
The Cry Of The Wild Goose, Frankie Laine (1950)
The wild goose nose song scored No. 1 on Billboard’s most played by deejays list in 1950, the third of Laine’s three consecutive No. 1 hits of that year.
I Am Boris Kelstorm [via IDHMGO].
Paris street art [via Mme. Jujujive].
Dairy Queens of yore [via Memo Of The Air].
Misophonia and an example of misophonia.
1947 road trip (with music from 1959?) [via Bunkerville].
[Top image: Painting by Quebec painter Mark Lague found here.]
From the Archives: 1 year ago. 5 years ago. 10 years ago. 15 years ago.
There is a lot (lot!) to explore with that post.
One topic I’ve started to question is “What happened to music immediately after WWII?” Frankie Lane is a good example in both fidelity and content; I’ll have to dive in that pool soon.
And the adorable chick explaining her noise sensitivity might get in my “Why Life is Good” file.
Can someone find out who she is so I can send some roses?
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Frankie Laine is one whose voice is immediately recognizable, but I could never connect it to his name. I just found out he sang the theme to Blazing Saddles.
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ty from ‘beatrice’
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😀
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