
CHARLES
COBORN
Coborn, whose real name was Colin McCallum, was born in 1852, and
had one of the longest careers of any music hall performer, from 1872
until his death in 1945. He was the classic example of a performer
whose fame rested very largely on only two songs, the one chosen here
and 'Two Lovely Black Eyes'. In the days before radio and TV,
performers would only visit the same area at intervals of several
years, so they didn't need to keep changing their material, and many
of them had only a small number of songs which kept them going
throughout their careers.
Coborn did perform a few other songs, but the two mentioned above
were his mainstay. he wrote 'Two Lovely Black Eyes' himself - the
tune, if not the words, is still remembered today - and Fred Gilbert
wrote 'The Man Who Broke The Bank At Monte Carle'. The latter isn't
really a funny song, more of a sing-along for the audiences to
join in the chorus - and of course a piece of wish-fulfilment (the
equivalent of winning the lottery today).

This recording is a fairly late one - 1924 - and is rather dim for
its age: the sung words are reasonably clear but the short spoken
section isn't. (The label of the other side, in which he sings the
chorus of 'Two Lovely Black Eyes' in nine languages, can be seen on
the labels
page).
Coborn continued to make occasional appearances up to his age at
the age of 93, including an appearance in the minor British film
'Variety Jubilee' (1943).
'The Man Who Broke The Bank At Monte
Carlo' (Beltona 764)
rec. in London, c. November 1924
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mp3 file (1.5MB)
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