Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Its Polka Time

 

A Facebook friend got me started today when he posted about having been "forced" to watch the Lawrence Welk Show as a kid. Jeff, if you read this, suck it up. You seem to have survived just fine.

As children, many Boomers had the pleasure or the pain of dealing with a weekly dose of Lawrence Welk. He was the  equivalent of a Rock Star back in the day. Women wearing winged glasses and full length dresses gathered with their husbands and families in front of  black and white TV's with 15 inch screens every week to see what Lawrence had up his sleeve this time. 

Every week he offered up a mixed bag of homogenized and pasteurized American music that lifted hearts throughout the land. His show had no rough edges, no bite; it was cheese puff entertainment. And America loved it, or at least the honchos running the shows thought so.

Only Ed Sullivan's show was more popular. Of course Ed allowed the latest immoral and deviant Rock n Roll stars to actually play their devil's music in front of the whole country. Gasp, oh the horror. Lawrence was decorum and civility squared.

Although Lawrence appeared to be a pleasant man, an affable man; as a kid, I always thought there was something off about him. He never stopped with that smile during the whole show. Come on now, nobody smiles that much. Ed Sullivan never smiled that much. Matter of fact Ed did not smile much at all. 

Myron and his accordion were a weekly mainstay on Welk's show. There seemed to be at least one polka number or accordion rendition of an old standard every week.  After the Lawrence Welk show ended, Myron hit the road and performed over 200 shows a year as a solo act or with the orchestra he created. He even appeared in a music video by Kansas. 

Nationally renowned as he was, Myron never was an A-lister though. He worked hard, recorded many albums, and played every East Gish boondock venue he could find. One year he even filled the grandstand at the Acton Fair. 

I am not sure of the year, but I think it was the early 1970s that Myron made all the blue haired ladies in town swoon when he played to a packed house at the Acton Fair's grandstands which usually only saw pulling contests of the animal and mechanical kind. 

Some days after his appearance I was over to Half Way Up Farm, my Aunt Helen's place on the Witch Trot Road for some errand or chore I was to perform for her. I asked her if any of her buddies had thrown their bloomers onto the stage. 

Without missing a beat, she looked at me with the disapproving look she had mastered over 70 years of living. "They are referred today as underwear. And to answer your question; No, I saw nothing tossed on the stage, though the ladies from the Old Timer's Shop were quite giddy."

The twinkle in her eye and the slight upturn of the corners of her mouth told me she probably had one of the best times of her life that night. 

Keep it 'tween the ditches ...........................................

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And in keeping with the music of my forebears, please give a moment or two to listen to Myron at his best - "12th Street Rag" and then "Tico Tico". The man knew his way around an accordion.



 

7 comments:

yellowdoggranny said...


fuck..I live in West, Texas..polka music is a staple here..here polka there polka, everybody fucking polkas..
ydg is at old blog west bygoddess texas..now named yellowdog granny. hope old one will be back soon..really? a spam blog? ugh.

amidnightrider said...

I went to a Myron Floren concert tiresome in the early 60's. I got his and Joanne Castles autographs. I was so excited as an accordion playing youngster. I have been to better concerts since though.

The Blog Fodder said...

West Central Saskatchewan where I grew up was settled primarily by Germans. Frankie Yankovich was a staple on the local radio station and to this day, the Blue Skirt Waltz is my all time favourite. https://youtu.be/KrweTvhqRvE
The accordion was very popular in Central and Eastern Europe, and Russia because it suited their music style and more likely because it was highly portable. Given the history of that part of the world, portability was a necessity.
Lawrence Welk was never big as we were shy on Norwegians but Don Messer and The Islanders filled the bill for decades.

Kulkuri said...

We only had one channel when we finally got a local TV station in the mid-50s. So when the Lawrence Welk came on what choice did we have? In the early 70s we got another station, PBS.

PipeTobacco said...

I too remember many hours of Welk on the television. Although some of it was good….. a fair amount had “cringy” aspects as you suggest…. for me, when it was “cringy” it was at times when some of the folks had either a “Stepford Wives” quality or a rather “Hitler Youth” sort of overly blond haired, blue eyed, catatonic look. I felt a similar “creepy” aspect of Welk himself. I actually appreciated the accordian players….. not necessarily to always liking the “sound” but more in that they always felt like REAL, hard at work folks.

PipeTobacco

peppylady (Dora) said...

My parents watch Lawrence Welk. Plus I recall the Geritol adds.
I think most family back then, got the readers digest as well.
Coffee is on and stay safe

PipeTobacco said...

Reader’s Digest Condensed Books!!!!! Hah! Such memories!!!!!!