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    L'origine du Brass Bonanza

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    Stéphane Dumas


    Messages : 14461
    Date d'inscription : 07/07/2012

    L'origine du Brass Bonanza Empty L'origine du Brass Bonanza

    Message par Stéphane Dumas Jeu 4 Oct - 8:20

    J'ai trouvé ce lien à propos d'une pièce musicale surnomée "Brass Bonanza" qui était le thème musical utilisé par les Whalers de Hartford dans l'AMH et la LNH.
    http://www.brassbonanza.com/hcc/whalers-audio/brass-bonanza

    Brass Bonanza, also known as the “Hartford Whalers Victory March” was adopted by the Hartford Whalers as their theme song during their tenure in the World Hockey Association, and remained so through their years in the National Hockey League. It was originally written by Jack Say.

    Jack Say (b. 12-Aug-1922, d. 04-Jul-2017), an aspiring musician whose real name is Jacques Ysaye, sold a piece of music to a record library and moved to Austria. Former Whalers official George Ducharme came across the piece. According to Ducharme: “It was one of those lucky things,” he recalls. “The song was handed to us – arranged and orchestrated – in 1975–1976 and we didn’t have to do a thing… “During the second season the team was in Hartford (1975–1976), I began to notice that there was something missing in the atmosphere in the building. We needed something, like a theme song, to add to the excitement when a goal was scored. But coming up with the right song was a different matter,” he said. “I had the record at home for a couple of weeks,” Ducharme said, “but never played it. Then, one Sunday, we had company over and one of the guests played the record for fun. When I heard the song I knew immediately it was perfect for us.” He used it as a “bridge” on a 1976 Whalers highlights LP – the song became a hit, and stuck with the team from then on.

    According to Jeff Jacobs of the Hartford Courant, “Gordie Howe once began humming Brass Bonanza in my ear. He said he loved to hear it as a visiting player for the Houston Aeros, but hearing it every night with the Whalers “began to drive me nuts.””



    Elle a été aussi utilisé pour une pub parodique d'un documentaire des Cowboys Fringuants.

      La date/heure actuelle est Dim 15 Sep - 19:48