Cole Porter: Begin the Beguine - Joe Loss & Chick Henderson, 1939 video free download


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Duration: 03:24
Uploaded: 2010/03/12

Joe Loss and His Band, Voc. Chick Henderson Begin the Beguine (Cole Porter), Regal Zonophone 1939

Chick HENDERSON (born Henderson Rowntree) one of Britains most popular singers in the late 1930s. He was born in Hartlepool, North England in 1912. As a boy Chick loved to sing and was an active member of a church choir. He was heard by Harry Leader and given an audition, who immediately signed him up in 1935. Chick started recording in 1935 and made three sides with a band for the Eclipse Label. In August 1935 he made his first broadcast on the BBC and a few months later he joined the Joe Loss Band and became his principal singer. Chick and Joe Loss went on to record over 250 tracks. Chick Henderson was a shy and modest person who loved to spend quiet weekends with his family and friends, but at least once a month he was in the recording studio with Joe Loss, usually putting down about four numbers each session. Very few recordings required more than one take. A tall, handsome man with a rich, strong vocal delivery, Chick quickly became a great favorite among young women who formed his core audience. He appeared on postcards and magazine covers. His best seller was „Begin The Beguine which sold over a million copies, the only recording by a 1930s vocalist to achieve such a triumph. In 1940 Chick recorded also with Harry Roy, with Organ Dance Band & Me, and with London Piano Accordion Band. His last recording session was in 1942 in Glasgow with Joe Loss.

One year following the start of World War II in September 1939, he began serving in the Merchant Navy. He survived two torpedo attacks on his ships, but after four years of service, sustained fatal wounds in Southsea from flying bomb shrapnel. He died in 1944 at age 31, after a recording career of only seven years.

Joe LOSS (Joshua Alexander Loss) b. 1909 in Spitalfields, London d. 1990. He was the youngest of four children. His father Israel who was a cabinet-maker, and his mother Ada, were Russian Jews. Joe was educated at Jews' Free School, Trinity College of Music and the London College of Music. He started violin lessons at the age of seven and later played violin at the Tower Ballroom, Blackpool. In 1935 he started to lead his own orchestra, which in a short time made his name synonymous with the very best in dance band music. Loved and respected by his public and profession alike, he had a style and musical policy that kept him at the very top of the big band world for 60 years.

Comments

9 years ago

Paul Herring

Transcendental - there seems to be no other word that fits. Maybe rapturous. What a combination!

9 years ago

Steven Heywood

What a wonderful voice and orchestra...pity Chick died so young in WW2 :-/

9 years ago

Robert Morgan

This was the first song from the period that I ever heard - in my teens in the 1970s, and on the original 78 rpm shellac disc just for good measure. I know of no better version.

9 years ago

Derek Holt

This was the 2nd record I ever bought but can t remember the tune on the flip side ?????

9 years ago

William Ferry

Thinks..All my biking and Car chums.. this'll confuse the b#ggers.!Wonderful work..Happy days.WF

9 years ago

Ong Cmu

The best of the best, thanks

9 years ago

Paul Herring

Probably the greatest song ever recorded. It had everything: outstanding vocal from Chick Henderson, sensational backing from Joe Loss Orchestra and the subject matter everyone of us dreams of. It is unlikely ever to be bettered.

9 years ago

newfriends

My father sang this song.Wonderful childhood memories

9 years ago

goinghomesomeday1

There is 1 very sad and lonely person out there.

9 years ago

Rj Leslee

Oh this is wonderful. Wish I could go back in time to experience such splendid and romantic era in musical history!

9 years ago

fred turton

They used play this quite a lot on 'Anything Goes' with Bob Holeness on the World Service. I used listen to it when I was studying in the evening for my BSc in Engineering

9 years ago

salvatore ganci

beautiful

10 years ago

Peter Osborne

I first heard this song sitting outside the army barracks guard house in Townsville Aust. in 1949 at the age of 17. It has haunted me since. Also on that night I first heard birth of the blues. They remain my favourite songs after 65 years.

10 years ago

dennis pendergast

Just beautiful. Only 67 but these times must have been the best of times..

10 years ago

Filippo Liberati

The best song in the world

10 years ago

leva dmitriev

Tack så mycket för pleasant song

10 years ago

Birgitta Rundqvist

How beautiful!!!!

10 years ago

fred turton

This reminds me of when I was studying for one of my degrees and listening to Bob Holeness on Anything Goes. It also reminds me of when I first started holidaying in Spain.

10 years ago

Saulo Mundim Lenza

A música é linda, o cantor é ótimo, a orquestra sensacional. Obrigado pela postagem.

10 years ago

David Woodhouse

Divine! Memories of romantic love. How beautiful and lovely..

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