It represents a promotional tie-in between Anheuser-Busch, brewers of Budweiser beer, and RCA Victor, purveyors of vinyl records. The LP is titled Where There's Life..., which happened to be the first part of Budweiser's tag line, "Where There's Life, There's Bud." And the awkwardly posed model seems to be eagerly anticipating the frothy Budweiser being offered. Either that or the off-camera male has no pants on. It's hard to tell, no pun intended.
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Magazine ad |
But what of the music, you may ask, this being a music blog and all. There is a melodic tie-in as well - the first song is "Where There's Life," which turns out to be (no surprise here) a glamorized version of the then-current Bud jingle. All the other tunes have "life" in the title as well.
The proceedings were under the direction of Russ David, who it turns out, wrote the Bud jingle back in 1956 with arranger-conductor George Cates, Lawrence Welk's music director and a mainstay of the Coral catalog. Cates recorded "Where There's Life" first, on a 1957 Coral single that went nowhere, probably because it didn't benefit from 40,000 display cards, etc. George is nowhere in evidence on the LP, and his name is spelled "Catz" on the songwriter credits. I've included Cates' single in the download.
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Russ David as radio personality |
The record is a credible affair, with David doing a Gordon Jenkins-style single-note solo over the opening of "Where There's Life," accompanied by accordion, followed by clarinet, tenor sax and trombone. It's all very pleasant, even if several years out of style in 1960.
On other songs, David brings in a vocal group and a terrific female soloist, who remains unnamed. I wish I knew who it is - I first thought it might be Jamie Silvia of the J's with Jamie, but comparisons suggest that it is not her. The vocalist is particularly good in her "Give Me the Simple Life" solo spot, but then I am partial to that Rube Bloom-Harry Ruby composition. Less effective is the male vocal chorus on "There's a Lull in My Life," which has a peculiar robotic quality.
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Cover of 1957 promo |
The LP is my transfer; the other items are courtesy of the web although remastered by me. RCA's sound is very good, although lushly reverberant in the style of the times.
This post is a result of a discussion that I had with my pal Ernie not long ago, where we differed on which RCA record had a beer on the cover. I opted for this one, although I said it was by Larry David, while acknowledging that couldn't be right. Ernie claimed it was a Boston Pops record. It turns out we were both right - there is a two-LP Pops set, "Everything But the Beer," that has two Anheuser-Busch beer steins on the cover. I have that album as well.
To go back to the Where There's Life cover, it is an example of the "Droste effect," that is, a picture within a picture of itself. It's not perfectly executed, though.
If you want more beer music - and who doesn't - a decade ago I uploaded a Schlitz promotional record with Nelson Riddle at the helm and featuring Jamie Silvia on vocals. Riddle turned the Schlitz jingle "The Real Joy of Good Living" into "The Joy of Living," the title tune of a 1959 LP. So the Milwaukee brewer or its ad agency had the idea first. The Riddle record is still available if you haven't had enough brew for the evening.
Link (Apple lossless):
ReplyDeletehttps://mega.nz/#!fd8WiKDA!mPF9dCQw46KWMhqMq-sU_G_K30B6l3uMhPhnvBrxOLU
Nice collection of Bud songs here Buster. :) Is that a Mario Lanza LP cover peeking out of the bottom of the LP cover? Wayne King? Hmmm, now it's bugging me...
ReplyDeleteErnie - I meant to investigate that. I thought it was a recording in Victor's LM classical series minus the wording, but now I can't find it. I don't think it's Mario or Sammy, but I could be wrong.
DeleteThought I could find it real quick at Discogs, but no luck. Looks so familiar...
DeleteInteresting to note the Living Stereo banner style is different between the actual record and the version in the cover photo for some reason. :) And the mono version still shows the Living Stereo banner in the photo.
Yes, I like that the "Where There's Life" title is done by hand in the little vignette.
DeleteOh, and you can see more of the mystery cover on the mono version. It's not the picture I thought it was...
ReplyDeletet's not what I thought it was, either. Appears to be a woman with a glass of beer (?), which makes sense. So maybe not a real album cover at all.
Deleteyou may recall that back then schlitz of milwaukee was the second largest selling beer in the country behind number one budweiser of st louis. like avis, schlitz was trying harder and, while its executives knew they couldn’t unseat bud in old st lou’, they drew a line in the dirt of western missouri. first, they bought out the largest brewery in that region (muehlebach beer), and began to retire the brand. second, in 1955 when the philadelphia athletics moved to kansas city, schlitz offered them the most lucrative sponsorship deal in all of baseball in order to make their product synonymous with the team, just as budweiser was synonymous with the cardinals in st louis. when their owner (arnold johnson) feigned overtures to bud, schlitz extended their offer to five years and really sweetened it by paying the whole five years up front! the money involved was more than johnson had paid for his baseball team.
ReplyDeleteactually, johnson was a front man for new york yankees’ owner del webb. it was webb who secretly put up the money for buying and relocating the club to k.c. in return for control of player movement. That meant any kc players he wanted, the yankees got. any ny players he wanted to discard, kc was forced to take. due to this arrangement, the yankees acquired clete boyer, roger maris, ralph terry, bobby shantz, art ditmar, and others; while the athletics received has-beens and never-weres… probably the second-worst scandal in baseball history.
but i have digressed. this was supposed to be about budweiser and schlitz. i used to own both the russ david “where there’s life” 45 rpm and the schlitz promotional extended play. i think it’s most often case that product jingles are based on popular songs (eg, betty crocker’s “it’s so nice to have a cake around the house”, or nescafe’s “let’s have another cup of coffee, yes let’s have a cup of nescafe”). i remember wondering if the russ david recording was the source for the budweiser jingle. but now after all these years, i learn that it’s the other way around. strange… sort of like johnny horton going to the movies and writing hit songs for them after the fact.
barba -
ReplyDeleteYes, I think the influence vector for jingles and songs points in both directions, because there is something to be gained by both parties.
The KC situation was a sad chapter in baseball history, for sure!
Parenthetically, I love Johnny Horton. I think I have all his records.
one of those never-weres on the athletics, a pitcher named melvin famey, actually had a notable day in his career… closer to notoriety than fame, i suppose. anyway, it was in one of those pre-season exhibition games in the late 50s where the athletics travelled to st louis to play the cardinals in busch stadium (“sportsman’s park” to the locals, regardless of what augie said). the game went along uneventfully until the bottom of the ninth when the athletics’ starting pitcher ran out of gas. he was protecting a 3 to 1 lead and suddenly – bam!- a home run, followed by two base hits. so now there’s nobody out, two men on, and the score is 3 to 2. in comes melvin famey to close out the game. in short order, he walks the first batter he faces. now the bases are loaded. mel calls time and walks to the dugout. in the corner there, he reaches into a bag, pulls out a beer and chugs it down. he then goes back out to the mound and, regardless of his newly found dutch courage, walks the next batter forcing in the tying run. the st louis fans are going crazy. again mel calls time and again he goes to the dugout. once more he reaches into a bag, pulls out a beer, and chugs it down. everyone’s on their feet. mel takes the ball again, and with four straight pitches walks in the winning run for st louis. the cardinals run out onto the field celebrating their come-from-behind victory. a couple of them eventually look over at the athletics’ dugout and see the loser chug a final for the road. one of them says, “hey, that’s not budweiser he’s drinking, what is that stuff?” their batboy makes a closer inspection and yells “nope, not budweiser; it’s schlitz beer” the cardinals smile and say, “of course, we should have known. that’s the beer that made mel famey walk us.”
ReplyDeleteI fell for it. Hook...line...sinker...
DeleteI never heard that one and I went to college in Milwaukee.
Deletenot many opportunities for schlitz jokes these days.
ReplyDeletecouldn't let one pass by.
Not being certain at all, but I seem to recall a commercial for a different beer that went something like: "Where's there's life... There's Michelob". Am I wrong on that?
ReplyDeleteTimmy - Well, Michelob is made by Anheuser-Busch, but I don't think it and Bud used the tag line. The only one I remember is "The night belongs to Michelob."
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