Posts Tagged ‘Pat Suzuki’

WARMING MUSIC FOR A COLD JANUARY.

Saturday, January 31st, 2026

     Today is January 30th and I’m going to try and sneak in another blahg before the end of the month and no, before you ask, I have not finished writing “HOW ABOUT YOU, DELBERT ROBINSON?”  I’ve stalled on that story but then again I’ve picked up on stories sometimes a year and half later or even ten years later.  I’ll get there eventually.  When I was driving to work today, I glanced at the temperature display and saw it was -21c and that converts to -5.8 Fahrenheit or, in other words, it’s damn cold out there.  I don’t usually dream about warmer climates at this time of the year but I like to listen to some music that warms the soul.  This blahg is going to offer up some music that always takes my mind off the cold.  I hope it does it for you, too. 

     First, let me show you a video I filmed three days ago that shows you what it looks like in my neck of the woods:

I was also suffering from a headache that afternoon, which was worse the next day.  I took the 28th off and slept and stayed warm.  I was back at work yesterday and today and I’ll tell you it’s hard to get motivated when it’s this cold.  In my bathroom, I have an old iPhone I’ve converted to a music player and listen to it when I’m showering and shaving in the morning.  I keep everything on shuffle so you never know what you’re going to hear.  This morning, in the rotation, I heard two great songs from Bing Crosby that made my mood better.  One was from the album, “Bing With A Beat” that also featured the great Bob Scobey and his band.  I mentioned this album in a blahg I did about Bob Scobey with the title WHAT ON EARTH IS SCOBEYFAN?  I’m going to offer up two peppy songs from this great record.  The first is “Last Night On The Back Porch.”  It’s a swinger.

 

Another great song from this album that will get your feet tapping is “Mama Loves Papa:”

I mentioned that I heard two songs on my iPhone from Bing.  The second was from the album “Fancy Meeting You Here” that he recorded with Rosemary Clooney. Here’s the title track:

Another great song from this album, and a rocker, is “You Came a Long Way from St. Louis”: 

Both of these albums are available on CD and probably as digital purchases.  Before I move off of Bing, I’ve been thinking about the song “June In January.”  Oh, wouldn’t that be nice.  Here’s a video someone posted of that song.  Here’s the description:  Bing Crosby duets on “June in January” with…Bing Crosby in this clip from Here Is My Heart (1934). Bing also sings the song as the film’s opening number.”

 

   I started to think about the topic of warming songs on my drive in this morning.  One of the songs I thought of was “I Was Made For Sunny Days” by The Weepies.  I used to hear this song a lot playing in the background when I was shopping at a local thrift store.  I always found it infectious and would always sing along.  Instead of offering the recorded version, I thought I would post a live version.  Here are The Weepies (Deb Talan, Steve Tannen, Jon Flaugher) performing “I Was Made for Sunny Days” on a beautiful summer evening at the Britt Festival, Southern Oregon – August 23, 2011. 

Of course, if I’m talking about The Weepies and songs to get you moving, I’d also have to offer up “Be My Thrill.”  Later live versions of this song had The Weepies performing it as a slowed down ballad version.  Both are wonderful but the original album version will get your blood pumping: 

 

   If you’ve read any of my previous blahgs (and if you haven’t then get going on that) then you’ll know I’m not a fan of most modern music.  Now that The Weepies have divorced and broken up, I’ve turned to listening to Scott Mulvahill.  I talked about seeing him live in Toronto and getting the picture below, taken with him.  You can check that out in my blahg, ANOTHER CLASS ACT.

One of Scott M’s most infectious songs, to me, has to be “Joy.”  The music video makes you want to sing along or dance along or something along…your choice. 

I recently came across a version of this song that Scott actually performed on a January date.  This is “Joy” from Paste Studio ATL – Atlanta, GA, on January 22, 2020: 

Another song by Scott Mulvahill that I enjoy is from a video where he performed “Never Going Back Again” with the duo Striking Matches.  I don’t know if it appears on an album anywhere but the video is a great distraction on a cold day. 

 

   Jumping back to some older music, I want to post something from a recent album I received as a late Christmas present.  In a previous blahg, ANOTHER BAKER’S DOZEN MORE FOUND VINYL RECORDS I mentioned that I was hoping to acquire the album, “The Music Man Goes Dixieland” by Jimmy McPartland and his All Stars.  Well, my wife ordered a copy for me for Christmas but it arrived later.  Still, it’s a great record and I really enjoy Jimmy’s vocal on “Ya Got Trouble”:

The first track on the album is one of the jazziest songs.  It’s “Seventy-Six Trombones.”  Unfortunately I couldn’t find a video of just that song but there is a video on YouTube of the full album and I’ll link it below to start at that particular track (I hope):

 

   I have also been listening to a lot of Pat Suzuki lately.  I had a few songs on my iPhone already but I was recently reading about a 2018 release of the Complete Album Series that comprises all of the tracks from her four albums, “The Many Sides of Pat Suzuki,” “Miss Pony Tail,” “Pat Suzuki’s Broadway ’59,” and “Looking at You.”  Here’s the information about the release:  https://www.stagedoorrecords.com/patsuzuki.html.  There are a couple of extra tracks from the Broadway Cast album of Flower Drum Song.  There is also another CD release of Pat Suzuki Singles and Rarities.  I really enjoy her singing and it’s hard to select a single favourite.  “From This Moment On” from her first album, “The Many Sides of Pat Suzuki”, is well worth a listen.

If you want to see a live performance of Pat Suzuki, check her out on this 1958 Frank Sinatra Show clip.  Again, it’s the full show but I’m trying to set the video start where she comes in. 

   I’m going to close out this blahg with something more modern, although the band I’m going to feature broke up in 2013.  I’m a huge fan of the Canadian band Great Big Sea and they had some very lively songs.  If you can’t warm up listening to one of their songs then you’re not listening close enough.  The following video is for their song, “Shine.”  One of the comments posted about the video sums it up:  “Who can’t hear GBS sing without smiling?”  Go ahead and smile!

The last video is also from Great Big Sea.  It’s “When I Am King.”  It’s an uplifting and positive song. 

 

   If you can’t smile after any of these songs then wait a few days until February 2nd and maybe the groundhog will have good news about spring.  We live in hope!

12 MONTHS – 12 RECORDS – 12 SONGS

Wednesday, March 31st, 2021

   This is the blahg that I intended to publish last time.A New Picture of Scott I got a little side-tracked with my mental health and trying to be upbeat.  Mental health is a big thing and for me, music is very important.  I don’t play any instruments but listening to good music is a great tonic.  Over the past 12 months we’ve have a couple of different lock-downs with this pandemic and I’ve spent a great deal of time working from home.  When stores were open I usually hit up local thrift shops and scanned through the record section.  This blahg is devoted to some of my acquisitions over the past year.  Most of these came from thrift stores with the odd one ordered online or picked up at a local DVD store that also sells some used records.

   Many of the albums mentioned in this blahg have not had CD releases so many will be new to you as they were to me.  Album covers usually attract my attention first and I thought it would be important to include those covers here.  More important, is the back covers because you can usually find out more information about the artists by reading the liner notes.  I’ve included good sized photos of the back covers where you can make out full details of the information on the rear covers.  Click on each photo to view larger sized images.

   The first up is an album called “Clarinet Gumbo” by Barney Bigard And His Orchestra.  This was released in 1976 on the RCA label

Clarinet Gumbo

Barney Bigard Clarinet Gumbo Rear Cover

Here’s the title track, “Clarinet Gumbo”:

 

  Next up is the album “Dixie On The Rocks” by Dave Remington and The Dixie Six.  This album came out on the Vee Jay label in 1960.  The group looked like they were having a lot of fun so I decided to purchase the album

Dave Remington and The Dixie Six - Dixie On The Rocks

"Dixie On The Rocks" by Dave Remington and The Dixie Six Rear Cover

The fun track here is “Take Me Out To The Ballgame”:

 

   The previous two albums were thrift store finds and here’s another one from one of the same stores. It’s The Kenny Clarke Francy Boland Big Band with their 1965 album “Now Hear Our Meanin’ ” released in North America on the Columbia Label.

 The Kenny Clarke Francy Boland Big Band ‎– Now Hear Our Meanin'

The Kenny Clarke Francy Boland Big Band with their 1965 album "Now Hear Our Meanin' " Rear Cover

This track is a real swinger. It’s “Johnny One Note”:

 

   I think I acquired most of these records at the same time as I remember the following record was purchased at the same time and location as the above albums. This album is a 1962 reissue on the Trip Jazz label of the 1959 original release of “Buddy Johnson Wails”. The original issue had been on the Mercury label.

Buddy Johnson Wails

"Buddy Johnson Wails" Rear Cover

The track I chose from this album is “Please Mr. Johnson”. From the album jacket, “His sister, Ella, another unaffected singer, was always a major attraction, and she was responsible for several of the band’s biggest hits, among them “Please Mr. Johnson”, which she recorded for the first time at the age of fourteen while still in high school…”Please Mr. Johnson” is recreated here, with sister Ella on hand to sing it.”

 

   Here’s a real oddity.  This is the 1977 album “The Pucker And Valve Society Band”.  This album is like listening to the best of or strange songs by a marching band.  It’s fun nonetheless.

The Pucker And Valve Society Band

The Pucker And Valve Society Band

The track I have selected here is “I Was Kaiser Bill’s Bat Man”.

 

   In a previous blahg, THE RAMBLE UNPACKED, I wrote about an album I picked up before Christmas by Jonah Jones, with the title “and now in person Jonah Jones.”  That was a live album but many months before purchasing that album, I picked up “Jumpin’ With Jonah” by the same artist.

Jumpin' With Jonah

Jumpin' With Jonah rear cover

The song I have selected from this album is the first track on side one of the album.  The song is “No Moon At All” which is a song I’ve enjoyed by singers such as Doris Day and Mel Torme.

 

    I cannot for the life of me remember what inspired me to purchase the following album. I know I had to order it from a reseller on the www.discogs.com website but it’s enjoyable. This album, “Fireworks” was released by the Weatherbird Jazzband in 1982.

Weatherbird Jazzband - Fireworks

Fireworks rear cover

The track I have selected is the title track “Fireworks.”

 

   Now we get back to a vocal performance. This is from an artist I did not know but when I saw the album I thought I would give the album a chance. The artist is Betty Roché and the album is “Singin’ & Swingin’ ” from 1961.

 Betty Roché ‎– Singin' & Swingin'

 Betty Roché ‎– Singin' & Swingin' rear cover

There are quite a few standards on this album so the selection to offer here was a tough choice. I decided to go with a song that I have enjoyed by Frank Sinatra from his “L.A. Is My Lady” album. The song is “Until The Real Thing Comes Along” but it’s all Betty Roché.

  

   The next group is a Canadian band.  In fact this album was recorded live, November 14, 1975 at Olivet United Church, in Hamilton, Ontario.  The band is The Washingtons and the album is “50 Years Together”.

The Washingtons - 50 Years Together

 

50 Years Together rear cover

The album had quite a few scuffs and skipped in a couple of places but I was able to clean it and get a nice recording from it. Again, here’s another title track with The Washingtons performing “Fifty Years Together”.

 

    It’s time for another vocal selection. Here we have the great and talented Pat Suzuki. The album is “Pat Suzuki’s Broadway ’59”

Pat Suzuki's Broadway '59

 Pat Suzuki ‎– Broadway '59 Rear Cover

Again, the selection was tough. Pat Suzuki performs song great tunes from such great Broadway shows as Flower Drum Song, West Side Story, My Fair Lady, Bells Are Ringing, and The Music Man. I decided to go with a song from a Broadway show with which I wasn’t familiar. The Broadway show is “First Impressions” and the song is “I Feel Sorry For The Boy”

 

    It’s back to the jazz again with another thrift store purchase. I didn’t know this artist either but I seem to have good luck taking a chance on these purchases. The album is “The Don Elliott Quintet” by The Don Elliott Quintet from 1954. I know the album title isn’t very original.

The Don Elliott Quintet

The Don Elliott Quintet Rear Cover

There were some nice tracks to choose from but I selected the second track this time from the first side. Here’s the The Don Elliott Quintet with “Five O’Clock Whistle”:

 

  The last album is one I really enjoy. It’s got a nice swing to it and the artist was again unknown to me. The artist is Harold Betters and the album is “Out Of Sight & Sound”

 Harold Betters ‎– Out Of Sight & Sound

 Harold Betters ‎– Out Of Sight & Sound Rear Cover

I chose the song “Sweetheart” from this album because right from the get-go it grabbed me. Another great thrift store find.

 

   That’s the twelve records for this time.  Do yourself a favour and seek out some of these artists or take a chance on some unknown artists when you find their records in a thrift store bin.  You might just be surprised!  Stay tuned.  I have another batch of records from the past year featuring some more great artists.  Lucky you.  Lucky me.