1928, Why Can't You, Breakaway, My Man From Caroline, Get Happy, You Took Advantage of Me, HD 78rpm

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2025
  • Note: be sure to enable the “1080p HD” option for best sound and picture -- and then click the full-frame icon for full view.
    "Why Can't You" 1929 Fred Rich Orch. voc: Rollickers Quartet
    "My Man From Caroline" 1930 Ben Selvin Orch. voc: Eva Taylor
    "You Took Advantage of Me" 1928 Fred Rich Orch. voc: James Melton
    "Good For You--Bad For Me" 1930 Ben Selvin Orch. instrumental
    "My First Love" 1928 Fred Rich Orch. voc: Smith Ballew trio
    "When the Morning Glories Wake Up in the Morning" 1927 Don Voorhees Orch. voc: Irving Kaufman
    "Leave It That Way" 1930 Ben Selvin Orch. voc: Lew Conrad
    "I'm Sailing on a Sunbeam" 1929 Paul Specht Orch. (unissued non-vocal test)
    "It's Easy to Fall in Love" 1930 Ben Selvin Orch. voc: Eddie Walters
    "Two Lips" 1928 Fred Rich Orch. voc: Smith Ballew (his first recording)
    "Get Happy" 1930 Ted Wallace Orch. (Ed Kirkeby) voc: trio
    "Where the Shy Little Violets Grow" 1928 Milt Shaw Orch. voc: Scrappy Lambert
    "Do You?--That's All I Want to Know!" 1928 Ipana Troubadours voc: Scrappy Lambert
    "Breakaway" 1929 Dorsey Bros Orch. instrumental
    "She's Funny That Way" 1928 Dorsey Bros Orch. voc: Smith Ballew
    "Not That I Care" 1931 Benny Goodman Orch. voc: Smith Ballew
    "Help Yourself to Happiness" 1931 Benny Goodman Orch. voc: Smith Ballew
    "When Your Lover Has Gone" 1931 Charleston Chasers voc: Paul Small
    "Walkin' My Baby Back Home" 1931 Charleston Chasers voc: Paul Small
    FAIR USE DECLARATION
    All posting on this channel conforms to the United States Code: Article 107., Chapter 1., Title 17., “Fair Use” Act of 1976 which supersedes all copyright. The material herein is of a strictly non-commercial intent and is created for the sole purpose of nonprofit education, research, information, and social comment. As presented in the RUclips forum, this video in no way violates actual copyright ownership for which I make no claim. All soundtracks use my own vintage original 78rpm recordings. Copying of any portion of these videos is prohibited without permission of the author. Ref: www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html

Комментарии • 56

  • @heinzpaulrilling
    @heinzpaulrilling Год назад +6

    Die schönen alten Lieder und Orchester mit dem neuen Sound versehen höre ich immer gern ,danke den Machern.

    • @Prozoot
      @Prozoot  Год назад

      ....thank you for tuning in!

  • @perfectjazz78
    @perfectjazz78 3 года назад +7

    There's something special about those two 1928 Fred Rich sides. I own that record and have been amazed for years .

  • @MegaFount
    @MegaFount 2 года назад +9

    Almost 100 years old and still going strong! The past is right here, beautiful and as prescient as ever!

    • @Prozoot
      @Prozoot  2 года назад

      ....molte grazie per le belle parole e il supporto.

  • @TransVangal
    @TransVangal 8 месяцев назад +2

    ❤❤❤❤❤Amazing ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @j.j.hunsecker3009
    @j.j.hunsecker3009 4 года назад +5

    Dynamic sound here. Make ya' wanna dance. Thanks again!

  • @tadeodewiesent1482
    @tadeodewiesent1482 4 года назад +9

    ¡Ooohhh...!
    ¡Mi estilo favorito de música!
    ¡Bellas y románticas melodías!
    ¡Wonderful!
    ¡Beautiful!
    ¡¡Great, Prozoot!!
    ¡Greetings from Chile!
    👍👍👍👌👌👌👏👏👏👏👏

  • @dansalot57
    @dansalot57 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for sharing this enchanting recordings.

  • @javiperez7767
    @javiperez7767 4 года назад +3

    🙂THANKS A LOT😉WHAT A WONDERFUL MUSIC🌈🌞

  • @howardoquest1436
    @howardoquest1436 3 года назад +1

    Leave it that way, could not be better.

  • @HansLimburger1930
    @HansLimburger1930 4 года назад +36

    Timestamps:
    Why Can't You - Fred Rich Orch. - 0:00
    My Man From Caroline - Ben Selvin & His Orch. - 3:09
    You Took Advantage of Me - Fred Rich Orch. - 6:04
    Good For You-Bad For Me - Ben Selvin Orch. - 9:41
    My First Love - Fred Rich Orch. - 13:02
    When the Morning Glories Wake Up in the Morning - Don Voorhees Orch. - 15:57
    Leave It That Way - Ben Selvin Orch - 19:12
    I'm Sailing on a Sunbeam - Paul Specht Orch. - 22:13
    It's Easy to Fall in Love - Ben Selvin Orch. - 25:01
    Two Lips - Fred Rich Orch. - 28:11
    Get Happy - Ted Wallace Orch. - 31:00
    Where the Shy Little Violets Grow - Milt Shaw Orch. - 34:31
    Do You?-That's All I Want to Know! - Ipana Troubadours - 37:41
    Breakaway - Dorsey Bros Orch. - 40:25
    She's Funny That Way - Dorsey Bros Orch. - 43:16
    Not That I Care - Benny Goodman Orch. - 46:23
    Help Yourself to Happiness - Benny Goodman Orch. - 49:47
    When Your Lover Has Gone - Charleston Chasers - 53:05
    Walkin' My Baby Back Home - Charleston Chasers - 56:19

    • @Prozoot
      @Prozoot  4 года назад +8

      ....Hans, Thanks for your work -- appreciated as always!

  • @spencersmith2798
    @spencersmith2798 4 года назад +13

    More treasure...your comments are spot on...thanks for all your tremendous effort to allow today’s listeners to experience the sounds long gone but alive again due to your work and that of others that realize the vast musical treasury that the 1920s-30s provide.

    • @Prozoot
      @Prozoot  11 месяцев назад

      ....thanks so much for the nice comment!

  • @wikiwakiwuh
    @wikiwakiwuh 4 года назад +3

    Großartig , Dankeschön .

  • @rafaelteixeira9838
    @rafaelteixeira9838 4 года назад +5

    Thank you so much!! This is very special!!

  • @williamwade641
    @williamwade641 4 года назад +5

    Excellent!

  • @antoniocampagnefilho2136
    @antoniocampagnefilho2136 4 года назад +3

    isto e orquestra mesmo parabens lindos canais

  • @mainaccount131
    @mainaccount131 4 года назад +3

    Super excellent

  • @j.j.hunsecker3009
    @j.j.hunsecker3009 4 года назад +7

    Thank you for doing this! Wonderful.

  • @lionelatwill
    @lionelatwill 4 года назад +6

    Great selection and beautiful quality as always, thanks so much for sharing

  • @roybo1930
    @roybo1930 4 года назад +4

    THESE RECORDS ARE AWESOME! I LOVE the Open Horn phonographs! But unless the Record is wore out pretty good to begin with I will NOT Play a E- or even a V- 78 on One! I have heard that Cactus Thorne needles on a Orthophonic Sound box works very well! I have yet to try one of these! And if I do on a E record, It would be on a Junker or partly broken E+ Record to see how it holds up! Sadly the WONDERFUL Dime store ARC Records were played lots of times on cheep phonographs leading to a craggy rough sound! Usually at the start! But sometimes I get very lucky and find a AWESOME BANNER, Regal, Cameo or Romeo still in the sleeve! Very shiny or as shiny as a ARC PLAZA Record can be! Back to playing Records on old machines, THE WORSE YET! A AWESOME Record that some Jackass played with a Front facing sound box! OH! IT RUINS THESE RECORDS! I Have several I am desperately looking for to replace the ruined Record! I have seen folks playin a 78 on a Wind up with the tone arm against the Record, in other words the tone arm on the opposite side of where it is suppose to be! People have got to be taught the dos and NEVER do`s of Playing a 78 RPM Record! Especially folks who run antique stores who have a large stack of Victor, Brunswick Records in a EDISON Diamond Disc Player, Or Visa Versa! GEEEEEEZE!

    • @donaldkgarman296
      @donaldkgarman296 4 года назад

      I used to use Bamboo Needles with good sucsess,Long Long ago......I know not if they may still be obtained.......if so,it is worthy of the try.

  • @LordWham
    @LordWham 4 года назад +3

    Wonderful, thank you!

  • @mainaccount131
    @mainaccount131 4 года назад +1

    Delightful

  • @MrXnews2
    @MrXnews2 4 года назад +3

    Great to see another awesome upload!

  • @Prozoot
    @Prozoot  4 года назад +50

    ....The landscape of collecting would look so different if home playback equipment of the 1920s were just a few years more advanced. The destruction caused by Gramophones and Victrolas is heartbreaking, and even more heartbreaking is today's persistence of certain collectors to enjoy their 78s under the weight of a steel needle. To believe the ridiculous hype that a fresh needle will protect the integrity of a shellac groove is wild nonsense. A simple law of physics tells us that when two objects of unequal hardness come in contact with each other, wear will occur to the softer material. We are only custodians of this music, and we have an obligation to see that it isn't ruined for future generations. If one has a thoroughly worn V copy of a disc, I say, "enjoy your Gramophone!" ....but when I see RUclips people playing rare E copy records on a wind-up, they should be hung by their toes. Hey guys, let's not be selfish -- think of future owners of your 78s.
    Yes, I fantasize that if only lightweight pickups had been invented in 1925, along with electrical recording, condition evaluations would be a non-issue. Can you imagine not having to explain or apologize for how a 78rpm record will play? Of course, I could take a cynical view that the recording industry who manufactured Gramophones was perfectly contented to see the disintegration of ephemeral shellac discs, only to have the customer coming back to purchase more. After all, they didn't seem to be in a big hurry to invent a gentler playback technology. And so, between steel needles, low sales during the Great Depression, and shellac reclamation during WW2, we have what is known as the "rare record."
    This video is a tribute to the creative genius of the Western Electric sound engineers. These records still sparkle with realistic sound after ninety years in a paper sleeve. It's interesting to follow the audio evolution in just the brief span of five years demonstrated in my post. They could never have imagined we would be hearing more than they were able to hear at the time of recording. The amplifiers in my graphics are excerpted from a page in a 1928 W.E. sales brochure. These are the amps used to record this music.

    • @gunnarthefeisty
      @gunnarthefeisty 4 года назад +1

      you're CLOWNING

    • @iainr222
      @iainr222 4 года назад +6

      Until recently , a certain English uploader with the world's greatest Jack Payne collection insisted on playing them on antique machines . If you had adjoining seats on a transatlantic flight ......thank god for plastic cutlery !

    • @williamwade641
      @williamwade641 4 года назад

      I knew a Gramophone enthusiast who insisted on using thorn needles. I was wondering, are they still made and do they make a difference?

    • @Prozoot
      @Prozoot  4 года назад +7

      @@williamwade641 ....whether it's a steel needle or a thorn needle, the problem is the weight that is being applied to the fragile shellac grooves. It's like you're asking me if it's OK if you smoke a little. I've seen store-stock (new) records that were played only once on a gramophone. Just one play is enough to do damage.

    • @williamwade641
      @williamwade641 4 года назад

      @Prozoot Point taken, I suspected as much.

  • @jeenkzk5919
    @jeenkzk5919 4 года назад +2

    I love playing this music while shaving and getting ready! Gives me pep in the morning! Out of curiosity, my grandmother has a bunch of 78s that have been sitting for a good 40 years. I was considering buying a record player from Walmart that plays 78s. Should those be okay and shouldn’t damage the records? I’m not concerned about ruining the needle. Those are readily replaceable. Her 78s aren’t. If you know any alternative please let me know! She’s 94 and would love to play them for her before she goes. She’s in good health but ya never know.

  • @richardsferlazza7071
    @richardsferlazza7071 3 года назад +4

    I don’t know how you clean up these recordings- but you make me so happy to hear these as they should sound.My 78’s

  • @alexmckenna1171
    @alexmckenna1171 4 года назад +4

    Yes you're right about those RUclips guys playing choice records on wind-up gramophones. It's sacrilege, and always makes me sad.

    • @donaldkgarman296
      @donaldkgarman296 4 года назад

      Reproducing techniques were not up to standard with recording until at least 1953.

    • @artshifrin3053
      @artshifrin3053 3 года назад +1

      ANOTHER SONIC FARCE IS ROAMING AROUND A MACHINE WHEN IT'S BEING VIDEO'd. WITH THE LOCATION OF THE MIC & LENSE BEING
      FIXED TOGETHER, THE DIRECTIONAL RENDITION EMANATING FROM THE HORN IS CORRUPTED. THAT'S A POLITE WAY OF STATING IT.

  • @albertbenajam4751
    @albertbenajam4751 3 года назад

    pThe picture shows RADIO STATION eqipment used to link a studio with a distant transmitter over "telephone clines". See lefthand caption. This "studio to transmitter equipment" can correct defects introduced by them so what happened in the studio will arrive at the transmitter.
    While there was not much "mixing" done in1920's there was careful studio set-ups of instuments before a mic

  • @richardsferlazza7071
    @richardsferlazza7071 3 года назад +3

    Is Prozoot your actual or a stage name?Love to listen to whatever you have.It’s an education and pleasure.

  • @albertbenajam4751
    @albertbenajam4751 3 года назад

    (Intersetimg sidelight about Columbia, in that both columbia & Victor recorded in 1926 the 150year aniversary of US the Associated Glee Clubs singing ADESTE FIDELIS recorded by the then new electric process. Victor did it first in Philedelphia,Columbia later in New Yorks Carnegie Hall. THE FAABULOIS PHONOGRH a 1950s history says that phone lines carried the live concert recording featured an adudience sing-along, the label claimed 4000 voices, was recorded by record making equipment in Conneticut fed by phone lines thus being an early REMOTE RECORDING.
    HOW DO THEY SOUND? The Victor was recorded without an audiece from an "an on-stage" perspective, while the Columbia had a distant perpective including audince, so not tricly comparable, but the Columbia is thinner at both bass and Treble probably due to phone line losses.

    • @albertbenajam4751
      @albertbenajam4751 3 года назад

      Do note that even as early as 1923 there were some network type radio programs. There is a Victor record of 1923/1924 at Library 0f Congress jukebox site in which they call our cities and call letters carring their program. NBC net dates to 1926 with continuois evening feed, CBS (originaly called THE COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH NETWORK. Mutual was largely in place by 1929. Columbia 1926 Adestie Fidelis may have given them idea of radio network. (Victor different case, as bought up by RCA.

  • @frustum-o5z
    @frustum-o5z 8 месяцев назад

    cumulatively, we've lost something~ check the complexity of the horn section, the timing and the position, as if every last micro-second has meaning~

  • @CarmenLopez-jy8tr
    @CarmenLopez-jy8tr 4 года назад +1

    Close and lock the door cause u took advantage of me

  • @johncaya1030
    @johncaya1030 4 года назад +1

    I'm 77 And i look back at the well dressed with shinny shoes short hair cuts playing great musical like Trombones and clarinets and the likes as compared to TODAY mostly Guitars and drums with clown dressing and freakier the look with hair like a girl the more popular they are . WHAT IN HELL HAPPENED ?

    • @richardsferlazza7071
      @richardsferlazza7071 3 года назад

      Time marches on,but we’re not getting any older,right?

    • @roderickfernandez5382
      @roderickfernandez5382 2 года назад

      Dear sir nothing happened the world changed and you didn't that's all I'm 84 years old and I love this music but I started loving this music when I was 15. And I enjoy some of the modern music and music of the seventies and eighties. I have to admit I tried my best to like rap and I really can't bring myself to like it but I say people who would do enjoy it should be able to enjoy it without criticism. But this old music is good isn't it? It's so long since you're posted this you probably won't even say it but I like to do it anyway take care

  • @JozefSterkens
    @JozefSterkens 4 года назад +1

    ***** !

  • @frustum-o5z
    @frustum-o5z 8 месяцев назад

    Plug-in = like using an electric typewriter~ just not so organic sounding.