Greetings,
graceful viewers
from around the globe,
and welcome to a special
Christmas edition of
A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms,
featuring the one
and only legendary
American performer,
Mr. Bing Crosby.
I'm dreaming of
a white Christmas
Just like the ones
I used to know.
Where the treetops glisten,
And children listen
To hear sleigh bells
in the snow.
I'm dreaming of
a white Christmas
We opened our show
with “White Christmas,”
the biggest-selling single
of all times according to
the Guinness Book
of World Records.
Originally composed by
Irving Berlin in 1940,
Bing Crosby’s rendition
of “White Christmas”
was added to
the United States
National Recording
Registry in 2002
and chosen by
the Library of Congress
as a historically
significant recording.
It was also ranked
as the second best song
of the 20th century by
the Recording Industry
Association of America.
Furthermore,
Mr. Crosby’s version was
given a Grammy Hall
of Fame Award
which honors recordings
of lasting qualitative
or historical significance
that are at least
25 years old.
On today’s show,
we will learn more
fascinating facts
about Mr. Bing Crosby’s
celebrated performing
career, including
his annual
Christmas TV specials,
his illustrious jazz history,
plus other accolades
and legacies.
The wonderful Mr. Crosby
made over an estimated
2,000 commercial
recordings during his life,
which makes him the
most recorded performer
in music history.
In fact, he has sold
close to an astonishing
one billion records, tapes,
compact discs and
digital downloads to date
all over the world.
His annually televised
Christmas specials
from 1961 to 1974
filled millions of homes
with holiday cheer and
plenty of entertainment
for the whole family.
Let’s continue
in the Christmas spirit
by enjoying footage
of his 1966
Christmas special
accompanied by
his lovely wife
and adorable children.
Together they sing
another holiday classic
originally composed by
Jay Livingston
and Ray Evans,
entitled “Silver Bells.”
Silver bells (Ring-a-ling)
Silver bells (Hear them sing)
It’s Christmas time
in the city
(Ring-aling-aling-aling)
Ring-aling (Silver bells)
Hear them sing
(Silver bells)
Tomorrow will be
Christmas Day
Everybody here
on Christmas
Hanging holly so green
And the big tree is laden
with treasures.
Well regarded as an
American musical legacy,
Bing Crosby’s career
spanned over five decades.
He was blessed with
a rich bass-baritone voice
and sang mostly
traditional pop and jazz.
Although Mr. Crosby
couldn’t formally read
music, his natural ability
allowed him
to memorize a song
the first time he heard it!
Born Harry Lillis Crosby
in 1903 in Tacoma,
Washington, USA,
he attended
Gonzaga University
to study law.
But upon a friend’s
invitation to join their band,
he left Gonzaga
and made it to
the bustling jazz-mecca
of New York City.
It was here that
Bing Crosby’s jazz career
took off in the early 1930s.
He was taught jazz
phrasing by the famous
Dorsey Brothers and
acclaimed jazz performer
Bix Beiderbecke.
It wasn’t long until he
was part of a successful
jazz vocal group named
The Rhythm Boys.
Ralph Gleason,
a noted jazz writer,
once described Mr. Crosby
as “the personification of
the whole jazz movement –
the relaxed, casual,
natural, uninhibited
approach to art.”
Jazz legend
Louis Armstrong added,
“Bing’s voice has
a mellow quality
that only Bing’s got.
It's like gold being
poured out of a cup.”
Here is an excellent
example of Mr. Crosby’s
swinging jazz talent called
“Now You Has Jazz”
from the popular 1956
movie “High Society.”
From the Equator
up to the Pole
Everybody winging,
everybody singing
Rock-rock-rock-rock
rock and roll
From the East to the West
From the coast
to the coast
Jazz is king, jazz is the thing
That folks …dig…most.
And that’s jazz.
Ms. Kim Morgan, writer
for the award-winning
American publication
“Huffington Post,”
penned this review
of Mr. Crosby’s singing:
“Perhaps it's just
how antiquated
his music sounds today –
beautifully, mysteriously
antiquated, like something
emerging from a dream....
when listening to
the brilliant baritone sing
‘Pennies From Heaven,’
you feel the music
form around you,
as if you're riding on
an ethereal echo chamber
of air coming from
a million miles away.”
Let’s listen to the song
“Pennies from Heaven”
from the 1936 movie
of the same name.
A long time ago
A million years BC
The best things in life
Absolutely free.
But no one appreciated
A sky
that was always blue.
And no one congratulated
A moon
that was always new.
So it was planned
that they would vanish
now and then
And you must pay before
you get them back again.
That's what storms
were made for
And you shouldn't
be afraid for
Every time it rains it rains
Pennies from Heaven.
Ever creative, Mr. Crosby
combined pop, jazz,
opera, classical and
even international music
on his TV shows.
In 1967, the musical
“Doctor Doolittle”
was released and
with it the Academy
Award-winning song
“If I Could Talk
to the Animals.”
Showing his easy-going
side, Bing Crosby chose
to sing this delightful song,
performing it
with his family
during his 1967
Christmas TV special.
Please enjoy.
If I could
talk to the animals,
just imagine it,
Chatting with a chimp
in chimpanzee,
Imagine talking to a tiger,
chatting with a cheetah,
What a neat achievement
it would be!
If we could
talk with the animals,
learn their languages,
Maybe
take an animal degree,
(That’s elevating)
We'd study elephant and
eagle, buffalo and beagle,
Alligator, guinea pig,
and flea!
The approximately
2,000 recordings
Mr. Bing Crosby made
during his 51-year career
as a vocalist
have been unmatched.
He sang
on 4,000 radio shows
from 1931 to 1962.
His own radio show
regularly attracted an
unprecedented audience
of 50 million listeners.
During the 1940s,
some of his songs
gave a new optimism
to multitudes of people
and served as a beacon
of hope over the airwaves.
Such an example is this
1945 soulful rendition
of the poem “In the Land
of Beginning Again.”
Let's find that Paradise
where sorrow can't live
And learn the teachings
of forget and forgive
In the land of beginning
again
Where broken dreams
come true
Would you believe that
Bing Crosby’s recordings
reached the charts an
unprecedented 383 times
as songs in the top 30s!
Frank Sinatra shared
these words of adoration
about Mr. Crosby,
“He was the father
of my career,
the idol of my youth
and a dear friend
of my maturity.”
Let’s now enjoy
one of Mr. Crosby’s
Grammy Award-winning
songs from
the 1944 classic film,
“Going My Way,”
the touching Irish lullaby,
‘Too-ra-loo-ra-loo-ral.”
Too-ra-loo-ra-loo-ral
Too-ra-loo-ra-li
Too-ra-loo-ra-loo-ral
Hush now, don't you cry
Too-ra-loo-ra-loo-ral
Too-ra-loo-ra-li
Too-ra-loo-ra-loo-ral
That's an Irish lullaby.
Mindful of the fact that
Christmas is celebrated
for millions of people
in summer-like weather,
Mr. Bing Crosby also
considerately released
“Mele Kalikimaka”
in 1950, which means
“Merry Christmas”
in Hawaiian.
Mele Kalikimaka
is the thing to say
on a bright Hawaiian
Christmas Day.
That's the island greeting
that we send to you
from the land
where palm trees sway.
Here we know
that Christmas
will be green and bright
The sun to shine by day
and all the stars at night.
Mele Kalikimaka
is Hawaii's way to say
Merry Christmas to you.
As one of
the most influential and
best loved entertainers
of the 20th century,
Mr. Crosby received
three stars
on the prestigious
Hollywood
Walk of Fame for
Music, Radio, and Film.
In addition,
he was the recipient of
an Academy Award for
Best Actor for the movie
“Going My Way” in 1944.
Mr. Bing Crosby was
very committed to
advances in technology.
His production company
Bing Crosby Enterprises
was instrumental
in the invention
of videotape recording
in the early 1950s.
Furthermore,
Bing Crosby’s
giving spirit is evident
in his establishment of
a Charitable Golf Classic
in 1947 which to date has
raised over $85 million
through the Monterey
Peninsula Foundation.
Mr. Crosby also
gifted audiences
around the world
with a number of
other Christmas classics,
like “I’ll Be Home
for Christmas,”
“Frosty the Snowman,”
and “Winter Wonderland.”
On Mr. Crosby’s
last TV performance
in 1977,
he sang a beautifully
memorable duet with
famous British singer and
Grammy Award winner
David Bowie.
The song is called
“Peace on Earth
Little Drummer Boy.”
Every child
must be made aware
Every child
must be made to care
Care enough
for his fellow man
To give all the love
that he can.
For more about
Bing Crosby,
please visit
May the wonderful
melodies of
Mr. Bing Crosby continue
to enrich our world
for many years to come,
especially bringing joy
at the blessed
Christmas season.
Cheerful viewers,
thank you
for joining us today on
A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms.
Coming up next
on Supreme Master
Television is
Vegetarianism:
The Noble Way of Living,
right after
Noteworthy News.
May the holidays bring
love, happiness, and peace
to your hearts.
Merry Christmas
May your New Year
dreams come true
And this song of mine
in three-quarter time
Wishes you and yours
Happy Holidays!
With Christmas bells ringing
Happy Holidays to you…