About Us

David and Cathy ...
David and Cathy …

  David will likely be the person who talks to you on the phone.  In addition, he does the actual audio and video transfer work.  Cathy administers our websites, manages our social media, writes our blog, performs many of our administrative tasks, handles our printing, and completes all our photographic and slide transfer work. 

    We are fortunate to have a studio in our home just north of Cincinnati, Ohio, fully equipped to perform audio, video, and photographic transfer work.  All work is performed in this studio.  We do not send any materials to outside sources for completion.  You can rest assured we treat all your priceless recordings and photographic materials with utmost care.

   

What Services Do We Offer?

Audio Transfer

We will transfer all your audio recordings to digital CD.

http://www.dlfmusic.com

 

LP Records, 45s, and 78s

Cassette and Reel to Reel Tapes

Personal Family Recordings

8 Track Tapes

Mini and Micro Cassette Tapes

16″ Transcription Records

Anything Else?  Ask Us!

Holiday Records and CDs

We stock and sell HUNDREDS of your favorite Christmas records which we have converted to CD.

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Looking for something you don’t see here?  Call us!

Video Transfers

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VHS tapes to DVD

8 mm video tapes to DVD

DV tapes to DVD

8mm film to DVD

Super 8 film to DVD

Anything else?  Ask us!

Voice Mail to CD

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Save your voice mail to CD or downloadable MP3

Photos to CD or DVD

Preserve family photos and slides by converting to digital.

Enjoy custom slide shows at your next family event (wedding, graduation, anniversary, birthday, Christmas)

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Photographic Prints (up to 12×17″)

Photographic Slides

Photographic Negatives

Advantix Film

DVD Slideshows

Photo Restoration

Bulk CD/DVD Duplication

We can duplicate any CD or DVD

Call us to discuss your project.

Personal Family Use

Fundraising Projects

Reunions

Parties

Weddings

Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas, Volume 5. 1965

     Along with Volume 6, it’s sister, Goodyear’s “Great Songs of Christmas” Volume 5 is one of the most popular Christmas releases we sell on our site (http://www.christmaslpstocd.com/).  In fact, we began our Christmas lp to cd business seven years ago when we saw how many Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas Volumes 5 and 6 that customers were sending our transfer business to have converted to cd.
     For its 1965 addition to the “Great Songs of Christmas” holiday series, Goodyear and Columbia Special Products produced nearly three million records.  As with years past, Goodyear’s retail stores sold every album. As with the previous four releases, Goodyear compiled a collection of wonderful performances of classic Christmas songs by popular artists of the era.
     Read below about the Goodyear “Great Songs of Christmas” Volume 5 collection as printed in 1965 on the back of the vinyl lp record album jacket.

Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas. Volume 5

     “Like the festivities, customs, and observances of the Christmas season, our album this year is a careful blend of old and new.  Many of the carols included here date back to the year 1500, and even earlier.  Still others were written within recent years and quickly have become widely-loved classics.
     One song is brand-new; it was commissioned by Goodyear especially for this album, and is our special Christmas gift to you.
     Thirteen of the twenty-one selections were recorded especially for us, and are available only on this album.
     When you have many, many stars participating in a project and they all are equally great, one customary way to list them is alphabetically.  That is what we have done here.
     When you create an enchanting starring role on Broadway, and appear regularly on all the big television programs, you become as famous as the “Carnival” girl — Anna Maria Alberghetti.
     For our album, she recorded two of the famous Burt carols.  Alfred S. Burt was a minister’s son, and a jazz musician, who each year wrote a song to celebrate Christmas — and sent it as his family’s Christmas card.  Burt died at the age of 34, just 11 years ago; and in the short time since his death, his legacy of songs have become more and more widely known.  They have the quality — not of modern music — but of traditional Christmas carols, and performers of the stature of the late Nat “King” Cole and Tennessee Ernie Ford have helped make them famous.  “Caroling, Caroling” is a happy, festive carol which reflects the happy sounds of Christmas, while the “Star Carol” tenderly tells the Christmas story.
     Diahann Caroll is the girl who so impressed Richard Rodgers with her talent that he wrote“No Strings” for her.  For us she recorded the ancient “Lo, How A Rose E’er Blooming” –a Twelfth Night carol which originated in Cologne around 1600.  The carol is typical of many which use a flower blooming in the snow as a symbol of the birth of Christ.  A version of this carol appears in the “Musae Sionae” collection of Michael Praetorius, dated 1609.
     Miss Carroll’s second selection is the beautiful Burt carol, “Some Children See Him.”
     Maurice Chevalier recorded for Goodyear in Paris two selections that give his fans a fresh, new facet of Chevalier’s talent.  The first is “Jolly Old St. Nicholas,” the delightful little song in which a youngster tells Santa what each one in the family dreams of getting, on Christmas morning.
     Chevalier’s second seletion is a unique, reverent recitation of “Silent Night” — two verses in English, one in French.
     “Silver Bells” is a modern Christmas classic.  It was written for the Bob Hope film, ” The Lemon Drop Kid,” which was adapted from a Damon Runyon story, and introduced in 1950.  This gala holiday song never has been so gaily sung as it is here, by Doris Day.
     “Golden Boy” Sammy Davis Jr. brings a special new excitement to our album series.  He recorded the song which was written especially for this album, and is heard here for the first time.  “It’s Christmas Time All Over the World” was written by Hugh Martin, who also wrote “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas,”, “The Trolley Song,” “Meet Me In St. Louis,” and numbers of other hits.
     Sammy Davis’ second selection is “Jingle Bells,” one of the relatively few traditional Christmas songs originating in America.  It was written by John Pierpont, in the early years of the 19th century.
     Danny Kaye took time to record two traditional carols for us.  There are many stories about the origins of “O Come All Ye Faithful”; one old Latin version is attributed to St. Bonaventura.  It was preserved in the collection “Cantus Diversi” by the English copyist John Francis Wade, dated 1741.  Wade attributed the Latin verses to John Reading, but many believe that Wade himself wrote both the words and music.  The English words we know were written by the Rev. Frederick Oakeley in 1841.
     Danny Kaye’s second carol is “The First Noel.”  The words and music first were printed in 1833 in a collection by William Sandys, but this lovely shepherd’s carol is at least 200 years older, and may have originated in France.
     Versatile Andre Kostelanetz is equally at home with opera, military marches and current popular tunes.  For us, he has given fresh interpretations to three traditional carols.  The words to “It Came Upon A Midnight Clear” were written by Rev. Edmund Hamilton Sears, and published in 1850.  Though Sears sent the lyrics to a friend to set to music, the melody most favored today is by Boston composer Richard Willis, who saw the lyrics in a later reprint.  This carol is another of the few traditional Christmas songs of American origin.
     The words to “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” were written in 1739 by Charles Wesley, brother of the founder of the Methodist Church.  The melody was written in 1840 by Felix Mendelssohn, as part of his “Cantata Festgesang.”  Fifteen years later Dr. W.H. Cummings, the organist of Waltham Abbey in England, combined the words and music, and the new carol was presented for the first time on Christmas Day.
     The French title of “Angels We Have Heard On High,” the third Kostelanetz selection, is “Les Anges dans nos Campagnes.” Most authorites feel it dates back to some time in the 18th century.
     Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme are that rare phenomenon, a husband and wife who both are stars of top stature.  And we are fortunate to have them both — exuberantly performing a rollicking, happy song of the season.
     “Sleigh Ride” was written by Leroy Anderson.  Since its introduction in 1948, it has been a favorite in the repertories of groups like the Boston Pops, and a popular hit as well.
     Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra perform a carol which might be called an instantaneous classic.  The tender “Little Drummer Boy” — which tells the story of the little boy who has no gifts to bring and therefore plays his drum for the newborn Jesus — has the sound of an ancient carol, but was introduced by the Harry Simeone Choir only in 1958, and has enjoyed fantastic popularity ever since.
     Mr. Ormandy’s second selection, “We Three Kings of Orient Are,” was written by Dr. J.H. Hopkins, Rector of Christ’s Church in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, in 1857.  This carol, which tells of the slow, patient caravan weaving its way over “field and mountain, following yonder star” has verses for each of the three kings: Melchior, Gaspar and Balthesar.
     Dinah Shore recorded her fun-with-music version of “The Twelve Days of Christmas” especially for Goodyear.  The carol is an old English song, long a special favorite among carollers’ it refers to the 12 days between Christmas and Epiphany — the actual time of the arrival of the three Kings.  It’s interesting to realize that our practice of gift-giving at Christmastime stems from the practice of gift-giving at Christmastime stems from the fact that the Wise Men brought gifts to the manger.  And the reason so many of the gifts in ‘Twelve Days’ are animals is in remembrance of the animals kneeling and being given the power of speech.
     Metropolitan Opera star Richard Tucker provides a very special musical experience in his recording for us of “The Lord’s Prayer.”  The music for this beautiful religious work is only 30 years old, and was written by Albert Hay Malotte, who died only last year.  It probably is the best selling religious work in the country.
     Mr. Tucker’s second selection is “O Little Town of Bethlehem.” The story of this carol is a particularly touching one.  A young rector, Philips Brooks, was inspired during a ride on horseback from Jerusalem to Bethlehem, in 1865, to write the verses.  Three years later, Louis Redner, the organist of Holy Trinity Church in Philadelphia, the church of which Brooks was the rector, wrote music for the verses — at the urging of the Sunday School children.  The story is that on Christmas Eve, Redner still did not have an idea for a melody, but inspiration struck, the carol was written on Christmas Eve, and performed for the first time the next morning.
     Andy Williams’ moving performance gives extra distinction to one of the loveliest carols of the season — “O Holy Night.”  Know also as “Cantique do Noel,” this carol was written by Adolphe Adam — the French composer who is best known for the ballet “Giselle.”
     And once again we are delighted to have this opportunity to wish you all the richness, the festivity, the reverence, and the warmth of the Holy season.
    

This blog is written and published by DLF Music Transfer, LLC  dba Christmas LPs to CD.  For more information on Christmas music or to purchase CDs of classic Christmas records on CD, please visit our website www.christmaslpstocd.com , call us 888-384-6970, or e-mail us david@dlfmusic.com.

Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas, Volume 4. 1964

    Goodyear’s “Great Songs of Christmas” Volume 4 released in 1964 marked the first of the series to be released in both mono and stereo versions.  Like the three prior albums, Goodyear’s “Great Songs of Christmas” Volume 4 featured classic Christmas favorites performed by popular artists of the time and was produced exclusively for them by Columbia Special Products. 

Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas, Volume 4



     This is Goodyear’s account of the creation of the “Great Songs of Christmas” Volume 4 as printed on the back of the vinyl record jacket.

     “Each year, as we put together an album of “The Great Songs of Christmas,” we are struck afresh by the wealth of beautiful music that has come down through the years to celebrate the joy, reverence and festivity of the Christmas season.
     Carols come from everywhere in the Christian world. Some of them are comparatively new; others trace back to the 12th century and even earlier.  It is not at all unusual for words to be written to a melody composed a hundred years earlier, or for a melody to be written years after the verse was set down — by a composer who was not even acquainted with the author of the poem.  In still other instances, words have been written in one place, melodies have been composed at a different time and place, and still a third person has matched words and melodies to each other.
     Some of the music we now associate with Christmas was not written originally for the holiday, but as general hymn music not pertaining to any particular portion of the Church calendar.
     Some of the music is joyful and vigorous.  Other carols are whimsical or tenderly reflective.  But whether old or new, and regardless of their origins or their mood, these carols eloquently and harmoniously add to our celebration of Christmas.
     This year’s album opens with an unusually rich and moving performance of Silent Night, recorded especially for us by Mary Martin.  Mary Martin fans, who are well aware of the wide range of her talents which have made her a constantly growing legend in the music world from “Annie Get Your Gun” to “Peter Pan” to “South Pacific” and “Sound of Music,” will experience still a new thrill when they hear Mary Martin here.
     It is amazing, too, to remember that Silent Night, which has become one of the best known and most loved of Christmas carols, was written hurriedly in an emergency, because the organ of a tiny, impoverished church in Bavaria broke down and could not be fixed in time for Christmas Eve.
     The words of O Little Town of Bethlehem were written by Phillips Brooks, a young Rector from the Holy Trinity Church of Philadelphia, inspired by his ride on horseback from Jerusalem to Bethlehem shortly before Christmas 1865.  The children of the Sunday School loved the poem and urged orgainst Lewis Redner to write music for it.  Inspiration evaded Redner until Christmas Eve, when the melody suddenly came to him.  The new carol was played for the delighted children the very next morning, Christmas Day 1868.
     It is performed here by Leonard Bernstein and the magnificent New York Philharmonic in their first joint recording session with the world-famous 375-voice Mormon Tabernacle Choir of Salt Lake City.
     Next, the Canadian choirboy who grew up to stardom on Broadway and in Hollywood — Robert Goulet — sings O Come All Ye Faithful.  This carol also is known as Adeste Fideles and the Portugese Hymn, though it has no association with Portugal.  The oldest known manuscript is dated 1751, and the words were translated into English in 1852; but the melody is far more ancient, and its origins are unknown.
     The words to Joy to the World were written more than 100 years before the music — in 1719, by Isaac Watts, as part of his “Psalms of David.”  Later they were set to a rather plain tune, and the song was not even thought of as a Christmas carol until in 1830 Lowell Mason matched the words to a melody taken from Handel’s “Messiah.”  The celebrated Philadelphia Orchestra, under the baton of Eugene Ormandy, gives us a beautiful performance of this Yuletide favorite.
     Good King Wenceslas was a ruler of Bohemia in the 10th century.  The words to this gay carol are credited to Dr. John Mason Neale, music advisor for the Swedish Lutheran Hymnal, and date back to 1582.  Percy Faith, who is famed for his beautiful arrangements, plays it for us here.
     Next the Brothers Four give us their tenderly moving performance of What Child Is This?, one of the best known and loved melodies in all folk literature, both in its original form as “Greensleeves” and as a Christmas carol.  The words were written around 1865 to a tune that has been traced as far back as 1642.
     Mahalia Jackson has won an international following for her devout and masterful performances of hymns and spirtuals.  We include two especially outstanding selections from her wide repertory — Holy, Holy, Holy!  and Abide With Me — even though they are not Christmas music, feeling that they will add to your enjoyment of the holy season.
     World-famed virtuoso Isaac Stern plays for us next the lovely Bach-Gounod Ave Maria.  His moving performance of the Schubert Ave Maria appears on our Album Three of “The Great Songs of Christmas.”
     Celebrating the lighter mood of Christmas, we open the second side of our album with a sweet and nostalgic arrangement of Victor Herbert’s Toyland, sung for us by the golden girl, Doris Day.
     The New Christy Minstrels are among the country’s favorite folk performers; they sing for us a folk version of the story of the nativity, the tender Shepherd Boy.
     The history of Deck the Hall With Boughs of Holly is unknown.  It is thought to predate the arrival of Christian missionaries in Britain.  Deck the Hall commemorates the old Welsh winter festival of Yule.  This gala performance is another of the gems produced by the joining of Bernstein, the New York Philharmonic, and the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
     Mitch Miller’s famous Group next sings The First Noel, one of the oldest carols known.  This simple folk melody was called the Shepherd’s Carol in England.  It was not published until 1833, when it became a world-wide favorite, but scholars believe the carol originated in France and may date back to 1500.
     Pianist Andre Previn took the time out from doing the movie sound track of “My Fair Lady” to record a unique arrangement of Hark! The Herald Angels Sing for us.
     This carol also has an intriguing story.  Felix Mendelssohn composed the melody in 1840 to celebrate Gutenberg’s invention of the printing press.  Eight years after Mendelssohn’s death, William H. Cummings, the organist of Waltham Abbey in England, combined this melody with the words of a hymn written over a hundred years earlier, in 1739, by Charles Wesley, the co-founder of Methodism; it was an immediate favorite.
     God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen was written by an anonymous poet about 1600 and immortalized in Dicken’s Christmas Carol.  The score is marked “giocoso,” and the Brothers Four do sing it joyfully, giving it the lilting folk flavor that is their trademark.
     The Coventry Carol wasn’t discovered and printed until 1825, but it dates back to the 15th century Corpus Christi pageant of the Coventry Guild of Shearmen and Tailors.  A haunting lullaby, this carol was sung in the pageant by the women of Bethlehem.  Mitch Miller and his Group perform it for us.
     The less well known O Come, Little Children is a charming, simple carol, very popular in Germany.  It was composed by Johann Abraham Peter Schultz, who studied with a pupil of a more famous Johann — Johann Sebastian Bach.  Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra give us this delightful rendition.
     Go Tell It on the Mountain, the final selection of the Brothers Four, is a popular American folk song, still another of the songs that tell the story of the birth of Jesus.
     The New Christy Minstrels appropriately end our fourth reverent and joyous celebration of the Christmas season with the novel and exuberant Sing Hosannah, Hallelujah, and the same heartfelt greeting we extend to you:  Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!”



Print Ad — Goodyear “Great Songs of Christmas” Volume 4. 1964 



This blog is written and published by DLF Music Transfer, LLC  dba Christmas LPs to CD.  For more information on Christmas music or to purchase CDs of classic Christmas records on CD, please visit our website www.christmaslpstocd.com , call us 888-384-6970, or e-mail us david@dlfmusic.com.