Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts

Friday, April 1, 2022

Florida QSL Card, Sort Of


 

I'm not part of the ham radio community, so I hope I'm getting this right.  QSL cards are the way ham radio operators keep track of who talks to whom.  Anyway, a few weeks ago I bought a small envelope of QSL cards.  Most of them were personalized images, drawings rather than photographs.  For those who are interested in such things, I've put a couple of them up on my Fair Use blog which I use for non-photographic bits of ephemera I've collected, as well as the huge number of images I've found while surfing the web that I've found interesting enough that I'd like to save and review from time to time.  

So, back to this card.  It's not a great image, just a commercially produced postcard with some ham radio info handwritten on the back.  The caption, "Cypress trees many centuries old grow far out in the waters of Lake Eloise at Florida's Cypress Gardens, and together with the brilliant flowers form a picture of the South that will never be forgotten" The card's publisher, "Florida Natural Color, Inc. 2652 N.E. 189th St., Miami, Fla 33163" The card doesn't look like it was ever mailed.  There's no stamp or postmark.  It was, however, addressed to "BILL, P.O. 6250, TITUSVILLE, FLA 32780."  And now for the ham radio stuff, "KENWOOD-T.S. 520, D-104, WILSON S.S. QUAD 45" And written separately, "ViA John, SSB-124."  Anyone who understands ham radio can translate what all the letters and numbers mean and put in the comments section at the bottom of the post.   

Monday, March 12, 2018

Music On Television



Imagine, if you will, you're a music crazed kid in the 1930's.  You've got a stack of big band 78 rpm records that you play all the time.  You've got society bands like Larry Carlton, swing bands like Benny Goodman, Glen Miller, and your favorite, Count Basie.  Every waking hour you dream of what it would be like to be with one of your favorites, touring the nation to sell out crowds.  Even a regional band would be great.  So you practice and practice until you're old enough to be a professional musician just like your idols.

And then it happens.  It's not a band that comes calling, it's the draft board.  The Japanese have bombed Pearl Harbor, and like every other kid your age, all your dreams are on hold until the war is over.  It's not music you dream of, it's survival.  Eventually, the war ends, you've come home in one piece, which is not something  a lot of your friends can say.

So,you get stateside and marry your sweetheart.  She waited for you, and after all the death you've seen, all you want is a normal life.  You take a good job at the car plant, have a kid or two and settle in to a nice, comfortable life in the new suburb.  But music keeps playing in the back of your head.  You can't let it go, so you take a part time job playing  in a restaurant.  The patrons enjoy their dates, and every once in awhile, one of them drops a dollar in your tip jar and makes a request.

This goes on for a few years, and you're beginning to hate music.  Something you thought would never happen.  One night you're sitting there going through your set list when this man approaches.  "Not Mona Lisa," you think.  "Please no, not Mona Lisa.  If I have to play Mona Lisa one more time I'll throw up."

But he doesn't ask you to play anything.  He hands you his business card and explains his dilemma.  He's a program director for this new thing called television.   The network provides a few hours of programming every day, mostly radio serials reworked for TV, but the rest of those hours have to filled with local content.  He has this idea for a morning talk show, with a couple of hosts who will chat up members of the local women's club, athletes, and whatever famous person who's passing through town, and he wants a musician to play intros, a few songs, maybe even compose a theme song.  He asks you to stop by the station the next morning and talk.  So, you call in sick, take the street car downtown and meet with the station manager.  You talk music, play a few songs, tell him you're confident that you can write that theme song.  Of course, the job is a bit more than the  morning show.  After that, you'll pull the same duty on a cooking show, the ten minute local news broadcast, and then after a three hour lunch, it's background music for the after school cartoon show.  And the money they're offering is amazing.  Twice what you're making at the car plant.

You go home and tell the wife, but she's not exactly thrilled.  "Television?  They're so expensive.   We don't know anyone who can even afford a television.  Why give up a good job for such a fly by night sort of thing."  There's a big fight, but you're getting a second chance at your childhood dream, and you're not turning it down.  It's bye bye assembly line and hello TV.

At first, it's just as the program director described.  You can play what you want, and it was easier to write the theme song than you expected, so while you're not ecstatic,  over all you're happy with your new job.  And then one day John and Karen, the show's two hosts, say something to you, live on air.  It's a little surprising, at first, but you've been shot at by a Panzer tank, so you don't really rattle.  Soon you're more of a regular part of the show.  People begin recognizing you on the street, as more and more people actually buy a television set.  Then one day, you get a call for a local business man.  He's built a super market, a first for the new suburb, and he wants you to play at the grand opening.  You call up a few guys you know and form a small combo.  After that, it's car dealerships, weddings,  a prom or two, and a regular Saturday night set at a local supper club.  No requests allowed. No Mona Lisa.

  And then one day, you read in the paper that Count Basie is in town.  No black man has ever appeared on the station before, but you go and beg your boss to have him on the show with John and Karen.  He's a little worried, but this isn't the south, so in the end, he relents, and for one wonderful morning you get to play with your idol.  After the show is over, the Count turns to you and says, "You got chops, man"

As the years pass by, the station moves more to prerecorded music,and rock and roll becomes the popular music that everyone wants to listen to.  But that's alright.  You're the station's music director, and you book the acts.  Chuck Berry may not be the Count, but he's not bad, and no one really cares if you hire a black musician.  You're thinking about retirement when another opportunity comes your way.  The dean of a local college asks if you want to teach jazz composition.  You tell him you went form high school directly into the army and never went to college.  "That's alright," he replies.  "We'll give you an honorary degree, and then you can teach a few classes every week.  All because the music kept playing in your head.

That's not the story of Larry Ferrari who spent years playing organ on a Philadelphia television  station.  He was drafted into the army, but it was right after the war ended.  He preformed on armed services radio before starting his TV career.  But I like my story better.

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

The Really Big Radio Has To Warm Up




Who out there is old enough to remember when radios had to warm up?   There was a time when radios, record players, televisions, and early tape recorders ran on tubes, turn them on, and until the tubes actually got warm, there was this low level hum that came out of the speakers.  I sometimes think I might have been born in the wrong time.  I like old technology.

Printed "Week of July 7, 1952"

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Jimmie Allen, Air Cadet



This one's another photo from my recent purchase, an envelope of military memorabilia, although, technically, it's not military at all.

Jimmie Allen wasn't in the Army Air Force.  In fact, Jimmie Allen wasn't even real.  He was the title character in the radio serial, The Air Adventures of Jimmie Allen.  The show ran from from 1933 to 1937, and poor Jimmie stayed sixteen years old for the entire four year run.  Two former pilots, air aces from the first world war, Bob Burtt and Bill Moore, both from Kansas City, had an idea for a radio show about a young man who becomes a pilot.  They wrote up a script, shopped it around, and a weekly 15 minute radio series was born.  In the pilot (About an aspiring pilot) young Jimmie was a telegraph operator at an airport in, you guessed it, Kansas City.  Asked to send a coded telegram, he figures out that it's about the hijacking of a plane carrying a million dollars.  He turns to his friend and mentor, Speed Robertson, a pilot,and together they thwart the hijacking and become heroes.   Speed gets made a secret G-Man, and Jimmie,with his friends help, becomes a flying cadet.  And yes, the show was aimed at children.

So, is this a picture of the actor who played young Jimmie?  Sadly, no.  After Burtt and Moore sold their script, professionals were brought in the make the actual show.  The director was a man in his mid forties, John Frank, who cast himself as the much younger Jimmie.  Well, it was radio, where if the voice was right, old could play young, young could play old, men could play women, and women could play men.

There was an attempt to resurrect The Air Adventures of Jimmie Allen after World War 2, but it didn't work out.  Perhaps it was because they used many of the old scripts and substituted things like jet for plane.  

Written on the back, "STOP, LOOK IN HERE. Bring em back alive, Bobby."


Wednesday, October 29, 2014

The Salesman


What is this man selling?  Let's see...Argus slide viewers, a home haircut kit, a Kodak Starflash Camera, typewriters, a clock, a tripod, Shaffer pens, a movie projector, and what looks like some sort of audio equipment in the radio, record player, open reel tape recorder type of stuff.  All things I can remember, and some of which, when I was young, I found amazing.  So, pawn shop or general store?

Saturday, May 11, 2013

The Gunner In Hawaii


Written on the back of the photo: "Honolulu in the summer of 1967"

I didn't buy this photo because of it's connection to Hawaii.  No knock on the state, but Hawaii is one of five states I've never visited, and while I'd love to make the trip,  I don't pine for it's blue lagoons.  (Does Hawaii have lagoons?)  I picked up this image because the man looks like Bob Prince.

For those without a Pittsburgh connection, Bob "The Gunner" Prince was the longtime voice of the Pittsburgh Pirates, and for me, a cherished childhood memory.  Prince was born in Los Angeles, my current home, in 1916.  His father was in the army,  so L.A. wasn't home, so much as a stop on an ever changing map.  Prince would become a Pittsburgher latter in life, graduating from Schenley High in the North Oakland neighborhood of the city.  (Andy Warhol was also a Schenley High grad.)  A star swimmer at The University of Pittsburgh, after graduation, Prince went into broadcasting, and in 1948 joined the Pirate broadcast team as color man for Rosy Rosewall, taking over the top spot for the team when Rosewall died in 1955.  In 1969, broadcast rights for the Pirates had passed from Atlantic Richfield to Westinghouse Broadcasting, and Bob Prince never got along with his new employers.  For five years, the Pirate organization intervened every time Westinghouse tried to get rid of him, but in 1975, they gave up defending him, so Prince and his broadcasting partner Nellie King, were shown the door.  Prince did a year with the Houston Astros before being fired.  He also did part of a season on ABC's Monday Night Baseball broadcasts, but was let go when he attacked management, on air, for not letting him call games the way he wanted to.  He did radio for NHL,  Pittsburgh Penguins for part of a season, but he didn't know the game and had trouble with French Canadian names, so that didn't work out either.  In 1982, he returned to the Pirates, calling a handful of games on a cable station, and returned to start the 1985 season on radio only.  Bob Prince didn't finish the season, but not because of disputes with his employers.  A heavy smoker, Bob Prince died of mouth cancer, mid season.

The official story on Bob Prince's nickname, The Gunner, was as a reference to his fast, staccato style of speech.  The unofficial story is that he had a near miss from a gun totting, jealous husband.

Prince was a colorful presence in the broadcast booth.  He had a love of really bad sports jackets, a tendency to give nicknames to  players, and was the inventor of more than a few colorful phrases.  If the Pirates were down by a couple of runs, we needed a "bloop and a blast." When Roberto Clemente came to the plate it was, "Arriba, Arriba."   Clemente hated that one, considering it a bit racist.  I can remember an interview he did with Hank Aaron, where he suggested that once Aaron tied Babe Ruth's all time home run record, he should retire mid game and not risk hitting number 716.  Hank looked somewhat baffled at that one.  And of course, Bob Prince invented the Green Weenie, a green plastic rattle,  modeled after the souvenir pin given out by Heinz to those who took the pickle factory tour.  The Green Weenie was closer to the size of a foot long hot dog, and well, to put it mildly, a lot of fans thought of it as a green penis.  I know I did.  Hey, I was a teenager, what do you expect.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

The Los Angeles Proof Sheet






What I'd do to own these negatives!

This is what I imagine when I see these four images.  A young couple drive their old jalopy across country to seek a good life in southern California.  The  first thing they do is  drive around the city and take pictures of all the things they've  dreamed about.  I did the same thing about forty-five years or so after these photos were taken.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Central Radio


I love this picture. The photographer may have got his depth of field wrong, with the four people in front slightly soft, but it's still a very compelling image. The reflection of the building across the street, the four people, employees, owners or customers, standing there, so confident in their pose. Just great. Probably from the late forties or early to mid fifties.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Kay Kyser


Kay Kyser was one of the most successful band leaders of the swing era. In all, his band recorded over 400 sides and had eleven number one hits. Kyser was born in Rocky Mount, North Carolina in 1905. While at the University of North Carolina he was a cheerleader and director of student plays. At the recommendation of Hal Kemp, he took over the leadership, from Kemp, of a local band. After his college career, he continued to lead his own band, and in 1934, was booked into the Blackhawk Club in Chicago. It was there that he developed the gimmick that he would be known for, The Kollege of Musical Knowledge, an amateur night quiz for the contestants. In 1938 he hired vocalist Ginny Simms. Broadcast regionally by the Mutual Broadcasting System, he went national and to New York and had a hit show on NBC radio. In 1949, he took his band to television, but after the show was cancelled in 1950, he retired from show business and never returned. I'm fairly certain that the singer with Kyser is Ginny Simms. She left the band in 1941, so if I'm right in my identification of Simms, with the NBC mic, this photo was taken between 1939 and 1941.