My wife can, and could as a child, alter her voice to sing in different accents, so she was able to create the sound of children from all over the world, though they didn't use any actually Chinese, French, Spanish, etc. children to create the sense of a world-wide children's choir.
Thursday, March 08, 2012
It's a Small World, et. al.
My wife can, and could as a child, alter her voice to sing in different accents, so she was able to create the sound of children from all over the world, though they didn't use any actually Chinese, French, Spanish, etc. children to create the sense of a world-wide children's choir.
4 comments:
- Dr. John said...
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My wife, Laurie Shane Sherman, was a child vocal talent for Walt Disney. She and a handful of other kids recorded the It's a Small World song, by using overdubbing. My wife can, and could as a child, alter her voice to sing in different accents, so she was able to create the sound of children from all over the world, though they didn't use any actually Chinese, French, Spanish, etc. children to create the sense of a world-wide children's choir. Its just Laurie and a few others, over and over. Laurie did all the foreign-sounding parts. And it is still played today, and all over the world. Its the song most often played on a daily basis all over the world. Yet, its mostly Laurie. Too bad her contract did not provide her with any royalties... Am I proud of her... You betcha, I love her to pieces, as they say.John Evans
- 12:24 PM
- MLove said...
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What a cool story, John. I'm gonna cut and paste it on to my blog. Thanks for sharing, and tell Laurie she, like her father, did so much to make people like me enjoy happy, magical moments. I look forward to the day when I can meet her and listen to her sing "our song."
- 12:34 PM
- Dr. John said...
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One more comment about Robert Sherman's music. My wife, Laurie Shane Sherman has a brother Jeffrey, who told Diane Sawyer on ABC news the other night that he was the inspiration for the song from Mary Poppins-- a spoonful of sugar... Trouble is, it was actually Laurie who came home and told her father that she had taken her dose of the Sabin oral polio vaccine via a sugar cube. You see, Jeffrey was only 5, and he was too young to go to school. Also, they gave the vaccines in community centers on the weekend, not in school that first year, and the sugar cubes were dispensed in little paper cups, not in plastic spoons as Jeffrey claims. Its just that Jeffrey has told the story so many times over the years that even his father began to remember it the way Jeffrey tells it. Laurie is too humble to dispute her brother in public, but I'm not that humble about it. Do your math Jeff, your story doesn't add up. When you were 8 years old, the song had already been written, recorded, and sung by Julie Andrews. It couldn't have been Jeff. So there.
- 12:37 PM
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So very interesting! Puz
- 9:53 PM
One more comment about Robert Sherman's music. My wife, Laurie Shane Sherman, has a brother Jeffrey, who told Diane Sawyer on ABC news the other night that he was the inspiration for the song from Mary Poppins-- a spoonful of sugar... Trouble is, it was actually Laurie who came home and told her father that she had taken her dose of the Sabin oral polio vaccine via a sugar cube.
You see, Jeffrey was only 5, and he was too young to go to school. Also, they gave the vaccines in community centers on the weekend, not in school that first year, and the sugar cubes were dispensed in little paper cups, not in plastic spoons as Jeffrey claims.
It's just that Jeffrey has told the story so many times over the years that even his father began to remember it the way Jeffrey tells it. Laurie is too humble to dispute her brother in public, but I'm not that humble about it.
Do your math Jeff, your story doesn't add up. When you were 8 years old, the song had already been written, recorded, and sung by Julie Andrews.
It couldn't have been Jeff. So there.