Welcome to UMO!! Registration is free!! Please register now for a chance to win a free T-Shirt & Hat!! Please register and become a part of our great family.
[x] Register as a member now for free! New Members are entered to win free merchandise! We would be honored to have you.
Upper Midwest Outdoors
Hello May 23, 2012, 06:36:29 AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
News:
 
  Home   Forum   Arcade Search Calendar Login Register Team UMO Help  

User

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
May 23, 2012, 06:36:29 AM

Login with username, password and session length

UMO Countdown

MN Muskie Opener in 9 days 17 hours 24 minutes

Proud To Support Our Troops & Veterans

Recent Topics




Top Posters

Who's In Chat

Stats

Members
Stats
  • Total Posts: 64196
  • Total Topics: 6959
  • Online Today: 6
  • Online Ever: 166
  • (February 05, 2010, 11:12:53 AM)
Users Online
Users: 1
Guests: 8
Total: 9
Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Send this topic  |  Print  
Share this topic on FacebookShare this topic on MySpaceShare this topic on TwitterShare this topic on GoogleShare this topic on Yahoo
Author Topic: Follow the bouncing ball  (Read 468 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Ude Lake Tom
UMO Public Relations Coordinator
UMO Moderator
Master Outdoorsman
*
Offline Offline

Location: So. St. Paul, Mn
Posts: 7577



Activity
100%

Referrals: 0

Awards
« on: August 02, 2010, 04:14:24 PM »
ReplyReply

Conductor Mitch Miller dies at age 99
Aug. 2, 2010, 1:02 PM EST
NEW YORK (AP) -- Mitch Miller, the goateed orchestra leader who asked Americans to "Sing Along With Mitch" on television and records, has died at age 99.

His daughter, Margaret Miller Reuther, said Monday that Miller died Saturday in Lenox Hill Hospital after a short illness.

Miller was a key record executive at Columbia Records in the pre-rock 'n' roll era, making hits with singers Rosemary Clooney, Patti Page, Johnny Mathis and Tony Bennett.

"Sing Along With Mitch" started as a series of records, then became a popular NBC show starting in early 1961. Miller's stiff-armed conducting style and signature goatee became famous.

As a producer and arranger, Miller had misses along with his hits, famously striking out on projects with Frank Sinatra and a young Aretha Franklin.

The TV show ranked in the top 20 for the 1961-62 season, and soon children everywhere were parodying Miller's stiff-armed conducting. An all-male chorus sang old standards, joined by a few female singers, most prominently Leslie Uggams. Viewers were invited to join in with lyrics superimposed on the screen and followed with a bouncing ball.

"He is an odd-looking man," New York Times critic Brooks Atkinson wrote in 1962. "His sharp beard, twinkling eyes, wrinkled forehead and mechanical beat make him look like a little puppet as he peers hopefully into the camera. By now most of us are more familiar with his tonsils than with those of our families."

Atkinson went on to say that as a musician, Miller was "first rate," praising "the clean tone of the singing, the clarity of the lyrics, the aptness of the tempos, the variety and the occasional delicacy of the instrumental accompaniment."

An accomplished oboist, Miller played in a number of orchestras early in his career, including one put together in 1934 by George Gershwin. "Gershwin was an unassuming guy," Miller told The New York Times in 1989. "I never heard him raise his voice."

Miller began in the recording business with Mercury Records in the late '40s, first on the classical side, later with popular music. He then went over to Columbia Records as head of its popular records division.

Among the stars whose hits he worked on were Clooney, Page, Bennett, Frankie Laine and Jo Stafford. His decision to have Mathis switch from jazz to lushly romantic ballads launched the singer as a superstar.

He had a less rewarding collaboration with Sinatra, whose recording of the novelty song "Mama Will Bark," featuring a barking dog, was considered the nadir of the singer's career. Still, Miller became known for his distinctive arrangements, such as the use of a harpsichord on Clooney's megahit version of "Come On-a My House." He used dubbing of vocal tracks back when that was considered exotic.

"To me, the art of singing a pop song has always been to sing it very quietly," Miller said in the book "Off the Record: An Oral History of Popular Music."

"The microphone and the amplifier made the popular song what it is — an intimate one-on-one experience through electronics. It's not like opera or classical singing. The whole idea is to take a very small thing and make it big."

Miller and a chorus had a No. 1 hit in 1955 with "The Yellow Rose of Texas," and that led to his sing-along records a few years later.

The years of Miller's biggest successes were also the early years of rock 'n' roll, and many fans saw his old-fashioned arrangements of standards and folk favorites as an antidote to the noisy stuff the teens adored. As an executive at Columbia, Miller would be widely ridiculed for trying to turn a young Aretha Franklin into a showbiz diva in the tradition of Sophie Tucker.

But Miller was not entirely unsympathetic to rock 'n' roll.

In a 1955 essay in The New York Times magazine, he said the popularity of rhythm and blues, as he called it, with white teens was part of young people's "natural desire not to conform, a need to be rebellious."

He added: "There is a steady — and healthy — breaking down of color barriers in the United States; perhaps the rhythm-and-blues rage — I am only theorizing — is another expression of it."

"Miller has often been maligned as a maestro of 1950s schlock ... Yet Miller injected elements of rhythm and blues and country music, however diluted, into mainstream pop," Ken Emerson wrote in his book "Always Magic in the Air."

In the Martin Scorsese documentary on Bob Dylan, "No Direction Home," Miller acknowledged that he was dubious when famed producer John Hammond brought the nearly unknown Dylan to the staid Columbia label in the early '60s. "He was singing in, you know, this rough-edged voice," Miller said. "I will admit I didn't see the greatness of it." But he said he respected Hammond's track record in finding talent.

In recent years, Miller returned to his classical roots, appearing frequently as a guest conductor with symphony orchestras.

In 2000, he won a special Grammy Award for lifetime achievement.

Reuther said her father died of "just old age."

"He was absolutely himself up until the minute he got sick," she said. "He was truly blessed with a long and wonderful life."

Miller was born in 1911, in Rochester, N.Y., son of a Russian Jewish immigrant wrought-iron worker and a seamstress. He graduated from the Eastman School of Music of the University of Rochester.

Reuther said there will be a memorial service for her father in the fall
« Last Edit: August 02, 2010, 05:24:06 PM by Ude Lake Tom » Logged
glenn57
UMO Moderator
Master Outdoorsman
*
Offline Offline

Location: cold spring mn
Posts: 8044



Activity
100%

Referrals: 0

Awards
« Reply #1 on: August 02, 2010, 04:18:01 PM »
ReplyReply

who's he???????????? dontknow dontknow icon_scratch
Logged
fish-n-fool
Guide
****
Offline Offline

Location: fgo/mhd
Posts: 2726



Activity
68%

Referrals: 0

Awards
« Reply #2 on: August 02, 2010, 04:37:04 PM »
ReplyReply

It's before our time, Glenn... WAY before out time.....
Logged

Sometimes too much fishing just isn't enough....
Ude Lake Tom
UMO Public Relations Coordinator
UMO Moderator
Master Outdoorsman
*
Offline Offline

Location: So. St. Paul, Mn
Posts: 7577



Activity
100%

Referrals: 0

Awards
« Reply #3 on: August 02, 2010, 04:38:49 PM »
ReplyReply

Ya....the TV had 4 channels and was black and white.  Lots of tubes.
An believe it or not, you had to get up out of the chair and change the channels.  One at a time, no speed flipping, it would wear out the channel selector.
Logged
fish-n-fool
Guide
****
Offline Offline

Location: fgo/mhd
Posts: 2726



Activity
68%

Referrals: 0

Awards
« Reply #4 on: August 02, 2010, 04:43:41 PM »
ReplyReply

Geez-- now I hate to admit it..... but maybe my dad just hadn't bought a TV in a lonnngggg time before I was born...  but we had one like that. 
Logged

Sometimes too much fishing just isn't enough....
sparcebag
Guide
****
Offline Offline

Location: Willmar area
Posts: 3613



Activity
100%

Referrals: 0

Awards
« Reply #5 on: August 02, 2010, 05:39:22 PM »
ReplyReply

who's he???????????? dontknow dontknow icon_scratch
AH HA HA HA channels 4,5,9, and 11 Right Tom?
« Last Edit: August 02, 2010, 05:41:10 PM by sparcebag » Logged

Keeping Americe clean & beautiful is a one man job, MINE
glenn57
UMO Moderator
Master Outdoorsman
*
Offline Offline

Location: cold spring mn
Posts: 8044



Activity
100%

Referrals: 0

Awards
« Reply #6 on: August 03, 2010, 09:06:18 AM »
ReplyReply

seriosly, i really dont know who he is!
Logged
fish-n-fool
Guide
****
Offline Offline

Location: fgo/mhd
Posts: 2726



Activity
68%

Referrals: 0

Awards
« Reply #7 on: August 03, 2010, 04:13:12 PM »
ReplyReply

Leave it to you to get it back on topic...
 laughing4 laughing4 laughing4 laughing4 laughing4
Logged

Sometimes too much fishing just isn't enough....
glenn57
UMO Moderator
Master Outdoorsman
*
Offline Offline

Location: cold spring mn
Posts: 8044



Activity
100%

Referrals: 0

Awards
« Reply #8 on: August 04, 2010, 09:22:06 AM »
ReplyReply

isnt that what we are suppose to do???????????? pottytrain2 pottytrain2 icon_thumleft laughing4
Logged
Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Send this topic  |  Print  
 
Jump to:  














Web hosting






toolbar powered by Conduit
TinyPortal v1.0 beta 3 © Bloc
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Upper Midwest Outdoors © 2008-2010
Powered by SMF 1.1.16 | SMF © 2011, Simple Machines
Refferals System by CreateAForum.com
Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!