My best pal Stu brought me news that both of us had missed, from earlier in the year, which is that Gene Marshall - or, technically, Gene Merlino - one of the kings of song-poem singing, died early this year, at the age of 95. You can read a bit about him here. He used to have his own website, which you can still see via the wayback machine.
Gene was a masterful singer, with a warm, inviting voice that you couldn't help believe meant everything it sang. He could adapt to many styles of music, and could seemingly instantaneously decide how to handle a song - in many, if not most cases, he was singing the song-poems you hear on this site the very first (and last) time that he ever saw the sheet music.
But his career was much more than song-poems. He sang on TV, with popular groups, for Disney films (and other films), at least on occasion found himself at a session along with one of my biggest musical heroes, Thurl Ravenscroft. He and Thurl even teamed up with two other session singers for a Barbershop Quartet album at one point. Here is one of the songs from that album.
Gene released relatively few records under his real name. Here is an early vocal performance with Paul Weston's group, and here he is (in poor sound quality), covering a Pat Boone hit song on one of those cheapo cover 78s from the 1950's. (By chance, his performance got paired, on the same side of the record, with Scatman Crothers great reworking of Nervous Norvis' "Transfusion".) But of course, Gene recorded under at least a half dozen different names for song-poem companies, work he reportedly always referred to as doing demos.
I have already featured most of the greatest Gene Marshall records from my collection, and I encourage you to click on his name at the bottom of this post for all of my Gene posts (and look elsewhere online), so I don't have anything startlingly amazing to share here. But I have selected four Gene Marshall Preview 45s from what is a huge subset of my collection featuring Gene's vocals. None of these eight songs appear to have been previously posted anywhere, and they offer a variety of styles (within the increasingly limited styles that Preview offered as the label moved into the 1970's).
Thanks, Gene.
To everyone else: Enjoy!
Download: Gene Marshall - Don't You Know I Feel Love Fever
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Download: Gene Marshall - You Asked For It
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Download: Gene Marshall - In a Little House Trailer
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Download: Gene Marshall - I'm Glad That I'm An American
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Download: Gene Marshall - That's It, Love
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Download: Gene Marshall - Hi Boys, Swing That Band
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Download: Gene Marshall - In Your Arms I Belong
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Download: Gene Marshall - Home Town Gal
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2 comments:
Other song-poem deaths include Ramsey Kearney, 1933-2020,
(https://classiccountrymusic.com/3-weeks-after-brain-cancer-diagnosis-singer-songwriter-ramsey-kearney-dies-at-86/)
and sadly one I just recently found out about, Bobbi Boyle (aka Bobbi Blake), 1931-2009.
(https://tolucalake.com/2024/06/the-fabulous-music-and-life-of-bobbi-boyle/)
Gene shall live on! Somehow...
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