Guy Lombardo - LOVE ME OR LEAVE ME (1929) descargar videos gratis


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Duración: 03:22
Subido: 2010/01/26

"Love Me or Leave Me"

Music by Walter Donaldson

Words by Gus Kahn

Performed by Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians

Vocal by Carmen Lombardo

Recorded March 20, 1929, New York

This song was introduced in the Broadway play, "Whoopee!," which opened in December 1928. Ruth Etting's performance of the song was so popular that she was also given the song to sing in the play "Simple Simon," which opened in February 1930.

"Love Me or Leave Me" was also a 1955 biographical film roughly based on the life of Ruth Etting, a singer who rose from dancer to movie star. It stars Doris Day as Etting, James Cagney as Martin "Moe the Gimp" Snyder.

Although Canada's premiere dance band, the Royal Canadians, are most closely associated with Guy Lombardo, it was in fact his younger brother Carmen who was the true driving force behind the music group. Born in London, Ontario in 1903, the Lombardo brothers made their first debut together at a church function in 1914, starting what would end up to be a 55-year collaboration.

Both Carmen and Guy began taking music lessons at the same time, with Guy on violin and Carmen on flute. Over the years, Carmen would switch to saxophone while Guy would just pick up a conductor's baton. The Royal Canadians formed in 1916, with Carmen as singer, saxophone player and composer. Their first prominent performance occurred at a dance pavilion in Grand Bend, Ontario in 1919.

In 1923, The Royal Canadians moved to Cleveland, Ohio and quickly obtained a permanent gig at a nightclub called the Claremont Trent. The band was taken under the wing of club owner, Louis Bleet, and continued to play in the Cleveland area until 1927, when they moved to Chicago and began broadcasting live on the radio from the Granada Cafe. In 1928, two of Carmen's songs, Coquette and Sweethearts on Parade,became major hits for the group, attracting international attention. The Royal Canadians were known for 'the sweetest music this side of Heaven', a description coined by Ashton Stevens of the Chicago Tribune. In 1929, The Royal Canadians began their longest standing gig at the Roosevelt Grill in New York City, lasting 33 years. It was at the Roosevelt that The Royal Canadians began the annual tradition of a New Years Eve telecast on CBS. The Royal Canadians sold at least 100 million records. Between 1929 and 1952 there wasn't a single year that a Guy Lombardo record didn't chart - 21 of them at number one, and many featuring songs by Carmen Lombardo.

Although Carmen continued to be the lead singer of The Royal Canadians, he never really enjoyed the job. In 1940, he was replaced as the lead singer, allowing him to concentrate solely on songwriting. Among the hits that Carmen penned, made popular by the Guy Lombardo Orchestra, were "Jungle Drums", "Boo Hoo", "It's Never Too Late", "It's Easier Said than Done", "Seems Like Old Times", "Where Are You Gonna Be When the Moon Shines?", "Get Out Those Old Records", "How Long Has it Been?",and "Marry the One You Love." He also penned the stage scores Arabian Nights, Paradise Island and Mardi Gras!

Over the course of half a century, Carmen collaborated with such great writers as John Jacob Loeb. Other creative partners included Charles Newman, Johnny Green, Jimmy Monaco, Cliff Friend, Gus Kahn, Gene Austin, Art Kassel, Sam Coslow, Irving Caeser and Roy Turk. Carmen continued to play with the band on saxophone until 1970, when his failing health forced him to retire from the band. He continued to write until his death in 1971, and his final song was entitled What Have We Done to Our World?, a bleak tune incongruent with the rest of his work. "They (the songs) kept him from thinking about the pain those last few months of his life," Carmen's widow explained. " The songs kept him alive an extra four months."

Standing the test of time, Carmen's songs have appeared in such Woody Allen films as Annie Hall and Bullets Over Broadway and have been recorded by artists including Louis Armstrong, Bing Crosby and Dean Martin.

Comentarios

9 years ago

M. Robert Wick

These are timeless classics....

9 years ago

Roberto Lopez

I love this type of music, I'm 42 and I think I was born in the wrong era! Roaring 20s!

9 years ago

Maria Cintron

I was a teen in the late 50's (rock,etc.)but these jewels are my favorite MUSIC.

10 years ago

eduardo govea arreguin

bsgs98 Te agradeceria subir si lo tienes el tema Anastasia con Guy Lombardo. Gracias.

11 years ago

wordsmith52

Best version I ever heard.

11 years ago

odysseetheater

great great version !!! thanks for posting... how glad i am to sing this songs... :D

11 years ago

bsgs98

Thank you! I have many Guy Lombardo postings on my channel. They are one of my favorite orchestras.

11 years ago

bsgs98

Thanks for the comment! There are many who can still remember the Lombardos on radio, TV and records and have fond memories. Especially on News Years EVE.

12 years ago

Peter Peter and his Uploads

@JCJasion Not sure you refer to Guy Lombardo as this group. He is an American (and Canadian!) institution.

13 years ago

Andre Rosa

I absolutely love this song. I'm twenty but I love these kind of oldies.

13 years ago

ziggy swartz

@NoelGuyALfan You are so right Noel- what passes for "talent" these days just makes me want to cry- and there is so little "class" that the Lombardo's and others personified. I had the chance to dance to Guy in the 60's (can't remember the girls name!) and Carmen even sang a vocal then while Kenny took a break. All sadly missed. Thanks goodness for sites like this. -Bill

13 years ago

bsgs98

@JCJasion I missed another performer on that recording: Dave Durham , tenor sax.

13 years ago

bsgs98

@JCJasion According to Rust's Jazz Discography it was Buck Houghins, reeds and violin / Jerry Collins , piano / Larry Dowing, guitar / Cliff Stein, string bass. Sessions were recorded in Charlotte, NC which is not too far from Knoxville, so it's likely it is the same band that Chet Atkins played with in the 1940s. I've never heard the group but might it be classified as "western swing?"

13 years ago

bsgs98

@JCJasion There is a reissue of the Dixieland Swingsters on CD with this song, but none of the web sites have 30 second sound samples. I read that Chet Atkins was briefly with a group with the same name in the early 1940s on a Knoxville radio station.

13 years ago

Dinamita Cienfuegos

Ahhh muy bonito video...mmmm , muy bien hecho bsgs98 * u *.

14 years ago

marsmoke

@NoelGuyALfan Sorry to hear the museum is gone. I last visited it in 1991. Auld lang syne.

14 years ago

bsgs98

@2reeler Back in the 1960's actor/comedian Tony Randall used to do a vocal recreation of some of the old 20s and 30s tunes on the Johnny Carson Show and he did a great version of "Boo Hoo" even imitating Carmen's vibrato. It was such a success that Carson later invited the Lombardo Brothers on the show and Carmen sang "Boo Hoo" and "Annie Doesn't Live Here Anymore." I wonder if a tape of that program exists?

14 years ago

2reeler

Wow, great old classic tune! It has just now jogged my memory as a teenager back in the early 70s. I had a victrola and a few Guy Lombardo 78s of my grandfathers, so when Lombardos band came to play a date at the big 1925 era Sacramento Mem. Auditorium, I went! I remember seeing Carmen and the trio singing BooHoo especially, as the crowd clapped loudest for that one. It was great to see so many older couples fox trotting out on the floor! Thank you for all your great Lombardo songs!~

14 years ago

vrobbie53

Nice video and great rendition! I also enjoy Bing's work form the early thirties with Guy Lombardo on Brunswick.

14 years ago

NoelGuyALfan

Final Pt 4 Like the Museum in his old hometown London Ont CA,also gone,sign of the times. Even the Appreciation Society in Richmond VA,hardly looks "alive" at all,a great disappointment. Sincerely Noel Melbourne.Victoria. Australia. PS.. I hope the photo made your Mom and Dad really happy to have met him,and gave them both a cherished memory !!

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