The Mysterious Life and Tragic Ending Of Burl Ives

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  • Опубликовано: 26 окт 2024

Комментарии • 159

  • @honestlyyours1069
    @honestlyyours1069 Год назад +92

    I am so glad that his Christmas song "A Holly, Jolly Christmas" is still played every year on the radio. It always seems to put me in a good mood.

    • @VintageVera
      @VintageVera Год назад +6

      I have a Santa doll that sings Have a Holly Jolly Christmas. I love it.

    • @RobertPaskulovich-fz1th
      @RobertPaskulovich-fz1th Год назад +3

      I LOVE Holly Jolly Christmas!

    •  Год назад +1

      Tradition!

  • @kenyork1107
    @kenyork1107 Год назад +19

    I love Burl Ives , his songs always put me in good place . I thank his voice is so soothing and relaxing it always makes me happy . Thank you I didn't know this much about him .

  • @Kiamichi-Okie
    @Kiamichi-Okie Год назад +27

    My father was the Director of Student Activities and ran the Student Union at Western IL. U. Burl Ives brother lived and farmed in Macomb IL, Burl would make surprise visits to see his brother. He would approach dad and 1 day / Night he would do a free concert in the Mississippi Room, those in attendance would have a blast, me included. Burl was kind generous man, and I am so happy, I had the opportunity to meet Mr. Ives.

    • @kenyork1107
      @kenyork1107 Год назад +5

      Your so blessed , I would have loved to seen him in concert and meet him , thanks for sharing .

    • @peppercat8718
      @peppercat8718 Год назад +1

      What an honor 💙

  • @peterjohnston8116
    @peterjohnston8116 Год назад +30

    About 1950 Burl Ives came to Australia and entertained troops preparing for deployment to Korea. This was at the Ingleburn Army Camp theatre and I was in the audience as a 10 year old with my family. My father was in the Army and families were invited. I have not forgotten the occasion nor Burl Ives.

    • @jb-vb8un
      @jb-vb8un 8 месяцев назад

      WOW - - - In the late forties, Ives signed the petition of the Committee for the First Amendment, organized by William Wyler, Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, and John Houston, to protest the House Un-American Activities Committee’s investigation of the Hollywood Ten. He supported the presidential candidacy of Progressive candidate Henry A. Wallace. In 1950, their appeals exhausted, the Hollywood Ten went to jail. As the “hot” Korean war began, anti-Communist hysteria intensified. Entertainment executives from the movie and broadcasting industries met in New York and announced their patriotic decision not to hire anyone suspicious or controversial. Over President Truman’s veto, Congress passed the McCarran and Smith Acts requiring the registration of “subversives” and making it illegal for them to have passports and travel. Ives found himself listed as a suspected Communist sympathizer in Red Channels, a booklet put out by ex-FBI agents, to help employers “vet” entertainers. To be removed a performer had to formally renounce his previous beliefs, humiliate himself by publicly declaring he or she had been a “dupe,” and denounce his associates by name before Congress (a ceremonial requirement because the names of former Communists were already known to the F.B.I and the legislature). Ron Cohen quotes a letter Ives received in September 1950 from the administration of Washington University, where he was scheduled to perform, stating that the university had received some protests challenging his loyalty. “Of course Washington University ‘steadfastly maintained that academic freedom, which means the intellectual freedom of its employees, must not be infringed,’ but, since the, ‘ Communist Party does not allow its members this kind of freedom’ the University ‘ will not allow members of that Party to use its classrooms and platforms’” (The Rainbow Quest, p. 80). Ives replied by defending his support of unions and other causes (as he had in his autobiography, The Wayfaring Stranger, first published in 1949). He denied having ever been a Communist. It was not known what, if any, other pressures were put on Ives; from 1950 to 1952, it was not uncommon for people to be shadowed by agents and interrogated at home. Ives’s rendition of “On Top of Old Smoky” made the top ten of the hit parade, but folk music was not heard on television. In 1951, the Weavers, hitherto very popular, abruptly lost all their bookings because of blacklisting.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe Месяц назад

      ​@@jb-vb8unTragedy

  • @colleenhenry940
    @colleenhenry940 Год назад +14

    Just saw the movie "The Big Country" loved his acting!! Also his singing

    • @joeleblanc689
      @joeleblanc689 9 месяцев назад

      I think the scene with him chewing out the other rancher is one of the best scenes in a movie I have ever seen. (I'm 66) The way his lip quivers while bawling them out is a great show of emotional acting.

  • @PhantomLover007
    @PhantomLover007 Год назад +30

    As a kid, I grew up, listening to his music, because my grandmother loved his singing. Especially his Holiday albums. Also his narration for “Frosty the Snowman” and “Rudolph the red nose reindeer”.

    • @singlewhitefemale1707
      @singlewhitefemale1707 11 месяцев назад +3

      I too grew up watching Frosty the Snowman , The Abominable Snowman, And Frosty the Snowman. I'm 60 now but still have a soft spot for his voiceovers. Gives me warm shivers❤❤❤

  • @timtoner1411
    @timtoner1411 Год назад +71

    At the very end of his career, Ives was scheduled to sing at a final folk concert. Pete Seeger was scheduled to sing at the same concert but said he wanted to go on at at different time then Ives. At the rehearsal, Ives was too sick to play guitar & was in a wheelchair. When he tried to wheel himself onto the stage, Ives was too sick to make the marks on the stage. When it came time for Ives to make his performance, everyone was surprised & amazed to see Pete Seeger wheeling Ives onto the stage. Then Seeger accompanied Ives on his 5-string banjo. Later, Seeger said it was time to forget & forgive.

    • @VintageVera
      @VintageVera Год назад +6

      That's a nice story.

    • @kokomo74149
      @kokomo74149 Год назад +3

      Too bad it wasn't sooner. But better late than never.

    • @johncook30284
      @johncook30284 Год назад +2

      Thanks for that story.

    • @johncook30284
      @johncook30284 Год назад +4

      That's me saying thanks. Grew up on Burl Yves and Harry Belafonte.

    • @rgj406
      @rgj406 11 месяцев назад +6

      Rest in peace, you made me very happy with his Christmas songs. I consider him the best Christmas singer ever.

  • @ellisc.foleyjr9778
    @ellisc.foleyjr9778 9 месяцев назад +4

    I'm 80 yrs old and grew up listening to Burl Ives, who can forget his voice and his intilling memories with Frosty the Snoman, Rudolf the Red Nose Reindeer, and Have a Holly JOlly Christmas and many more. quick wit and charm loving memories in my heart and mind thank you Burl for them. God Speed. ECF

  • @ianrundle5862
    @ianrundle5862 Год назад +5

    For me, growing up in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia now) in the 50's.
    Burl Ives provided the music of my young years.
    I loved his voice and his story telling ability.
    Although, in my teens, I gravitated towards Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson and that ilk.
    I continued to love Burls voice and recounteur.
    There was a bit of Mark Twain in Burl.

  • @davidmanley9437
    @davidmanley9437 Год назад +19

    He was very talented, I have most of his albums and was a great story teller.May he RIP

  • @JB4404
    @JB4404 Год назад +12

    Burls sister was my second grade teacher ( Mildred Russell) and came to my small South school in Arlington Heights and sing in the hall for us in 1946. Jan Behrens

  • @TonyWhite22351
    @TonyWhite22351 Год назад +19

    I love his version of A Little Bitty Tear Let Me Down !

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Год назад +3

      Me too!

    • @sherrybirchall8677
      @sherrybirchall8677 Год назад +2

      My dad used to sing that one. That, and Put Your Sweet Lips a Little Closer to the Phone.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Год назад +1

      Spoiled my Act as a Clown!

    • @jb-vb8un
      @jb-vb8un 8 месяцев назад

      @@marknewton6984 song was in 1993 film. TRUE ROMANCE

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 8 месяцев назад +1

      His acting in Cat-Roof was superb!

  • @donaldturcotte
    @donaldturcotte Год назад +6

    Thank you thank you for this.i love that man he is and was every that is good about our country.

  • @brianevans2819
    @brianevans2819 Год назад +7

    What a fabulous saying, he packed his dreams, just fantastic, I am 74 and have heard that saying before.

  • @PeterOHalloran-hf2ho
    @PeterOHalloran-hf2ho 11 месяцев назад +5

    A classic voice and a terrific actor brilliant in The big country

    • @jb-vb8un
      @jb-vb8un 8 месяцев назад +1

      Burl Ives Wins Supporting Actor: 1959 Oscars

  • @sharonweinstock3198
    @sharonweinstock3198 6 месяцев назад +3

    We listened to his children’s songs when I was young, and now I’m so grateful to let my 5 month old great granddaughter lister to his wonderful kids songs, like the grey goose. God Bless him for his legacy.

  • @MultiSweener
    @MultiSweener 9 месяцев назад +2

    Can't replicate his voice. So unique.

  • @singlewhitefemale1707
    @singlewhitefemale1707 11 месяцев назад +3

    I grew up on Burl Ives. Love him with a passion❤❤❤

  • @wrjines
    @wrjines Год назад +7

    His most charming and moving expression of compassion in the 1962 movie "The Spiral Road" has never been exceeded. It was so gentle that it was resurrected by Sean Connery in "Indiana Jones, The Last Crusade" to a great effect.

  • @DH-ve5bl
    @DH-ve5bl Год назад +12

    Whenever I hear the the term “Americana”, Burl Ives immediately comes to mind.

  • @peterbland7227
    @peterbland7227 Год назад +13

    Thank you for this video. I do wish you you stop using the clickbait “tragic ending” in your video titles. It dishonors the legacy of those artists.

    • @DefundTheFringes
      @DefundTheFringes 11 месяцев назад +1

      True. It's absurd how often the "tragic" theme is borrowed. Death in general tends to be tragic, but Ives managed to reach age 86.

  • @anthonykelly1368
    @anthonykelly1368 Год назад +8

    Still my favorite singer of Christmas songs.

  • @Thomas-pq4ys
    @Thomas-pq4ys Год назад +5

    In the mid 1950's, I adored his "Bear and the Ball and the Parasol." I was 6. I think I still have that record.

  • @victorbenner539
    @victorbenner539 Год назад +8

    I was somewhat surprised to hear he passed away in Anacortes Washington. This is my home state. It would have been great to have met him at least once. Rest well sir.🙏

  • @patriciaboehme128
    @patriciaboehme128 Год назад +6

    Won't be christmas if I don't listen to his songs. Thank you

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke 4 месяца назад +3

    RIP
    Burl Ives
    (1909-1995)

  • @donaldturcotte
    @donaldturcotte Год назад +12

    His acting was incredible.

    • @appledoreman
      @appledoreman Год назад +2

      He won an Oscar for his role in 'The Big Country' - a fact not mentioned here.

    • @guyfaux3978
      @guyfaux3978 2 месяца назад

      @@appledoreman He was not too shabby in Cat On A Hot Tin Roof as Big Daddy, either.

  • @auxone5009
    @auxone5009 8 месяцев назад +2

    My father used to work with Burl as part of a small dance band out of Elkhart Lake, Wi. This was back in the 1940's before he was that well known.. He was beloved by all the band members, who used to refer to him, affectionately, as "Ferdie". He was a great guy.

  • @zardozyo
    @zardozyo Год назад +16

    If this was a tragic ending, I guess we're all headed that way.

  • @sandramorey2529
    @sandramorey2529 Год назад +13

    He was among the first to record "Rudolph the Red Nosed Raindeer, too. He did not write it. I have taught from his collections for 60 years and sung many of them. His children's songs are not specifically for children. He collected sea shanties and my students love them. He recorded The Oxdriver's Song, a historical reminiscence of the first teamsters who drove oxen carts with goods over the entire nation before the railroads. He definitely screwed over many of his early allies during HUAC & claim authorship of songs he didn't write (Big Rock Candy Mountain for one). He was
    a mixed bag. None will forget his marvelous performance as Big Daddy in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. There was a picture of him with Luana Patton and Bobby driscoll from So Dear to My Heart. I'll have to watch it again.

    • @thurgoodstubbs9670
      @thurgoodstubbs9670 Год назад

      When a some enters public domain it can be re arranged and then that arrangement belongs to you and you are identified as the composer.
      Example: Greenback Dollar written by Hoyt Axton. Hoyt found this song in the public domain and recorded his version with acoustic guitar. The Kingston Trio liked it and got permission from Hoyt to do their rendition using Hoyts demo. The rest is history. It was a smash hit.

  • @LonnieFaith
    @LonnieFaith Год назад +10

    Burl Ives was also a very talented actor.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Год назад +2

      He deserves an Oscar for "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof."

    • @LonnieFaith
      @LonnieFaith Год назад

      @@marknewton6984 I agree 👍

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Год назад +1

      @@LonnieFaith Was there ever a Big Daddy like him? Great movie.

  • @brianbanks7685
    @brianbanks7685 Год назад +3

    A fond part of my childhood as a child of the sixties

  • @svipdagx7291
    @svipdagx7291 4 месяца назад +1

    After hearing"Big rock candy mountains" and"Were have all the flowers gone",i was sold.Wish there were more Burl Ivesses,he had courage.

    • @seikibrian8641
      @seikibrian8641 2 месяца назад

      * WHERE Have All the Flowers Gone.

  • @paulpickering4615
    @paulpickering4615 11 месяцев назад +2

    Top man Very much missed❤

  • @bosse641
    @bosse641 Год назад +4

    Loved him. Wonderful man.

  • @califdad4
    @califdad4 Год назад +3

    I remember when he and his wife moved from the LA area to Washington and he had been a active freemason for at the time in the early 90s , 50 years and his SoCal lodge asked the Washington lodge near him to present him his 50 year pin , which they gladly did

  • @GrandpasProgress-eu6sf
    @GrandpasProgress-eu6sf 8 месяцев назад +1

    What a Wonderful man truly Heavenly sent unique in every way his singing and acting was magical.

  • @garybrockwell2031
    @garybrockwell2031 Год назад +6

    Big rock candy mountain's plad it loud on a London bus today😁👍 top big FELLA 🙏💯🇬🇧 great in film also,
    Sad i was when he died.
    Great memories he left.
    🙏🎬🧐💪🤩💓😘

  • @sturmgesutz
    @sturmgesutz 10 месяцев назад +1

    One of the very best entertainers ever.

  • @TomokoAbe_
    @TomokoAbe_ Год назад +6

    I always thought he was very sexy. I love his voice. Considering he was a lifelong smoker he died of oral cancer age 85, just 2 months before his 86th birthday. He lived a long life and with enormous fame and fortune...a long life despite his smoking habits and morbid obesity.

    • @amysands8925
      @amysands8925 Год назад +1

      Indeed 85 not to many people get to that. Loved him and still he lives on we can lisen to him when ever we want.

  • @wandakennell8186
    @wandakennell8186 Год назад +4

    I enjoyed his music for years

  • @poppamichael2197
    @poppamichael2197 Год назад +5

    The title of this piece is inappropriate and does not fairly reflect the life of Burl Ives, who rose from a very humble beginning to an international star who was loved by at least two generations of Americans. He was caught up in the horrors of the McCarthy era, as were so many fine Americans, but he survived that as well. Although he died of cancer at 85, that's hardly the point of his life. His accomplishments should be reflected in the title of this video.

    • @appledoreman
      @appledoreman Год назад

      This channel always heads up its bios "the life & tragic ending of..."

  • @billdornan4379
    @billdornan4379 Год назад +3

    July 2023 👍💕🇨🇦

  • @davewagner5408
    @davewagner5408 Год назад +5

    Holly Jolly Christmas is the perfect example of his great voice.

  • @jessmccart3937
    @jessmccart3937 Год назад +6

    No matter what urban legends say he was not a victim of the blue tailed fly. So Jimmy crack corn.

  • @davidtodd9686
    @davidtodd9686 Год назад +7

    Actually , he is americas first popular (pop) star, r.i.p. burl!

    • @amysands8925
      @amysands8925 Год назад

      Loved Burl Ives. Still lisen to him today. my favored big rock candy mountain. and so many more.

  • @tonyshort1623
    @tonyshort1623 3 месяца назад

    What a great story!!!!

  • @ML-rz2hb
    @ML-rz2hb Год назад +7

    You should include locations, where he grew up, where to college. And what tragic ending? Seems pretty normal to me.

    • @appledoreman
      @appledoreman Год назад +1

      This channel always heads up its bios that way.

  • @melvance7281
    @melvance7281 7 месяцев назад +1

    I lived a ways up the road from him in 69. He kept horses at the same stable as my folks had ponies..i think....maybe they just rented them. Not entirely sure. I was all of 4 at the time. All I truly remember was meeting him one time. He put me on one of his horses. I also remember him building a helicopter pad at his house way down the road from our house. Know he had many major stares in the day landing there over the year we lived there. Miss him I remember him treating me as an adult even as young as I was

  • @Bumper776
    @Bumper776 2 месяца назад

    My mother was born in 1930 in the same town where Burl Ives lived, Hunt City Illinois, population about 50 people. My great grandfather ran a general store there and my great grandmother was the post mistress. My grandmother, who was born in 1908 recalls Burl Ives, my grandfather always teased her and said she should have married Burl instead of him since they were always poor. My great grandfather said that Burl was lazy and always ran up a tab at his store but always paid eventually. Before my mother died, we went for a road trip back to Hunt City and she pointed out where the house stood that Burl Ives had lived in but there were only some bricks left from the foundation on a vacant lot. We went to Burl's grave which was not far from Hunt City and nearly to Oblong Illinois.

  • @sherrybirchall8677
    @sherrybirchall8677 Год назад +2

    This video is very full of minutiae, detail, anda thorough recounting of Burl Ives life, so im betting the part of the title that states that Burl had a tragic death is also clickbait, and not true. I find the actual content about Burl Ives life to be fascinating enough. You didnt need that ridiculous title....ok, mouth cancer is not a good way to go. But, what a life.

  • @davebroders2912
    @davebroders2912 Год назад +9

    After listening to this I love burl Ives even more
    He was able to distinguish the difference between the radical left and real American values even then

  • @maxinehuebner7322
    @maxinehuebner7322 Год назад +1

    Too bad that Burl Ives needs to be put down
    I like him with Haley Milles in Polly Anna. He sang The Ugly Bug Ball. He was a delightful actor and singer.😅🎶🎶🎶🐛🐛🎶🍄🇱🇷

  • @deanframe9095
    @deanframe9095 Год назад +2

    Burl lves, and Edmund Fitzgerald are my favorites

  • @richardmcleod1930
    @richardmcleod1930 Год назад +8

    Odd no mention was made of Burl Ives having reached the 33rd Degree status with the Scottish Rite.

  • @trimule
    @trimule Год назад +7

    My God, I HATE these AI robot narratives. The "ill-loose-treus town hall". Just hire your bum of a brother in law for $20 to read the narration. They are getting better but that worries and scares me even more. Watch the "60 Minutes" story (Oct 8 2023) about AI and listen to the "Father of AI" scientist's dire warnings about what he has (and now seriously regrets) created.

  • @chips1a
    @chips1a 6 месяцев назад

    As a huge metal fan, I have to get my Burl Ives fix every so often.

  • @cliffbungalow9373
    @cliffbungalow9373 Год назад +3

    That album cover is terrifying

  • @peterwerner835
    @peterwerner835 Год назад +3

    I thought his most powerfull performances were as a heavy, Cat on a hot tin roof. Big country.

  • @BrendaMurphy-z6r
    @BrendaMurphy-z6r 2 месяца назад

    Beloved. RIP

  • @TheBuccy
    @TheBuccy 8 месяцев назад

    I daw a complete set of his songs in a huge folder in the local HMV record store.
    I regret not buying it.

  • @WVF112469
    @WVF112469 Год назад +2

    He looks like the guy in the cartoon with Yukon Cornelius

  • @custodialmark
    @custodialmark Год назад +1

    i/we followed him early 60's. before i knew my dad, J Ferd, idolized him and when sister conected a call in request for radio show, said dedicated to him fave song/Waffaring stranger. Dad said met at presidential dinner for soldiers, i not got date but recording should be in library of his , mountian music buddies in , motor pool.infantry besides the other military bands,choir, and Burle Ives. but headliner was Jubilee singers. i do many tune of or like him in my practice of my Repyouguitar...other family friend passed think knew of him and Pete. Banjoist Billie Faire. ?

  • @patsianni4371
    @patsianni4371 Год назад +3

    Mr. Ives was America personified!

  • @johnnnoise
    @johnnnoise 9 месяцев назад +1

    his Dylan covers were tragic

  • @nomadpi1
    @nomadpi1 Год назад +9

    Burl Ives was a patriotic American, hence his rejection of the American Communistic Party lines and their American shill, Pete Seeger. Burl Ives was a multi-talented artist. I grew up hearing his voice singing folk music and seeing him perform in motion pictures. He was superb at both venues.

    • @sandramorey2529
      @sandramorey2529 Год назад +6

      Seeger was no shil for anyone. He, too, left the party when it became clear that it wasn't what he had thought it was. Pete stood for working people, the underdog, women's rights. He
      did a huge service when he created a movement to clean up the Hudson river in the 80's & now it is swimmable. Both of these men were remarkable and those of us who sing their music can't thank them enough for their service.

  • @scronx
    @scronx Год назад +4

    It really is an actual untruth when you use a headline like that. I don't remember you using the word communist here?

  • @veganwally
    @veganwally 3 месяца назад

    Born in Hunt City Illinois.

  • @gibbogle
    @gibbogle Год назад +1

    I didn't learn what party he became disenchanted with.

  • @JudeNance
    @JudeNance 11 месяцев назад

    He went to DANCE ON THE WIND BECAUSE LOVE NEVER DIES. 🎉

  • @micealhome6363
    @micealhome6363 Год назад +1

    No mention of his movie roles? Where was he born? Which “party” didn” t live up to his ideals? Why leave this detail out?

  • @goonbelly5841
    @goonbelly5841 Год назад +4

    "There ain't nothin' more powerful than the odor of mendacity!"
    -- Harvey 'Big Daddy' Pollitt

  • @graveeverystep
    @graveeverystep 10 месяцев назад +1

    @7 mins 19-20 seconds: you said, “Burt Ives”. The correct first name is: BURL

  • @normanleach5427
    @normanleach5427 Год назад +2

    B.I. was also a tough SOB. Undoubtably genteel, but an undominable will.

  • @bruiser4638
    @bruiser4638 3 месяца назад

    He lived to 85. Just how bad of a "tragic ending" is up for interpretation

  • @itsgoingtobeok-justbreathe4808
    @itsgoingtobeok-justbreathe4808 8 месяцев назад

    Sorry...i missed what is the "tragic ending" part? He died at age 85 after living a full and successful life.

  • @thecowfy
    @thecowfy Год назад +3

    If Seeger was alive today no doubt he would champion the palistinien terrorists, As good a person as he was , his naivity was that much greater. A wonderful artist,& a true shlomeil.

  • @joeracioppi7771
    @joeracioppi7771 Год назад +1

    Tragic ending??

  • @charles-i1m
    @charles-i1m 6 месяцев назад

    Was it he who sang... Pearly shells on the sea shore?/

  • @paulsmodels
    @paulsmodels Год назад +3

    Very interesting, and talented man, but your narration is impossible to listen to for no more than a couple minutes, and leaves a lot to be desired.

  • @namj8145
    @namj8145 Год назад +1

    A decent overview of his life, nothing earth shattering. But the tin-ny, jagged voice of the narration is jarring to listen to. I'm guessing it's an AI generated thing? A slight accent, but I don't think any actual accent would repeatedly say "ill-loose-strious", or melodic as "mella-dick". So many of these homemade docs always lose something when they don't use a real voice actor, or someone who can just read enjoyably.

  • @chuckhodges5584
    @chuckhodges5584 Год назад +2

    Glad he wasn't a far left loon.

  • @SPDLC
    @SPDLC Год назад +1

    "Renowned for his booming bass-baritone voice" ... yeah, I don't think so. Tenor.

  • @johngore7744
    @johngore7744 Год назад +5

    This narrator is awful AI. can’t say ‘ing’ only ‘in’ and saying he ‘toured his vast homeland’ sounds like their talking about ‘mother’ Russia. My god how bad / dangerous will AI get?

    • @martinphilip8998
      @martinphilip8998 Год назад

      These “voices” make me ill. But if I was an enterprising Cypriot living in Prague I might try this too. As those tortured animals who served as phonograph needles for The Flintstones would say, “It’s a living.” I turned to this story to see if the rumor is true that Ives didn’t like children. I mentioned this to a family that was related to him. They strongly denied it. So there must have been something to it. 😆

    • @martinphilip8998
      @martinphilip8998 Год назад

      These “voices” make me ill. But if I was an enterprising Cypriot living in Prague I might try this too. As those tortured animals who served as phonograph needles for The Flintstones would say, “It’s a living.”
      I turned to this story to see if the rumor is true that Ives didn’t like children. I mentioned this to a family that was related to him. They strongly denied it. So there must have been something to it. 😆

    • @appledoreman
      @appledoreman Год назад +1

      "Illoostrious" got to me.

    • @alicethephoenix4766
      @alicethephoenix4766 Год назад

      @@martinphilip8998 might you be confusing him with W. C. Fields who famously hated working with children?

    • @martinphilip8998
      @martinphilip8998 Год назад

      @@alicethephoenix4766 Fields was envious of the attention Baby Leroy got. It was actually in the obit I read for Ives. I met someone who married into that family and she swore that it wasn’t true. She seemed angry that I’d even been half aware.

  • @iscout61kenney10
    @iscout61kenney10 5 месяцев назад

    if pete seeger could forgive burl for what he did and became, so can i. thanks pete, thanks burl.

  • @theSnakeDoctor
    @theSnakeDoctor Год назад +1

    good morgen freeman impersonation

  • @Canoe571
    @Canoe571 10 месяцев назад

    the first attempt to access this video put me on a 3.5 minute ad for some fat burning concoction a fat woman had invented. There was no place to click "Skip."

  • @danemoreno88
    @danemoreno88 10 месяцев назад

    I don’t understand why people with Great singing voices smoke so stupid

  • @donaldleroy6502
    @donaldleroy6502 Месяц назад

    I don't know if it's true, nor do I know how to verify if it's true. I'd heard a story years ago that said during a performance that he got so angry with a heckler that he busted him in the head with his 🎸 😮😂

  • @Brad-gk9jd
    @Brad-gk9jd 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm glad that he rejected Communism!

  • @soaringvulture
    @soaringvulture Год назад +3

    Is this a very natural-sounding machine-made voice that almost pronounces words correctly? Or just some guy who don't know English?

    • @LillyMarz777
      @LillyMarz777 Год назад +2

      Some guy that don't know English? 😂

    • @DH-ve5bl
      @DH-ve5bl Год назад +2

      It mispronounced “illustrious” twice.

    • @LillyMarz777
      @LillyMarz777 Год назад +1

      @@DH-ve5bl He misprounces a lot of things.

    • @elisabethvalade9866
      @elisabethvalade9866 Год назад +1

      A machine. Blah!!!

    • @TonyWhite22351
      @TonyWhite22351 Год назад

      Just like the commenter who doesn’t know English !

  • @stillme9171
    @stillme9171 Год назад +2

    He ratted out Pete Seeger

  • @Chucky-y3u
    @Chucky-y3u 11 месяцев назад

    Was he a racist?!? We wanna know!!

  • @misfitsailor
    @misfitsailor Год назад +4

    illustrious
    ĭ-lŭs′trē-əs