I appreciate your eloquent response to me.(Especially as it expresses my own sentiments almost in their entirety!) BUT,any idea as to why I received your reply identically in triplicate in my E-mail? So puzzled that my brain threatens to overheat till I'm too afraid to wear a hat...
Very pleased to encounter your enthusiasm, in the text, for this wonderful tune -- I love it myself and always associate it with Billie Holiday, who -- though a pretty tough cookie, I think -- took some abuse from various among ses hommes, it seems. I believe she sang from experience, in other words. ... Lovely and diverse representations of the cruel cad of our song!
@Trombonology Bille Holiday as a "pretty tough cookie"... ha ha... I like that vision... Yes, you are absolutely right! In my medical practice I met sometimes such cases: huge women tormented by tiny husbands and a rebours: giant blokes completely incapacitated by their female little persecutors.
@camille885 Maybe the little sample of Marseillaise denotes that this tune is originally written in France (and was added by Whiteman)? It's only my version.
@valdo2est Yes, Ithink it was a music joke of Whitman's. By adding fragment of "Marsellaise" to the original composition he seemingly made his tribute to French origins of this fabulous tune.
Hi Grzegorz - love, love, love that fabulous photo of that Tanguera with a monocle in her eye. She embodies tons of most lovely and independent Tango spirit by which most prominent women - live their lives. All the artwork in this vid - is well chosen - your trademark. However this instrumentation is sensation. By the way - Fanny Brice did a great job with this song - but Barbra Streisand didn't let Fanny upstage her. Barbra's version was also dynamite. Thanks a lot! Great Sunday to you!!!
@tango3721 I had somewhere the name of that actress but to my regret, I can't find it. Her partner is Hans Albers -extra class German actor of 1920/30s.That photograph was taken in ca 1925 by Alex Binder - one of the best German photographers of the 1920s . He was author of several famous shots of Garbo as well as the whole series of German movie stars of that era.One day I will upload some photoes from that collection - all they need is some perfect German tango as background.
@bambi68735 Czy przypadkiem nie śpiewała tego Barbara Rylska, a nie Kwiatkowska? Chyba, że to jest jakieś nieznane mi wykonanie Kwiatkowskiej.Bo Rylskiej było bardzo popularne w końcówce lat 1960. Gdzieś je mam i pewnie warto by je któregos dnia tu zaprezentować - bo jest świetne!
@Grundsau47 Indeed, it;s a true jazzy performance made out of that simple cabaret tune. A real master plays it. I adore these early recordings of Whiteman's - he was still a jazz player back than, before in late 1920/30s he changed his genre into a kind of a Hollywood -style "glamourosa"
I appreciate your eloquent response to me.(Especially as it expresses my own sentiments almost in their entirety!) BUT,any idea as to why I received your reply identically in triplicate in my E-mail? So puzzled that my brain threatens to overheat till I'm too afraid to wear a hat...
Grundsau47 3 months ago
What an energetic, roaring version! They could almost do the can-can to this.
dzheger 3 months ago
Tanks a lot,my friend!
MsDobrita 3 months ago
AWESOME!
A video to fill the eyes!!... and ears!
MaisSimples 3 months ago
Very pleased to encounter your enthusiasm, in the text, for this wonderful tune -- I love it myself and always associate it with Billie Holiday, who -- though a pretty tough cookie, I think -- took some abuse from various among ses hommes, it seems. I believe she sang from experience, in other words. ... Lovely and diverse representations of the cruel cad of our song!
Trombonology 3 months ago
@Trombonology Bille Holiday as a "pretty tough cookie"... ha ha... I like that vision... Yes, you are absolutely right! In my medical practice I met sometimes such cases: huge women tormented by tiny husbands and a rebours: giant blokes completely incapacitated by their female little persecutors.
240252 3 months ago
Nice to hear this as a fox-trot. Sound very 20's!
(A little sample of the "Marseillaise" at the end? the last photo is very cute!)
Thanks for sharing!
camille885 3 months ago
@camille885 Maybe the little sample of Marseillaise denotes that this tune is originally written in France (and was added by Whiteman)? It's only my version.
valdo2est 3 months ago
@valdo2est Yes, Ithink it was a music joke of Whitman's. By adding fragment of "Marsellaise" to the original composition he seemingly made his tribute to French origins of this fabulous tune.
240252 3 months ago
the art work and photos in this vid an others is exccelent....much research there.....oh, by the way....the music is great also....
johnklyza 3 months ago
@johnklyza Thanks! :-))
240252 3 months ago
Hi Grzegorz - love, love, love that fabulous photo of that Tanguera with a monocle in her eye. She embodies tons of most lovely and independent Tango spirit by which most prominent women - live their lives. All the artwork in this vid - is well chosen - your trademark. However this instrumentation is sensation. By the way - Fanny Brice did a great job with this song - but Barbra Streisand didn't let Fanny upstage her. Barbra's version was also dynamite. Thanks a lot! Great Sunday to you!!!
tango3721 3 months ago
@tango3721 I had somewhere the name of that actress but to my regret, I can't find it. Her partner is Hans Albers -extra class German actor of 1920/30s.That photograph was taken in ca 1925 by Alex Binder - one of the best German photographers of the 1920s . He was author of several famous shots of Garbo as well as the whole series of German movie stars of that era.One day I will upload some photoes from that collection - all they need is some perfect German tango as background.
240252 3 months ago
Świetne wykonanie i ilustracje a ja z łezką w oku wspominam "Bladego Nika" w wykonaniu Ireny Kwiatkowskiej!!
bambi68735 3 months ago
@bambi68735 Czy przypadkiem nie śpiewała tego Barbara Rylska, a nie Kwiatkowska? Chyba, że to jest jakieś nieznane mi wykonanie Kwiatkowskiej.Bo Rylskiej było bardzo popularne w końcówce lat 1960. Gdzieś je mam i pewnie warto by je któregos dnia tu zaprezentować - bo jest świetne!
240252 3 months ago
As familiar as I am w/ Fanny Brice, 'My Man" &c. I've missed hearing it played as fox trot.
Boy, they sure do jazz it up! I wouldn't have missed it for all the victrola needles in Seigel & Coopers!
Grundsau47 3 months ago
@Grundsau47 Indeed, it;s a true jazzy performance made out of that simple cabaret tune. A real master plays it. I adore these early recordings of Whiteman's - he was still a jazz player back than, before in late 1920/30s he changed his genre into a kind of a Hollywood -style "glamourosa"
240252 3 months ago
Fantastic!
valdo2est 3 months ago