Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Lyons and Yosco

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Genres
  
Vaudeville, Ragtime

Years active
  
early 1900s

Occupation(s)
  
musicians, composers

Genre
  
Ragtime

Lyons and Yosco httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumba

Birth name
  
Dominick George Martoccio and Rocco Giuseppe Iosco

Instruments
  
harp, voice and mandolin

Record labels
  
Columbia Records, Victor Talking Machine Company

George Lyons and Bob Yosco (Lyons and Yosco) were successful performers on Vaudeville. They were called in one account "the finest pair of Italian street musicians playing in the Vaudeville ranks." They toured the United States from 1909 into 1923, doing a musical and comedy act. The News Journal of Wilmington, Delaware described their performance, saying they were "the best vocalists and instrumentalists of the street variety on the stage, proved intensely interesting, while their droll comedy kept the audience laughing much of the time."

Contents

They were also successful composers of popular music, including ragtime. One of their best known works was the million-selling ragtime piece, "Spaghetti Rag" which was notably popular during the ragtime revival in the 1950s. Their compositions were recorded by performers for Victor Records and Columbia Records.

George Lyons

George Lyons was the stage name for Dominick George Martoccio (b. 26 June 1889, New York City - d. 31 January 1958, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida). In his life he was a Vaudeville performer, a composer, and a movie actor. He was described by the Los Angeles Herald as "a premier harpist, playing most every kind of music, including ragtime, on his instrument." Prior to his partnership with Bob Yosco, he worked in 1908 and 1909 with Eddie Parks, a singer and dancer, and when they parted he seems to have kept the basic act to use with Yosco. He starred in a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer short movie, George Lyons, The Singing Harpist in 1929, performing four songs. He also acted in the MGM movies Hylton and His Band (1937) and In the Spotlight (1935).

Bob Yosco

Robert Joseph Yosco, (b. 1874, Castelmezzano, Italy - d. 1942, Brooklyn, New York) was born Rocco Giuseppe Iosco. He was a Vaudeville perfomer, a comedian, composer, singer and actor, and was reported by newspaper accounts to play mandolin, violin and cello. The Los Angeles Herald called his cello and mandolin playing "of high order", but was less impressed with his singing. The Harrisburg Telegraph had a different opinion, saying they "took their audience by storm with their vocal duets. They were applauded several times for encores. They could sing in a real way and that is half of any act."

Lawrence Yosco

Robert's brother Lawrence Yosco was also involved in music, founding the Lawrence Yosco Manufacturing Company of New York, making banjos and mandolins. He also toured the country as a guitar and banjo soloist.

Million-selling rags

According to David A. Jasen, in his book Ragtime gems: original sheet music for 25 ragtime classics, sheet music for ragtime songs sometimes sold a million copies (the standard of today's Platinum Record for recorded music). It tended not to happen as quickly as with music sales today, taking as long as 20 years for the hit Maple Leaf Rag, but it did happen. "Spaghetti Rag" was part of a list of million-selling songs that included Scott Joplin's "Maple Leaf Rag" and Charles L. Johnson's "Dill Pickles Rag".

George Lyons and Bob Yosco

  • Tony Rag, The Cowboy Whop (1910)
  • Spaghetti Rag (1910)
  • A different version was published in 1950, with words added by Dick Rogers.
  • Mardi Gras Rag (1914)
  • I'm Going Back To Dixie and You (1914)
  • Don't Worry, Dearie (1917)
  • Macaroni Joe (1917)
  • The Road for You and Me (1917)
  • Santa Rosa Rose (1918)
  • The Liberty Boys are Coming (1918) (manuscript)
  • Sweet Anna Marie (1919)
  • The Toast of the USA (1919)
  • Come Along and Hum Along With Me (1920)
  • Italy (1921)
  • Main Street (c. 1921)
  • It Must Be Someone Like You (c. 1921)
  • There's Only One Pal, After All (c. 1921)
  • I Miss You (1922)
  • Sometime in Junetime (1923)
  • Bob Yosco

  • What's the Use of Trying to Forget the One You Love (1910)
  • The Old Love is the Best Love After All (1913)
  • I'm a Happy Goldoliero (1929
  • References

    Lyons and Yosco Wikipedia