CD 1: 
                  1. Puffin' Billy (Children's Favourites Theme), The Melodi Light 
                  Orchestra 
                  2. The Laughing Policeman, Charles Penrose 
                  3. The Song Of The Prune, Frank Crumit 
                  4. The Wedding Of The Painted Doll, Layton & Johnstone 
                  5. Barnacle Bill The Sailor, Frank Luther & Carson Robison 
                  
                  6. Hansel And Gretel Dance Duet, Manchester Children s Choir 
                  
                  7. The Runaway Train, Vernon Dalhart 
                  8. The Teddy Bears' Picnic, Henry Hall 
                  9. Who's Afraid Of The Big Bad Wolf?, Henry Hall 
                  10. The Old Sow, Leslie Sarony 
                  11. Grandfather's Clock, Harold Williams 
                  12. On The Good Ship Lollipop, Shirley Temple 
                  13. I'm Popeye The Sailorman, Billy Costello 
                  14. Ragtime Cowboy Joe, The Hill Billies 
                  15. The Owl And The Pussy Cat, Stuart Robertson 
                  16. Heigh-Ho, The Seven Dwarfs 
                  17. Balloons, The Ovaltineys & Monte Rey 
                  18. The Dicky Bird Hop, Gracie Fields 
                  19. The Bee Song, Arthur Askey 
                  20. Three Little Fishes, Maurice Denham 
                  21. We're Off To See The Wizard, The Ken Darby Singers 
                  22. Run, Rabbit, Run, Flanagan & Allen 
                  23. The Grasshoppers' Dance, Alfredo Campoli 
                  24. Christopher Robin At Buckingham Palace, Ann Stephens 
                  25. Vespers: Christopher Robin Is Saying His Prayers, Ann Stephens 
                  
                  26. Tubby The Tuba, Danny Kaye 
                  CD 2: 
                  1. Swinging On A Star, Bing Crosby 
                  2. Big Rock Candy Mountain, Burl Ives 
                  3. Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah, James Baskett 
                  4. The Woody Woodpecker Song, Danny Kaye & The Andrews Sisters 
                  
                  5. Me And My Teddy Bear, Rosemary Clooney 
                  6. The Thing, Phil Harris 
                  7. I Taut I Taw A Puddy Tat, Mel Blanc 
                  8. The Ugly Duckling, Danny Kaye 
                  9. The King's New Clothes, Danny Kaye 
                  10. Little Red Monkey, Joy Nicholls, Jimmy Edwards & Jack 
                  Bentley 
                  11. How Much Is That Doggie In The Window? Patti Page 
                  12. He's A Tramp, Peggy Lee 
                  13. The Happy Wanderer, The Obernkirchen Children's Choir 
                  14. The Little Shoemaker, Petula Clark 
                  15. Gilly Gilly Ossenfeffer Katzenellen Bogen By The Sea, Max 
                  Bygraves 
                  16. Coronation Scot, Sidney Torch 
                  17. In The Middle Of The House, Alma Cogan 
                  18. Nellie The Elephant, Mandy Miller 
                  19. Little White Bull, Tommy Steele 
                  20. Sparky's Magic Piano, Henry Blair 
                  21. Little Man, You've Had A Busy Day, Paul Robeson 
                  22. Goodnight, Children, Everywhere, Vera Lynn 
                  
                    
                  If you want to revisit your childhood – or someone’s childhood 
                  if not your own – you might do worse than consider this packed 
                  twofer of Children’s Favourites. It’s something of a mixed salad 
                  of things, exclusively Anglo-American, and spanning a period 
                  of over three decades from 1926 to 1959. 
                    
                  A few highlights should give the flavour of what’s on offer. 
                  Charlie Penrose’s The Laughing Policeman was always a 
                  firm favourite but it’s probably not as well remembered that 
                  there was a vogue for laughing songs that went back almost to 
                  the earliest days of recorded history. Frank Luther and Vernon 
                  Dalhart feature nicely – the latter was a would-be opera singer 
                  christened Marion T Slaughter – and they singly or together 
                  offer plenty of fun. The Runaway Train is a deserved 
                  classic of course. Henry Hall’s Big Bad Wolf resounds 
                  down the ages but I wonder if Leslie Sarony’s compendium of 
                  pig’s farts ever made it to the BBC’s transmitters. The piece 
                  is called The Old Sow. 
                    
                  That splendid singer Harold Williams essays Grandfather’s 
                  Clock whilst the patrician tones of Stuart Robertson are 
                  to be heard in The Owl and the Pussy Cat – probably more 
                  for adults really, as are the two AA Milne pieces sung by nine 
                  year old Anne Stephens. Talking of whom I’m sure quite a few 
                  adults got thoroughly sick of listening to Arthur Askey’s The 
                  Bee Song, but remember that its composer was actually Kenneth 
                  Blain, who plays the piano for Askey in this famous disc from 
                  1938. We hear a swinging arrangement – very much of its time 
                  – in the case of Three Little Fishes, where Maurice Denham 
                  is supported by the agile Brain Lawrence and his Lansdowne Orchestra. 
                  Flanagan and Allen have to be here and they are – it’s still 
                  a great song – and so is Campoli in a pre-War light frame of 
                  mind. 
                    
                  Tubby the Tuba is here and he inaugurates a largely American 
                  domiciled second disc. Andy Williams is with his brothers supporting 
                  Der Bingle in Swinging on a Star which he sings far less 
                  snazzily than Frank Sinatra. Cartoon and film items start to 
                  appear around the end of the War, and increasingly so did whimsical 
                  conjunctions. I must congratulate the programming maestro who 
                  set down Coronation Scot next to In the middle of 
                  the house; in the latter a train crashes straight through 
                  the house. EMI released a disc of all the Sparky tracks back 
                  in 1992. Here we have the most famous, Sparky’s Magic Piano 
                  with its talking piano. And so, gently, slowly we wind down 
                  with two final tracks from Robeson and Vera Lynn, ushering in 
                  a pleasing sunset glow over these childhood memories. 
                    
                  Jonathan Woolf 
                see also 
                  review by Bob Briggs