Poor Benny Hill.Britain's most popular comic and master of funny songs and witty wordplay gets about as little respect as the equally under-rated Three Stooges. Python's the "Beatles of comedy," the Bonzos get the cult cred, but mention Hill's name and watch people roll their eyes. Songs about wives, mothers-in-law, naughty double-entendres - it's all pretty unhip, music hall stuff. Hill was one of the last of the vaudevillians.
His reputation is largely based on his popular, long-running tv show, but he wasn't all about leering at and chasing after the scantily-clad ladies featured on the show, and this album's the proof - clever rhymes (hey, Snoop Dogg and Biz Markie are fans) and surprisingly strong singing serve a variety of song styles popular from the late '50s to the '70s: doo-wop, country-western, go-go beat, various pseudo-ethnicities, folk rock, and on the genuinely rockin' "Rose," garage-rock. Dylan (on several occasions), The Platters, and Sonny & Cher are winningly parodied. The latin/calypso "Bamba 3688" totally rules, funny or no. But most of these songs are funny, and some are really funny. I actually did LOL whilst listening to this. And does "Transistor Radio" from 1961 feature the world's first Elvis impersonation?
Benny Hill - The Ultimate Collection
| 1. Gather in the Mushrooms | |
| 2. Transistor Radio | |
| 3. Harvest of Love | |
| 4. Pepy's Diary | |
| 5. Gypsy Rock | |
| 6. The Piccolo Song | |
| 7. Lonely Boy | |
| 8. Moving on Again | |
| 9. The Andalucian Gypsies | |
| 10. The Egg Marketing Board Tango | |
| 11. Bamba 3688 | |
| 12. What a World | |
| 13. I'll Never Know | |
| 14. My Garden of Love | |
| 15. In the Papers | |
| 16. Golden Days | |
| 17. Flying South | |
| 18. Wild Women | |
| 19. Jose's Cantina | |
| 20. Rose | |
| 21. Those Days [Duet with Maggie Stredder] | |
| 22. The Old Fiddler | |
| 23. Ernie (The Fastest Milkman in the West) |


No comments:
Post a Comment