
The Wrecked Record:
Home and Amateur Disc Recordings, 1939-1957
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1. Doris Jane -- Fa, Fi, Fi (Children's Nonsense Song),
ca. December 1940.
2.
Walter is supposed to sing "It Had to Be You" but opts for
"Bum on the Stem."
3.
Over the Waves Waltz on accordion, with idiosyncratic
chord choices.
4.
Uncle Joe Donahue Interviews Santa Claus, Christmas 1939,
urging him to bring his nephew Woody Carlisle lots of
presents.
5.
Uncle Joe Donahue Interviews Santa Claus Again, Christmas
1941.
6. To My
Daughter on Her 2nd Birthday -- 29 Oct. 1954. A man
stationed at Fort Worth won't be able to make it home for the
occasion and cuts a record for her instead.
7-10. A
collection of recordings from the era of World War Two, made
by a family in Kentucky for "Bud," stationed overseas in Great
Britain.
11. A
young girl performs "Jesus Loves Me" and "Little Miss Muffet"
-- with a difference. Recorded on August 17, 1947.
12-13. Two
recordings made in Arizona in 1957 by visiting relatives
from Indiana, including Ted and Warren who are featured
performing on ukulele and fiddle. Track 12 is The Wrecked
Record, namesake of the whole compact disc.
14. A Trip to
the Moon, as imagined by a group of schoolchildren and
their teacher in the mid-1940s (two separate tracks but on one
side of the disc).
15-17.
Three recordings made at the D&L Electronics Store in Urbana,
Ohio, on the occasion of a visit by Democrat William Rhodes in
December 1946. We hear politics, shop talk, and a "colored
fellow down south" joke.
18. New Year's
Day 1947 -- two celebrants apply Victor Borge's "phonetic
punctuation" to an advertisement for the Kiss Me Necktie.
19.
Christmas greetings for the absent Pete.
20. The
flip-side of the above, a "variety show" put on for Pete's
benefit, complete with jokes and singing.
21. Sigma Chi
Song by Bob Rowan. Desperate efforts to squeeze a second
performance onto the disc fail miserably.
22. Pepsi-Cola
Record by Howard Miller. A parody Pepsi-Cola
advertisement.
23. New Year's
Resolutions for 1941.
24. Walter &
Alice put on a "comedy sketch" for their friends, the
Millers.
25. A
father interviews his ten-year-old son.
26. Personal
Property of Patricks. Flip-side of the above: a man
relaxes on the evening of April 15, 1952, by making a record.
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