Thursday, September 21, 2023

THROWBACK THURSDAY: The History of "Happy Birthday to You"

 


Tomorrow, September 22, 2023, will mark the 8th anniversary of a federal judge's landmark decision that declared the song "Happy Birthday to You" to be in the public domain. That decision led to a subsequent settlement in which Warner/Chappell, the giant media corporation that claimed to have owned the copyright, agreed to repay, to the tune of $14 million, those who had licensed the song.

But, contrary to a rumor I just made up, Judge George H. King, did not admonish Warner/Chappell by declaring, "You look like a monkey and you smell like one too."

"Happy Birthday to You" undoubtedly is the most sung 10-second song in the USA. 

Yes, 10-seconds. Remember singing it -- twice -- while washing your hands every few minutes during the early months of the COVID pandemic? As a 2020 article in Billboard noted:

This has led to some strained attempts at humor, as people try to defuse the tension we’re all feeling. Mark Ronson tweeted: “Been washing my hands for 7 minutes singing ‘happy birthday’ by @StevieWonder x2. I didn’t know they meant the ‘other’ birthday song… smh.”

The melody that everyone loves while someone brings a flaming cake to the table was written by a couple of sisters, Patty and Mildred Hill in Kentucky back in 1893.

The first version was titled "Good Morning to All," and was meant to be sung in the classroom. (Patty was the principal of the Louisville Experimental Kindergarten School, while Mildred was a teacher there.) This early version of the song, which didn't mention any birthdays, was published in Song Stories for the Kindergarten and Primary Schools a book written by the sisters. But, according to The Farmer's Almanac:

Nearly ten years after their first song book was published, the Hill sisters were invited to a neighbor’s birthday party. It was then that Patty changed the words of “Good Morning to All” to “Happy Birthday to You,” in an effort to make the occasion more festive. The song was the highlight of the party, and obviously caught on.

Sounds like some party!

Oklahoma City's beloved Ho Ho the Clown, about to
sing "Happy Birthday" to my brother, back in the
days when we weren't all afraid of clowns.

Billboard, however, noted that "There are various accounts of how `Good Morning to All' morphed into `Happy Birthday to You'."

The Songwriters Hall of Fame website says:

The sisters copyrighted their original song in October 1893 but years later in March of 1924, it appeared without authorization in a songbook edited by a Robert H. Coleman. In the book, Coleman used the original title and first stanza lyrics but altered the second stanza’s opening line to read, “Happy Birthday To You.” Thus, through Coleman, the sisters’ line “Good Morning dear children,” became “Happy Birthday dear (name).”

During the next decade, the song was published several times, each time with minor alterations in the lyrics. By 1933, the widely accepted title was “Happy Birthday To You.” When the song was soon being belted nightly in the Broadway musical, As Thousands Cheer, a third Hill sister, Jessica, tired of the ongoing theft of the melody and total lack of royalty payments, took the case to court.

And apparently she won. The tune was dropped from As Thousands Cheer, and, as the Songwriters Hall of Fame notes, "...Western Union and Postal Telegraph both ceased using the song in singing telegrams. A Broadway hit play with Helen Hayes, `Happy Birthday,' arranged for the star to speak the lyrics so the producers might avoid paying royalties to the authors."

The copyright saga of "Happy Birthday to You" serves as a great example of corporate greed. The publisher of the Hill sisters' Song Stories for the Kindergarten and Primary Schools was the Clayton F. Summy Company, which became the Summy-Birchard Company in 1957, and became a division of the Birch Tree Group in 1970, only to be gobbled up by Warner/Chappell in 1988.

But that lawsuit against Warner/Chappell, originally filed in 2013 by documentary filmmaker Jennifer Nelson returned the song to the people two years later.

Just a week after Nelson filed her suit in New York, a singer named Rupa Marya, singer with a band called Rupa & The April Fishes, filed a similar suit in California, where the cases were combined.

Marya told The Hollywood Reporter that a San Francisco audience had sung the song to her on her birthday in 2013. But... "When the band tried to add that live rendition to an album, she was hit with a lawyers demand for payment to license the song."

Here is Rupa, in the center, with her lawyers and others at the law firm singing the song they fought for:

Here is what is song has to be the most famous performance of this song. Marilyn took more than the mandatory 10 seconds. Nobody complained:

Kermit Ruffins does a version of "Happy Birthday to You," that features lyrics I first heard in elementary school:


For more deep dives into songs, check out The Stephen W. Terrell Web Log Songbook

And, oh yeah, today is my birthday. I guess
I've been hearing this song for 70 years now.


Sunday, September 17, 2023

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST




Sunday, September 17, 2023
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org

Here's my playlist :

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Right Hand Man by Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Ookami Otoko by Horror Deluxe
Girls on Bikes by Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Threat Landscape by Robert Shredford 
Pauline by Eleni Mandell 
Gino is a Coward by Gino Washington
Leave Me Alone by Esquerita
Funky Cowboy by Goober & The Peas
Little Girl by John & Jackie

Jim Thompson by Movie Star Junkies
Uh Oh by Pere Ubu 
Poison Ivy by The Coasters
Get off the Road by The Cramps
My Girl's Pussy by R. Crumb & His Cheap Suit Serenaders
Shave 'Em Dry II by Lucille Bogan
Ten Feet Tall by Little Dion
Special Place In Hell by Suzi Moon 
Teenage Clementine by The Belmonts


Happy 100th Birthday, Hank Williams! 
 (All songs by Hank, except where noted)

Ramblin' Man 
Has Anybody Here Seen Hank by The Waterboys
Cold Cold Heart
Mrs. Hank Williams by Fred Eaglesmith
Lost Highway
Tee Makhuea Pok (Your Cheatin' Heart) by Pairote
Are You Sure Hank Done it This Way by Waylon Jennings
Alone and Forsaken
Hank Williams' Ghost by Darrell Scott


Ma by Tom Zé 
Toast First by Nick Shoulders
Don't Talk to Strangers by Miriam 
Everybody Knows Concrete Blonde
If You Call by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
Are You Sincere by Bobby Bare 
Loser's Lullaby by Ronny Elliott 
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis






Wednesday, September 13, 2023

WACKY WEDNESDAY: The Punk Rock Crisis on Network TV

 



There's no panic like a moral panic.

Back in the late '60s, the hippies with their long hair and marijuana inspired Jack Webb to try to warn the nation of the dangers of peace and love and their threatening new music on Dragnet. In the' 70s and '80s, punk rock inspired overwrought television episodes trying to shock Mr. Marvin Middleclass about the unhealthy phenomenon destroying the nation's youth.

Actually on sitcoms, punk-rock generally was treated as weird but essentially harmless fun for the kids. The humor came not only from  the stereotypical Mohawks and slam dancing, but from the squares' reactions to it. 

This was the case with case with Don Rickles in CPO Sharkey. A 1978 episode titled "Punk Rock Sharkey" actually featured The Dickies. This video of the band's song "Hideous" features clips from that show:


On WKRP in Cincinnati, in a 1978 episode there's a British punk band called Scum of the Earth (which featured musician/actor Michael Des Barres) dress all spiffy, but that's only a guise. Under those 3-piece suits there are rascally punk-rock hearts who like to spray their audiences with fire extinguishers, much to the dismay of Mr. Carlson, who prefers Benny Goodman, and Andy, who yearns for Crosby, Stills & Nash: 

But on television dramas, things got serious. 

Punk rock became a backdrop for murderous violence and destruction.

On CHiPs, for instance, a band called Pain, in a 1982 episode called "Battle of the Bands" thinks it's funny to throw an electric bass off a rooftop causing traffic mayhem. (I was sympathetic though, because one band member is named "Potatohead"!)

All the way up to 1987 -- long after the heyday of actual punk rock -- an ABC After School Special called "The Day My Kid Went Punk" warned of the danger of "Punk Syndrome," which apparently is even worse than the Woke Mind Virus! Here, a meek, soft-spoken high school orchestra nerd transforms himself into a punk rocker to try to win the heart of a cute blonde girl in the orchestra. Here's an abbreviated version of that episode:


But perhaps the craziest punk rock depiction of all time was on Quincy ME, that Jack Klugman vehicle about the crime-solving medical examiner. In one episode called  “Next Stop, Nowhere,” a kid is stabbed to death at a punk rock show and Quincy is convinced that the evil music was at least partially to blame. “Whoever killed that boy was listening to words that literally cried out for blood,” he says at one point during the episode. Here are some clips from this infamous episode:


But I'll let Jack Webb have the last word:



Sunday, September 10, 2023

TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

 



Sunday, September 10, 2023
KSFR, Santa Fe, NM
Webcasting!
10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time
Host: Steve Terrell 101.1 FM
Email me during the show! terrell(at)ksfr.org

Here's my playlist :

OPENING THEME: Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) by The Hombres
Pressure Drop by The Clash
Jumpin Jack Off  by Thee Retail Simps
Walking With Frankie by Eilen Jewell
Waiting for the World by City of My Death
Nga Nga by Ebo Taylor
Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White by The Grawks 
Blame it on the Hula Hula by Chuck & The Hulas
Party Crasher by Mark Sultan

Big Bad Bill by Spike Jones
Billy Richardson's Last Ride by Grandpa Jones 

Ain't That Loving You Baby by Jimmy Reed
Esu by Agalu 
A Promise by Movie Star Junkies
Far Away Across The Sea by Sierra Ferrell 
Walk to the Harvest by Quintron 
New Kind Of Kick by Brat Farrar

POST-LABOR DAY SET
Plenty Tough-Union Made by Waco Brothers
We Shall Not Be Moved/Roll the Union On by Joe Glazer
Pie In The Sky by Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco 
Scraps from Your Table by Hazel Dickens
Do Re Mi by Woody Guthrie 
Bread and Roses by Bobbie McGee

Zombi B. Good by Horror Deluxe
Donut Quota by Gluey Brothers
Man, It's A Jungle by Ruth Wallis 

Superstar by US Girls & Bootsy Collins
Another Trip by The Minks
Moonglow, Lamp Low by Eleni Mandell
Jukebox by Lucinda Williams
Pressing On by John Doe 
Adios Maria by The Cactus Blossoms  
CLOSING THEME: Over the Rainbow by Jerry Lee Lewis



Wednesday, September 06, 2023

THROWBACK THURSDAY: Happy Birthday, Jimmy Reed

 

Mathis James Reed, better known in this world as Jimmy Reed, would have been 98 years old today. However, he died at the age of 50 back in 1976 at the age of 50.

Happy birthday, Boss Man!

Reed, who like so many of his generation of blues singers migrated from Mississipoi to Chicago, left behind an amazing catalogue of songs, some of the most recognizable blues tunes this side of Muddy Waters.

He began recording on the Chicago-based label Vee Jay in 1953  (Hey, they had The Beatles for a short time!) Encyclopedia Brittanica --not usually my first go-to blues history source --described his tunes: 

"They almost invariably featured the same basic, unadorned rural boogie-shuffle rhythm accompanied by his thickly drawled "mush-mouth: vocals and high, simply phrased harmonica solos."

Mush-mouth? I dunno ...

Jackie Meyers of Mississippi Writers & Musicians wrote:

Much of his success can be credited to his friend Eddie Taylor, who played on most of his sessions, and his wife, Mama Reed, who wrote many of his songs and even sat behind him in the studio reciting his lyrics into his forgetful ear as he sang. His hits appealed  to blacks and  whites. Many of his blues songs were even adopted by white R&B groups during the early 60’s.  He was the first of the Chicago electric bluesmen to break through to the pop/rock market. Reed  had fourteen  hits for Vee Jay on the R&B charts between 1955 and 1966.

Among those who have covered Reed tunes are Elvis Presley, Count Basie, Willie Nelson, Jimi Hendrix, Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Jerry Lee Lewis, The Grateful Dead, Waylon Jennings Sonny James and scores of others.

But nobody sounded like mush-moth Jimmy!

Here are a few of my favorite Reed songs.

Honest, I do love this one:

And if you don't love Jimmy Reed I'm going to ask you to Hush:

I'm amazed no insurance company never tried to use this one in a comercial:

But my favorite has always been Big Boss Man. I always have imagined some bone-weary Egyptian slave defiantly shouting this into the air while working on some pyramid.




TERRELL'S SOUND WORLD PLAYLIST

Sunday, April 28, 2024 KSFR, Santa Fe, NM, 101.1 FM  Webcasting! 10 p.m. to midnight Sundays Mountain Time Host: Steve Terrel...