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The Author..Wayne Jancik
Golden Age Of The 50s
Golden Age Of The 60s
1970s and There After
The Nutty Squirrels
“UH! OH!
PART 2
“
(Sascha Burland, Don Elliott)
Hanover 4540
No. 14 December 28, 1959
;
;.
The Nutty Squirrels were the creation of Don Elliott and Sascha Burland. Working their “squirrels”
like David Seville did his “Chipmunks,” Don and Sascha speeded up their scat voices to sound like
the chatterings of some hip little creatures.
.
Don Elliot (b. Oct. 21, 1926, Somerville, N.J.) had been active on the jazz scene since the ’50s. He has
played mellophone, trumpet, and vibes with Benny Goodman, Buddy Rich, George Shearing, and Teddy
Wilson. Elliot had his own 16-track recording studio, where he wrote and produced numerous radio
and TV commercials during the ’60s. He composed for, and played in, Broadway shows like
A Thurber
Carnival
,
The Happiest Man Alive
, and
The
Beast in Me
; he had also supplied soundtracks to such films
as
The Getaway
(1972),
In the
Heat of the Night
(1967), and
The Pawnbroker
(1965).
.
In the ’50s, Alexander “Sascha” Burland (b. Oct. 25, 1927/NewYork City) began producing, writing, and
working TV and radio jingle sessions. Sascha was the creator of the theme song for TV icon “What’s My
Line?”
b
In 1959, the pair came up with the idea of having chipmunk-like characters singing jazzy scat numbers.
STEVE ALLEN and Bob Thiele had just formed the Hanover/Signature Record labels, and were pleased
pink to give the jazzy “squirrels” a try. “Uh! Oh!” was a hit, but a novelty hit at most, which meant that
follow-up efforts like “Zowie” failed to excite enough program directors and ergo record-buyers. With
novelty numbers the media has demonstrated a long history of being dismissive.
. ,
Despite successful recordings by the Nutty Squirrels, RAY BRYANT, Bill Evans, and Jack Kerouac, Allen
and Thiele shut down Hanover/Signature in 1960. With the help of Columbia and RCA, Don and Sascha
continued to work their nutty turf for another four years. None of these efforts fared well economically,
and eventually the two returned to their previous endeavors.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Wayne Jancik