1971 Woolworth TV commercial for LPs


TV commercial from another time. (What is the music playing in the background?) (Via Bedazzled!)

24 Comments

| Leave a comment

Aaaaah inflation...

Kitschy. Somebody else might have a better answer, but I would guess the music was arranged specifically for Woolworth's. If someone knows who the composer was, you could probably dig up some more from them.

Don't know the backing track, but this does take me back.

Woolworths was about the only option in the small town where I grew up. The cut-out bin was fantasic!! I picked up many great, great albums for a quarter - including Sun Ra Angels and Demons at Play, and Jazz in Silouette. Anthony Braxton, etc. Those were the good days.

Also, this seems to be a clue to why 8-track did not make it. 3x the price? No way!

Groovy! In more ways than one! Ah, for the days of pastel-colored uniforms.

Man, I've gotta find a time machine to go back to 1971 and get me some-a-them cartridges!

I had a couple copies of the 45 for "Journey to the Center of Your Mind" by the Amboy Dukes, still sealed in cardboard backing "hangers", with old Woolworth's price tags on them, priced like $1.78 or something ridiculous.

I totally had that Sesame Street album back in '72 or '73.

sounds like an instrumental ripoff of "Incense and Peppermints"

Spliced with "Music to Watch Girls By."

I still have Canned Heat's Living the Blues from Woolworth's -- a double-album for maybe $1.99. Cut-outs! Cut-outs!

Ahhh Woolworths! man that brings back memories of Fedco, Gemco and Zody's. I miss those simple times indeed.

I don't know the tune, but based on the organ stylings, that has to be Klaus Wunderlich, probably from one of his many Hammond Pops albums, available at better Sally Anns everywhere.

The artwork appears to be the work of Peter Max.

So did we. I hear they're hot collector's items nowadays.

Love the artwork on this. Reminds me of my school notebook from around that time.

Also, this commercial bears that awesome thing that prevalent in the early '70s, which was to put '7(n) at the end of anything. Like "Match Game '70".

As a kid, I thought it added some up-to-date cachet to whatever it was attached to, but in later years it made me wonder if there was something particularly different about that era (coming at the end of the upheavel of the '60s and the landing on the Moon, etc.) that made everyone feel like the '70s were truly like being in the future.

I don't recognize the specific track, however this sounds remarkably like other tracks produced in the same era by KPM Music. KPM was a 'Production Music House', who recorded generic jingles and tunes that advertisers could use in TV and Cinema productions for small licensing fees. If you've never heard any KPM tracks and enjoy they grooviness of the BG music, I'd recommend some digging. KPM Music made some absolutely fabulous go-go, proto-rock, pop, and lounge compositions, some of which have been released as a KPMs retrospectives.

I don't know who did the music (or what the name of the tune might be), but I agree that it is trying very hard to sound like Strawberry Alarm Clock, or perhaps Ray Manzarek.

However, the voiceover talent really, REALLY sounds like it is probably Paul Frees.

--Patrick

The Strawberry Statement?!? Man, I've worked in record stores for 12 years, and have never heard that name. Also, I think my being drawn to groovy farfisa organ sounds comes from my parents watching this ad some nine months before I was born.

Dammit! I paid a whole $1 for that sesame street original cast recording album. Granted that was a couple of months ago at SCRAP, but still...

"Blind Faith" on an 8-track cart? Wowsers, I wonder if they used the original cover art?

The Association? Herb Alpert? They were trying to get rid of 1966 stock. 1971 records would be Wings, Elton John, or Jethro Tull.

Woolworth was responsible for my being able to build my 1st record collection (45rpm, natch). I would go every weekend to peruse the selections. One of my faves things they had there were mystery bundles of 45rpm records... stacks of ten that one could purchase for $1 (the records at the top and bottom of the bundles were the only ones visible). Most of what one got was immediately disposable, but "treasures" obtained in these stacks included records by Elephant's Memory, Pacific Gas & Electric and a fun little novelty record titled Flop Top Beer.

Yeah, the Strawberry Statement doesn't appear to be a real band.

Children, "The Strawberry Statement" was a 1970 SF-college-scene exploitation movie. The Strawberry Alarm Clock was a psychedelic (or, perhaps, faux-psychedelic) band, best known for the song "Incense and Peppermint."

Leave a comment

Anonymous

More items

Dr Peter Watts, Canadian science fiction writer, beaten and arrested at US border

My friend, the wonderful sf writer Peter Watts was beaten without provocation and arrested by US border guards on Tuesday. I heard about it early Wednesday morning in London and called Cindy Cohn, the legal director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. She worked her contacts to get in touch with... More.

Rick Warren does the right thing

Rick Warren has officially come out against the proposed laws in Uganda that would make homosexuality a crime, punishable by death in some cases. In an open letter to the pastors of Uganda (with whom Warren has a great deal of influence from his missionary work) the American mega-pastor says, As an... More.

Jesus on clothes iron

Mary Jo Coady of Methuen, Massachusetts spotted Jesus Christ on the bottom of her iron. Apparently, seeing Jesus on the iron has reminded Coady that "life is going to be good." From the Associated Press: The 44-year-old Coady was raised Catholic. She and her two college-age daughters agree t... More.

Chicken-suited street musician plays "What is Love" on Melodica, rocks righteously (video)

Here is your Friday soundtrack, people. Alex Ringis of Synthtube says, I was in Melbourne for Game Connect Asia Pacific (GCAP) 09, and I found this busker standing outside Flinders Street Station in Melbourne. He was playing the hit 90's track "What Is Love" on bass guitar, Pianica Melodica, with t... More.

Make: Electronics, a great new book to learn hands-on electronics

Maker Media has just published a new book called Make: Electronics, by Charles Platt, and it's the best electronics primer I've ever come across (admittedly, I'm the editor-in-chief of MAKE and Charles' friend, but I really do think it's the best). Here's what Gareth Branwyn (the book's editor)... More.

Features

Reviews Videos
More Features