Mike Riley | |
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Born | January 5, 1904 |
Died | September 2, 1984 (aged 80) Redondo Beach, California, U.S. |
Genres | Jazz |
Instruments | Trombone |
Mike Riley (January 5, 1904 – September 2, 1984)[1] was an American jazz trombonist and songwriter. He is best known for co-writing the 1935 song "The Music Goes Round and Round", one of the biggest hits of that year.[2]
If we really wanted to be nasty about it, we could say that this Farley-Riley sequence is the best thing in the new picture. At least it makes no pretense of being anything but a musical interlude dragged in by the scruff of its neck to illustrate the devastating effect upon the public of some anonymous young busybody's question about the workings of a three-valve sax horn. Like the "March of Time," it preserves in film the stark record of a social phenomenon—in this case, the conversion of a song hit into a plague, like Japanese beetles or chain letters.