Favoriting Sounds Under 64 Not Allowed with Jan Turkenburg: Playlist from February 5, 2022 Favoriting

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

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Favoriting February 5, 2022: 173 Japaxploitation rondo (2)

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Playlist image Favoriting

Artist Track Year Comments Images Approx. start time
Raderman's Novelty Orchestra  The Japanese Sandman   Favoriting 1920   
Favoriting
0:00:00 (Pop-up)
Frank Sterling  Underneath the Japanese Moon   Favoriting 1922   
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0:04:12 (Pop-up)
Artie Shaw  Japanese Sandman   Favoriting 1936   
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0:08:14 (Pop-up)
Duke Ellington  Japanese Dream   Favoriting 1929   
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0:10:35 (Pop-up)
Totten Hollywood  Japanese Sandman (A1)   Favoriting  
2 Bar Intro. -16 bars - Met. Beat 84
 
  0:14:07 (Pop-up)
Bert Ambrose  Japanese Dream   Favoriting 1930   
Favoriting
0:14:57 (Pop-up)
Totten Hollywood  Japanese Sandman (A2)   Favoriting  
2 Bar Intro. -16 Bars - Met. Beat 100
 
  0:18:16 (Pop-up)
Billy Barton Orchester  Japanese Sandman   Favoriting 1931   
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0:18:59 (Pop-up)
Jack Hylton  In A Japanese Garden   Favoriting 1930   
Favoriting
0:22:08 (Pop-up)
Totten Hollywood  Japanese Sandman (A3)   Favoriting  
2 Bar Intro. - 1 Chorus (32 bars)
Met. Beat 112
 
  0:25:03 (Pop-up)
Earl Hines and His Orchestra  Japanese Sandman   Favoriting 1935   
Favoriting
0:26:19 (Pop-up)
Marek Weber  Japanese Lantern Dance   Favoriting 1930   
Favoriting
0:28:57 (Pop-up)
Totten Hollywood  Japanese Sandman (B1)   Favoriting  
2 Bar Intro. - 1½ Choruses (48 bars)
Met. Beat 138
Professional crescendo finish
 
  0:32:07 (Pop-up)
Bix Beiderbecke Orchestra  Japanese Sandman   Favoriting 1928   
Favoriting
0:33:36 (Pop-up)
Paul Whiteman  Japanese Mammy   Favoriting 1928   
Favoriting
0:36:50 (Pop-up)
Totten Hollywood  Japanese Sandman (b2)   Favoriting  
2 Bar Intro. - 2 Choruses (64 bars)
Met. Beat 160
Professional crescendo finish
 
  0:40:07 (Pop-up)
AVRO Dansorkest, Hans Mossel  Japanese Sandman   Favoriting 1937 
vocal - Topy Glerum
 
Favoriting
0:41:55 (Pop-up)
Jayne and Audrey Meadows  Japanese Rhumba   Favoriting 1955   
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0:44:25 (Pop-up)
Clyde McCoy And His Orchestra  Japanese Sandman   Favoriting 1935   
Favoriting
0:46:51 (Pop-up)
Twin Tunes  Japanese Rhumba   Favoriting 1955   
Favoriting
0:49:18 (Pop-up)
Kay Cee Jones  Japanese Farewell Song   Favoriting 1955   
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0:51:35 (Pop-up)
Earl Grant  Japanese Farewell Song   Favoriting 1958   
Favoriting
0:56:10 (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!

Rare Oldies Radio hosted by Kitschy Mama, featuring lost songs from the 50s & 60s: Retro Obscuro with Kitschy Mama

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

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



More Dutch 'forgotten artists' can be found on Vergeten Artiesten by Mike Winkelman


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Listener comments!

Avatar 12:01pm
Mr Fab:

Greetings, honorable Jan san!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:01pm
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi everyone!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:02pm
Jan Turkenburg:

Hey Mr Fab!
Avatar 12:03pm
Mr Fab:

Lots of pentatonic runs, haha. I discovered early on that I could make fake Asian music by going up and down the black keys.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:05pm
Jan Turkenburg:

Yes, it's quite easy. Also a pentatonic scale is a very safe way to improvise on any kind of music. Just practise your pentatonic scales as fast as you can and you can sound like Frank Zappa ;-)
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:08pm
Jan Turkenburg:

Although I must admit he also played other scales very fast too, as long as the band kept playing the same chord.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:09pm
Jan Turkenburg:

I hope I didn't make too may intellectuals angry now.😁
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:13pm
Jan Turkenburg:

All kiddin' aside I do like much of the Zappa repertoire and I have a lot of it either on vinyl or CD/DVD and he had the best musicians around him, but some things he did are sometimes somewhat overrated, imho.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:20pm
fred:

Good afternoon Jan and all
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:21pm
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi fred!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:23pm
Wenzo Toad:

hey Jan
  12:24pm
MHLee:

Hi jan
  12:24pm
MHLee:

I know this melody from another song
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:24pm
Jan Turkenburg:

Hey Wenzo!
Hi MHLee!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:24pm
fred:

I don't know much about Zappa (more of a Beefheart guy), but the wild range of the secondhand stories I heard at work about him make me curious
Avatar 12:26pm
David in California:

Hello, Jan. I first heard "Japanese Sandman" in the movie "Thoroughly Modern Millie", where it is used to reinforce the 1920's setting.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:26pm
chresti:

Hi Jan and over/unders!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:27pm
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi chresti!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:27pm
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi David!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:30pm
Jan Turkenburg:

There are lots of anecdotes on Zappa. His motto was: whatever you did, don't tell 'm you didn't!
Avatar 12:40pm
Mr Fab:

Ha, that Totten Hollywood address on the record up top - I’m actually sitting on a car on Magnolia as we speak. Just drove past that address. Didn’t see any low budget record companies tho. It’s a supermarket now.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:41pm
Jan Turkenburg:

It's a small world!
Avatar 12:44pm
David in California:

Hello, Mr. Fab. Is Eddie Brandt's store still in North Hollywood?
Avatar 12:46pm
Mr Fab:

Alas, no David. I think it closed a few years ago. They probably think that you can find everything on line now, even the rare and bootleg stuff they used to stock.
Avatar 12:48pm
David in California:

Mr. Fab, that's too bad. Thanks for your reply.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:53pm
fred:

@Mr Fab: picking from your last two comments, "rare and low budget" could fit on a Sheena T-shirt
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:54pm
Lizardner Dave !:

Just caught the last 20 minutes or so if this, thanks Jan!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:55pm
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi Dave !
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:55pm
chresti:

Thanks Jan!
Avatar 12:55pm
David in California:

Thank you, Jan.
  Swag For Life Member 12:32am
WR:

Coincidentally, Doug on his Friday GTDS episode played about 20 versions of "The Music Goes 'Round and Around".
  Swag For Life Member 9:24am
WR:

In a future Japaxploitation rondo would be interesting to include some 1930s and maybe even postwar Japanese foxtrot recordings to hear how Japanese melded "Japaneseness" into western pop jazz.
  Swag For Life Member 9:46am
WR:

OMG, The Meadows sisters needed a better Japanese language coach. Excellent example of pop exoticism. Cuban rumba and Japan. Also this is the first time for me hear the 50s TV show "What's My Line" regular as a singer.

As writing this hear the Twin Tunes version of J Rumba and the j words are mangled even more. Haven't looked up which came first and what is the possible source of the malapropisms.
  Swag For Life Member 9:55am
WR:

It was Got a Secret that Meadows was a regular on, she did guest on ...Line as well. Perhaps irrelevant side note, Jayne was born and lived some if not all of her first 7 years in China to Christian missionary parents.
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