Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Frankie Carle" ¶ 17
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Frankie and Carle's
* Frankie Carle's Piano Party, Columbia ( CL-531, 1953 )
* Frankie Carle's Finest, RCA Victor ( LPM-1153, 1957 )

Frankie and RCA
In 1956 the theme song was released on Parlophone records by Dick James with Stephen James and his chums and Ron Goodwin's Orchestra and reached number 14 in the UK charts ( 78rpm single: R. 4117 / 45rpm single: MSP6199 ), and by PYE records as a 78rpm single by Gary Miller with Tony Osbourne orchestra and the Beryl Stott chorus ( PYE N. 15020 ) and reached number 10 on the UK charts, versions by Frankie Laine ( CBS Coronet ), Nelson Riddle and his Orchestra ( Capitol ), Alan Dale ( Coral ), Joe Reisman's orchestra and chorus ( RCA Victor ) and Ronnie Ronaldo ( Colombia ) were also issued.
Selling it to RCA for $ 24, 000, it was used to promote Presley's latest film, Frankie & Johnny.
* Frankie Carle Plays Honky Tonk, RCA Victor ( LPM-26, 1951 )
* Cocktail Time with Frankie Carle, RCA Victor ( LPM-1221, 1956 )
* The Piano Style of Frankie Carle, RCA Camden ( CAL 478, 1959 )
* Frankie Carle Plays the Big Imported Hits, RCA Victor ( LSP-2920, 1964 )
* Frankie Carle Plays the Great Piano Hits, RCA Victor ( LSP-3425, 1965 )
* Frankie Carle ( released by RCA Victor Records as catalog number 20-4540, with the flip side " Be My Life's Companion ")
* Frankie Carle ( released by RCA Victor Records as catalog number 20-4540, with the flip side " Wheel of Fortune ")
" Got My Mojo Working " is edited down from an impromptu jam session ; Presley's version incorporates lyrics from " Hands Off ", a 1955 song by Frankie Castro released on the Wing record label ( RCA often mislabelled this song " Keep Your Hands Off of It " when the complete jam was issued on CD years later ).
Besides the RCA Camden catalog, the company also put out an edited reissue of Elvis Presley's soundtrack album to Frankie and Johnny, and a two-LP set of mostly movie songs entitled Double Dynamite.

Frankie and Victor
A brutish but well-meaning Irishman, Gypo Nolan ( Victor McLaglen ), informs on his best friend Frankie McPhillip ( Wallace Ford ), who is a member of the illegal Irish Republican Army, in order to collect the reward of £ 20 offered by the Irish government and sail to the United States with his girlfriend Katie Madden ( Margot Grahame ).
He led many jazz and dance bands, of which the best known was his Victor Recording Orchestra of 1924 – 1929, which included, at various times, Bix Beiderbecke, Hoagy Carmichael, Chauncey Morehouse, Jimmy Dorsey, Tommy Dorsey, Bill Rank, Eddie Lang, Frankie Trumbauer, Pee Wee Russell, Steve Brown, Joe Venuti, and arranger Robert Ginzler among others.
The Roxy hosted one of New York City's largest weekly gay dance night, Roxy Saturdays, promoted by John Blair Productions, which has featured many famous DJs including Junior Vasquez, Manny Lehman, Hex Hector, Victor Calderone, Frankie Knuckles, Merritt, Offer Nissim, Hector Fonseca and Peter Rauhofer.
Frankie Trumbauer recruited Bix Beiderbecke for Jean Goldkette's Victor Recording Orchestra, of which he became musical director.
Others who appeared on the show over the years include Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr., James Meredith, Sam Sheppard, Mother Teresa, Jerry Rubin, Angela Davis, Madelyn Murray O ' Hair, Alfred Hitchcock, Fred Astaire, Judy Garland, Bette Davis, Gene Kelly, Gene Tierney, Lucille Ball, Vivian Vance, Mark Hamill, Ginger Rogers, Ricardo Montalban, Howard Keel, Celeste Holm, Dorothy Lamour, Dana Andrews, Vincent Price, Natalie Wood, Joan Crawford, Cliff Robertson, Peter Lawford, Nanette Fabray, Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis, Lee Marvin, Paul Newman, Sean Connery, Roger Moore, Carrie Fisher, Robert Wagner, Diahann Carroll, George Hamilton, Victor Buono, Peter Ustinov, Tammy Grimes, Valerie Harper, Richard Dreyfuss, John Travolta, Louis Armstrong, Rosemary Clooney, Bing Crosby, Ethel Merman, Sammy Davis, Jr., Harrison Ford, Eydie Gorme, Jack Jones, Harry Belafonte, Liza Minnelli, Paul Anka, Robert Goulet, Carol Lawrence, Edie Adams, Debbie Reynolds, Gwen Verdon, Connie Francis, Olivia Newton-John, Ben Vereen, Joey Heatherton, Frankie Laine, Eartha Kitt, Sergio Mendes, Buddy Rich, Jerry Vale, Lola Falana, Frankie Valli, Pearl Bailey, Lou Rawls, Yank Barry, Tina Turner, Tom Waits, Eddy Arnold, Johnny Cash, Roy Clark, Kenny Rogers, Ray Stevens, Janis Ian, Bernie Taupin, Ian Anderson, Marcel Marceau, Muhammad Ali, Howard Cosell, Joe Namath, Mason Reese, Ralph Nader, Rex Reed, Martha Mitchell, Victor Borge, Kreskin, Imogene Coca, Phyllis Diller, Fannie Flagg, Lily Tomlin, Joan Rivers, Elayne Boosler, Milton Berle, George Burns, Sid Caesar, Mel Brooks, Alan King, Bill Cosby, Henny Youngman, Jack Carter, Redd Foxx, Rodney Dangerfield, Jan Murray, Shecky Greene, Buddy Hacket, Joey Bishop, Red Skelton, Steve Allen, Dan Rowan, Dick Martin, George Schindler, Marty Allen, Robert Klein, George Carlin, Sandy Baron, Artie Johnson, Frank Gorshin, Soupy Sales, Jonathan Winters, Charlie Callas, Norm Crosby, Rip Taylor, Foster Brooks, Irwin Corey, Leonard Barr, Pat Cooper, Rich Little, Stan Kann, Steve Landesberg, Andy Kaufman, Jimmie Walker, Jay Leno, Moe Howard of The Three Stooges, Gloria Parker with her Musical Glasses, Ruth Dickson, Jimmy Edmonson ( better known as " Professor Backwards " who appeared more times than any other guest ).

Frankie and 1956
In 1956, an R & B " Top Stars of ' 56 " tour took place, with headliners Al Hibbler, Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers, and Carl Perkins, whose " Blue Suede Shoes " was very popular with R & B music buyers.
In 1956 Frankie Lymon and The Teenagers appeared on the Frankie Laine show in New York, which was televised nationally, performing their hit " Why Do Fools Fall in Love ?".
* May 30 – Frankie Trumbauer, US saxophonist, bandleader and singer ( d. 1956 )
From 1956 until 1960, the group stayed together, performing in clubs and lounges as The Four Lovers and recording on various record labels with various names: Frankie Tyler, Frankie Valley, Frankie Valley and the Travelers, Frankie Valle and the Romans, The Village Voices, and The Topics are some of the 18 " stage names " used individually or collectively by the members of the group.
An album, The Teenagers Featuring Frankie Lymon, was issued in December 1956.
* 1956: 701 The Teenagers Featuring Frankie Lymon
* 1956: Frankie Lymon And The Teenagers-1981 Re-issue Roulette Y2-116-RO ( Japan ) 701
* 1956: The Teenagers Featuring Frankie Lymon
She starred with Frankie Howerd and Dennis Price in her only film role as Ruby, in the 1956 farce, A Touch of the Sun.
* Frankie Howerd ( 1956 )
Orie Frank (" Frankie " or " Tram ") Trumbauer ( May 30, 1901 – June 11, 1956 ) was one of the leading jazz saxophonists of the 1920s and 1930s.
Goldner released the record, with " Please Be Mine " on the " B " side, under the name " Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers ", on his new " Gee Records " subsidiary, in January 1956.
* Frankie Gavin ( 1956 )
In 1956, Weld played the lead in Rock, Rock, Rock, which featured record promoter Alan Freed and singers Chuck Berry, Frankie Lymon, and Johnny Burnette.
Doo wop diversified considerably later in the decade, with groups like The Crows (" Gee "), creating a style of uptempo doo wop and the ballad style via The Penguins (" Earth Angel "), while singers like Frankie Lymon became sensations ; Lymon became the first black teen idol in the country's history after the release of the Top 40 pop hit " Why Do Fools Fall in Love " ( 1956 ).
In 1956, Spot and his then wife Rita were attacked outside their Paddington home-by " Mad " Frankie Fraser, Bobby Warren.
The song was revived by Frankie Laine in 1952, and subsequently recorded again in 1956 by Patience and Prudence, who reached # 4 on the Billboard charts with their version, and also by Lawrence Welk with The Lennon Sisters and the duo of Karen Chandler and Jimmy Wakely, Ann Shelton and The Duprees.
*" Why Do Fools Fall in Love " ( song ), a 1956 song by doo-wop group Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers

Sweethearts and Victor
* " Sweethearts " w. Robert B. Smith m. Victor Herbert
Sweethearts is an operetta or musical play in two acts with music by Victor Herbert, lyrics by Robert B. Smith and book by Harry B. Smith and Fred De Gressac.
These included The Merry Widow, Naughty Marietta, Rose Marie, Maytime, Sweethearts, Bitter Sweet, Smilin ' Through, and The Sun Comes Up, plus other operettas and musicals like Victor Herbert's Mlle Modiste, Irene, The Student Prince, Tonight or Never with Melvyn Douglas, A Song for Clotilda, The Gift of the Magi, and Apple Blossoms.
* Sweethearts, 1938, was MGM's first three-strip Technicolor feature, incorporating Victor Herbert's 1913 stage score into a modern script by Dorothy Parker.
* Sweethearts ( musical ), a 1913 operetta by Victor Herbert

2.788 seconds.