Well, I'M still here. I myself can't believe the progress of time, because I'm the only one who looks exactly the same. All my classmates from grammar school are either dead or have grey hair. It's the wine, I'me sure of it. Then again, I never did any drugs, and I never married. Instead I moved to eastern Europe when the wall fell down and started my own supermarket and later a bank. Learned 4 foreign languages along the way, but I'm still that guy from the 60s who hung out in the backyard in his underwear listening to (back then) modern records and drinking homemade wine. That guy EVERYBODY knew. I'm still that guy. And you can still come by my place here in Germany. Just slightly bigger than what I had in Elmwood Park.
Another Disney connection: the male dancer in the clip is Bobby Burgess, who was one of the original Mouseketeers, which started the same year Welk started his TV show - 1955. Burgess was always an outstanding dancer & still makes appearances on behalf of the Welk musical family.
Love the song. My daughter sang this in a competition when she was 7 years old and and won 1st prize in it. This was at the American Baton competition at the States. What a great time we had. Joan Smith. God bless everyone ❤❤❤
I really enjoyed that! Thank you, Kevin. Myron was a beauty, always smiling and having the greatest time! My favorite Myron was him playing with the orchestra on "Calcutta" on the Lawrence Welk Show.
What's that old saying "If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail." Is there a musical equivalent? "If all you have is an accordion, everything sounds like a polka."
Nice song. If you notice, Lawrence Welk's left hand is concealed when playing, since he never learned how to play the bass clef of the accordion. Daddy always made reference to this defect.
The negative comments about this are really stupid. This may not be your cup of tea, but try to be civil, and not give the rest of us that "hipper than thou" nonsense. Many of us who have listened to Welk, listened to many other kinds of music as well. I gues they never thought of that. There's an lot more to music than 3 guitars, synthesizer, and drums. Try listening you're sure to learn something.
Take every dish your grandmother made that were the least flavorful and blandest. Tuna casserole, jello something or other, chipped beef and gravy (SOS), soggiest meatloaf, strained prunes or prune juice, mash potatoes with no salt or seasonings, etc. Throw it all into a giant blender and push PUREE for 30 seconds until it becomes a nice creamy, pour ready mess. Pour into onto your soup bowl. That's what Lawrence Welk music was. A pureed blend of slop for easy digestion and no chewing required. Goes down with no offending salt or spices, tasteless, and comes out the other end with no irritating burning sensation. He took the most inoffensive music, least complex, minimum imagination of composition, and flattened it even more so there was nothing left to chew on. Nothing intellectually stimulating, nothing to cause any any digestion or heartburn, nothing to satisfy the hunger for new taste sensation, and poured it into every viewer's soup bowl. Don't need any musical taste or training. Don't need to know a pizzicato from a pizzaria, an allegro non tropo from a volce moderato, just spoon it down and swallow. Don't even need to put your dentures in. No straining your bowels when it comes out the other end. Welk knew his audience. He understood they weren't the most educated or worldly, understood they lived through WWI, thr Great Depression, WWII, and Korea, and don't want challenging music or modern compositions that pulls them into uncomfortable arenas. No John Gage and his 4'33" of silence at the piano. Welk fans just want soothing easily digestible tunes that might remind them of grandma's house with her slightly unpalatable cooking with no seasonings or imagination because Gramps couldn't eat salt or pepper. For that he was a genius at. He gave auditory comfort to those who wanted to feel the good old days when things were familiar and everyone knew their place in society. Whites knew what was expected and blacks knew not to be uppity. He reminded them when blacks couldn't move into a good white neighborhood and a man was a man who smoked 2 packs of Msrlboro a day and a woman who knew her place was chained to the kitchen with just enough slack to go into the bedroom. Days when it was expected that if the wife mouthed off or wasn't ready with a fabulous meal when he came home, a little back handed slap was all it took to cure any thoughts of trying to live to her potential. Oh the good old days. LAWRENCE welk Provided a trip down memory lane for those folks.
F***k that "it's not my kind of music comments" you bunch of hypocrites!!! A lot of you guys are closeted Lawrence Welk fans like me listening to his beautiful version of Jesusita En Chihuahua in private with your headphones. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha. Ooops sorry, it's Myron Floren's Chihuahua Polka. They sound the same. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha again. I love you Lawrence Welk. Be happy !!!!!!
Hunter S. Thompson wrote, "The Circus-Circus is what the whole hep world would be doing Saturday night if the Nazis had won the war." Ironically this aired Saturday Night across most of this country.
Does anyone else see Robin Williams when looking at this guy? The one in the beginning also the one in the middle of the three amigos. besides just myself? Maybe I just miss the guy but I can see him in him.
You know what "perfect pitch" is? It's the ability to throw the accordion into the dumpster and have it land on the banjo! Really, though, this is fun music, I like it a lot!
LOL!!! Quantum Leap, that is damn funny!!!!!!! At first, when I first started reading it, I was thinking "oh here we go with the snarky comments".. but, then, once I thought about it a minute, I got one hell of a good chuckle from it!
Unless you know something I don't, as far as I'm aware, he learned accordion from his father at a reasonably young age. It's possible he developed arthritis or something, but there is no way he went his entire life without knowing the bass side of the instrument. The bass buttons are laid out intuitively enough that even a novice could at least comp with basic chords and alternating bass. If he was having trouble with the bass side of the instrument, something else had to have been going on.
@@ryano.5149 Hate to break this to you Ryan, but, Frank is correct! L.W. never learned how to play the accordion buttons properly, so, whenever you see him playing the accordion on his show, he PURPOSELY stands so the camera doesn't catch his left hand NOT playing the buttons part of his accordion. That's one of the big reasons he hired Myron Floren as the main accordionist back in 1950!
Now that I know that, if you watch carefully, you can see Lawrence Welk’s left hand just kind of hanging out a couple of times. It’s brief but it’s there.
who cares if he's looking down at the damn thing? If LW says Joey Schmidt is one of the best, then he's one of the best! I don't give a damn if he's taking a SHIT and playing at the same time, if he can make that squeeze box sound that damn good, then so be it!
They were so talented on that show. I am now 70yrs and watched with my parents and still watched when PBS broadcast the reruns. Bring them back.
Happy music, happy dancing, happy faces, what's not to love?
Happy days and good music. Those were the days....where have they gone?
Well, I'M still here. I myself can't believe the progress of time, because I'm the only one who looks exactly the same. All my classmates from grammar school are either dead or have grey hair. It's the wine, I'me sure of it. Then again, I never did any drugs, and I never married. Instead I moved to eastern Europe when the wall fell down and started my own supermarket and later a bank. Learned 4 foreign languages along the way, but I'm still that guy from the 60s who hung out in the backyard in his underwear listening to (back then) modern records and drinking homemade wine. That guy EVERYBODY knew. I'm still that guy.
And you can still come by my place here in Germany. Just slightly bigger than what I had in Elmwood Park.
Another Disney connection: the male dancer in the clip is Bobby Burgess, who was one of the original Mouseketeers, which started the same year Welk started his TV show - 1955. Burgess was always an outstanding dancer & still makes appearances on behalf of the Welk musical family.
Love the song. My daughter sang this in a competition when she was 7 years old and and won 1st prize in it. This was at the American Baton competition at the States.
What a great time we had.
Joan Smith. God bless everyone
❤❤❤
Dude that sounds SO Slavic. Only now, 50 years later do I realise this. When I was a kid I knew all the words, too.
My foot couldn't stop tapping and my head bobbed back and forth! It's so nice to find others who love the same kind of music! Thank you! 😊
What a wonderful show. We could use it today.
How can this not put a smile on someone's face?
Maybe for people who actually enjoy music this is pure slop? 🙄
@@ms.annthrope415 - as opposed to tribal atonal chanting about poppin' caps and other friendly activities?
God i miss the show on Saturday nights
I really enjoyed that! Thank you, Kevin. Myron was a beauty, always smiling and having the greatest time! My favorite Myron was him playing with the orchestra on "Calcutta" on the Lawrence Welk Show.
In Scotland this is used as a hymn tune to the words "this is God's world after all.
Joey was the BEST! And very easy on the eyes, too!
Appropriate Bobby Burgess dances to this. Not only is he Myron Floren's son-in-law, he was one of the original Mouseketeers.
14DaveHunter h
Wow!!! Absolutely incredible!! i'd love to get a hold of that album!!
Gives me the almost overwhelming urge, to go test-drive a BMW or Benz, with this blaring through the speakers!
I use to play this and I must say loved it to. I surprised myself if you can believe that lol
What's that old saying "If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail." Is there a musical equivalent? "If all you have is an accordion, everything sounds like a polka."
Well much cleaner than what is on today...my grandad would watch this and make my skin crawl....ugh..
We hope our world could be better!
super muzyka i taniec!!!,,,dziekuję i pozdrawiam :)
great music and dancing!! Thanks and regards :)
Amazing musicianship and double memories :)
Myron, my hero!
I WATCH THIS SHOW FROM 1980 SINCE I CAME TO USA.
I watched it from about 1966, when I was 8-years old.
Love this song. Memory lane in Disneyland❤.
With such talent it is a big big world after all.
Love this!!!! says Judy Corrette I am a beginner on the accordion with my 12 bass 25piano key accordion.
It is indeed a small world after all in which life is even smaller. Such talent.
I like this! A Really Good Friend of mine mentioned this video to me..
that beat influenced a lot of music all around the world.
It is too nice. I love this kind of music. I am 33 years old.
small world was a attraction at disney world meant to bring everyone from all around the world together
Nice song. If you notice, Lawrence Welk's left hand is concealed when playing, since he never learned how to play the bass clef of the accordion. Daddy always made reference to this defect.
Are you son of Mr. Floren?
Lol nightmare 🤣 😅 😂 had to watch it before Disney and now they're both gone
The negative comments about this are really stupid. This may not be your cup of tea,
but try to be civil, and not give the rest of us that "hipper than thou" nonsense. Many of us
who have listened to Welk, listened to many other kinds of music as well. I gues they never thought
of that. There's an lot more to music than 3 guitars, synthesizer, and drums. Try listening you're
sure to learn something.
This is great
Muito muito muito bom ,nunca vi igual , parabéns ao dono do canal RUclips
Well, its not my cup of tea but you can't fault the powder blue polyester suit. Well done.
Bonjour,super Paul,j'aurais bien voulue des partition pour débuté j'ai déjà de bonne notion ,mercie
Take every dish your grandmother made that were the least flavorful and blandest. Tuna casserole, jello something or other, chipped beef and gravy (SOS), soggiest meatloaf, strained prunes or prune juice, mash potatoes with no salt or seasonings, etc. Throw it all into a giant blender and push PUREE for 30 seconds until it becomes a nice creamy, pour ready mess. Pour into onto your soup bowl. That's what Lawrence Welk music was. A pureed blend of slop for easy digestion and no chewing required. Goes down with no offending salt or spices, tasteless, and comes out the other end with no irritating burning sensation.
He took the most inoffensive music, least complex, minimum imagination of composition, and flattened it even more so there was nothing left to chew on. Nothing intellectually stimulating, nothing to cause any any digestion or heartburn, nothing to satisfy the hunger for new taste sensation, and poured it into every viewer's soup bowl. Don't need any musical taste or training. Don't need to know a pizzicato from a pizzaria, an allegro non tropo from a volce moderato, just spoon it down and swallow. Don't even need to put your dentures in. No straining your bowels when it comes out the other end. Welk knew his audience. He understood they weren't the most educated or worldly, understood they lived through WWI, thr Great Depression, WWII, and Korea, and don't want challenging music or modern compositions that pulls them into uncomfortable arenas. No John Gage and his 4'33" of silence at the piano. Welk fans just want soothing easily digestible tunes that might remind them of grandma's house with her slightly unpalatable cooking with no seasonings or imagination because Gramps couldn't eat salt or pepper. For that he was a genius at. He gave auditory comfort to those who wanted to feel the good old days when things were familiar and everyone knew their place in society. Whites knew what was expected and blacks knew not to be uppity. He reminded them when blacks couldn't move into a good white neighborhood and a man was a man who smoked 2 packs of Msrlboro a day and a woman who knew her place was chained to the kitchen with just enough slack to go into the bedroom. Days when it was expected that if the wife mouthed off or wasn't ready with a fabulous meal when he came home, a little back handed slap was all it took to cure any thoughts of trying to live to her potential. Oh the good old days. LAWRENCE welk Provided a trip down memory lane for those folks.
You're a sad person. I bet you're a lot of fun at parties
Yikes! Someone needs a hug!
I can't stop laughing!! I wish I had some weed or shrooms! What a trip!!!
reminds me of the Germany section of the ride with the German polka band
Parabéns ao dono do canal do RUclips
Tempo bom que não volta mais, isso sim era tempo de atração tempo de amor que todos tinham uns pelo outros
F***k that "it's not my kind of music comments" you bunch of hypocrites!!! A lot of you guys are closeted Lawrence Welk fans like me listening to his beautiful version of Jesusita En Chihuahua in private with your headphones. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha. Ooops sorry, it's Myron Floren's Chihuahua Polka. They sound the same. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha again. I love you Lawrence Welk. Be happy !!!!!!
Bravo from Australia 2017
Parabéns ao dono do canal, isso e bão d+++++(
Very nice. Please correct spelling to Lawrence Welk. Thank you !
Hunter S. Thompson wrote, "The Circus-Circus is what the whole hep world would be doing Saturday night if the Nazis had won the war." Ironically this aired Saturday Night across most of this country.
Does anyone else see Robin Williams when looking at this guy? The one in the beginning also the one in the middle of the three amigos. besides just myself? Maybe I just miss the guy but I can see him in him.
Just wondering: Is this music Eastern European? Where did the influence come from?
pretty sure its a small world is from america but its theme was bringing everyone together no matter where your from
Alps music. Slovenia, Austria, Switzerland..Avsenik was the best.
Na Golici...Na roblek...V Bohinju, Otoček sredi jezera...try on youtube
The was played in Polka style.
i got stuck on the small world ride at disney land it wouldnt have been so bad if lawrence was playin the damn song
@larkpraise try ebay sure you can probably find it on there
You know what "perfect pitch" is? It's the ability to throw the accordion into the dumpster and have it land on the banjo! Really, though, this is fun music, I like it a lot!
ha you would not know good music if it bit Ya ver da sun don't shine
LOL!!! Quantum Leap, that is damn funny!!!!!!! At first, when I first started reading it, I was thinking "oh here we go with the snarky comments".. but, then, once I thought about it a minute, I got one hell of a good chuckle from it!
Theme song to Walt Disney's "Wonderful World of Disney," while Walt and hus brother were alive, before Disney went Bolshevik like.
Nope-that woman was Elaine Niverson (Balden, now)
Size of those collars
💖Happy face’s Happy Dancer’s 🌻💖
It's already a fantastic song, and then they turned it into a polka! The only thing that can make it better is if they turn it into a CONGA!!
❤Wow.
You got a cousin? I got one too.
Small world.
Huh? Wut? I won't go away this is the internet I can do what I want.
This was Diane and not Cissy
Wunnerful wunnerful!
And Bobby and Cissy popped in and danced for a bit. But no one sang?
Shout out to the Sherman family
bardzo ładnie
I thought so. That's Walt Disney's wife Lillian at 1:50.
They never showed Lawrence's other hand playing the side of the acordion with the buttons because he didn't know how.
Unless you know something I don't, as far as I'm aware, he learned accordion from his father at a reasonably young age. It's possible he developed arthritis or something, but there is no way he went his entire life without knowing the bass side of the instrument. The bass buttons are laid out intuitively enough that even a novice could at least comp with basic chords and alternating bass. If he was having trouble with the bass side of the instrument, something else had to have been going on.
@@ryano.5149 Hate to break this to you Ryan, but, Frank is correct! L.W. never learned how to play the accordion buttons properly, so, whenever you see him playing the accordion on his show, he PURPOSELY stands so the camera doesn't catch his left hand NOT playing the buttons part of his accordion. That's one of the big reasons he hired Myron Floren as the main accordionist back in 1950!
Now that I know that, if you watch carefully, you can see Lawrence Welk’s left hand just kind of hanging out a couple of times. It’s brief but it’s there.
Poor Lawrence passed away sorry Joey and Myron
Мило)
Guy on the left looks like a blonde Elvis!
😃😃😃😃
MIRON WAS THE BEST.SPOCZYWAJ W SPOKOJU.
0:24
IBVC
X
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Corny it is-but well done!
I was enjoying the music until the dancing freaks showed up 🤷🏼♂️
Very nice but not as good as the Dutch ``Three Jacksons``.
Myron better
Great performance, but Joey Schmidt needs to work on his technique. A professional accordionist does not constantly look down at the keyboard.
+mindspring57 Although he does not do it as much, Myron Floren also looks down quite often.
who cares if he's looking down at the damn thing? If LW says Joey Schmidt is one of the best, then he's one of the best! I don't give a damn if he's taking a SHIT and playing at the same time, if he can make that squeeze box sound that damn good, then so be it!