Blind Skeleton's Three Tune Tuesday

Victoria Day

1 h 1 min · 19 mei 2026
aflevering Victoria Day artwork

Beschrijving

This week’s Three Tune Tuesday takes us back to the origins of Victoria Day — not the long weekend, not the fireworks, but the woman herself. We open with an “On This Day” entry: “June Brought the Roses,” recorded by contralto Marcia Freer on May 19, 1924, one hundred years to the day before this episode was released — nothing to do with Queen Victoria, but everything to do with the warmth her holiday signals for Canadians. From there we travel to Montreal in 1902, where the Kilties Band of Canada pressed “The Maple Leaf Forever” onto a maroon disc with a tartan paper label for the Berliner Gramophone Company — one of the rarest and most distinctly Canadian objects the early recording industry produced. We close with the song that was Victoria herself: Ian Colquhoun’s “Soldiers of the Queen,” captured in London around 1900, the sound of an empire that believed without question in its own permanence. A New Zealand newspaper noted in 1901 that the death of Queen Victoria had rather interfered with the popularity of the song. It had. Nothing could have replaced her. BERLINER TARTAN LABEL [https://blindskeleton.one/wp-content/uploads/tartan_label.png]

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aflevering First Times artwork

First Times

This week, it’s personal. Boneapart skipped into new territory at the GNCC Arena Championship bonspiel — a first time playing on Sunday, a first time in a championship final. Runners-up in the C final, sure, but the letter on the bracket isn’t the point. The point is he’d never been there before. This was his first. So here’s the question: what are some others? First, off-theme and by way of welcome, Tuchki nebesnyia — “Clouds of the Skies” — a setting of Lermontov’s poem about clouds as eternal wanderers, composed by Alexander Dargomyzhsky and sung by Russian soprano Maria Mikhailova in 1903. The label names the composer and the singer but forgets the poet, so we’ll put Lermontov back where he belongs. Mikhailova made over 300 records and became one of the first singers anywhere to win her fame chiefly through the gramophone. Then the firsts. Chimes Blues, cut by King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band for Gennett in 1923, is a tidy twelve-bar blues — but listen to the twenty-four bars in the middle, the first recorded solo by a twenty-one-year-old second cornet named Louis Armstrong. Everything he’d become starts right there. And You May Be Lonesome, by Art Gillham, “The Whispering Pianist,” for Columbia in 1925 — credited as the first electrically recorded disc issued to the public. The first time a record caught a whisper, sung by the man who whispered for a living. Three firsts. What’s yours?

30 jun 20261 h 11 min
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Animal House

This week on Three Tune Tuesday, we throw open the barn door for “Animal House” — three records with critters in the title and not a serious thought among them. No grand theme, no hidden agenda. Just a bird, some chickens, and a bee, scattered across two decades of shellac. We open with “On the Wing” (1904), a breakneck galop from Arthur Pryor’s Orchestra hiding behind the house name “Victor Dance Orchestra.” Pryor was Sousa’s star trombonist, and this one moves like something with feathers and a head start. Then the Six Brown Brothers turn their saxophones loose on “Chasing the Chickens” (1918), a fox-trot from vaudeville’s favorite reed-blowing clowns — back when the saxophone was still the funniest instrument in the room. We close with “Bee’s Knees” (1922), a Ted Lewis romp co-written by New Orleans cornetist Ray Lopez, the same man who’d helped copyright the first jazz record five years earlier. The title was brand-new slang that year: the very best of the very best.

22 jun 202658 min
aflevering Games artwork

Games

Three Tune Tuesday plays tunes. So why does this week open with a man reciting a poem? Because the best story about a game isn’t always sung. The theme this week is “Games,” and we follow the stakes as they drain right out of one — from everything riding on a single swing, through the swagger of a man who never loses, to an afternoon where the only thing on the line is a bag of peanuts. We open at the ballpark in Mudville, where DeWolf Hopper throws his whole booming theatrical might into Ernest Thayer’s “Casey at the Bat” (Victor, 1909) and the mighty Casey goes down swinging in front of the entire town. Then we take to the road with Kelly Harrell’s “Rovin’ Gambler” (Victor, 1925), the wandering player who wins every hand — and the girl besides. We land back in the bleachers with Harvey Hindermeyer’s “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” (1908), one of the very first recordings ever made of it, where the game costs nothing and everybody goes home happy. Hope, swagger, and Cracker Jack — three spins of the shellac. This week’s theme is inspired by our friends at https://ancient.games [https://ancient.games].

16 jun 20261 h 4 min