Subject: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 21 Apr 06 - 06:41 PM I came across a cassette today that I'm re-mixing and burning to CD. I taped it several years ago... some of my favorite popular music from the 50's, that I own as 45's. Whenever I see a collection of music from the 50's it's all Doris Day, Perry Como, Eddie Fisher, Mitch Miller, The MaGuire Sisters, Jo Stafford and company. But there was "another" 1950's music that shaped all the music that was to come. My Cassette collection is unique to me, and not representative of the Other 50's. But, it's a reminder of what a wide range of music was popular during that time. Here are a few examples from the Cassette: Hambone, by the Red Saunders orchestra.. the Bo Diddley beat before Bo DIddley claimed that he invented it... the vocals done by a group of black kids. Mockingbird, by the 4 Lads, before the backed Johnny Ray on Cry. This is an old black gospel song I still love. Sweet Georgia Brown by Hutch Davie... used as a theme song by the Harlem Globe Trotters for many years... lead instrument is someone whistling.. Marie by the Four Tunes Skokiann by the Bullawayo Sweet Rhythm Band. I weill never tire of this record Rock Island Line ... need I say who by? Same Old Tale That The Crow Told me by Johnny Horton Wildwood Flower by Tom and Jerry (a great instrumental version, not by the earlier version of Simon and Garfunkel.) Bluebirds Over The Ocean by Ersel Hickey (the shortest running time of any record ever to hit the top 40.) Swinging Shepherd Blues by Johnny Pate Quartet And then a slug of 45's by people like Ella Fitzgerald, Gerry Mulligan and Art Tatum And the seminal pre-Ventures guitar group recording of Guitar Boogie Shuffle by the Supersonics. The Ventures covered this recording a few years later, but couldn't touch the original, in my opinion. Not to excessively knock Doris Day, Perry Como and crew, but there was a whole underbelly of music bubbling up in the 50's. And what about National City by The Joyner Arkansas Junior High School Band (and old Sousa march). A JUNIOR highs school band that not only had a rock solid tromobne section, but BANJOS!. Anyone want to add their favorites.. I may well have the 45's.. Jerry Can you believe the 50's were 50 years ago? Weird, Man! |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: melodeonboy Date: 21 Apr 06 - 06:46 PM If you want to hear some really interesting, non-mainstream stuff (well, a lot of it is!) from the 50s, listen to Mark Lamar's "Shake, Rattle & Roll" programme on Radio 2 (Thursday evenings after Paul Jones' blues slot). It's a cracker! |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Azizi Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:03 PM melodeonboy, you said "It's a cracker!" The first thing that came in my mind was "Yeah, but does Polly want it? Sorry, that hit my funny bone. {and if you're not in the USA, will you even "get it". **** Jerry, is Lloyd Price's Personality" from the 1950s? [I think it was Lloyd Price] And who recorded "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes?" and "Lavender Blue", and Sixteen Candles"? Are these from the 1950s? **** Also, Jerry you wrote "Rock Island Line ... need I say who by?" I stand ready for ridicule. I don't know which song that is and who recorded it. I guess you don't mean the Big Rock Candy Mountain" And no, I'm not kidding-I guess I could cheat and google it, but could you let me and others who might not know who that song is by. Thanks. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Bill D Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:23 PM The Rock Island Line it is a mighty good road, The Rock Island Line it is the road to ride... The Weavers.. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: lesblank Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:24 PM I hesitate to do this -- giving away my age !!! The Platters did "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes", Sammy Turner did "Lavender Blue (Dilly Dilly)" and The Crests did "Sixteen Candles" - a group I sang with in the late fifties (The FeatherTones) did them all !! |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Azizi Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:28 PM Thanks, Bill D. Of course, I won't admit that I don't know who the Weavers are.. Opps! I just did. But-wait a minute...I remember reading another Mudcat thread that they recorded the Wimoweh version of the Lion Sleeps Tonight, right? And did I read that Pete Seeger was part of the Weavers? Am I remembering that thread correctly? |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: lesblank Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:29 PM Rock Island Line by the one and only -- Lonnie Donegan !!! |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Azizi Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:31 PM Well, alright, lesblank and "The FeatherTones group! So those really are 1950s songs? Well, maybe I redeemed myself a little by not knowing who the Weavers are but knowing those song titles if not the vocalists. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: kendall Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:31 PM The wayward wind Gogie Grant In My adobe hycienda Gene Autry Wild Goose Frankie Lane Wheel of Fortune ?? |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: GUEST,Cluin Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:33 PM Try the DoveSong site for some free MP3 downloads. Some great old recordings there made from old 45s and 78s. Country, Bluegrass, Pop, Gospel, etc... |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Azizi Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:34 PM Okay, you guys are confusing me. Is it Lonnie Donegan {whose name I've seen mentioned here but I haven't had the pleasure of hearing]or the Weavers-or maybe both of them recorded that Rock Island Line song?? |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:39 PM Hey, Azizi: Personality hit the top 40 in 1959, Smoke Gets In Your Eyes did the same in 1959, as did Lavnder Blue by Sammy Turner as did Sixteen Candles by the Crests. Rock Island Line by our own Lonnie Donegan hit the top 40 twice... in 1956 and 1961.. one of a very small handful of records that hit the top 40 twice, seperated by several years. (The Twist was another.) I never heard the Weaver's recording on national radio, although Goodnight Irene, Tzena, Tzena and Wemoweh all hit the top 40. Don't feel bad, Azizi... you may not have heard the Lonnie Donegan recording when it came out, you being so young and all. It's just us grizzeled old Fogies, and Fogettes that go back that far. :-) Jerry |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:42 PM Wheel of Fortune was by Kay Starr, Kendal.. one of the earliest multitrack vocal duets by the same singer (obviously not countin Mary Ford.) Jerry Yes, the Weavers and Lonnie Donegan both recorded Rock Island line, probably learned from the same source, Leadbelly. I don't know if the Weaver's version was released as a 45 (or 78) rpm. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: GUEST,weelittledrummer Date: 21 Apr 06 - 07:54 PM I hate to give away MY age, but my first recording of Smoke Gets in Your Eyes was by the Lew Stone Orchestra with vocal accompaniment, and it was a 78rpm BIG record on the Regal Zonophone label- a real record, not like those poncy little 45's! |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 21 Apr 06 - 08:00 PM The 50s - the days of Skiffle, Trad Jazz, and Rock and Roll. As well as other types of folk music. For me Perry Como and that lot never got a look in. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Amos Date: 21 Apr 06 - 08:15 PM Honeycomb, Wontcha Be My Baby You Butterfly! This Ole House Hot Diggety, Dog Diggety, Boom! Watcha Do to Me Green Door (I think) Hernandop's Hideaway Lollipop, Lollipop Love Forever True Love Letters in the Sand Blue Velvet? Just of the top of me 'ead. A |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: GUEST,Dale Date: 21 Apr 06 - 10:17 PM Two lines copied and pasted from Bill D's post, followed by MY opinion. The Rock Island Line it is a mighty good road, The Rock Island Line it is the road to ride... Johnny Cash! It all depends on your geography and your POV. The key word is opinion. Everyone has one; some are the same, some are different, none are wrong . . . or worth arguing about. (You could stick that in the Johnny Cash/icon thread, too.) |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: jimmyt Date: 21 Apr 06 - 10:36 PM Amos, my man, I think lolipop and Blue Velvet were solid 60s songs |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: jimmyt Date: 21 Apr 06 - 10:39 PM Kendall. I got together with our lead singer and Jayne a couple weeks ago and somehow we got started on those sort of "Western" pop songs and actually did a medley of Cool, COol Water, Mariah, THe Wayward WInd and ELpaso. SOrt of a nice little period of music. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 21 Apr 06 - 10:42 PM Lollipop by the Chordettes hit the top 40 in 1958. Blue Velvet, by Booby Vinton was a hit in 1963. The Moonglows did a wonderful rendition of Blue Velvet (far better than Bobby Vinton's in my opinion,) but it was an R & B hit, never cracking the more white-bread Billboard top 40. Hi, Jimmy... we're on your turf, now... Jerry |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 21 Apr 06 - 10:49 PM Booby Vinton? It was a typo. Honest.. Jerry |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: GUEST Date: 21 Apr 06 - 10:52 PM http://www.greatgrannygeek.com/asf.html "Granny" even calls this music of the "other" 50s. A bunch of WMA files on that page, with a link to a bunch more in real audio. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: jimmyt Date: 21 Apr 06 - 10:54 PM Swingin' SHepherb Blues. my how that takes me back!As a horn player that was one of the early songs to ad lib on when I was in HS stage band! I look back and still enjoy the simple chord progression and how it just lead you to learn Improvisation! Thanks jerry for the "Memory Bite." |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Bobert Date: 21 Apr 06 - 11:36 PM Hey, Chuck Berry!!!! Man, he was #1.... Then Buddy Holly, he was the nerdy Bob Dylan in the makin'... And mah man, Link Wray, was the heaviest of the heavy... And Smokey, ahhhh, could he ever smoke up the joint, 'er what??? But there was some stuff happenin' that a lot of folks weren't hearin' like Elmore Jame and Lightnin' Hopkins,,, Oh sure, the folkies were in tune with the Waevers, the Kingston Trio and Woody but even then there was a passin' of the torch to Pete Seegar and ina couple years to Bob Dylan... But it was also a time fir folks like the Belltones... Remember their 45??? On one side it was "Be Mine" an' on the other "I've Had It"???? Yeah, the 50's had a lot of demensions, not all that pop.... But, hey, them days were the pre-worship days unless it was Elvis or Fabian??? An' how about Smokey.... Oh, oh, oh......... |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Amos Date: 22 Apr 06 - 12:01 AM Well, tell the truth, Jimmy, the dividing line gets a little fuzzy from this distance!! How about "Midnight Gambler" -- I gambled for love, and I looo-oost -- the Purple People Eater, My Friend the Witch Doctor, and Around the World in Eighty Days? A |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 22 Apr 06 - 12:46 AM I can cheat here, Amos: I have the two Joel Whitburn books: Pop Memories covering 1890-1954 and Billboard Top 40 Hits, also by Joel Whitburn, from 1955 to 2000. Great bathroom reading... Jerry |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Roger the Skiffler Date: 22 Apr 06 - 05:04 AM As a fully paid up old fogey, Jerry, I agree, the 1950s were THE decade for pop music (and jazz and skiffle in the UK and the start of the folk revival in the UK that extended to the '60s)as far as I'm concerned, never got into pop music much after those 4 Liverpool guys turned up (though I liked their early Rock 'n' roll stuff). RtS (soggy with nostalgia) |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Mo the caller Date: 22 Apr 06 - 03:20 PM Noooo. Green door was 70s (maybe even 80s) Shakin Stevens anyway. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Mo the caller Date: 22 Apr 06 - 03:23 PM And Azizi, now we've explained who Lonnie Donegan was, how about sharing yout joke with those of us who didn't understand. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Amos Date: 22 Apr 06 - 03:38 PM Mo, thanks -- you just made me about ten or twenty years younger, which I really wanted! :D GREEN DOOR (Marvin Moore - Bob Davie) JIM LOWE (Dot 15486, 1956) Midnight, one more night without sleepin' Watchin' till the mornin' comes creepin' Green door, what's that secret you're keepin? There's an old piano And they play it hot behind the green door Don't know what they're doin' But they laugh a lot behind the green door Wish they'd let me in So I could find out what's behind the green door Knocked once, tried to tell them I'd been there Door slammed, hospitality's thin there Wonder just what's goin' on in there Saw an eyeball peepin' Through a smoky cloud behind the green door When I said "Joe sent me" Someone laughed out loud behind the green door All I want to do is join the happy crowd behind the green door ... |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Rasener Date: 22 Apr 06 - 04:21 PM These were absolute tops with me in the 50's Marty Wilde - Endless Sleep (one of my most favourite songs of that era), Donna, Teenager in Love, Bad Boy, Sea Of Love. Great British Artist. Gene Vincent - Be-Bop-A-Lula, Pistol Packin Momma (that was a cracker) Bobby Darin - Dream Lover and Bullmoose (that was a cracker as well) How many people realise that he recorded Rock Island Line in 1956? Neil Sedaka - I go Ape (Another cracker) Cliff Richard - Move It, High Class Baby, My Feet Hit The Ground, Living Doll, Travellin' Light, Dynamite Freddie Cannon = Talahassie Lassie (what a stonker was that), Way down Yonder In New Orleans, Palisades Park Little Richard - Lucille, Jenny Jenny, Keep A Knockin', Good Golly Miss Molly I guess you can see where I am coming from. Nothing will ever replace those Rock N Roll Days |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: John Hardly Date: 22 Apr 06 - 04:36 PM The Other 50s... Coleman Hawkins Miles Davis Johnny Hartman John Coltrane Sonny Rollins Thelonius Monk Clifford Brown Stan Getz Sons of the Pioneers Buck Owens and the Bakersfield sound. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Rasener Date: 22 Apr 06 - 04:56 PM Forgot What'd I Say - Ray Charles, Bobby Darin and Jerry Lee Lewis - I loved all 3 versions, but my favourite was Bobby Darin's Jerry you bugger, youve got me going now :-) |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Once Famous Date: 22 Apr 06 - 05:23 PM I am sure you do not have any of these from the '50s, but I do. You are missing a whole genre of American music. Honky Tonk blues by Hank Williams Long Black Veil by Lefty Frizzel Satisfied Mind by Porter Wagoner Tennesse Waltz by Pee Wee King Chattanooga shoe Shine boy by Red Foley Sixteen Tons by Tennesse Ernie Ford Singin' the Blues by Marty Robbins Walking the Floor over you by Ernest Tubb Home of the Blues by Johnny Cash Cry, Cry, Cry by Johnny Cash Wild Side of Life by Hank Thompson I'm Movin' On by Hank Snow Rumba Boogie by Hank snow Shitloads more, too numerous to mention. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: John on the Sunset Coast Date: 23 Apr 06 - 01:13 AM Ahh, the '50s! A period where music on the radio was very eclectic. On the same radio station one could hear sweet, popular music, rhythm and blues, country western, popular jazz, novelty songs, shown tunes and the remnants of big-band during the course of the day all interspersed. All of the lists take me back to Jr High (middle school to you) days, but I like Martin Gibsons c/w list best, overall. Jerry, your list contains Marie by the Four Tunes. That was the very first recording of that song I heard. Who knew who Tommy Dorsey was! They also recorded a song I liked even better, Toujour L'Amour, Toujour. I have not heard either in over 50 years, but I can still hear them in my head. Somebody posted the Weavers as having had popular hits with G'Nite Irene, On Top of Old Smokey and Tzena, Tzena, Tzena [about 1951]. Unfortunately, they had lush orchestrations by the Gordon Jenkins Orchestra; imagine what folk music might have been like if they had not had political problems [shudder & shake].----John |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: GUEST,Cluin Date: 23 Apr 06 - 02:48 AM Bo Diddley, Sandy Nelson, Link Wray, John Cage, Harry Belafonte, Lefty Frizzell, Ike Turner, Dave Brubeck... |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Mo the caller Date: 23 Apr 06 - 05:22 AM Sorry Amos, I missed it first time round as I was a studious, and religious teenager so my musical diet in the 50s was Anything by J.S. Bach Anything in the Baptist hymnal Any thing that was on at the Proms when something I knew was on with it (oh, the joys of standing in the front with the crowd and being part of it all) I did google Green door in case it was a cover version but the lyrics definitly said "Shakin Stevens" who I remember from when my children used to listen to Pop. (But I didn't know who else to Google, and I got a night club otherwise) |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Flash Company Date: 23 Apr 06 - 05:44 AM On the day that 'Rock Around the Clock' came out as a UK single, I walked into our local record shop and heard a recording of The Humphrey Lyttelton Band playing Bechet's 'Fish Seller'. I'm afraid Rock'n'roll never got a look in after that, and a long love affair with jazz and folk began right there. FC |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Rasener Date: 23 Apr 06 - 05:51 AM Green dor was a massive hit by Frankie Vaughan in the UK in the 50's |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Rasener Date: 23 Apr 06 - 05:52 AM oops hit the go too quickly Green Door |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: wilbyhillbilly Date: 23 Apr 06 - 06:40 AM Wayward Wind and River Of No Return--Tennessee Ernie Ford were a couple of my favourites which I remember trying to emulate in a local pub on a Friday night in the fifties, in between the skiffle sessions. Ahh sweet memories! |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 23 Apr 06 - 06:47 AM Hey, John on the Suncoast: Yeah. I started this thread, thinking about popular music of the 50's. Top 40 stuff. Of course, when you think of the 50's, who can forget Segovia? Tail fins on cars, poodle skirts, Segovia and Leonard Bernstein? The thing that was unique to me about popular music in the 50's was the sea change that was taking place where you could hear Gene Vincent followed by Patti Page. All the country music stuff (don't count on my not having a lot of that stuff, Martin because you'd be wrong) and Rhythm and Blues didn't get much top 40 pay with notable exceptions like Hank Williams and maybe Bob Wills, and R & B on seperate (but better than equal) radio stations mostly in big cities. How much Country (when it was Country and Western)and R & B you heard also depended on where you lived.. I grew up in Southern Wisconsin and heard the same mix of music as you did, Martin. Every morning, my parents would turn on the news on the local radio station and when the Hog Reports came on, I knew that it was time to get up. How many people remember waking up to someone one the radio calling "Soooooeeeeeee?" For those Catters who weren't around to hear the music in the fifties, the music may seem to have been all the American Grafitti/Happy Days soundtracks. That's all still great stuff to my ears, although I listen to it sparingly because I've heard it too much. Some other comments. Green Door was somewhat of a breakthrough because up until the fifties, most popular singers came through the big bands. I remember what a big deal they made about Frankie Lane never having taken voice lessons. Jim Lowe was a DJ (disc jockey.) He wasn't even a professional singer, for God's sake! And the ultimate affront to the musical establishment was Don Howard, who recorded Oh Happy Day (not the gospel song) in a record your own voiced booth and had a national hit despite a concerted effort by the music industry to squelch it. Most of the 50's music that was a little out of the mainstream has never been re-issued. I still have my 45 rpm of Oh Happy Day by Don Howard (and gospel version too) but it has never been re-issued (neither has Bluebirds over the Mountains or Hambone or much of the other 50's stuff.) I have Swinging Shepherd Blues too, Jimmy and I've never seen it included in re-issues. I also have Marie, John... a two CD set of the Four Tunes that was very hard to find. It also has their other major hit, I Understand. And then there's rhythm and blues. I don';t dare get in to that, or I'll spend the next 500 posts talking about it. Fred Parris and the Five Satins are singing in New Haven, CT next weekend, where they started. I'm hoping to go hear them.. Jerry |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Mr Happy Date: 23 Apr 06 - 06:49 AM Hi Jerry! [long time - no chat!] Thanks for posting those songs of yesteryear. Some of those numbers occur in my band's current repertoire, including 'Catch a falling star': Perry Como, loadsa Lonnie Donnegan stuff too! |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: kendall Date: 23 Apr 06 - 06:52 AM Oh yeah? Well, I remember the Lucky Strike hit parade with "Snookie" Lampson! |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 23 Apr 06 - 07:03 AM Man, You iz old, Kendall. I remember Snookie, too, except Lampson doesn't sound quite right... have to do some reseach and see if that was his last name... real close, if it wasn't. Maybe it was Lampton? There was a lot of almost folk music in the top 40 too... Mule Train, Call Of The Wild Goose, Wayward Wind, The call the Wind Maria, the Rusty Draper stuff, Sweet Moma, Tree Top High and You Must Come In At The Door by the Mariners, a couple of minor hits by Burl Ives, and several by Jimmie Rodgers (The Honeycomb kid) and the Weavers... and stuff by Tennessee Ernie Ford.. Jerry |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 23 Apr 06 - 07:06 AM Just checked... It was Snooky Lanson, Kendall... real close.. Snooky couldn't handle rock and roll... he made Pat Boone sound down and dirty in comparison. Jerry |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Rasener Date: 23 Apr 06 - 07:44 AM Ah Slim Dusty and A Pub With No Beer - once again another one of my favourites. Have the Four Aces been mentioned? I remember my first LP i bought - it was "Tops with Lonnie" It got totaly worn out. I was about 13 then. However, I always remember the Sleeve picture of Lonnie Donegan sitting on the floor with a spinning top. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: fat B****rd Date: 23 Apr 06 - 08:05 AM I came back from the annual (1956) sojourn in Sunderland having spent most of the time listening to my older cousins 78s. Therefore I saved my "Holiday Money" until we got back and my Dad took me to Harry Horner's in St. Peters Avenue, Cleethorpes where I bought "Lost John" by Lonnie Donegan and "Rock Around The Clock" by Bill Haley. He bought "It's Almost Tomorrow" by The Dream Weavers and Indian LOve call by Slim Whitman. Great thread, happy days, what ??. |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Azizi Date: 23 Apr 06 - 08:22 AM Hey Mo! Since I'm such as serious person, I couldn't remember what joke you said I made on this thread. I went back and read my previous posts here and found this: "melodeonboy, you said "It's a cracker!" The first thing that came in my mind was "Yeah, but does Polly want it?" -snip- I guess that the phrase "It's a cracker" is a colloquial expression meaning "It's great!" or [to use hip-hop phrasing] "It's off the hook!" or "It's the bomb!" But that phrase made me think of "Polly wanna cracker" -a saying that is discussed in this Mudcat thread that just happened to be started after I made that [weak] bit of witticism: Origin of Polly want a cracker And okay-I admit that I don't have much of a sense of humor-but that phrase did tickle my funny bone-and "sharing is caring" yaknowwhatImean? :o)) |
Subject: RE: The Other 50's From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 23 Apr 06 - 10:27 AM Been carrying on an e-mail conversation with someone I just spoke to by phone for the first time last night. Turns out he lives right here in Derby, where I live (a town of just 11,000 people.)I see that we're going to excite each other so much there'll be no sleeping. He is in a five man a capella rhythm and blues group. My wife and I are hoping to hear them this Saturday along with the Five Satins, The Jive Five, The Emotions and the Chiffons. We're already talking about doing a workshop together that I'd lead with the Gospel Messengers and his group, The Sentinels. It would be fascinating to me to talk about and sing examples of how four part black church harmony evolved when it moved out to the street corner. HELLO NOMAD... tentative title, Church and Street Corner Harmonies Jerry |
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