Radio comedians Bob Elliott and Ray Goulding weren't singers, but they did some intentionally bad singing on their radio show from time to time. The duo was on the air from 1946 to 1987, and in those 41 years, although they released a number of spoken-word comedy albums, they released only one record of music: "Mule Train" b/w "I'd Like to Be a Cow in Switzerland," both sides of which were performed by Ray Goulding's Mary McGoon character in 1949.
The record came about after Goulding-as-McGoon performed "Mule Train" on the air to poke fun at the flood of cover versions that appeared when Frankie Laine's version became a hit. "Mule Train" was so ubiquitous that even Mary McGoon—the elderly host of a recipe segment on Bob and Ray's show—was singing it.
David Pollock's book Bob and Ray, Keener Than Most Persons says:
After first performing ["Mule Train"] live on the program, requests poured in for Mary to repeat the number; some even suggested that she put it on record. Finally, Ray recorded it in Mary's voice, joined on the choruses by Elliott as Tex Blaisdell. Bill Green provided the piano accompaniment. On the flip side, Mary sang, "I'd Like to Be a Cow in Switzerland," with music and lyrics by Charles and Nick Kenny. ... With McGrath's* okay—in exchange for a cut—the record was highly promoted on the station. But when the pressed discs arrived shortly before Christmas, there was no shipping operation in place. Finally, Sam Clark, an owner of a small Boston record distributorship with a taste for offbeat labels, let the boys use his basement. Night after night, after their regular WHDH shifts, the two processed all mail-order requests themselves, including packaging and mailing, in Clark's garage. Everyone involved—including McGrath—made out okay.*William McGrath, general manager of Boston's WHDH.
On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio says that Bob and Ray's recording of "Mule Train" and "I'd Like to Be a Cow in Switzerland"—released on their own Bob and Ray Records label—"quickly sold out its 3,000-copy pressing and was soon a collectors item."
Although "Mule Train" was the A-side of the single, "I'd Like to Be a Cow in Switzerland" seems to be the best remembered of the two Bob and Ray recordings, perhaps because that song hasn't been as widely recorded as "Mule Train."
Bob and Ray |
Gorman was a longtime secretary-treasurer of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters' Union (AMCU). In 1947, the AMCU recorded 10 songs by Gorman and pressed them on records to give to the union's members as Christmas gifts. Billboard reported that Gorman, "for 30 years an executive of the union, has never had any formal education, but has written 735 compositions of all types of music since he was 10 years old." (A book about Gorman, Picket and the Pen: The Pat Gorman Story, was published in 1960.)
Gorman was inspired to write "I'd Like to Be a Cow" when he took a trip to Europe and felt that Switzerland was the only peaceful place on the continent.
A 1947 ad for Goldmine Music, Inc. |
After Bob and Ray's reasonably successful debut as musical recording artists, they never did it again. The closest they came was on the 1958 RCA-Victor album Bob and Ray Throw a Stereo Spectacular, which featured songs by various RCA artists interspersed with Bob and Ray skits that mainly serve to demonstrate stereo effects. Bob and Ray themselves don't sing on the album, but most of the album's content is music.
Bob and Ray's recordings of "Mule Train" and "I'd Like to Be a Cow" can be found on RadioArt's 4-CD set The Best of Bob and Ray: Volume 4.
"I'd Like to Be a Cow in Switzerland"
I'd like to be a cow in Switzerland
Where the grass is always green
Where the hunters hide behind the trees
Shooting holes in good ol' Schweitzer cheese
Where the bulls are all such gentlemen
So gently they go "moo"
I'd like to be a cow in Switzerland
I'll bet that you would too
I'd like to be a cow in Switzerland
Where the skies are always blue
Where the milkmaids yodel all the day
To their sweethearts miles and miles away
Odelayheeho (Odelayheeho)
How are you? (How are you?)
How much is two and two? (Twenty two)
Oh, the Swiss are vegetarians
And Swiss cheese is the rage
I'd like to be a cow in Switzerland
And live to a ripe old age
I'd like to be a cow in Switzerland
Where the mountains kiss the sky
Where the bulls, like Ferdinand, are meek
And so shy because the mountains peek
Where the black cows give milk chocolate
And the white cows give ice cream
I'd like to be a cow in Switzerland
Where life is just a dream
Thank you for posting this! I've been listening to Bob and Ray for fifty years now.
ReplyDeleteI have two small corrections to the lyrics, though. In the fourth stanza (is that the right word for it?) the final echo is missing: "Twenty-two".
The other correction is more of a nitpick. I'm not sure that "pique" was the right word to use. It seems to me that the pun was based on "peak" and "peek". It's a lovely auditory pun, difficult to render in print...but I think I would go with "...peek" (including the ellipses because Ray clearly and deliberately hesitated before that word).
Thanks again!
Thanks for your comment! I added the final echo.
DeleteI thought about the peak/peek/pique question when I transcribed the lyrics, and "pique" seemed to be the only word that makes sense there. "Caused the mountain peek" doesn't make grammatical sense. "Caused the mountain peak" makes literal sense but isn't a joke. "Pique," however, means irritation and creates a pun on "mountain peak," so it works both literally and humorously, unlike "peak" and "peek."
In the line in question, I hear "And so shy because the mountains peek", which seems to make some kind of wordplay sense.
ReplyDeleteBy jove, I think you've got it! Updated accordingly.
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