chicago Pinball Machine (electro mechanical) the theme of the machine fits this show if you saw the art on it
  11:07am
Martinibomb:

Is it station manager Ken's bday today?
  11:08am
Listener Robert:

Do you restore pinballs, Martinibomb?
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:09am
Jan Turkenburg:

@MB, I don't know
Avatar 11:09am
Ursula1000:

Happy bday Ken and thanks for my vaccine!
  11:16am
Listener Robert:

In 1st Form (7th grade) shop class (wood working) I wanted to build a (strictly mechanical, gravity fed) pinball table as my project, but I could barely even get started in the time and with the skill I had. It would have had nails and rubber bands as the obstacles, and would have channeled steel marbles dropping thru target holes into channels under the table leading to where the score could be added as in an abacus. You would shoot by rolling the marble off your fingers with the desired force across the top.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:17am
chresti:

My son wanted to make a blimp for his science fair project.
Avatar 11:19am
Ursula1000:

The marimba generally has softer tones than the xylophone---maybe it's because of the wood versus the metal plates?
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:20am
Jan Turkenburg:

Marimba and Xylophone are both made of wood
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:20am
MHLee:

There must be a song about blimps or dirigibles somewhere, but I can't think of any.
  11:22am
Listener Robert:

I know there are metal xylophones resembling glockenspiels ("play bells") in sound and construction, but the work "xylophone" technically means "wood sound".
Avatar 11:22am
Ursula1000:

oops thinking glockenspiel!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:22am
Jan Turkenburg:

With metal plates it would be Metallophone, or Vibraphone, as far a I know. We should ask NotsoKWYet, he is a quilified percussionist
Avatar 11:23am
Ursula1000:

doing some searching and it appears to be a tonality thing
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:23am
Jan Turkenburg:

Glockenspiel are the small thin metal ones.
Avatar 11:25am
Ursula1000:

Solved! The Xylophone has a series of wooden bars, tuned to the relevant notes. The marimba has similar wooden bars with resonators (originally gourds, now tubes) underneath. The Vibraphone is a variant of the marimba, often with metal bars, but with a spinning butterfly at the top of the resonator giving a tremolo effect and the Glockenspiel has metal bars, again tuned to the relevant notes. Whew!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:25am
Jan Turkenburg:

Yes, I've seen that as an explanation as well, but then it's surely they are being mixed up all the time.
Avatar 11:26am
Ursula1000:

I like whatever Cal Tjader plays! haha
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:29am
MHLee:

Yamaha sys the marimba is in the xylophone family.. so maybe it's using a wide versus narrow definition
  11:31am
johnk77:

https://boulevardcarroll.com/Store/Percussion/Mallet-Instruments
with pictures
these are available for rentals
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:32am
Jan Turkenburg:

Thank you Johnk77!
Avatar 11:32am
zivilars:

Hi everybody, hi Jan, thanks for the show!
Avatar 11:33am
zivilars:

I'm late
  11:33am
zzmz:

good orchestra level xylophones and marimbas are almost impossible to get them now due to over consumption of rosewoods. so sad. many recording are opted with sampled keyboards these days. but if you've experienced you could tell the clear difference.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:34am
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi zivilars!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:35am
Jan Turkenburg:

zzmz, so the difference lies in the sort of wood as well?
  11:36am
zzmz:

whereas vintage xylophones and marimbas do not guarantee the quality. they need to oil the rosewood bars time-to-time to prevent cracks.
  11:37am
zzmz:

yes quality rosewoods are gone long ago.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:39am
MHLee:

There's a rosewood grand piano held by an art gallery near me. The value is so extreme that they don't want anything to touch it
  11:39am
zzmz:

you must've heard xylophone sync with soprano. that kind of sonority can't have it with modern manufactured mallets instruments these days.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:39am
MHLee:

ironically a sign sits on top of it "Don't place ANYTHING on the piano!"
  11:41am
zzmz:

all rosewood were consumpted for coffee tables for nouveau riches
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:43am
MHLee:

This was an extremely wealthy family which all died rather tragically in the 1920s I think. One of them got run over by a street car.
  11:43am
johnk77:

here is a current manufacturer of
rosewood marimbas
https://www.marimbaone.com/
carroll has a 5 octave version
available for rental
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:43am
MHLee:

The maid, a woman nearing 100, still lived on site about 4 years ago
  11:45am
zzmz:

yes, I've used carroll many times! they also have bass marimba!
  Swag For Life Member 11:46am
WR:

hello all. great music, interesting comments. thank you Jan and jungle room denizens.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:47am
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi WR!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:47am
Jan Turkenburg:

Thank you for this story MHLee! We need more and more story-telling here at Sheena's.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:47am
MHLee:

I learned to love these old phonographs through Tiny Tim of all people. His later work has him saying (SUNG BY --- at ---- Recrods) then singing in an octave like this.
  11:57am
Martinibomb:

THANKS JAN TURKENBURG!
Avatar 11:57am
Ursula1000:

Thanks Jan---stay locked in for Sounds Spectacular next where there may be a marimba! Or is it a xylophone? wfmu.org...
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:57am
Lizardner Dave !:

Thanks Jan! A fun and educational show!
Avatar 11:58am
Ursula1000:

whaaaaa? the return of MB! yay!
  11:58am
Eric Kilkenny:

YESS Aloha Friday This friday! It's going to be a Live Improvised set from me. Not playing anybody elses stuff hehe
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:59am
chresti:

Thanks Jan!
  Swag For Life Member 11:59am
WR:

for kids like us. laters all.
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