Posted on 12/13/2009 5:37:31 PM PST by SamAdams76
Remember back in 1970, when you heard that (horrible to some) rendition of Jingle Bells by the Singing Dogs? Well, you may not realize this, but those dogs got their start about 15 years earlier, in 1955.
Jingle Bells was originally part of a medley of tunes sung by the Dogs, beginning with Pat-A-Cake, Three Blind Mice, and then Jingle Bells. The 1955 RCA Victor release also included the effects of a carniv(or)al to showcase their talent, including that of a carnival barker. The record was complemented with a faithful (well, as faithful as could be expected) rendition of Stephen Fosters Oh! Susanna on the other side. There was even an article about the Dogs written up in LIFE Magazine, in their December 19, 1955 issue for those who choose to seek it out (for those who don't, see below).
Around 1970, some DJ dug out the old record and began playing it with much success. So much, in fact, that RCA went so far as to re-release the 1955 Jingle Bells track, though in a slightly edited version, in 1970. Since the stand alone Jingle Bells track was just over a minute long, they extended it by taking a part of the track and tagged it on to the ending to bring it closer to 2 minutes. They dropped all carnival activities in the process.
As an additional aside about the 1955 release, special preview copies of the record were released just for radio play. What they did was track each tune separately, such that they werent banded together. There was also no carnival activity here either, just the Dogs singing. They started the one side with Jingle Bells which was attributed to Pearl. Pat-A-Cake was attributed to Caesar, and King got credit for Three Blind Mice (Note: this was before Elvis was signed to the label). With regard to Oh! Susanna, Dolly got credited on that one. That track was also split into two separate parts, beginning with a fast version, and then a slow version. On the regular release, both tracks were strung together as one, only in reverse order, the slow version going into the fast version. The 1955 release was also complemented with a picture sleeve, showing the Dogs as a quartet. Picture sleeves are known to exist on both the 45rpm and 78rpm versions (I have both).
As to the track posted here, what youre hearing is a compromise of the 1955 and 1970 release of Jingle Bells. What I did was to recreate the 1970 edit of Jingle Bells, using only the 1955 release, and retained all the Carnival activity associated with the original. As an added embellishment on my part, I under-dubbed part of the instrumental bridge to the beginning introduction to keep it Seasonal throughout. The Dogs would go on to record once more in 1956, with Hot Dog Rock N Roll and Hot Dog Boogie, which was also re-issued in the 1970s. The 1956 release also featured a picture sleeve of the Dogs (by then a quintet, with the addition of Pussy), also in both formats.
The same white-coated men who ran the IBM mainframes for the Apollo program were no doubt contracted out to work on this magnus opus. In fact, I do not think I exaggerate when I state that The Singing Dogs was as important to music as the Manhattan Project was to the atomic bomb.
“The same white-coated men who ran the IBM mainframes for the Apollo program were no doubt contracted out to work on this magnus opus. In fact, I do not think I exaggerate when I state that The Singing Dogs was as important to music as the Manhattan Project was to the atomic bomb.”
So True! And “Switched on Bach”, the first Moog Synthesizer album was also a wonder. Thousands of edits of single notes on TAPE, all patched together to become a Brandenburg Concerto!
Those ere the days!
Thanks to South Park, I can’t listen to O Holy Night without giggling.
Later there was the Jingle Cats.
An early episode of Monty Python had a guy (Terry Jones I think) named Arthur Lemmings who had “musical mice”. He puts mice in a box and prepares to...hit them with mallets (don’t worry, it’s all fake). “Now, I have arranged 23 white mice...mice that have been arranged in a specific order. Now, this one is E sharp, and this one is G. Now I will have them squeak ‘The Bells of St Mary’. On the mouse organ. ‘The Bells of St Mary’...”
He starts and soon gets dragged off by security...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9nGyPz9uT0
I remember the first time I heard it on the radio. I was working at a small radio station in NH, but heard this on some other station. It cracked me up. Went lookig for it, but we hadn’t received a copy. Somehow I found this original 1955 release with the other songs on it, in the basement somewhere, I don’t really remember where. (But this one didn’t have the songs separated, it was just a medley) That whole Christmas season, I manipulated that thing to be able to play just the Jingle Bells part. But it was instructive - just the other day my sister and I were talking about it, and I told her it had originally come out in 1955 - she was surprised. Just think that all those dogs were probably dead before they achieved “fame.”
I appreciated the article with pictures of the actual dogs.
Oh, yes, the Jingle Cats!!! That one was big when I was working at Cheapo. Yes, yes, Allen even allowed us (is allowed the right word?)to blast it out into Central Square. We got pretty tired of it (along with Santa Claus Got Stuck in My Chimney) and I haven’t heard it since. But I have a new cat...I was thinking of letting him have a listen......
For a good laugh, be sure to check out those Benny Grunch Christmas songs!
Actually, I believe Dr Demento is using a pitch bender, much later technology.
(And you can be sure the dogs got screwed out of the royalties due them just like Richie Valens and all the other great artistes!)
ok, great!
It brought tears to my eyes hearing them last Friday evening while waiting at the checkout line in my local discount grocery store. The black woman behind me cursed the poor dogs while I was grooving along glad the line moved slowly so I could hear the symphony to the end.
Well at least they had fun on the road. All the T-bone steaks they could eat and all the groupies they could handle.
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