GLEN MASON - Glendora (1956) HD

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • 50s Jiver Pop Vocal - Parlophone Records U.K. - R. 4203-B (1956) With Ron Goodwin's Chorus and Orchestra - Writing by Ray Stanley (The flip side is "Love, Love, Love")
    Also singing by: Jack Lewis (Crest 1956) Perry Como (RCA Victor 1956)
    The Vikings (HMV - NZ 1956) Johnny Brandon (Decca 1956)
    Loren Becker (18 Top Hits 1956) Olavi Virta (Triola Finland 1957)
    Johnny O'Neill (Live TV Show : At Ranch Party) 1957
    Clem Sacco (Smeraldo Italy 1958) Downliners Sect (Columbia UK 1966)
    and many others...
    Tommy Lennon aka Glen Mason (born Tom Lennon in Stirling, Scotland, UK, on 16 September 1930 - Died on 25 August 2014) was a Scottish-born singer of popular music.
    After three years in the mines, Mason spent eleven months at the Forth Vale Rubber Works, six months in the Army and fifteen months with a dry-cleaning firm.
    He appeared on the stage for the first time in a local amateur revue, "The Shipmates", singing "You Made Me Love You".
    In the spring of 1951, he was offered his first professional engagement, with a three-month summer show at St. Andrews.
    After that, Glen had several appearances at Scottish theaters and in 1952 sang in another summer show at Montrose, also doing Sunday-night concerts in Arbroath.
    He headed next to London where, after some months, got a job in cabaret and sang for two weeks at the Churchill Club.
    Norman Newell, manager for the Philips recording company noticed Mason and after an audition recorded Mason's first two tracks, "The Whistling Kettle and the Dancing Cat" and "Dixieland Tango".
    Mason introduced him to producer George Martin, and Martin made the Scottish singer "sound American" in his versions of U.S. hits "Glendora" and "Green Door".
    They were amply advertised "Glendora" was described as a record that "really rocks" but, competing with the Perry Como and Jim Lowe originals, they failed to chart, with "Green Door" peaking at #24.
    Mason later appeared many times on radio and TV, in shows such as Mid-day Music Hall and Variety Parade.
    In 1960, he appeared, along with Jack Jackson and Jackson's son Malcolm, in the Michael Winner-directed musical-variety film "Climb Up The Wall", and worked with Winner again in his 1962 films "Behave Yourself" and "The Cool Mikado".
    He came third in a national contest to represent the UK at "Eurovision Song Contest" in 1959 with the song "Suddenly" (not released, but published by Petula Clark in the same year)
    #popvocal #perrycomo #cover

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