The Singing Dogs

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Jingle Bells 01:40 Tools
Hot Dog Boogie 01:40 Tools
The Hey Song 01:40 Tools
Jingle Balls 01:40 Tools
Oh! Susanna 01:40 Tools
Rock & Roll 01:40 Tools
Medley (Pat-A-Cake) (Three Blind Mice) (Jingle Bells) 01:40 Tools
Jimgle Bells 01:40 Tools
Oh! Susana 01:40 Tools
Hot Dog Rock and Roll 01:40 Tools
My Bonnie Lies Over The Ocean 01:40 Tools
London Bridge 01:40 Tools
For He's A Jolly Good Fellow 01:40 Tools
Pat-a-Cake--Three Blind Mice--Jingle Bells 01:40 Tools
Medley: Pat-A-Cake / Three Blind Mice / Jingle Bells 01:40 Tools
Who Let the Dogs Out (Real Hound Dogs) 01:40 Tools
Dogs Barking Jingle Bells 01:40 Tools
The Singing Dogs (Medley) 01:40 Tools
Little Brown Jug 01:40 Tools
Where Has My Little Dog Gone 01:40 Tools
Tingelingelater & Frere Jacque 01:40 Tools
Jingle Bells [Clean] 01:40 Tools
Oh Susanna 01:40 Tools
Jingle Bells - Singing Dogs 01:39 Tools
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The Singing Dogs was a musical recording project under whose name two 45rpm singles were released in the 1950s. The idea for the Singing Dogs came from Danish recording engineer Carl Weismann who recorded the sounds of various species of birds. But barking dogs often spoiled the recordings. Weismann found a new use for these spoiled takes by splicing together the pitches of dog barks into the pattern of songs.[1] He teamed up with Don Charles, a record producer working in Copenhagen, Denmark (not the same person as an English record producer also named Don Charles).[2] Weismann used recordings of five dogs barking (their names were Dolly, Pearl, Pussy, Caesar, and King), spliced them on reel-to-reel tape, and arranged the pitches to the tune of the Stephen Foster song "Oh! Susanna". Charles provided the musical accompaniment. This was eventually released by RCA Victor as the A-side on a 7" single, with the B-side a medley of "Pat-a-Cake", "Three Blind Mice", and "Jingle Bells". The novelty record became a hit, reaching #22 on the US Billboard Pop Singles chart.[2] The disc eventually sold over a million copies.[3][4] In 1956, the troupe of dogs (with a fifth member, Pussy) were again recorded, yielding the single "Hot Dog Rock 'n Roll" b/w "Hot Dog Boogie". This recording is listed as being "directed" by Carl Weismann. In 1983 RCA reissued "Jingle Bells" as a single, becoming a Christmas hit on virtually every radio format, since then the track has received frequent media exposure during the Christmas and holiday season although it appears its fame and popularity peaked in the 1970s. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.