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The last time the Chicago Cubs won the World Series was in 1908, but had it not
been for a questionable call during the regular season, they might not have
made it to the Series at all. The most notorious mistake in all of baseball
history was committed by "Bonehead" Fred Merkle of the New York Giants, who
failed to touch second base as the winning run was scored by the Giants over
the Cubs in September 1908. When the Cubs tagged the base as Merkle was headed
to the dugout, the game was called a tie, and the teams faced a rematch in
October, with the winner?which turned out to be the Cubs?getting the pennant.
You couldn't ask for a better backdrop to the introduction of baseball's most
famous song, "Take Me Out to the Ball Game," which was waxed for the first
time in 1908 by the Haydn Quartet, and which is included on a compilation for
the first time here on Archeophone's "1908" release.
The World Rolls On
As essayist Todd Avery notes in the CD's accompanying booklet, 1908 was a year
when events were outpacing the historian's pen. American life was busy being
busy, with advances in aviation, streets full of motorcars, and feats of
construction. It seems natural that Americans would turn out to baseball
parks for relaxation?but the season ended up as one of the most tense and
exciting on record. The soundtrack for the historical season included songs
that slowed down the pace, such as "The
Glow Worm," "I Love You So," from
The Merry Widow, and the old Stephen Foster gem, "Come
Where My Love Lies Dreaming" by the newly christened Peerless Quartet.
Seasoned Veterans . . .
Two sets of top-notch teammates had a big year in 1908, singing affectionate,
even somewhat silly songs: Collins and Harlan and Jones and Murray. The latter
pair are featured on three songs on this CD: "Cuddle
Up a Little Closer, Lovey Mine," George M. Cohan's "When We Are M-A-Double-R-I-E-D," and "Wouldn't
You Like to Have Me for a Sweetheart." The former pair are featured with
the rube song, "My Gal Irene" and "Down
in Jungle Town," a standout number of the "monkey craze" then current. The
perennial favorite ragtime singer Arthur Collins is here on two other songs
as well, the interminably catchy "Dixie Dan" and "Every Little Bit, Added
to What You've Got, Makes Just a Little Bit More."
. . . and Showstoppers
The irresistible Billy Murray performs a great Cohan song, "Under Any Old Flag
at All," and for the Indestructible cylinder firm, he does the song most closely
associated with George Walker of Williams and Walker: "Bon
Bon Buddy" from the Broadway hit, Bandanna Land. Also featured is Elise
Stevenson's "Are You Sincere?" a
late interpolation into The Wizard of Oz, which by 1908 had already been running
for five years on Broadway. And then there are the vaudevillians?the irascible
Eddie Morton, with his first hit, "Don't Take Me Home," and Clarice Vance,
vaudeville's stupendous "Southern Singer," with her wry song, "I'm Wise."
Batting Cleanup
Vintage record enthusiasts will be thrilled by the inclusion of terrific numbers
by Harry Maconough, one of the true acoustic-era greats who has never received
his due. We've got the moving "My Dear," and the rousing "Maxim's" from Lehár's
The Merry Widow. Further, the outstanding baritone Alan Turner does "As Long
as the World Rolls On," and the more popular-oriented basso Frank C. Stanley
teams with Henry Burr on "Rainbow," and he leads the way on the Peerless
Quartet's "Rah, Rah, Rah." These performers are the backbone of the acoustic
recording era, and Archeophone is committed to preserving them. Once again, "1908" raises
the standard for quality in rare records, intelligent commentary, and deluxe
packaging, all at an incredibly low price.
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