landtuna said:
RicoGregg said:
The Andrews Sisters were before my time.....and this is the year I turn 60.
FDR, Hitler, W. C. Fields, Babe Ruth, and Patton all died before I was born.
They were before my time too but unlike the others you mention the Andrews Sisters legacy lives forever on tape, vinyl, CD and film.
I'm definitely from the Rock 'n Roll generation but I think Big Band music was the best dance music ever and enjoy listening to it every now and then. I have a 30-year old son who thinks so too.
Mr. Landtuna;
Please tell me that you're not saying that the legacy of Patty, Maxine, and La Verne is larger than those of the people I mentioned.
Of all the people mentioned, they were the ones who were alive after I was born. I don't remember seeing them on TV when I was young. Perhaps they retired.
As for legacies, well....
FDR left us Social Security, unemployment benefits, and the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Hitler's "legacies" included the Soviet Eastern Bloc of countries in east Europe, which lasted until the late 80's, including two Germanys and the Berlin Wall, the creation of the United Nations which works to prevent future wars, and the creation of the state of Israel.
W. C. Fields left a legacy of an incredible gift of humor, writing, and timing. To many, he was the textbook comedian. One college teaches a class on W. C. Fields. He is "immortalized" on film and in books, tapes, and not to mention vinyl and CD. I have a W. C. Fields album I bought in 1968 with some of my first payday money which contains audio from both his movies and radio work. I still have it.
Babe Ruth's biggest, most everlasting legacy is the very existence of Major League Baseball itself. After the Black Sox Scandal of 1919, it was widely felt that the game of big league baseball would wither away and die on the vine. Instead, it thrived mainly due to the major gate attraction of Ruth. Babe Ruth saved baseball. He, along with Lou Gehrig created the first Yankee Dynasty, and Major League Baseball survives and is a going venture today. Babe Ruth youth baseball leagues exist to this day.
Patton, with all of his faults, eccentricities, and quirks, is considered one of military history's greatest strategists.
There is no doubting the success of the Andrews Sisters. They were huge, no debate on my part. It's just that if you were a post-WWII baby boomer like me, could you go to an Andrews Sisters show or to a big band dance? No. They were done. But there were plenty of Rock and Roll shows one could go to.