Still, there’s something quite
nostalgic about listening to a scratchy old record on an ancient phonograph.
I wrote about it in my old Hilo
Days website.
Bozo the Clown
We had an old phonograph that we'd haul out
occasionally. It was one of those that
required winding with a crank and played only 78 rpm records.
I had a
couple of Bozo the Clown story albums. "Bozo on the Farm." "Bozo at the Circus." Like that.
Anyway, I
had this memorized and could recite the entire record and turn the pages in the
dark. But of course, you just had to
wait for Bozo to make that right sound that meant "turn the page."
My favorite
was Bozo on the Farm. The "turn
page" signal was the sound of the klaxon traffic horn on Bozo's flivver
(jalopy Model‑T car). There's this one
part where Bozo finds a bullfrog sitting on a lily pad and asks the frog if he
can sing. "Sku! Ah skan
sking!" the frog would croak, launching into a glumpity‑glump bullfrog
rendition that never failed to crack me up.
When I was
in college, we used to have a singing group and whenever I'd mention that fact
to someone, they'd invariably ask "Can you sing?" and it took every
bit of self‑control I had not to answer, "Sku, Ah skan sking!"
"Can
you sing?" Dumb question.
Anyway it
was fun, especially when the phonograph spring would run down and the voices
got lower and slower and even lower and even slower. And if it got that way during the bullfrog
segment, I'd consider it a special bonus.
Boy, I loved
that record.
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