Mickey Katz sings "Duvid Crockett"
A great jewish yiddish entertainer.Biography"Mickey Katz (June 15, 1909 - April 30, 1985) was a U.S. Jewish comedian who received his first moments of fame in the 1940s as a member of Spike Jones and His City Slickers where he was most famous for his "glugging" vocal sound effects on tunes like "Cocktails for Two" and others. He later went on to perform his own parodic musical review and record highly popular "ethnic" comedy albums on the Capitol label where he would perform English-Yiddish parody songs. He was also recognized as a master of Klezmer style clarinet and had several hits during his long career. Though Katz sang primarily in Yiddish, he is often as recognized as one of the godfathers of American song parody which would later be advanced by the likes of Allan Sherman and, in the 1980s, Weird Al Yankovic.Katz and his group can be seen in the movie Thoroughly Modern Millie accompanying Julie Andrews as she sings a Yiddish song at a Jewish wedding.Katz is the father of Broadway legend Joel Grey and a grandfather of the actress Jennifer Grey. In the early 1980s he told the story of his life in a biography called Papa Play for Me.Jazz musician Don Byron recorded a tribute to Mickey Katz in 1993 entitled Don Byron Plays The Music of Mickey Katz."source: wikipedia"Mickey Katz Born 1909, Cleveland, Ohio Died 1985 Mickey Katz's unique blend of Spike Jones, klezmer music, and Borscht Belt humor proved a successful formula for much of the space age pop era. Studying the clarinet as a child, Katz began a proficient performer and was playing with local bands in his teens. He started introducing comic routines into his act and attracted the attention of Spike Jones, who hired him into his City Slickers band in 1946. Katz can be heard on a number of classic Spike Jones recordings, most notably making the astounding poly-glottal "glug-glug-glugs" on Jones' version of "Hawaiian War Chant". Katz eventually mentioned to Jones' RCA producers that he had been working on his own parody tunes, combining popular tunes with Yiddish lyrics and instrumentation. RCA decided to record Katz and released his first single, "Haim Afn Range" backed with "Yiddish Square Dance." It proved a surprise hit, selling over 30,000 copies in one month. Like Jones, part of Katz' success was due to the very high quality of musicians he used. Fellow City Slicker Mannie Klein (later replaced by the great Ziggy Elman) played trumpet, the young Si Zentner played trombone, and Sam Weiss played drums, and Nat Farber, a studio orchestrator, provided the arrangements. The popularity of his RCA singles led Katz to organize a road show, which he called "The Borscht Capades." Among the cast was Katz' own son, who later became famous as Joel Grey. Ironically, one place the show never appeared was the Borscht Belt itself. Katz switched to Capitol Records in the early 1950s, and remained with the label until he retired in the late 1960s. Most of his material remained the same throughout his albums--Yiddish interpretations of American tunes, rendered in Katz' heavily-inflected comic Jewish accent ("ecch-sent"). But he did play it straight for the album, Mickey Katz Plays Music for Weddings, paying homage to the klezmer music he heard as a child. He also recorded one straight comedy album, Mickey Katz at the U.N., and The Katz Pajamas, a collection of fairy tales told in fractured Yiddish. Katz reprised the "Borschtcapades" idea in the mid-1960s with a Broadway revue titled, "Hello, Solly," but the show was short-lived. He published an autobiography, Papa Play for Me in 1977. In the early 1990s, black clarinetist Don Byron, who had learned klezmer music as a member of the Klezmer Conservatory in the mid-1980s, paid tribute to Katz's work by recording the well-received Music of Mickey Katz. For more information on Mickey Katz, check out Haim Afn Range: The Mickey Katz Haim Page. RecordingsBorscht, RCA Victor LPM 3193 The Family Danced: American-Yiddish Folk Music and Dances, Capitol H 457 Mickey Katz and his Orchestra, Capitol T 298 Mish-Mosh, Capitol T 799 Katz Puts on the Dog, Capitol T 934 Mickey Katz Plays Music for Weddings, Bar Mitzvahs, and Funerals, Capitol T 1021 The Most Mishige, Capitol T 1102 The Katz Pajamas, Capitol W 1257 Comin' Round the Katzkills, Capitol W 1304 The Borscht Jester, ST 1445 Katz at the U.N., Capitol ST 1603 Sing-Along with Mickele, Capitol ST 1744 Fiddler on the Roof, Capitol ST 2387 Hello, Solly, Capitol SW 2731 The Hits of Mickey Katz, Capitol Starline T 298"Yiddish humorous version of THE BALLAD OF DAVY CROCKETT.שיעור יידיש
Channel: People & Blogs
Uploaded: December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm
Author: albertdiner
Length: 03:14
Rating: 4.70
Views: 48797
Tags: Grey Idish idishe Jennifer jewish jiddisch Joel Katz klezmer Mickey yiddish ייִדיש
Video Comments
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TumescentInNYC (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
What a find !"The Knish Doctor" and "Ghost Riders In The Sky" are up there, too.Thanks for posting this gem, albertdiner.
albertdiner (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
born in the wilds of delancey streethome of gefilte fish and kosher meathandy with a knife, oh her zich tzihe flicked him a chicken, when he was only 3duvid, duvid crocket, he sat in the sun und gerocket (rocked) und gebaket (baked)duvid, duvid crocket, king of delancey street
albertdiner (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
in eighteen thoiteen he fought indianers, then came the litvaks and the galitzianers, avekgeharget redskins all over the shtetl, he never lost his head, he never lost his sheiteld-d-crocket, he chewed tobacky und gehissed und gechrocket, d-d-c king of delancey streeet
albertdiner (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
he went down south, looking for a maidel, met a little tzatzkale called daisy fraidelfrom near and far, they came to the chippeelected him president of the bnei missisipimazel tov duvid crocket ah mazel tov der mame und der alter crocket, mazel tov d-c kods
albertdiner (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
he went up west on his ferdeleh shlaim, took along fraidaleh his vaibale shain, shlaim hut gefleet vi an aeroplane, he got to las wegas ahead of the traind-d-c he walked up to the crap table with a full pocket, d-d-c kodshe shot like a gambler, ainer af der veltup came two sixes ,in drerd di gelthe flet very sad, that's my opinion, he would have said kaddish but he couldn't find a minyand-d-c farloren di haisen he went home naket, d-d-c he's back on delancey street
chibershow (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
yeah i have to make a parody out of the original song for reading class i can't really think of anything though
MrRogerMellie (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
I play this at the bar where I work, plugging it into the stereo system. One customer went out and found it and played it on the radio here in New York. Just listening to it makes you feel funny and good. It also reminds one of how lively and worldly New York used to be. Now, not so much.
bingcro (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
I have a friend who worked in the tailoring in leeds and was always asking to find mickey katz singing "the yodeling yid" anyone outthere with this
54spiritedwill54 (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
Thanks for your wise words and bringing peace.Stay well and live up to 120!
Alikenberg (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
How do I find Jennifer Gray's tv interview where she sings like Mickey Katz? |
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