Description: Rocking the Old Folks at Home, Sports Music, Stadium Organ Music, license music, music licensing and royalty free background music
Keywords: Rocking the Old Folks at Home, license music, music licensing, royalty free background music, commercial stock music, background music, royalty-free stock music, corporate music, stock music downloads, music for film, flash music loops, royalty free sounds, royalty free music, royalty free mp3, websites music, flash music, stock music sound effects, stock music, royalty free sound, royalty-free song, music clips, download music, royalty free music downloads, stock music clips, television music, buyout music, royalty-free songs, download stock music, cheap production music, website music, producteur musique amerique, list of production music libraries, free instrumental music, Farfisa Vox Conn Selmer Rodgers Lowery Hammond Allen Walker Compton Wicks Marshall & Ogletree Phoenix Makin Organs Wyvern Rock Organ Sport retro nostalgia Chicago Cubs, put an organ in Wrigley Field as an experiment in 1941 for two games Ebbets Field, home of the Brooklyn Dodgers, hired baseball's first full-time organist, Gladys Gooding, the following year, who eventually gained so much fame as to become the punchline of a joke: "Who played every game last year for the Dodgers without making an error?" Over the years, many ballparks caught on to the trend, and many organists became well-known and associated with their parks or signature tunes: Eddie Layton playing at Yankee Stadium for over 50 years, Jane Jarvis greeting the New York Mets at Shea Stadium with their club song "Meet the Mets", Ernie Hays serenading a Busch Memorial Stadium crowd with "Here Comes the King", Nancy Bea as the organist for the Dodgers, Chicago favorite Nancy Faust urging Chicago White Sox fans to tell an opposing pitcher or a Pale Hose home run to "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye" Today fans have requests on Twitter
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