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texan

Well-Known Member
Small tree transplant.
1327602367_tree_remover.gif
 

moreluck

golden ticket member
link below will take you to a video showing the very first public performance of "GOD BLESS AMERICA".

But before you watch, you should also know the story of the song.

The time was 1940. America was still in a terrible economic depression. Hitler was taking over Europe and Americans were afraid that we'd have to go to war. It was a time of hardship and worry for most Americans.

This was the era just before TV, when radio shows were HUGE, and American families sat around their radios in the evenings, listening to their favorite entertainers. And no entertainer of that era was a more popular star than Kate Smith.


Physically, Kate was a big woman, and the popular phrase still used today is about her, "It ain't over 'till the fat lady sings". Kate might not have made it big in the age of TV, but with her full, rich voice over the radio, she was the biggest star of her time.

Kate was also very patriotic. It hurt her to see Americans so depressed and afraid of what the next day would bring. She had hope for America, and faith in her fellow Americans. She wanted to do something to cheer them up, so she went to the famous American song writer, Irving Berlin (who also wrote "White Christmas") and asked him to write a song that would make Americans feel good again about their country.


When she described what she was looking for, he said he had just the song for her. He went to his files and found a song that he had written, but never published, 22 years before - 'way back in 1917. He gave it to Kate Smith and she worked on it with her studio orchestra.

Kate and Irving Berlin were not sure how the song would be received by the public, but both agreed they would not take any profits from God Bless America. Any profits would go to the Boy Scouts of America. Over the years, the Boy Scouts have received millions of dollars in royalties from this song.

This video starts with Kate Smith entering the radio studio, joining the orchestra and an audience. She introduces the new song for the very first time, and starts singing. After Kate sings the song through once, scenes are shown from the 1940 movie, You're In The Army Now - with her voice in the background still singing. At the 4:20 mark of the video you see a young actor in the movie, sitting in an office, reading a paper; it's Ronald Reagan.


Frank Sinatra considered Kate Smith the best singer of her time, and said when he and a million other guys first heard her sing God Bless America on the radio, they all pretended to have dust in their eyes as they wiped away a tear or two.

To this day, God Bless America stirs our patriotic feelings and pride in our country. Back in 1940, when Kate Smith went looking for a song to raise the spirits of her fellow Americans, I doubt she realized just how successful the results would be for her fellow Americans during those years of hardship and worry, and for many generations of Americans to follow.


Now that you know the story of the song, I hope you will enjoy it and treasure it even more.

Now, here is how GOD BLESS AMERICA should be sung! Enjoy!

!
 

moreluck

golden ticket member
From the movie, The Big Store (1941)......Chico & Harpo (2 of the Marx Bros.) at the piano........

Marx brothers - Comic duet at the piano - YouTube

There were 5 brothers.......Chio, Harpo, Groucho, Gummo and Zeppo.

 

texan

Well-Known Member
From the movie, The Big Store (1941)......Chico & Harpo (2 of the Marx Bros.) at the piano........

Marx brothers - Comic duet at the piano - YouTube


There were 5 brothers.......Chio, Harpo, Groucho, Gummo and Zeppo.
They were something. Show me people from Vaudeville, I will show you true showmanship.
No camera tricks, no retakes on Vaudeville. Yes years later, film on Vaudeville performers allowed more
leeway, but Vaudeville raised actors and performers that had that "certain something".
 

moreluck

golden ticket member
You can't watch this and not move your feet! SMOOOOTH -

Great moves yet so tight and clean

He's 17 and she's only 15. But together, they won the 2012 Junior Division National Carolina Shag
Dancing Championships.

They're
dancing to Joe Turner's "Flip, Flop and Fly."

 
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