At 10:08 PM -1000 2/23/10, kaub...@hawaii.rr.com wrote:
"It's not funny if you have to explain it", but Fred Waring also
invented the blender. I guess I was too obtuse.
Got me I knew both facts, of course, but didn't make the
connection and made the mistake of taking your question serious
Fred Waring also invented the blender.
In 1922, Stephen Poplawski invented the blender. Frederik Osius later
began working on ways to improve the Poplawski blender, and he
invented and patented the blending "Miracle Mixer".machine in 1937-38.
Fred Waring was the financial source and market
"It's not funny if you have to explain it", but Fred Waring also invented the
blender. I guess I was too obtuse.
John Howell wrote:
> At 6:04 AM -0500 2/23/10, Dennis Bathory-Kitsz wrote:
> >On Tue, February 23, 2010 12:01 am, kaub...@hawaii.rr.com wrote:
> >> Was that so they would blend
At 6:04 AM -0500 2/23/10, Dennis Bathory-Kitsz wrote:
On Tue, February 23, 2010 12:01 am, kaub...@hawaii.rr.com wrote:
Was that so they would blend?
See John Howell's response -- all the answers!
Thanks! But not quite all.
No, not primarily for blend. Choral blend comes from matching vo
On Tue, February 23, 2010 12:01 am, kaub...@hawaii.rr.com wrote:
> Was that so they would blend?
See John Howell's response -- all the answers!
Dennis
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Was that so they would blend?
Dennis Bathory-Kitsz wrote:
> On Mon, February 22, 2010 9:21 am, Noel Stoutenburg wrote:
> > I think it was Fred Waring.
>
> That's it! Thank you! Mr. Tone Syllables... just couldn't find it via Google,
> and it was driving me crazy. All I could think was Dale
On Mon, February 22, 2010 6:47 pm, John Howell wrote:
> Yup. It was Fred Waring, and the choral charts published by his
> company, Shawnee Press. I'm trying to remember what he called them,
> but it escapes me at the moment.
>
> His point (and the way he coached his singers in the Pennsylvanians)
At 9:06 AM -0500 2/22/10, Dennis Bathory-Kitsz wrote:
Hi all,
Just going over something, and trying to remember which vocal arranger or
company (U.S., mid-20th century) printed English lyrics in supposedly singable
phonetic format to encourage 'proper' singing sounds. I used to have one of
these
On Mon, February 22, 2010 9:21 am, Noel Stoutenburg wrote:
> I think it was Fred Waring.
That's it! Thank you! Mr. Tone Syllables... just couldn't find it via Google,
and it was driving me crazy. All I could think was Dale Warland, and knew that
was much too recent. Yes! Thank you!
Dennis
___
Dennis Bathory-Kitsz wrote:
Hi all,
Just going over something, and trying to remember which vocal arranger or
company (U.S., mid-20th century) printed English lyrics in supposedly singable
phonetic format to encourage 'proper' singing sounds. I used to have one of
these pieces of sheet music, bu
Hi all,
Just going over something, and trying to remember which vocal arranger or
company (U.S., mid-20th century) printed English lyrics in supposedly singable
phonetic format to encourage 'proper' singing sounds. I used to have one of
these pieces of sheet music, but can't find it any more.
I'm
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