Added: 2 years ago
From: tregnier279
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  • Correct, the Wurlitzers 150 and 155 are both military band organs back then, because it had brass pipes (piccolos, clarinets, trumpets and trombones). Most later band organs were substituted with wooden pipes for Wurlitzer styles 146, 153, 157, and 165 organs; the larger styles (153 and 165) advertized as "Duplex Orchestral Organs," due to the fact that it had more violin and chello pipes, and were suted for carousells and dance pavilions.

  • Waltz of the Zebras???? This is "Smarty" played in waltz time.

  • a fine organ and selection - this waltz is unfamiliar - it's a keeper though - thanks treg

  • I've identified the tune. The tune is "Smarty, by Jack Norworth and Albert Von Tilzer, 1908. Albert Von Tilzer was best known as "Take Me Out To the Ball Game," written in the same year.

  • @wurlitzer165 Thanks!

    It's available over at IN Harmony. Oddly enough, their version has the verse in even 2/4 time instead of the flowing waltz time. The chorus, however, is the waltz we are familiar with.

    For those who'd like to know, the first line of the chorus is "Smar-ty, Smar-ty, Smarrrr-tyyyy, Thought you had a parrrr-tyyyy."

  • @wurlitzer165 I forwarded your find to the MMD, if you don't mind, as it's the best way of informing the general band organ community, and Art Reblitz in particular.

  • I've identified the tune. The tune is "Smarty."

  • beautiful

  • SOunds diffrent than a wurlITzer 150

    and there both military band organs

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