Rock & roll to shop by
I saw these pigs this afternoon at the Merchants Mall, and I immediately thought about The Pondering Pig. Then I thought how odd that thought was. To explain it to most of my fellow shoppers would have required a lot of talking.
The flea market was playing some good old rock & roll on the loudspeaker today. After a dozen peppy toe-tappers like "Chantilly Lace" and "Johnny Be Good", they played "Good Night, Sweetheart"
Goodnight, sweetheart, well, it's time to go,
Goodnight, sweetheart, well, it's time to go,
I hate to leave you, but I really must say,
So goodnight, sweetheart, goodnight...
Several people around me began to sing along. A lady pushing her cart down the aisle gave me a random happy smile.
5 comments:
I love the face on the pig that's front-and-center, covered in corn and flowers. What a sweet little piggie!
Hey, thanks for the plug, Genevieve. Does my heart good to know they're remembering we wanderers in Hopkinsville.
I love that song Goodnight Sweetheart. There is something so melancholy about it. "Tears and sorrow may make you forlorn, but with the dawn, a new day is born" sung to that sweetest of melodies. I've tried to sing it myself but my voice often breaks up at that point in the song.
I just realized that line comes right from Psalm 30..." Weeping may linger for the night, but joy comes with the morning."
Just went to your link and noticed you're referencing the Fifties Goodnight Sweetheart and I'm referencing the Thirties song. It's okay tho - I love doo-wop too. Grew up on it. But that Rudy Vallee song - it's really special.
P'Pig, I didn't know the other (older) song of the same name, but I listened to it on several midi sites last night before I got caught up in piano boogie -woogies and was sidetracked into writing about them. It is a WWII song -- no wonder the melody's a bit melancholy. When those guys left for the war, they were gone for the duration.
Hmmm. I read on numerous sites that it was a WWII song, but upon reading your comment again, I see that you attribute the song's roots to the 1930's, Here is the earliest date I found associated with the song upon more research:
Al Bowley / Goodnight Sweetheart: Al Bowlly - 1931 Sessions
You can hear a fragment of Al Bowlly singing Goodnight Sweetheart at 1930's Musical Montage. (Real Audio file)
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