Wednesday, July 24, 2024

You Belong To Me: Jo Stafford: 'Live' With Pyramids, Sunrise, Old Algiers, Souvenirs, Silver Plane, Jungle

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Jo Stafford: 'You Belong To Me'
YouTube Video from: Larry Hinze

Scroll down slowly and checkout 
the pictures as you listen to the song.

See the pyramids along the Nile

Watch the sunrise on a tropic isle.

Just remember darling, all the while
You belong to me.


See the market place in old Algiers.

Send me photographs and souvenirs.

Just remember when a dream appears
You belong to me.

I'll be so alone without you
Maybe you be lonesome too, and blue

Fly the ocean in a silver plane

See the jungle when it's wet with rain.

Just remember till you're home again
You belong to me.


The song was originally written by Pee Wee King, Chilton Price, and Redd Stewart and recorded by American singer Jo Stafford in 1952. It became a number one hit on the US and UK charts and Stafford became a pop star. Famed in the 40s and 50s she was American, involved in pops, jazz and standards. 

It has also been covered by many singers like Bob Dylan, Tori Amos, the Duprees, Bette Midler and even Ringo Star. The song has appeared on nearly two dozen movie sound tracks.

I was only 12 years old when I heard this song and singing it even today, 70 years later. She came about the same time as Patti Page, Doris Day and later Connie Francis, another two of my favourite lady singers from those days of yore.

Doris Day and Connie Francis: pop singers
from the 50s and 60s.

The cover by Patti Page is also just as popular.

'You belong to me,' sung by Tori Amos, is heard 
in the background in this movie, called, 
'Mona Lisa Smile,' [2003] with Julia Roberts.
YouTube Video by: gazaguy.


Images: Google. 

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Singapore 60s Out Of Tune 60 Years Ago. Racial Riot @ Kallang Gas Works 21 July 1964.

This story was featured on 23rd November, 2014 during Brian Richmond's 90.5fm radio show, Sundays With Brian during the 'Reminiscing with Andy' segment.

EXACTLY 60 YEARS AGO TODAY.
21st JULY, 1964:

Mine is not a political blog but I have to address this matter because it shaped my mind for later years and because the Velvetones pop guitar band and I were together that day. We met during this holiday and spent our time till late. 

The Velvetones in 1964 and morphed into The Firebyrds [Philips Records.]

Members of the pop guitar band called The Velvetones were jamming at a bungalow in Lorong 39, Geylang that day; the house was diagonally opposite the former Chief Minister's Lim Yew Hock's bungalow on Sims Avenue. This group consisted of our usual Singaporean mix.  We had been practising for a few weeks and I was enjoying myself as one of their many singers. It was the first time that I had joined a band and it was extremely exciting for a 24 year old. 

While we were practising the leader of another Singapore pop band visited us to watch me sing.  Both of us had thoughts that I could join his group as a singer since I had met him some time ago to discuss it. 
The jam session lasted till late evening when we decided to call it a day. Meanwhile there were goings-on in the streets that we were not aware of. My friend only told me when he was sending me home in his car since he did not want to alarm the others during our practice. Although I was living around the corner I took his offer only after learning what had happened earlier.

Quietly in the car he told me how he had to dash through a barricade at one of the roads in Geylang before coming to the bungalow. He was not sure whether it was a police barricade or otherwise. No one stopped him as he sped to where we were, fearful for his life.

When he left me at my home at about 6.30 pm I experienced a strange quiet and uneasy stillness in the air. There was not a single vehicle or human being anywhere near my home or street. It was an eerie, eerie feeling as I felt my hair behind my head stood on ends. I felt as if an atomic bomb had dropped on Singapore and that the whole island had been devastated.  
"Not a soul on earth..." was the thought in my mind.  The whole stretch of Geylang Road, from the Paya Lebar end on one side, to the other where I could see the distance at Lorong 30, was totally empty and quiet. It was truly frightening. And the memory lives to this day!

My family, who were anxiously waiting for me and huddled behind the door, told me that a racial riot had started at the Kallang Gas Works earlier that day. I realised how serious the situation was when I read about it in the newspapers the next morning. The Gas Works was not too far from my home.

We shouldn't, as Singapore citizens, let this incident happen ever again!

On the music scene, the Beatles were hot those years with so many of their songs on the Top Hits list, "I Want to Hold Your Hand", "She Loves You", "A Hard Day's Night", "Love Me Do" and "Please Please Me". 

But the most ironical song those months was Dean Martin's, "Everybody Loves Somebody Somehow." I wish! Ironical it was!

[I cannot remember the details but the story is reasonably accurate.]

Dean Martin: 'Everybody Loves Somebody Somehow'. 
YouTube Video from Dean Martin.

Were you aware of this 1964 Singapore riot? Comments are welcome.
The roads were empty with 
a few bystanders and the police.

Racial riots affected the country as 
people were in chaos and business disrupted. 


Reference:
'The Singapore Story. Memoirs of Lee Kuan Yew' 
Pg: 556-559. (SPH/Times Edition 1998).

Images: 
Google; National Heritage Board, Personal Collection.