Phantom Dancer :: 12:00pm 31st Jan 2023
Ernest Hutcheson is this week’s Phantom Dancer feature artist in a broadcast from 1936. He was an internationally renowned concert pianist born in Australia and was president of Juilliard, the prestigious Arts school in New York City.
The Phantom Dancer is your weekly non-stop mix of swing and jazz from live 1920s-60s radio and TV every week.
LISTEN to this week’s Phantom Dancer mix (online after 2pm AEST, Tuesday 31 January) and weeks of Phantom Dancer mixes online at, at https://2ser.com/phantom-dancer/
ERNEST
From his bio on the Steinway pianos’ website…
Ernest Hutcheson (1871-1951) was an Australian pianist, composer and teacher. Born in Melbourne, he toured as a child prodigy at the age of five. He later traveled to Leipzig and entered the Leipzig Conservatory at the age of fourteen to study with Carl Reinecke, Bernhard Stavenhagen, and Bruno Zwintscher. Prior to the outbreak of World War I he taught at the Stern Conservatory in Berlin, but in 1914 he settled in New York, where he made his U.S. debut.
He is believed to have been the first pianist to play three concertos of Ludwig van Beethoven in a single concert: his performances of Beethoven’s third, fourth and fifth with the New York Symphony Orchestra in the Aeolian Hall in 1919.
JUILLIARD
Hutcheson had studied under Carl Reinecke (who studied with Mendelssohn, Schumann and Liszt), Bernhard Stavenhagen (a pupil of Liszt) and Bruno Zwintscher (who studied under Moscheles, among others). He would become Dean and then President of the Juilliard School, teaching eminent pianists that included Bruce Hungerford and Abram Chasins. He wrote two important books, “The Literature of the Piano” and “The Elements of Piano Technique,” and it is thanks to Hutcheson’s support that Gershwin was able to have the seclusion he required at Chautauqua Institution in order to meet the deadline to finish his Piano Concerto in F.
He became a member of the faculty at the Juilliard School, and successively Dean (1926–1937) and President (1937–1945) of the school. At Juilliard, he championed the use of radio musical broadcasts in education.
Hutcheson was also associated with the Chautauqua School of Music in Western New York State. Hutcheson provided a much needed refuge for George Gershwin at Chautauqua while composing and refining the Piano Concerto in F. Thanks to Ernest Hutcheson’s kind offer of seclusion for Gershwin at Chautauqua where his quarters were declared off limits to everyone until 4 p.m. daily, Gershwin was able to successfully complete his piano concerto on time.
You’ll hear him broadcasting from Chautauqua in the clip above. (I prefer his piano interpretation of the Emporer Piano Concerto to Walter Gieseking in 1944)
Ernest Hutcheson wrote concertos for piano; 2 pianos; and violin, and many solo piano works, such as a transcription of Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries. His music has been little heard in concert or on recordings, but his Australian compatriot Ian Munro has recorded some of his piano pieces.
Hutcheson wrote important books The Literature of the Piano, The Elements of Piano Technique, and Elektra, by Richard Strauss: a Guide to the Opera with Musical Examples from the Score, among others.
24 JANUARY PLAY LIST
Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney
LISTEN ONLINECommunity Radio Network Show CRN #582 |
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107.3 2SER Tuesday 31 January 2023 |
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Set 1
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Les Brown | |
Mexican Hat Dance
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Les Brown Orchestra
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‘Spotlight Bands’
Bowman Field KY AFRS Re-broadcast 7 Oct 1945 |
This I Love Above All
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Les Brown Orchestra (voc) Gordon Drakes |
‘Spotlight Bands’
Bowman Field KY AFRS Re-broadcast 7 Oct 1945 |
Is You Is or Is You Ain’t My Baby
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Les Brown Orchestra (voc) Butch Stone
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‘Spotlight Bands’
Bowman Field KY AFRS Re-broadcast 7 Oct 1945 |
It Had to Be You + Mush Head | Les Brown Orchestra (voc) Doris Day |
‘Spotlight Bands’
Bowman Field KY AFRS Re-broadcast 7 Oct 1945 |
Set 2
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Charlie Barnet | |
Redskin Rhumba (theme) + Charleston Alley
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Charlie Barnet Orchestra
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‘One Night Stand’
Palladium Ballroom Los Angeles AFRS Re-broadcast 4 Dec 1959
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But Beautiful
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Charlie Barnet Orchestra (voc) Lynn Franklyn
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‘One Night Stand’
Palladium Ballroom Los Angeles AFRS Re-broadcast 4 Dec 1959
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Moonglow
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Charlie Barnet Orchestra
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‘One Night Stand’
Palladium Ballroom Los Angeles AFRS Re-broadcast 4 Dec 1959
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Fair and Warmer
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Charlie Barnet Orchestra
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‘One Night Stand’
Palladium Ballroom Los Angeles AFRS Re-broadcast 4 Dec 1959
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Set 3
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Duke Ellington Orchestra | |
Take the A-Train (theme) + Love Letters
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Duke Ellington Orchestra (tb) Lawrence Brown
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‘One Night Stand’
New Zanzibar NYC AFRS Re-broadcast 1944 |
Main Stem
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Duke Ellington Orchestra
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‘One Night Stand’
New Zanzibar NYC AFRS Re-broadcast 1944 |
Fishing for the Moon + Riff’n’Drill
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Duke Ellington Orchestra (tp) Rex Stewart
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‘One Night Stand’
New Zanzibar NYC AFRS Re-broadcast 1944 |
The Kissing Bug + Close
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Duke Ellington Orchestra (voc) Joya Sherill
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‘One Night Stand’
New Zanzibar NYC AFRS Re-broadcast 1944 |
Set 4
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Ernest Hutcheson | |
Finale Mendelsohn Concerto in Gm
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Ernest Hutcheson (piano) NBC Symphony Orchestra
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‘The Magic Key’
WJZ NBC Blue NYC 18 Oct 1936 |
Spinning Song
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Ernest Hutcheson (piano)
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‘The Magic Key’
WJZ NBC Blue NYC 18 Oct 1936 |
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Set 5
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Bob Crosby | |
Summertime (theme) + Boogie Woogie Maxixe
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Bob Crosby Orchestra
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Blackhawk Restaurant
WGN Mutual Chicago 29 Apr 1940 |
Oh, You Crazy Moon
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Bob Crosby Orchestra (voc) Helen Ward
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‘Camel Caravan’
WABC CBS NYC 11 Jul 1939 |
Reminiscin’ Time
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Bob Crosby Orchestra
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Blackhawk Restaurant
WGN Mutual Chicago 29 Apr 1940 |
You Turned the Tables on Me + But None Like You
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Charlie Spivak Orchestra (voc) Irene Day & Tommy Mercer
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Palladium Ballroom
KNX CBS LA 7 Apr 1948 |
Set 6
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Miff Mole Trombone | |
Big Butter and Egg Man
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Miff Mole and his Nixieland Six
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‘For the Record’
WEAF NBC NYC |
Keep Smilin’ at Trouble
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Eddie Condon Group (tb) Miff Mole
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‘Eddie Condon Jazz Concert’
WJZ Blue NYC 20 Sep 1944 |
Peg o’ my Heart
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Miff Mole and his Nixieland Six
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Comm Rec
Chicago 26 Jun 1928 |
Impromptu Ensemble
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Eddie Condon Group (tb) Miff Mole
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‘Eddie Condon Jazz Concert’
WJZ Blue NYC 9 Sep 1944 |
Set 7
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Cab Calloway Records | |
A Minor Breakdown
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Cab Calloway Orchestra
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Comm Rec
NYC 10 Dec 1937 |
Vuelva
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Cab Calloway Orchestra | Comm Rec NYC 17 Oct 1939 |
Azure
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Cab Calloway Orchestra
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Comm Rec
NYC 23 Mar 1938 |
Fifteen Minutes Intermission
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Cab Calloway Orchestra
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Comm Rec
NYC 27 Jun 1940 |
Set 8
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Modern Jazz on 1959 Radio | |
Open +Sid’s Ahead |
Miles Davis
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‘Bandstand USA’
The Spotlight Washington DC Mutual Network Feb 1959 |
In a Prescribed Manner | Buddy Rich | Birdland WABC ABC NYV 7 Nov 1959 |