birthdays

Petula Clark

Petula Clark Treats Audience to Her Big Hits | Best Classic Bands

Today is the birthday (15 November, 1932) of Petula Clark. Most of us on this side of the pond know her for her iconic 1964 hit ‘Downtown’. She was, however, a very successful performer before her first US hit.

She made her radio debut in 1942 and went on to a series of some 500 performances designed to entertain the troops. She also toured the UK with fellow child performer, Julie Andrews. She was considered a mascot by the British army and troops plastered her photos on tanks and such for good luck in battle.

In the late 50s and early 60s she became a star across Europe, recording hits in German, French, Spanish and Italian and had numerous number 1 hits both in the UK and across the channel. She also began composing film scores.

Her US debut came with the release of ‘Downtown’ in 1964. It went to number 1 on the charts in January of 1965. She also recorded the song in French and the song was a hit in the UK, Netherlands, Germany, Australia, India and Rhodesia. Clark went on to record 15 consecutive top 40 hits in the US.

An interesting episode occurred in 1968 when she was invited by NBC to film her own special. While singing a duet with Harry Belafonte, she took hold of his arm, much to dismay of a representative of Chrysler corporation (the sponsor) who feared that the moment would incur racial backlash from southern viewers. He demanded that they re-film the song with the two standing well apart. Clark refused and destroyed all other takes of the song and delivered the show to NBC with the touch intact. The Chrysler rep was fired and the show aired on 6 April, 1968, four days after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King.

Enough of my blathering. Here’s Petula!

And this…

and this…

Posted by Tom in sixties and seventies

Claude Monet

Impression, Sunrise 1872

Today is the birthday (14 November, 1840) of one of my favorite artists – Claude Monet. Along with Camille Pissaro, Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley and Édouard Manet he was one of the founders of French Impressionism. Indeed, the movement was named after the above painting – Impression, Sunrise.

Monet was very interested in how changes in light affected what he saw and he often painted the same scene many times to capture the changes. He and other impressionists focused on using broken color and rapid small brush strokes painting en plein air to capture the effects of light.

He may be best known for his paintings of water lilies which he painted some 250 times during the last years 30 years of his life. He suffered from cataracts during part of this period.

One of my favorite Monet paintings is this one of Waterloo Bridge, which hangs in the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2e/Claude_Monet_-_Waterloo_Bridge_-_National_Gallery_of_Art.jpg/1024px-Claude_Monet_-_Waterloo_Bridge_-_National_Gallery_of_Art.jpg
Waterloo Bridge, 1904

I also like this painting of his garden with his son. I think the colors look particularly vibrant.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/89/Claude_Monet_-_Monet%27s_garden_at_V%C3%A9theuil_%281880%29.jpg/808px-Claude_Monet_-_Monet%27s_garden_at_V%C3%A9theuil_%281880%29.jpg
Monet’s garden at Vétheuil

Both of these paintings are at the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC. Go and see them next time you are in Washington.

Posted by Tom in Art

Johann Strauss II

Today is the birthday (October 25, 1825 of Johann Strauss II – ‘The Waltz King’. He was a prolific composer of light music including more than 500 waltzes, polka, quadrilles, etc. His waltzes including ‘The Blue Danube Waltz’, the ‘Vienna Waltz’ and the ‘Emperor Waltz’ help popularize the waltz in Austria and elsewhere. His music is widely known. Those of you who are old enough may remember that the Blue Danube Waltz was used to score one of the remarkable scenes in 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Posted by Tom in Music