The Second one is "Can This Be Love?" recorded on November 7th 1930 by the Dorsey Brothers with Scrappy Lambert singing . Amazing orchestration! And by the way Thanks a Lot for the post! and good sound!
OMG! This one is just BEAUTIFUL! Prozoot You are just AWESOME!!! Thank You so much for all the HARD work that You do in posting these delicious and very well done videos of these recordings. They are well appreciated indeed!
@mojoman4147 Yes, you should be proud of these artful productions. And, to echo what genia and roybo say, we who love this music are very grateful for these delightful gems.
This sort of defies the common conception that swing "suddenly emerged" in the second half of the 30s. The first track is very swingy; apart from perhaps the vocalists style I would've picked this as 1937 - 1939. Helps that the quality of the recording is incredibly good.
Here in 1931 a pop band style began that included both hot playing and arranging. In 1932, business collapsed and this was no longer acceptable. Ballads and simple sentiment all but took over the nation's music. The hot band style resurfaced again, but slowly, after Prohibition.
JonnokNZ Astutely observed! Of course the Dorsey Brothers would go on to be on the cutting edge of Swing development! The second song sounds more modern than its date as well, I would have guess ‘33-36 if I were doing this blind. Again the vocal style is antiquated but was the then popular way.
@Prozoot I've checked and double-checked the copyright regulations and I'm certain this is out of copyright, so I'd love it if you have a version I could use for my theatre production. Thank you.
@@Prozoot Not everything. If the composer died more than 70 years ago and the recording is more than 70 years old, then the music would be out of copyright.
@@nataliewilcox9511 ....don't plan on that -- copyright laws are very mirky and still evolving. Warner Chappell probably owns the song -- you should contact them and ask. Is this for a commercial project? If you need a very high-quality transfer of a song (much better than what you hear on my YT posts) I can supply that. Just let me know.
@@Prozoot Hi - no it's not. It's for part of a fringe festival. Thanks, I will get in touch with Warner Chappell. That's very kind of you to offer. If you could, that would be majorly helpful. Thank you.
What our grandparents & great grandparents were listening to, while they were a parkin' & sparkin' !
The best band to make the transition between twenties charleston influenced dance bands and swing jazz fashion. Very talented brothers!
Never thought about that, but you’re right! The Dorsey’s had talent in their DNA for sure!
Swing emerged from jazz, everything else fell into place. It sounds good to me!
The Second one is "Can This Be Love?" recorded on November 7th 1930 by the Dorsey Brothers with Scrappy Lambert singing . Amazing orchestration!
And by the way Thanks a Lot for the post! and good sound!
Thank you! As much as I'm liking these old Two-Fers, it's nice to know the TITLE of the song on the flip side.
"Can this be love" was recorded 3 days ago, 89 years ago. Sad I didn't comment then.
OMG! This one is just BEAUTIFUL! Prozoot You are just AWESOME!!! Thank You so much for all the HARD work that You do in posting these delicious and very well done videos of these recordings. They are well appreciated indeed!
Prozoot this is the music I love to hear!Thank goodness there are guy"s like you who can share with us.
@mojoman4147
Yes, you should be proud of these artful productions. And, to echo what genia and roybo say, we who love this music are very grateful for these delightful gems.
Lovely version - beautiful recording of one of my favourites.
Your technique is simply amazing and you should be very proud of your work. Thanks a million!
got to like it.... two thumbs up....
"Parking in the Moonlight" was recorded on July 30, 1931.
My father, because he was
so tall, was known as Long
Bill.
they left a legion too early!joe overby atlanta ga
Nice
Proozoot, just discoverd you via pax41 . Incredible sound.
Super excellent
thanks again.
This sort of defies the common conception that swing "suddenly emerged" in the second half of the 30s. The first track is very swingy; apart from perhaps the vocalists style I would've picked this as 1937 - 1939. Helps that the quality of the recording is incredibly good.
Here in 1931 a pop band style began that included both hot playing and arranging. In 1932, business collapsed and this was no longer acceptable. Ballads and simple sentiment all but took over the nation's music. The hot band style resurfaced again, but slowly, after Prohibition.
I see what you mean, Jonnok!
JonnokNZ Astutely observed! Of course the Dorsey Brothers would go on to be on the cutting edge of Swing development! The second song sounds more modern than its date as well, I would have guess ‘33-36 if I were doing this blind. Again the vocal style is antiquated but was the then popular way.
Great thanks...
parabéns seus canais são lindos mesmo desculpem a demora no meu circulo familiares tem 800 de cada um do youtube da google das usicas antigas
すばらしい! I love it! But I do not understand English. 歌詞の意味を教えてほしい
@Prozoot I've checked and double-checked the copyright regulations and I'm certain this is out of copyright, so I'd love it if you have a version I could use for my theatre production. Thank you.
@@Prozoot Thanks, I've just sent you an email, from Front Room Theatre
Thlanks again
In the words of Jimmy Dorsey: "Isn't that a little fast, Mac?"
Is it ok if we spill the beans on the bonus cut?
@RatPfink66 , Yes, "Let's Spill The Beans." ....but keep some beans in the pot!
But, but he sings "Can This Be Love", not "Let's Spill The Beans".
these boys were very talented,but were totaly incompatible!joe overby atlanta ga
Is this in copyright? I can't find any information, and I would love to use it in a video if it isn't.
....If your video is monetized, you will be shut down. Everything has copyright ownership.
@@Prozoot Not everything. If the composer died more than 70 years ago and the recording is more than 70 years old, then the music would be out of copyright.
@@nataliewilcox9511 ....don't plan on that -- copyright laws are very mirky and still evolving. Warner Chappell probably owns the song -- you should contact them and ask. Is this for a commercial project? If you need a very high-quality transfer of a song (much better than what you hear on my YT posts) I can supply that. Just let me know.
@@Prozoot Hi - no it's not. It's for part of a fringe festival.
Thanks, I will get in touch with Warner Chappell. That's very kind of you to offer. If you could, that would be majorly helpful. Thank you.
Unusually perky, for something produced after 'The Crash'. Usually, attempts at anything upbeat, sounded desperate, after October of '29.
I love this comment's insight!
Maybe it was written before the crash and recorded with maximum nostalgia?