SPIKE JONES:Tchaikovsky Medley

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  • čas přidán 26. 09. 2012
  • All Star Review (June 7, 1952)
  • Komedie

Komentáře • 2K

  • @stuartwallace6154
    @stuartwallace6154 Před 4 lety +28

    Thank God for CZcams for keeping this stuff alive 🙏

  • @MrJamespeyton
    @MrJamespeyton Před 3 lety +135

    I remember seeing him on tv when I was about 8 years old. I loved his antics and music. I’m almost 77.

    • @herondelatorre4023
      @herondelatorre4023 Před rokem +9

      James Peyton : So you are from my parent's generation "The Baby Boomers " who were the first young generation to grow up watching television. Very remarkable life your generation lived.

    • @lucywarner7031
      @lucywarner7031 Před rokem +3

      I was just thinking about the same thing. I'm almost 78. It was a crazy 3/4 of a century.

    • @geofjones9
      @geofjones9 Před rokem

      We got our first TV in 1956. My mom was totally against any type of humorous music. We would watch Liberace, that and later Laurence Welk, but that was about it. The big radio-record player was for classical music only. Only saw Spike a couple of times back then, but loved him instantly.

    • @binkwillans5138
      @binkwillans5138 Před 9 měsíci

      My dad had I Went to your Wedding on a 78rpm. My poor heart was praying, to hear the groom saying, I do-hooh, I do hoo-hoo-hoo, I doooooo-hooh-hoo-hoo.....

    • @MrJamespeyton
      @MrJamespeyton Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@herondelatorre4023 I was born in 1944 so I’m a war baby, not a boomer. Pretty close though.

  • @virginiawhedon5078
    @virginiawhedon5078 Před rokem +75

    Sigourney Weaver’s uncle Doodles Weaver was Spike’s chief sound effects man. It so happens that when “Doodles” was born, his mother thought he was “funny looking” and nicknamed him Doodles. Doodles’ brother was the chief executive of CBS. Later I saw Doodles on the Groucho Marx show, he admitted he “needed a job.” He was the one who did the sound effects of Beetlebaum. (Aka “Beetle bomb”) When I was a child, all us grandchildren would go to her house on Sundays and laugh hysterically at “Love in Bloom”, Beetlbomb, and other standards of the day as interpreted by Spike Jones’ extremely talented musicians. Virginia Simpson Whedon

    • @surferpam1
      @surferpam1 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Sigourney's father was Sylvester "Pat" Weaver who was president of NBC (not CBS) from 1953-1955. Pat was the older brother of Winstead Sheffield "Doodles" Weaver who had an extensive acting and voice resume but killed himself in 1983 over failing health.

    • @ydarbnhoj
      @ydarbnhoj Před 10 měsíci +1

      Thank you for sharing that memory

    • @Patricia-gg2pl
      @Patricia-gg2pl Před 10 měsíci

      My fa m

    • @JPGotrokkits
      @JPGotrokkits Před 8 měsíci

      Whedon, you say?

    • @charlesburroughs3537
      @charlesburroughs3537 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I met Sigourney Weaver "up close and personal" at an Explorers Club Annual Dinner years ago at the Waldorf Astoria in NYC. Such a beautiful woman.

  • @marianlincoln9008
    @marianlincoln9008 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Many Happy Hours spent laughing hilariously with joy thanks to the antics and skits by Spike Jones and company, the many guest appearances of different actors, singers, dancers, and comedians.... Making fun of how super serious we all tend to take ourselves was always and will always be the great levelers when we need to step back and take a break from the seriousness of politics and war... Thanks Spike and Company , for those already gone REST IN PEACE .

  • @CurseCreep
    @CurseCreep Před 4 lety +342

    What you have to admire is that Spike, being the creative mastermind behind it all, always looked as if he was the most bored or irritated person in the room when he performed. His deadpan adds a whole new dimension of humour to the madness of the routine, because you´re aware he is the center of it all

    • @baffledbybullshit-
      @baffledbybullshit- Před rokem +5

      For people that don't know the headless banjo players were found in arkansas.

    • @humbertosandoval55
      @humbertosandoval55 Před rokem +6

      hahaha... funny is kind of being the spectator of your own LSD trip, it do be like that...

    • @eshiffer
      @eshiffer Před rokem +8

      As a bandleader/arranger I watch all these clips for inspiration. They are the reason I never laugh onstage.

    • @keithblaney9064
      @keithblaney9064 Před rokem +3

      Like George and Gracie, he was the straight man...

    • @jeffreyhughes7107
      @jeffreyhughes7107 Před rokem +2

      My exact thought. Irritated being key… or just going through the motions.

  • @drfranklippenheimer8743
    @drfranklippenheimer8743 Před 4 lety +39

    That gentleman's dance routine is simply amazing.

  • @patrickpurdue2739
    @patrickpurdue2739 Před rokem +40

    What the world needs now is more zany, crazy wonderful stuff like this. It always puts a big smile on my face. 😊

    • @davidk3729
      @davidk3729 Před rokem +2

      Well said (written). It’s called ‘entertainment’. Not much of it about nowadays.

    • @SeekingHisWill
      @SeekingHisWill Před 10 měsíci +1

      😊

    • @cathydoyle8804
      @cathydoyle8804 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The world is so serious and has no time for making people laugh! Smile! And spread a little happiness 😊

  • @marcochimio
    @marcochimio Před rokem +8

    I had HEARD numerous Spike Jones recordings when I was a kid, but I had never SEEN his show. HOLY MACKEREL, I had NO idea!

  • @errolfellows409
    @errolfellows409 Před 5 lety +29

    Comedic genius! First heard Spike Jones on radio in the very late 50s/early 50s. I'm South African - we didn't have TV until 1975!!

  • @patricksaylor614
    @patricksaylor614 Před 5 lety +52

    I discovered Spike Jones through his "Nutcracker Suite" when I was five or six years old. My high school orchestra teacher was a huge fan. RIP Larry Maupin.

  • @blakkat4126
    @blakkat4126 Před 3 lety +180

    I’ve heard of these guys but never realized how good they really were until watching their videos. Great musicians.

    • @ghostsignal
      @ghostsignal Před rokem +4

      Ditto. Great musicians and insane energy.

    • @laurahall3094
      @laurahall3094 Před rokem +5

      I played clarinet in high school to get out of gym class, 3 years. I didn't realize until today what it was supposed to sound like.

    • @tomshea8382
      @tomshea8382 Před rokem +2

      It would never have worked if they were just a bunch of second-rate players.

    • @keithm1138
      @keithm1138 Před rokem +3

      No they knew how good they were. Many musicians back then wanted to be in spikes band simply for the craziness they were able to do

    • @olderthanyoucali8512
      @olderthanyoucali8512 Před rokem +1

      Just another of the Vaudeville acts that made it to the Radio, then the movies, then T V.

  • @FlippinDingDong
    @FlippinDingDong Před rokem +45

    The bug sprayer ensemble at 6:07 has to be one of the most impressive things I've seen them do.
    I always thought they were "faking it" and there was an organ or something being played off-screen, but you can clearly see (and hear) Spike hit a wrong note at the very beginning, and he quickly switches the sprayers around to correct it.
    The coordination among ALL of them to accurately play Tchaikovsky on a bunch of bug sprayers blows my mind lol.

    • @jeanbeard178
      @jeanbeard178 Před rokem +2

      Quick, the Flit!

    • @demef758
      @demef758 Před 10 měsíci +3

      That's what most people fail to understand: to play songs like this, in the middle of the self-created insanity, you had to be one helluva good musician to do it! Not a slouch in the bunch!

    • @Moostache_
      @Moostache_ Před 2 měsíci

      Wasn't expecting to see you here

  • @geofftefl
    @geofftefl Před rokem +11

    Memories of my childhood come flooding back, before we had TV our family together huddled around the 'wireless', listening to the Spike Jones show,. Outstanding talent combined so well to resemble chaos. Great fun. And all those sound effects! Wonderful times.

  • @deewesthill1213
    @deewesthill1213 Před rokem +17

    It takes exceptionally brilliant musicians, who truly admire and love the works of Tschaikovsky and other great classical composers, to perform them so comically!

    • @chriskroll4166
      @chriskroll4166 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Yeah these guys must go home and listen to every type of music ever recorded. A real musician will appreciate the skill that these guys have and also the sense of humor.

  • @evieraotacon
    @evieraotacon Před 2 lety +26

    I was born in the 70's. I am forever grateful that my dad introduced me to Spike Jones when I was 6 years old. Everything rolled into one comedy, musical and acting talent. This is the stuff I appreciate even more at my current age. Thank you for posting.👍🤪😂

  • @kenttm42
    @kenttm42 Před rokem +3

    Loved Spike Jones and His City Slickers since I first discovered "Beetlebaum" on an old 45 record when I was 6 years old. Between him and Ernie Kovacs, television was so much more creative than now.

  • @s6th795
    @s6th795 Před 6 lety +414

    Can we talk for a moment about how impressive that cowbell ensemble was? The hand-eye coordination and dexterity required is INSANE!

    • @joeday4293
      @joeday4293 Před 3 lety +14

      *Handbell. And yes.

    • @ricardofranciszayas
      @ricardofranciszayas Před 2 lety +28

      That band had a superhuman sense of time. To be able to play accurate 16th notes is not easy. But having each individual 16th note assigned to separate players, played with such
      accuracy, is other worldly. Every one of those players were genius musicians and comedic performers.
      I challenge any Symphony orchestra to do that.

    • @andrewbarrett1537
      @andrewbarrett1537 Před 2 lety +10

      @@ricardofranciszayas Exactly. I mean, they probably could, but this is indeed a near-symphonic or near-studio level of musicianship.

    • @bazzakrak
      @bazzakrak Před 2 lety +9

      I am guessing@@joeday4293 you are thinking about the bells they play at around 6:40 those are cowbells, they just have a handle om them so they easy can pick them up

    • @redcalx9568
      @redcalx9568 Před 2 lety +2

      sure

  • @dustindoud1568
    @dustindoud1568 Před 6 lety +210

    I love how Jim Backus showed up and sounded very "Mr. Magoo" in his routine. What a great voice!

    • @johnbockelie3899
      @johnbockelie3899 Před 4 lety +23

      Ooh..Magoo, you done it again!'

    • @Moluccan56
      @Moluccan56 Před rokem +4

      I LOVED that!

    • @demolitionsexpert
      @demolitionsexpert Před rokem +22

      Thursten Howell!

    • @martabachynsky8545
      @martabachynsky8545 Před rokem +11

      @@demolitionsexpert the Third.

    • @TheLarryBrown
      @TheLarryBrown Před rokem +10

      He's good. He has a lot of charm, is loveable, and we all know and love him from Gilligan's island, but he's one of those guys that did a whole career in a single character.

  • @nedraleggett9088
    @nedraleggett9088 Před 2 lety +10

    Those costumes were hilarious too. Between the clothes and music and TALENT, I am loving this.

  • @nedraleggett6837
    @nedraleggett6837 Před rokem +2

    My mom introduced me to spike Jones. I still enjoy watching and listening to him..

  • @synthonaplinth5980
    @synthonaplinth5980 Před 4 lety +24

    That handbell duo was freaking INSANE!

  • @LadyAstyrael
    @LadyAstyrael Před 9 lety +86

    This is the very definition of a well-oiled machine...my goodness, what incredible talent, I wish this was still a thing! My mouth was open the entire time. I just couldn't believe it.

  • @tonalityludwigvon5748
    @tonalityludwigvon5748 Před 4 lety +33

    Wow ... the sheer amount of energy and training for the dancing girl to perform ... love that the most

    • @mcc142000
      @mcc142000 Před 5 měsíci

      Her name was Ruth Foster.

  • @user-fo5gk9ir7n
    @user-fo5gk9ir7n Před 2 měsíci +1

    My mom was a teen in the '40s, so naturally us kids heard it all! Spike Jones, Tommy Dorsey, Glenn Miller, et. al.

  • @colink4823
    @colink4823 Před 5 lety +48

    Incredible musicianship! These guys were beyond professional

  • @graemehilzinger8519
    @graemehilzinger8519 Před rokem +11

    We never got Spike Jones on Australian tv. First time i've ever seen him. What phenominal talent. All of them.

  • @michaelvirgini2388
    @michaelvirgini2388 Před rokem +52

    If we could just have a show like this again, maybe people would start to remember how valuable humanity and it’s creative, empathetic genius is.

    • @andyvan5692
      @andyvan5692 Před rokem +2

      what?, this 1920's rubbish should never have been digitised in the first place, as the generations who loved it died 90 years ago!!

    • @Playsinvain
      @Playsinvain Před rokem

      You tell ‘em, Brother Michael.

    • @michaelvirgini2388
      @michaelvirgini2388 Před rokem +3

      @@andyvan5692 yes, now go enjoy your Sam Smith videos and kardashian “reality”…that’s the height of culture clearly. 🙄

    • @andrewhardy3490
      @andrewhardy3490 Před rokem +1

      We're living in a NEW AGE. Anything is possible...😎😁🥰❤️

    • @tesmith47
      @tesmith47 Před 10 měsíci

      For White folks 😅😅😅😅😅

  • @zovalentine7305
    @zovalentine7305 Před rokem +4

    Rest in powerful peace Spike Jones🙏
    4 December 1911 ~
    1 May 1965⚘

  • @RealPeterGunn
    @RealPeterGunn Před 5 lety +21

    I am so thrilled to see this on CZcams, you have no idea. Thank You Spike Jones Estate!!!

  • @fun4ray2
    @fun4ray2 Před 5 lety +4

    I don't know why but I remember this I was 5 yrs old but a lot of Spike Jones I'm 70 yrs now. This brings back memorizes of me and my family and neighbors (we had the tv) Thank You for sharing this!!!!!

    • @herondelatorre4023
      @herondelatorre4023 Před rokem +1

      Billy Stokes : Then you are from my parent's generation "The Baby Boomers " who were the first young generation to grow up watching television. Remarkable.

  • @schwei56
    @schwei56 Před 4 lety +52

    The incomparable vocal stylings of trumpeter George Rock at 6:20, ladies and gents…

    • @TiqueO6
      @TiqueO6 Před rokem

      Yes at first I thought that was Mel Blank ha ha
      Might wanna back up to 6:18 or so

  • @kelleybryant5947
    @kelleybryant5947 Před 4 lety +37

    My dad loved Spike Jones! I loved the song where he says, “and night falls!” Then it sounds like a piano being tipped over.

    • @herondelatorre4023
      @herondelatorre4023 Před rokem +2

      Kelley Bryant : Was your dad from the " Greatest Generation " . Those who were young people in the 1940's and who lived thru WWII ????

  • @ginjaababe
    @ginjaababe Před 4 lety +10

    I think a bit of my mind just melted from the pure awesomeness of all this talent.

  • @stuartofblyth
    @stuartofblyth Před rokem +22

    For all the chaos, this was a disciplined band. Watch how Spike holds the final note (7:50) until the right moment, then gives the signal and everybody stops together.
    It was reportedly said of him "He conducted the band with a baton in one hand and a revolver in the other".

    • @Tmanaz480
      @Tmanaz480 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Sounds like Frank Zappa, or Benny Goodman.

    • @demef758
      @demef758 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Imagine this act in today's hypersensitive environment when Spike fires off a few (blank) rounds during one of his many parody numbers. They'd have him cancelled overnight.

  • @borb57JC
    @borb57JC Před 4 lety +77

    Around 5:40 look at the birth of a breakdancing move. These performers got some fresh moves way ahead of their time

    • @WildBillCox13
      @WildBillCox13 Před rokem +6

      I think it comes from Vaudeville, where you rose or fell on your ability to improvise.

    • @donmcw5678
      @donmcw5678 Před rokem +5

      My comment before reading yours. Good eye brother.

    • @Robin.2226
      @Robin.2226 Před rokem +3

      The guy looks like Paul Merson who used to play for Arsenal football club!

    • @michaelfoxbrass
      @michaelfoxbrass Před rokem +4

      Curly - The Three Stooges - break dance moves! Coffee Grinder - nyuk-nyuk-nyuk!

    • @roadlimoster
      @roadlimoster Před rokem +3

      Not mention the Rapping at 4:40, one of the first Rappers

  • @Bomono65
    @Bomono65 Před 4 lety +74

    They packed an hour of entertainment into 10 minutes

    • @cathydoyle8804
      @cathydoyle8804 Před 9 měsíci

      Your so right!
      All that talented energy! Great stuff 🎉

  • @ghostrider-ek8gu
    @ghostrider-ek8gu Před 4 lety +8

    Watching these guys, when I was a kid, was always a barrel of laughs. They were great ...

  • @glibbis
    @glibbis Před 9 lety +59

    The talent of these performers is trull amazing.

  • @gordatados
    @gordatados Před rokem +2

    I'm 30 watching this in 2022. I love older music much more than my own times music. How am I just now discovering Spike Jones?

  • @JonBlondell
    @JonBlondell Před 4 lety +54

    These musicians included some of the top studio players of the era! This stuff was hard!! In fact fact, Spike was a studio player himself! He played on Bing Crosby's White Christmas, and many other hits of the times. I would have Killed to be on this band!!

    • @cathydoyle8804
      @cathydoyle8804 Před 9 měsíci +1

      They all were so talented!
      I would of loved to have seen them live in person!
      The beautiful dancing girl lady was great to watch!❤

    • @cardinalhamneggs5253
      @cardinalhamneggs5253 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@cathydoyle8804That was definitely something. A wonderful bit of calm and relative normalcy in the middle of a sea of zany antics. My personal favorite part, though, was the headless banjo players.

  • @zachsplep
    @zachsplep Před 9 lety +92

    Isn't it nice to know that these old broadcast signals from the Fifties are winging their way through outer space as ambassadors of Earth culture?! "They" probably will love Spike Jones! :)

    • @revfred2620
      @revfred2620 Před 9 lety +10

      Yeah, wait until they meet the real deal and see how we screwed things up.

  • @olliefoxx7165
    @olliefoxx7165 Před 9 měsíci +5

    The guy that comes out at 4:34 is an amazing physical performer. Hes doing so many things that require strength, flexibility, and energy and makes it seem effortless. I can see the beginnings of break dance moves in a few instances. The whole show is fantastic.

  • @sandybruce9092
    @sandybruce9092 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Just came across this video and it sure brought back so,e very old memories! I’m guessing I saw Spike Jones on TV way back in the early 1950s - I was born I. 1947 so I know I was young - but I laughed and laughed! Loved this guy and his band! I had forgotten how crazy they all wore - and those suits!!! Thanks to whomever posed this!

  • @raiderjohnthemadbomber8666

    I was privileged to see "Spike Jones and his Whacky Whacaateers" perform at Ascot Park in Gardena, Ca. (a dirt track raceway) in the sixties. I knew who they were as my mother had several of their albums (yes vinyl ). He and his band were incredible performers and musicians.

  • @donmcw5678
    @donmcw5678 Před rokem +21

    Wonderful and if noticed the break dance moves that confirm he and his troupe were on the leading edge. Amazing stuff.

  • @animemanganet
    @animemanganet Před 4 lety +19

    I grew up listening to Spike and other musicians of that era. It's great to SEE how awesome they were instead of just hearing. Thank you for the videos!

  • @mikevincent5195
    @mikevincent5195 Před rokem +1

    I used to watch him on TV years ago. Loved his show. Always funny

  • @DVincentW
    @DVincentW Před 3 lety +6

    My granddad played this music. Listened to Spike Jones as a kid.. Frank Zappa has an album called Does Humor Belong in Music? Yes .. it very much does.

  • @PlasticGirl65
    @PlasticGirl65 Před 4 lety +16

    That bell ringing was something else!

  • @TheBigMclargehuge
    @TheBigMclargehuge Před 4 lety +180

    In 10 minutes more talent than every pop artist today combined.

  • @colleenhenry-bs6ij
    @colleenhenry-bs6ij Před rokem +2

    Love this, my dad played his records every weekend at home!!

  • @michaelstearnesstearnes1498

    Today we have tv.programs on abandoned storage lockers and house renovations to keep us entertained.

  • @brill068
    @brill068 Před 8 lety +51

    I'm not sure what all the comments were about, but all I see and hear is a wonder classical orchestra that was far underrated. Spike was the best.

  • @s.a.z.108
    @s.a.z.108 Před 4 lety +79

    I saw him and his band in person at the Fox theater in Atlanta, Georgia. I was just a kid and was scarred for life!

    • @digitalbookworm5678
      @digitalbookworm5678 Před 4 lety +1

      Lucky! 😉

    • @s.a.z.108
      @s.a.z.108 Před 4 lety +3

      digitalbookworm5678 I do realize the talent it took to do that. My dad always said it takes more talent to make someone laugh than to make them cry.

    • @digitalbookworm5678
      @digitalbookworm5678 Před 4 lety +2

      Did you go into music at all? I played trombone for 12 years, but haven't touched it since college. 😕

    • @s.a.z.108
      @s.a.z.108 Před 4 lety +1

      digitalbookworm5678 I played clarinet. I kind of left off during college. My major was chemistry, so there wasn’t much spare time.

    • @billsmith9711
      @billsmith9711 Před 4 lety +1

      the first show I saw at the Fox Theater was REO Speedwagon...

  • @peterhess2610
    @peterhess2610 Před rokem +2

    I remember sitting in my grandmothers tiny living room watching this show. I was about 7-8 and couldn’t take my eyes off the screen. They were amazing musicians and dancers.

  • @johnnypk1963
    @johnnypk1963 Před rokem +2

    This is brilliant I love it. I’ve known of Spike Jones but I’ve never seen his show until today.

  • @perfectlypurepinkpompompan3467

    Now THAT'S entertainment!!!! Pure 100% comic genius.

  • @garnerjazz58
    @garnerjazz58 Před 5 lety +358

    These routines are filled with musical references that few in today's audiences would understand. There was an adage that "you don't chew gum in the orchestra" that was widely known of in popular culture. The upturned trombone bell is no doubt a reference to Dizzy Gillespie's trumpet. The giant portrait of Spike behind the band comes from Paul Whiteman, who used a similarly placed caricature of himself with his band. References to "all girl bands", players opening their case and blowing the dust off their instrument (they never practice...), a harpist knitting during a piece (they count a lot of rests and of course the harp isn't utilized in most pieces of symphonic repertoire..). The tuba which expels bubbles (ala Lawrence Welk), and many more. And Spike calmly presiding over all of the bedlam, chewing away on a stick of Beeman's. Among his sidemen for this NBC TV series: George Rock, trumpet; Mickey Katz, clarinet; Tommy Pederson, trombone. Thanks for the laughs, Spike, we love you.

    • @thrashpondopons2776
      @thrashpondopons2776 Před 5 lety +16

      It's funny how much which just seems irreverent today was actually topical in it's time! (Knew something was up with the gum chewing... thanks for nailing-it-down!) Another was the anti-Soviet barb at the end! This show was done after the start of the Cold War! Stuff he did during WWII praised the Russians as allies! (HEY... Schikelgruber… Why you run so quick??? From the Bolshevik?!?)

    • @kennethegleston1314
      @kennethegleston1314 Před 5 lety +1

      garnerjazz58 g

    • @geoffdearth8575
      @geoffdearth8575 Před 5 lety +3

      I'm sure I rate as an ignoramus but I have heard of Spike Jones before.

    • @MrCuddlyable3
      @MrCuddlyable3 Před 5 lety +3

      +Thrashpondo Pons, I know the difference between irreverent and irrelevant, and so should you.

    • @jerrychevalier
      @jerrychevalier Před 5 lety

      Does anyone know of a transmitter that incorporates a macro recording capability of the maneuvers that you were making so that you can replay it in a particular segment at the flip of a switch for the touch of a button that would be very helpful for us robotics this so that when we’re trying to do multiple maneuvers all at the same time we could just flip a switch and you can do these various tasks automatically and therefore doesn’t put such a high demand of skill on the operator

  • @daneb.mcfadhen9896
    @daneb.mcfadhen9896 Před rokem +1

    The rehearsals must have endless. wow and get a load of that male dancer doing what hip hoppers do today. breathtaking

  • @carhelmers5614
    @carhelmers5614 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Wow....I grew up listening to my grandfathers 78 Spike Jones records. Thanx 4 the memories. Love the bug sprayers ! 😂

  • @burnleyize
    @burnleyize Před 9 lety +45

    I have cd's, all 3 editions of a book on Spike, and all dvd's I can find. I CANNOT imagine the talent that was involved with that band. What I would give to be able to play with such a group. His personnel in '48, '49 and 50 were probably the most awesome group of entertainers ever assembled. God Bless Spike Jones; the Wackiest Band in the Land!

    • @mrkipw8735
      @mrkipw8735 Před 8 lety +7

      +burnleyize
      I like the story of when Spike and his band jammed with another band - I forget if it was Goodman or a Dorsey - and Spike told his guys to play twice as fast, and the other group couldn't keep up. For all the over-the-top gagging, they were incredibly tight and disciplined. Weird Al Yankovic (influenced by Jones) is similar in his way. When he performs his material live, you can see some super musicians at work, and it's easy to not notice it.

    • @moondawg3693
      @moondawg3693 Před 5 lety +5

      I was watching a Toronto drummer name of Jorn " john" Andersen-son ?
      The guy is likely one of the top 5 Rock & Roll drummers I've ever witnessed and I've seen them all, I'm 56.
      There was a guy with a Rush t-shirt on, who of course had to state how much better Neil Peart was and that Andersen didn't have a tenth of the drums Peart has.
      I told him that I saw Peart with his 4 drum kits around him and the other 20 things as well and Pert only played one kit at a time and during a solo stood up and walked to another set and played that one, just stopping everything and honestly very disappointingly playing on both.
      Just then Andersen opened up and after the show the guy turned to me and said wow best drum solo ever.
      My point ?
      Andersen played so well with so many different left hand solos alone on the snare, but was so great he made it look easy.
      The very best always make it look so easy.
      To play and do all these things took master players and athletes all in one.
      Spike was a master !

  • @deniseboldea1624
    @deniseboldea1624 Před 4 lety +38

    In spite of what the critics of the time had to say, Jones and his entourage were legitimate musicians and performers.

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 Před 4 lety +2

      And extremely talented for what they did with their comedy recordings! 😀😀😀😀😀

    • @bloggerccc
      @bloggerccc Před 11 měsíci +2

      A musician must be very good to play those arrangements. Breaking the rules takes effort when you spent your wholelife learning them.

  • @RootlessNZ
    @RootlessNZ Před rokem +1

    Wonderful, thanks for posting. I loved Spike when I was a kid and still do now I'm 76. A unique talent.

  • @francislarv3012
    @francislarv3012 Před 9 měsíci

    Funny funny funny. Thanks Spike. Here in 2023 true entertainment is difficult to come by

  • @davidsalomon8426
    @davidsalomon8426 Před 5 lety +20

    An unforgettable Team of Musicians under Spike's command...

  • @TheWizardofRandR
    @TheWizardofRandR Před 10 lety +64

    They all were Brilliant Musicians ,actors and Comedians ,all wrapped up into the Mad Cap mind of Spike Jones ! His movies were hilarious and glad there so much of his insanity & genius on YT !

    • @spikejj
      @spikejj Před 10 lety +9

      Wizard, thanks for the kind words. Spike Jones, Jr.

    • @TheWizardofRandR
      @TheWizardofRandR Před 10 lety +5

      Your most graciously welcome !

    • @farshimelt
      @farshimelt Před 4 lety +3

      @@spikejj I played drums for you, when you rehearsed a band , in the canyon, (don't remember the name) doing your dad's music, in the early 70's (I think). I had a great time, thanks.

  • @folgore1
    @folgore1 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Neat "blast from the past" with a cameo by Jim Backus to boot! But darn, THOSE SUITS!!! Spike Jones looks like he survived an encounter with a giant waffle iron! Hard to believe this was from 70 years ago!

  • @AveryMilieu
    @AveryMilieu Před 3 lety +2

    My father's mother listened to Spike Jones on the radio in the 50's, so when I was staying there, so did I. It was a large wooden Motorola, as I recall. Huge thing, as tall as I was at seven, dials and buttons and all the radio frequencies being used from short wave up! Great sound from that old piece...
    She also had 45 RPM records of Spike Jones and likely got sick of me playing them over and over.
    My mother the Librarian thought he was tasteless.
    However -- this is the first time I've gotten to see the clothes they wore! OH MY! What wonderful fun they must have had thinking up these suits!
    And my mother was rights -- tasteless.
    I still love them! Then again -- I love certain aspects of the Circus and Vaudeville and volunteered to work for the Moisture Festival in Seattle for a number of years. The One-Man-Band has always been a fascination for me.

  • @silascochran9705
    @silascochran9705 Před 4 lety +3

    I wake up from insomnia in a depression and turn this on and laugh my arse off reminds me of a veteran friend that I lost he loved old Spike

  • @pupdowg420
    @pupdowg420 Před rokem +12

    Never ever has there been a musical genius such as this. God bless this man and the musicians who got to work with him.

  • @P.G.1966
    @P.G.1966 Před rokem +1

    Thank you...Thank you...Thank you. Priceless.

  • @jimmyjennings4089
    @jimmyjennings4089 Před 4 lety +34

    Dude that liked to knock himself silly was the first break dancer.

  • @saintmichael1779
    @saintmichael1779 Před 5 lety +34

    One never knows what Spike Jones is going to do. In 2019, he and his band are still hilariously funny.

  • @JustWasted3HoursHere
    @JustWasted3HoursHere Před 4 lety +9

    That was one of the craziest things I've ever seen. Man, live television sure was the cat's meow!

  • @mousiebrown1747
    @mousiebrown1747 Před rokem +1

    I grew up on this stuff! Love it!!!

  • @0tt0z
    @0tt0z Před 4 lety +38

    This was on the recommendation list and I'm not sure why but I watched it and I'm glad I did. These people are very talented and creative. I enjoyed the video.

  • @tomwilkins3865
    @tomwilkins3865 Před 7 lety +12

    Before we had TV in the 50s, we laughed at his records. I would have been a year old when this was done.

  • @perromanchado
    @perromanchado Před 5 lety +30

    Hilarious and excecuted with phenomenal musicianship. This is like a Vaudeville equivalent of Frank Zappa.

    • @davidwesley2525
      @davidwesley2525 Před 2 měsíci

      Spike Jones is the Original Weird Al Yankovic .
      😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅

  • @jpsned
    @jpsned Před rokem +2

    I first heard Spike Jones and his City Slickers when I was quite young--maybe 5 or 6--from some 78s my parents had. I listened to them over and over so I was able to memorize their routines. ❤

  • @chriskroll4166
    @chriskroll4166 Před 9 měsíci +20

    If Frank Zappa and the mothers came out in 1949 this is how they would sound. These guys are most incredible musicians without a doubt. 🙏

    • @jackempson3044
      @jackempson3044 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Frank says he was a big fan of Jones and was influenced a lot by Jones. They were doing comedy in with great musicians. The music quality wasn't clowning around.

    • @chriskroll4166
      @chriskroll4166 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@jackempson3044 yeah I believe he was. He probably also like people like professor Tom lehrer or Stan freberg or Shel Silverstein. And also guitar slim. 😁

  • @onemercilessming1342
    @onemercilessming1342 Před 5 lety +29

    Spike Jones and Weird Al Yankovic--I've always loved listening to them both.

    • @herondelatorre4023
      @herondelatorre4023 Před rokem +3

      One MercilessMing : Weird Al Yankovic was probably the "Spike Jones " of his heyday time during 1980's .

    • @rickmanley767
      @rickmanley767 Před rokem +2

      Frank Zappa was the Spike Jones of my generation.

    • @onemercilessming1342
      @onemercilessming1342 Před rokem +1

      @@herondelatorre4023 Well, I'm old enough to have enjoyed their performances within my lifetime.

    • @herondelatorre4023
      @herondelatorre4023 Před rokem +1

      @One MercilessMing Well as for myself. I'm only old enough to have remembered Mr. Yankovic. By the time I was born Mr. Jones had already passed on 6 yrs earlier. However, I wish I could have seen him when he was still alive. But, fortunately I can enjoy his remarkable talent on CZcams videos.

  • @WestCoastDP
    @WestCoastDP Před 5 lety +9

    I used to play with Spike Jones, Jr. in the 70's. Great time. Recorded a spoof of "raindrops falling on my head" by B.J. Thomas. Was played on Dr. Demeto Radio show on Sunday. You had to be on your toes. A lot of breaks and effects.

    • @farshimelt
      @farshimelt Před 4 lety

      Me too. I rehearsed with Spike, in his garage, in the canyon. It was fun. I had other gigs and couldn't make enough rehearsals to continue.

    • @WestCoastDP
      @WestCoastDP Před 8 měsíci

      @@farshimelt Yes, was fun. But one time I loaned him $500. and he never paid me back. No respect for the guy. NONE.

  • @cathydoyle8804
    @cathydoyle8804 Před 9 měsíci +1

    The dancing girl so beautiful and talented😊! Enjoyed this ! Great talent in all of them !🎉

  • @chitlika
    @chitlika Před 4 lety +145

    Those musicians were as tight as anything you'd ever see in any genre. fantastic timing

    • @johnr8820
      @johnr8820 Před 4 lety +5

      chitlika Masters...when you had to be top notch to be a paid musician

    • @ronyanai4627
      @ronyanai4627 Před 4 lety +11

      They better be. The guy waves a gun.

    • @musicom67
      @musicom67 Před 4 lety +5

      All former radio show orchestra / recording studio session players and former Big Band members. You will never find better musicians able to time and play anything in any key whenever, however. AND belt down a few shots during the breaks...Spike Jones was the drummer during 1938-1940 during NBC's Fibber McGee and Molly show in the Billy Mills Orchestra.

    • @hankkingsley2976
      @hankkingsley2976 Před 4 lety +3

      @@musicom67 I did this in high school as we did variety shows and stuff on the local level and I was okay but we had one guy that was one of those that could do anything any instrument he went on to be a professional musician I ended up in radio and he wasn't even the guy that can play two parts on Two Trumpets at one time now that skill was amazing

    • @Super241946
      @Super241946 Před rokem

      Tight as a duck's ass and that's water tight😂

  • @dereksuddreth8672
    @dereksuddreth8672 Před 5 lety +7

    This flim is witness to the level of talent these folks had, great video! The show is fast paced in the same vein as earlier vaudeville acts, as were many other Golden Age television shows. However, they surely would not be appreciated in more modern times, and would have most likely been "Gonged" on the Gong Show!

  • @allanegleston13
    @allanegleston13 Před 9 lety +73

    no, spike propelled music 1000 years ahead . made my day. grew up listening to the records on dr demento.

    • @mtj1047
      @mtj1047 Před 4 lety +1

      Metric Michael, here. Would look forward to anything from SJ that the Doc had me spin :-)~

    • @nedraleggett9088
      @nedraleggett9088 Před 2 lety

      Me too. Dr Demento. You wanna buy a bunny? I still have Dr D. Vinyl.

  • @rusosure7
    @rusosure7 Před 8 měsíci

    My dad loved Spike Jones. This is the first time I've ever seen him.

  • @gabbyhyman1246
    @gabbyhyman1246 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this! As a kid I had a whole Spike collection on 78 rpm vinyl. Wish I still had it.😢

  • @DNRY122
    @DNRY122 Před 5 lety +11

    Many years ago I met a musician who had worked with Spike Jones back in the 1950s. He said only the best musicians could keep up with the manic goings on in the land of the City Slickers.

  • @nerdnul
    @nerdnul Před 10 lety +146

    Unbelievable energy level in all these guys. Nothing compares today.

    • @bbKleefton
      @bbKleefton Před 4 lety +7

      Perhaps amphetamines aren't as widely embraced nowadays... Oh wait...

    • @rocistone6570
      @rocistone6570 Před 4 lety +12

      People in those days did full tours of stage shows. TV was an upstart medium that many thought would not last. The energy you see here was crafted over months and years of being on the road 340 days a year, and doing the same set of gags in every performance. If anything, watching these folks proves the old adage "practice makes perfect." because they make it all look so easy and spontaneous. The only guy I know that could compete with SJ was Ernie Kovacs and his crew.

    • @TJWatson59
      @TJWatson59 Před 4 lety +4

      Bang on Maxwell!

  • @Mike583
    @Mike583 Před rokem +2

    I'm 70,I've heard of him,but this is my first time watching him. Great musicians, great comical talent & the pretty woman with talent! Perfect!

  • @pbziegler
    @pbziegler Před 10 měsíci

    I was about 7 years old when my family went to dinner at the El Rancho in Sacramento. Spike Jones and his band were playing in the dining room. My parents convinced me to go up to him with a menu and get his autograph. I was terrified but I wanted his autograph so badly. Had that menu for years.

  • @Ostaralore
    @Ostaralore Před 5 lety +6

    This was hilarious beyond all hilarity! This guy is talented and funny as hell!!!

  • @knightflyte
    @knightflyte Před 8 lety +21

    Awesomely good fun...
    I remember back in the late 70s driving around with friends and listening to Spike Jones Greatest Hits. We knew all the words and tunes. Ahhhhh good times.

    • @oneworld9071
      @oneworld9071 Před 6 lety +1

      We might have mixed fairly well, cruising and singing Zappa songs from Uncle Meat, 200 Motels, Chunga's Revenge, and Waka Jawaka...... and some of Pink Floyd's "UmmaGumma" LP, and Genesis' "Lamb Lies Down on Broadway" :)
      Anywhere near the region of Baltimore, Maryland? :) Zappa's hometown, of course :)

  • @moxxiepeppino
    @moxxiepeppino Před 3 měsíci

    This, this is what type of music I have been looking for since I was a young boy

  • @Paladin1873
    @Paladin1873 Před 4 lety +266

    A high energy effort indeed. Spike eventually gave up spoofing popular music after rock-and-roll hit the scene. He said he couldn't satirize such music because it satirized itself. He may have been right.

    • @stevenlight5006
      @stevenlight5006 Před 2 lety +19

      Perhaps ,a dancing girl never goes out of style.

    • @adamriggs2698
      @adamriggs2698 Před 2 lety +4

      How old are you?

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 Před 2 lety +18

      @@adamriggs2698 I'm 67, but I grew up listening to my parents' Big Band music.

    • @herondelatorre4023
      @herondelatorre4023 Před rokem +8

      @@Paladin1873 So you are from my parent's generation The Baby Boomers and your parents are from my grandparent's generation called " THE GREATEST GENERATION " who were the first young generation to hear big band & Spike Jones music during the 1940's decade.

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 Před rokem +6

      @@herondelatorre4023 Yep, I even have a collection of Spike's music on CD.

  • @kevinfriend3504
    @kevinfriend3504 Před 5 lety +5

    Such a great intro! It never fails to crack me up.

  • @alexandervaneijken7741
    @alexandervaneijken7741 Před rokem +3

    Well what can we say: absolutely world class act. Never bettered!

  • @tomhammer1784
    @tomhammer1784 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I remember as a young elementary school child watching the Spike Jones show thinking they were clowns. And really enjoyed it.

  • @sharonbielski2792
    @sharonbielski2792 Před rokem

    I ❤️ it, Back when they had great music 😉 enjoyable fun and laughs..