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FOR OLD PEOPLE - First song I liked as a kid that I learned the words to

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(@flga-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2)
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What about y'all? ?????ÿ

 
Posted : April 15, 2020 6:08 pm
(@bill93)
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Wikipedia says: The 8th of January was a federal holiday in the US from 1828 until 1861, commemorating the U.S. victory in the battle of New Orleans on January 8, 1815.

The tune "8th of January" was played long before Jimmy Driftwood wrote and Johnny Horton sang those words.?ÿ Here's a more traditional rendition, plus variations.?ÿ

?ÿ

?ÿ

 
Posted : April 15, 2020 6:40 pm
(@dave-lindell)
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"On Top of Old Smokey"

 
Posted : April 15, 2020 6:53 pm
(@norman-oklahoma)
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I just took the time last week to google the lyrics to the Flintstones theme song. There were 2 lines that I had never quite figured out. That wasn't an available option when I was a kid.

 
Posted : April 15, 2020 8:38 pm
(@rankin_file)
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I remember that one and I also remember my cousins had a record of their dadƒ??s theyƒ??d play on their (the kidƒ??s- whoowhoo-1966-ish) record player- of train songs. Wabash Cannonball - and the wreck of the Old ƒ??97- that song terrified this 5 year old kid ever riding a train.

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 4:48 am
(@squirl)
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Had it on 45 too...

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 5:23 am
(@andy-bruner)
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@bill93 Thanks for that.  I don't know how anyone can listen to Mountain and/or Bluegrass music and not hear the pipes and other Irish/Celtic music.

 

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 5:38 am
(@paden-cash)
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@squirl

"Please Pass The Biscuits" has a special place in my heart.  Although Jimmy Dean's version is usually considered the benchmark, the song was written by one of my father's friends, Gene Sullivan. 

Gene had a long-time partner, Wiley Walker, from their performing and traveling days in the '40s.  Together they wrote another oldie titled "When My Blue Moon Turns Gold". They both settled in OKC and Gene opened a recording studio there.  My father use to help Gene tweak his state-of-the-art three track hi-fi recording equipment.  I can remember hanging out a number of times in the studio with Pops in the '50s.  Gene even had his own record label, OK-eh records.

I never got to hang out at the studio when there were artists recording.  And that's a shame.  In the early '60s folks like Leon Russell and J.J. Cale use to come down from Tulsa to use Gene's studio.  I remember it cost a whopping $20 an hour for recording time.  

Wiley Walker passed away years ago.  Gene ran a music store for years after he retired.  I use to visit him there from time to time.  He passed away in the '80s.

good times.. 😉

 

 

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 6:00 am
(@holy-cow)
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That was tough.?ÿ Decided it had to be one of these two songs.?ÿ Heaven knows I probably didn't even come close to singing the lyrics correctly as I was so young at the time.?ÿ It turns out the first offering came out two years ahead of the second so the first must have been the first.?ÿ Although when you live out in the boonies sometimes you are exposed to the new before the old comes to your attention.?ÿ Enjoy.

?ÿ

?ÿ

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 7:48 am
(@dougie)
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@holy-cow

The yellow polka dot bikini was the one for me!

It had a good beat and was easy to dance to...

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 8:18 am
(@loyal)
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It was a hit song at the time, all over the radio in 1955.

:d

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 8:19 am
(@loyal)
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@holy-cow

Eric Fleming, Sheb Wooley, and some other guy...

sheb wooley
 
Posted : April 16, 2020 8:24 am
(@holy-cow)
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@loyal

More on Shelby Fredrick Wooley from IMDB

As he was born in Erick, Oklahoma in 1921 he was probably a classmate of Paden Cash. 😉 😉  

 

The running lyric to his huge 1958 novelty song hit "The Purple People Eater" was: "It was a one-eyed, one-horned, flying purple people eater." It spent six weeks at #1 and sold 3,000,000 copies. Other silly songs included "Talk Back Blubbering Lips," "Sunday Morning Fallin' Down," "Harper Valley PTA (Later That Same Day)," "The Happiest Squirrel in the Whole U.S.A." and "Fifteen Beers Ago." He also recorded the parody "Don't Go Near the Eskimos," based on Rex Allen's 1962 hit "Don't Go Near the Indians.".
Was one of the four gunslingers who stalked Gary Cooper in the western film classic High Noon (1952) (for the record, the others were Ian MacDonald, Robert J. Wilke, Lee Van Cleef).
It is believed that he may be the person who recorded the famous Wilhelm Scream for the movie Distant Drums (1951) (in which he played a soldier). He was one of the few actors assembled for the recording of additional vocal elements for the film. It is very likely he was asked on the spot to perform other things for the film, including the screams of a "man getting bitten by an alligator" (as the Wilhelm Scream takes were slated).
He got the idea for his hit song "Purple People Eater" when a friend of his mentioned that his young son came home from elementary school with a joke he had heard: "What has one eye, one horn, flies and eats people?" "A one-eyed, one-horned flying people eater!".
In 1969 he was one of the original members of the cast of Hee Haw (1969), the-long running country slapstick series. He also wrote the familiar theme song. He left the show after only filming 13 episodes due to other professional demands. He returned from time to time as a guest.
Sheb Wooley is the voice of the 'Wilhelm Scream' as used in countless beloved classics, from the Star Wars and Indiana Jones franchises to the likes of Toy Story, Reservoir Dogs, Beauty and the Beast ... the list goes on and on.
 
Posted : April 16, 2020 8:41 am
(@daniel-ralph)
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Grandpa Jake and I would sing Take Me Out To The Ball Game.?ÿ He would listen to the Cubs on the radio like he was sitting in the stands.?ÿ

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 9:21 am
(@flyin-solo)
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Posted by: @flga

What about y'all? ?????ÿ

love that song.?ÿ can't remember where (and can't find it quickly with google) i read a not-too-flattering quote about johnny horton from one of his contemporaries (again, the memory fails me): [paraphrasing] "he's so dumb he'd sing the list of ingredients off the side of a cereal box."

?ÿ

mom was on a massive woody guthrie kick when i was coming on-line mentally.?ÿ so for me it'd be either "so long it's been good to know ya" or "hard travelin."

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 9:26 am
(@paden-cash)
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@holy-cow

My sister was the proud owner of a portable 45 rpm record player.  She had purchased it from her earnings as a clerk at the Woolworth store.  It was her prize possession, along with all her 45 records.  In the late '50s and probably early '60s that record player gave her an elevated social status because she would be invited to every party and social gathering that came down the pike...as long as she brought her record player and records.

She had a number of records that were purchased without out mother's knowledge or approval, probably due to questionable content or words.  Among those I remember were two specifically:  the intsy-bitsy bikini song and Bobby Darin's Splish Splash.  For some reason these were not deemed appropriate for young people's listening enjoyment.  If you'd lived through those times you'd remember..

My mother caught her listening to them and a big argument ensued.  Momma had to go through all her records and censor any that weren't approved by the "Congregationalist Women's Committee for Purity"...all the old biddies at the church.

A few years later the song "Louie, Louie" came out.  I guess by then all the old biddies at the church had retired or given up.  😉

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 9:43 am
(@squirl)
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@loyal

Love this song still today!

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 9:56 am
(@squirl)
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Posted by: @flga

What about y'all? ?????ÿ

Grew up listening to this song...my dad is a big fan. I think he has it on vinyl as well.

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 9:57 am
(@squirl)
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In a tie for first...

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 9:58 am
(@holy-cow)
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@daniel-ralph

Now, that's a memory to be cherished.  Wow.

 
Posted : April 16, 2020 10:02 am
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