Tuesday, September 10, 2019

Two Unusual Collections and Two Very Short Tapes

Happy September!

First, I am indebted, and far from the first time, to Eric Paddon, a consistent follower, and one who often chimes in with further or clarifying information when I share media tapes, particularly vintage radio and TV involving celebrates, shows or genres of the past. Last month, I posted excerpts from two episodes of the Bea Kalmus shows, and Eric offered up detailed and fascinating commentary. You could read these on the page for that posting, but I want to share them here.


The musical that never came off "Mad Avenue" that Fairfax Mason refers to was supposed to open in the summer of 1960 starring Frankie Laine. Then behind the scenes problems resulted in it being delayed and in September 1960, the NY Daily News reported it was going to go into rehearsals in December 1960, still starring Laine, but it never did. The producer of the show sued another NY newspaper in November 1960 for libel, claiming that a June report on the show "dissolving in rehearsal" had caused investors to ask for their money back, and that apparently was why the show never opened.

While there is a superficiality to programs like this and others of the day like the weekly CBS Radio talk show hosted by Mitch Miller in this era from Sardis I do find it a fascinating time capsule of the era and it's very rare when programming like this surfaces.

Also, Mason's career clearly revolved around the narrow world of New York cabaret spots and nightclubs. That has the effect of making such people seem very obscure today because they don't leave behind a long trail of performance work in film/theater to judge their careers, but NY audiences in those days tended to have a better awareness of such people even if they were nobodies west of the Hudson. (The NY Daily News noted she had won the "most beautiful child" contest they put on in 1940 when plugging her eventual Broadway debut in "How To Succeed" While her part was small, apparently she did understudy the lead actress during her time on the show).

Thanks again, Eric!

~~

Today, I have two major items which are unrelated except that they each feature a series of internally related items, strung together in this way for reasons that are not clear to me, although I have a better idea in terms of the first set than I do for the second.

First up, a reel which contains a recording - clearly made from a record, but my copy in on a reel, of a series of numbered musical cues, played by an orchestra. Some are little more than "stingers" - very short pieces probably meant to accentuate a moment in a production (perhaps a radio production), others are introductory or transitional musical phrases, and others are considerably longer music beds. The numbering system is weird - as is the emotionless voice rattling them off . And while there are themes that recur within some of the segments, the different musical items are different enough that they'd be unlikely to all be used in the same setting. However, it seems likely that this was an album of music cues, perhaps for sale, and explained somewhere in a brochure, all of them for use whenever the producer wanted them used.

A neat little oddity:

Download: Unknown - A Collection of Numbered Musical Cues
Play:

~~

As I said, the second item I have today isn't exactly related to the above, but what it does have in common is that it's a series of related items, gathered together here for a reason I can't quite fathom.

I actually thought I'd posted this somewhere before, but I can't find it - if I did, and someone can point me to it, I'll own up!

For 15 minutes, what you'll hear here are is a series of short, suspenseful introductions to.... something. The narrator is excellent, the production values heard in the background are nice, and it seems like somethings going to happen. But as soon as each introduction ends, it goes to the start of another one, which at least in some cases seems to pick up part of the same story, some time later.

Guesses (or answers!) as to what this is about are welcome!

Download: Unknown - A Series of Suspenseful Radio Show Openings
Play:

~~

And now, a couple of very short bits. I thought I'd share the sort of thing I sometimes find buried on otherwise dull tapes (or even otherwise unrecorded tapes). Here's someone singing a familiar song for all of 35 seconds or so.

Download: Unknown - The House of the Rising Sun
Play:

~~

And finally, I have again grabbed one of my "very short reels" at random and digitized it for my ongoing series. In this case, we have an early '80's anti-smoking PSA, set to a generic version of some of the most horrific of popular music styles of that moment, and labeled "Peer Group". In honor of the departing Mad Magazine, let me just say "ECCH".

Download: "Peer Group" Anti-Smoking PSA
Play:

Whew. I think I need to play some Queen, Fats Domino or Fats Waller to clear my mind of that.

5 comments:

  1. Regarding the clip "Unknown - A Series of Suspenseful Radio Show Openings", I'm wondering if it was made by or for the narrator, as a demo tape or souvenir. Presumably he wouldn't be interested in the rest of each episode, performed by other voice actors.

    The references to "journey into fear" made me wonder if that might be the name of the series or that particular episode, but a Google search of the phrase only returned a 1943 movie of that name.

    Some aficionados of old-time radio shows might be able to identify the original source, but it's outside my area of expertise. :-)

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  2. Also regarding the "Unknown - A series of Suspenseful Radio Show Openings". I think the first opening would be for a radio version of the film 'House of Frankenstein' (1944), then you have 'Journey into Fear' (Book released in 1939, film in 1943), the third I cannot identify.

    Also the opening mentioning Abd al-Hazred's book Necronomicon, now H.P. Lovecraft died in the 1930s so whenever this series came out it must have been after the 1940s.

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    Replies
    1. I've identified the film that the last of the complete intro/outro sets is linked to, it's 'The Mummy's Curse' (1944), the last of the Lon Chaney Jr Mummy movies from the 1940s.

      Which means that some time after 1944 someone converted at least two Universal Monster Movies and an RKO suspense film into either a record format or for a radio show. I've transcribed the intro tag line just in case anyone recognizes it.

      "Deep within the dusty crypt, the eldritch hands of the Mad Arab (Only in the first intro, the other two say "...Mad Abdul Alhazred...") Abdul Alhazred clutch the dread Necronomicon, so ancient it was old, ere Babylon was new. In your curious pages monstrous secrets lie. Ah, there it is..."

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  4. The "OK" numbering system on the reel of those short instrumental tracks indicates that these were originally released on an album in the Capitol Hi-"Q" stock music library. The "OK Music Library" was a library with tracks from Bill Loose, Jack Cookerly and Emil Cadkin that were featured on the library for a while.

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