Phantom Dancer :: 12:00pm 18th Feb 2020
This week’s 18 February Phantom Dancer mix of swing of jazz feature artist from live 1920s-60s radio, on radio and online, is composer, band leader, violinist, and magician, Richard Himber.
Richard Himber was a gimmicks man. He had the first vanity phone number back in 1932, R-HIMBER, and he came up with the idea of bands playing on the back of flatbed trucks for promotions. Hear him on 1936-38 radio on this week’s Phantom Dancer with Greg Poppleton.
The Phantom Dancer with actor and 1920s-30s singer Greg Poppleton can be heard online now at https://2ser.com/phantom-dancer/
The last hour is all vinyl.
From his Wiki entry…
TUCKER
He was born as Herbert Richard Imber in Newark, New Jersey to the owner of a chain of meat stores. His parents gave him violin lessons but when they found him performing in a seedy Newark dive, they took the instrument away from him and sent him to military school. In 1915, he stole away into New York City, where Sophie Tucker heard him play and hired him as a novelty act to play with her and the Five Kings of Syncopation where Himber was the highlight of the cabaret act.
He worked his way through Vaudeville and down Tin Pan Alley. He managed Rudy Vallee’s orchestra service, which sent out bands for private parties and society functions. A suave salesman and irrepressible idea man, he soon had his own band booking agency. In 1932, he acquired the first known “vanity” telephone number, R-HIMBER, answered 24 hours a day. Later that year, Himber finally formed an orchestra of his own, parlaying a gig at New York’s Essex House Hotel into national NBC radio exposure. Among the top-notch professionals in its ranks were Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Artie Shaw and many other future stars of the music world.
CAREER
In 1933 Richard Himber made his first records, for Vocalion under the name “Dick Himber,” which intimates always called him. Among the selections was his own theme song, “It Isn’t Fair,” a song he wrote which became a hit. In 1934 after a single session for Victor’s budget label Bluebird, he began recording for the full-priced Victor label until 1939. He led one of the most sophisticated “sweet” dance bands of the era, featuring Joey Nash as his vocalist (1933–1935), who was replaced by Stuart Allen (1935–1939). We hear Stuart Allen on this week’s Phantom Dancer.
Himber was also a skilled magician, and invented many magic tricks including “The Himber Wallet,” “The Himber Ring,” and the “Himber Milk Pitcher.” In later years, his band act often included an interlude of magic and he conjured on many television shows as well.
Himber was the publisher of the R-H Log, a weekly survey of the most popular tunes on radio and television. To the annoyance of most music publishers, he refused to accept payola. He once ordered his secretary to phone every major publisher and tell them he had a stroke, to which many of them joyfully replied, “It’s about time.”
Other popular tunes that Himber composed were “Moments in the Moonlight,” “After the Rain,” “Monday in Manhattan,” “Haunting Memories,” “Time Will Tell,” “Am I Asking Too Much,” and “I’m Getting Nowhere Fast with You.” In 1957 he wrote a TV theme for NBC’s Tonight! America After Dark when Jack Lescoulie was the interim host—before Jack Paar took over.
In the late 1930s Himber’s band was featured in short-subject films produced in New York by Paramount Pictures and Himber was also the maestro for New York’s annual Harvest Moon Ball.
FLATBED TRUCK
Among Himber’s novel promotions was a traveling bandstand on a flatbed truck, sponsored by Pepsi-Cola. The orchestra used it for free outdoor concerts in the New York City area in the 1960s. It was during one of these concerts in 1966 that Himber suffered a heart attack, dying several hours later.
VIDEO
Here is The Phantom Dancer Video of the Week, the Richard Himber 1937 soundie, ‘Richard Himber Plays For You’.
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!
18 FEBRUARY PLAY LIST
Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #424 |
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107.3 2SER Tuesday 18 February 2020 |
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Set 1
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1938 – 40 Glenn Miller | |
Moonlight Serenade (theme) + I Never Knew
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Glenn Miller Orchestra
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Paradise Restaurant
WEAF NBC Red NY 30 Dec 1938 |
Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen
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Glenn Miller Orchestra (voc) Andrew Sisters
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‘Chesterfield Show’
WABC CBS NY 27 Dec 1939 |
My My + Close
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Glenn Miller Orchestra (voc) Marion Hutton
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Cafe Rouge
Hotel Pennsylvania WJZ NBC Blue NYC 15 Apr 1940 |
Set 2
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Modern Radio | |
Prez’s Mood
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Lester Young
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1958 recording
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I Got It Bad
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Woody Herman Orchestra (voc) Mary Ann McCall
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‘Excursions in Modern Music’
Rendezvous Ballroom KHJ Mutual LA 30 Jul 1949 |
My Lady + Bill’s Blues
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Stan Kenton Orchestra (alto sax Lee Konitz)
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‘Concert Encores’
Palladium Balroom KFI NBC LA 15 Jan 1953 |
Set 3
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Benny Goodman and Fletcher Henderson | |
Some of These Days
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Benny Goodman Quartet
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‘Camel Caravan’
WABC CBS NY 13 Sep 1938 |
Pic-a-Rib
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Benny Goodman Orchestra
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‘Camel Caravan’
WEAF NBC Red NY 14 Oct 1939 |
Blue Skies
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Benny Goodman Orchestra and Fletcher Henderson
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‘Camel Caravan’
WABC CBS NY 13 Sep 1938 |
Set 4
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Richard Himber | |
Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen
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Lucky Strike Orchestra directed by Richard Himber (voc) Buddy Clark
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‘Your Hit Parade’
WEAF NBC Red NY 15 Jan 1938 |
Yesterdays
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Richard Himber and his Studebaker Champions
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‘Magic Key’
WJZ NBC Blue NY 27 Dec 1936 |
Through the Courtesy of Love + It’s DeLovely
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Richard Himber and his Studebaker Champions (voc) Stuart Allen
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‘Magic Key’
WJZ NBC Blue NY 27 Dec 1936 |
Set 5
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Women Big Band Singers 1937 – 40 | |
I’m Getting Sentimental Over You (theme) + I’ll Those In Favour of Swing Say Aye
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Edythe Wright (voc) Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
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Cafe Rouge
Hotel Pennsylvania WABC CBS NY 14 Sep 1939 |
It’s a Blue World
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Ella Fitzgerald Orchestra (voc) EF
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Savoy Ballroom
Harlem WEAF NBC Red NY 4 Mar 1940 |
Darn That Dream
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Helen Humes (voc) Count Basie Orchestra
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Southland Cafe
WNAC NBC Red Boston 20 Feb 1940 |
One, Two Button Your Shoes
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Ivie Anderson (voc) Duke Ellington Orchestra
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Cotton Club
WABC CBS NY 18 Mar 1937 |
Set 6
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1940s Swing Bands on Radio | |
Combination Solid
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Charlie Spivak Orchestra
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Radio Transcription
1941 |
Nightmares (theme) + Bedford Drive
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Artie Shaw Orchestra
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‘Spotlight Bands’
Santa Ana Ca. Mutual Network 3 Oct 1945 |
Is You Is or Is You Ain’t My Baby?
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Bob Strong Orchestra (voc) Betty Martin and Randy Ryan
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Glen Island Casino
New Rochelle NY WOR Mutual NY 5 Aug 1944 |
Minding My Business
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Buddy Rich Orchestra (voc) Dottie Reid
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‘Spotlight Bands’
Phoenixville PA 24 Dec 1945 |
Set 7
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Cab Calloway Commercial Sides | |
A Minor Breakdown
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Cab Calloway Orchestra
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Comm Rec
10 Dec 1937 |
Vuelva
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Cab Calloway Orchestra
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Comm Rec
17 Dec 1939 |
I Like Music
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Cab Calloway Orchestra
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Comm Rec
26 Jan 1938 |
Do I Care? No. No.
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Cab Calloway Orchestra
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Comm Rec
18 Mar 1940 |
Set 8
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Harry James on 1954 Radio | |
Caxton Hall Swing
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Harry James Orchestra
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Radio Transcription
New York City 23 Jan 1954 |
Cherry
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Harry James Orchestra
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NBC Superior WI
29 May 1954 |
Woodchopper’s Ball
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Harry James Orchestra
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‘All Star Parade of Bands’
WOW NBC Omaha 1954 |
Roll ‘Em + Cirribirribin (theme)
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Harry James Orchestra
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Aragon Ballroom
WBBM CBS Chicago 20 Jun 1954 |