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Friday, 29 April 2022

The Singing Inventor

The disc I’m sharing with you today is a recent purchase (in fact, it only arrived at WWR Towers yesterday) but one I have been aware of for a while, and one I have played on the World’s Worst Records Radio Show in the past.

 

I’ll Walk With God, backed with a stunning rendition of the Sound of Music showstopper Climb Ev’ry Moutain was issued in 1969 on the tiny Palaske Records label of Portland, Oregon, by singer Tony Villa, credited both on the sleeve and disc as ‘Tony Villa From Manila’.

 

Christened Antonio-Euclid C. Villa-Real, Villa was born in Manila, capital of the Philippines, in March 1935. ‘A versatile young man from the Orient blessed with a golden voice, whose great love for music and wide berth of inventive brilliance make him a truly unique personality’, according to the sleeve notes of one of his albums, The Sensational Tony Villa: the Singing Inventor, our man was also ‘a promising composer, dance originator, and an up-and-coming novelist and script-writer, whose talents never spoil his sincere and friendly radiance.’ The gushing praise came courtesy of Ed and Retta Palaske, owners and operators of Palaske Records.

 

Ed Palaske was also the proprietor of Portland’s Hillvilla Restaurant, which opened in 1954 and, later, Palaske’s, which opened in November 1982, when Ed was 69, but only operated for four months before it closed without warning. A handwritten note sellotaped to the front door simply announced, ‘Closed for one month: illness.’

 

The album notes continue to elevate out crooner to new, outlandish heights. ‘Critics believe he has the makings for a meteoric rise to singing stardom. A sensational singer of a variety of songs ranging from semi-classical numbers, Broadway musical tune, popular, religious, folk, country and western to his new creation called Spacetronic Rock.’

 

Apparently our boy was ‘once sponsored by Mario Lanza's mother, the late Mrs. Maria Lanza Cocozza,’ and ‘thrilled thousands of listeners when his recording in memory of the great Lanza was aired over radio WJMJ-AM in Philadelphia.’ Ed also reckoned that he had ‘recently been a guest singer in Hawaii on the "DON HO SHOW" at the Polynesian Palace, and on the "KIT SAMSON SHOW" at the Kahala Hilton,’ and that the former singer with the Morgan Baer Orchestra of Washington, D.C., was ‘currently preparing for his first international concert tour.’ Perhaps unsurprisingly, I can find little to no evidence to back up any of these claims, although a photograph of Tony and Don shaking hands backstage was included on the liner to his album.

 

What I can tell you is, at the time of recording The Sensational Tony Villa, Tony was working as a technologist in the haematology department of a Baltimore hospital. He was also hard at work perfecting his latest invention, a plastic, drip-preventing ice cream cone holder, and working on several novels. How he and his wife Lydia, who he met at university, found the time to have three children – Maria-Lourdes Stewart (after Our Lady of Lourdes), Apollo-Euclid G. Villa-Real (after the Apollo moon shot), and Antoinette-Euclideana Mora - I do not know, but they did, and they remained married for 57 years. I’ll bet they had a fun life.


In 1976 Tony issued a second album, Mountain of Love which also included Satellite Mouse as well as several other space-themed tracks, including Moon Cat and Spiral City In a Martian Moon. He resurfaced around a decade ago as Antony Starluck, with his own YouTube channel. 

 

The single I’m featuring today was issued in June 1968, ‘in memory of Three Great American Martyrs’, drawn for the 7” sleeve by Tony himself. In case you’re not quite clear on who he’s referring to, the men are, from left to right, Bobby Kennedy, John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. The back of the sleeve features another rambling, self-aggrandising message, this time from the pen of Mr Villa himself, in which he hopes that ‘with Divine Guidance, may our creative capabilities, courage and spiritual convictions perpetuate the eternal seed of goodwill’, and he declares that he ‘humbly offer[s] this inspired recording as a tribute to these Three Great American Martyrs of Our Time’ (his capitals, not mine).

 

JFK would remain an influence (of sorts) on his life for a number of years. In 1974 the brazen hussy had the temerity to send a copy of his album, along with a letter begging for financial backing, to shipping magnate - and then-husband of the former First Lady - Aristotle Onassis.

 

As an extra, I’m also including a track from The Sensational Tony Villa: the Singing Inventor, Tony’s own composition Satellite Mouse, which Ed Palaske described as having ‘the beat and the pulse of electrifying rhythm spearheading a new dance craze ― his own SPACE MOUSE DANCE that will soon be rockin' the nations.’ It’s bonkers and brilliant, and you will love it.

 

Tony died in June 2020, aged 85. He may not have made an international hit of his Space Mouse Dance, but he left behind an incredible legacy powered by his boundless hopes and dreams.

 

Enjoy!

 

Download Walk HERE

Download Climb HERE

Download Mouse HERE

2 comments:

  1. As Antony Starbuck, YT channel here:

    https://www.youtube.com/user/EucliStar999/videos

    ReplyDelete