Ben Bernie

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sweet Georgia Brown 02:41 Tools
Ain't She Sweet 00:00 Tools
I've Got A Feeling I'm Falling 03:19 Tools
Make Believe 02:27 Tools
Sleepy Time Gal 02:51 Tools
It's a Lonesome Old Town 02:44 Tools
It All Depends on You 02:48 Tools
Rhythm King 02:28 Tools
I'm in Love Again 02:54 Tools
Sweet Georgia Brown (1925) 02:58 Tools
Muddy Water 02:54 Tools
Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? 04:00 Tools
deep down south 02:28 Tools
I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me 02:28 Tools
Makin' Whoopee 02:28 Tools
Miss Annabelle Lee 02:33 Tools
I'll Get By 02:46 Tools
She's Funny That Way 02:56 Tools
A Little Bit Bad (1925) 02:57 Tools
Harlem Globetrotters Theme Song (Sweet Georgie Brown, arr. Aksel Kolstad) 02:57 Tools
There's Too Many Eyes 02:57 Tools
Telling it to the Daisies 03:06 Tools
yes sir, thata my baby 02:34 Tools
Ain't She Sweet? 02:34 Tools
Nu ska vi dansa 00:35 Tools
Miss Anabelle Lee 02:04 Tools
What! No Mickey Mouse? 02:54 Tools
Let's Put Out The Lights 02:55 Tools
Au Revoir, Pleasant Dreams 02:31 Tools
Pretty Little Baby 03:27 Tools
He's The Last Word 02:33 Tools
I Love Her 02:33 Tools
He's Still My Baby (Keller Sisters & Lynch-vocal) 7-9-1926 02:57 Tools
Crying For The Carolines 10:07 Tools
Glad Rag Doll 20-12-1928 02:33 Tools
Swinging Down the Lane 02:56 Tools
I'm Looking Over A Four Leaf Clover 28-1-1927 02:26 Tools
Button Up Your Overcoat 02:56 Tools
Sweet Georgia Brown (From "Les Tricheurs") 10:07 Tools
The Traffic Was Terrific 03:14 Tools
Hello Swanee Hello 28-12-1926 02:26 Tools
COQUETTE 02:26 Tools
When Polly Walks Through The Hollyhocks 30-7-1928 10:07 Tools
Bigger And Better Than Ever 10:07 Tools
He's The Last Word 23-12-1926 10:07 Tools
Confessin' 10:07 Tools
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Ben Bernie (Bernard Anzelevitz, May 30, 1891 – October 23, 1943) was an American jazz violinist and radio personality, often introduced as The Old Maestro. He was noted for his showmanship and memorable bits of snappy dialogue. Bernie was born in Bayonne, New Jersey. By the age of 15 he was teaching violin, but this experience apparently diminished his interest in the violin for a time. He returned to music doing vaudeville, appearing with Phil Baker as Baker and Bernie, but he met with little success until 1922 when he joined his first orchestra. Later, he had his own band, "The Lads," seen in the early DeForest Phonofilm sound short, Ben Bernie and All the Lads (1924–25), featuring pianist Oscar Levant. He toured with Maurice Chevalier and also toured in Europe. Bernie's orchestra recorded throughout the 1920s and 1930s; Vocalion (1922–25), Brunswick (1925–33), Columbia (1933), Decca (1936), and ARC (Vocalion and OKeh) (1939–40). In 1925 Ben Bernie and his orchestra did the first recording of Sweet Georgia Brown. Bernie was the co-composer of this jazz standard, which became the theme song of the Harlem Globetrotters. (His Vocalion and Brunswick records were always listed as Ben Bernie and His Orchestra; only his Columbia records used the moniker "Ben Bernie and All The Lads".) His musical variety radio shows through the 1930s, usually titled, Ben Bernie, The Old Maestro, were hugely successful, with ratings placing him among radio's top ten programs. He was heard on radio as early as 1923, broadcasting on WJZ and the NBC Blue Network in 1930-31, sponsored by Mennen. After a 1931-32 run on CBS, sponsored by Pabst Beer (during Prohibition, they sold malt syrup, the primary ingredient in brewing "homemade beer"), he was heard Tuesdays on NBC from 1932 to 1935, also with Pabst. His announcer during this period was Jimmy Wallington. On the Blue Network from 1935 to 1937, Bernie's sponsor was the American Can Company. He returned to CBS in 1938, sponsored by U.S. Rubber. With Half-&-Half Tobacco as a sponsor, he did a musical quiz program of CBS from 1938 to 1940. From 1940-41, Bromo-Seltzer was his sponsor on the Blue Network. Wrigley's Gum sponsored The Ben Bernie War Workers' Program (1941–43). He also made guest appearances on other radio shows. He appeared in two feature films Shoot the Works (1934) and Stolen Harmony (1935). His theme was "It's a Lonesome Old Town" and his signature trademark, "yowsah, yowsah, yowsah" (also spelled "yowsa" or "yowza"), became a national catchphrase. The term was memorably used by a character in the film They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969), Richie Cunningham in a 1976 episode of Happy Days, "They Shoot Fonzies, Don't They?" (1976), and by the band Chic with their hit "Dance, Dance, Dance (Yowsah, Yowsah, Yowsah)" (1977).[2] Announcers for Bernie's programs included Harlow Wilcox, Harry von Zell and Bob Brown. With comedy from Lew Lehr and Fuzzy Knight, the line-up of vocalists included Buddy Clark, Little Jackie Heller, Scrappy Lambert, Pat Kennedy, Jane Pickens, Dinah Shore and Mary Small. To boost ratings, Walter Winchell and Bernie, who were good friends, staged a fake rivalry similar to the comedic conflict between Jack Benny and Fred Allen. This mutually beneficial "feud" was a running gag on their radio appearances and continued in two films in which they portrayed themselves: Wake Up and Live (1937) and Love and Hisses (1937). They are also caricatured in the Warner Bros. cartoons The Woods Are Full of Cuckoos (1937) as "Ben Birdie" and "Walter Finchell" and The Coo-Coo Nut Grove (1936) as "Ben Birdie" and "Walter Windpipe". Bernie was a freemason, member of Keystone Lodge n.º 235, New York City. He died from a pulmonary embolism, brought on from his years of smoking his famed cigars, in October of 1943, aged 52. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.