Happy (Almost) Thanksgiving 2022!

The clock on the wall says it's almost Turkey Day

& it's time to get in the Holiday Spirit! 

 

"Let us be grateful to the people who make us happy; 

they are the charming gardeners 

who make our souls blossom." 

— Marcel Proust

 

Here's some tasty sounds that will

help you celebrate your Thanksgiving Holiday!

 

Red Rodney Sextet - Dig This Menu Please!

Red Rodney was a well known jazz artist who spent some time playing with Charlie Parker.  After paying his dues with Charlie Parker, Rodney assembled his own combo and came up with this great track.  Every year, I always start things off with this cool track!

 

Cab Calloway - Everybody Eats When They Come To My House

I've always been a big fan of what I like to call "Hep Cat Music".  For me this Cab Calloway tune really captures the spirit of a Thanksgiving dinner with family and friends.

 

Everybody Eats When They Come To My House

 

Have a banana, Hannah 

Try the salami, Tommy 

Get with the gravy, Davy 

Everybody eats when they come to my house 

Try a tomato, Plato 

Here's cacciatore, Dory 

Taste the bologna, Tony 

Everybody eats when they come to my house 

Pass me a pancake, Mandrake 

Havin' a derby, Irvy 

Look in the fendel, Mendel 

Everybody eats when they come to my house 

Hannah, Davy, Tommy, Dora, Mandrake 

Everybody eats when they come to my house 

Pasta fazoola, Tallulah 

Oh, do have a bagel, Fagel 

Now don't be so bashful, Nashville 

Everybody eats when they come to my house 

Hey, this is a party, Marty 

Well, you get the cherry, Jerry 

Now look, don't be so picky, Mickey 

'Cause everybody eats when they come to my house

 

Polk Miller & His Old South Quartette - Oysters and Wine At 2 A.M.

Clickety clank of the bottles as the cheer is passed around...Clank! Clank!

This tune by Polk Miller and His Old South Quartette is on my Thanksgiving Playlist each and every year.  Awhile ago, I was trying to find some info on Polk Miller and came across an article on him on the Wikipedia site: 

"Polk Miller was born in Prince Edward County, Virginia in August 1844. While growing up, he learned to play the banjo from slaves on his father's plantation. He became a druggist in Richmond in 1860. During the American Civil War, he served as a Confederate artilleryman.  At his drugstore in Richmond, Miller began making remedies for Sergeant, his favorite hunting dog. His friends soon found these remedies worked for their dogs as well. In 1868, began selling the products in the drugstore. This was the beginning of Sergeant's Pet Care Products, Inc. The tradename was established in 1886. By 2007, over 400 pet care products were sold under the Sergeant's trade name. 

 

Polk Miller

In 1892, he began performing music professionally. Through the 1890s he had a solo act in which he played banjo, sang songs and told stories. Already comfortably well-off from his drugstore business, Polk Miller had little need to earn money from such appearances, using them to raise funds for church repairs, Confederate monuments and Confederate veterans, while broadcasting his apologist views. In his own words: 'As an entertainer, it has been my aim to vindicate the slave-holding class against the charge of cruelty and inhumanity to the negro of the old time.' 

Polk Miller and his Old South Quartette had a variety show of Stories, Sketches and Songs depicting African American life before the Civil War.  Miller was white, and the four members of the quartet were black. Until recently, only 2 of the 20 or so black singers that sang in the quartet were widely known: James L. Stamper and Randall Graves. However further research has identified the names of five others: Anderson Epps, first or lead tenor; Archie Johnson, baritone; Clarence Smith, second tenor; Alphonso DeWitt, basso; and Walter Lightfoot, baritone.  They gained national prominence and toured between 1900 and 1911, stopping out of concern for the dangers of touring a racially integrated group. 

At one performance, Mark Twain introduced Polk Miller at Madison Square Garden...Miller and his quartet played colleges and military schools, as well as the "most exclusive social clubs" in New York, Boston, Baltimore, Washington, Pittsburgh, and Cleveland. Polk Miller's and the Old South Quartette were featured on some of Thomas Edison's earlier phonograph recordings.  In 2008, Tompkins Square issued seven 1909 Edison cylinder records and seven 1928  disc recordings in the compilation Polk Miller & His Old South Quartette."

From slate.com: A Brief History of Pie 

At the first Thanksgiving celebration in 1621, Pilgrims brought English style, meat-based recipes with them to the colonies.  While pumpkin pie, which was first recorded in a cookbook in 1675, originated from British spiced and boiled squash.  It was not popularized in America until the early 1800's.  Historians don't know all the dishes the Pilgrims served at the first Thanksgiving feats, but primary documents indicate that the pilgrims cooked fowl and venison and it's not unlikely that some of that meat found its way between sheets of dough at some point...because of their crusty tops, pies acted as a means to preserve food and were often used to keep the filling fresh during the winter months...Further, as the colonies spread out, the pie's role as a means to showcase local ingredients took hold and with it came a proliferation of new, sweet pies. 

A cookbook from 1796 listed only three types of sweet pies; a cookbook written in the late 1800's featured 8 sweet pie varieties; and by 1947 the Modern Encyclopedia of Cooking listed 65 different varieties of sweet pies...There are few things as American as apple pie, as the saying goes, but like much of America’s pie tradition, the original apple pie recipes came from England. These pre-Revolutionary prototypes were made with unsweetened apples and encased in an inedible shell. Yet the apple pie did develop a following, and was first referenced in the year 1589, in Menaphon by poet R. Greene: “Thy breath is like the steeme of apple pies.” 

Pies today are world-spanning treats, made with everything from apples to avocados. The winners of this year’s annual APC Crisco National Pie Championship included classic apple, pumpkin and cherry pies, but citrus pies, banana foster crème and Wolf Pack trail mix pies have all made the awards list. Pies have come a long way since the days of magpie and pepper, but many bakeries — including The Little Pie Shop in New York City, in the audio below — say a classic apple pie is still their top holiday

 

 

Blue Velvo - Hungry

Blue Velvo were a one-of-kind Long Island rock band. They were sharp as a razor and always brought the heat!  Sadly, Blue Velvo broke up but their music lives on!

 

Louis Prima with Keely Smith Sam Butera & The Witnesses - Closer To The Bone

Louis Prima!  It don't get much better than that!  This song was originally recorded by a cowboy singer named Granpa Jones back in 1952.  Somewhere along the way, the great New Orleans jazz artist, Louis Prima got his hands on this food oriented tune and the rest is history!

Closer To The Bone

Closest to the bone 
Sweeter is the meat 
Last slice of Virginia ham 
Is the best that you can eat 

Don't talk about my baby 
She's slender but she's sweet 
Closest to the bone 
And sweeter is the meat 

Now she'd make a good thermometer 
If she drank a glass of wine 
She's built just like a garter snake 
She climbs up like a vine 

'Cause closest to the bone 
Sweeter is the meat 
Last slice of Virginia ham 
Is the best that you can eat

 

The History of Thanksgiving 

From the history.com site: "Throughout that first brutal winter, most of the colonists remained on board the ship, where they suffered from exposure, scurvy and outbreaks of contagious disease. Only half of the Mayflower’s original passengers and crew lived to see their first New England spring. In March, the remaining settlers moved ashore, where they received an astonishing visit from an Abenaki Indian who greeted them in English.  Several days later, he returned with another Native American, Squanto, a member of the Pawtuxet tribe who had been kidnapped by an English sea captain and sold into slavery before escaping to London and returning to his homeland on an exploratory expedition. Squanto taught the Pilgrims, weakened by malnutrition and illness, how to cultivate corn, extract sap from maple trees, catch fish in the rivers and avoid poisonous plants. He also helped the settlers forge an alliance with the Wampanoag, a local tribe, which would endure for more than 50 years and tragically remains one of the sole examples of harmony between European colonists and Native Americans.  In November 1621, after the Pilgrims’ first corn harvest proved successful, Governor William Bradford organized a celebratory feast and invited a group of the fledgling colony’s Native American allies, including the Wampanoag chief Massasoit. Now remembered as American’s “first Thanksgiving”—although the Pilgrims themselves may not have used the term at the time—the festival lasted for three days.  Historians have suggested that many of the dishes were likely prepared using traditional Native American spices and cooking methods. Because the Pilgrims had no oven and the Mayflower’s sugar supply had dwindled by the fall of 1621, the meal did not feature pies, cakes or other desserts, which have become a hallmark of contemporary celebrations. 

Pilgrims held their second Thanksgiving celebration in 1623 to mark the end of a long drought that had threatened the year’s harvest and prompted Governor Bradford to call for a religious fast. Days of fasting and thanksgiving on an annual or occasional basis became common practice in other New England settlements as well.  During the American Revolution, the Continental Congress designated one or more days of thanksgiving a year, and in 1789 George Washington issued the first Thanksgiving proclamation by the national government of the United States; in it, he called upon Americans to express their gratitude for the happy conclusion to the country’s war of independence and the successful ratification of the U.S. Constitution. His successors John Adams and James Madison also designated days of thanks during their presidencies. 

In 1817, New York became the first of several states to officially adopt an annual Thanksgiving holiday; each celebrated it on a different day, however, and the American South remained largely unfamiliar with the tradition.  In 1827, the noted magazine editor and prolific writer Sarah Josepha Hale—author, among countless other things, of the nursery rhyme “Mary Had a Little Lamb”—launched a campaign to establish Thanksgiving as a national holiday. For 36 years, she published numerous editorials and sent scores of letters to governors, senators, presidents and other politicians, earning her the nickname the Mother of Thanksgiving. 

Abraham Lincoln finally heeded her request in 1863, at the height of the Civil War, in a proclamation entreating all Americans to ask God to “commend to his tender care all those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife” and to “heal the wounds of the nation.” He scheduled Thanksgiving for the final Thursday in November, and it was celebrated on that day every year until 1939, when Franklin D. Roosevelt moved the holiday up a week in an attempt to spur retail sales during the Great Depression. Roosevelt’s plan, known derisively as Franksgiving, was met with passionate opposition, and in 1941 the president reluctantly signed a bill making Thanksgiving the fourth Thursday in November. 

Although the American concept of Thanksgiving developed in the colonies of New England, its roots can be traced back to the other side of the Atlantic. Both the Separatists who came over on the Mayflower and the Puritans who arrived soon after brought with them a tradition of providential holidays—days of fasting during difficult or pivotal moments and days of feasting and celebration to thank God in times of plenty. 

As an annual celebration of the harvest and its bounty, moreover, Thanksgiving falls under a category of festivals that spans cultures, continents and millennia. In ancient times, the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans feasted and paid tribute to their gods after the fall harvest. Thanksgiving also bears a resemblance to the ancient Jewish harvest festival of Sukkot. Finally, historians have noted that Native Americans had a rich tradition of commemorating the fall harvest with feasting and merrymaking long before Europeans set foot on their shores."

 

Dave Bartholomew - Shrimp And Gumbo

Dave Bartholomew, one of the great New Orleans artists of the past, recorded this tune for Imperial Records.  Shrimp And Gumbo is a real groove that has some definite Caribbean influence.  There aren't many songs that sound more festive than Shrimp And Gumbo, a wild mix of party noise that's exactly what you'd hear at any Mardi Gras carnival. The band kicks in with a sound that is a nice slice of mambo-Mardi Gras gris-gris!

 

Steve Lucky with The Rhumba Bums & Miss Carmen Getit - Where's My Gravy

 One of my favorite food tracks is by a good friend of mine named Steve Lucky.   If you're ever in the San Francisco area, be sure to catch the one and only Steve Lucky.  Steve plays frequently with his hot combo, the Rhumba Bums featuring Miss Carmen Getit!

IF YOU'RE IN SAN FRANCISCO, CHECK OUT THEIR UPCOMING SHOWS!

Steve Lucky, the Rhumba Bums & the fabulous Miss Carmen Getit

 

Bo Diddley - Soul Food

Bo Diddley was one of the first rock & rollers that captured my imagination.  I've always dug his earthy approach to hittin' the groove. Go Bo Go!

 

 

The JB's - Pass The Peas

Thanksgiving dinner wouldn't be magical without a nice bowl of peas and ham!  The JBs were and still are one of the funkiest combos ever to walk the earth.  "The J.B.'s were the legendary supporting cast of musicians behind James Brown, earning a well-deserved reputation as the tightest, best-drilled instrumental ensemble in all of funk. The name J.B.'s is most often associated with three horn men in particular -- saxophonists Maceo Parker and Alfred "Pee Wee" Ellis, and trombonist Fred Wesley, all of whom originally joined Brown's backing band at various points during the '60s.

 

Harold Burrage - You Eat Too Much

"This song is a cool early R&B track that is as hilarious as it is insulting!"

 

Alka Seltzer Commercial - Plop Plop!  Fizz Fizz!

 

 

Wishing One & All A HAPPY (Almost) THANKSGIVING!

 

Don't miss out on the perfect song for dysfunctional families everywhere! 

Johnny Pierre's Holiday Single: Have A Happy Thanksgiving!

 

Download the tune @ the Mind Smoke Records!

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