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med_cat: (cat in dress)
med_cat: (cat in dress)

Why is "Auld Lang Syne" sung on New Year's Eve?

med_cat: (cat in dress)

Here’s a favorite post of ours from the past: Ever wonder why we sing "Auld Lang Syne" on New Year's Eve? Wonder no more:

This tradition is mostly thanks to Guy Lombardo and the Royal Canadian Band. While their work is largely unknown to those born in the last few decades, the band has sold over 300 million records to date. Guy Lombardo himself has three stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and he was once the “Dick Clark” of New Years before Clark and his “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve,” attempting to appeal to younger audiences, started supplanting “Mr. New Year’s Eve,” Guy Lombardo.

It was in 1929 that Guy Lombardo and his band took the stage at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City on New Year’s Eve. Their performance that night was being broadcast on the radio, before midnight Eastern-time on CBS, then after on NBC radio.

At midnight, as a transition between the broadcasts, the song they chose to play was an old Scottish folk song Lombardo had first heard from Scottish immigrants in Ontario. The song was Auld Lang Syne.

Previous to this, there are several documented instances of others singing this song on New Year’s Eve, going all the way back to the mid-nineteenth century, but it wasn’t anywhere close to the staple it would soon be after Lombardo’s performance.

The next year, and every year thereafter, all the way to 1976, with Lombardo dying at the age of 75 in 1977, they played it at midnight on New Year’s Eve at first broadcast out on the radio and later on TV. Thanks to “Mr. New Year’s Eve” and his band, it’s still tradition to this day.
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Comments

Dec. 31st, 2015 01:57 am (UTC)
I've always wondered about this - and now I know! Thanks, Cat! : D

That said - I always associate this song with the classic film, "It's a Wonderful Life", because of that heart-warming scene at the end, where everyone sings "Auld Lang Syne". It's a very sentimental and moving old song.
med_cat: (Default)
Jan. 1st, 2016 04:01 am (UTC)
Indeed, the song and the film are moving :)

And yes, an interesting tidbit, isn't it? It was new info to me, when I ran across this a few months ago, so I thought I'd share.
Dec. 31st, 2015 08:30 am (UTC)
Fascinating.
med_cat: (Default)
Jan. 1st, 2016 04:01 am (UTC)
Pleased you found it of interest!
Dec. 31st, 2015 09:02 am (UTC)

med_cat: (Default)
Jan. 1st, 2016 04:02 am (UTC)
Very interesting :) You really should write a book--you've a lot of interesting stories to tell...;)
med_cat: (cat and books)
Jan. 2nd, 2016 12:12 am (UTC)
Will certainly have a browse :)

And yes, I think your book would get read--as you say, if you write it not as an autobiography _per se_, but rather focusing on the interesting people you'd met and interesting experiences you'd had...I've read some "lived experience" books like that, by nurses and doctors--theirs focused on their professional work and challenges
med_cat: (cat and books)
Jan. 2nd, 2016 11:59 am (UTC)
Hmm...I think you could do a book of essays then, perhaps, along the lines of Robert Fulghum's books? ;)
med_cat: (Default)
Jan. 4th, 2016 11:59 pm (UTC)
OK :) I rather liked some of his work, but we all have different views.
med_cat: (Default)
Jan. 5th, 2016 03:56 pm (UTC)
True, there's that...but he had some good stories, some funny, some profound--his "meaning of life" story I found especially interesting, for example.
med_cat: (cat and books)
Jan. 6th, 2016 01:20 pm (UTC)
True enough.

This is the story, I think you might like it if you'd not seen it: http://med-cat.livejournal.com/531350.html
med_cat: (Basil in colour)
Jan. 7th, 2016 01:54 am (UTC)
Perhaps you might like this one better, then ;)

http://med-cat.livejournal.com/777676.html
med_cat: (Default)
Jan. 7th, 2016 07:41 pm (UTC)
Thought you would be :)