jazzoLOG: The Hi-Lo's I Presume |
Category: Dreams 17 comments 26 Jul 2006 @ 08:52 by dempstress : Hi JazzoStarted the day listening to the Hi-Los in my dressing-gown on lovely sunny morning on honeymoon. Thanks. 26 Jul 2006 @ 09:03 by jazzolog : Honeymoon! You didn't tell me you were running off for such an activity! I thought this just was vacation. Fluster, fluster! Well...if you two have any kids, we're finished! "Keep Your Sunnyside Up" flashed immediately to mind, which is an old tune the Hi-Lo's used to do. "If you have 9 sons in a row, Baseball teams make money you know." How many players on a rugby team? Anyway, glad you made it to a computer. Been thinking about you and mailing a couple of things. Card definitely on the way!! Sincere congratulations and best wishes. 26 Jul 2006 @ 20:54 by i2i : Life is just a bowl of Cherries ;-) {link:http://206.180.232.42/clips/ram/BowlOfCherries.ram|link} Life is just a bowl of cherries Don't take it serious, Life's too mysterious You work, You save, You worry so But you can't take your dough When you go, go, go So keep repeating "It's the berries." The strongest oak must fall The sweet things in life To you were just loaned So how can you lose What you've never owned... 26 Jul 2006 @ 23:23 by jazzolog : Repeat Life Line Life is just a bowl of cherries... So live and laugh Ya know...like Ha HA Ha HAAAH live and laugh at it all! 27 Jul 2006 @ 00:09 by i2i : Laugh is no joke Aristotle noted that "only the human animal laughs". Although, research now suggests that "neural circuits for laughter exist in very ancient regions of the brain, and ancestral forms of play and laughter existed in other animals eons before we humans came along with our 'ha-ha-has' and verbal repartee." "Life is the laugh of the actual in the face of nothing. There is so much to sense, think, and emote about, so much life to endure, such fullness of good and bad---and all of it, suddenly, nothing. Only laughter fits the gap. And he laughs luminously with the great swell of being nothing." —A.A.Attanasio, Solis 27 Jul 2006 @ 00:57 by i2i : But seriously... I like the Hi-Lo's. Some of the pieces that they interpreted, including "Life Is A Bowl Of Cherries," can be found {link:http://www.singers.com/jazz/hi-los.html|here}, along with a few RealAudio sound files. Francis's favorite is {link:http://206.180.232.42/clips/ram/hilosblack.ram|Black is the Color of my True Love's Hair}. It would of course - the Celtic nostalgic streak in him and all, you know. I don't mind. Though I suspect he likes it best when sung by some cute Irish lass like Eimear Quinn, lol. 27 Jul 2006 @ 07:07 by jazzolog : What Is The Color Of i2i's Hair? Life Is Just A Bowl Of Cherries was an old song when The Hi-Lo's decided to sorta jazz it up. Rudy Vallee had the original hit with it in 1931, which makes it a song of the Great Depression---along with Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? and We're In The Money! You get the idea. Jaye P. Morgan had revived the song a couple years before these guys did it. The Hi-Lo's had a vaudeville streak in them that sometimes got way out of hand. See if you can find their version of The Desert Song sometime. The song made me nervous from the first time I heard it. Its philosophy escapes me totally. I agree that life is a very pleasant experience...but I think viewing it strictly as a bowl of cherries to be sweetly savored, while the rest of the world struggles on, ultimately will leave you in the pits. 27 Jul 2006 @ 17:43 by i2i : Eye of the beholder What Is The Color Of i2i's Hair? Well black it isn't, lol, but, as I said, I am not jealous. Besides, Eimear Quinn is a blonde (sometimes) - so I don't feel so bad about the whole thing ;-) Sorry about the bowl of cherries here. Didn't mean to make you uneasy, or get your goat or anything - I realized my mistake as soon as I read your response. The meaning of the song—to me—is all a matter of how one looks at it. I do not look at it as a "don't worry, be happy" kind of a song or, as you put it, as just simply being about sweetly savoring one's bowl of cherries "while the rest of the world struggles on." This is how I like to look at it: Life is just a bowl of cherries Don't take it serious, Life's too {link:http://www.newciv.org/nl/newslog.php/_v97/__show_article/_a000097-000050.htm|mysterious} You {link:http://www.newciv.org/nl/newslog.php/_v97/__show_article/_a000097-000106.htm|work}, You save, You worry so {link:http://www.newciv.org/nl/newslog.php/_v97/__show_article/_a000097-000090.htm|But you can't take your dough} When you go, go, go So keep repeating "{link:http://ming.tv/flemming2.php/__show_article/_a000010-000881.htm|It's the berries}". The strongest oak must fall The sweet things in life To you were just loaned So {link:http://www.newciv.org/nl/newslog.php/_v97/__show_article/_a000097-000060.htm|how can you lose} {link:http://www.newciv.org/nl/newslog.php/_v97/__show_article/_a000097-000088.htm|What you've never owned}... Reg: Clare Fischer (Early on in his career—jazzolog's high school years—he worked with the Hi-Lo's for four years or so as a pianist and an arranger: {link:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clare_Fischer|link}) I had never heard of Clare Fischer before I saw him on stage and was admonished by my musician companions that I was privileged to see one of jazz's greatest artists up close. After the concert, my friends introduced me to him and I actually shook his hand and said, "Pleased to meet you." Sometimes it's better if we are innocent in the face of greatness. This was some time in the early 80s in Hollywood, California. 28 Jul 2006 @ 09:37 by jazzolog : The Beard Of The Goat Actually goat-self wasn't involved at all until we got deeper into this exchange. Now I'm coming up with gratitude for helping me rethink this whole article. It wasn't just you, i2i. My mother-in-law, of the same generation as the original members of The Hi-Lo's, replied privately that she didn't hear songs on the radio the way I did as a kid. They couldn't afford a radio, living as they did in the Pennsylvania coalfields, where the children walked home from school by way of the railroad tracks picking up fallen coal to keep warm and cook with through the winter. That was the Depression. I think maybe the songs of that period, which this group used to lovingly parody (and there many of them http://www.thehi-los.com/songlist/ ) were in the air when they were little...and they celebrated that kind of connection. I had a distaste for the music my parents liked to have on the radio and stereo, but eventually I have come to honor it---and to my wife's wonder and sometimes dismay play those old records myself on some days. In the comfort and security of the 1950s the spirit of exploration and novelty flourished. Sorry if the point isn't clear: my explanation is the household is uproaring as we prepare to leave for New York in a few minutes for a Scandinavian Festival there this weekend. SKOAL! 27 Nov 2006 @ 10:15 by jazzolog : Additions/Corrections Hi And Lo I've been meaning to update this article since I posted it over at thehi-los.com. What I learned there was very polite people, who know a heck of a lot more than I do, are quick to set my record straight, center on the turntable, and press some of the warps out. Here's a wonderful comment anyone would be happy to get from a contributor known as stringbean~~~ "Nice piece on the group. If I may here's my two cents---from someone who has done a fair amount of research on the Hi-Lo's, including interviewing Gene and trading lots of emails with Clare Fischer, Dave Gold (co-founder of Gold Star Studios, where the Hi-Lo's did all of their Starlite LP's and possibly some Columbia things), and other musical notables who were active in the LA music scene during the 1950s and 60s. "First, let me say that it’s difficult to find much written/photo/video material on the guys (suffice to say, Bobby has done a great job putting this site together). Yes the Hi-Lo’s did do some 30-odd Rosie shows but their 'real' music spots on each show lasted a mere 2-3 minutes. Much of the time they wore silly hats, jumped around in skits and sang background for assorted guests. Some, admittedly, were very good, like Matt Dennis. They did a couple of Spike Jones shows, a Nat Cole show, and a Sinatra appearance in late 1959, just a few months after Don Shelton joined. There is a rumor that they appeared on one of Nat Hentoff’s Jazz Casual shows or even one of the early Playboy After Dark syndicated shows, but I’ve never been able to corroborate that info. They do appear in the movie Calypso Heatwave where they sing two songs from the 'Suddenly' LP. There are also very brief appearances in a couple of other early 1960 movies. Unfortunately there seems to be very little in the way of concert reviews---whether it’s performances during their salads days from 1953-1963, or from the so-called retro days of the 1980s and early 1990s. "In your piece, I couldn't tell if you meant that Frank Comstock was 'with' the Hi-Lo’s for 15 years or Les Brown’s band for fifteen years. If you meant the former, Frank’s tenure as orchestral arranger for the Lo’s lasted only from 1955 ('Listen') to 1958 (Love Nest)---a total of eight recordings. Sadly he never did another recording with the group after ‘Nest. If you meant that Comstock was with Brown for fifteen years then I misunderstood. "Also, in the summer 1959, Bob Strasen didn’t 'quietly leave' the quartet. He was fired, and until this day no one knows, or will say, exactly why. There are theories about Stras having voice problems (however, Clare Fischer says he is sure that Stras wasn’t having throat issues), or that from a vocal point of view he was the weak link in the group. But if it’s the later, then why was Stras a member for NINE records and countless live appearances from 1953 to 1959? Even Comstock says although he didn’t know “the Bob’s” or Clark well, that during the recording sessions he worked on, the four singers were very professional and obviously well rehearsed. "I think you gave Don Shelton feint praise in your piece. Gene, Morse, and Clark were all solid sight-readers, and right on pitch---as were most of the top studio vocalists at that time (Marnie Nixon, Randy Van Horne’s crew, etc). However, as a seasoned LA musician and studio contractor who was active in LA during the 1950s & 60s told me, Don was simply bionic (musically speaking). He could literally sight-sing anything nearly perfectly the first time. Combine that in-tune voice with frightening range, great projection, very little vibrato, and a bit of swing to his delivery, and you have an incredible musician---which all of the members of the group agreed upon. "Lastly, you mentioned that after their second MPS LP in the early 1980s the group sort of faded (my word) away. Actually their so-called rebirth happened as follows. In 1978, fourteen years after they last sang together, Gene received a call from Jimmy Lyons, the founder of the Monterey Jazz Festival. Lyons asked if the group could get together for a reunion as a favor to him. They rehearsed, it sounded great, and they subsequently rocked Monterey that year. At the time Hans Georg Brunner-Schwer, the owner of MPS, was recording Singers Unlimited and of course knew and loved the Hi-Lo’s. He asked Gene about recording and the group did 'Back Again' with Rob McConnell’s band. They did several more 'reunions' at Monterey (plus a few other selected concerts) before they did their second MPS LP 'Now', which was to be their last recording. However, in the mid-1980s the group decided to begin ramping up the number of appearances they would do and this continued right through 1992 when they did their last concert at a benefit for the Betty Ford Clinic in Palm Springs, CA. Four years later, in 1996, when the Clinic asked the group to do another concert, the Hi-Lo’s came out of retirement to do it one more time. "Thanks for sharing your piece with all of us. I hope my two cents didn’t wear out my welcome. ‘Bean" http://www.thehi-los.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=446 As I replied, the most confounding part of Bean's comment concerns my error about Frank Comstock's arranging tenure. I immediately scoured the Net looking for any indication that I knew what I was talking about, but 15 years just ain't so. I did find a fascinating 3 1/2 hour interview with Frank Comstock where it says, "From 1943 through 2002, Comstock was responsible for about 90% of Brown's book." Whew! But of more interest to us, there are extensive references to his work for the Hi-Lo's, especially since neither Frank nor Puerling had formal musical training. Apparently Gene wrote the guys' parts on 4 individual lines, and left it to the arranger to figure out what chords would work well. Comstock doesn't complain about the difficulty at all, praising Puerling as the greatest vocal arranger he ever heard. The interview structure is a bit complicated but if you're interested, take a look~~~ http://salticid.nmc.csulb.edu/cgi-bin/WebObjects/OralAural.woa/wa/interview?ww=893&wh=460&pt=jaws&bi=1&prj=ajazz002&col=a1004&ser=nwr001 24 Feb 2007 @ 01:33 by george j. karras @65.101.220.193 : hi lo's hi, saw the hi lo's at the university of colorado. they were great! just with a piano in 59 or 60. looking for photo's can you help!.......george 24 Feb 2007 @ 01:50 by george j. karras @65.101.220.193 : hi lo's hi, i forgot to say in my front-room i have a framed picture of "under glass" signed by william claxton. gene prueling was the best, but one of the best songs was with a different arranger! [sixteen tons].......george 24 Feb 2007 @ 11:05 by jazzolog : Re: Hi-Lo's Thanks for the comment, George. Sixteen Tons! I never heard them do that one. The site I mentioned above http://www.thehi-los.com/ doesn't have a lot of pictures but there are links galore...and of course you can try Google Image. I had trouble finding one I thought good enough to illustrate this article. As you'll see on the splash page of thehi-los.com they've been thinking about shutting down the site...so hurry on over. 28 Mar 2008 @ 10:15 by jazzolog : A Death In The Hi-Lo's I've just heard from my online friend, bassist Phil Schroeder, that Gene Puerling died on Tuesday. So far I've seen no reference to his passing at Google News or other jazz forums. The brief reference Wikipedia has for him does verify it. Gene's influence went far beyond his work with---and really management of---The Hi-Lo's...and even jazz group singing. His formation of Singers Unlimited moved him more into a pop setting, without losing for a moment his impeccable taste (usually) and astonishing harmonic sensibility. The group's sound, through multi-tracking, was choral, and so it is not surprising that a whole new generation of singers became attracted. And best of all, for those of us in an inexplicably small audience of devotees, a new form of choral jazz began to spread. Dave Lambert had experimented earlier, but it was Gene Puerling who risked actually maintaining a group with a larger sound like this. He continued to arrange for choirs the rest of his life, perhaps most notably for Chanticleer, whose very sound and range surely was influenced by The Hi-Lo's. You can find a Puerling chart or 2 of all of Chanticleer's albums that have a Great American Songbook theme. He contributed settings of Silent Night and The Christmas Song for last year's Let It Snow release. 29 Mar 2008 @ 10:05 by jazzolog : A Note From Michele Weir Received last night~~~ Hi Richard, thanks, and yes, the word is spreading fast. Gene was so important to us all. FYI, here’s an email sent to a few folks from Clark Burroughs this morning: Don Shelton phoned me last night with the news. My old friend, most admired mentor and lifelong near-brother passed into the next existence night before last. I wish with all my being that I could stand next to him one more time. There were times when we were one voice, somehow larger than our two voices. His genius informed my entire life. His harmonies are embedded in my bones, and his humor followed me through more than six decades. I'll always love him. Clark Burroughs __________________________________________ Michele Weir Visit the MichMusic Store (arrangements, books, and CDs): http://www.micheleweir.com (or http://www.michmusic.com) 3 Apr 2008 @ 09:49 by jazzolog : Obits At Last For Gene Puerling Perhaps the news services finally caught up with the death of Gene Puerling last week because some obits are beginning to appear. The LA Times was the first yesterday, and is notable for including the wonderful comment Bing Crosby made about The Hi-Lo's, {link:http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-puerling2apr02,1,1634219.story} but this morning's column in the San Francisco Chronicle is even better, as Jon Hendricks is quoted. I left a comment online there, because of course Don Shelton didn't come in for Clark Burroughs. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article/article?f=/c/a/2008/04/02/BAUGVUHDD.DTL 29 Apr 2016 @ 08:18 by Bandar Togel @103.12.162.4 : brilliant! I would like to share this ar Togel Online Singapore Togel Online Hongkong Bandar Togel Singapore Bandar Togel Togel Online Terpercaya Bandar Togel Online Terpercaya Togel Online Agen Togel Online Terpercaya Agen Togel Online Other entries in Dreams 2 Nov 2008 @ 11:55: Sing Out The Vote 21 Jun 2008 @ 11:14: My Piece Of The Pie 16 Mar 2008 @ 11:12: Hope 30 Jan 2008 @ 10:27: Making The Best Of The Toxic 25 Nov 2007 @ 11:18: A Mournful Thanksgiving 1 Aug 2007 @ 13:19: A Year Without Tagliabue 8 May 2007 @ 08:58: Death Of A Bebop Wife 10 Mar 2007 @ 13:08: I Am The Middle Class 22 Dec 2006 @ 09:54: Christmastime's A-Comin' 4 Nov 2006 @ 13:02: Phil Mattson Brings Us Jazz Choirs
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