User:Eurodog/sandbox40


 * Voicing the popular: On The Subjects of Popular Music, by Richard Middleton, Routledge (2006);


 * Discography of Western Swing and Hot String Bands, 1928–1942, by Cary Ginell & Kevin Coffey, Greenwood Press (2001); ; Discographies


 * Mark My Words: Great Quotations and The Stories Behind Them, by Nigel Rees, Barnes & Noble (1997, 2002), pg. 229;


 * more analylsis


 * blog


 * lawsuit
 * same lawsuit


 * Sentimental Journey: Intimate Portraits of America's Great Popular Songs, 1920–1945, by Marvin E. Paymer & Don E. Post, Two Bytes Pub. (1998), pps. 23–24;

Historical notes
The lyrics in the second chorus, "There's a new way the people get their Booze," is a reference to the Prohibition in the U.S., enacted January 17, 1920.

Structure
The song was composed in a standard thirty-two-bar form. That is, each verse (or "chorus") is in AABA form — an eight-bar "A melody" played twice, then an eight-bar "B melody" (commonly called a "bridge"), finishing with the eight-bar "A melody." Harmonically, the song, when first written, showcased the use of dominant 7ths, a jazz voicing that defined early jazz (early 20th century), and nowadays, by itself (without further extensions), and stands as a hallmark for traditional (old time) jazz. The song's chord progression runs through a circle of 5ths, to wit:

Versions

 * Ethel Waters: Instrumental intro (6 bars); Singing of 1st verse (A theme; 16 bars) (actually A theme x 2; 8 bars apiece); Singing of the 1st chorus (B theme; 16 bars) (actually B theme x 2; 8 bars apiece); Instrumental repeat of the chorus; Singing of the 1st Chorus; end. (70 bars, total).

Plates

 * Plate: 9105-3
 * Mark Bro Edition
 * Edward B. Marks
 * 223-225 W. 46th St
 * New York


 * Cover: (photos) Dolores Gray (with Gregory Peck & Lauren Bacall in the background)
 * Plate: 9105-3
 * Edward B. Marks Music Corporation
 * 136 W 52nd St
 * New York


 * Benny Goodman on cover
 * Edward B. Marks Music Corporation
 * RCA Building
 * Radio City
 * Plate: 9105-4
 * BMI
 * Includes additional lyrics by Wilson & Ringle

More discography
Roy Newman (de) and His Boys

Recorded October 1, 1935, Dallas


 * Roy Newman (piano),
 * Jim Boyd (born 1914) (brother of musician Bill Boyd brother) (guitar),
 * Earl Brown (guitar),
 * Ish Erwin (bass),
 * Holly Horton (1892–1944) (clarinet),
 * Walter Kirks (tenor banjo),
 * Randall "Buddy" Neal (guitar),
 * Thurman Neal (fiddle)

Matrix: DAL-196-1

Vocalion 03325 

Hi-Lo Trio
Charles Geraci (1927–1988) was well-known on the North Shore during the 1940s and 1950s as a drummer in the Hi-Lo Trio, which toured New England nightclubs and regularly played in the Wonderland Ballroom in Revere and the former Hurley's and Ocean View clubs. ...


 * Hi-Lo Trio (vocals)
 * With instrumental ensemble
 * Album:
 * Old Tyme Favourites
 * Recorded around 1950
 * Vinnie "Jimmy Cal" Calderone (accordion)
 * Angelo Boncore (1919–2012) (bass)
 * Side B, Track 3
 * Label:
 * Family Library of Recorded Music (Canada)
 * (audio on YouTube) 1007-B (78 rpm)

Hy-Lo Trio

 * The Hy-Lo Trio. Crystal-Tone MK 1004


 * Crystal-Tone Record Co.
 * 1182 Columbus Ave.
 * Boston


 * Crystal-Tone Hits
 * Crystal-Tone Distributors


 * Crystal-Tone Records
 * 120 Boylston St.
 * Boston

Selected Crystal-Tone discography
504

(c. 1947)

John Kiley

A: "For You"

B: "Jalousi"



505

(c. 1947)

A: "Louise"

B: "My Heart Is Still Good"



507

(c. 1947)

John Kiley

A: "Goodnight Sweetheart"

B: "East of the Sun"



507

(c. 1947)

Hy-Lo Trio

A: "Bye-Bye, Blackbird"

B: "Waco Bill"



(c. 1948)

R Davis, D Hicks

"By The Light of the Silvery Moon"

"Cherokee"



512

(c. 1948)

B. Stone

"Mamselle Veronica"

"Ol' Man River"



513

(c. 1948)

P. Clements Trio

A: "After You've Gone"

B: "Side By Side"

</li>

<li>514

(c. 1948)

R. Borden Orchestra

"But Beautiful"

"Paradise"

</li>

<li>515

(c. 1948)

S. Lewis Orchestra

A: "Bottoms Up"

B: "I Made Up My Mind"

</li>

<li>516

(c. 1948)

S. Lewis Orchestra

"I Can't Give You Anything But Love"

"King For A Day"

</li>

<li>517

Released March 1948

Clarence Jackson

The 4 Notes of Rhythm

A: "Poor Butterfly"

B: "Flamingo"

</li>

<li>520

(c. 1948)

R. Borden Orchestra

"I'll Be Seeing You"

"You Were Meant For Me"

</li>

<li>521

Ray Bordon

B: "What Can I Say Dear After I Say I'm Sorry"<li></ol>

<li>501

(c. 1947)

Hy-Lo Trio

MK 1002: "If I Live To Be A Hundred"

"Waco Bill"

</li>

<li>"The Gang"

</li>

<li>MK 1003

(c. 1947)

Hy-Lo Trio

"Charmaine"

</li>

<li>MK 1004

(c. 1947)

Hy-Lo Trio

"Civilization" ("Bongo, Bongo, Bongo")

</li></ol>

Crystal-Tone Records

 * Reference for Crystal-Tone Records
 * More references
 * See Bob Blythe re: Manny Kopelman (sic)
 * See Sutton Records re: Manny Kopelman (sic) (Manuel E. Kopelman?; 1918–1998), a Boston lawyer, who became a rack jobber, producer, investor in labels, and owner of Crystal-Tone. He was into cut-rate sales


 * Kopelman died January 1998


 * Clear-Tone was a Boston label, owned by Manny Koppelman, which also produced some releases by Sabby Lewis And His Orchestra, another Boston area attraction.
 * Clarence Jackson (lead vocal/drums), George Jones (bass), Kurt Treveigne (guitar), Highland Diggs (piano)

References for Alphonse H. Wilson

 * Alphonse H. Wilson's name is inscribed on a vertical-type monument, 10 feet high, 8 feet wide (front face, right margin, 13th row), honoring Catholic Actors Guild of America, in Calvary Cemetery Woodside, Queens. Inscribed at the top of the front face is a quote from Macbeth, "A poor player that struts and frets his hour upon the stage, and then is heard no more". Inscribed at the topo of the back face is a quote from Hamlet, "Flights of angels sing thee to thy rest".


 * FHL (GS) microfilm no. 2,079,282; digital folder no. 4,007,605; online image no. 555; indexing project (batch) no. I07962-7; record no. 316. (note: Alphonse Wilson's middle initial "H" is on the actual death certificate)


 * . LCCN sn84029091. (referencing siblinghood).


 * . LCCN sn83030933. (referencing his birth name, "Alphonse Heerwich Wiederhofer").


 * Calvary Cemetery, Woodside, Queens (DOD: 1936). "Alphonse H. Wilson". BillionGraves. Retrieved February 4, 2021.
 * Calvary Cemetery, Woodside, Queens (DOD: 1936). "Alphonse H. Wilson". BillionGraves. Retrieved February 4, 2021.



Passport Applications, January 2, 1906 - March 31, 1925 1914-1915