Saturday, 9 April 2011
Letter to an Unborn Child
Dear God, how vile is this? It’s another of those awful, maudlin spoken word things – like The Shifting Whispering Sands or Deck of Cards – which America couldn’t get enough of. Everyone was doing it: Jim Reeves, Johnny Cash, Telly Savalas – we’ve even had examples of it here with Red Sovine and Orson Welles. Today if you can’t sing your producer simply pumps your caterwauling through autotune. Back in the 50s and 60s there was no such gimmick available, and the world had to endure dozens of spoken word atrocities.
Letter to an Unborn Child is performed by Scott Muni, a US radio DJ who, during the 1950s had been a member of the United States Marine Corps where he made his broadcasting debut reading "Dear John" letters on Radio Guam. After leaving the Corps Muni began a massively successful career on the air, starting out in 1955 in Akron, Ohio and carrying on until early 2004, when he was forced to retire following a stroke. He died the same year. Hugely influential at a time when radio really mattered, a friend to John Lennon (Muni spent the vast majority of his career working in New York) and a champion of the British music scene, God only knows why he chose to record this piece of junk.
What makes this even more distasteful, for me at least, is that the original 45 appeared in a picture sleeve which announced – falsely, of course – that ‘this letter was found on the body of an unknown soldier during World War II’. How sick is that? Coming out at the height of the Vietnam conflict, how many grieving family members were conned into buying a copy? Not many, thankfully, as the single failed to trouble the charts. One has to wonder why, when it was so obviously pitched at blissed-out hippies celebrating the summer of love. Maybe it was the b-side, a woeful reading of the 23rd Psalm.
Enjoy!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
WWR Most Popular Posts
-
UPDATE, October 2021: I’ve added some extra biographical information as well as an extra cut, you lucky people! For some bizarre reason, thi...
-
Family groups often go through the mill, and often at the hands of their overbearing parents or management (or both), but if you thought the...
-
If you feel the need to blame anyone for today’s monstrosity, don’t blame me: blame TheSquire Presents. A couple of weeks ago the Squ...
-
Finding new bad music for you each week is no easy challenge: mind you, as the blog is called The World’s Worst Records I could just post...
-
I have featured Chicago-based singer and songwriter Jan Terri on the blog before, briefly mentioning the outsider music legend in the 2018 C...
-
Advertised as ‘the biggest little band in the land, with a sound three times their size’, the Bantams were three pre-teens from Venice, Cali...
-
There's a thin line, as anyone with an interest in bad records will know, between the truly awful and the trite; between recordings so b...
-
Adrian Street (born 5 December 1940) is a retired Welsh professional wrestler, known for his flamboyant, androgynous wrestling persona, Exot...
-
It had to happen. When I wrote about Christian ventriloquism in the World’s Worst Records Volume One I knew there had to be other w...
-
Captain Sensible , founder member of one of the most important acts of the last four decades, The Damned , all-round stand-up guy (by all ac...
By "body of an unknown soldier during World War II," I think they mean "Nazi weapons researcher who was going to play this during the siege of Stalingrad in hopes that the residents would all kill themselves.
ReplyDeleteA crass and creepy pile of tripe, I love it!
ReplyDeleteApparently, this guy is really as stupid as he looks. It's beautiful.
ReplyDeleteAudio link is not working.
ReplyDeleteScott Muni was an iconic figure in New York City radio for decades... Possibly the most influential DJ in American radio. Non-NYers also knew his thundering baritone --though likely not his name --from his many voiceovers on nationwide radio and tv, including the JC Penney's department store and "Rolaids Spells Relief!"
ReplyDelete