Fred Waring & His Pennsylvanians

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Ring Those Christmas Bells 05:00 Tools
I Love My Baby, My Baby Loves Me 03:29 Tools
Collegiate 03:06 Tools
Dry Bones 02:20 Tools
How About Me 03:12 Tools
Ole Moses Put Pharaoh In His Place 03:15 Tools
'Twas the Night Before Christmas 07:14 Tools
Love for Sale 03:15 Tools
Ice Cream 02:31 Tools
Sleep 03:07 Tools
Nutcracker Suite Part 1 02:31 Tools
Caroling, Caroling 01:03 Tools
Fit as a Fiddle 00:00 Tools
The Night Before Christmas 02:23 Tools
Twas the Night Before Christmas 07:13 Tools
Jesu Bambino 02:23 Tools
Do Something 01:50 Tools
I Found A Million Dollar Baby 04:30 Tools
White Christmas 03:16 Tools
Nashville Nightingale 03:14 Tools
soft lights and sweet music 03:28 Tools
The Twelve Days of Christmas 03:41 Tools
Christmas Was Meant for Children 02:22 Tools
Let's Have Another Cup of Coffee 03:14 Tools
Silent Night, Holy Night 01:11 Tools
Tulips And Heather (mono) 02:52 Tools
Little White Lies 03:03 Tools
Hark! The Herald Angels Sing 02:58 Tools
I Scream, You Scream 02:30 Tools
Dancing in the Dark 03:03 Tools
Gloria In Excelsis 03:03 Tools
I Scream, You Scream, We All Scream For Ice Cream 02:30 Tools
Jingle Bells 06:37 Tools
Yankee Doodle Boy 03:19 Tools
Memory Lane 03:23 Tools
When Angels Sang Of Peace 02:58 Tools
Brazil 02:55 Tools
Collegiana 02:43 Tools
The Star Carol 01:18 Tools
Christmas 03:22 Tools
Tea For Two 03:23 Tools
Winter Wonderland 00:00 Tools
Button up Your Overcoat 00:00 Tools
O Holy Night 03:10 Tools
Do You Hear What I Hear? 03:10 Tools
Ah, Sweet Mystery Of Life 03:10 Tools
Carol, Brothers, Carol 02:22 Tools
Red Hot Chicago 03:10 Tools
O Christmas Tree 00:00 Tools
Jingle Bells / Caroling, Caroling 03:07 Tools
The Sweetheart Of Sigma Chi 02:13 Tools
Silver Bells 02:22 Tools
Love For Sale (Remastered) 03:10 Tools
Navy Blues 00:00 Tools
I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day 02:22 Tools
I Scream, You Scream, We All Scream for Ice Cream! (feat. Poley McClintock) 03:02 Tools
While By Our Sleeping Flock We Lay 03:22 Tools
A Picnic For Two 02:45 Tools
Let Me Sing and I'm Happy (feat. The Three Girl Friends) 03:49 Tools
Here We Come Awassailing 03:14 Tools
Now Is The Caroling Season 02:22 Tools
Sleigh Ride 03:14 Tools
Jingle Bells (From "a Christmas Story") 02:21 Tools
Does My Sweetie Do - And How! 03:29 Tools
You'll Get By 02:22 Tools
H'lo Baby 03:22 Tools
Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life 02:45 Tools
Angels We Have Heard on High 03:14 Tools
Let's Have Another Cup of Coffee (1932) 03:14 Tools
In Sweetest Jubilee 03:14 Tools
We Three Kings 00:30 Tools
Masters In This Hall 00:30 Tools
Beautiful Savior 00:30 Tools
Silent Night 03:29 Tools
Christmas Tree 00:46 Tools
I Love My Baby My Baby Loves Me 03:29 Tools
Who's Blue Now 00:30 Tools
March of the Kings 03:49 Tools
I Say It's Spinach 03:49 Tools
Bright, Bright The Holly Berries 00:30 Tools
It Was a Night of Wonder 00:30 Tools
The Christmas Song (Merry Christmas To You) 03:29 Tools
O Hearken Ye 01:21 Tools
Swingin Shepard Blues 01:31 Tools
Laugh, Clown, Laugh 03:29 Tools
Mistletoe 03:29 Tools
Do You Hear What I Hear 01:21 Tools
Opening 00:54 Tools
Carol Of The Bells 03:29 Tools
Battle Hymn Of The Republic 03:49 Tools
Holiday For Strings 03:49 Tools
A Caroling We Go 02:21 Tools
The Halls Of Ivy 02:21 Tools
I'll Always Be in Love with You 03:29 Tools
Collegiana (feat. Tom Waring) 03:29 Tools
‘twas The Night Before Christmas 03:29 Tools
Angels, From The Realms Of Glory 02:21 Tools
Gesu Bambino 03:02 Tools
Christmas Magic 00:54 Tools
How'm I Doin' 03:29 Tools
Music Of Tradition 03:29 Tools
The Sleigh 03:29 Tools
Adestes Fideles 03:29 Tools
Let's Have Another Cup O' Coffee 03:29 Tools
A Visit from St. Nicholas (Twas the Night Before Christmas) (Part 1) 03:29 Tools
Jesu Parvule 03:02 Tools
Stack O'Lee Blues 03:29 Tools
I Wonder As I Wander 03:02 Tools
You'll Never Walk Alone 03:02 Tools
The Meaning Of Christmas 03:02 Tools
O Come, O Come, Emmanuel 02:21 Tools
Let's Have Another Cup of Coffee (feat. Chick Bullovk & The Three Girl Friends) 02:21 Tools
Bring a Torch, Jeannette Isabella 02:21 Tools
Angels from the Realms of Glory 03:02 Tools
I Hear Music 03:02 Tools
Who's Blue Now? 03:02 Tools
September Song 03:02 Tools
Rudolph, The Red-Nosed Reindeer 03:02 Tools
I Found a Million-Dollar Baby 03:02 Tools
Hark The Herald Angels Sing 03:02 Tools
Heigh Ho the Holly 03:02 Tools
Toyland 03:02 Tools
Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town 03:02 Tools
Adeste Fideles 03:02 Tools
Does My Sweetie Do And How! 03:02 Tools
Nutcracker Suite Pt. 1 03:02 Tools
O Come All Ye Faithful / Come, Dear Children 03:02 Tools
Farewell Blues 03:02 Tools
Nut Cracker Suite Pt 1 03:02 Tools
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Fredrick Malcolm Waring (born June 9, 1900 in Tyrone, Pennsylvania, died July 29, 1984, State College, Pennsylvania) was a popular musician, bandleader, and radio and TV personality of the 20th century, sometimes referred to as "the man who taught America how to sing." Waring once touted the blender by saying, "...this mixer is going to revolutionize American drinks." Waring blenders became an essential appliance for every “modern kitchen.” It was said that Waring blenders were used by Jonas Salk for developing his polio vaccine. When he decided to add a men’s singing group to his growing ensemble, he recruited a young man named Robert Shaw, recently out of the Pomona College glee club in California, to train his singers. Shaw, of course, went on to found the Robert Shaw Chorale, direct the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, and become America’s preeminent conductor of "serious" choral music -- although the decidedly "schmaltzy" recordings of the men of the Robert Shaw Chorale contain strong echoes of the famous Waring glee club sound. During the war years, Waring and his ensemble appeared at countless war bond rallies and entertained the troops at training camps. He also composed and/or performed dozens of patriotic songs, his most famous being “My America.” Throughout the 1940s and early 1950s Waring and The Pennsylvanians produced a string of hits, selling millions of records, and remained among the best known musical groups in the nation. A few of his many choral hits include "Sleep," "Battle Hymn of the Republic," "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes," "Button Up Your Overcoat," "White Christmas," and "Dancing In The Dark." In 1947, Waring began holding summer choral workshops at his Pennsylvania headquarters in Shawnee-on-the Delaware. For 37 years, talented young musicians from all over America flocked to these sessions and were taught to sing with precision, sensitivity and enthusiasm by the meticulous Waring. Among the many techniques the “maestro” shared with his pupils was his method of pronouncing “every sound of every syllable of every word,” thereby making the words of a song as clear to the audience as the music. The inspired singers then went home and shared what they had learned with fellow musicians, and Waring’s approach to choral singing spread throughout the nation. His reputation as “the man who taught America how to sing” was well earned. Waring expanded into television in 1949 with The Fred Waring Show on CBS. The program ran until 1955 and received several awards for Best Musical Program. In the 60s and 70s, popular musical tastes turned from choral music, but Waring changed with the times, introducing his “Young Pennsylvanians,” a group of fresh-faced, long-haired, bell-bottomed performers who sang both old favorites and “choralized” arrangements of contemporary songs. In this way he continued to be a popular touring attraction, logging some 40,000 miles a year. Ron Ketelsen, a "Young Pennsylvanians" singer in the late 70s, remembers Fred Waring with both awe and affection. "Whenever he entered a room, people stood up," Ketelsen said. "He was extremely well respected. No one ever called him 'Fred' - it was always "Mr. Waring." Ketelsen also remembers his repartee with his audiences between musical numbers. As a judge of the "Miss America" competition, Waring sometimes invited contestants onto his shows, and might comment on the brevity of their outfits by saying, "The women's costumes aren't quite finished yet, but I'm sure you'll enjoy what you do see." Throughout his career, Fred Waring received many awards, but none was as illustrious as his last one. In 1983, the 83-year-old Waring — by now considered king of popular choral music — was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal of Honor, the nation’s highest honor for a civilian, by President Ronald Reagan. Fred Waring died suddenly on July 29, 1984 at the place where it all began — Penn State University — just after videotaping a concert with his ensemble and completing his annual summer choral workshop. He conducted many such workshops at Penn State in his later years, and in 1984 designated Penn State to house his collection of archives and memorabilia. He also served his alma mater as a trustee and was named a Distinguished Alumnus of the Universit . While many believe that "Waring Hall" at Penn State is named for him, it is actually named for his grandfather, William Waring . A small meeting room by the West Wing restaurant has dozens of cartoons drawn by artists such as Al Hirschfeld in Waring's honor. Fred Waring left behind four adult children; Dixie, Fred Waring Jr. (b. 1936), William "Bill" and Malcolm. Son Fred Jr. enjoyed a long and varied musical career as conductor and jazz trombonist. Grandson Jordan Waring attained some success as a classical composer and was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in music in 1996. The always-popular bandleader/choral conductor had spent a lifetime entertaining a nation and had, indeed, taught it how to sing. For almost 70 years this untiring artist and his beloved "Pennsylvanians" had enchanted audiences too numerous to count. There is little doubt that "Mr. Waring" did more to popularize choral music in America than any other person. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.