Jazzdigger.com Home Shop at Amazon.com!
Enter Keywords:

Powered by Arc Spider - Smart Product Search Services 
Privacy Statement

NOTICE : All prices, availability, and specifications are subject to verification by Amazon.com.

Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2008 Dominant Systems Corporation
info@jazzdigger.com
Last Modified : 12-29-2008

More Tea, Vicar?


JazzDigger Home > E - Jazz Artists > Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass > Item 191

View Previous Product in our Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass Store      View Next Product in our Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass Store

Click here to buy More Tea, Vicar? by  Doris Day;Mills Bros;Nat King Cole;Duke Ellington;Ella Fitzgerald;and others . More Tea, Vicar?
by Doris Day;Mills Bros;Nat King Cole;Duke Ellington;Ella Fitzgerald;and others
Sales Rank: 410314
0.0 out of 5 stars
Price:$16.99




Album Details
1. Everything Stops For Tea - Jack Buchanan
2. Tea for Two - Doris Day
3. Put Another Chair at the Table - Mills Bros.
4. Rockin' Chair - Paul Robeson
5. If I Knew You Were Coming I'd've Baked a Cake - Eilleen Barton
6. Shortnin' Bread - Andrews Sisters
7. Home Cookin' - Bob Hope & Margaret Whiting
8. When I Take My Sugar to Tea - Nat King Cole
9. The Five O'Clock Whistle - Harry Roy & His Band
10. Teddy Bears' Picnic - Henry Hall
11. A Picnic For Two - Fred Waring & The Pennsylvanians
12. Tater Pie - Evelyn Knight & Red Foley
13. A Nice Cup of Tea - Sam Costa
14. You're the Cream in My Coffee - Nat King Cole
15. Coffee in the Morning and Kisses in The Night - George Scott-Wood
16. Let's Have Another Cup of Coffee - Fred Waring & The Pennsylvanians
17. Just a Sittin' and a Rockin' - Duke Ellington
18. Ma, I Miss Your Apple Pie - RAOC Blue Rockets
19. In a Little Gypsy Tea-Room - George Scott-Wood
20. The Coffee Song - Edmundo Ros
See all 22 tracks on this disc


More Tea, Vicar? - Gentle teatime classics

Music on the theme of tea, with a hint of coffee thrown in for those who like their caffeine from beans, not leaves! A light-hearted brew of old favourites and familiar songs for tongue in cheek listening while sipping the glorious nectar which is tea!

'Give me tea sweet and weak. Bring me the Times and do not speak' - A.P. Herbert

We British have been drinking tea for more than 350 years. It is a pastime that has become closely identified with us. According to national statistics, every man, woman and child consumes at least four cups a day, and there is almost no occasion where a nice cup of tea is not appropriate. But tea has been enjoyed universally for more than four thousand years. So what are its origins and how did it become the world's favourite drink?

According to Chinese mythology, in 2737 BC the Chinese Emperor, Shen Nung, who was also a scholar and an herbalist, was sitting beneath a tree whilst his servant boiled drinking water. A leaf fell from a tree and dropped into the water and Shen Nung decided to try the brew. That tree was of a wild tea variety. From earliest times, tea was renowned for its properties as a healthy, refreshing drink. By the time of the Tang Dynasty (618 - 906 AD), tea had become China's national drink and the word ch'a was used to describe tea. As Buddhist priests travelled around China and Japan, the spread and the cultivation of tea followed them.

The first mention of tea outside of China and Japan is attributed to the Arabs in 850 AD and it was they who were reputed to have brought it to Europe via Venice in the middle of the sixteenth century. However, it was the Portuguese and the Dutch who developed a thriving sea tea trade in Europe. By 1610, there were regular shipments of tea to ports in France, Holland and the Baltic coast. England entered the tea trade via the East India Company in the mid to late 17th century.

As the popularity of tea spread here, it also became an essential part of people's entertainment outside of the home. Tea gardens opened all over the country, with tea being served as the high point of the afternoon. Dancing was also included as part of the entertainment, and so the 'tea dance' arrived and was to remain fashionable up until the Second World War when it lost its wide popularity. However, 'tea dances' have survived and are still held today.

The very English custom of taking afternoon tea was started by Anna, the Seventh Duchess of Bedford, in the early 1800s. Around the same time, another aristocrat initiated a long lasting contribution to the British tea drinking tradition. Lord John Sandwich gave his name to what has become a mainstay of British cuisine.

The tea bag, invented in America in 1908, would revolutionise the tea industry and today 82% of all tea sold in the UK is in tea-bag form.

On our CD of popular songs associated with tea, both as a drink and a relaxing pastime, we have not overlooked the dedicated coffee drinkers amongst us. So included on the menu are several inviting, musically nostalgic varieties. Whatever your choice is, pour another cuppa and enjoy our refreshing Collection.


Back To Top


More Tea, Vicar?
by Doris Day;Mills Bros;Nat King Cole;Duke Ellington;Ella Fitzgerald;and others
Price:$16.99




Jazzdigger.com Home

JazzDigger Home > E - Jazz Artists > Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass > Item 191

View Previous Product in our Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass Store      View Next Product in our Ella Fitzgerald & Joe Pass Store

Search For Products:

Powered by Arc Spider - Smart Shopping Search Engine   
Privacy Statement

Search:
Keywords:
In Association with Amazon.com
NOTICE: All product prices, availability, and specifications
are subject to verification by their respective retailers.


Copyright © 2008 Dominant Systems Corporation
info@jazzdigger.com         Privacy Policy
Last Modified : 12-29-2008