Shortwave Broadcasting 1940 | Phantom Dancer 14 May 2024


Shortwave broadcasting by the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra from New York to Latin America in 1940 is your Phantom Dancer Feature this week. And below are some relevant paragraphs on shortwave broadcasting taken from a 1942 article in ‘RCA Review’.

The Phantom Dancer is your weekly non-stop mix of swing and jazz from live 1920s-60s radio and TV every week.

LISTEN to this week’s Phantom Dancer mix (online after 2pm AEST, Tuesday 14 May) and weeks of Phantom Dancer mixes online at, at https://2ser.com/phantom-dancer/

SHORT

From ‘RCA Review’, 1942…

“AN EXPANDING horizon of steel towers, tall wooden poles, and networks of elevated antenna wires attests to the growing international broadcasting activities of NBC stations WRCA and WNBI at Bound Brook, New Jersey.

NBC has provided this service for many years. International activities have been stimulated in recent years, first, ih point of time, through the action of the Fed­eral Communications Commission authorizing commercial operation, and second, by the more important contribution this service brings to National Defence.

The Bound Brook plant contains NBC’s international transmit­ting facilities plus the WJZ transmitting facilities. The original property was purchased for these combined facilities in 1925 when RCA built its first short-wave broadcast transmitter, the predecessor of the present busy stations.

The original site consisted of 54 acres. Recently the expanding scope of NBC’s international activities resulted in the purchase of an additional 16 acres, making a total of 70 acres, most of it devoted exclusively to international transmitting antennas.”

WAVE

“It has been the writer’s privilege to be associated with radio for 26 years and with broadcasting for 20 years.

Rarely has there been an opportunity in those eventful times for any form of communication to demonstrate such unique feats as are now becoming accepted common­ places in international broadcasting.

Barely 16 years ago the first rebroadcast from across the seas took place. Scheduled rebroadcasts from the far corners of the earth have since become matters of but casual interest.

But only in recent months has the bewildered victim of catastrophe, propaganda, and censorship so fully appreciated the modern miracle of radio which enables him to listen, perhaps secretly, at night.

The following is an example of the technical character of the WRCA 9670-kc signal received in Rio de Janeiro from the steerable antenna.

It covers from 6.00 to 7.45 P.M. E.D.S.T. on May 15, 1941. Reception was on a common receiver with six feet of wire for an antenna.

Carrier strength …  Very Strong
Fading-Depth … Very slight to slight
Rate of fading … Very slow to slow
Interference from other stations … None
Static ….Very weak
Background noise … None
Quality Overall rating … Excellent.”

14 May PLAY LIST

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney
LISTEN ONLINE
Community Radio Network Show CRN #653

107.3 2SER Tuesday 14 May 2024
12:04 – 2:00pm (+11 hours GMT)
National Program
5UV Adelaide Monday 2:30 – 3:30am
5GTR Mt Gambier Monday 2:30 – 3:30am
3MBR Murrayville Monday 3 – 4am
4NAG Keppel FM Monday 3 – 4am
2MIA Griffith Monday 3 – 4am
2BAR Edge FM Bega Monday 3 – 4am
2BRW Braidwood Monday 3 – 4am
2YYY Young Monday 3 – 4am
7RPH Hobart Monday 3 – 4pm
3VKV Alpine Radio Monday 6 – 7pm
7MID Oatlands Monday 3am – 4 and 6 -7pm
2MCE Bathurst Wednesday 9 – 10am
1ART ArtsoundFM Canberra Friday 10 – 11am
and Sunday 11pm
Reading Radio (QLD) Friday 1am – 2
2RRR Ryde Friday 11am – 12
2ARM Armidale Friday 12 – 1pm
5LCM Lofty FM Adelaide Friday 1 – 2pm
6GME Radio Goolarri Broome Saturday 4am – 5am
Denmark FM (West Australia) Saturday 10 – 11am
Repeat: Wednesdays 10 – 11pm
7LTN Launceston Sunday 5 – 6am
3MGB Mallacoota Sunday 5 – 6am
3BBR West Gippsland Sunday 5 – 6pm
2SEA Sapphire Coast Eden Sunday 9 – 10pm

Set 1
Tommy Dorsey
Daydreams Come Teue at Night (theme) + Why Fall in Love witha Stranger? + Dime a Dozen
Dick Jurgens  Orchestra (voc) Al Galetti
‘The Treasury Show’
Garden Room
Hotel Claremont
Berkeley Ca
ABC
9 Oct 1949
Wedding Day
Dick Jurgens Orchestra Vocals – Lee Castle
‘The Treasury Show’
Garden Room
Hotel Claremont
Berkeley Ca
ABC
9 Oct 1949
That Old Black Magic
Dick Jurgens Orchestra
‘The Treasury Show’
Garden Room
Hotel Claremont
Berkeley Ca
ABC
9 Oct 1949
Medley: Miss You  |  Was That the Human Thing to Do?  |  My Blue Heaven  |  Them There Eyes  |  Makin’ Whoopee + Close Dick Jurgens Orchestra (voc) Lee Castle
‘The Treasury Show’
Garden Room
Hotel Claremont
Berkeley Ca
ABC
9 Oct 1949
Set 2
Tommy Dorsey on Shortwave in Spanish
I’m Gettin’ Sentimental Over You (theme) + Dark Eyes
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
‘Carnival of Broadway’
Hotel Astor Roof
WNBI/WRCA NBC Shortwave NYC
19 Jun 1940
Polkadots and Moonbeams
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (voc) Frank Sinatra
‘Carnival of Broadway’
Hotel Astor Roof
WNBI/WRCA NBC Shortwave NYC
19 Jun 1940
March of the Toys
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
‘Carnival of Broadway’
Hotel Astor Roof
WNBI/WRCA NBC Shortwave NYC
19 Jun 1940
Deep Night + I’m Gettin’ Sentimental Over You (theme)
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (voc) Frank Sinatra
‘Carnival of Broadway’
Hotel Astor Roof
WNBI/WRCA NBC Shortwave NYC
19 Jun 1940
Set 3
Jazz TV
I Left My Baby
Count Basie Orchestra (voc) Jimmy Rushing
Seven Lively Arts
‘Sound of Jazz’
WCBS TV NYC
8 Dec 1957
Dickie’s Dream
Count Basie Orchestra
Seven Lively Arts
‘Sound of Jazz’
WCBS TV NYC
8 Dec 1957
The Train and the River
Pee Wee Russel (cl) Jimmy Giuffre (cl)  Danny Barker (g) Milt Hinton (db) Jo Jones (d)
Seven Lively Arts
‘Sound of Jazz’
WCBS TV NYC
8 Dec 1957
Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives to Me
Pee Wee Russel (cl) Jimmy Giuffre (cl)  Danny Barker (g) Milt Hinton (db) Jo Jones (d)
Seven Lively Arts
‘Sound of Jazz’
WCBS TV NYC
8 Dec 1957
Set 4
Set 5
Les Brown Orchestra
How High The Moon
Les Brown Orchestra
Palladium Ballroom KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
Coastin’ Along
Les Brown Orchestra
Palladium Ballroom KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
I Wish I Knew
Les Brown Orchestra (voc) Doris Day
Palladium Ballroom KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
Show Me The Way To Go Home
Les Brown Orchestra (vov) Butch Stone
Palladium Ballroom KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
Set 6
Cootie Williams
Round Midnight (theme) + 711
Cootie Williams Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Do Nothin’ Till You Hear From Me
Cootie Williams Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Don’t Blame Me
Cootie Williams Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Perdido
Cootie Williams Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Set 7
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Take the A-Train (theme) + Bensonality
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
30 Jul 1952
All of Me
Duke Ellington Orchestra (voc) Bette Roche Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
30 Jul 1952
Bakiff
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
30 Jul 1952
The Hawk Talks
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
30 Jul 1952
Set 8
Trad Jazz
Theme + Maple Leaf Rag
Wild Bill Davison
‘This is Jazz’
WOR Mutual NYC
19 Apr 1947
Basin Street Blues George Brunis & Albert Nicholas
‘This is Jazz’
WOR Mutual NYC
19 Apr 1947
Mahoganny Hall Stomp
Louis Armstrong All-Stars
‘All-Star Jazz Show’
NBC TV
30 Dec 1957

Shortwave Broadcasting 1940 | Phantom Dancer 5 December 2023


Shortwave broadcasting by the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra from New York to Latin America in 1940 is your Phantom Dancer Feature this week. And below are some relevant paragraphs on shortwave broadcasting taken from a 1942 article in ‘RCA Review’.

The Phantom Dancer is your weekly non-stop mix of swing and jazz from live 1920s-60s radio and TV every week.

LISTEN to this week’s Phantom Dancer mix (online after 2pm AEST, Tuesday 5 December) and weeks of Phantom Dancer mixes online at, at https://2ser.com/phantom-dancer/

SHORT

From ‘RCA Review’, 1942…

“AN EXPANDING horizon of steel towers, tall wooden poles, and networks of elevated antenna wires attests to the growing international broadcasting activities of NBC stations WRCA and WNBI at Bound Brook, New Jersey.

NBC has provided this service for many years. International activities have been stimulated in recent years, first, ih point of time, through the action of the Fed­eral Communications Commission authorizing commercial operation, and second, by the more important contribution this service brings to National Defence.

The Bound Brook plant contains NBC’s international transmit­ting facilities plus the WJZ transmitting facilities. The original property was purchased for these combined facilities in 1925 when RCA built its first short-wave broadcast transmitter, the predecessor of the present busy stations.

The original site consisted of 54 acres. Recently the expanding scope of NBC’s international activities resulted in the purchase of an additional 16 acres, making a total of 70 acres, most of it devoted exclusively to international transmitting antennas.”

WAVE

“It has been the writer’s privilege to be associated with radio for 26 years and with broadcasting for 20 years.

Rarely has there been an opportunity in those eventful times for any form of communication to demonstrate such unique feats as are now becoming accepted common­ places in international broadcasting.

Barely 16 years ago the first rebroadcast from across the seas took place. Scheduled rebroadcasts from the far corners of the earth have since become matters of but casual interest.

But only in recent months has the bewildered victim of catastrophe, propaganda, and censorship so fully appreciated the modern miracle of radio which enables him to listen, perhaps secretly, at night.

The following is an example of the technical character of the WRCA 9670-kc signal received in Rio de Janeiro from the steerable antenna.

It covers from 6.00 to 7.45 P.M. E.D.S.T. on May 15, 1941. Reception was on a common receiver with six feet of wire for an antenna.

Carrier strength …  Very Strong
Fading-Depth … Very slight to slight
Rate of fading … Very slow to slow
Interference from other stations … None
Static ….Very weak
Background noise … None
Quality Overall rating … Excellent.”

5 December PLAY LIST

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney
LISTEN ONLINE
Community Radio Network Show CRN #630

107.3 2SER Tuesday 5 December 2023
12:04 – 2:00pm (+11 hours GMT)
National Program
5UV Adelaide Monday 2:30 – 3:30am
5GTR Mt Gambier Monday 2:30 – 3:30am
3MBR Murrayville Monday 3 – 4am
4NAG Keppel FM Monday 3 – 4am
2MIA Griffith Monday 3 – 4am
2BAR Edge FM Bega Monday 3 – 4am
2BRW Braidwood Monday 3 – 4am
2YYY Young Monday 3 – 4am
7RPH Hobart Monday 3 – 4pm
3VKV Alpine Radio Monday 6 – 7pm
7MID Oatlands Monday 3am – 4 and 6 -7pm
2MCE Bathurst Wednesday 9 – 10am
1ART ArtsoundFM Canberra Friday 10 – 11am
and Sunday 11pm
Reading Radio (QLD) Friday 1am – 2
2RRR Ryde Friday 11am – 12
2ARM Armidale Friday 12 – 1pm
5LCM Lofty FM Adelaide Friday 1 – 2pm
6GME Radio Goolarri Broome Saturday 4am – 5am
Denmark FM (West Australia) Saturday 10 – 11am
Repeat: Wednesdays 10 – 11pm
7LTN Launceston Sunday 5 – 6am
3MGB Mallacoota Sunday 5 – 6am
3BBR West Gippsland Sunday 5 – 6pm
2SEA Sapphire Coast Eden Sunday 9 – 10pm

Set 1
Tommy Dorsey
Daydreams Come Teue at Night (theme) + Why Fall in Love witha Stranger? + Dime a Dozen
Dick Jurgens  Orchestra (voc) Al Galetti
‘The Treasury Show’
Garden Room
Hotel Claremont
Berkeley Ca
ABC
9 Oct 1949
Wedding Day
Dick Jurgens Orchestra Vocals – Lee Castle
‘The Treasury Show’
Garden Room
Hotel Claremont
Berkeley Ca
ABC
9 Oct 1949
That Old Black Magic
Dick Jurgens Orchestra
‘The Treasury Show’
Garden Room
Hotel Claremont
Berkeley Ca
ABC
9 Oct 1949
Medley: Miss You  |  Was That the Human Thing to Do?  |  My Blue Heaven  |  Them There Eyes  |  Makin’ Whoopee + Close Dick Jurgens Orchestra (voc) Lee Castle
‘The Treasury Show’
Garden Room
Hotel Claremont
Berkeley Ca
ABC
9 Oct 1949
Set 2
Tommy Dorsey on Shortwave in Spanish
I’m Gettin’ Sentimental Over You (theme) + Dark Eyes
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
‘Carnival of Broadway’
Hotel Astor Roof
WNBI/WRCA NBC Shortwave NYC
19 Jun 1940
Polkadots and Moonbeams
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (voc) Frank Sinatra
‘Carnival of Broadway’
Hotel Astor Roof
WNBI/WRCA NBC Shortwave NYC
19 Jun 1940
March of the Toys
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
‘Carnival of Broadway’
Hotel Astor Roof
WNBI/WRCA NBC Shortwave NYC
19 Jun 1940
Deep Night + I’m Gettin’ Sentimental Over You (theme)
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (voc) Frank Sinatra
‘Carnival of Broadway’
Hotel Astor Roof
WNBI/WRCA NBC Shortwave NYC
19 Jun 1940
Set 3
Jazz TV
I Left My Baby
Count Basie Orchestra (voc) Jimmy Rushing
Seven Lively Arts
‘Sound of Jazz’
WCBS TV NYC
8 Dec 1957
Dickie’s Dream
Count Basie Orchestra
Seven Lively Arts
‘Sound of Jazz’
WCBS TV NYC
8 Dec 1957
The Train and the River
Pee Wee Russel (cl) Jimmy Giuffre (cl)  Danny Barker (g) Milt Hinton (db) Jo Jones (d)
Seven Lively Arts
‘Sound of Jazz’
WCBS TV NYC
8 Dec 1957
Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives to Me
Pee Wee Russel (cl) Jimmy Giuffre (cl)  Danny Barker (g) Milt Hinton (db) Jo Jones (d)
Seven Lively Arts
‘Sound of Jazz’
WCBS TV NYC
8 Dec 1957
Set 4
Set 5
Les Brown Orchestra
How High The Moon
Les Brown Orchestra
Palladium Ballroom KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
Coastin’ Along
Les Brown Orchestra
Palladium Ballroom KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
I Wish I Knew
Les Brown Orchestra (voc) Doris Day
Palladium Ballroom KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
Show Me The Way To Go Home
Les Brown Orchestra (vov) Butch Stone
Palladium Ballroom KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
Set 6
Cootie Williams
Round Midnight (theme) + 711
Cootie Williams Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Do Nothin’ Till You Hear From Me
Cootie Williams Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Don’t Blame Me
Cootie Williams Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Perdido
Cootie Williams Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Set 7
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Take the A-Train (theme) + Bensonality
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
30 Jul 1952
All of Me
Duke Ellington Orchestra (voc) Bette Roche Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
30 Jul 1952
Bakiff
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
30 Jul 1952
The Hawk Talks
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
30 Jul 1952
Set 8
Trad Jazz
Theme + Maple Leaf Rag
Wild Bill Davison
‘This is Jazz’
WOR Mutual NYC
19 Apr 1947
Basin Street Blues George Brunis & Albert Nicholas
‘This is Jazz’
WOR Mutual NYC
19 Apr 1947
Mahoganny Hall Stomp
Louis Armstrong All-Stars
‘All-Star Jazz Show’
NBC TV
30 Dec 1957

Frankie Laine, Mel Torme, Jo Stafford on Live 1940s Radio – Phantom Dancer 14 January 2020


Your feature artists on this week’s Phantom Dancer with Greg Poppleton – your two hour non-stop mix of swing and jazz from live 1920s-60s radio – are singers Frankie Laine, Mel Torme and Jo Stafford from live 1940s radio. The last hour is all vinyl.

You can hear The Phantom Dancer online now at https://2ser.com/phantom-dancer/

frankie laine

FRANKIE LAINE

Frankie Laine (born Francesco Paolo LoVecchio) was an American singer, songwriter and actor whose career spanned nearly 75 years.

He first sang in 1930 with a marathon dance company. His final performance was “That’s My Desire” in 2005. Often billed as “America’s Number One Song Stylist”, his other nicknames include “Mr. Rhythm”, “Old Leather Lungs”, and “Mr. Steel Tonsils”. His hits included “That’s My Desire”, “That Lucky Old Sun”, “Mule Train”, “Jezebel”, “High Noon”, “I Believe”, “Hey Joe!”, “The Kid’s Last Fight”, “Cool Water”, “Rawhide”, and “Lord, You Gave Me a Mountain”.

He sang well-known theme songs for many movie Western soundtracks, including 3:10 To Yuma, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral and Blazing Saddles, although his recordings were not charted as a country & western. Laine sang an eclectic variety of song styles and genres, stretching from big band crooning to pop, western-themed songs, gospel, rock, folk, jazz, and blues.

On this week’s Phantom Dancer, The Velvet Fog, Mel Torme, sings two songs including one when aged 17 in front of Chico Marx’s Orchestra on a CBS Fitch Bandwagon.

mel torme

MEL TORME

Melvin Howard Tormé was nicknamed “The Velvet Fog”. He was an American musician, singer, composer, arranger, drummer, actor, and author. He composed the music for “The Christmas Song” (“Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire”) and co-wrote the lyrics with Bob Wells.

A child prodigy, Torme first performed professionally at age 4 with the Coon-Sanders Orchestra, singing “You’re Driving Me Crazy” at Chicago’s Blackhawk restaurant.

He played drums in the drum-and-bugle corps at Shakespeare Elementary School. From 1933 to 1941, he acted in the radio programs The Romance of Helen Trent and Jack Armstrong, the All-American Boy. He wrote his first song at 13. Three years later his first published song, “Lament to Love,” became a hit for bandleader Harry James.

From 1942 to 1943 he was a member of a band led by Chico Marx of the Marx Brothers. He was the singer, drummer, and also did some arrangements. In 1943, Tormé made his movie debut in Frank Sinatra’s first film, the musical Higher and Higher. His appearance in the 1947 film musical Good News made him a teen idol.

In 1944 he formed the vocal quintet Mel Tormé and His Mel-Tones, modeled on Frank Sinatra and The Pied Pipers. The Mel-Tones, which included Les Baxter and Ginny O’Connor, had several hits fronting Artie Shaw’s band and on their own, including Cole Porter’s “What Is This Thing Called Love?” The Mel-Tones were among the first jazz-influenced vocal groups.

jo stafford

JO STAFFORD

Jo Elizabeth Stafford was an American traditional pop music singer and actor. Her career spanned the late 1930s to the early 1980s. Admired for the purity of her voice, she originally underwent classical training to become an opera singer before following a career in popular music, and by 1955 had achieved more worldwide record sales than any other female artist. Her 1952 song “You Belong to Me” topped the charts in the United States and United Kingdom, the record becoming the first by a female artist to reach number one on the UK Singles Chart.

Born in Coalinga, California, Stafford made her first musical appearance at age 12. While still at high school, she joined her two older sisters to form a vocal trio named the Stafford Sisters, who found moderate success on radio and in film. In 1938, while the sisters were part of the cast of Twentieth Century Fox’s production of Alexander’s Ragtime Band, Stafford met the future members of the Pied Pipers and became the group’s lead singer. Bandleader Tommy Dorsey hired them in 1939 to perform back-up vocals for his orchestra.

In addition to her recordings with the Pied Pipers, Stafford featured in solo performances for Dorsey. After leaving the group in 1944, she recorded a series of pop standards for Capitol Records and Columbia Records. Many of her recordings were backed by the orchestra of Paul Weston. She also performed duets with Gordon MacRae and Frankie Laine. Her work with the United Service Organizations giving concerts for soldiers during World War II earned her the nickname “G.I. Jo”. Starting in 1945, Stafford was a regular host of the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) radio series The Chesterfield Supper Club and later appeared in television specials—including two series called The Jo Stafford Show, in 1954 in the U.S. and in 1961 in the U.K.

Jo Stafford film and TV clips make up your Video of the Week. The first clip is introduced by Ronald Reagan and includes a live version of ‘Temtayshun’, with Jo Stafford as ‘Cinerella G Stump’ singing a quarter tone out and taking no spaces like all of our great indie singers (but back then it was considered a joke).

Make sure you come back to this blog, Greg Poppleton’s Radio Lounge, every Tuesday, for the newest Phantom Dancer play list and Video of the Week!

Thank you.

14 JANUARY PLAY LIST

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #419

107.3 2SER Tuesday 14 January 2020
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+11 hours GMT)
National Program:
ArtsoundFM Canberra Sunday 10 – 11pm
Edge FM Bega Monday 3 – 4pm
7MID Oatlands Tuesday 8 – 9pm
2ARM Armidale Friday 12 – 1pm
3MGB Mallacoota Sunday 5 – 6am
and early morning on 23 other stations.

Set 1
Swing on 1950s Radio
One O’Clock Jump + Sixteen Men Swinging
Count Basie Orchestra
‘Saturday Night Rock’n’Roll Dance Party’
Paramount Theatre, Brooklyn
WCBS CBS NY
1956
Sitting In The Sun
Les Brown Orchestra (voc) JoAnn Greer
‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
Palladium Ballroom
KFI NBC LA
12 Oct 1953
Capital Idea + (theme)
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra
‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
Magnolia Room
Hotel Claridge
WMC NBC Memphis
19 Jun 1953
Set 2
Swing Dance Bands on 1942-44 Radio
Open + Abraham
Chico Marx Orchestra (voc) Mel Torme
‘Fitch Band Wagon’
Blackhawk Restaurant
WBBM CBS Chicago
20 Dec 1942
Was It Like That?
Lionel Hampton Orchestra (voc) Dinah Washington
‘One Night Stand’
Civic Auditorium
Oakland Ca
AFRS Re-broadcast
4 Jun 1944
Open + Ain’t Misbehavin’
Louis Armstrong Orchestra (voc) Louis Armstrong
‘Jubilee’
AFRS Hollywood
20 May 1943
One Night Stand + Close (Coca Cola Waltz in 4/4 Swing)
Denny Beckner Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Norfolk, Virginia
AFRS Re-broadcast
30 Mar 1944
Set 3
Navy Star Time Singers 1952 Radio
Baby, That Ain’t Right
Frankie Laine (voc) Buzz Adlam Orchestra
‘Navy Star Time’
Radio Transcription
Hollywood
1952
I Hadn’t Anyone Till You
Mel Torme (voc) Buzz Adlam Orchestra
‘Navy Star Time’
Radio Transcription
Hollywood
1952
I’ll Get By + Close
Jo Stafford (voc) Buzz Adlam Orchestra
‘Navy Star Time’
Radio Transcription
Hollywood
1952
Set 4
1946 Radio Swing
Instrumental
Harry James Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands ‘
El Patio Playhouse
KHJ Mutual LA
13 Apr 1946
Begin The Beguine
Bobby Sherwood Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Avadon Ballroom
Los Angeles
AFRS Re-broadcast
3 jun 1946
Blue Moon + Summertime
Bob Crosby Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Palladium Ballroom
Hollywood
AFRS Re-broadcast
3 Dec 1946
Set 5
1934 – 36 Radio Bands
There’s Something In The Air
Red Nichols Orchestra
Radio Transcription
New York City
1936
Robins and Roses
Lee Wiley (voc)
WABC CBS NY
17 Jun 1936
Christopher Columbus
Isham Jones Orchestra
WOR Mutual NY
13 Mar 1936
Goodbye
Benny Goodman Orchestra
‘Let’s Dance’
WEAF NBC Red NY
2 Feb 1935
Set 6
Big Bands 1942-45 Radio
McGhee Special
Andy Kirk and his 12 Clouds of Joy
Comm Rec
New York City
14 Jul 1942
Open + Smiles
Charlie Barnet Orchestra
‘For The Record’
WEAF NBC NY
11 Sep 1944
Slip Of The Lip
Duke Ellington Orchestra
‘Fourth War Loan Drive’
WEAF NBC NY
1 May 1943
One O’Clock Jump (open) + Unidentified Time
Johnny Otis Orchestra
‘Jubilee’
AFRS Hollywood
Oct 1945
Set 7
Sweet Bands on 1930-40s Wireless
You Are My Dream
Gray Gordon and his Tic Toc Rhythm Orchestra (voc) Cliff Glass
Radio Transcription
New York City
1939
It Was Just One Of Those Things
Russ Morgan Orchestra
Biltmore Hotel
Los Angeles
13 May 1946
Words Of Love
Eddy Howard Orchestra
Aragon Ballroom
WGN Mutual Chicago
5 Dec 1945
It’s A Whole New Thing
Blue Barron Orchestra (voc) Charlie Fisher
Radio Transcription
New York City
1938
Set 8
Bop Inspired Radio
Moppin’ The Blues
Pete Brown Quintette
Comm Rec
New York City
11 Jul 1944
A Minor Thing + In Your Own Sweet Way
Dave Brubeck Quartet
Basin Street
WCBS CBS NY
Feb 1956
High On An Open Mike
Fats Navarro (tp) Bill Harris (tb) Alen Eager, Charlie Ventura (ts) Ralph Burns (piano) Al Valente (g) Chubby Jackson (b) Buddy Rich (d)
‘Saturday Night Swing Session’
WNEW NY
12 Apr 1947
Fine and Dandy
Slim Gaillard Quintet
‘Symphony Sid Show’
WJZ ABC NY
2 Jun 1951

Happy New Decade – Did Wynn Foresee Australia Burning? – Phantom Dancer 31 Dec 2019

eddie heywood

We started this year  with this New Year show, choc-a-bloc full of New Years swing and jazz from live 1936 – 1966 radio. And because I’m on holidays unable to move with a fractured femur, we’ll end the decade with it, too!

The Phantom Dancer, presented by myself, Greg Poppleton, since 1985 on 107.3 2SER Sydney, is now re-broadcast on over 24 stations of the Community Radio Network across Australia. Hear the show online from midday 31 December 2019 (AEST).

And see the play list below.

OOGIE BOOGIE

This week’s featured ‘artist’ is Wynn the Astrologer

Wynn the astrologer

SEER

This famous 1930s astrologer gives his prognostications for 1937 on this week’s Phantom Dancer. In fact, get ready for disappointment at the end of Set 1, where I play Wynn’s ‘wise words’ (and some musical excerpts) from the 1936 New Year’s Eve Rudy Vallee show.

You’ll hear most of what Wynn had to say about the year ahead. I cut it short for time. Think of the audience for the 1936 radio broadcast, they never got that time Wynn wasted back.

Wynn, born Sidney Kimball Bennett, wrote the stars for the New York Daily News. It seems he didn’t do it for a laugh. He was pompously serious about himself, as you’ll hear.

SPOOKY

His claim to fame was a prediction he made in the NY Daily News in 1932. He ‘foresaw’ financial turmoil for early March of 1933. That’s when President Roosevelt closed the banks for a week as the US struggled with the Great Depression.

wynn the astrologer

UNCANNY

Wynn’s predictions for 1937 are typically vague, and, well, predictable. More interesting is just a short list of what actually happened in 1937 out of the trillions of things Wynn’s charts failed to predict…

  • Safety glass in vehicle windscreens becomes mandatory in Great Britain
  • Bradman scores 270 Aust v England at the MCG, incl 110 singles
  • 2nd of Stalin‘s purge trials; Pyatakov & 16 others sentenced to death
  • DuPont Corp patents nylon, developed by employee Wallace H Carothers
  • Initial flight of the first successful flying car, Waldo Waterman’s Arrowbile
  • Bradman scores 169 in 5th Test Cricket v England in 223 minutes
  • Mexico nationalizes oil
  • Pope Pius XI publishes anti-nazi-encyclical Mit brennender Sorge
  • Astronomer Fritz Zwicky publishes his research on stellar explosion in which he coins the term “supernova” and hypothesizes that they were the origin of cosmic rays
  • Spinach growers of Crystal City, Texas, erect statue of Popeye
  • Debut of cartoon characters Daffy Duck, Elmer J Fudd & Petunia Pig
  • German Luftwaffe destroys Basque town of Guernica in Spain
  • 1st commercial flight across Pacific operated by Pan Am
  • The Philippines holds a plebiscite for Filipino women on whether they should be extended the right to suffrage; over 90% voted yes
  • San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge opens
  • Spam, the luncheon meat, is first introduced into the market by the Hormel Foods Corporation
  • Japanese & Chinese troops clash at the Marco Polo Bridge, beginning the Second Sino-Japanese War
  • Buchenwald Concentration Camp opens
  • Isolation of pituitary hormone announced (Yale University)
  • 1st FM radio construction permit issued (W1X0J (WGTR) in Boston MA)
  • Date celebrated as the first International Hobbit Day and the birthdays of Bibo and Frodo Baggins
  • 1st Santa Claus Training School opens (Albion NY)
  • Balinese Tiger declared extinct
  • Dmitri Shostakovitch’s 5th Symphony premieres
  • Clifford Odets’ “Golden Boy” premieres in NYC
  • Japanese troops conquer and plunder Nanjing (Nanjing Massacre)
  • Bill O’Reilly takes 9-41 for NSW against South Australia
  • Constitution of Ireland (Irish: Bunreacht na hÉireann) is enacted and Irish free state is named Eire
  • Pan Am starts service between San Francisco and Auckland, New Zealand

Here’s some footage of the first successful flying car, Waldo Waterman’s Arrowbile. How did Wynn miss this one? Probably the same way he missed foretelling his own 1926 car accident…(gosh, on today’s Phantom Dancer he warns Rudy Vallee to be ‘careful of cars’, spooky!)

31 DECEMBER PLAY LIST

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #417

107.3 2SER Tuesday 31 December 2019
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+11 hours GMT)
National Program:
ArtsoundFM Canberra Sunday 10 – 11pm
Edge FM Bega Monday 3 – 4pm
7MID Oatlands Tuesday 8 – 9pm
2ARM Armidale Friday 12 – 1pm
3MGB Mallacoota Sunday 5 – 6am
and early morning on 23 other stations.

Set 1
New Years Eve Aboard An Ocean Liner Raymond Scott Quintette Comm Rec
New York
21 Jul 1939
In The Mood Glenn Miller Orchestra ‘Chesterfield Show’
WABC CBS NY
27 Dec 1939
Never Should Have Told You + Predictions for 1937 + Chim Bomba + Close Rudy Vallee and Wynn the Astrologer ‘Royal Gelatin Show’
WEAF NBC Red NY
31 Dec 1936
Set 2
Open + Happy Holidays Bing Crosby (voc) John Scott Trotter Orchestra ‘Kraft Music Hall’
KFI NBC LA
30 Dec 1943
Rhapsody In Blue (theme) + Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah Paul Whiteman Orchestra and Chorus ‘The Paul Whiteman Show’
WJZ ABC NY
1 Jan 1947
Poinciana + Close Bing Crosby (voc) John Scott Trotter Orchestra ‘Kraft Music Hall’
KFI NBC LA
30 Dec 1943
Set 3
Deep Forest (theme) + Dippermouth Blues + When The Saints Go Marching In + Tiger Rag Earl ‘Fatha’ Hines Club Hangover
KCBS CBS San Francisco
1 Jan 1957
Set 4
Auld Lang Syne + Newport Up + Together + Macarena + You Better Know It Duke Ellington Orchestra (voc) Jimmy Grissom and Ozzie Bailey ‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
1 Jan 1958
Set 5
Sad Sack Harry James Orchestra (Hollywood) ‘New Year’s Dancing Party’
AFRS Hollywood
31 Dec 1945
One O’Clock Jump Count Basie Orchestra (New York) ‘New Year’s Dancing Party’
AFRS Hollywood
31 Dec 1945
Warsaw Concerto Freddy Martin Orchestra (Cocoanut Grove, Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles) ‘New Year’s Dancing Party’
AFRS Hollywood
31 Dec 1945
Woodchopper’s Ball Woody Herman Orchestra (Meadowbrook Ballroom, Cedar Grove NJ) ‘New Year’s Dancing Party’
AFRS Hollywood
31 Dec 1945
Set 6
Open + Stompin’ At The Savoy + Tea For Two Teddy Wilson Trio ‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
The Embers
WRCA NBC NY
31 Dec 1957
Stompin’ Down Broadway + Opus 1 (close) Dorsey Brothers Orchestra Meadowbrook Ballroom
Cedar Grove NJ
WCBS CBS NY
1 Jan 1956
Set 7
Afterthoughts + Canadian Sunset + Soft Summer Breeze + The Man I Love + Begin The Beguine Eddie Haywood Trio ‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
The Embers
WRCA NBC NY
31 Dec 1957
Set 8
Robin Hood Louis Prima Orchestra (voc) LP ‘New Year’s Dancing Party’
AFRS Hollywood
31 Dec 1945
Gotta Be This Or That Benny Goodman Orchestra (with Slam Stewart b, Red Norvo vibes, Boston) ‘New Year’s Dancing Party’
AFRS Hollywood
31 Dec 1945
Let The Zoomers Drool Duke Ellington Orchestra (Evansville, Indiana) ‘New Year’s Dancing Party’
AFRS Hollywood
31 Dec 1945

Dorsey Brothers – 17 December 2019 Phantom Dancer


LAST SHOW OF THE DECADE

Kinda. This week’s Phantom Dancer with Greg Poppleton is the last mix before the annual Christmas and New Year Phantom Dancer specials. Your feature artist – the fabulous Dorsey’s, Tommy and Jimmy.

Dorsey Brothers band poster

LISTEN

This week’s Phantom Dancer will be online after the 17 November 107.3 2SER Sydney live mix at 2ser.com.
Hear the show live every Tuesday 12:04-2pm on 107.3 2SER Sydney.

DORSEY

The Dorsey Brothers were an American studio jazz band, led by Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey. They started recording in 1928 for OKeh Records.

BROTHERS

They signed to Decca in 1934, formed a more traditional band and performed live until a falling out in May 1935. Glenn Miller, trombonist with the band in 1934-35, composed four songs for the Dorsey Brothers – “Annie’s Cousin Fannie”, “Dese Dem Dose”, “Harlem Chapel Chimes”, and “Tomorrow’s Another Day”.

dorsey brothers band racoon coats

In 1935, the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra had two No. 1 recordings on Decca, including “Lullaby of Broadway” with Bob Crosby on vocals, topping the charts for two weeks and No. 1 for three weeks.

Tommy Dorsey left the orchestra in 1935, ending the group as most band members either followed him or left.

MARK 2

The Dorseys reunited on March 15 1945 to record a V-Disc at Liederkranz Hall in New York City. Released in June 1945, the disc contained “More Than You Know” and “Brotherly Jump”. The songs were performed by the combined orchestras of Jimmy and Tommy Dorsey. They reunited again in 1947 for the film The Fabulous Dorseys. In the 1950s, they had a network TV series, Stage Show.

VIDEO

Your Phantom Dancer Video of the Week, the Dorsey Brothers and silent movie with their recording of ‘Is It a Dream?’ from 1928…

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #418

107.3 2SER Tuesday 17 December 2019
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+11 hours GMT)
National Program:
1 ART ArtsoundFM Canberra Sunday 10 – 11pm
Edge FM Bega Monday 3 – 4pm
3VKV Alpine Radio 6 – 7pm
7MID Oatlands Tuesday 8 – 9pm
2ARM Armidale Friday 12 – 1pm
3MGB Mallacoota Sunday 5 – 6am
and early morning on 23 other stations.

Set 1
1944 Swing Bands
Open + Jeep Jockey Jump
Glenn Miller AAF Orchestra
‘Uncle Sam Presents’
NBC
12 Feb 1945
Speak Low
Bob Chester Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Panther Room
Hotel Sherman, Chicago
AFRS Re-broadcastY
8 Oct 1944
How Do I Say I Love You?
Richard Himber Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Aniston, Alabama
AFRTS Re-broadcast
1944
Set 2
Live Rock’n’Roll on 1950s Radio
Open + The Dripper
Louis Jordan and the Tympani 5
‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
Zardi’s
KFI NBC LA
9 Jul 1956
Cry Baby
Bonnie Sisters (voc) Count Basie Orchestra
‘Rock ‘n’ Roll Dance Party’
Paramount Theatre, Brooklyn
WCBS CBS NY
1956
Ad + One O’Clock Jump+ Close
King Porter Band
‘Burgie Big Beat’
KNX Los Angeles
1956
Set 3
Swing on 1938 Radio
I Want To Be Happy
Frank Coughlan’s Band
Comm Rec
Sydney
Dec 1938
Open + Heart and Soul
Larry Clinton Orchestra (voc) Bea Wain
International Casino
WEAF NBC Red NY
15 Nov 1938
Indistinct Title shouted out by the Audience
Benny Goodman Orchestra
‘Camel Caravan’
WBBM CBS Chicago
6 Sep 1938
Set 4
1950s All-Star Parade of Bands on NBC Radio
Cheek To Cheek
Billy Taylor Trio
‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
Composers Club
WRCA NBC NY
7 May 1956
Love Is Just Around The Corner
George Shearing
‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
11 Jul 1953
That Old Devil Me
Sarah Vaughan
‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
Zardi’s Hollywood
KFI NBC LA
21 May 1956
Set 5
Jazz and Pop on 1945 Radio
Is There A Story
George Trevare Orchestra (voc) Joan Blake
Comm Rec
Sydney
1945
Open + Back In Your Own Backyard
Charlie Barnet Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Fort Devons Mass.
Blue Network
15 Oct 1945
I Wish I Knew
Les Brown Orchestra (voc) Doris Day
Palladium Ballroom
KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
Stompin’ At The Savoy
Gene Krupa Orchestra
Hotel Astor Roof
WOR Mutual NY
15 Aug 1945
Set 6
Swing Radio from 1938
Blues in D Flat
Seven Pearce Arrows
Demo Rec
Sydney
Sep 1938
Monday Morning
Jan Savitt Top Hatters (voc) Carlotta Dale
KYW NBC Red Philadelphia
17 Oct 1938
The Gal From Joe’s
Duke Elligton Orchestra
Cotton Club
WOR Mutual NY
1 May 1938
The Dipsy Doodle
Glenn Miller Orchestra (pre-famous sound)
Paradise Restaurant
WJZ NBC Blue NY
18 Jun 1938
Set 7
Tommy Dorsey on Radio 1934 – 1955
Open + Is That Religion?
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Bob Crosby
Ben Mardin’s Riviera
Fort Lee NJ
WEAF NBC Red NY
20 Sep 1934
Open + Losers Weepers
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
‘America Dances’
WABC CBS NY and BBC London
28 May 1940
Buster’s Gang Comes On
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Blue Network
29 Jan 1945
Tangerine + Close
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Tommy Mercer and Dolly Houston
Cafe Rouge
Hotel Statler
WRCA NBC NY
Dec 1955
Set 8
Bebop Reeds from 1948-49 Radio
Sax of a Kind
Lee Konitz (as)
‘Bandstand USA’
Carnegie Hall
Voice of America
25 Dec 1949
Indiana
Benny Goodman (cl) Sextet
‘One Night Stand’
The Click
Philadelphia
AFRS Re-broadcast
3 Jun 1948
Just You Just Me
Lester Young Sextet
‘Symphony Sid Show’
Royal Roost
WMCA NY
27 Nov 1948

International Sweethearts of Rhythm – Phantom Dancer 5 November 2019


INTERNATIONAL

This week’s Phantom Dancer feature artist with Greg Poppleton is The International Sweethearts of Rhythm, the first integrated all women band in the United States. Latina, Asian, Caucasian, Black, Indian and Puerto Rican members gave the band an ‘international’ flavour, hence the name. You’ll hear them today from 1944-45 AFRS airchecks.

ONLINE

This week’s Phantom Dancer will be online after the 5 November 107.3 2SER Sydney live mix at 2ser.com.
Hear the show live every Tuesday 12:04-2pm on 107.3 2SER Sydney.

International sweethearts of rhythm trumpets

SWEETHEARTS

The original members of the band had met at Piney Woods Country Life School, a school for poor and African American children, in 1938 in Mississippi. Most who attended Piney Woods were orphans, including band member Helen Jones, who had been adopted by the school’s principal and founder (also the Sweethearts’ original bandleader), Dr Laurence C. Jones.

International Sweethearts of Rhythm saxes

OF

The International Sweethearts of Rhythm turned professional and severed connections with Piney Woods in April 1941. The venues they played, such as the Apollo Theatre in Harlem, the Howard Theatre in Washington D.C., the Regal Theatre in Chicago, the Cotton Club in Cincinnati, the Riviera in St. Louis, the Dreamland in Omaha, or the Club Plantation and Million Dollar Theater in Los Angeles, were for black audiences. Leonard Feather stated in a Los Angeles Times article about the band that “if you are white, whatever your age, chances are you have never heard of the Sweethearts”.

The Sweethearts swiftly rose to fame, nonetheless. The band set a new box office record of 35,000 patrons in one week of 1941 at the Howard Theatre. In Hollywood they made short films for use in movie theaters. One of these is your Phantom Dancer Video of the Week. Radio work was largely confined to ‘Jubilee’ broadcasts over Armed Forces Radio aimed at black US armed forces personnel. You’ll hear excerpts from some of these broadcasts on this week’s Phantom Dancer.

International Sweethearts of Rhythm rhythm section

RHYTHM

The 16-piece International Sweethearts of Rhythm featured a strong brass section, heavy percussion, and a deep rhythmic sense, along with many of the best female musicians of the day. The band leader and singer was Anna Mae Winburn. Check out the video of the week below to savour their original ideas.

VIDEO

This week’s Phantom Dancer video of the week is ‘Central Avenue Boogie’ from a 1940s soundie by the International Sweethearts of Rhythm, sung by Anna Mae Winburn.

5 NOVEMBER PLAY LIST

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #412

107.3 2SER Tuesday 5 November 2019
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+11 hours GMT)
National Program:
ArtsoundFM Canberra Sunday 10 – 11pm
Edge FM Bega Monday 3 – 4pm
7MID Oatlands Tuesday 8 – 9pm
2ARM Armidale Friday 12 – 1pm
3MGB Mallacoota Sunday 5 – 6am
and early morning on 23 other stations.

Set 1
Big Bands on One Night Stand
Open + Saint Louis Breakdown
Lucky Millinder Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem NYC
AFRS Re-broadcast
17 July 1945
I’ll Be Around
Sonny Dunham Orchestra (voc) Pat Cameron
‘One Night Stand’
Cafe Rouge
Hotel Pennsylvania NYC
AFRS Re-broadcast
14 Apr 1944
I’ve Got Rhythm + Close
Tony Pastor Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Jantzen Beach
Portland OR
AFRS Re-broadcast
15 May 1945
Set 2
1940s-50s Trad Radio
Lonesome Road
Muggsy Spanier & Baby Doods
‘This is Jazz’
WOR Mutual NY
5 Apr 1947
Between The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
Ralph Sutton Quintet
Club Hangover
KCBS San Francisco
7 Sep 54
I Ain’t Gonna Give Anyone None of my Jelly Roll
Meade Lux Lewis
Club Hangover
KCBS San Francisco
7 Sep 54
Set 3
Lounge Radio
Open + Quiet Village (theme) + Happy Talk
Martin Denny Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
London House
AFRTS Re-broadcast
via WBBM CBS Chicago
1959
Open + Boulevarde of Broken Dreams
Dick Carroll Orchestra
‘The World Dances’
WJSV CBS Washington DC
21 Sep 1939
Kila Kila Holi A’kala + Close
Johnny Pineapple
Polynesian Village
Edgewater Beach Hotel
WGN Chicago
1 Jan 1958
Set 4
The International Sweethearts of Rhythm
Galvanising
The International Sweethearts of Rhythm
‘Jubilee’
AFRS Hollywood
1945
Diggin’ Dyke
The International Sweethearts of Rhythm
‘Jubilee’
AFRS Hollywood
17 Jul 1945
She’s Crazy With the Heat
The International Sweethearts of Rhythm
‘Jubilee’
AFRS Hollywood
Set 5
Les Brown
Carioca
Les Brown Orchestra
Radio Transcription
1949
Open + Love is Just Around the Corner
Les Brown Orchestra
Peacock Room
baker Hotel
CBS Dallas
9 Au !945
We’ll Be Together Aain
Les Brown Orchestra (voc) Jane Harvey
‘One Night Stand’
Cafe Rouge
Hotel Pennsylvamia
AFRS Re-broadcast
28 Dec 1945
Show Me The Way To Go Home
Les Brown Orchestra (voc) Butch Stone
Palladium Ballroom
KNX CBS LA
16 Aug 1945
Set 6
1935-36 Dance Bands
Down By the Old Mill Stream
Bunny Berrigan Orchestra
‘Saturday Night Swing Club’
WABC CBS NY
22 Oct 1936
Christopher Columbus
Isham Jones Orchestra
WOR Mutual NY
13 Mar 1936
Haunting Me
Henry Busse Orchestra
Radio Transcription
1935
Weary Blues
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
‘Ford V-8 Show’
CBS Dallas
Aug 1936
Set 7
Django Reinhardt Radio Transcriptions
Nuages
Django Reinhardt Quintet
Radio Geneve
Switzerland
25 Oct 1949
How High the Moon
Django Reinhardt with Ray McKinley’s Quintet
Jazz Club Francaise
1945
Black Night
Django Reinhardt Quintet
Radio Geneve
Switzerland
25 Oct 1949
Danse Norvegienne No. 2
Django Reinhardt Quintet
Radio Geneve
Switzerland
25 Oct 1949
Set 8
Miles Davis
Intro + Walkin’
Miles Davis
‘Bandstand USA’
Birdland
WOR Mutual NYC
3 Jan 1959
All of Me
Miles Davis
‘Bandstand USA’
Birdland
WOR Mutual NYC
3 Jan 1959

Child Prodigy Jazz Pianist – Phantom Dancer 24 September 2019


A child prodigy on this week’s Phantom Dancer radio show with Greg Poppleton – Frank ‘Sugar Chile Robinson’. He played a White House dinner in 1946 aged 7, then played again at the White House in 2016 to a standing ovation aged 77.

The Phantom Dancer is your two hour non-stop mix of swing and jazz from live 1920s-60s radio and TV, presented by Greg Poppleton on Radio 2SER 107.3 Sydney since 1985. Hear the show online from 12:04pm Tuesday 24 September at 2ser.com

The last hour is all vinyl.

SUGAR CHILE

Sugar Chile Robinson

Fom Wiki,
Frank Isaac Robinson (born December 28, 1938), known in his early musical career as Sugar Chile Robinson, is an American jazz pianist and singer who became famous as a child prodigy.

PIANO

Robinson was born in Detroit, Michigan. At an early age he showed unusual gifts singing the blues and accompanying himself on the piano. According to contemporary newsreels, he was self-taught and managed to use techniques including slapping the keys with elbows and fists.

AGE 3

He won a talent show at the Paradise Theatre in Detroit at the age of three, and in 1945 played guest spots at the theatre with Lionel Hampton, who was prevented by child protection legislation from taking Robinson on tour with him. However, Robinson performed on radio with Hampton and Harry ‘The Hipster’ Gibson and also appeared as himself in the Hollywood film No Leave, No Love, starring Van Johnson and Keenan Wynn.

Sugar Chile Robinson

CATCH PHRASE

In 1946, he played for President Harry S. Truman at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner, shouting out “How’m I Doin’, Mr. President?” – which became his catchphrase – during his performance of “Caldonia”. He was the first African American performer to appear at the annual WHCA dinner. He began touring major theaters, setting box office records in Detroit and California. In 1949 he was given special permission to join the American Federation of Musicians and record his first releases on Capitol Records, “Numbers Boogie” and “Caldonia”, both reaching the Billboard R&B chart. In 1950, he toured and appeared on television with Count Basie and in a short film ‘Sugar Chile’ Robinson, Billie Holiday, Count Basie and His Sextet. The following year, he toured the UK, appearing at the London Palladium. He stopped recording in 1952, later explaining,

“I wanted to go to school… I wanted some school background in me and I asked my Dad if I could stop, and I went to school because I honestly wanted my college diploma.”

Sugar Chile Robinson

UNI AND TV

Until 1956 he continued to make occasional appearances as a jazz musician, billed as Frank Robinson, and performed on one occasion with Gerry Mulligan, but then gave up his musical career entirely. Continuing his academic studies, he earned a degree in history from Olivet College and one in psychology from the Detroit Institute of Technology. In the 1960s, he worked for WGPR-TV, and also helped set up small record labels in Detroit and opened a recording studio.

LATELY

In the 21st Century he has made a comeback as a musician with the help of the American Music Research Foundation. In 2002, he appeared at a special concert celebrating Detroit music, and in 2007 he traveled to Britain to appear at a rock and roll weekend festival. In the last Dr Boogie show of 2013, Sugar Chile Robinson was the featured artist, with four of his classic hits showcasing amid biographical sketches of his early career. On April 30, 2016, he attended the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on the 70th anniversary of his appearance at the 1946 dinner. He met President Obama and was saluted during the dinner, receiving a standing ovation as the picture of him as a child appeared on the video screens. In 2016 he was inducted into the Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame.

Your Phantom Dancer Video of the Week is Sugar Chile Robinson! Enjoy…

Make sure you come back to this blog, Greg Poppleton’s Radio Lounge, every Tuesday, for the newest Phantom Dancer play list and Video of the Week!

Thank you.

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #406

107.3 2SER Tuesday 24 September 2019
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+10 hours GMT)

Set 1
That Ace Drummer Man Gene Krupa on 1945-46 Radio
Whispering
Gene Krupa Orchestra
’Spotlight Bands’
MBS
1946
Bugle Call Rag
Gene Krupa Orchestra
Pacific Square
San Diego
MBS
2 Mar 1945
Yes, Yes, Honey
Gene Krupa Orchestra (voc) Carolyn Gray
’One Night Stand’
The Click, Phildelphia
AFRS Re-broadcast
8 Jan 1945
Set 2
Rock’n’Roll Live on 1950s Radio
Theme + I Was Born To Rock
Smilin’ Smokey Lynn
’Midnite Matinee’
Olympic Auditorium
KFVD Los Angeles
28 Sep 1951
Tender Trap
Count Basie Orchestra (voc) Joe Williams
’Rock’n’Roll Dance Party’
WCBS CBS NY
12 May 1956
Baby Please Don’t Go
’Sepia Swing Club’
WDIA Memphis
14 Dec 1951
Set 3
Progressive Jazz on 1948-62 Radio and TV
Theme + Move
Miles Davis Nonet
’Symphony Sid Show’
Royal Roost
WMCA New York
4 Sep 1948
Strike Up the Band
Pete Brown
’All-Star Parade of Bands’
Birdland
WRCA NBC NY
2 Sep 1952
Oleo + Theme
Phineas Newborn Jr
’Jazz Scene USA’
TV Series
Los Angeles
15 Oct 1962
Set 4
Woody Herman on Live 1944-45 Radio
Flying Home
Woody Herman Orchestra
’Old Gold Show’ Rehearsal
WABC CBS NY
2 Aug 1944
Goosey Gander
Woody Herman Orchestra
Cafe Rouge
Hotel Pennsylvania
WABC CBS NY
21 Jul 1945
Apple Honey + Blue Flame (theme)
Woody Herman Orchestra
’One Night Stand’
Cafe Rouge
Hotel Pennsylvania NYC
AFRS Re-broadcast
6 Aug 1945
Set 5
Raymond Scott Orchestra 1940
Pretty Little Petticoat (theme) + Huckleberry Duck
Raymond Scott Orchestra
Panther Room
Hotel Sherman
WMAQ NBC Chicago
1940
Creepy Weepy
Raymond Scott Orchestra
’Music Depreciation’
KHJ Mutual-Don Lees LA
1940
Blueberry Hill
Raymond Scott Orchestra (voc) Nan Wynn
Panther Room
Hotel Sherman
WMAQ NBC Chicago
1940
Caterpillar Creep
Raymond Scott Orchestra
’Music Depreciation’
KHJ Mutual-Don Lees LA
1940
Set 6
1930s Swing Bands on Radio
I Let a Song Go Out of my Heart
Charlie Barnet Orchestra
Radio Transcription
Los Angeles
1938
The Chant
Artie Shaw Orchestra
Aircheck
28 May 1939
Satan Takes a Holiday
Benny Goodman Orchestra
’Camel Caravan’
KNX CBS LA
17 Aug 1937
Bugle Blues
Count Basie Orchestra
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem NYC
30 June 1937
Set 7
Tommy Dorsey on 1945 Radip
I’m Getting Sentimental Over You (theme) + Instrumental
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
400 Restaurant
AFRS Re-broadcast
30 Sep 1945
I’m Beginning To See The Light
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (voc) Sentimentalists
Aircheck
Meadowbrook Ballroom
Cedar Grove NJ
3 Feb 1945
Song of India
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
Aircheck
Ocean Park Ca
19 Aug 1945
The Minor Goes Muggin’
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
Aircheck
Meadowbrook Ballroom
Cedar Grove NJ
3 Feb 1945
Set 8
Pianists on 1940s-50s Radio
Caldonia Boogie
Sugar Chile Robinson with Lionel Hampton Orchestra
‘Jubilee’
AFRS Hollywood
1946
Theme + I’m In a Dancing Mood
Dave Brubeck
Basin Street
WCBS CBS
New York City
Mar 1957
When Your Lover Has Gone
Erroll Garner
‘Storyville’
WHDH Boston
Dec 1953

Sy Oliver – King Swing Arranger – Phantom Dancer 10 September 2019


SWING ARRANGER

This week’s Greg Poppleton Phantom Dancer features a set of 1940s swing bands from the Spotlight Bands series, a set of 1940s Nat King Cole and a set of the Dorsey Brothers on air, Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey with a feature by their uptempo arranger, the influential musician and composer, Sy Oliver.

ONLINE

The Phantom Dancer will be online right after the 6 August 107.3 2SER Sydney live mix at 2ser.com.
Hear the show live every Tuesday 12:04-2pm and Saturday 5 – 5:55pm on 107.3 2SER Sydney

The last hour is all vinyl.

Sy Oliver

OLIVER

Sy Oliver was a byword for swing in the 1940s. His musicianship skyrocketed the careers of big band leaders Jimmie Lunceford and Tommy Dorsey, both of whom you hear on this week’s Phantom Dancer. From wiki,

“Sy Oliver was born in Battle Creek, Michigan. His mother was a piano teacher and his father was a multi-instrumentalist who made a name for himself demonstrating saxophones at a time that instrument was little used outside of marching bands.

Oliver left home at 17 to play with Zack Whyte and his Chocolate Beau Brummels and later with Alphonse Trent. He sang and played trumpet with these bands, becoming known for his “growling” horn playing. He also began arranging with them.

He continued singing for the next 17 years, making many recordings when he was with Jimmie Lunceford and with his own band. With Lunceford, from 1934 to 1937, he recorded more than two dozen vocals. From 1949 to 1951, he recorded more than a dozen with his own band. With Tommy Dorsey, he only recorded two vocals, both in 1941 with Jo Stafford, on his own compositions “Yes Indeed” and “Swingin’ on Nothin'”.

Oliver arranged and conducted many songs for Ella Fitzgerald from her Decca years. As a composer, one of his most famous songs was “T’ain’t What You Do (It’s the Way That You Do It)”, which he co-wrote with Trummy Young.

 

Sy Oliver

LUNCEFORD

In 1933, Oliver joined Jimmie Lunceford’s band as a trumpet player, arranger and songwriter. He contributed many hit arrangements for the band, including “My Blue Heaven” and “Ain’t She Sweet”, as well as his original composition “For Dancers Only” which in time became the band’s theme song. He was co-arranger with pianist Ed Wilson; Oliver primarily taking the up-tempo numbers, Wilcox the ballads. Oliver’s arrangements “were a dashing parade of innovation that rivaled Ellington’s for consistency and originality.”

DORSEY

In 1939, when band leader Tommy Dorsey decided he wanted a swing band, his first step was to hire Oliver as an arranger away from Lunceford for $5,000 more a year. Oliver then became one of the first African Americans with a prominent role in a white band when he joined Tommy Dorsey. (Fletcher Henderson, another African American composer/arranger, had joined the Benny Goodman orchestra as the arranger some years earlier.) He led the transition of the Dorsey band from Dixieland to modern big band. His joining was instrumental in Dorsey luring several major jazz players, including Buddy Rich to his band.

With Dorsey, Oliver continued sharing arranging duties with another arranger, Axel Stordahl, Oliver doing up tempo tunes, Stordahl ballads. As James Kaplan puts it, “Tommy Dorsey’s band got a rocket boost in 1939 when Dorsey stole Lunceford’s great arranger Sy Oliver.”

His arrangement of “On the Sunny Side of the Street” was a big hit for Dorsey in 1946, as were his compositions “Yes, Indeed!” (a gospel-jazz tune that was later recorded by Ray Charles), “Opus One” (originally titled as “Opus No. 1”, but changed to suit the lyric that was added later), “The Minor Is Muggin'”, and “Well, Git It”.

Here’s a 1947 Downbeat review of the Sy Oliver band that you’ll hear from a live 1946 broadcast on this week’s Phantom Dancer…

 

Sy Oliver

APRES DORSEY

Oliver left Dorsey after seven years, in 1946, and began working as a freelance arranger and as music director for Decca Records.

One of his more successful efforts as an arranger was the Frank Sinatra album I Remember Tommy, a combined tribute to their former boss.

June 26, 1950, Sy Oliver and his Orchestra recorded the first American version of C’est si bon (Henri Betti, André Hornez, Jerry Seelen) and La Vie en rose (Louiguy, Édith Piaf, Mack David) for Louis Armstrong.

In 1974 he began a nightly gig with a small band at the Rainbow Room in New York. He continued that gig until 1984, with occasion time off to make festival or other dates, including at the Roseland Ballroom in New York. He retired in 1984.

Oliver died in New York City at the age of 77.

Your Phantom Dancer Video of the Week this week is a 1936 Vitaphone short of Jimmie Lunceford and his Orchestra with trumpet and arrangements by Sy Oliver
Enjoy!

Make sure you come back to this blog, Greg Poppleton’s Radio Lounge, every Tuesday, for the newest Phantom Dancer play list and Video of the Week!

Thank you.

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #403

107.3 2SER Tuesday 10 September 2019
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+10 hours GMT)

Set 1
Swing on the 1940s Spotlight Bands Radio Series
Blue Skies + You’re Too Beautiful
Harry James Orchestra (voc) Buddy DeVito
’Spotlight Bands’
AFRS Re-broadcast
Aug 1946
Futurama
Gene Krupa Orchestra
’Spotlight Bands’
AFRS Re-broadcast
1945
Dark Eyes + Temptation (theme)
Jimmy Joy Orchestra
’Spotlight Bands’
Harlingen Tx
Blue Network
6 Jan 1945
Set 2
Nat King Cole Trio Time on 1947 – 59 Radio
Straighten Up And Fly Right (theme) + Sunday + Ad
Nat King Cole Trio (voc) NKC
’King Cole Trio Time’
KFI NBC LA
6 Mar 1948
Little Joe From Chicago + Boogie A La King
Nat King Cole Trio
’King Cole Trio Time’
Radio Transcription
1959
Tired
Pearl Bailey (voc) Nat King Cole Trio
’King Cole Trio Time’
WMAQ NBC Chicago
1 Mar 1947
Set 3
Those ‘Fabulous Dorseys’ on 1950s Radio and TV
I’m Getting Sentimental Over You (theme) + Sentimental Baby
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Lynn Roberts
’All-Star Parade of Bands’
Claridge Hotel
WMC NBC Memphis
1953
I’m Getting Sentimental Over You (theme) + Smiles
Sy Oliver Orchestra
’Endorsed By Dorsey’
WOR Mutual NY
3 Mar 1946
When The Saints Go Marching In + I’m Getting Sentimental Over You (theme)
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Johnny Ray
’Stage Show’
CBS TV NY
1 Jan 1955
Set 4
Modern 1950s Sounds: RnB, Bop and Cool
Open + King Jacquet
Illinois Jacquet
’Sepia Swing Club’
WDIA Memphis
14 Dec 1951
Cool Blues
Charlie Parker
Hi-Hat Club
WCOP Boston
1954
I’ve Got Rhythm
The Flexible Five
’California Melodies’
KHJ Mutual Los Angeles
1950
Set 5
Broadcasting From The Savoy
Round Midnight (theme) + 711
Cootie Williams Orchestra
’One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom NYC
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Body and Soul (theme) + Chant of the Groove
Coleman Hawkins Orchestra
Aircheck
Savoy Ballroom NYC
1940
They Can’t Take That Away From Me
Count Basie Orchestra (voc) Billie Holiday
Aircheck
Savoy Ballroom NYC
30 Jun 1937
Floogie Boo + St Louis Blues
Cootie Williams Orchestra
’One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom NYC
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Set 6
Swing Bands on 1930s – 1940s Radio
Chatterbox
Charlie Barnet Orchestra
Radio Transcription
Los Angeles
Apr 1938
Are You Kidding?
Jimmie Lunceford Orchestra (voc) Band
’Spotlight Bands’
Jefferson Barracks Missouri
Blue Network
23 Nov 1945
Benny’s Bugle
Lee and Lester Young Orchestra
Club Capri
KHJ Mutual LA
2 Dec 1941
The Blizzard
Louis Prima Orchestra
’Spotlight Bands’
Mitchell Field NY
Mutual Network
15 Jan 1945
Set 7
Pop Songs on 1930s Radio
The You And Me That Used To Be
George Hall Orchestra
Radio Transcription
New York City
1937
When Summer Is Gone (theme) + You’ve Got Me Crying Again
Hal Kemp Orchestra
’Lavena Program’
Radio Transcription
New York City
1934
Chlo-e
Benny Goodman Orchestra
’Camel Caravan’
KNX CBS LA
17 Aug 1937
The Little Man Who Wasn’t There
Johnny Messner Orchestra
’Radio Transcription’
New York City
1939
Set 8
Modern Improvised Jazz on 1950s Radio
The Cinch + I Don’t Want To Be Kissed
Buddy Rich Quintet
Birdland
WABC ABC NY
8 Nov 1958
The 7-11 Jump
Erroll Garner Trio
Basin Street
WCBS CBS New York City
May 1956
All The Things You Are
Dave Brubeck Quartet
Basin Street
WCBS CBS New York City
Feb 1956

Hit of the Week – Phantom Dancer Show 6 August 2019


CARDBOARD RECORDS

This week’s Greg Poppleton Phantom Dancer feature is a set of famous cardboard records from 1931. These are Hit of the Week cardboard records.

ONLINE

The Phantom Dancer will be online right after the 6 August 107.3 2SER Sydney live mix at 2ser.com.
Hear the show live every Tuesday 12:04-2pm and Saturday 5 – 5:55pm on 107.3 2SER Sydney

ONE SIDED

Hit of the Week was a US record label founded in 1930 that sold low-priced records made of resin coated cardboard rather than the usual shellac.

After August 1931 they were extended play discs advertised with ‘up to twice the playing time of the average record’.

They also used two long outdated industry practices not used since before 1910:

1. some of the records had the songs announced or contained advertising about ‘Hit of the Week’ records. (The company that brought out Hit of the Week records also produced low cost advertising discs).

2. All of the records were recorded on one side only.

The playing side of the cardboard records was coated with Durium, a lightweight synthetic resin. The unrecorded side was uncoated and the unprotected cardboard absorbed moisture from the air. Therefore the discs have a propensity to curl. They now often require the use of a clip or weight around the turntable spindle to keep them flat during play.

Apart from some low-frequency rumble due to their texture, Hit of the Week audio fidelity was equal to or better than most ordinary shellac records., as you’ll hear in Set 4 of this week’s Phantom Dancer.

A few releases had the performer’s portrait printed on the uncoated paper side, or were imprinted there with advertising matter. They were issued in flimsy rice paper sleeves, few of which have survived.

A new issue featuring a current hit song was released every week. They were sold at newsstands. Previous issues could be obtained by mail order. Retailing for 15 cents each, later raised to 20 cents, Hit of the Week records were by far the lowest-priced records in the US at that time.

BOOM AND BUST

The first regular issue was released in February 1930.

By mid 1930, up to half a million copies of each week’s issue were produced. But sales quickly slumped as the Depression worsened.

In March 1931 the company went into receivership and in May it was purchased by the Erwin, Wasey & Company advertising agency. They debuted a new format debuted in August, featuring two songs or dance tunes on each single-sided disc and a total playing time of about five minutes, but the label remained unprofitable.

The final Hit of the Week issue was released in June 1932.

After the demise of the label, some limited use was made of smaller (often only four inches in diameter) records made of the same material, mostly for giveaway advertising novelties. Specimens of one of the most common advertising records, which invited the recipient to come see the new 1932 Chevrolet automobile, are usually found with a mailing label and postage on the uncoated back side.

Musicians who recorded for Hit of the Week included Gene Austin, Duke Ellington (under the pseudonym “Harlem Hot Chocolates”), Ben Pollack, Eddie Cantor (on a special 25 cent “Durium De Luxe” issue), Morton Downey, and Rudy Vallée. Most of the arrangements were performed by studio musicians in New York, led by Adrian Schubert, Bert Hirsch, Vincent Lopez, Don Voorhees and Phil Spitalny.

Jazz solos by instrumental stars including Bunny Berrigan, Joe Venuti and Eddie Lang enlivened some recordings.

Two of the recordings on this week’s Phantom Dancer are tailed with football songs, trying to appeal to the young, male university market.

The vocalists who recorded with the studio bands included several popular radio singers of the day including Ralph Kirbery and Helen Rowland.

In the UK, a similar series was issued on the Durium label with songs by Al Bowlly and more.

VIDEO

This week’s Phantom Dancer video of the week is from the late 1940s, an unidentified woman reading to paper tape. Enjoy her story!

6 AUGUST PLAY LIST

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #397

107.3 2SER Tuesday 6 August 2019
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+10 hours GMT)
National Program:
Edge FM Bega Monday 3 – 4pm
7MID Oatlands Tuesday 8 – 9pm
2ARM Armidale Friday 12 – 1pm
3MGB Mallacoota Sunday 5 – 6am
1ART ArtSoundFM Canberra Sunday 7 – 8pm
7LTN CityPark FM Launceston Sunday 5 – 6am
and early morning on 23 other stations.

Set 1
1945 – 46 Radio Spotlight Bands
Nightmare (theme) + Bedford Drive
Artie Shaw Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Santa Ana AFB Ca
Mutual Network
3 Oct 1945
Chickery Chick
Gene Krupa Orchestra (voc) Anita O’Day
‘Spotlight Bands’
AFRS Re-broadcast
1946
This Love of Mine + Close
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (voc) Frank Sinatra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Blue Network
17 Jan 1942
Set 2
Cocoanut Grove 1932-34 Radio
Theme + You’re Blase + Sophisticated Lady
Vincent Valsanti aka Ted Fio Rito Orchestra
‘Cocoanut Grove’
TRANSCO Radio Transcription
Hollywood
1934
The Vamp
Phil Harris Orchestra
‘Cocoanut Grove’
TRANSCO Radio Transcription
Hollywood
1933
Gooby Gear + Music in the Moonlight (theme)
Jimmie Grier Orchestra (voc) Donald Novis
‘Cocoanut Grove’
TRANSCO Radio Transcription
Hollywood
1932
Set 3
1941 Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street
Open + Magic Carpet
Paul Lavalle’s Woodwind 10
‘Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street’
WJZ NBC NY
14 Aug 1941
Flow Gently Sweet Afton
Diane Courtney
‘Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street’
WJZ NBC NY
14 Aug 1941
Twirl Away
Lumel Morgan Trio
‘Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street’
WJZ NBC NY
14 Aug 1941
Home Town Blues
Henry Levine’s Dixieland Octet
‘Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street’
WJZ NBC NY
14 Aug 1941
Set 4
Hit of the Week Records
Me + Football Song
Sam Lanin Orchestra with vocals
Hit of the Week Record
1931
Love Letters in the Sand + Football Song
Sam Lanin Orchestra with vocals
Hit of the Week Record
1931
Pardon Me, Pretty Baby
Sam Lanin Orchestra (voc) Paul Small
Hit of the Week Record
13 Aug 1931
Set 5
Louis Armstrong Big Swing Band on 1940s Radio
Open + I Never Knew
Louis Armstrong Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Blue Network
Dalls TX
17 Aug 1943
I’ve Got Plenty of Nothing
Louis Armstrong Orchestra (voc) Ada Brown
‘Jubilee’
AFRS NYC
1943
Lazy River
Louis Armstrong Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Blue Network
Dalls TX
17 Aug 1943
It Had To Be You + Close
Louis Armstrong Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Tuskagee Alabama
AFRS Re-broadcast
5 Oct 1944
Set 6
Trad Bands on 1940s Radio
Open + Medley
Bud Freeman Summa cum Laude Orchestra
Panther Room
Hotel Sherman
WMAQ NBC Red Chicago
20 May 1940
That’s a Plenty + Relaxin’ at the Trouro
Muggsy Spanier
Home Recording
Blue Note
WMAQ NBC Chicago
18 Oct 1953
Big Butter and Egg Man
Miff Mole and the Nixieland 6
‘For The Record’
WEAF NBC NYC
30 Oct 1944
Set 7
Chuck Foster 1938-40 Radio Transcriptions
Oh, You Beautiful Doll (theme)
Chuck Foster Orchestra (voc) CF
Radio Transcription
1940
I Found My Yellow Basket
Chuck Foster Orchestra (voc) Dorothy Brandon, CF and The 3 Ds
Radio Transcription
1938
Listen to My Heart
Chuck Foster Orchestra (voc) Dorothy Brandon
Radio Transcription
1940
How Srrange
Chuck Foster Orchestra (voc) Dorothy Brandon
Radio Transcription
1939
Set 8
Early Charlie Parker on 1940 and 45 Radio
Honeysuckle Rose
Jay McShann Orchestra (alto sax Charlie Parker)
Radio Transcription
KFBI Witchita Kansas
2 Dec 1940
Floogie Boo + St Louis Blues
Cootie Williams Orchestra (with Charlie Parker)
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
I Found a New Baby
Jay McShann Orchestra (alto sax Charlie Parker)
Radio Transcription
KFBI Witchita Kansas
30 Nov 1940

Victory Belles All-Women 1940s Radio Show – Phantom Dancer 19 March 2019


VICTORY BELLES

This week I’m thrilled to find for you on The Phantom Dancer with Greg Poppleton, a 1942 all-woman jazz show I played on the Phantom Dancer over ten years ago. The tape has re-surfaced. This week, enjoy the Victory Belles as your Phantom Dancer featured artists with the Bea Turpin Orchestra and singer Martha Mears (who sang White Christmas with Bing Crosby in the movie, Holiday Inn). See the full play list below.

PHANTOM DANCER

This week’s Phantom Dancer will be online immediately after the 12 March 2SER live mix at 2ser.com.
Hear the show live every Tuesday 12:04-2pm on 107.3 2SER Sydney

BACKGROUND

Billboard, 13 Feb 1943 page 7 wrote,

“KNX-CBS is the only net here having an all-girl show. ‘Victory Belles’ uses an all girl ork and comedienne, with Mabel Todd filling the latter spot. Show is produced by Ona Munson. Billy Gould, sound effects, the only man on the program is forced to don Mother Hubbard wig – and cigar – to hold his job on this show.”

Ona Munson
Ona Munson

STORY

Jeannie Gayle Pool in her book, ‘Peggy Gilbert and Her All-Girl Band’ quotes Peggy Gilbert talking about the Victory Belle broadcasts,

“Ona Munson, who was a movie star, she was in Gone With The Wind, you remember? And she had quite a little reputation at that time as a star and she had her own show on CBS. She wanted an all-girl jazz orchestra on it and so we got together…There was actually no leader. A bunch of us just got together and said, “Here we are and this is it.” I was one of them and we were on that for a year. We had a weekly program. 1942, I think, right after the war started. We were at CBS in Hollywood. And what terrific audiences…they would bring fellows in from all over the place around here, in uniform, And it was just a terrific show. I loved it. The girls were such fine musicians. they would cut the stuff. They’d put the arrangements in front of us just before we went on. We’d be lucky if we had time to go through it before the show started. we’d talk through it, usually, and maybe go through a couple of parts of it. And then, away we’d go. Accompanying acts and doing our own thing.”

Side note: Munson introduced the song ‘You’re the Cream in My Coffee’ in the 1927 Broadway musical ‘Hold Everything’.

Martha Mears singing 'White Christmas' with Bing Crosby in the movie 'Holiday Inn'.
Martha Mears singing ‘White Christmas’ with Bing Crosby in the movie ‘Holiday Inn’.

EIGHT JILLS OF JIVE

“We had some fine musicians. we had Jane Sager on trumpet; and we had Pee Wee [Naomi Preble] on trombone;…Katherine Cruise on first alto: I was on first tenor, clarinet and vibes; Dody Jeshke on drums and Bea Turpin on piano.”

There would have been a double bass player and singer.

VIDEO

This week’s Phantom Dancer video of the week is not the Victory Belles, but a breathtaking climb up the radio 2UW tower in Sydney, 1944. Happy clambering!

19 MARCH PLAY LIST

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #377

107.3 2SER Tuesday 19 March 2019
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+11 hours GMT)
National Program:
ArtSoundFM Canberra Sunday 7 – 8pm
2ARM Armidale Friday 12:04 – 1pm
and early morning on 24 other stations.

Set 1
Mod 1950s Radio
Lover Come Back To Me
Bud Powell
Birdland
WJZ ABC NY
7 Feb 1953
Cool Blues
Charlie Parker
‘Symphony Sid Show’
Hi Hat Club
WCOP Boston
Indiana
Lester Young
‘Bandstand USA’
Cafe Bohemia
WOR Mutual NY
22 Dec 1956
Set 2
Duke Ellington 1942-47 Radio
Feeling A Little Tomorrow Like I Feel Today
Duke Ellington Orchestra
‘Spotlight Bands’
Ciro’s Hollywood
AFRS Re-broadcast
25 Jul 1947
I Wonder Why?
Duke Ellington Orchestra (voc) Bette Roche
‘Spotlight Bands’
Buffalo NY
Blue Network
27 Nov 1943
Poco + Take The A Train (theme)
Duke Ellington Orchestra
El Patio Ballroom
Lakeside
KLZ CBS Denver CO
15 Jul 1942
Set 3
Singin’ Sam
Open + Ol’ King Cole
Singing Sam
Radio Transcription
New York City
1940
What’s It Gonna Get Ya? + Hortence
Singing Sam
Radio Transcription
New York City
1940
A Brownbird Singing + Close (Coca Cola Waltz)
Singing Sam
Radio Transcription
New York City
1940
Set 4
Women’s Radio ‘Victory Belles’
Open + Ten Little Soldiers
Bea Turpin Eight Jills of Jive (voc) The Music Maids
‘Victory Belles’
KNX CBS LA
12 Dec 1942
When You And I Were Young, Maggie
Bea Turpin Orchestra
‘Victory Belles’
KNX CBS LA
12 Dec 1942
When You And I Were Young, Maggie (voc) Mabel Todd
Bea Turpin Orchestra
‘Victory Belles’
KNX CBS LA
12 Dec 1942
I Came Here To Talk For Joe
Bea Turpin Orchestra (voc) Martha Mears
‘Victory Belles’
KNX CBS LA
12 Dec 1942
Set 5
Bunny Berrigan 1934-36 Radio
I Can’t Get Started (theme) + My Melancholy Baby
Bunny Berrigan Orchestra
Broadcast
mid-1939
Moonshine over Kentucky and Heigh Ho
Bunny Berrigan Orchestra
Paradise Restaurant
WOR Mutual NY
3 May 1938
Familiar Moe
Bunny Berrigan Orchestra
Trianon Ballroom
WCLE Cleveland OH
9 Apr 1939
Deed I Do
Bunny Berrigan Orchestra (voc) Bunny Berrigan
Mutual Network
Boston
20 Sep 1939
Set 6
Billie HolidayRadio
You Better Go Now
Billie Holiday (voc) Percy Faith Orchestra
‘Woolworth Hour’
KNX CBS LA
1954
I Cover The Waterfront
Billie Holiday
Storyville
Copley Square Hotel
WHDH Boston
29 Oct 1951
I’ll Get By
Billie Holiday
‘Spotlight Bands’
Metropolitan Opera House
WJZ Blue NY
18 Jan 1944
You’re Driving Me Crazy
Billie Holiday
Storyville
Copley Square Hotel
WHDH Boston
Oct 1953
Set 7
1930s Radio Transcriptions
I’ve Got You Under My Skin
Red Nichols Orchestra (voc) The Songcopators
Radio Transcription
NYC
30 Nov 1936
Panama
Hal Kemp Orchestra
Radio Transcription
NYC
14 Dec 1934
Never Should Have Told You
Red Nichols Orchestra (voc) The Songcopators
Radio Transcription
NYC
30 Nov 1936
Blue Moon
Hal Kemp Orchestra (voc) Bob Allen
Radio Transcription
NYC
14 Dec 1934
Set 8
Dorsey Brothers 1956 Radio
You Are My First Love
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Tommy Mercer
Cafe Rouge
Hotel Statler
WCBS CBS NY
1956
I Could Have Danced All Night
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Dolly Houston
Cafe Rouge
Hotel Statler
WCBS CBS NY
1956
Too Close For Comfort
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Tommy Mercer
Cafe Rouge
Hotel Statler
WCBS CBS NY
1956
Too Young To Go Steady
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Dolly Houston
Cafe Rouge
Hotel Stadtler
WCBS CBS NY
1956