Skip to the content

Skip to main content
Collections Menu
Large format image
Barney's Tune / How Deep is the Ocean
Large format image

Barney's Tune / How Deep is the Ocean

Performing artist Dave Lewis
Record company Northgate
Songwriter Irving Berlin
Date1959
Mediumpolyvinyl chloride
DimensionsOverall (Diameter): 6 7/8 in. (17.463 cm)
Credit LineMoPOP permanent collection
Object number1997.342.211
Text Entries

This single, produced by Northgate Records, features an original song, “Barney’s Tune,” by Dave Lewis on Side A. “How Deep is the Ocean” on Side B, was written by Irving Berlin in 1932.

Although he was born in Texas, Dave Lewis (1938-1998) grew up in Bremerton and then Seattle after his family moved to the area for work in the 1940s. Both of Lewis’s parents were musicians, and his father even gave music lessons to a teenage Quincy Jones (b. 1933), but Lewis took most of his inspiration from his mother’s piano playing and the music of Ray Charles (1930-2004), who he would sneak into nightclubs to see perform. Lewis’s first band was the Five Checks, a Doo-Wop vocal group, which he helped create to perform in the Edmond Meany Junior High talent show. The group was popular enough that they continued to perform at school pep rallies and other assemblies.

Moving on from the Five Checks, in 1955 Lewis formed and led the Dave Lewis Combo, a Rhythm and Blues band which began playing small venues but eventually became popular enough to help desegregate the Seattle music scene. At the time, Seattle musicians were represented either by AFM Local No. 76 if they were white, or AFM Local No. 493 if they were black. The white union, No. 76, had historically laid claim to venues in downtown Seattle to the exclusion of black musicians in No. 493, but the popularity of the Dave Lewis Combo led to them booking events in ‘white’ venues. When the band eventually booked a show at a premier venue, Parker’s Ballroom, in 1956, No. 76 union leaders threatened to boycott and picket the venue unless the show was canceled. The ballroom’s manager refused to cancel and responded with his own threat to never book No. 76 musicians again if the union representatives did not drop the issue. Ultimately, the Dave Lewis Combo was able to perform at Parker’s Ballroom and within two years the two unions merged into one, integrated union.

By 1962 Lewis had dissolved the Dave Lewis Combo and started a new band, the Dave Lewis Trio, with Jerry Allen (b. unknown) and Don “Candido” Mallory (b. unknown). The group was more oriented toward playing at nightclubs than touring, but they produced several regional hits including “J.A.J”, “Little Green Thing” and “David’s Mood (Part 2)”.

7” phonograph record with light blue label. Side A text reads: “Northgate / Seattle, Wash. / Dvorak Music BMI / Instrumental / 45-1001 / 2:40 / Barney’s Tune / (D. Lewis) / Dave Lewis” Red stamp reads: “Plug Side” Side B text reads: “Northgate / Seattle, Wash. / Irving Berlin Music Corp. ASCAP / Instrumental / 45-1002 / 2:37 / How Deep Is the Ocean / (Berlin) / Dave Lewis”
CopyrightThis Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). For more information, see http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
On View
Not on view
Dave Lewis
Date: 1962
Medium: polyvinyl chloride; paper (fiber product); ink
Object number: 1997.342.210.A,.B
Large format image
Dave Lewis
Date: 1964
Medium: polyvinyl chloride; paper (fiber product); ink
Object number: 1997.342.631.A,.B
Large format image
Dave Lewis
Date: September 17, 1964
Medium: cardboard; paper (fiber products); ink; plastic
Object number: 2001.342.1
Large format image
Dave Lewis
Date: September 17, 1964
Medium: cardboard; paper (fiber products); ink; plastic
Object number: 2001.342.2
Large format image
Dave Lewis Combo
Date: c. 1964
Medium: paper (fiber product); ink
Object number: 1997.342.561
Dave Lewis
Date: c. 1964
Medium: paper (fiber product); ink
Object number: 2000.301.1
The Message (Single) by Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five
Grandmaster Flash and The Furious 5
Date: July 1, 1982
Medium: polyvinyl chloride; paper (fiber product); ink
Object number: 1998.441.10.A,.B
Spoonin Rap / Spoonin Rap
Spoonie Gee
Date: 1979
Medium: polyvinyl chloride; paper (fiber product); ink
Object number: 2001.235.8.A,.B
Zulu Nation Throw Down
Afrika Bambaataa
Date: 1980
Medium: polyvinyl chloride; paper (fiber product); ink
Object number: 2001.482.23a
TICKETS