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5.075 Ft
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1. | Charley My Boy
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2. | You're Driving Me Crazy
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3. | My Baby Just Cares for Me
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4. | Chilli Bom Bom
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5. | My Mama's in Town
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6. | Words
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7. | China Boy
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8. | Ukulele Lady
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9. | My Blue Heaven
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10. | Oh, Baby!
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11. | I Wonder What's Become of Joe
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12. | Take Me Over
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13. | Carole
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14. | The Mooche
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15. | Vo Do Do De O Blues
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16. | Seven & Eleven
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17. | East St. Louis Toodle Oo
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18. | Pleasant Moments
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19. | Pasadena
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20. | A Japanese Dream
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21. | Deep Henderson
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22. | Ain't She Sweet
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23. | Sugar
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24. | Sugar
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25. | Sugar
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26. | From Russia With Love
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27. | Jimmy
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28. | Thoroughly Modern Millie
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Jazz / Early Jazz, Trad Jazz, British Dance Bands
Recorded: 1960-63
Capt. Cepas Howard (tp, eup) Alan Swainston Cooper (cl, bs cl, so sax) Phillip Harrison (alto & bar sax) Sheik Haroun (al sax, tb, cor) Canon Colin Bowles (pno) John Gieves-Watson (bjo, spo) Franklin D. Paverty sou Professor Brian Innes (gr jazz per kit) Whispering Paul McDowell (meg voc.)
SEE ALSO LBOOK01 'A LONG WAY FROM PASADENA' THE LIFE & TIMES OF THE TEMPS AS TOLD BY BRIAN INNES.
This collection contains the usual favorites such as Home In Pasadena and You're Driving Me Crazy. There is also a vast array of colorful characters: Charley My Boy, the Ukulele Lady, Carole, Jimmy, the China Boy, that epitome of melancholia, Deep Henderson and, of course, the Thoroughly Modern Millie. Connoisseurs of the Cinematic Art will not that From Russia With Love possesses the original lyric which pre-dated that used in the famous talking picture of the same name.
The Temperance Seven
Active Decades: '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s Genre: Jazz Styles: Comedy, Early Jazz, Trad Jazz, British Dance Bands
After decades of music hall and pantomime in Britain, the link between various forms of jazz and various forms of comedy (many of them low) was well-forged indeed. This link was very well understood by the people involved with The Goon Show, a BBC Radio comedy show starring Peter Sellers, Harry Secombe and Spike Milligan, with the occasional appearance from Michael Bentine -- this kind of surreal comedy would give rise to the Alberts, the Scaffold and the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, with the influences traveling across the Atlantic to inspire such bent comedy-with-brass outfits as the Roto Rooter Good Time Christmas Band. The Temperance Seven first appeared in 1957, led by the flamboyant Alexander Hitchcock Galloway, who provided vocals and periodic bellows and commentary through a brass megaphone. The band had some direct links with the Alberts, in that members of the expanded version of the Alberts (known as the Massed Alberts) found their way to the Temperance Seven. Ted Wood, brother of Rolling Stones member Ron Wood, was a member for some time. In 1966, they appeared in The Wrong Box, providing some of the more hilarious moments in the film. While the band has, in its various lineups, recorded a number of albums, they achieved only a few hits in Britain -- although these included a #1 with "You're Driving Me Crazy." Other chart successes included "Pasadena" and "Chili Bom-Bom," a song so pervasive that it approached the saturation of a national fad. The band continues to perform and record as of 1998. --- Steven McDonald, All Music Guide |
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