[Harp-L] Subject: Re: Frankie Laine Dies at age 93
Another article from BluesWax Ezine and something I haven't seen anyone else
mention so far...is the recent passing of Frankie Laine (2/6/07)...who to me
was "the" first male voice I fell in love with as a kid. High Noon, Mule
Train, Rawhide...I still love those songs:
"Blues Notes:
Pop Phenomenon Frankie Laine Passes:
Frankie Laine, a pop singer of the 1940s and â50s, died on February 6 in San
Diego, California. He was 93. He was born LoVecchio, the oldest of eight
children of an Italian immigrant barber in Chicago who had cut Al Caponeâs hair.
Laine had over 70 chart hits and is said to have sold 100 million records,
but the interesting thing was that he was a belter. Singing in night clubs
from the early 1930s, working day jobs and taking part in dance marathons to
make ends meet, he told the Saturday Evening Post in 1954 that he had been
inspired by Louis Armstrong, and tried to use his voice like a horn, rather than
imitating Bing Crosby or Frank Sinatra. His first big hit, on Chicagoâs new
Mercury label, was âThatâs My Desire,â a slow sensual ballad to which Laine
brought considerable intensity.
Mercury had begun as an R&B label, and was one of the first labels to
promote new records by taking them to disc jockeys in towns where the artist was
appearing. Nobody knew how to use radio to sell records like producer Mitch
Miller. Though he had begun as a Jazz singer, Laineâs first hit was followed by
faux-Folk stuff like âMule Train,â complete with whip-cracking sounds, and â
My Heart Goes Where The Wild Goose Goes,â written by Terry Gilkyson, father
of todayâs singer-songwriter Eliza Gilkyson.
Laine followed Miller from Mercury to Columbia, where he was assigned
novelties, duets with Doris Day and Jo Stafford, and Hank Williams covers. Miller
said that he liked Laineâs âblue collarâ voice. Although he was not exactly a
matinee idol, Laine was so popular that he starred in several musical films.
Laine had the hit recording of the theme from High Noon in 1952, though it
was Tex Ritter in the soundtrack. After that Laine was heard in the
soundtracks of Western movies like Gunfight at the O.K. Corral and 3:10 to Yuma. On TV
he was the host of variety shows and sang the theme song on Rawhide, which
starred young Clint Eastwood. Laine reprised this part of his career in the
soundtrack of the Mel Brooks comedy Blazing Saddles in 1974.
Laineâs death marks the end of a long-ago era in popular music, when the
vast majority of Pop records sold were purchased on impulse and music became a
throwaway commodity. As far as anybody knows, Mitch Miller is still alive,
though he must be older than dirt."
Elizabeth
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