• Prolific composer Charles Strouse dies at 96

    From DianeE@21:1/5 to All on Fri May 16 08:25:56 2025
    Reading and hearing his obits yesterday, I noticed that he had composed
    a number of songs that I loathe, including "Born Too Late" by the
    Poni-Tails and "Put On A Happy Face" from the score of "Bye Bye Birdie"
    which he composed along with many other Broadway shows. Reading
    further, I saw that he did not write any lyrics, only the tunes. I'm
    not sure if I would still hate these songs with different lyrics. Same
    goes for what is probably his most famous composition (off topic here), "Tomorrow" from "Annie."

    One song he wrote which I do *not* hate is the opening theme from "All
    In The Family," "Those Were The Days." I did not know this before, but
    he personally played the piano when Carroll O'Connor and Jean Stapleton recorded it for the show's opening sequence (and Stapleton mimed playing
    the piano). It didn't say whether he also played the piano on the later version that clarified the lyrics.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Roger@21:1/5 to DianeE on Fri May 16 14:44:46 2025
    On Fri, 16 May 2025 12:25:56 +0000, DianeE wrote:

    Reading and hearing his obits yesterday, I noticed that he had composed
    a number of songs that I loathe, including "Born Too Late" by the
    Poni-Tails and "Put On A Happy Face" from the score of "Bye Bye Birdie"
    which he composed along with many other Broadway shows. Reading
    further, I saw that he did not write any lyrics, only the tunes. I'm
    not sure if I would still hate these songs with different lyrics. Same
    goes for what is probably his most famous composition (off topic here), "Tomorrow" from "Annie."

    One song he wrote which I do *not* hate is the opening theme from "All
    In The Family," "Those Were The Days." I did not know this before, but
    he personally played the piano when Carroll O'Connor and Jean Stapleton recorded it for the show's opening sequence (and Stapleton mimed playing
    the piano). It didn't say whether he also played the piano on the later version that clarified the lyrics.

    I'm not Catholic so making confession doesn't come that naturally to me but.....
    I have 'fess up to "Born Too Late" being the absolute favorite record of
    the 12 year old Rogie at the time it was all over the radio---and I
    still have a soft spot for it today.

    But probably not quite enough to put it in the faves list when we get
    around to the ABC-Paramount list 😊

    PS I also liked the Bunkers theme song "Those Were The Days" tho I found
    the show itself--tho pretty funny---a lesser imitation of the UK
    original "Till Death Us Do Part" a huge hit over here on the BBC (when
    the Beeb was still highly watchable and not filled with the dreadful
    claptrap it is infested with today and wasn't charging the truly
    extortionate licence fee as it stands today)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bruce@21:1/5 to Roger on Fri May 16 17:42:30 2025
    On Fri, 16 May 2025 14:44:46 +0000, Roger wrote:

    On Fri, 16 May 2025 12:25:56 +0000, DianeE wrote:

    Reading and hearing his obits yesterday, I noticed that he had composed
    a number of songs that I loathe, including "Born Too Late" by the
    Poni-Tails and "Put On A Happy Face" from the score of "Bye Bye Birdie"
    which he composed along with many other Broadway shows. Reading
    further, I saw that he did not write any lyrics, only the tunes. I'm
    not sure if I would still hate these songs with different lyrics. Same
    goes for what is probably his most famous composition (off topic here),
    "Tomorrow" from "Annie."

    One song he wrote which I do *not* hate is the opening theme from "All
    In The Family," "Those Were The Days." I did not know this before, but
    he personally played the piano when Carroll O'Connor and Jean Stapleton
    recorded it for the show's opening sequence (and Stapleton mimed playing
    the piano). It didn't say whether he also played the piano on the later
    version that clarified the lyrics.

    I'm not Catholic so making confession doesn't come that naturally to me but.....
    I have 'fess up to "Born Too Late" being the absolute favorite record of
    the 12 year old Rogie at the time it was all over the radio---and I
    still have a soft spot for it today.

    ROFL.....PUSSY!

    --

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Roger@21:1/5 to Bruce on Sat May 17 09:01:02 2025
    On Fri, 16 May 2025 17:42:30 +0000, Bruce wrote:

    On Fri, 16 May 2025 14:44:46 +0000, Roger wrote:

    On Fri, 16 May 2025 12:25:56 +0000, DianeE wrote:

    Reading and hearing his obits yesterday, I noticed that he had composed
    a number of songs that I loathe, including "Born Too Late" by the
    Poni-Tails and "Put On A Happy Face" from the score of "Bye Bye Birdie"
    which he composed along with many other Broadway shows. Reading
    further, I saw that he did not write any lyrics, only the tunes. I'm
    not sure if I would still hate these songs with different lyrics. Same
    goes for what is probably his most famous composition (off topic here),
    "Tomorrow" from "Annie."

    One song he wrote which I do *not* hate is the opening theme from "All
    In The Family," "Those Were The Days." I did not know this before, but
    he personally played the piano when Carroll O'Connor and Jean Stapleton
    recorded it for the show's opening sequence (and Stapleton mimed playing >>> the piano). It didn't say whether he also played the piano on the later >>> version that clarified the lyrics.

    I'm not Catholic so making confession doesn't come that naturally to me
    but.....
    I have 'fess up to "Born Too Late" being the absolute favorite record of
    the 12 year old Rogie at the time it was all over the radio---and I
    still have a soft spot for it today.

    ROFL.....PUSSY!

    YAWNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)