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...
Kenner Kiddie Fondue was an insulated plastic pot with fondue made with special packages of artificially flavoured melting chocolate inside a three compartment tray and heated by hot water in the red pot. Kids can then dip the mini-marshmallows in it and it was all fun and as close as they could get to those Saturday evening parties their parents would have when they would all smoke funny cigarettes with their friends in the living room around the real fondue pot.
This was made by Kenner when it was owned by General Mills. They were seeing some kind of synergy between both sides of their food/toy portfolio. (The Easy Bake Oven was another Kenner product.)
It came in chocolate, vanilla and cherry flavoured chips, which you poured into a three compartment tray.
Remember that Not Found In Nature, Only At Kmart shade of turquoise blue? Well bring it home for the holidays!
"This is a digitized version of an in-store reel to reel tape
that was played within a Kmart store in December 1974. The opening
Kmart jingle is interesting at the beginning of both hours, and there
are theft deterrent security pages and store policy announcements
between every few songs. This must have been in attempt to discourage
shoplifting.
This is a Tape-Athon product
perhaps in their early days - see the attached pictures. There also was
an insert within the reel to reel box stating that the recording was
made on a state of the art system -- and to possibly adjust volume
levels.
The recording contains both sides,
which are 1 hour long each, totaling 2 hours. This tape is in good
shape and was recorded on the 3¾ speed. This was transferred to digital
using my Akai GX-4000D which is in excellent operable condition, and I
cleaned the heads between plays as the tape did leave residue.
Special
Thanks to Tom Schwarzrock (Zephryrhills, FL) who personally provided
this very rare tape to me so that it can be added to the archive
collection. Tom preserved this from store #3405 Lake street in
Minneapolis, MN as he worked there as a department manager in the
1970's." - Mark Davis
Kentucky Fried Chicken holiday bucket and lid, circa late 1960s.
The 1960s and '70s will always be the heyday of the Christmas album loss leader. Tire companies were using Christmas records to entice customers. Department and grocery stores too. If it was round with grooves and played at 33 1/3 RPM, you were likely getting extra business with it.
Colonel Sanders was also bitten by the Christmas vinyl bug. And released his own series of Christmas compilation albums through RCA from 1967 to 1969.
1967
1968
There was even an Australian pressing of the 1968 edition!
"Nuttin' For Christmas" is clearly one of the most god-awful, Christmas spirit sucking squeal-fests ever written. It's funny when you're 5. When you get any older, it's unbearable to hear. The only version I can stand is Stan Freberg's parody version.
This is why you don't hear it much (if at all) on your local all Christmas radio station. No matter who covers it, it's just annoying to hear the year long attacks of some psychopathic kid who then wonders why no one gives him anything for Christmas.
It's the spiritual forerunner to the gangsta rap songs where the artists list out their criminal rap sheets to prove how tough they are. Yeah, sure. They did some drive-bys and pimped some ho's. But did they do a dance on Mommy's plants? That is pure thug, right there.
But Bobby Stewart's version was not the original version of this song. This is one argument that seems to be perennial every year when I discuss vintage Christmas classics with novice collectors and this song pops up. Peter Pan (and corporate parent, Synthetic Plastics Company) never released anything that wasn't a knockoff of something else. No matter what their moms might have told them.
Yes, Bobby Stewart's version also came out on a 78 RPM record. But a lot of kids records still did in the 1950s as parents who upgraded to modern 16/33/45/78 RPM speed turntables often handed down their old 78 RPM players to their kids.
This was the original version. Released in 1955 by Art Mooney and His Orchestra with six year old Barry Gordon on vocals.
I picked Bobby Stewart's particularly horrific version of this song because it was one I used to be tormented with hearing over and over every year blaring from my mom's console stereo when I was a kid. It was on this 1965 Diplomat Caroleers LP.
There was also something very off about Bobby Stewart's version of this song. Namely in that if you listen closely, it sounds like it was actually performed by a young woman rather than a little boy, like in the original Art Mooney/Barry Gordon version. But then again, such trickery was not uncommon at all in the world of budget record labels.
So who was Bobby Stewart?
Obviously, the trail goes cold.
There are literally thousands of performers named Bobby Stewart. And as mentioned,
it's also doubtful it was even the actual name of the person singing on
this recording. The boy who sang on the original 1955 MGM recording was
named Barry Gordon.
Peter Pan Records' corporate parent, SPC was notorious for using fuzzy memories and market confusion to
their advantage to fop off their cheap knockoff recordings, Peter Pan credited their recording to a random "Bobby Stewart" and shoved it out to unsuspecting buyers who thought they were getting the original Barry Gordon version (or whoever that kid's name was.)
Secondly, SPC's distribution channels (discount and drug stores), worked to their advantage as it gave their recordings greater exposure to a less music savvy clientele that MGM's original recording of this song (which could only be found in actual record stores and larger, pricier department stores serviced by the major labels at that time. The cheaper price of the Bobby Stewart record also helped.)
Which is why some people still think Bobby Stewart's was the original version of the song; Mostly because they had this version as a kid and clung religiously to that belief.
The
Bobby Stewart version was available independently as a Peter Pan single for several years before being
consolidated into SPC's Diplomat Records line under their generic house
band The Caroleers. The Diplomat albums added an atrocious artificial echo chamber and electronic fake stereo to this track.