Organ, Piano/Keyboard, Electronic Keyboard E-Z Play Today Volume 225. We recommend that you contact your local customs or import office for further information. We do not refund customers who refuse shipments or return items because they do not want to pay customs or import taxes. The person who received the order is responsible for paying all customs or import tax. For all international shipments, we identify the order contents and cost of the order on the custom form, however, we have no control over whether your country will charge customs or import tax when the package arrives. Packages delivered outside the US may incur customs or import taxes. We reserve the right to discontinue or change Budget Air/Ground Shipping at any time.Budget Delivery is not the default shipping option, so customers must choose this option during checkout.Length of delivery depends on the time required for products to move through your country's customs or import tax system.
Note: Budget Air/Ground takes a little longer than our other shipping options, but it's a great value if you're not in a rush. All rights reserved.Enjoy our Budget Air/Ground Shipping - starting as low as $2.99! Simply choose Budget Air/Ground as your shipping method during checkout. Lawrence Welk Plays Everybody's Music, Hamilton SHLP 12125.The Lawrence Welk Television Show 10th Anniversary, Dot DLP 3591.A Lawrence Welk Sing-a-Long Party, Dot DLP 3432.Welk's two autobiographies are named after his trademark phrases, Wunnerful, Wunnerful! (1971) and Ah-One, Ah-Two! (1974). He established a retirement resort outside San Diego, Lawrence Welk Village, that's now home to many of his fans. Welk accumulated a vast real-estate empire and acquired royalty rights to 20,000 songs, including the entire body of Jerome Kern's work. Welk promptly signed a lucrative syndication contract and went right on producing the show for a number of years thereafter, with even greater financial reward. The Lawrence Welk Show was a staple of ABC for many years, but the network dropped the show in the 1970s because programmers thought its audience was too old and moving away from its core viewing target. George Cates was Welk's musical director throughout the show's 25-year run. He maintained a roster of musical regulars, including ragtime pianist JoAnn Castle, accordion player Myron Floren, singer Norma Zimmer and Joe Feeney, organist Bob Ralston, guitarist Buddy Merrill, and the singing group the Lennon Sisters. He was a demanding taskmaster dedicated to producing a nostalgic, wholesome show. Within a few years, he joined the big band movement with a group that toured Midwest.Īlthough written off as a hick by music critics, Welk was a shrewd businessman. After leaving high school, he went into music full-time, eventually forming two groups, the Biggest Little Band in America and the Hotsy-Totsy Boys. He began performing professionally at the age of 13, playing the accordion. Welk was raised in a German-speaking hamlet in North Dakota,Īnd did not learn English until he was 21, accounting for his distinctive accent. Whether it's worth the effort to weed through all the junk to find them is another question. Within the stream of products Welk put out over a period of 30-odd years can be found a few gems-mostly in his 60s material on Dot Records. Born 11 March 1903, Strasburg, North DakotaĪlthough viewed as the musical epitome of the culture that produced Wonder Bread, American cheese, and "Fun with Dick and Jane" books, Lawrence Welk doesn't deserve to be written off as a stereotype entirely.