Ilse weinberger biography

          Read Ilse Weinberger;Glenn Miller's bio and find out more about Ilse Weinberger;Glenn Miller's songs, albums, and chart history.!

          German “Ilse Weinberger” serves as announcer with Glenn Miller, at times, answering her in pretty bad German, but mostly speaking in English.

        1. German “Ilse Weinberger” serves as announcer with Glenn Miller, at times, answering her in pretty bad German, but mostly speaking in English.
        2. Ilse Weinberger is on Facebook.
        3. Read Ilse Weinberger;Glenn Miller's bio and find out more about Ilse Weinberger;Glenn Miller's songs, albums, and chart history.
        4. Ilse Weinberger (born Wetzler) was born on month day Siblings.
        5. Ilse Wagner was born in Hamburg, Germany to a Jewish family on 26 January Her mother was Johanna Wagner née Goldstein (b.
        6. Glenn Miller discography

          Year Single Peak chart position Total
          weeks
          charted Background U.S.[1][2]1938 "My Reverie" 11 3

          Recorded September 27, 1938, with vocals by Ray Eberle, "My Reverie" was the first release by the reformed Glenn Miller Orchestra on Victor Bluebird.

          Larry Clinton released a popular version of it the same year with Bea Wain on vocals, writing lyrics to Claude DeBussy's Reverie.[3] According to George Simon, the original arrangement was to be an instrumental, but a producer at RCA Victor wanted Glenn Miller to play a solo trombone a'la Tommy Dorsey, with a Ray Eberle vocal.[4] The B side was "King Porter Stomp".

          1939 "Moonlight Serenade" 3 15

          Instrumental. Miller's theme song, and a favorite of the swing era. Composed by Miller himself, as "Now I Lay Me Down to Weep", out of a Joseph Schillinger exercise, it was number three for 1 week.

          "Sunrise Serenade" 7 11

          Ins