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SUNDAY { 0:00 } - (v) Keller Sisters & Lynch I'D RATHER BE THE GIRL IN YOUR ARMS { 2:56 } - (v) Frank Bessinger Jean Goldkette & his Orchestra; Victor 20273 (15 October 1926) Jean Goldkette had a stellar orchestra with guitarist Eddie Lang, violinist Joe Venuti, cornetist Bix Beiderbecke, saxist Frank Trumbauer, trombonist Tommy Dorsey, and more. The tale is told that Paul Whiteman enticed key players away and that the later 'Goldkette' Victor recordings were actually McKinney's Cotton Pickers recorded mostly in Chicago. However, it is a fact that the Keller Sisters were Taddy and Nan; and Lynch was Frank of that ilk. There seemed to be a fashion for trios, of various gender combinations, with names structured as 'Thingy Sisters and Whatsit'. Hamilton Sisters & Fordyce, and Brown Sisters & Green come to mind; there were others. SUNDAY is Keller Sisters & Lynch's classic, not to mention Goldkette's. As was the way back then, Frank Bessinger singing I'D RATHER BE THE GIRL IN YOUR ARMS was not regarded as incongruous. There were eight takes of this tune. The first four (on 12 October 1926) used a male vocal trio comprising Joe Griffith, Frankie Marvin and Frank Bessinger. The last four, at the same session as SUNDAY, used only Frank. Take-8 was used. Note the use of a string-bass (Steve Brown), a feature of Goldkette recordings. The double-bass came into its own with the use of electrical recording. Prior to that, it had to be a brass-bass (bass tuba, sousaphone) to register any presence in the recording wax. Victor was one of a few companies that catalogued sides as A and B. I have led with SUNDAY, the side catalogued as B.