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Music Notes

Music Notes #2

Humphrey Lyttelton

Humphrey Lyttelton aka “Humph” (23 May 1921 – 25 April 2008) was a talented broadcaster, humorist, cartoonist, trumpeter and jazz band leader. Musically, he is remembered for Bad Penny Blues, a hit in 1956, while as a broadcaster he presented The Best of Jazz for forty years, and hosted the hilarious comedy panel game I’m Sorry I Haven’t a Clue. Louis Armstrong was so impressed with Humphrey Lyttelton’s playing that he referred to him as “that cat in England who swings his ass off.”

📸 Wikipedia

Born at Eton College and related to the nobility, Humphrey Lyttelton turned his back on titles and honours. A turning point in his life arrived upon leaving school when he worked at Port Talbot Steel Works. His experiences there forged his political beliefs, which he termed as “romantic socialism”.

A second lieutenant in the Grenadier Guards, Humphrey Lyttelton saw Second World War action at Salerno, Italy during Operation Avalanche. When he came ashore, he held a pistol in one hand and a trumpet in the other.

On VE Day, 8 May 1945, Humphrey Lyttelton joined the celebrations in London by playing his trumpet from a wheelbarrow. Inadvertently, the BBC broadcast his performance in a recording that still survives.

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Music Notes

Music Notes

Music Notes

Jane Morgan (pictured) enjoyed a long career on Broadway, on record, on television, and in nightclubs and movies. Her career blossomed in America and Europe, and featured a number of million sellers including The Day the Rains Came (number one in Britain in 1959), which she released as a double A side, an English version of the song and a French version – Le jour où la pluie viendra. 

Later in her career, Jane Morgan released an answer song to Johnny Cash’s A Boy Named Sue called A Girl Named Johnny Cash. She performed this song on Cash’s television show, 1971. Check it out, it’s clever and amusing.

Jane married twice and her second husband, Jerry Weintraub, was instrumental in Elvis Presley’s re-emergence in the early 1970s.

Jane Morgan celebrated her 100th birthday on 3 May 2024.

Some artists write and record a song in half an hour. With ‘More Than a Feeling’, Boston’s Tom Scholz took five years. During that time, Scholz worked for Polaroid, and used his wages to build a recording studio in his basement. Boston’s rich sound, built around Scholz’s harmonised guitars and Brad Delp’s long-held notes, arguably, created the blueprint for the American rock sound of the mid to late seventies.

Incidentally, Scholz cited ‘Walk Away Renee’, the Left Banke version, as his main ‘More Than a Feeling’ influence.

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A pop music curiosity: The Specials’ Too Much Too Young (1980), at just under two minutes, was the shortest number one since the Beatles’ From Me to You (1963).

“And every song was short and sweet, and every beat was fast
And every paper in the land said rock-and-roll won’t last
You know it just won’t last, it’s such a rapid burn.”

Class of ‘58 – Al Stewart

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Originally established in 1931 to broadcast in German and French, in 1933 Radio Luxembourg began Sunday broadcasts in English on 208 metres medium wave. After 1945, the station broadcast an English service daily and introduced a new feature – a top twenty based on sheet music sales.

With the BBC indifferent to popular music, Radio Luxembourg’s evening shows became an important source for British listeners. Indeed, the station dominated the pop music airwaves until the arrival of pirate radio ships in 1964.

Radio Luxembourg at Expo ‘58, Brussels, Belgium

In 1971 Radio Luxembourg abandoned its pre-recorded shows and adopted an “all live” format with disc jockeys presenting their programmes from Luxembourg. 

In the late sixties and early seventies strong competition from BBC Radio 1 and British commercial radio stations reduced Radio Luxembourg’s audience. Listeners also preferred the cleaner sound of the BBC programmes to Radio Luxembourg’s “fade in-fade out” reception. 

Despite the heavy hand of sponsors interrupting the music, and the dodgy reception, Radio Luxembourg played an important part in the development of 1960s pop culture. 

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