Knowledge (XXG)

Let's Dance (radio)

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123:
three-week stay at the Palomar on Vermont and Third in Hollywood. Goodman started the evening cautiously, playing some stock arrangements he had purchased on the trip. The Palomar crowd seemed as indifferent to the band as the other audiences had been that summer. According to Alexander, Goodman's drummer,
122:
series in May 1935 and the band’s opening at the Congress, Benny Goodman and his orchestra suffered one defeat after another. In August, however, they scored a triumph at the Palomar in Los Angeles, a prelude of what was to happen at the Congress... The discouraged Goodman band opened August 21 for a
140:
program. The coastal time difference enabled West Coast listeners to hear Goodman beginning at 9pm, three hours earlier than listeners on the East Coast heard the show. And a West Coast disc jockey, Al Jarvis, had been playing Goodman’s recordings on his shows. The Palomar audience had been groomed
100:
Willard Alexander, who died in 1984, was the band's booking agent in 1935. He had placed his job on the line at the Music Corporation of America (MCA) by representing Goodman. In 1978, Alexander spent an afternoon with me at his New York office recalling the problems Goodman faced during the summer
56:
was a five-hour broadcast from New York, yet calculated so that all time zones heard three hours of music. The first three hours of the broadcast were played between 10:30pm to 1:30am in The East Coast Time zone, and 9:30pm to 12:30am in the Central Time zone. Between 9:30pm and 12:30am in the
127:, said, "If we're gonna die, Benny, let's die playing our own thing." At the beginning of the next set, Goodman told the band to put aside the stock arrangements and called for charts by Fletcher Henderson and other "swing" arrangers who were writing for the band. When the band’s trumpeter, 80:
went off the air May 25, 1935. Despite its popularity, the program abruptly ended due to a labor dispute involving Nabisco employees, with the company temporarily discontinuing all of their sponsored radio shows as a result. However, because of the expense involved in sustaining
22: 131:, played his solos on Henderson’s versions of "Sometimes I'm Happy" and "King Porter Stomp," the Palomar dancers cheered like crazy and exploded with applause! They even gathered around the bandstand to listen to this new music. 52:), it aired for three full hours in any given Time zone, starting at 10:30pm on the East Coast. This late-night time slot gave the program a much larger audience on the West Coast when heard earlier in the evening. 105:
radio program. Xavier Cugat’s Latin orchestra and Kel Murray’s society orchestra dominated the first two "live" hours; Goodman was not heard until the last hour, late in the evening on the East Coast.
118:’s already enjoyed nationwide popularity. But they were patterned after the so-called hotel bands and played a pleasant, innocuous, "sweet style" of music... Between the end of the 57:
Mountain Time zone, listeners tuned in to the second, third and fourth hours. Hours three, four and five were heard on the West Coast between the hours of 9:30pm and 12:30am.
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for Benny Goodman and His Orchestra. Radio broadcasts from the Palomar sent the excitement from coast to coast--including Goodman's hometown, Chicago.
192: 187: 72:'s group stand out as "downright thrilling," according to George Simon. It was a turning point for Goodman, who had more than 70 60:
The series premiered December 1, 1934, showcasing three different regular bands. The mellow music of Kel Murray (a pseudonym for
101:
of 1935... In early 1935, Goodman and his struggling band had been one of three orchestras featured on NBC’s Saturday night
197: 165: 136:
Radio had made the difference. Earlier that year, the crowd at the Palomar had heard Goodman’s band on the
158: 73: 169: 61: 181: 128: 69: 49: 111: 65: 21: 124: 115: 45: 20: 85:, Nabisco decided not to renew the series for another season. 159:
Spink, George. "Benny Goodman Launches Swing Era in Chicago."
38: 37:
was a Saturday night radio music program broadcast by
96:in launching Goodman as the "King of Swing": 8: 151: 7: 14: 92:, described the crucial role of 48:(initially to promote their new 76:swing arrangements by the time 1: 193:1930s American radio programs 188:American music radio programs 88:George Spink, writing in the 64:) and the Latin rhythms of 214: 168:February 9, 2009, at the 110:Other big bands such as 46:National Biscuit Company 29: 24: 163:, November 10, 1985. 16:Radio music program 198:NBC radio programs 74:Fletcher Henderson 41:in the mid-1930s. 30: 25:Advertisement for 161:Chicago Sun-Times 90:Chicago Sun-Times 44:Sponsored by the 205: 172: 156: 213: 212: 208: 207: 206: 204: 203: 202: 178: 177: 176: 175: 170:Wayback Machine 157: 153: 148: 17: 12: 11: 5: 211: 209: 201: 200: 195: 190: 180: 179: 174: 173: 150: 149: 147: 144: 143: 142: 133: 132: 107: 106: 62:Murray Kellner 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 210: 199: 196: 194: 191: 189: 186: 185: 183: 171: 167: 164: 162: 155: 152: 145: 139: 135: 134: 130: 129:Bunny Berigan 126: 121: 117: 113: 109: 108: 104: 99: 98: 97: 95: 91: 86: 84: 79: 75: 71: 70:Benny Goodman 67: 63: 58: 55: 51: 50:Ritz Crackers 47: 42: 40: 36: 35: 28: 23: 19: 160: 154: 137: 119: 112:Guy Lombardo 102: 93: 89: 87: 82: 77: 66:Xavier Cugat 59: 53: 43: 33: 32: 31: 26: 18: 138:Let's Dance 120:Let's Dance 103:Let’s Dance 94:Let's Dance 83:Let's Dance 78:Let's Dance 54:Let's Dance 34:Let's Dance 27:Let's Dance 182:Categories 146:References 125:Gene Krupa 116:Glen Gray 166:Archived 114:’s and 68:made 39:NBC 184::

Index


NBC
National Biscuit Company
Ritz Crackers
Murray Kellner
Xavier Cugat
Benny Goodman
Fletcher Henderson
Guy Lombardo
Glen Gray
Gene Krupa
Bunny Berigan
Spink, George. "Benny Goodman Launches Swing Era in Chicago." Chicago Sun-Times, November 10, 1985.
Archived
Wayback Machine
Categories
American music radio programs
1930s American radio programs
NBC radio programs

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