Phantom Dancer :: 12:00pm 12th May 2020
Johnny Green was a U.S composer, songwriter, pianist, band leader and orchestra conductor. His most famous song is ‘Body and Soul’.
On this week’s Phantom Dancer we’ll be hearing a few of the 1930s radio orchestras lead by Johnny Green. And below, on your Phantom Dancer Video of the Week you can see a short film of the Johnny Green band in action. The short was made in 1935.
This week you’ll also hear sets with Patti Page, Johnny Ray and Erroll Garner from live 1957 TV and some of the great swing bands from the 1930s live on the 1938-39 BBC series, ‘America Dances’.
Produced and presented by Australia’s only authentic 1920s-30s singer, Greg Poppleton, The Phantom Dancer is your non-stop mix of swing and jazz from live 1920s-1960s radio and TV every week.
Hear this week’s Phantom Dancer (after 12 May) and past Phantom Dancers online at radio 2ser.com
JOHN ‘JOHNNY’ WALDO GREEN
He won four Academy Awards for his film scores and a fifth for producing a short musical film. And he went by the name of John or ‘Maestro’ in his later years.
As you’ll hear on today’s live 1930s radio broadcasts of Johnny Green and his Orchestra, Green couldn’t help but be self-assured.
He entered Harvard at age 15. You’ll hear him talk today on a 1939 aircheck about his early music schooling and his first song as a kid.
Indeed, by the time he was at Harvard, bandleader Guy Lombardo had heard Green’s Gold Coast Orchestra and hired him to create dance arrangements for his nationally famous Lombardo orchestra.
JAZZ STANDARDS
Green’s first song hit was written for the Lombardo orchestra. It was Coquette (1928), which Green wrote when he was 19.
Two years later, in 1930, Green wrote ‘Body and Soul’ which is now a jazz standard.
In the early 30s he was the radio and recording accompanist and arranger to singers James Melton, Libby Holman and Ethel Merman, and as you’ll hear on this week’s Phantom Dancer, Ruth Etting. He was also arranger and conductor for Paramount Pictures.
In this period he also wrote the standards ‘Out Of Nowhere’ (which you’ll hear in play today), ‘Rain Rain Go Away’, ‘I Cover the Waterfront’, ‘You’re Mine You’, ‘I Wanna Be Loved’ (his 1934 Oldsmobile show theme song), ‘Easy Come Easy Go’, ‘Repeal The Blues’ and the theme for Max Fleischer’s Betty Boop cartoons.
Nathaniel Shilkret and Paul Whiteman commissioned Green to write larger works for orchestra, including ‘Night Club: Six Impressions for Orchestra with Three Pianos’.
After spending 1933 in London, where he wrote the first musical comedy ever for BBC Radio, Green returned to New York City where, William S. Paley, president of the Columbia Broadcasting System and an investor in New York’s St. Regis Hotel, encouraged him to form what became known as Johnny Green, his Piano and Orchestra.
And he continued to lead his orchestra in top ranking radio shows into the 1940s, backing singers such as Fred Astaire and Alan Jones.
In the early 40s, Green moved to Hollywood. He became one of the people central to changing the overall sound of the MGM Symphony Orchestra.
ACADEMY AWARDS
He was Music Director at MGM from 1949 to 1959 and was nominated for an Oscar thirteen times. He won the award for the musical scores of Easter Parade, An American in Paris, West Side Story, and Oliver!, as well as for producing the short “The Merry Wives of Windsor Overture”, which won in the Short Subjects (One-Reel) category in 1954.
After leaving MGM, Green guest-conducted the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Denver Symphony Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, and Hollywood Bowl Orchestra. He also continued to compose the occasional filmscore, including the critically acclaimed They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? in 1969. He conducted the orchestra for the 1961 United Artists’ film version of West Side Story, for which he won a Grammy.
Green was a chairman of the music branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, leading the orchestra through 17 Academy Award telecasts.
VIDEO OF THE WEEK
Your Phantom Dancer Video of the Week is a short film from 1935 of the Johnny Green Orchestra with sly dig at Johnny Green’s musical achievements. Enjoy…
12 MAY PLAY LIST
Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #436 |
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107.3 2SER Tuesday12 May 2020 |
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Set 1
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1944-46 Swing Bands on One Night Stand | |
Theme + Boyds Nest
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Boyd Raeburn Orchestra
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‘One Night Stand’
Club Morocco LA AFRS Re-broadcast 19 Aug 1946 |
New World Jump
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Bobby Sherwood Orchestra
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‘One Night Stand’
Avodon Ballroom LA AFRS Re-broadcast 3 Jun 1946 |
Fellow on a Furlough + Blue Skies
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Bob Chester Orchestra (voc) David Allyn
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‘One Night Stand’
Panther Room Hotel Sherman Chicago AFRS Re-broadcast 8 Oct 1944 |
Set 2
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Johnny Green Composer and Bandleader | |
Open + Sweet Little Heartache
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Johnny Green Orchestra (voc) Jimmy Farrell
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‘Fitch Summer Bandwagon’
WEAF NBC Red NY 9 Apr 1939 |
In the Evening + I Wanna Be Loved (theme)
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Johnny Green Orchestra
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‘Oldsmobile Program’
WABC CBS NY 20 Feb 1934 |
So Far So Good
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Johnny Green Orchestra
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‘Rhymo’
WABC CBS NY 26 May 1940 |
Set 3
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Miles Davis on 1957 Radio | |
Miles Davis Quintet
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‘Bandstand USA’
Cafe Bohemia WOR Mutual NY 20 Jul 1957 |
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Set 4
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The Three Ambassadors, 1931-33 TRANSCO Cocoanut Grove Radio Shows | |
Sweet and Lovely + Down Among The Sleepy Pines
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Jimmie Grier Orchestra (voc) Jean Shark and The Three Ambassadors
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‘Cocoanut Grove Show’
Radio Transcription Los Angeles 1932 |
I Found a Million Dollar Baby in a Five and Ten Cent Store
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Gus Arnheim Orchestra (voc) The Three Ambassadors
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‘Cocoanut Grove Show’
Radio Transcription Los Angeles 1931 |
Seven Little Steps To Heaven
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Phil Harris Orchestra (voc) The Three Ambassadors
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‘Cocoanut Grove Show’
Radio Transcription Los Angeles 1933 |
Set 5
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English Dance Bands | |
Let’s Put Out The Lights And Go To Sleep
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Ambrose and his Orchestra
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Comm Rec
London 26 Oct 1932 |
My Bonnie Lies Over The Ocean
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Johnny Claes and his Claepigeons (voc) Irene King
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Comm Rec
London 1941 |
Ya Got Love
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Roy Fox Orchestra (voc) Al Bowlly
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Comm Rec
London 1932 |
We Shall Have Music
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Jack Hylton Orchestra
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AEF Programme
BBC London 7 Sep 1944 |
Set 6
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New Orleans Jazz on Radio | |
Running Wild
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George Lewis Jazz Band
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‘Dixieland Jambake’
WDSU ABC New Orleans 7 Oct 1950 |
Struttin’ With Some Barbeque
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Red Allen Dixielanders
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‘Doctor Jazz’
Stuyvesant Casino WMGM NY 1954 |
September in the Rain + I Got Rhythm
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Eddie Condon Group
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‘Eddie Condon’s Jazz Concert’
Town Hall WJZ Blue NY 25 Nov 1944 |
Eh, La Bas
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Papa Celestin
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‘Dixieland Jambake’
WDSU ABC New Orleans 1950 |
Set 7
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A Date With The Duke on ABC 1945 | |
Caravan + Fickle Fling
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Duke Ellington Orchestra
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‘A Date With The Duke’
Apollo Theatre WJZ ABC NY 30 Jun 1945 |
Hop, Skip and Jump
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Duke Ellington Orchestra
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‘A Date With The Duke’
Toldeo OH ABC 9 Jun 1945 |
C Jam Blues
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Duke Ellington Orchestra
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‘A Date With The Duke’
Paradise Theatre Detroit ABC 19 May 1945 |
Blue Skies + Things Ain’t What They Used To Be
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Duke Ellington Orchestra
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‘A Date With The Duke’
Battle Creek Michigan ABC 2 Jun 1945 |
Set 8
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Modern Jazz on the Air | |
Move
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Stan Getz (ts) Kai Winding (tb) Al Haig ℗ Tommy Potter (b) Roy Haynes
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‘Jazz Club USA’
Carnegie Hall Voice of America 25 Dec 1949 |
How High The Moon
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Allen Eager
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Birdland
WJZ ABC NY Jun 1953 |
Mel’s Idea + Body and Soul
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Benny Goodman Sextet
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‘One Night Stand’ Click Phildelphia AFRS re-broadcast 3 Jun 1948 |