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Orchestra Wives (1942) - "At Last"
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0035157/ - Singing is Ray Eberle and Lynn Bari. I wonder just how Ray Eberle felt about sharing his song with this dame!
published: 31 Mar 2010
-
Ray Eberle - The nearness of you (1940)
Raymond Eberle (January 19, 1919 – August 25, 1979) was a vocalist during the Big Band Era, making his name with the Glenn Miller Orchestra. His elder brother, Bob Eberly, sang with the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra.
Eberle was born in Mechanicville, Saratoga County, New York. His father, John A. Eberle, was a local policeman, sign-painter, and publican (tavern-keeper). His elder brother was Big Band singer Bob Eberly, who sang with the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra. Ray started singing in his teens, with no formal training. In 1938, Glenn Miller, who was looking for a male vocalist for his big band, asked Bob Eberly if he had any siblings at home who could sing. Bob said "yes", and Ray was hired on the spot.
Eberle recalled walking by a table when his similar-looking brother was performing, and bein...
published: 22 Aug 2020
-
Glenn Miller Plays & Ray Eberle Sings
Please Note: These broadcasts and images are owned by the Estate of Glenn Miller and courtesy of Sony Legacy and the Estate of Glenn Miller. Here are some featured 1939 broadcast vocals featuring Ray Eberle and the Glenn Miller Orchestra. Please remember to subscribe to our YouTube Channel for more Miller music. And if there is a favorite song(s) you would like to hear please let me know in the comments below. Thanks for listening...
published: 18 Mar 2019
-
Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra ft Ray Eberle & Helen O'Connell - Oh Look at me now
published: 07 May 2020
-
'Once in a While' featuring Ray Eberle and the Stardusters
Universal Studios release of 1943 short film featuring this song called, 'Once In A While' with Ray Eberle and the Stardusters.
published: 06 Aug 2022
-
1940 Glenn Miller - A Million Dreams Ago (Ray Eberle, vocal)
Co-written by bandleader Dick Jurgens and his vocalist Eddy Howard along with Lew Quadling, here also is the Jurgens recording: https://youtu.be/wcPk1bBD5Ek
CD audio, original issue on Bluebird 10768 - A Million Dreams Ago (Quadling-Howard-Jurgens) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle, recorded in Chicago June 13, 1940
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The three* MusicProf channels are home to The HITS ARCHIVES, YouTube’s most comprehensive collection of U.S. ‘popular music’ recordings from 1925 thru 1979. Discover thousands of original hit versions, conveniently arranged in year-by-year playlists and sorted alphabetically in your choice of either song title or artist name. Simply visit this channel’s home page (...
published: 28 Feb 2024
-
Glenn Miller Interviews Ray Eberle
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
Glenn Miller Interviews Ray Eberle · The Glenn Miller Orchestra · Glenn Miller
1942 Chesterfield Shows
℗ 2006 Jazz Hour
Released on: 2006-12-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
published: 02 Jan 2015
-
1940 HITS ARCHIVE: Indian Summer - Glenn Miller (Ray Eberle, vocal)
Indian Summer (Dubin-Herbert) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle
Music composed in 1919 by Victor Herbert with new Al Dubin lyrics. Both the Miller and Tommy Dorsey versions were popular sellers.
THE 1940 HITS ARCHIVE - a collection of commercial recordings and songs that proved popular during the calendar year 1940 (some were recorded in 1939) via sales, sheet music, and radio exposure.…plus some others that have gained increased recognition or have been shown to have had an impact during the decades that followed. .
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The three* MusicProf channels are home to The HITS ARCHIVES, YouTube’s most comprehensive collection of U.S. ‘popular music’ recordings from 1925 thru 1975. Disc...
published: 17 May 2019
-
1940 HITS ARCHIVE: Fools Rush In - Glenn Miller (Ray Eberle, vocal)
Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear to Tread) (Mercer-Bloom) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle
“Fools Rush In” reached the top spot on “Your Hit Parade” during the month of July, with this Miller treatment leading the pack in record sales (#3 peak on Billboard)
THE 1940 HITS ARCHIVE - a collection of commercial recordings and songs that proved popular during the calendar year 1940 (some were recorded in 1939) via sales, sheet music, and radio exposure.…plus some others that have gained increased recognition or have been shown to have had an impact during the decades that followed. .
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The three* MusicProf channels are home to The HITS ARCHIVES, YouTube’s most comprehensive collect...
published: 17 May 2019
-
Ray Eberle Did I Remember
Ray Eberle Sings Did I Remember, in awesome voice
published: 08 Apr 2019
4:52
Orchestra Wives (1942) - "At Last"
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0035157/ - Singing is Ray Eberle and Lynn Bari. I wonder just how Ray Eberle felt about sharing his song with this dame!
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0035157/ - Singing is Ray Eberle and Lynn Bari. I wonder just how Ray Eberle felt about sharing his song with this dame!
https://wn.com/Orchestra_Wives_(1942)_At_Last
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0035157/ - Singing is Ray Eberle and Lynn Bari. I wonder just how Ray Eberle felt about sharing his song with this dame!
- published: 31 Mar 2010
- views: 274703
3:14
Ray Eberle - The nearness of you (1940)
Raymond Eberle (January 19, 1919 – August 25, 1979) was a vocalist during the Big Band Era, making his name with the Glenn Miller Orchestra. His elder brother, ...
Raymond Eberle (January 19, 1919 – August 25, 1979) was a vocalist during the Big Band Era, making his name with the Glenn Miller Orchestra. His elder brother, Bob Eberly, sang with the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra.
Eberle was born in Mechanicville, Saratoga County, New York. His father, John A. Eberle, was a local policeman, sign-painter, and publican (tavern-keeper). His elder brother was Big Band singer Bob Eberly, who sang with the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra. Ray started singing in his teens, with no formal training. In 1938, Glenn Miller, who was looking for a male vocalist for his big band, asked Bob Eberly if he had any siblings at home who could sing. Bob said "yes", and Ray was hired on the spot.
Eberle recalled walking by a table when his similar-looking brother was performing, and being stopped by Miller and invited to audition. Music critics and Miller's musicians were reportedly unhappy with Eberle's vocal style but Miller stuck with him. Critic George T. Simon said that Miller pitched Eberle's keys too high, straining Eberle's voice. Simon noted that when singing in lower keys, Eberle's sound was richer.
Eberle went on to find success with Miller, deeming the songs for Orchestra Wives, such as the jazz standard "At Last", to be among his favorites as there were songs he could "sink my teeth into, and make a story out of". He appeared in the Twentieth Century Fox movies, Sun Valley Serenade (1941) and Orchestra Wives (1942).
He made several Universal films, including Mister Big, making a cameo appearance as himself. Eberle mostly sang ballads. He led his own orchestra called, The Ray Eberle Orchestra as well as the Serenade In Blue Orchestra from 1943 and maintained his band until his death in 1979.[6] From 1940-43 he did well on Billboard (magazine)'s "College Poll" for male vocalist] He also appeared on numerous television variety shows in the 1950s and 1960s.
Ray Eberle sang lead on "Sometime", composed by Glenn Miller in 1939, "Polka Dots and Moonbeams", "At Last", a number 9 chart hit on Billboard in 1942, and "To You", but Miller ran a tight ship and often fired people after one negative incident. Eberle was stuck in traffic one day during a Chicago engagement, and was late for a rehearsal. Miller fired him on the spot, and replaced him in June 1942 with Skip Nelson. After his departure from Miller, Eberle briefly joined Gene Krupa's band before launching a solo career. He later joined former Miller bandmate Tex Beneke's orchestra in 1970 for a national tour, and reformed his own orchestra later in the decade.
Ray Eberle (* 19. Januar 1919 in Mechanicville, New York; † 25. August 1979 in Douglasville, Georgia) war ein Sänger des Bigband-Swing. Er hatte seine ersten Hits mit dem Orchester von Glenn Miller und setzte später seine Karriere als Bandleader fort.
Eberle, Bruder des Sängers Bob Eberly, der Mitglied des Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra wurde, sang wie sein Bruder als Autodidakt auf Schulfesten. Als Glenn Miller seine Band gründete, ließ er sich von Dorsey beraten; dieser war der Ansicht, dass eine Bigband auf jeden Fall einen Sänger bräuchte. Auf Nachfrage Millers schlug Bob Eberly, der bei dem Gespräch anwesend war, seinen Bruder vor. Miller holte Eberle, der 1937 bereits mit Eddie Miller aufnahm, 1938 in seine Band und hatte Erfolge mit seinen Interpretationen von Over the Rainbow, Indian Summer, At Last , My Prayer, A Nightingale in Berkeley Square, Moonlight Cocktails, Serenade In Blue die sich teilweise zu Hits entwickelten. Auch war Eberle in den Musikfilmen Sun Valley Serenade (1941) und Orchestra Wives (1942) zu sehen.
Im Juni 1942 musste Eberle die Miller-Band verlassen, nachdem er zu spät zu den Proben gekommen war. Daraufhin wurde er Mitglied der Band von Gene Krupa. Nachdem er ab 1943 seinen Wehrdienst absolviert hatte, gründete er 1945 eine eigene Band, die zunächst Stücke wie Moonlight Serenade und Arrangements im Miller-Stil spielte. Die Band, die zunehmend Easy Listening spielte, hatte bis Mitte der 1950er Jahre Bestand. Dann trat er im Fernsehen auf und arbeitete mit The Modernaires.[3], bevor er mit Tex Beneke und seiner Original Glenn Miller Band in den frühen 1970er Jahren auf Tournee ging. Dann war er mit eigener Band in Las Vegas tätig. 1978 spielte er noch im New Yorker Madison Garden.[
1995 wurde er in die Georgia Music Hall of Fame aufgenommen.
Die Tochter Eberles, Jan Eberle, ist Sängerin und veröffentlichte 2002 eine Biographie über ihren Vater (The Eberle Named Ray).
https://wn.com/Ray_Eberle_The_Nearness_Of_You_(1940)
Raymond Eberle (January 19, 1919 – August 25, 1979) was a vocalist during the Big Band Era, making his name with the Glenn Miller Orchestra. His elder brother, Bob Eberly, sang with the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra.
Eberle was born in Mechanicville, Saratoga County, New York. His father, John A. Eberle, was a local policeman, sign-painter, and publican (tavern-keeper). His elder brother was Big Band singer Bob Eberly, who sang with the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra. Ray started singing in his teens, with no formal training. In 1938, Glenn Miller, who was looking for a male vocalist for his big band, asked Bob Eberly if he had any siblings at home who could sing. Bob said "yes", and Ray was hired on the spot.
Eberle recalled walking by a table when his similar-looking brother was performing, and being stopped by Miller and invited to audition. Music critics and Miller's musicians were reportedly unhappy with Eberle's vocal style but Miller stuck with him. Critic George T. Simon said that Miller pitched Eberle's keys too high, straining Eberle's voice. Simon noted that when singing in lower keys, Eberle's sound was richer.
Eberle went on to find success with Miller, deeming the songs for Orchestra Wives, such as the jazz standard "At Last", to be among his favorites as there were songs he could "sink my teeth into, and make a story out of". He appeared in the Twentieth Century Fox movies, Sun Valley Serenade (1941) and Orchestra Wives (1942).
He made several Universal films, including Mister Big, making a cameo appearance as himself. Eberle mostly sang ballads. He led his own orchestra called, The Ray Eberle Orchestra as well as the Serenade In Blue Orchestra from 1943 and maintained his band until his death in 1979.[6] From 1940-43 he did well on Billboard (magazine)'s "College Poll" for male vocalist] He also appeared on numerous television variety shows in the 1950s and 1960s.
Ray Eberle sang lead on "Sometime", composed by Glenn Miller in 1939, "Polka Dots and Moonbeams", "At Last", a number 9 chart hit on Billboard in 1942, and "To You", but Miller ran a tight ship and often fired people after one negative incident. Eberle was stuck in traffic one day during a Chicago engagement, and was late for a rehearsal. Miller fired him on the spot, and replaced him in June 1942 with Skip Nelson. After his departure from Miller, Eberle briefly joined Gene Krupa's band before launching a solo career. He later joined former Miller bandmate Tex Beneke's orchestra in 1970 for a national tour, and reformed his own orchestra later in the decade.
Ray Eberle (* 19. Januar 1919 in Mechanicville, New York; † 25. August 1979 in Douglasville, Georgia) war ein Sänger des Bigband-Swing. Er hatte seine ersten Hits mit dem Orchester von Glenn Miller und setzte später seine Karriere als Bandleader fort.
Eberle, Bruder des Sängers Bob Eberly, der Mitglied des Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra wurde, sang wie sein Bruder als Autodidakt auf Schulfesten. Als Glenn Miller seine Band gründete, ließ er sich von Dorsey beraten; dieser war der Ansicht, dass eine Bigband auf jeden Fall einen Sänger bräuchte. Auf Nachfrage Millers schlug Bob Eberly, der bei dem Gespräch anwesend war, seinen Bruder vor. Miller holte Eberle, der 1937 bereits mit Eddie Miller aufnahm, 1938 in seine Band und hatte Erfolge mit seinen Interpretationen von Over the Rainbow, Indian Summer, At Last , My Prayer, A Nightingale in Berkeley Square, Moonlight Cocktails, Serenade In Blue die sich teilweise zu Hits entwickelten. Auch war Eberle in den Musikfilmen Sun Valley Serenade (1941) und Orchestra Wives (1942) zu sehen.
Im Juni 1942 musste Eberle die Miller-Band verlassen, nachdem er zu spät zu den Proben gekommen war. Daraufhin wurde er Mitglied der Band von Gene Krupa. Nachdem er ab 1943 seinen Wehrdienst absolviert hatte, gründete er 1945 eine eigene Band, die zunächst Stücke wie Moonlight Serenade und Arrangements im Miller-Stil spielte. Die Band, die zunehmend Easy Listening spielte, hatte bis Mitte der 1950er Jahre Bestand. Dann trat er im Fernsehen auf und arbeitete mit The Modernaires.[3], bevor er mit Tex Beneke und seiner Original Glenn Miller Band in den frühen 1970er Jahren auf Tournee ging. Dann war er mit eigener Band in Las Vegas tätig. 1978 spielte er noch im New Yorker Madison Garden.[
1995 wurde er in die Georgia Music Hall of Fame aufgenommen.
Die Tochter Eberles, Jan Eberle, ist Sängerin und veröffentlichte 2002 eine Biographie über ihren Vater (The Eberle Named Ray).
- published: 22 Aug 2020
- views: 3705
26:43
Glenn Miller Plays & Ray Eberle Sings
Please Note: These broadcasts and images are owned by the Estate of Glenn Miller and courtesy of Sony Legacy and the Estate of Glenn Miller. Here are some featu...
Please Note: These broadcasts and images are owned by the Estate of Glenn Miller and courtesy of Sony Legacy and the Estate of Glenn Miller. Here are some featured 1939 broadcast vocals featuring Ray Eberle and the Glenn Miller Orchestra. Please remember to subscribe to our YouTube Channel for more Miller music. And if there is a favorite song(s) you would like to hear please let me know in the comments below. Thanks for listening...
https://wn.com/Glenn_Miller_Plays_Ray_Eberle_Sings
Please Note: These broadcasts and images are owned by the Estate of Glenn Miller and courtesy of Sony Legacy and the Estate of Glenn Miller. Here are some featured 1939 broadcast vocals featuring Ray Eberle and the Glenn Miller Orchestra. Please remember to subscribe to our YouTube Channel for more Miller music. And if there is a favorite song(s) you would like to hear please let me know in the comments below. Thanks for listening...
- published: 18 Mar 2019
- views: 5831
2:03
'Once in a While' featuring Ray Eberle and the Stardusters
Universal Studios release of 1943 short film featuring this song called, 'Once In A While' with Ray Eberle and the Stardusters.
Universal Studios release of 1943 short film featuring this song called, 'Once In A While' with Ray Eberle and the Stardusters.
https://wn.com/'Once_In_A_While'_Featuring_Ray_Eberle_And_The_Stardusters
Universal Studios release of 1943 short film featuring this song called, 'Once In A While' with Ray Eberle and the Stardusters.
- published: 06 Aug 2022
- views: 21880
3:05
1940 Glenn Miller - A Million Dreams Ago (Ray Eberle, vocal)
Co-written by bandleader Dick Jurgens and his vocalist Eddy Howard along with Lew Quadling, here also is the Jurgens recording: https://youtu.be/wcPk1bBD5Ek
CD...
Co-written by bandleader Dick Jurgens and his vocalist Eddy Howard along with Lew Quadling, here also is the Jurgens recording: https://youtu.be/wcPk1bBD5Ek
CD audio, original issue on Bluebird 10768 - A Million Dreams Ago (Quadling-Howard-Jurgens) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle, recorded in Chicago June 13, 1940
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The three* MusicProf channels are home to The HITS ARCHIVES, YouTube’s most comprehensive collection of U.S. ‘popular music’ recordings from 1925 thru 1979. Discover thousands of original hit versions, conveniently arranged in year-by-year playlists and sorted alphabetically in your choice of either song title or artist name. Simply visit this channel’s home page (here: https://www.youtube.com/@the78prof72 ), scroll down the rows of playlist categories, choose a favorite year, click on “view full playlist,” and then pick out the songs that you want to hear. Enjoy the music!
* The78Prof The45Prof AnotherProf
https://wn.com/1940_Glenn_Miller_A_Million_Dreams_Ago_(Ray_Eberle,_Vocal)
Co-written by bandleader Dick Jurgens and his vocalist Eddy Howard along with Lew Quadling, here also is the Jurgens recording: https://youtu.be/wcPk1bBD5Ek
CD audio, original issue on Bluebird 10768 - A Million Dreams Ago (Quadling-Howard-Jurgens) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle, recorded in Chicago June 13, 1940
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The three* MusicProf channels are home to The HITS ARCHIVES, YouTube’s most comprehensive collection of U.S. ‘popular music’ recordings from 1925 thru 1979. Discover thousands of original hit versions, conveniently arranged in year-by-year playlists and sorted alphabetically in your choice of either song title or artist name. Simply visit this channel’s home page (here: https://www.youtube.com/@the78prof72 ), scroll down the rows of playlist categories, choose a favorite year, click on “view full playlist,” and then pick out the songs that you want to hear. Enjoy the music!
* The78Prof The45Prof AnotherProf
- published: 28 Feb 2024
- views: 1231
1:18
Glenn Miller Interviews Ray Eberle
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
Glenn Miller Interviews Ray Eberle · The Glenn Miller Orchestra · Glenn Miller
1942 Chesterfield Shows
℗ 2006 ...
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
Glenn Miller Interviews Ray Eberle · The Glenn Miller Orchestra · Glenn Miller
1942 Chesterfield Shows
℗ 2006 Jazz Hour
Released on: 2006-12-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
https://wn.com/Glenn_Miller_Interviews_Ray_Eberle
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
Glenn Miller Interviews Ray Eberle · The Glenn Miller Orchestra · Glenn Miller
1942 Chesterfield Shows
℗ 2006 Jazz Hour
Released on: 2006-12-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
- published: 02 Jan 2015
- views: 453
3:17
1940 HITS ARCHIVE: Indian Summer - Glenn Miller (Ray Eberle, vocal)
Indian Summer (Dubin-Herbert) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle
Music composed in 1919 by Victor Herbert with new Al Dubin lyrics. Both the ...
Indian Summer (Dubin-Herbert) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle
Music composed in 1919 by Victor Herbert with new Al Dubin lyrics. Both the Miller and Tommy Dorsey versions were popular sellers.
THE 1940 HITS ARCHIVE - a collection of commercial recordings and songs that proved popular during the calendar year 1940 (some were recorded in 1939) via sales, sheet music, and radio exposure.…plus some others that have gained increased recognition or have been shown to have had an impact during the decades that followed. .
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The three* MusicProf channels are home to The HITS ARCHIVES, YouTube’s most comprehensive collection of U.S. ‘popular music’ recordings from 1925 thru 1975. Discover thousands of original hit versions, conveniently arranged in year-by-year playlists and sorted alphabetically in your choice of either song title or artist name. Simply visit this channel’s home page (here: https://www.youtube.com/@the78prof72 ), scroll down the rows of playlist categories, choose a favorite year, click on “view full playlist,” and then pick out the songs that you want to hear. Enjoy the music!
* The78Prof The45Prof AnotherProf
https://wn.com/1940_Hits_Archive_Indian_Summer_Glenn_Miller_(Ray_Eberle,_Vocal)
Indian Summer (Dubin-Herbert) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle
Music composed in 1919 by Victor Herbert with new Al Dubin lyrics. Both the Miller and Tommy Dorsey versions were popular sellers.
THE 1940 HITS ARCHIVE - a collection of commercial recordings and songs that proved popular during the calendar year 1940 (some were recorded in 1939) via sales, sheet music, and radio exposure.…plus some others that have gained increased recognition or have been shown to have had an impact during the decades that followed. .
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The three* MusicProf channels are home to The HITS ARCHIVES, YouTube’s most comprehensive collection of U.S. ‘popular music’ recordings from 1925 thru 1975. Discover thousands of original hit versions, conveniently arranged in year-by-year playlists and sorted alphabetically in your choice of either song title or artist name. Simply visit this channel’s home page (here: https://www.youtube.com/@the78prof72 ), scroll down the rows of playlist categories, choose a favorite year, click on “view full playlist,” and then pick out the songs that you want to hear. Enjoy the music!
* The78Prof The45Prof AnotherProf
- published: 17 May 2019
- views: 16238
2:33
1940 HITS ARCHIVE: Fools Rush In - Glenn Miller (Ray Eberle, vocal)
Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear to Tread) (Mercer-Bloom) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle
“Fools Rush In” reached the top spot on “Your Hi...
Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear to Tread) (Mercer-Bloom) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle
“Fools Rush In” reached the top spot on “Your Hit Parade” during the month of July, with this Miller treatment leading the pack in record sales (#3 peak on Billboard)
THE 1940 HITS ARCHIVE - a collection of commercial recordings and songs that proved popular during the calendar year 1940 (some were recorded in 1939) via sales, sheet music, and radio exposure.…plus some others that have gained increased recognition or have been shown to have had an impact during the decades that followed. .
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The three* MusicProf channels are home to The HITS ARCHIVES, YouTube’s most comprehensive collection of U.S. ‘popular music’ recordings from 1925 thru 1975. Discover thousands of original hit versions, conveniently arranged in year-by-year playlists and sorted alphabetically in your choice of either song title or artist name. Simply visit this channel’s home page (here: https://www.youtube.com/@the78prof72 ), scroll down the rows of playlist categories, choose a favorite year, click on “view full playlist,” and then pick out the songs that you want to hear. Enjoy the music!
* The78Prof The45Prof AnotherProf
https://wn.com/1940_Hits_Archive_Fools_Rush_In_Glenn_Miller_(Ray_Eberle,_Vocal)
Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear to Tread) (Mercer-Bloom) by Glenn Miller & his Orchestra, vocal by Ray Eberle
“Fools Rush In” reached the top spot on “Your Hit Parade” during the month of July, with this Miller treatment leading the pack in record sales (#3 peak on Billboard)
THE 1940 HITS ARCHIVE - a collection of commercial recordings and songs that proved popular during the calendar year 1940 (some were recorded in 1939) via sales, sheet music, and radio exposure.…plus some others that have gained increased recognition or have been shown to have had an impact during the decades that followed. .
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The three* MusicProf channels are home to The HITS ARCHIVES, YouTube’s most comprehensive collection of U.S. ‘popular music’ recordings from 1925 thru 1975. Discover thousands of original hit versions, conveniently arranged in year-by-year playlists and sorted alphabetically in your choice of either song title or artist name. Simply visit this channel’s home page (here: https://www.youtube.com/@the78prof72 ), scroll down the rows of playlist categories, choose a favorite year, click on “view full playlist,” and then pick out the songs that you want to hear. Enjoy the music!
* The78Prof The45Prof AnotherProf
- published: 17 May 2019
- views: 25974
3:40
Ray Eberle Did I Remember
Ray Eberle Sings Did I Remember, in awesome voice
Ray Eberle Sings Did I Remember, in awesome voice
https://wn.com/Ray_Eberle_Did_I_Remember
Ray Eberle Sings Did I Remember, in awesome voice
- published: 08 Apr 2019
- views: 11503