Advertising jingle with a
lively tune. It has been heard for decades on New
Zealand TV, sung by two dancing cartoon men, Ches, a
dairy farmer, and Dale, a cheese factory worker.
"We are the
blokes from down on the farm,
We really know our cheese
There's much better value in Chesdale,
It never fails to please.
Chesdale,
Slices thinly
Never crumbles,
Theres no waste.
And boy, it's got a mighty taste!
Chesdale cheese!"
It's finest cheddar
Made better!
Here is the score of the original tune, supplied by
its composer Terry Gray.
Notice that the Yoemen changed "the boys" to "the
blokes" and changed the tune in the "mighty taste"
line.
Cheese at Mangamahu
When
I was a boy at Mangamahu, in the 1940s, I used to go
across to the Mangamahu Store and watch Bob Cook cutting
up the cheese for the grocery orders that the farmers had
telephoned in on the spasm.
The
store
had no fridge, and the cheese was in huge ten pound
wheels, hard and dry on the outside, and
crumbly when he cut it into wedge-shaped slices. It
quickly went stale in the farmhouse cupboards.
Butland's
Cheese
Sir
Jack Richard Butland KBE
(1896-1982), pioneer food manufacturer and
philanthropist
Jack
Butland was a businessman who tackled this hard cheese
problem in the 1920s by adding additives. He was born in
Hokitika (c 1890?) and entered the workforce as a bank
clerk. Later he worked as a salesman for a rubber
company and then decided to go into business in Auckland
as an agent for imported foodstuffs. He founded NZ
Cheese Ltd in 1926 and finally discovered that adding
small amounts of sodium or potassium phosphate would
make the cheese smooth textured, like peanut butter. It
went on sale as Chesdale Cheese in 1929.
Butland would have used the discoveries of earlier food
scientists. In 1911 Walter Gerber and Fritz Stettler had
made processed cheese in Switzerland by shredding
Emmentaler cheese and heating it with sodium citrate to
preserve it when exported to hot countries. In the same
era James Kraft in the USA experimented with melting
Cheddar cheese and stirring it to form a homogenous mass
that was then packaged in glass jars. In 1921 George
Garstin, of Sidney NY, discovered how cheese could be
emulsified with sodium phosphate.
c. 1930
1940
1944
Pixie
Cheese
Also
in 1929, Pixie Cheese was manufactured in NZ as a
competitor to Chesdale. Adverts for it can be found in
newspapers from 1929 to 1942. Apparently it was made by
Renco in Eltham for Joseph Nathan & Co in Wellington.
In
later times
With
the coming of refrigerators, plastic shrink wrap,
supermarkets, and chemophobia, NZers have turned to big
1kg blocks of cheddar -"Mild, Colby, and Tasty" with no
chemical additives - but Chesdale is still popular where
household fridges are rare, for picnic lunches and Army
ration packs in NZ, or for export to tropical countries.
Sodium citrate is used as an emulisifer, and sorbic acid
is used as a preservative.
Ches
and
Dale were drawn for static advertisements by Don
Couldrey in the early 1960s. Nobby
Clark, a 1960s graphic designer, illustrator and
artist who had migrated out from England in 1952,
says he was working on animated TV advertisements
in Auckland at the time, and produced story boards
for the Chesdale cheese adverts. And
in 1968 Butland's advertising agency, Dormer Beck,
commissioned a black and white tv commercial for
Chesdale. The advert's producer was Sam Gardiner
and Robert Jenkins wrote the words of the jingle.
Ches
'n Dale
from a drawing by Brent Chambers in
"The Great Kiwi Sandwich" Penguin
Books (NZ) 2000
The
lyrics were set to music by Terry Gray, who later
became director of music for TVNZ. The song was
recorded by an Auckland folk group, The Yeomen, in
Mascot Studios in Ponsonby, Auckland.
The Ches n Dale cartooning was created at Sam Harvey
Animations, the Auckland cartooning studio of
Englishman Sam Harvey who later created the Goodnight
Kiwi cartoon on TV2.
Included in the Ches n Dale cartooning team were
Dick Frizzell and John Ewing. Dick Frizzell later
became an iconic New Zealand "Kiwiana" artist while
John Ewing, a former Disney cartoonist, formed his
own company where he trained many animators, some of
whom went on to work at Peter Jackson's Weta
Studios.
Some
of this information was supplied in Feb 2001 by
Terry Gray, who for the past few years has lived in
Wanganui. Mr Gray says he doesn't remember the
Chesdale song as anything special; they were making
lots of commercials at the time. He also noted that
although the song is registered with APRA as his, he
has not received any royalties for its use in recent
times! A music publisher - Media Administration
Services - apparently negotiates the mechanical
rights to the work.
Ches
and Dale were retired from television advertising in
about 1975.
The
Yeomen
They
consisted of Brian Borland, Gordon Hubbard, Peter
Carter. For a while I had the Yeoman confused on
this webpage with a similar group at the time, the
Convairs. My apologies.
In Oct 2005, Brian Borland of the Yeomen kindly
forwarded this information.
"My
name is Brian Borland. All members of the trio
played on the track but the voices were Gordon
Hubbard and myself. Gordon played 6 string
Guitar, Peter Carter played tenor guitar and I
played 5 string Banjo. We included the jingle
as part of our floor show on a number of
occasions.
"It
was recorded by Bruce Barton at his studio in
Eden Terrace.
"We
actually did two Chesdale Jingles...one for
"Colby Cheese". The lines were changed to ...
"We've got news from Chesdale Cheese, Our
Colby's back in town" .... the rest was
the same except for the last line which was
"it's the finest Colby, made better". When we
made this jingle we decided we didn't like the
lack of rhyme ...so we did an additional track
for them that finished with ..."it's the
finest Colby, gone mouldy!" I understand
they took the joke in good faith.
"The
Yeomen and the Convairs were friendly rivals.
I was on Jim Sutton's 1ZB show last Saturday
night with both Phil Seth and Johnny Bond from
the Convairs. Peter Carter and Gordon Hubbard
called in to talk about the "good old days".
"Make
no mistake about it, Gordon and I are the
original Ches and Dale. The jingle is in Te
Papa (Museum) too.
The
Mike Moore myth
There is a widely told story that the
Chesdale Cheese song was sung overseas by Mike Moore
when he couldn't think of "a NZ folk song."
Mike Moore's love of NZ folk song is well-known. On
the 1987 LP "Bush Justice" by the Christchurch band
Bushfire, Mike was the guest singer for their
"Taumarunui" track.
However, when Max Cryer recently (Nov 2003) asked
Mike Moore for details of this event, Mike explained
that he has NEVER sung the song, either in NZ or
overseas, and that it is TOTALLY UNTRUE that he led
a delegation which sang it. He said he had vaguely
heard something about it ..... but it wasn't HIM !!!
But
Mr Moore has given details the story. Parliamentary
Library archives have the transcript of a speech
Mike Moore while he was Minister of Overseas Trade
and Marketing, entitled 'Towards a New Zealand
Identity ' and delivered at the opening of Air Force
Recording Studio, Auckland, August 1988; in which he
said
"I
am reminded of a New Zealand Minister and a group of
Dairy Board delegates at a function in Ireland,
after which the Irish sang their songs.
When New Zealand's turn came, they looked
embarrassed, sang a disjointed and inaccurate
Pokarekare Ana, and then, inspired by a creative
Dairy Board member, got up and sang the jingle 'We
are the boys from down on the farm, we really know
our cheese.' "
Max is now closing in on who the singers were. No
Minister of Trade went to Ireland before Mr Moore
made that speech. So it must have been a Minister of
Agriculture who was with the Dairy Board group in
Ireland, and it must have in the 1970s. But which
year exactly? And which Minister of Agriculture?
Multinational
Take-overs
Chesdale cheese was made by NZ Cheese Ltd, part of
Butlands Industries, which also made other sandwich
spreads. In 1973, Kraft Foods of the USA began
discussions about taking over NZ Cheese Ltd. In 1981,
the Muldoon government allowed Kraft (a part of the
Philip Morris multinational group of companies) to buy
49% of all of Butland, on the grounds that it would
allow more NZ cheese to be sold overseas.
But
Kraft failed to keep the promises it made before the
Butlands takeover, which included wider markets,
especially access to the United States. Instead, in
August 1989, Kraft bought the remaining 51% of
Butlands it did not already own.
In October 1995, having extracted all the profits it
was able to, Kraft sold Chesdale to J Watties, a
subsidiary of Heinz, another multi-national.
Cheez
Toyz
In the late 1990s, the New Zealand
Dairy Board aquired the Chesdale cheese brand.
Capitalising on the international reputation of the
well-known jingle and dancing farmers, it promoted
Chesdale overseas as-
"CHESDALE;
processed cheese for fun and nutrition."
One product was CHESDALE CHEEZ TOYZ. These were made
for Arab children at an NZDB factory in Dammam, in
the style of Kinder Surprises. Sealed packets with
tasty snack and surprise plastic toys. However a
check of the SADAFCO site in 2005 showed the cheese
was now being promoted as Saudia Cheese Spread.
Back
in NZ
Since
1997, We have also been seeing the old Chesdale advert
on tv again, and Ches and Dale children's story books,
as the original old-style Chesdale cheese packets
appeared on the supermarket shelves again.
And in 2000 NZ Dairy Foods got scriptwriter Michelle
A'Court to bring Ches & Dale to life. Her comedy
sketches and stories, performed in shopping malls and
stores by "big-head" actors, have brought a cheesy
rural perspective to our towns.
Cheez
Dale in Singapore
But the icons have been changed in
Singapore. In 2004, Kiwi expat Robyn
M Speed, living in Singapore, reported that
Chesdale cheese slices were being sold there with
the same jingle, but with Dale (and Ches?) drawn as
dancing cheese slices. Her webpage shows a photo of
a promotional coin purse she received with a
twin-pack of Chesdale cheese slices. She was
indignant at this mis-use of part of NZ's cultural
history.
NZ
folk songs tell New Zealanders about
themselves,to celebrate past achievements,
enable us to understand who we are now, and
help guide us into the future.
The Chesdale jingle does that by summing
up the essential character of much of the
NZ export trade: good quality farming
(farmer Ches), combined with innovative
processing (cheese factory worker Dale).
We
have the same farm/tech combination of
quality in meat-processing, wine-making,
fruit-juicing, carpet-weaving,
paper-making etc activities.
The
Chesdale cheese song has a really good
tune that every NZer knows. But it only
has one verse.
Can
it be "made better" with more verses ? Can
you link the verses into a story ?
Steve
Wells first heard this DB version in
the early 1970s. He remembers that the yellow
labelled brand was referred to as a draught
bitter, which he thought odd, as it seemed
sweeter than other beers of the time.
We
are the boys from down on the farm
We really know our beer
There's much better value in DB
It never fails to cheer
DB, pours quite nicely,
Never spills,
So there's no waste
And ,'Boy!' it's got a mighty taste
The finest bitter, made better.
From
children in the Edmund Hillary Primary School
playground, Papakura, in the late 1960s.
We are the boys from down on
the farm
We really know our fleas
There's no better value in Chesdale
It always fails to please
Chesdale
Slices thickly,
Always crumbles,
Has no taste,
And boy is it a bloody waste!
Chesdale Cheese!
The Poms all buy it - don't try it!!
And this from Gunner Joe Subritzky of 161 Battery, in
the early 1970s.
We are the boys from down on
the Guns,
Field Gunnery it's a breeze!
There's much better value in H. E.
it never fails to please!
H. E.
Splinters perfect,
Get no blinds
And there's no waste!
It creams them Mothers to a paste!
with explosive ease!
Tri-Nitro-Toluene!
Made Better!!!
Other
old NZ television jingles
There
are a large number of them at this archive copy of Stottie's
Old NZ Ads page
Here are a couple of them. Memorable visuals, clever
words, but they don't tell us as much about ourselves
as the Chesdale song though.
CRUNCHIE
Life's a whole long journey, boy,
Before you grow too old,
Don't miss the opportunity
To strike a little gold.
Out West the folks are crossing you.
The way to make them stop,
Is to quick draw your Crunchie bar...
-And fill them full of choc.
Have a Crunchie
Hokey pokey bar
Golden Crunchie
Hokey pokey bar.
BASF CASSETTES
Dear John, Oh how I hate to write.
Dear John, Oh how I miss you so, tonight.
But my love for you has gone,
So I'm sending you this song.
Tonight I'm with another.
You'll like him John,
He's your brother.
So adieu to you forever,
Dear John.
And from Marion Jackson
BERNINA
Bernina Bernina
So easy simple and versatile
Bernina Bernina
Gets all your sewing done in style
Bernina Bernina
The experts all agree
No other sewing machine today
Is so automatic in every way
Just try it once and you will agree
What a wonderful machine.
Ber-niii-naaa!
Updated
12 Feb
2001,
Terry Gray's correct tune added 26 Sept 2004. Thanks Terry!
More 1930s material added Jan 2012
Boys => Blokes correction Jan 2020.
Bernina July
2022