Guckenheimer Sour Kraut Band - Discography and Track Listings

Discography and Track Listings

San Francisco Records TM-5 "Oom-Pah-Pah in HiFi", 1956 (San Francisco Records was later taken over by Barbary Coast Records, which gave it the catalog number BC-33005).

Side 1

  1. Trink Mir Noch Ä Tröpfche
  2. Gaudeamus
  3. Die Wacht Am Rhein
  4. Lauterbach
  5. Rain Rain Polka
  6. Present Arms
  7. Hi-Le-Hi-Lo
  8. Schuhplattler Tanze

Side 2

  1. Under The Double Eagle
  2. Vilia
  3. Village Tavern Polka
  4. Kommt Ein Vogel Geflogen
  5. Blue Danube
  6. Bier Her, Bier Her
  7. Alte Kamaraden March

RCA Victor LP 1453: "Sour Kraut in Hi-Fi", 1957

Side 1

  1. Poet And Peasant Overture
  2. Ach Ich Bin So Müde Polka
  3. Hamburger Waltz
  4. Warum So Schnell Gallop
  5. Gesellschafts Lieder
  6. Hortensie Polka
  7. L'Estudiantina
  8. Wien-Wien

Side 2

  1. Tinker Polka
  2. Skater's Waltz
  3. Sobra Las Olas
  4. Springtime Polka
  5. Wiener Blut
  6. Tyroler Walzer
  7. Der Lustige Musikant Polka
  8. Drink Mein Liebling

RCA Victor also made a 45 rpm Extended Play version of Sour Kraut In Hi-Fi (EPS 1-1453) which has four selections:

  1. Wien-Wien
  2. Wiener Blut
  3. Der Lustige Musikant Polka
  4. Drink Mein Liebling

RCA Victor LPM-1721: "Music For Non-Thinkers", 1958

Side 1

  1. Second Hungarian Rhapsody
  2. Grad Aus Dem Wirthaus
  3. Katarina Polka
  4. In München Steht Ein Hofbrau Haus
  5. Jägermarsch
  6. Um Die Ecke Rum
  7. In Der Heimat Da Gibt's Ein Wiederseh'n
  8. Stars And Striped Forever

Side 2

  1. Raymond Overture
  2. Kommes Ein Birdie Yet
  3. Trinklieder
  4. Gruss Aus Minneapolis
  5. Der Kuss (II Bacio)
  6. Mädel Wasch Dich
  7. Rheinwein Polka
  8. Come Vere The Band Ist Playing

Read more about this topic:  Guckenheimer Sour Kraut Band

Famous quotes containing the word track:

    Commit a crime and the world is made of glass. Commit a crime, and it seems as if a coat of snow fell on the ground, such as reveals in the woods the track of every partridge and fox and squirrel and mole.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)