Sunday, January 18, 2026

SNOWFALL AND SENTIMENT: BING'S WINTERTIME MELODIES

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There’s something about winter that invites reflection. The hush of falling snow, the long shadows of January afternoons, the way the world seems to slow down and listen. And if winter had a voice, it might very well sound like Bing Crosby’s—smooth, steady, and full of quiet emotion.

Though most people associate Crosby with Christmas, his musical embrace of the season extended far beyond December 25th. His recordings captured not just the holiday spirit, but the entire emotional landscape of winter: its romance, its solitude, and its unexpected warmth.

It all began with a song that would become the most iconic winter tune of all time—White Christmas. Written by Irving Berlin and first performed by Crosby in 1941, the song wasn’t just a hit—it was a balm. During World War II, it became a symbol of home and hope, especially for soldiers stationed far from snowy rooftops and glowing hearths. Crosby’s version, with its gentle phrasing and wistful tone, became the best-selling single in history. Even today, it feels like a quiet prayer for peace.

But Crosby didn’t stop there. In 1934, he recorded June in January, a romantic ballad that turned the coldest month into a metaphor for love’s warmth. “It’s June in January because I’m in love,” he croons, transforming icy landscapes into blooming gardens with nothing more than affection. The song is a reminder that winter isn’t just about snow—it’s about the contrast between chill and comfort, solitude and connection.

Then there’s Looks Like a Cold, Cold Winter, a lesser-known gem from 1951. It’s a song that doesn’t shy away from the season’s melancholy. With lyrics that speak of icy streets and frosty air, Crosby’s voice carries a quiet ache, as if he’s singing to someone just out of reach. It’s the kind of song you play when the snow is falling and the world feels still.

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Not all of Crosby’s winter songs are somber. Silver Bells, recorded with Carol Richards in 1950, paints a picture of bustling city sidewalks dressed in holiday style. The song captures the magic of urban winter—shop windows glowing, children laughing, bells ringing in the distance. Crosby’s voice adds a layer of nostalgia, making it feel like a memory you’ve never had but somehow still miss.

Other seasonal tunes like The First Snowfall and Sleigh Ride in July show Crosby’s versatility. The former celebrates the quiet beauty of snow’s arrival, while the latter flips the seasons for romantic effect, imagining a sleigh ride in the middle of summer. Both songs showcase his ability to make any moment feel magical.

What makes Bing Crosby’s winter recordings so enduring isn’t just the music—it’s the feeling. He didn’t just sing about snow; he sang about what snow represents. His songs are filled with longing, love, and the kind of quiet reflection that January invites. Whether you’re watching flakes fall outside your window or reminiscing about winters past, Crosby’s voice is like a warm fire in the cold.

So this season, when the world slows down and the days grow short, let Bing be your soundtrack. His winter melodies remind us that even in the coldest months, warmth is never far away...

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Sunday, January 4, 2026

DIXIE LEE: HOLLYWOOD STAR

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Dixie Lee, born Wilma Winifred Wyatt on November 4, 1911, in Harriman, Tennessee, was an American actress, singer, and dancer best known for her marriage to legendary crooner Bing Crosby. However, before becoming Mrs. Crosby, Dixie Lee carved out a notable—albeit brief—career in Hollywood during the late 1920s and early 1930s.

Dixie Lee began her entertainment career as a singer and dancer in vaudeville and nightclubs. Her talent and charm quickly caught the attention of film producers, and she transitioned to the silver screen during the early sound era of Hollywood. Her film debut came in 1929 with Fox Movietone Follies of 1929, a musical revue that showcased her singing and dancing abilities. This film was part of the wave of early sound musicals that capitalized on the novelty of synchronized sound.

Here are some of the key films in Dixie Lee’s filmography:

Fox Movietone Follies of 1929 (1929)
A musical revue-style film featuring various performers. Dixie Lee’s appearance helped launch her film career.

Love Comes Along (1930)
Dixie starred opposite Bebe Daniels in this romantic musical drama, further establishing her as a leading lady.

The Big Party (1930)
A drama set in the world of college life and youthful exuberance, showcasing Dixie’s appeal to younger audiences.

Cheer Up and Smile (1930)
A musical comedy where Dixie played a prominent role, reinforcing her image as a charming and talented performer.

Night Life in Reno (1931)
A drama set against the backdrop of Reno’s nightlife, this film gave Dixie a chance to explore more serious acting.

Manhattan Parade (1932)
One of her final film appearances, this musical comedy was released by Warner Bros. and featured Lee in a supporting role.

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Despite her early success, Dixie Lee’s film career was relatively short-lived. After marrying Bing Crosby in 1930, she gradually stepped away from the spotlight. The pressures of Hollywood, combined with personal struggles—including health issues and the demands of family life—led her to retire from acting by the mid-1930s.
Legacy

Though her filmography is modest in size, Dixie Lee remains a fascinating figure in early Hollywood history. Her contributions to the musical genre during the transition from silent films to talkies helped pave the way for future stars. Moreover, her influence on Bing Crosby’s early career and personal life was profound.

Dixie Lee passed away in 1952 at the age of 40, but her brief time in Hollywood left a lasting impression. Today, she is remembered not only as Bing Crosby’s first wife but also as a talented performer who shone brightly during a transformative era in American cinema...

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Monday, December 22, 2025

BING, IRVING BERLIN, AND WHITE CHRISTMAS

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Irving Berlin was a Jewish immigrant who loved America. As his 1938 song “God Bless America” suggests, he believed deeply in the nation’s potential for goodness, unity and global leadership.

In 1940, he wrote another quintessential American song, “White Christmas,” which the popular entertainer Bing Crosby eventually made famous.

But this was a profoundly sad time for humanity. World War II – what would become the deadliest war in human history – had begun in Europe and Asia, just as Americans were starting to pick up the pieces from the Great Depression.

Today, it can seem like humanity is at another tipping point: political polarization, war in the Middle East and Europe, a global climate crisis. Yet like other historians, I’ve long thought that the study of the past can help point the way forward.

“White Christmas” has resonated for more than 80 years, and I think the reasons why are worth understanding.

Christmas in America had always reflected a mix of influences, from ancient Roman celebrations of the winter solstice to the Norse festival known as Yule. Catholics in Europe had celebrated Christmas with public merriment since the Middle Ages, but Protestants often denounced the holiday as a vestige of paganism. These religious tensions spilled over to the American colonies and persisted after the Revolutionary War, when slavery divided the nation even further.

After the Civil War, many Americans pined for national traditions that could unify the country. Protestant opposition to Christmas celebrations had relaxed, so Congress finally declared Christmas a federal holiday in 1870. Millions of Americans soon adopted the German tradition of decorating trees. They also exchanged presents, sent cards and shared stories of Santa Claus, a figure whose image the cartoonist Thomas Nast perfected in the late 19th century.

The Christmases that Berlin and Crosby “used to know” were those of the 1910s and 1920s, when the season expanded to include the nation’s first public Christmas tree lighting ceremony and the appearance of Santa Claus at the end of Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

Despite these evolving secular influences, Christmas music and entertainment continued to emphasize Christianity. Churchgoers and carolers often sang “Silent Night” and “Joy to the World.” Berlin’s inspiration for the song came in 1937, when he spent Christmas in Beverly Hills. He was near the film studios where he worked but far from his wife, Ellin – a devout Catholic – and the New York City home in Manhattan where they had always celebrated the holiday with their three daughters.

Being apart from Ellin that Christmas was particularly difficult: Their infant son had died on Dec. 26, 1928. Irving knew his wife would have to make the annual visit to their son’s grave by herself.

By 1940, Berlin had come up with his lyrics. In his Manhattan office, he sat at his piano and asked his arranger to take down the notes.

“Not only is it the best song I ever wrote,” he promised, “it’s the best song anybody ever wrote.”

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Berlin had connected his lonesome Christmas to the broader turmoil of the time, including the outbreak of World War II and fraught debates about America’s role in the world.

This new song reflected his response: a dream of better times and places. It evoked a small town of yesteryear in which horse-drawn sleighs crossed freshly fallen snow. It also imagined a future in which dark days would be “merry and bright” once again.

Berlin soon took “White Christmas” back to Hollywood. He wanted it to appear in his newest musical, one that would tell the story of a retired singer whose hotel offered rooms and entertainment, but only on American holidays. He titled the film “Holiday Inn” and pitched it to Paramount Pictures, with Crosby as the lead.

Raised in Spokane, Washington,  Bing Crosby had launched his music career in the 1920s. A weekly radio show and a contract with Paramount led to stardom during the 1930s. With his slim build and protruding ears, Crosby did not look the part of a leading man. But his easygoing demeanor and mellow voice made him immensely popular.

“Holiday Inn” premiered in August 1942. Reviewers barely mentioned the song, but ordinary Americans couldn’t get enough of it. By December it was on every radio, in every jukebox and, as the Christian Science Monitor newspaper noted, in nearly “every home and heart” in the country.

“White Christmas” was not overtly patriotic, but it made Americans think about why they fought, sacrificed and endured separation from their loved ones. As an editorial in the Buffalo Courier-Express concluded, the song “provided a forcible reminder that we are fighting for the right to dream and for memories to dream about.”

This made it a song all Americans could embrace, including those not always treated like Americans. During World War II, aspects of the Christmas holiday – family, home, comfort and safety – took on 

Berlin and Crosby didn’t set out to change how Americans celebrate Christmas. But that’s what they ended up doing. Their song’s universal appeal and phenomenal success launched a new era of holiday entertainment – traditions that helped Americanize the Christmas season.

Like “White Christmas,” popular songs such as “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” (1943) tapped into a longing for being with friends and family. “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” (1949) and other new songs celebrated snow, sleigh rides and Santa Claus, not the birth of Jesus.

“White Christmas” had already sold 5 million copies by 1947 when Crosby recorded “Merry Christmas,” the first Christmas album ever produced. On the album, “White Christmas” appeared alongside holiday classics such as “Jingle Bells” and “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town.”

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Friday, December 12, 2025

BING'S DISCOGRAPHY: DECEMBER 12, 1938

 On this date, Bing did not record any Christmas songs, but he died go into the Decca studio to make some great records...

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Date: 12/12/38
Location: Los Angeles, Calif
Label: DECCA (US)

a. DLA1633-A My Melancholy Baby (George A Norton, Ernie Burnett) - 2:58
b. DLA1634-B I Cried For You (Arthur Freed, Gus Arnheim, Abe Lyman) - 3:06
c. DLA1634-C I Cried For You (Arthur Freed, Gus Arnheim, Abe Lyman) - 3:14
d. DLA1635-A The Lonesome Road (Gene Austin, Nathaniel Shilkret) - 2:53
e. DLA1636-A When The Bloom Is On The Sage (Fred Howard, Nat Vincent) - 2:52

Bing Crosby (voc), The Foursome (vgr), John Scott Trotter and his Frying Pan Five (ing)

All titles on:
JONZO (UK) CDJZCD-24 — THE CHRONOLOGICAL BING CROSBY VOLUME 24 (2001)


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Sunday, November 23, 2025

SPOTLIGHT ON LOUISE CAMPBELL

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Louise Campbell is just a footnote in Hollywood history. She made films for just a short 10 year period, and her most famous work was probably with Bing Crosby. Louise Campbell Weisbecker was born on May 30, 1911 in Chicago. Despite her success in Hollywood, she made it clear she preferred the stage.

Campbell attended St. Michael's School.and DePaul University, studying dramatic arts at the latter. She gained additional dramatic training at the Chicago School of Expression. She said that when she was 6 years old, she decided to be an actress after she watched a production of Uncle Tom's Cabin.

At one point, she worked as a dental assistant, an experience which she said was "invaluable to me in my acting" as she observed changes in patients' facial expressions in the dentist's office, with their changing expressions displaying "their real character."

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Campbell gained early theatrical experience by performing in stock theater. Her Broadway debut was in Three Men on a Horse (1935). Her other Broadway credits include Julie the Great, Guest in the House (1941), A House in the Country (1936) and White Man (1936). A column in the June 13, 1942, issue of Billboard complimented "Louise Campbell, that fine actress, for a lovely, beautifully projected, altogether excellent performance in Guest in the House."

Campbell went to Hollywood in 1937 and made 13 films in the 1930s and 1940s. Her film debut was in Bulldog Drummond Comes Back (1937).Her film credits included Bulldog Drummond sequels, Night Club Scandal (1937), Men with Wings (1938), The Buccaneer (1938) with Fredric March, and The Star Maker (1939) with Bing Crosby. It would be her most popular film, playing Bing's wife in the loose bio of songwriter Gus Edwards. Watching her film appearances, Louise looks and sounds amazingly like Mary Martin.
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Despite leaving Hollywood in 1947, she would occasionally act on the stage. “The demands of the screen are less than those for the stage,” she told The Times in 1939. The close-up, for instance, is a tremendous aid to the screen player. In close-ups the star has a chance to put over any emotion called for, with a lot of rehearsals and direction, whereas on the stage the actress must manage to get that emotion over without any such assistance whatsoever. Then, too, the stage demands talent and hard work, not merely personality and looks.”

Campbell was married to actor Horace McMahon, whom she met when they were both in the Broadway play Three Men on a Horse. They wed in 1938 and remained married until his death in 1971. Not much is know about Louise's private life, but I believe she had three children. Campbell died November 5, 1997, in Norwalk Hospital in Norwalk, Connecticut. She is buried at St. Mary's Cemetery in Norwalk, Connecticut...

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Sunday, November 9, 2025

COMING SOON - NEW BING CROSBY RECORD

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Last year, UME celebrated the holidays with a selection on 7” vinyl. This year, they’re continuing the series, complete with a new snow white-colored 7” of Bing Crosby’s beloved “White Christmas.”

The 2024 collection included pressings of The Beach Boys’ “Little Saint Nick,” Brenda Lee’s “Rockin’ Around The Christmas Tree,” Burl Ives’ “A Holly Jolly Christmas,” Chuck Berry’s “Run Rudolph Run,” Ella Fitzgerald’s “Sleigh Ride,” Frank Sinatra’s “Jingle Bells,” and Nat King Cole’s “The Christmas Song.” Each 7” features a beloved holiday hit on the A-side and another festive favorite on the B-side.

“White Christmas” will come out as part of the 2025 lineup. It is set to be released on its own as well as part of a carrying case that will include the full lineup of 2024 and 2025 releases...

Thursday, October 30, 2025

BRIAN CROSBY: A FORGOTTEN CROSBY

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I am sure that Brian Crosby is not forgotten to his family, but he is forgotten to Bing's loyal fans. Brian was 18-year-old grandson of Bing Crosby. He was killed shortly after Bing's death on October 14, 1977. Brian Patrick Crosby died on August 19, 1978. He 
died in a motorcycle crash in Beverly Hills after running a red light and being chased by a police car, according to authorities. He was the son of Phillip Crosby, one of the singers four children by his first marriage. Brian is buried right next to his father....

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I reached out to his young half-brother Phil Crosby Jr, who did not really remember Brian, but he had this to say: "Yeah my theory or what I may have heard from my dad or someone in the family was that if he got caught high on anything one more time he would have been kicked off the football team. And that would have been the only way to disappoint my dad." 

I would love to learn more about Brian and his short life. If you have any details let me know...

Tuesday, October 14, 2025

49 YEARS AGO

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49 years ago the music stopped. On this date in 1977, at the La Moraleja Golf Course near Madrid, Bing played 18 holes of golf. His partner was World Cup champion Manuel Piñero; their opponents were club president Cesar de Zulueta and Valentin Barrios. 

At about 6:30 pm, Crosby collapsed about 20 yards from the clubhouse entrance and died instantly from a massive heart attack. 

On October 18, following a private funeral Mass at St. Paul's Catholic Church in Westwood, Crosby was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California. Crosby's trademark warm bass-baritone voice made him the best-selling recording artist of the 20th century, having sold over one billion records, tapes, compact discs and digital downloads around the world...

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