Unknown Vocal Group - Backfire (Version Two) , 1950's
Don Moreland's recording have relatively little in common with his daughter's recordings, but their is a fairly wide variety here, from standard pre-rock-era pop music to an almost song-poem like segment, to parodies of singing commercials, meant to sell the talents of the singers. I have learned from his family that Don Moreland worked in the last days of Vaudeville, and played guitar and sang in a group, The Three Oxford Boys, after being in the Navy, and that this group appears in the film "DuBarry Was a Lady" (1943). Around that same time, Don and his wife had a daughter, and eventually moved to southern Wisconsin. This was followed by a move to Rolling Meadows, IL, where he became involved in Chicago area radio, nightclubs and advertising. Everything heard here was recorded during the 1950's, after Don's career in Chicago began." First up is a recording of a song called "Why?" There are a half-dozen tapes in the batch of reels from which most of the Merigail/Don material comes from, and this song recurs in nearly a dozen versions throughout those half-dozen tapes, sung by at least five or six different people. I'm certain that someone Don knew had written this song, and was trying to make a hit of it, in the Chicago area. Next up are three recordings of a live appearance, presumably somewhere in the Chicago area. Sadly, the opening of the comic version of "Pennies From Heaven" is cut off, and for those who have never heard this version, it's about a soldier who is gone for over a year, and comes home to find his wife has had a newborn son, Bennie. So where did Bennie come from....? Two other nice performances follow, including another version of "Why?" Next up is a curious item, divided up here (by me) into three parts. The audio quality is far from perfect, as this comes from the worst preserved of the tapes, and is an off-the-radio recording. Apparently a weekly nationwide radio program, "Songs of Tomorrow" is about as close as you can get to being a song-poem project, without actually being one. Amateur songwriters were invited to send in their compositions, and Don Moreland sang them, with the best song being picked by a panel of music industry insiders. I find this recording quite fascinating, and it's even more enjoyable because the songs are, in most cases, so poorly written, and because the professional song that is included in the mix, "Stomp and Whistle", is, to these ears, no better than the amateur submissions. "Stomp and Whistle" was, however, a chart hit, although in it's rhythm and blues arrangement, it must have sounded quite different than Don's version. All of the above recordings date from around (or shortly before) 1953. Next up are two records from 1958, both of them versions of a song called "Backfire". My guess is that Don is one of the voices heard here, and my well be the guitarist, as well (he is heard later on the same tape). However, this was not his project - elsewhere on the tapes is confirmation that an amateur songwriter (perhaps also the writer of "Why?"), whose full time job was as an electrician, wrote this catchy, peppy tune.
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