History's Dumpster = GLORIOUS trash! Kitsch, music, fashion, food, history, ephemera, and other memorable and forgotten, famous and infamous pop culture junk and oddities of yesterday and today. Saved from the landfill of time...
Back in 1982, there was a Seattle rock group called The Allies. They
weren't a grunge band by any means, as you can see here, but they were a
kickass power pop band that seemed to have a lot of potential.
This
song, "Emma Peel" (about the
heroine spy in the British TV series The Avengers) became a REALLY
popular song locally in the Seattle area, gaining lots of airplay on
influential Seattle rock radio station KJET, who's airplay helped get
them national exposure.) The video even made it on MTV in it's early
years. It's still a catchy tune after all these years
('60s superbabe Diana Rigg as Emma Peel in The Avengers)
Snik Snak (1968-1977) Snik-Snak was M&M/Mars answer to the hallowed
(and much more successful) Kit Kat franchise of Nestle International
(however through some long standing arrangement, Kit Kats are made by
Hershey in the US.)
Hose Nose (1980s) This is a candy dispenser that looks like a nose that you strap to your
face. It oozes candy slime and they encourage you to stick out your
tongue and catch the drips from the nose (I'll bet you're all screaming "EWWW!!!!" right now.) Some of the slogans: “It’snot
what you think”, “candy slime filled”, “drippy”, and “catch it on your
tongue”. Yes, this candy encourages you to eat candy
snot. And unless you're 10 years old, VERY forgettable....
Archie McPhee Gummy
Maggots (1990s) Another gross candy. I’ve never heard another human
being say - not even Andrew
Zimmern. “Mmmm, these maggots are delicious!” Maybe Zimmern has said
this, but I’ve never made it more than ten minutes into his show
before violently barfing in the trash can and changing channels. (I’m more of a Guy Fieri/Adam Richman type of guy.)
Abba Zaba (1920-Present) Still made, but rarely seen east of the Rockies
Lik-M-Aid
(1965-1982) This candy came with vanilla cream flavoured compressed
sugar "dipping" sticks. Original flavours were Cherry, Grape and Orange
(later Lime.) The name was changed to "Fun Dip" and they're now a part
of Wonka's candy empire.
"No musical instruments or mechanical devices used on this recording
other than one guitar....."
- An inscription on all the 78 RPM
labels of The Mills Brothers recordings for the Brunswick and Decca
labels from the '30s and '40s.
A tall order - even for the
most dedicated folk acts today, but The Mills Brothers did it during the
60 years of their career. With style to spare.
I've always been a fan of The Mills Brothers. They INVENTED doo-wop.
Yes, some people will give lofty praise to The Robins, The Orioles, The
Clovers and The Chords (and yes, they certainly DESERVE theirs). But you just
can't hear their records and NOT know where it all REALLY came from.
And while Michael Buble might be the snazziest thing to come along since
Harry Connick Jr., you just don't know HIGH CLASS MUSIC until you get
hip to The Mills Brothers.
LONG before the days of multi-tracking studio vocals
and other studio gimmickry, these guys could put out a record that
sounded far ahead of it's time, but was as organic as can be. And do it
all in ONE TAKE. Simply because they had such an awesome talent (Michael
Buble today can sit back and check his Twitter feeds while his studio
engineers remove every trace of morning after breath from his vocal
tracks.....), The Mills Brothers could complete a whole album in less
time than it takes for most pop bands today to decide which note goes
where in the first three bars.
Their last big hit was 1968's "Cab
Driver". They were the only act in pop music who had a hit record in
the '20s to last until 1968.
.....and here they are with the Jackson Five in 1974:
Back in the '70s, someone found a homemade recording on a cassette that
was thrown out, lost or abandoned. The story of how it was found....and
who found it...and where is unknown.
The recording, which had
circulated in the tape underground for decades, was that of a woman with a
Southern accent, probably middle aged (or a young smoker.)
She
sings an a cappela song on a cheap cassette recorder of doing a
burlesque striptease for her boyfriend, some, um...lucky guy named "Ben"
Nobody knows who sang this. Or who our lucky Ben is. But
everyone who's ever heard this wonders if she really wrote this or
just ad-libbed her way through it. But they all had the same look of catatonic
shock you'll probably have upon hearing this, before busting out in
uncontrollable laughter. Or have to swallow a whole bottle of Advil just
to cope with this woman's migraine-inducing singing in their heads the
rest of the day...
You can find this on Irwin Chusid's Songs In The Key of Z, Vol. 2 compilation of outsider music. LOADS of bizarre musical oddities on these discs.
The YouTuber who posted this dedicated it to Bettie Page: