Saturday, March 2, 2019

1972 Joe Dowell newspaper ad for "Christmas in Ann Arbor"


This 1972 advertisement from Chelsea, Michigan's Chelsea Standard promotes Joe Dowell's single "Christmas in Ann Arbor" as a premium for customers who open a Christmas savings account at Ann Arbor Federal Savings. (Click on the ad to enlarge it.)

The text of the ad says:
Joe Dowell is the nationally famous recording star whose "Wooden Heart" was number one in the nation in nineteen sixty one. And now, Joe Dowell has written and recorded "Christmas in Ann Arbor" exclusively for AAFS Christmas Club members. When you open your AAFS CHRISTMAS CLUB, you will receive your 45 rpm record, "Christmas in Ann Arbor," with "Patapan," a French Christmas Carol on the reverse side.
When I interviewed Dowell, he didn't remember the precise date on which he recorded and released "Christmas in Ann Arbor" on his own Journey Records label, and the record itself doesn't have a date, so this ad places it at either 1972 when the ad ran or 1973 when customers received the record (if it hadn't yet been manufactured when this ad was published).

Dowell also recorded a six-song 7" EP of folk songs that was issued as a bank premium by both Ann Arbor Federal Savings and Second Federal Savings and Loan Association of Cleveland.

A Facebook commenter said that Hazel Proctor, who was vice-president of marketing for Ann Arbor Federal Savings, was the organizer behind this single.

I've written quite a bit about Dowell on this blog, because I wrote liner notes for and helped compile the 2004 Bear Family CD Wooden Heart, which collected most of Joe's Smash Records recordings from the early 1960s. 

At the time that the CD was being prepared, Dowell (who passed away in 2016) gave me a lot of interesting ephemera from his career, so I've shared much of it here. I had never seen this advertisement until today, though.

Dowell, as the ad copy mentions, had a #1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 with "Wooden Heart" in 1961. He then went on to record mostly religious music and commercial jingles in the 1970s and '80s. 

Apart from a 1963 folk album that he convinced a furniture-store owner to release and a 1966 single for Monument Records, all of Dowell's recordings after he left Smash Records were either self-released, commercial jingles, or promotional recordings for organizations such as the Church World Service and Boy Scouts of America.

I previously posted some of Joe Dowell's commercial jingles here and here.

I've also posted a discography of his recordings and a lengthy three-part interview with him that starts here.

And here are both sides of this bank-premium single:







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