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Eleven-three-oh in New York”
“it’s what feel good music is all about, Charlie Brown.”
seems like something Snoopy would enjoying while sitting on top of his doghouse
Or doing the Snoopy Dance
I will master this at some point. Work in progress ...
Fills my heart every time i almost get it right.
Keep going our friend!
Fills my heart every time i almost get it right.
Bill, there really are some of the most sublime segues between songs...all the time. It is one of the arts that you and Rebecca practice here on this small island of amazing music.
Bill of course had many years of radio DJ experience before opening RP and had the segue thing down to a fine art by then.
in music - it was definitely his thing..
William: A lot of "education" is received unwillingly. Glad you learned to appreciate a wide variety of music from your radio education! Glad we are here to enjoy the benefits of your education, and receive our own musical education from you.
I Agree Completely!! VIVA Radio Paradise!!
Linus and Lucy
This stinks play some Hawkwind not Charlie Brown
Hit the button on your ejector seat .... you may not be missed
ahhhhhhhhhhh...
Bill, I'm sure you know that this was associated with WNEW in New York, the sign off piece at 2 AM, to be more precise. How often I heard this right before going to bed. It was my lullaby. Could have been Scott Muni, could've been Dennis Elsas - anybody know?
“Double-you, any-double-you
Eleven-three-oh in New York”
This stinks play some Hawkwind not Charlie Brown
seems like something Snoopy would enjoying while sitting on top of his doghouse
You're right! Vince took this and transformed it to make "Linus & Lucy," the theme song for Peanuts.
OK Mr SmartyPants, what was Paco's theme music?
...Canon in D? ;-)
WNEW FM, what a great great time it was for so many of us back then.
Dennis Elsas used Cast Your Fate to the Wind.
Jonathan used the Chopin Prelude 4 in E Minor to close.
Scott Muni used the Bob Lind Elusive Butterfly to close his show.
Bob Lewis ended his program with Flying from the Beatles.
Alison Steele also ended her show with "Flying."
Pete Fornatale ended with various recordings from the Assembled Multitude.
Mike Harrison ended with Rock and Roll Ensemble's Pick Up in the Morning.
OK Mr SmartyPants, what was Paco's theme music?
I remember the motorcycle now, too .. it was a Honda 305. Guess Edie liked that vibration.
The best sounding motorcycle ever.
I'm pretty sure it was Dennis Elsas, but I remember him going off the air around 10 PM, before giving up the mic to Alison Steele. I guess his schedule may have varied over the years.
Alison Steel, The Night Bird.
Dennis Elsas used Cast Your Fate to the Wind.
Jonathan used the Chopin Prelude 4 in E Minor to close.
Scott Muni used the Bob Lind Elusive Butterfly to close his show.
Bob Lewis ended his program with Flying from the Beatles.
Alison Steele also ended her show with "Flying."
Pete Fornatale ended with various recordings from the Assembled Multitude.
Mike Harrison ended with Rock and Roll Ensemble's Pick Up in the Morning.
This stinks play some Hawkwind not Charlie Brown
How about you jut hit PSD or the skip button and keep your negative personal feelings/opinions about the music to yourself.
"I prefer the James Gang cover." (Comment meant as a joke, although I really do prefer the James Gang version.)
Found it. Anyone else looking for the James Gang version, its interpolated in The Bomber on Rides Again.
You're welcome.
This is great and I love it, but the James Gang version is the best cover.
What!? James Gang. Love that band (still). Where? What album? I must know!!
Enough already ... this is weak jazz and is only good for Peanuts soundtracks ...
Are you the Grinch?
Bill, there really are some of the most sublime segues between songs...all the time. It is one of the arts that you and Rebecca practice here on this small island of amazing music.
it's a huge continent of amazing music!
I'm pretty sure it was Dennis Elsas, but I remember him going off the air around 10 PM, before giving up the mic to Alison Steele. I guess his schedule may have varied over the years.
Miles Davis is often credited with saying that "it's the notes that you don't play" that are as important as the ones you do.
Vince nails those notes as well.
courtesy of Wikipedia:
"...Guaraldi went on to compose scores for seventeen Peanuts television specials..."
While working on a Peanuts' documentary, one of the producers heard this song while he was driving over the Golden Gate Bridge. He reached out and asked Guaraldi if he would consider composing the music for the show and Guaraldi gave us "Linus and Lucy". He then wrote the score for "A Charlie Brown Christmas" and the rest is, as they say, history.
jp33442 wrote:
WFMU, independent, listener-supported radio from East Orange, NJ.
Woof Moo:
10 for the mustache
Thanks for that memory. Also listened to WFMU, an alternative college station from Farleigh Dickinson University in northern NJ.
No that is WFDU
Bill is in cahoots with Alexa.
Thanks for that memory. Also listened to WFMU, an alternative college station from Farleigh Dickinson University in northern NJ.
Saw George Winston (wiki) 10/11/18 play at our restored Normal Theater (pictures at the hop). Very intimate. He's a bit shy and has a bit of Robin Wright's humor!!!
Reminds me of a 1970 Mad Magazine cartoon where a character on TV said "We will now play the William Tell Overture, and as a test of maturity we will see if you can listen without thinking of The Lone Ranger". In the next panel, the music is playing and the dad is bounding out of the kitchen with a beer saying "Hi ho Silver!"
This song often reminds me of a DJ in NYC many years ago - on WNEW-FM, who would play it at the end of his shift. Despite all the GIF files in posted this thread, this song was never featured in a Peanuts cartoon, it was written several years before he composed for Peanuts.
Reminds me of a 1970 Mad Magazine cartoon where a character on TV said "We will now play the William Tell Overture, and as a test of maturity we will see if you can listen without thinking of The Lone Ranger". In the next panel, the music is playing and the dad is bounding out of the kitchen with a beer saying "Hi ho Silver!"
No, it's not. Unless you've hidden behind a rock for the last 30 years. Or were born yesterday...
Reminds me of a 1970 Mad Magazine cartoon where a character on TV said "We will now play the William Tell Overture, and as a test of maturity we will see if you can listen without thinking of The Lone Ranger". In the next panel, the music is playing and the dad is bounding out of the kitchen with a beer saying "Hi ho Silver!"
Best during Christmas...Thanks Bill!
If you like this check out 'Ramsey Lewis' version.
Yup
I'm pretty sure it was Dennis Elsas, but I remember him going off the air around 10 PM, before giving up the mic to Alison Steele. I guess his schedule may have varied over the years.
I don't recall who it was, but I remember this tune fondly, too. Oh, WNEW-FM -- how I missed it until RP came along!
Keep in mind that this was released in 1962 (per the description here).
interesting album cover, back then when a jazz musician that was African-American they usually wouldn't have a picture of themselves on the cover but Guaraldi puts African-Americans on his cover
After 2 or 3, they're terrific.
But only after.
Love in an elevator recipe:
1 oz gin
1/2 oz Green Curacao liqueur
2 1/2 oz ginger ale
And do you know what? It's not half bad.
After 2 or 3, they're terrific.
Love in an elevator recipe:
1 oz gin
1/2 oz Green Curacao liqueur
2 1/2 oz ginger ale
And do you know what? It's not half bad.
Well, once upon a time kids, say the mid-sixties, "Jazz Impressions of Black Orpheus" was considered world-class seduction music, ranking up there with Dave Brubeck for example. But then Vince Guaraldi threw all that OUT THE F*ING WINDOW when he did the incidental music for "A Charlie Brown Christmas" around '65 or so. After that he did the music for like dozens of Peanuts TV specials and got real rich, I suppoooose, He died very young. Here is a great jazz player, whose records will be pulled out at Christmas, eternally smeared with jam and dusted with powdered sugar, and thought of almost exclusively as "The Charlie Brown music guy." Funny. I have JIOBO on vinyl and it is quite a great LP, but it does NOT function as seduction music, except maybe Mid-December when maudlin sentiment runs high...
Well I was five when Orpheus got tossed out the window and that is OK with me as I probably would have not have been exposed to Vince Guaraldi for many decades later.
agreed! sounds good.
Alison Steele, The Nightbird