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This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Wed Jun 19, 2013 12:25 pm
by Tomkat
.......Slim Whitman.

FUCK! I loved Slim, nothing beats waking a roomie with a hangover up than Indian love call on #9.



Slim Whitman obituary

Yodelling country singer best known for Rose Marie and Indian Love Call


Tony Russell

The Guardian, Wednesday 19 June 2013 11.18 EDT


The singer Slim Whitman, who has died aged 89, was a noteworthy figure in country music, since, although he was hugely popular outside the US, for most of his career he was almost forgotten in his own country. In the 1970s, two decades after his American heyday, he still commanded enough of a following in the UK to be voted the No 1 international star in a music poll – four times.

Much of the reason for his success outside the US was his high, clear, strong singing and almost operatic yodelling, characteristics that several generations in Britain, Australia and South Africa have assimilated into their notions and fantasies of the old west of America. One of Whitman's chief models was Wilf Carter, a Nova Scotian yodeller and singer of cowboy songs who was popular throughout north America in the 30s and 40s under the sobriquet Montana Slim.

What set Whitman apart from both his models and contemporaries was his bold choice of material. In the age of honkytonk music and Hank Williams, his two biggest hits, Indian Love Call (1952) and Rose Marie (1954), were drawn from operetta. Bob Sullivan, a radio engineer who worked with him, described him as being like "an Irish tenor singing Sigmund Romberg. Hank Williams couldn't stand him. He used to say, 'He ain't no hillbilly'."

Slim was born Otis Dewey Whitman in Tampa, Florida, and as a teenager was a promising baseball player, who returned to the game after service in the second world war. But while in the US navy, he had learned to play the guitar and then found an opening on local radio. By 1949 he was working with the long-established Texas band The Light Crust Doughboys, and in 1950 he joined the roster of the Louisiana Hayride, a widely heard barndance programme broadcast from the radio station KWKH in Shreveport, Louisiana.

On the recommendation of Colonel Tom Parker, who later managed Elvis Presley, but was then working for the country crooner Eddy Arnold, Whitman signed a recording contract with RCA Victor. He had some success in 1951 with Love Song of the Waterfall, a revival of a western ditty by the Sons of the Pioneers; a generation later, it would be briefly heard in Steven Spielberg's 1977 film Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Then, in 1952, Whitman moved to the west coast independent label Imperial and immediately had a hit with Indian Love Call.

The song, from the 1924 operetta Rose-Marie by Rudolf Friml, Oscar Hammerstein II and Otto Harbach, Indian Love Call had previously been recorded by Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. Whitman's version not only reached No 2 in the country charts, but also appeared in the pop top 10, a feat repeated in the UK a few years later in 1955, when it spent 12 weeks in the charts. The director Tim Burton paid it a sort of tribute in his film Mars Attacks! (1996), in which Slim's recording is used as a weapon against alien invaders. "Yes," said Whitman with satisfaction in a 2008 interview, "I'm the one who killed the blasted Martians."

Rose Marie, the title song from the musical, followed in 1954 and fared even better overseas. It held the No 1 position on the UK pop chart for 11 weeks (a run that would not be bettered until Bryan Adams's Everything I Do (I Do It For You) 36 years later) and earned Whitman a spot in the nation's most glittering variety showcase, at the London Palladium. It became Australia's bestselling single to that date. Another UK top 10 hit came in 1957 for I'll Take You Home Again Kathleen.

His fame in America, however, soon evaporated. Though it was on a 1954 Hayride show headlined by Slim that Elvis Presley made one of his earliest live appearances in Memphis, the arrival of rock'n'roll served Whitman ill, as it did many of his fellow country artists. He continued to have records in the country charts, but they were low-placed, and after the mid-70s he made few more. Throughout the 60s and 70s he concentrated on performing for his overseas audiences, returning to semi-retirement in Middleburg, Florida.

Then, in 1979, he found a new niche in the US music business as a pioneer of the TV-merchandised bestseller, when his greatest hits album All My Best racked up a million and a half direct sales. It was followed by The Best (1982), Best Loved Favorites (1989) and 20 Precious Memories (1991). A new studio album, Twilight on the Trail, came out in 2010.

Jerry, his wife of 67 years, died in 2009. He is survived by his daughter, Sharon, and son, Byron, a musician who had worked with him.

• Slim Whitman (Otis Dewey Whitman, country music singer, born 20 January 1924; died 19 June 2013

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 6:59 am
by Tomkat
Indian love call was probably my favorite Slim song of all time.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 10:58 am
by Eric Haynes
Mr Gandolfini also passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 10:59 am
by Bootlipkiller
Eric Haynes wrote:Mr Gandolfini also passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Yes very sad

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 11:47 am
by huntfishnv
I have no idea who these people are.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 11:51 am
by 3legged_lab
Eric Haynes wrote:Mr Gandolfini also passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Is... or was he the old guy with the white beard from lord of the rings?

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 11:55 am
by Redbeard
Bootlipkiller wrote:
Eric Haynes wrote:Mr Gandolfini also passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Yes very sad
HAHAHA

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 12:24 pm
by Eric Haynes
3legged_lab wrote:
Eric Haynes wrote:Mr Gandolfini also passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Is... or was he the old guy with the white beard from lord of the rings?


Yup. Sorcerer Gandolfini has passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 12:27 pm
by 3legged_lab
Eric Haynes wrote:
3legged_lab wrote:
Eric Haynes wrote:Mr Gandolfini also passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Is... or was he the old guy with the white beard from lord of the rings?


Yup. Sorcerer Gandolfini has passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Crazy, being magic you'd think he could have avoided his passing.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 12:30 pm
by Bootlipkiller
3legged_lab wrote:
Eric Haynes wrote:
3legged_lab wrote:
Eric Haynes wrote:Mr Gandolfini also passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Is... or was he the old guy with the white beard from lord of the rings?


Yup. Sorcerer Gandolfini has passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Crazy, being magic you'd think he could have avoided his passing.

Even magic can't stop a life time of spaghetti and meat balls. We should all say a prayer for gadwall at this time!:)

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 12:40 pm
by Eric Haynes
Bootlipkiller wrote:
3legged_lab wrote:
Eric Haynes wrote:
3legged_lab wrote:
Eric Haynes wrote:Mr Gandolfini also passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Is... or was he the old guy with the white beard from lord of the rings?


Yup. Sorcerer Gandolfini has passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Crazy, being magic you'd think he could have avoided his passing.

Even magic can't stop a life time of spaghetti and meat balls. We should all say a prayer for gadwall at this time!:)


I'm sure axing people for a living could put a strain on the ticker too.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:06 pm
by Bootlipkiller
Eric Haynes wrote:
Bootlipkiller wrote:
3legged_lab wrote:
Eric Haynes wrote:
3legged_lab wrote:[quote="Eric Haynes"]Mr Gandolfini also passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Is... or was he the old guy with the white beard from lord of the rings?


Yup. Sorcerer Gandolfini has passed away.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2

Crazy, being magic you'd think he could have avoided his passing.

Even magic can't stop a life time of spaghetti and meat balls. We should all say a prayer for gadwall at this time!:)


I'm sure axing people for a living could put a strain on the ticker too.

Sent from my LG-L38C using Tapatalk 2[/quote]
True!

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:23 pm
by Redbeard
What's was ole James' best movie or tv role fellas?

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:26 pm
by Bootlipkiller
Redbeard wrote:What's was ole James' best movie or tv role fellas?

He was the boss mobster in the sopranos but one of my favorite moves with him was The Last Castle. Older move but if you can find it it's a good flick.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:29 pm
by Redbeard
Bootlipkiller wrote:
Redbeard wrote:What's was ole James' best movie or tv role fellas?

He was the boss mobster in the sopranos but one of my favorite moves with him was The Last Castle. Older move but if you can find it it's a good flick.
The Last Castle came to my mind too. Kinda of a corny flick but I liked it. He played a great douche bag warden

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:29 pm
by Feelin' Fowl
Bootlipkiller wrote:
Redbeard wrote:What's was ole James' best movie or tv role fellas?

He was the boss mobster in the sopranos but one of my favorite moves with him was The Last Castle. Older move but if you can find it it's a good flick.

The Last Castle was great! Have it on dvd.

I think this is where something clever about tapatalk should go.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:31 pm
by Bootlipkiller
Redbeard wrote:
Bootlipkiller wrote:
Redbeard wrote:What's was ole James' best movie or tv role fellas?

He was the boss mobster in the sopranos but one of my favorite moves with him was The Last Castle. Older move but if you can find it it's a good flick.
The Last Castle came to my mind too. Kinda of a corny flick but I liked it. He played a great douche bag warden

It was corny but I still enjoy it every time I see it on.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:36 pm
by assateague
It was only a cameo, but he was awesome in True Romance.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:41 pm
by DeadEye_Dan
I thought James was fantastic in the off broadway musical "Big Pimpin' - The Life and Times of Slim Whitman"

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:42 pm
by Redbeard
DeadEye_Dan wrote:I thought James was fantastic in the off broadway musical "Big Pimpin' - The Life and Times of Slim Whitman"
Hahaha!

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 2:47 pm
by Bootlipkiller
Redbeard wrote:
DeadEye_Dan wrote:I thought James was fantastic in the off broadway musical "Big Pimpin' - The Life and Times of Slim Whitman"
Hahaha!

:lol:

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 4:41 pm
by Tomkat

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 6:40 pm
by DeadEye_Dan
Somebody made a recording of something dying???

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 6:50 pm
by waterfowlman
DeadEye_Dan wrote:I thought James was fantastic in the off broadway musical "Big Pimpin' - The Life and Times of Slim Whitman"


Gandolfini played Slim Whitman?.......No wonder he died!

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 6:52 pm
by DeadEye_Dan
Apparently the yo-yo dieting for the part is what did him in.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Fri Jun 21, 2013 9:02 pm
by capt1972

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Sat Jun 22, 2013 9:04 am
by Tomkat
Back to topic-

Slim was a bad ass yodeler, maybe the best ever.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Sat Jun 22, 2013 1:39 pm
by Bootlipkiller
DeadEye_Dan wrote:Apparently the yo-yo dieting for the part is what did him in.

I hear yo yo dieting is worse for you then cancer.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Sat Jun 22, 2013 2:18 pm
by DeadEye_Dan
It's a scientific fact.

Re: This is a sad day. RIP, we will miss you...

PostPosted: Sat Jun 22, 2013 2:59 pm
by 3geese4me
Bootlipkiller wrote:
DeadEye_Dan wrote:Apparently the yo-yo dieting for the part is what did him in.

I hear yo yo dieting is worse for you then cancer.


50/50