Posts Tagged: gomiller

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Happy New Year and happy satire.  Sure, that’s an expression.  One of the great, energetic musical comedians, Tom Lehrer is a must-listen (again, another real expression) for those bent on listening to comedy made by intelligent people.

Until recently, Lehrer was a university professor who got out of the satire business for a number of reasons.  He has been quoted as saying “Political satire became obsolete when Henry Kissinger was awarded the Nobel Prize.”  That about sums it up.  Give it a listen.

Also, given Tumblr’s inherent limits (if we post more than 20… anythings, it starts pushing old episodes off of iTunes), we’re moving feed hosts, so there MAY be some iTunes issues in the coming days.  Please let us know if you notice an issue before we do: jason@comedyonvinyl.com

Subscribe on iTunes (And please leave your comments and rate us.)

Host: Jason Klamm

Producer: Mike Worden

This Week’s Guests: Dan Gomiller and Ari Jarvis

Comedy on Vinyl is recorded at Fort Awesome Studios in beautiful downtown Burbank.  The samples played in these non-commercial (see: free) podcasts are used without permission, and are intended to sell more albums, not to endorse Vinyl Piracy.  Follow us on Twitter or at the Facebooks.

Tom Lehrer’s Official Website: http://www.tomlehrer.org/

Buy “That Was The Year That Was” on Vinyl: http://goo.gl/NS7yV

Episode 18 Direct Download

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…I have no words.  Except Merry Christmas.  This special episode features the one and only Zero Mostel at possibly his most insane, reading Dr. Seuss’s timeless “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.”  There are SO many things going on here, I can’t begin to describe it.

Just know that despite the fact that we didn’t talk much about Zero (his comedy was on the stage and screen), he was a great actor, and Mel Brooks’ “The Producers” wouldn’t have been the same without him intimidating the hell out of Gene Wilder.  In many ways, we wouldn’t have the same Gene Wilder.  Take a listen and, as always, have a Merry Thing.

Subscribe on iTunes (And please leave your comments and rate us.)

Host: Jason Klamm

Producer: Mike Worden

This Week’s Guests: Dan Gomiller, Ari JarvisJeremy Guskin  and Jen Smith

Comedy on Vinyl is recorded at Fort Awesome Studios in beautiful downtown Burbank.  The samples played in these non-commercial (see: free) podcasts are used without permission, and are intended to sell more albums, not to endorse Vinyl Piracy.  Follow us on Twitter or at the Facebooks.

Zero Mostel’s IMDB page: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0609216/

Buy “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” on vinyl: http://goo.gl/3fChz

Episode 17 Direct Download

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We waited too long to get to this album, since its among the first albums I ever listened to, and it simply blew my mind.  What’s disappointing is its the first one I simply have not been able to find locally on vinyl - despite having it in the secret Comedy on Vinyl Vaults somewhere deep in the woods of Upstate New York at my mom’s house (it also explains why we’re pointing to an image of the album cover on my phone).  THAT said, this is going to be one of those albums I absolutely DEMAND you purchase immediately.  I choose to sample these tracks without killing the value of purchasing the album, but believe me, it was very tempting to give you “Seven Words” in its entirety, as this is the greatest version there is.  That said, I didn’t - so go buy it.

Though people have treated George Carlin as though he was following the work of Lenny Bruce, Carlin was never an activist, and no matter what you thought of his changing onstage persona, he remained a comedian, unlike Lenny Bruce.  ”Stand-up philosopher” is a phrase bandied about in this podcast, and I’ve always felt it fit George Carlin to a T.  Comedians are, by trade, thinkers before speakers.  Usually the speaking takes the form of a joke - Carlin weaves the traditional joke in with pure “one-on-one” conversation, letting you discover his thought process as he helps you understand your own.  All this, on top of being a bad-ass who did, indeed, challenge the FCC and, whether he tried to or not, changed the way the US and its government looks at “profanity,” makes George Carlin a legend.  Do yourself a favor and discover this album, if you haven’t already.

Subscribe on iTunes (And please leave your comments and rate us.)

Host: Jason Klamm

Producer: Mike Worden

This Week’s Guests: Dan Gomiller, Ari Jarvis and Jeremy Guskin

Comedy on Vinyl is recorded at Fort Awesome Studios in beautiful downtown Burbank.  The samples played in these non-commercial (see: free) podcasts are used without permission, and are intended to sell more albums, not to endorse Vinyl Piracy.  Follow us on Twitter or at the Facebooks.

George Carlin’s official site: http://georgecarlin.com/

Buy “The Rutles” on vinyl: goo.gl/fs6ny

Episode 16 Direct Download

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After Monty Python, Eric Idle continued the sketch comedy television with Rutland Weekend Television, which featured “The Seventh Python,” Neil Innes.  Best known beyond The Rutles as an amazing absurd satirist, Innes brought a musical legitimacy that Idle, with impressive musical credentials of his own, likely couldn’t match.  Also, Innes did a dead-on John Lennon.

Hardly the first mock-documentary, this is one of the first - if not THE first musical-themed film in the genre.  A pretty literal parallel of the actual history of The Beatles, The Rutles is impressive, if only for its attention to detail.  The songs are, in many cases, dead-ringers for actual Beatles songs (which apparently caused a legal problem or two), and the story an absurd twist and comment on Beatlemania - an obsession that, no matter how you feel about The Beatles, is easily seen as one of the strangest phenomena to ever ripple through pop culture.

Subscribe on iTunes (And please leave your comments and rate us.)

Host: Jason Klamm

Producer: Mike Worden

This Week’s Guests: Dan Gomiller & Ari Jarvis

Comedy on Vinyl is recorded at Fort Awesome Studios in beautiful downtown Burbank.  The samples played in these non-commercial (see: free) podcasts are used without permission, and are intended to sell more albums, not to endorse Vinyl Piracy.  Follow us on Twitter or at the Facebooks.

Buy “The Rutles” on vinyl: http://goo.gl/iafam

Buy “The Rutles” on DVD: http://goo.gl/l96Yx

Episode 15 Direct Download

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Mel Brooks may have made the name he has today with a unique brand of parody, but Young Frankenstein is arguably his masterpiece, and is no doubt the beginning of a brand of pastiche that has informed the work of every great filmmaker of the last four decades.  Self-awareness without having to mug, genuine drama without a sly wink, and real, stone-faced, honest acting make this more than just what Mel Brooks calls a “spoof.” 

As Dan points out in this episode, “Young Frankenstein” is a spiritual sequel to its namesake, and even cursory knowledge of the original “Frankenstein” is enough to get the basics.  That said, it’s still a good, human story, given to us through some of the best slapstick ever put on film.

Subscribe on iTunes (And please leave your comments and rate us.)

Host: Jason Klamm

Producer: Mike Worden

This Week’s Guests: Jennifer SmithDan Gomiller & Ari Jarvis

Comedy on Vinyl is recorded at Fort Awesome Studios in beautiful downtown Burbank.  The samples played in these non-commercial (see: free) podcasts are used without permission, and are intended to sell more albums, not to endorse Vinyl Piracy.  Follow us on Twitter or at the Facebooks.

Buy the “Young Frankenstein” soundtrack on VERY expensive vinyl: http://goo.gl/3qZPC

Buy “Young Frankenstein” on DVD: http://goo.gl/7OT4x

Episode 14 Direct Download

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CACGHThey’re back, and this time we cover the second album that made Jason and Dan become best friends while hanging out in a broken Ford Fiesta.  Yep, that’s Upstate New York for you.  This is, in fact, our first quadrilateral New York episode.

The appeal of this album is clear, even to comedy nerds who have never touched marijuana in their lives.  The characters are great, due in large part to Cheech’s voice characterizations, and the situations are not, in any way, difficult to understand.  Add the fact that Cheech & Chong were smart and considerate to add production values to something that could easily rely on mere mentions of illegal activity for its laughs, and you have one of the greatest comedy compilations out there.  It outshines the last album we covered, and - for Dan and I at least - rivals Monty Python Sings, which we will surely cover in the future.

Subscribe on iTunes (And please leave your comments and rate us.)

Host: Jason Klamm

Producer: Mike Worden

This Week’s Guests: Jeremy Guskin, Dan Gomiller

Comedy on Vinyl is recorded at Fort Awesome Studios in beautiful downtown Burbank.  The samples played in these non-commercial (see: free) podcasts are used without permission, and are intended to sell more albums, not to endorse Vinyl Piracy.  Follow us on Twitter or at the Facebooks.

Cheech & Chong Official Site: CheechandChong.com

Buy “Greatest Hit” on vinyl: goo.gl/UCjAG

Episode 13 Direct Download

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Purple Onion

Finally!  We cover The Smothers Brothers’s’s first album.  This album helped the duo achieve the kind of notoriety that informs the success of every folk comedy… duo… since.  Actually, the form was so unique that they cut out a place for themselves in the world of comedy that, eventually, made them two of the most influential voices in the history of modern comedy. 

Subscribe on iTunes

Host: Jason Klamm

Guests: Dan Gomiller, Ari Jarvis

Producer/Contributor: Mike Worden

Comedy on Vinyl was recorded at Fort Awesome Studios in beautiful downtown Burbank.  The samples played in these non-commercial (see: free) podcasts is used without permission, and is intended to sell more albums, not to endorse Vinyl Piracy.  Follow us on Twitter or at the Facebooks.

The Smothers Brothers Site: http://www.smothersbrothers.com/

“Dangerously Funny,” David Bianculli’s wonderful book about the Smothers Brothers and their rise to fame: http://www.amazon.com/Dangerously-Funny-Uncensored-Smothers-Brothers/dp/1439101167

Buy “Live at the Purple Onion” on Vinyl: http://www.amazon.com/Comedy-Smothers-Brothers-Recorded-Purple/dp/B0016A02BK/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1310082707&sr=8-1

On ridiculously expensive CD: http://www.amazon.com/COMEDY-SMOTHERS-BROTHERS-RECORDED-FRANCISCOAT/dp/B002A1WGIG/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1310082707&sr=8-3

Thank you,

Jason Klamm

Episode 3 Direct Download

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Button-Down MindEPISODE #2: The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart (1960)

In this episode, Jason Klamm, Dan Gomiller and Mike Worden are joined by writer/podcaster Ari Jarvis to discuss 1960s comedy phenomenon Bob Newhart in his premiere album, “The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart.”

Not so much a rarity, this album still serves as a flashback to the days when the proof was really in the pudding.  Small-time, talented no-name gets a break because he liked to entertain at friends’ parties.  The tapes got passed around, and Bob Newhart flew into our living rooms, sort of like a confused pigeon.  Forty years before Matt and Trey got their break with a hand-traded animated Christmas card, Bob Newhart changed the face of comedy by making it marketable again.  All, ironically enough, by making fun of advertising and marketing on a regular basis.

Host: Jason Klamm

Guests: Dan Gomiller, Ari Jarvis

Producer/Contributor: Mike Worden

Direct Download of Episode 2

Comedy on Vinyl was recorded at Fort Awesome Studios in beautiful downtown Burbank.  The music played in the background on these non-commercial (see: free) podcasts is used without permission, and is intended to sell more albums, not to endorse Vinyl Piracy.  Follow us on Twitter or at the Facebooks.

The in-between music in this week’s episode is “I Love Me (I’m Wild About Myself)” by Jack Haley, from 1922, as found at Archive.org.  Last week’s was “Wanita (Wanna Eat?  Wanna Eat?) by Allan Cross, also 1922.

Bob Newhart’s Site: BobNewhart.com

Bob Newhart’s misleading (and unverified) Twitter: @bobnewhart

Buy “The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart” on Vinyl: http://www.amazon.com/Button-Down-Mind-Bob-Newhart/dp/B000MU3M62

On CD:  http://www.amazon.com/Button-Down-Mind-Bob-Newhart/dp/B000002MSU

Things/entities/people/items/devices that are mentioned in this podcast:

JFK
Marilyn Monroe
Joe DiMaggio
Michael Cera
Scott Bakula / Sam Beckett
Dane somebody 

Thank you,

Jason Klamm

FMI:

“Why Did I Buy That?” (Ari Jarvis reviews her DVD collection): http://www.wdibt.com/

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Dan and Jay and In 3-DWelcome to the Comedy on Vinyl podcast, where we listen to the great comedy albums on their original medium, and talk about them.  Some of these albums were never even made available on cassette, giving us an even better reason to let you know/remind you they exist.

This week, (your host) Jason Klamm and (your guest) Dan Gomiller discuss Weird Al Yankovic’s sophomore album “In 3-D,” discussing Al’s career and his affect on/being a partial catalyst of their friendship.

In this episode, we also discuss the lack of architecture references in Weird Al’s songs.

Host: Jason Klamm
Guest: Dan Gomiller
Producer/Contributor: Mike Worden

Direct Download of Episode 1

Comedy on Vinyl was recorded at Fort Awesome Studios in beautiful downtown Burbank.  The music played in the background on these non-commercial (see: free) podcasts is used without permission, and is intended to sell more albums, not to  endorse Vinyl Piracy.  Follow us on Twitter or at the Facebooks.

Weird Al’s site: http://www.weirdal.com/
Buy “In 3-D” on vinyl: http://www.amazon.com/3-D-Weird-Al-Yankovic/dp/B000LTR44U/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1297022775&sr=1-1
Buy “In 3-D” on CD: http://www.amazon.com/3-D-Weird-Al-Yankovic/dp/B00000HZYC/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1297022725&sr=8-1

Things/entities/people/items/devices that are mentioned in this podcast:
Bermuda Schwartz
Billy Mays

The Shamwow Guy’s movie
Chris Hardwick
Tom Lennon
Chamillionaire

Thank you,

Jason Klamm

FMI:
Dan Gomiller: http://lordofdance.com
Jason Klamm: http://stolendress.com