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Scopitones.com now on iTunes Music Store

Color1 UPDATE: I think i fixed the problem that people were reporting where the videos would not work on their iPods. They're looking great on mine, anyway. Let me know if you're having any problems.

You can now subscribe to Scopitones.com as a Podcast at the iTunes store. I'm not exactly sure how this happened (or even how I discovered that it had happened), but thanks to whoever made it happen. The 2 commenters both complain of not being able to get them to work on their iPods, so I'll try and figure out why that is, please let me know if anybody has some hints. Click on the little button to subscribe. Scopitones.com - Scopitones.com - Scopitones.com

What's A Scopitone? 
Watch Scopitones
Scopitones On DVD

Scopitones.com now on iTunes Music Store

Color1 You can now subscribe to Scopitones.com as a Podcast at the iTunes store. I'm not exactly sure how this happened (or even how I discovered that it had happened), but thanks to whoever made it happen. The 2 commenters both complain of not being able to get them to work on their iPods, so I'll try and figure out why that is, please let me know if anybody has some hints. Click on the little button to subscribe. Scopitones.com - Scopitones.com - Scopitones.com

"Scopitone Party" Screening and Talk

65broch5-1 Friday, February 27

8:00 pm
Admission: $7.00

Moore College of Art & Design
20th & Race Streets, Philadelphia
(215) 965-4099

On Friday, February 27, The Secret Cinema will present Scopitone Party, a unique collection of music films from the early and mid 1960s. They were originally made for a French film jukebox called Scopitone, which entertained patrons in bars, cafes and bus stations in both Europe and America. The film clips, which feature performers both famous and obscure -- and are considered to be among the more important of the many predecessors to the modern rock video -- are today quite scarce, and difficult to see in their original form. Link.

What's A Scopitone? 
Watch Scopitones
Scopitones On DVD

Former Scopitone Star Molly Bee Dies


Okay, that wasn't the actual headline, but that's how I think of her. R.I.P.  Link.

"Da Carosone a Cosa Nostra. Gli antenati del videoclip-From Carosone to Cosa Nostra. Ancestors of the music video"

Copj13_2Italian Cinebox and Scopitone expert Michele Bovi has an amazing new book out on the history of the film jukebox. It's written in Italian with an English translation (the photo captions are just in Italian, though).

It's a very thorough history of the invention and marketing of the competing "film jukeboxes" with interviews of inventors, executives, producers, directors, and the artists who appeared in the films.

There's a bunch of interesting tidbits about folks such as Debbie Reynolds (her production company made many of the US Scopitones), Francis Ford Coppola (who lost a small fortune he invested in the new technology), Robert Altman (who directed at least one Scopitone film), as well as details about the US Scopitones business's extensive ties to the mafia.

There are hundreds of great photos, film stills and reproductions of Cinebox and Scopitone ephemera along with lists of films produced etc. Bob Orlowsky of The Scopitone Archive has an extended section detailing the history of the machines in the US. It's a must have for any serious Cinebox and Scopitone fan.  Buy "Da Carosone a Cosa Nostra. Gli antenati del videoclip-From Carosone to Cosa Nostra. Ancestors of the music video"
What's A Scopitone? 
Watch Scopitones
Scopitones On DVD

ScopitoneArchive.com

AlsbarBob Orlowsky's invaluable resource, the Scopitone Archive, has an awesome new site to go with it's brand new domain name. Check out Scopitonearchive.com.

The Rise And Fall Of The Scopitone Jukebox

Main_lg NPR Story: The Rise And Fall Of The Scopitone Jukebox By Jennifer Sharpe. Jennifer did a great job on this, even tracking down Dee Dee of Dick and Dee (!). Check it out.
What's A Scopitone? 
Watch Scopitones
Scopitones On DVD

"Videoclip Story"

RaiThis is an Italian Television documentary about Cinebox and Scopitone put together by Italy's #1 Juke Box Movie expert Michele Bovi, and featuring America's #1 Scopitone guy, Bob Orlowsky (of the Scopitone Archive). It's in Italian but it's still a fun watch if you don't speak it. Go to this page and click on "Videoclip Story"

Scopitones At WFMU Record Fair

Rf_splash_2_1WFMU Record Fair Home Page.

It's WFMU Record Fair time again. Bedazzled! and Scopitones.com will both be presenting video programs in the AV Lounge (they haven't released the exact schedule yet). We'll also be selling some stuff so look for our table. Here are the blurbs for our video presentations:

The Bedazzled Video Hour (and a half) 2005
90 minutes of rare music video clips from TV & Movies.  Featuring
Tropicalia. Soul. Bubblegum. 60's. 70's. 80's. Punk. Post-punk. Pop.
Rock. Pop/Rock. Soft Rock and other genres I can't think of right now.
Scott Walker. Roy Wood. Dwight Twilley, TV commercials, movie trailers &
much much more.
http://bedazzled.blogs.com/

The Scopitones.com Jukebox Movie Hour 2005
60 minutes of choice American, British, French, German & Italian
Scopitone and Cinebox rarities.
http://scopitones.blogs.com/

"Lost" Scopitone

For_youNo, I haven't unearthed some unknown Scopitone,or even figured out who that guy is that sang "High Boots" (and if you tell me "Mr. Eraserhead", I'll hit you). But while I was watching the 1st season of "Lost" on dvd last night and the "Hurley" character is flipping around on the TV in a flashback, I noticed some funny stock footage, and when I rewound and looked at it again I realized, "it's a Scopitone!". I immediately recognized it as "For You" by Freddie Bell and Roberta Linn. Dunno who snuck that in there, but it's pretty cool. It's just the video, not the music, the music is just a square dance call (guess they probably don't have to pay royalties for that).

Lost, by the way, is a really great show. Genuinely original plot twists, great scripting, acting and casting. The music is exceptionally good. I was sceptical about it at 1st (as much as I love TV I realize that most of it sucks), but I'm not any more. It's definitely worth renting the 1st season (we got it from Netflix) and getting caught up.

Here's the clip from Lost and the
Freddie Bell and Roberta Linn Scopitone.

Lost Scopitone.mov
For You-Freddie Bell & Roberta Linn (Scopitone).mov
Buy "Scopitone Guys, Scopitone Gals"

Smokey Warren Scopitone Shoot

Doingjukeboxvideo1966Smokey_warren_jerry_hattondottie_maeScopitone_photo_shoot_1"Hi Spike, Thanks for answering my e-mail. The pix attached are of the shoot early Sixties taken from a slide. You're welcome to use them if you like.
The cast was Smokey Warren on fence, Dottie Mae, Shorty
Benjamin on Drums, Harvey Reynolds on Steel Guitar, And me, Jerry Hatton on Bass.I only saw the film on a Scopitone once after we did the shoot in NJ in PA. I found info about Scopitones when searching the net. Once again, Thanks For your help Jerry Hatton" 
If anyone has Jerry's Scopitones: Smokey Warren "Where the Old Red River Flows" (#K 242) & "Out Behind The Barn" (#K243)
email me for his contact info,
Thanks Jerry!

Scooby-Ooby Scopitone

1101640821_400Time Magazine
Modern Living
Scooby-Ooby Scopitone
Aug. 21, 1964

In some 500 bars, restaurants and servicemen's clubs throughout the U.S., the center of attention these days is a monstrous new machine called Scopitone. It is a cross between a jukebox and TV. For $.25 a throw, Scopitone projects any one of 36 musical movies on a 26-in. screen, flooding the premises with delirious color and hi-fi scooby-ooby-doo for three whole minutes. It makes a sobering combination.

Scopitone, which has been the rage of France for the past four years, was invented by a firm that sounds as if it had been founded by Jules Verne; Compagnie d'Applications Mecaniques à Electronique au Cinéma et à Atomistique (CAMECA). Since then it has spread from Marseilles to Macao; Nikita Khrushchev even has one, loaded with Marxian uplift featurettes. Actually, Scopitone's "musies" are descended from U.S. Soundies, which during World War II filled bus terminals and B-girl grottoes with grainy, black-and-white productions of The Flat Foot Floogee with the Floy Floy and A Boy in Khaki, a Girl in Lace. Television and Lucky Strike's Hit Parade put a merciful end to Soundies, but it looks as if Scopitone will be here to stay awhile.

Rights to Scopitone for the U.S. and South and Central America were snapped up for $5,000 last year by Alvin I. Malnik, 31, a Miami Beach attorney, who will soon start distributing machines manufactured in Chicago. He already has installed them in New York, San Francisco, Las Vegas and dozens of military bases, and has a backlog of 2,500 orders. If Malnik has his way, every public place from the hoitiest cocktail lounge to the toitiest pizza parlor will be swinging to musies, all of which are eventually to be produced by Malnik himself. Meanwhile, Scopitone screens are filled by French films. One typical Gallic offering, El Gato Montés, captures the jollity of the annual Pamplona fiesta with trumpet playing, flamenco dancing and the shrieks of small boys being gored by rampaging bulls in the streets.

The production possibilities of Scopitone films make their promoter sound like Cecil B. DeMalnik. "Take Hello, Dolly! " he says, eyes moist with enthusiasm. "Maybe we'd have an actress getting down from a train in a little hick town, and, you know, she's Dolly coming back—I really don't know the rest of the words—but then there'd probably be some people meeting her, dancing along. There's just no end to the storybook film devices we can prepare." Just for a start, he might try My Funny Ballantine, Tea for Tuborg, and Music to Cry in Your Beer By.

Bedazzled

1bedaz_head_low_resI have this other blog Bedazzled! where I post cool stuff that's not a Scopitone, including other kinds of music video, eclectic music MP3s, radio commercials, lots of other cool stuff and sometimes some Scopitones too (there's a couple cool ones up there right now). Please check it out.

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