Thursday, 3 April 2025

Syng lille laerke / En smule - Raquel Rastenni

The Danish singer Raquel Rastenni was born in Copenhagen on 21 August 1915. She started her career as a dancer in the Helsingør Revue in 1936. She debuted as a singer in 1938 by being broadcast on radio. As a Jew, she fled Denmark in October 1943 along with her family, as the country had come under Nazi occupation. She spent the rest of the war years in Sweden where she continued having great success with her career, performing with orchestras and in cabarets and varieties.

In 1958 she represented her country at the Eurovision Song Contest with 'Jeg rev et blad ud af min dagbog' (a single I am still searching for, actually). She kept in touch with the Contest after that, because a lot of her singles are actually cover versions of Eurovision songs. This single, for instance, presents her Danish versions of the number 1 and 2 of the 1959 edition. 'Syng lille laerke' is a version of 'Sing little birdie', and 'En smule' is Raquel's take on ''n Beetje'. It sounds rather good actually!

My collection: 7" single no. 7616
Found: Discogs.com, received 18 March 2025
Tracks: 'Syng lille laerke' / 'En smule'

Aprite le finestre - Nilla Pizzi

'Aprite le finestre' was Italy's first ever Eurovision song, performed by Franca Raimondi in 1956. Although the single still eludes me, there were plenty other artists recording that song and it is a lot easier to get hold of those versions. 

This EP features four songs by Nilla Pizzi, and 'Aprite le finestre' is one of them. Nilla Pizzi was born in Sant'Agata Bolognese on 16 April 1919. She won the first ever San Remo festival in 1951 and performed a total of 31 songs at that festival throughout her career. With her charismatic, warm voice, she is considered the most successful San Remo singer of all time. 

My collection: 7" single no. 7615
Found: Discogs.com, received 18 March 2025
Tracks: 'Arrivederci Roma', 'Aprite le finestre' / 'Due teste sul cuscino', 'Musetto'

So long - Paunita Ionescu

When I order records online, sometimes there are such items that I just buy because they're cheap and interesting. And a disc like this is certainly that. For just 1 euro extra I got this rare gem. 

The Romanian singer Păunița Ionescu recorded a cover version of Abba's 'So long', and it appears on this EP with three tracks. Ionescu apparently had a musical background, as both her parents were opera singers. She started singing in the 70s with the band Catena (Latin for “chain”), a girl band. Finally, Păunița Ionescu opted for a solo career in 1974. She left Romania in 1990 but occasionally returns to her homeground.

My collection: 7" single no. 7614
Found: Discogs.com, received 17 March 2025.
Tracks: 'Don't tell me', 'Is everybody happy?' / 'So long'

Golden years - David Bowie

'Golden years' was the lead single from David Bowie's tenth studio album Station to Station (1976). Harry Maslin, who co-produced the track, recalled that the song was "cut and finished very fast. We knew it was absolutely right within ten days. But the rest of the album took forever." Like the majority of Station to Station, the song's elements were primarily built in the studio rather than written before.

The single was very successful, reaching number 10 in the US BIllboard Hot 100 chart, number 8 in the UK singles chart and number 6 in the Dutch Top 40. I thought I'd bought this single a long time ago, but apparently not. So I did.

My collection: 7" single no. 7610
Found: Record fair, Rotterdam, 1 March 2025
Tracks: 'Golden years' / 'Can you hear me'

Friday, 28 March 2025

Mother Freedom - Bread

The magazine Record World called Bread's 'Mother Freedom' a "stylistic shift of gears" for Bread in which they "prove they can rock with the best of them." Much like 'Let your love go', the record buying public wasn't too convinced, because the single only reached number 37 in the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, just after 'If' had reached number 4. 

I bought three singles by Bread in one go, which was quite astonishing for me, since they seem to be pretty rare nowadays. 

My collection: 7" single no. 7605
Found: Record fair, Rotterdam, 1 March 2025
Tracks: 'Mother Freedom' / 'Live in your love'

I wanna go to a disco - Ricky Wilde


The humble beginnings of young Ricky Wilde have been well documented on this blog, but there are still some singles that I am after. More specifically: promotional singles like this one.

This US promo of 'I wanna go to a disco' features the track on both sides; once in mono and once in stereo. Although stereo had already become the norm in the real world, radio stations often still broadcast in mono and so it was useful to have a mix of a song in a mono version. The fact that this copy comes in an original UK records sleeve from the USA is a great bonus.

My collection: 7" single no. 7579
Found: Discogs.com, received 22 February 2025
Tracks: 'I wanna go to a disco (stereo)' / 'I wanna go to a disco (mono)'

Reeling in the years - Steely Dan

It was a surprise for me that, after decades of not buying anything by Steely Dan, I found two singles I fancied. 'Rikki don't lose that number' was the attractive one of the two, with its picture sleeve and yellow vinyl, so this ordinary one with a record company sleeve could easily have been discarded, but it's the better track of the two. So, after a slight doubt, I just bought them both.

'Reeling in the years' was written by Donald Fagen and Walter Becker and features Fagen on vocals.  The guitar solo was recorded in one take. The single peaked at number 11 in the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, but didn't chart in Europe. Still, it was regularly on the radio when I was young.

My collection: 7" single no. 7599
Found: Record fair, Rotterdam, 1 March 2025
Tracks: 'Reeling in the years' / 'Only a fool would say that'

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