Phantom Dancer :: 12:00pm 31st Jul 2018
A set of 1930s-40s live radio swing from ‘The Home of Happy Feet’, the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem, New York City is the feature on this week’s Phantom Dancer.
Every Tuesday, authentic jazz deco singer and actor, Greg Poppleton, brings you The Phantom Dancer.
The Phantom Dancer is your non-stop mixtape of swing and jazz from live 1920s-60s radio, recorded live-to-air at 107.3 2SER Sydney, Tuesdays 12:04 – 2pm.
It’s re-broadcast on 22 radio stations of the Community Radio Network and online.
You can hear this week’s Phantom Dancer immediately after the 31 July broadcast online at 2ser.com. That’s the place where you’ll also find lots of past Phantom Dancer swing jazz mix tapes.
THIS WEEK’S PHANTOM DANCER MIX
– has a set Charlie Barnet from live 1957-59 radio, a set of jazz from the humorous 1940-41 ‘Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street’ radio series, a set of 1935 Claude Hopkins Orchestra radio transcriptions and the Savoy Ballroom feature. See the play list below….
SAVOY BALLROOM
‘The Home of Happy Feet’ was described by poet Langston Hughes in his ‘Juke Box Love Song’ as the ‘Heartbeat of Harlem’ – Harlem being the centre of the African-America community in New York City.
On this week’s Phantom Dancer, the 1938 CBS broadcast of ‘This is New York’, Fats Waller names it as the Harlem go-to place ‘where everyone’s hip to the jive’. He then launches into the 1934 song that has since become a jazz standard, ‘Stomping at the Savoy’.
Being in Harlem, and as the ‘soul of the neighbourhood’, the dance hall, billed at its opening as the ‘World’s Finest Ballroom’, had a largely black clientele and band roster. However, the club had a no-discrimination policy, the important thing was that patrons knew how to dance and could swing.
10,000 SQUARE FEET
The ballroom at the Savoy, on the second floor of the building accessed by a marble staircase, was 10,000 square feet in area and could hold 4,000 people.
The ballroom walls were painted pink and lined with mirrors. Coloured lights shone on the sprung dance floor. The floor was replaced every three years because of the amount of dancing that took place.
On opening night, 20 March 1926, the New York Age reported, “Savoy Turns 2,000 Away On Opening Night – Crowds Pack Ball Room All Week”.
LINDY HOPPERS
Herbert White was a bouncer turned floor manager at the Savoy in the early 1930s. He kept an eye out for the best dancers to form his own dance troupe. This made the Savoy unique in that it came to house the best Lindy Hoppers.
Whitey’s Lindy Hoppers, as the cohort came to be known, turned professional in 1935 appearing on Broadway and in Hollywood including the 1937 Marx Brothers’ movie, ‘A Day at the Races’.
“The Savoy held a yearly dancing festival called the Harvest Moon Ball featuring lindy dancers. The first Ball was held in 1935, and the contestants introduced the Lindy Hop to Europe the next year.” (wiki)
As well as The Lindy Hop, other dances born in the Savoy dance hot house were The Flying Charleston, Jive, Snakehips, Rhumboogie, and variations of the Shimmy and Mambo.
‘The Evolution of Negro Dance’ was the Savoy’s contribution to the 1939 New York World Fair.
BANDS
The Savoy had a double bandstand so the music could be continuous for dancers with two bands playing alternatively each night. This also allowed the famous Savoy swing band cutting contests of the late 1930s.
Swing bands synonymous with the Savoy include the orchestras of Chick Webb, Erskine Hawkins, Lucky Millinder, Buddy Johnson and Cootie Williams who you’ll hear with Charlie Parker on this week’s Phantom Dancer mix.
The NYPD and Army shut the Savoy down in April 1943 on vice charges, despite the place having been run by gangsters since its 1926 opening. The ridiculous closure was reversed by mid-October that year.
TORN DOWN
The Savoy continued to operate until October 1958. Despite a big campaign to save it, the building was demolished for a housing complex.
“On 26 May 2002, Frankie Manning and Norma Miller, surviving members of Whitey’s Lindy Hoppers, unveiled a commemorative plaque for the Savoy Ballroom.” (wiki)
VIDEO OF THE WEEK
Dancing at the Savoy c 1950s
31 JULY PLAY LIST
Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #324 |
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107.3 2SER Tuesday 31 July 2018 |
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Set 1
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Charlie Barnet | |
Redskin Rhumba (theme) + Lumby
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Charlie Barnet Orchestra
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‘Charlie Barnet Show’
Radio Transcription 1957 |
Along The Santa Fe Trail
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Charlie Barnet Orchestra
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Salt Air Ballroom
KDYL Salt Lake City UT 5 Jun 1957 |
Moten Swing + Redskin Rhumba
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Charlie Barnet Orchestra
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‘One Night Stand’
Palladium Ballroom AFRS Re-broadcast 1959 |
Set 2
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Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street | |
Open + Beale St Blues
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Henry Levine Dixieland Octet
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‘Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street’
WJZ NBC Blue NY 16 Jun 1940 |
Flying Home
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Lionel Hampton
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‘Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street’
WJZ NBC Blue NY 19 Aug 1940 |
I Dreamt I Dwelled in Harlem + Close
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Paul Lavalle Woodwinds
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‘Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street’
WJZ NBC Blue NY 1 Sep 1941 |
Set 3
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The Blooz | |
Pointless Mama Blues
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Herbie Fields and Miles Davis (voc) Rubberlegs Williams
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Comm Rec
New York City 24 Apr 1945 |
Chubby’s Blues
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Woody Herman’s First Herd (voc) Woody Herman
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Meadowbrook Ballroom
Cedar Grove NJ WABC CBS NY 18 Feb 1945 |
Rocky Mountain Blues
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Fletcher Henderson Orchestra
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Comm Rec
New York City 21 Jan 1927 |
Set 4
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Latin Sounds | |
Agata
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Nino Taranto
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Comm Rec
Turin 1937 |
Pim Pam Pum
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Nita Rosa (voc) Xavier Cugat Orchestra
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‘Xavier Cugat Show’
AFRS Re-broadcast 1944 |
Instrumental + Close
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Enric Madriguera and his Music of the Americas
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‘One Night Stand’
Copacabana New York City AFRS Re-broadcast 5 Jul 1945 |
Set 5
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Trad Jazz on Radio | |
Back To Coajingalong
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George Trevare Orchestra
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Comm Rec
Sydney 1945 |
Bay City (theme) + Ragtime Dance
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Turk Murphy San Francisco Jazz Band
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Easy Street
KCBS CBS San Francisco 9 Dec 1958 |
Indiana
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Kid Ory Jazz Band
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Club Hangover
KCBS CBS San Francisco 10 Oct 1954 |
Farewell Blues + Close
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Muggsy Spanier
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‘This is Jazz’
WOR Mutual NYC 22 Mar 1947 |
Set 6
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Claude Hopkins Radio Transcriptions | |
I’d Do Anything For You
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Claude Hopkins Orchestra
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Radio Transcription
New York City 18 Oct 1935 |
Chasing the Blues Away
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Claude Hopkins Orchestra
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Radio Transcription
New York City 1935 |
Singin’ in the Rain
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Claude Hopkins Orchestra
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Radio Transcription
New York City 1935 |
Put On Your Old Gray Bonnet
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Claude Hopkins Orchestra
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Radio Transcription
New York City 1935 |
Set 7
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Stompin’ at the Savoy | |
Stompin’ at the Savoy
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Fats Waller
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‘This is New York’
WABC CBS NY 11 Dec 1938 |
Body and Soul (theme) + Chicago
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Coleman Hawkins Orchestra
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Savoy Ballroom
Aircheck 4 Aug 1940 |
The Count Steps In
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Count Basie Orchestra
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Savoy Ballroom
Aircheck 30 Jun 1937 |
Floogie Boo + Close
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Cootie Williams Orchestra
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‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom AFRS Re-broadcast 12 Feb 1945 |
Set 8
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Progessive Jazz on the Air | |
The Gentle Art of Love (theme) + Aw, C’mon
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Oscar Pettiford
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Birdland
WABC ABC NY Jun 1957 |
Little Girl Blue
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Stan Getz
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Basin Street
WCBS CBS NY 1956 |
Cement Mixer
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Slim Gaillard
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Birdland
WJZ ABC NY 20 May 1951 |