Phantom Dancer :: 12:00pm 26th Jun 2018
Jim Davidson was an Australian swing band leader and second-in-charge of light entertainment at the BBC in the 1950s. He also worked in the same soap factory I did. And he’s the feature on today’s Phantom Dancer.
And that electric guitar scene in one of those Back To The Future movies sounds embarrassingly lame and pig-ignorant compared to the real electric guitar breaks played on live 1930s-50s radio you’ll hear this week by Charlie Christian, Mary Osbourne, Tal Farlow and Les Paul.
I’m Greg Poppleton, 1920s-30s singer, band-leader and your Phantom Dancer every week over radio 2SER 107. 3 Sydney, 23 Australian radio stations, and online.
The Phantom Dancer is your non-stop mix of swing and jazz from live 1920s-60s radio and TV.
On air every Tuesday, live from 107.3 2SER Sydney from 12:04-2pm, the Phantom Dancer is recorded for re-broadcast. You can hear all Phantom Dancer episodes online at 2ser.com.
THIS WEEK’S PHANTOM DANCER MIX
– has a set of Benny Goodman from 1939 radio including the sextet with Charlie Christian on electric guitar. There’s also a set of electric guitar from live 1940s-50s radio including some 1945 hot guitar work by Mary Osbourne who later in this week’s Phantom Dancer mix inaudibly backs Billie Holiday singing on 1958 TV. And this week’s feature, a set of 1930s commercial recordings by Sydney swing maestro Jim Davidson. See the full mix play list below…
JIM DAVIDSON
Quoting from Jeff Brownrigg’s article, Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 17, (MUP), 2007
“James Hutchinson (Jim) Davidson (1902-1982), band leader, was born on 6 August 1902 at Balmain, Sydney, second son of Alexander Davidson, a restaurant cook from New Zealand, and his English-born wife Mabel, née Walker. Jim described his father, of Scottish descent, as hard, stern and unsmiling. His maternal grandfather encouraged his interest in music, taking him to hear the American bandmaster John Philip Sousa on his Australian tour of 1911. Davidson took up the cornet, joining his school cadet band and a local church band. After leaving school at 14, he found work with the soap manufacturer Lever Bros Pty Ltd. His days, however, were a means to an end and nights were given over to music. Replacing his cornet with a drum kit, he played in dance band and cinema pit ensembles.
On 8 February 1928 Davidson married Gertrude Madeline Kitching at St Thomas’s Church of England, Rozelle; they were to be divorced in 1935. He had joined Jimmy Elkins’s dance orchestra in the mid-1920s and after it disbanded in 1928 he played at the Ambassadors restaurant until it was destroyed by fire in 1931. Following engagements at the Ginger Jar and a significant concert at Hillier’s Café in August 1932—sometimes described as the first jazz concert in Sydney—Davidson opened the winter season of 1933 at Sydney’s Palais Royal dance hall, which drew crowds of 10,000 a week. Further successful seasons followed in 1934 and 1936. A regular Thursday evening 2UE live radio broadcast from the Royal augmented his audience. The Columbia recording company made sound recordings of his most popular pieces; Davidson claimed that a 78-rpm disc of `Shuffle Off to Buffalo’ and `Forty Second Street’ sold 95,000 copies. He and his orchestra also played a six-month season at the Palais de Danse at St Kilda, Melbourne, in 1933. At a formal `Dress Night’, when patrons were encouraged to dress as elegantly as the musicians, who routinely wore evening dress, Davidson met Marjorie McFarlane, an artist. They were married with Presbyterian forms at Scots Church, Melbourne, on 7 June 1935.
While in Melbourne, having signed a contract with the Australian Broadcasting Commission, Davidson enlarged his orchestra and performed over the national network to all States. Broadcasting from Sydney from 1936, Jim Davidson’s ABC Dance Band, with the trumpeter Jim Gussey, the vocalist Alice Smith and the trombonist and arranger George Trevare, became the most popular in the country. It presented dance programs on Friday and Saturday evenings and played for other ABC shows including `Out of the Bag’ and `A.B.C. Parade’. In 1937-39 the band made three interstate tours, with a variety of artists including Bob Dyer, Tex Morton and Gladys Moncrieff. Davidson was a strict but encouraging leader who inspired great loyalty in his players.
On 30 May 1941 Davidson was appointed an honorary lieutenant in the Australian Imperial Force. He produced, directed and led the orchestra in variety shows staged for troops in the Middle East and the South-West Pacific Area. From 1943 he was in charge of the AIF’s concert parties. Rising to temporary lieutenant colonel, he transferred to the Reserve of Officers in October 1947. He applied for the position of director of light entertainment at the ABC but was unsuccessful. Stung by his rejection, he made use of management skills developed in his military command, taking up an offer of work as director of productions for the Tivoli circuit and, soon after, for Harry Wren Enterprises. He managed Australian tours for performers such as Will Mahoney and Evie Hayes and for the British comedian Tommy Trinder.
In 1947 Davidson joined the British Broadcasting Corporation. He arrived in London with his wife the following January. Starting as assistant-head of variety (music), he rapidly advanced to become the second-in-charge of the light entertainment unit. His most important contributions included support for what became the `Goon Show’, which went to air against some resistance on 28 May 1951. Davidson estimated that he had produced 3500 live shows on radio, among them a historic Beatles concert at the Royal Albert Hall in April 1963. He was given a farewell concert there before his retirement in September.
Returning to Australia in 1964, Davidson was disappointed that although Australians remembered his success as a band leader, they were unaware of his achievements in England. He served briefly as a consultant to the ABC but found that old `ghosts’ continued to haunt its corridors. The Davidsons turned to house renovation and gardening, first in Sydney and then in the southern highlands of New South Wales. Survived by his wife, Jim Davidson died on 10 April 1982 at Bowral and was cremated. His memoir, A Showman’s Story (1983), was published posthumously.”
And your Phantom Dancer Vid of the Week?
Jim Davidson and his Australian Broadcasting Commission Dance Orchestra with his 1938 record ‘So Little Time’. Vocals by Alice Smith and Johnny Warren. Jim Davidson broadcast late night over national stations of the ABC.
26 JUNE PLAY LIST
Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #321 |
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107.3 2SER Tuesday 26 June 2018 |
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Set 1
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Benny Goodman on 1939 ‘Camel Caravan’ | |
Let’s Dance (theme) + Down By The Old Mill Stream
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Benny Goodman Orchestra
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‘Camel Caravan’
WEAF NBC Red NY 4 Nov 1939 |
Flying Home
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Benny Goodman Sextet (g Charles Christian)
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‘Camel Caravan’
WEAF NBC Red NY 9 Sep 1939 |
Sing, Sing, Sing + Goodbye (theme)
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Benny Goodman Orchestra
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‘Camel Caravan’
WEAF NBC Red NY 18 Nov 1939 |
Set 2
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Latin Rhythms | |
Nachts am Kongo
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Teddy Stauffer (voc) Eric Helgar
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Comm Rec
Berlin 24 Oct 1938 |
Dilo
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Prado Perez
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‘All-Star Parade of Bands’
Birdland WNBC NBC NY 24 Jul 1953 |
Tanga
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Machito with Zoot Sims tenor sax
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‘Symphony Sid Show’
Birdland WJZ ABC NY 1951 |
Set 3
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Electric Guitarists on live 1940s-50s Radio | |
Open + I’ve Got Plenty of Nothin’
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Les Paul Trio
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‘Les Paul Show’
AFRS Hollywood 27 May 1945 |
They Can’t Take That Away From Me
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Tal Farlow
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‘All Star Parade of Bands’
Composer Club WRCA NBC NYC 23 Apr 1957 |
Texas Polka + Isle of Capri + Close
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Gay Claridge Orchestra (elec g) Mary Osbourne
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‘One Night Stand’
Chez Paree Chicago AFRS Re-broadcast 21 Aug 1945 |
Set 4
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Jim Davidson Australian Swing | |
Fair and Warmer
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Jim Davidson and his Palais Royal Orchestra (voc) Austral Sisters
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Comm Rec
Sydney 7 Sep 1934 |
She Changed Her Hi-De-Ho For His Yodel-O-Dee-Ay
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Jim Davidson and his Palais Royal Orchestra (voc) Male Trio
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Comm Rec
Sydney 2 Mar 1934 |
Marmelade
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Jim Davidson and his ABC Dance Orchestra
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Comm Rec
Sydney 2 Jun 1938 |
Set 5
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1930s Fats Waller | |
Christopher Columbus
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Fats Waller
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ComM Rec
New York City 1936 |
Ain’t Misbehavin’ (theme) + I Simply Adore You
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Fats Waller
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WEAF NBC Red NY
5 Jul 1938 |
You Can’t Be Min and Someone Else’s Too
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Fats Waller
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Aircheck
Yacht Club New York City 18 Oct 1938 |
Watcha Know, Joe?
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Fats Waller
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Panther Room
Hotel Sherman WMAQ NBC Red Chicago 10 Dec 1940 |
Set 6
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1930s-50s French Swing on Record | |
Frenchie’s Blues
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Freddy Johnson Orchestra
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Comm Rec
Paris 28 Jun 1939 |
Week-End Stomp
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Alix Combelle Orchestra
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Comm Rec
Paris 20 Feb 1940 |
Le Boogie de Paris
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Jacques Helian Orchestra
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Comm Rec
Paris 1946 |
Mambo Zero
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Ruben Calzado
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Comm Rec
Paris 1953 |
Set 7
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Billie Holiday on Rdaio | |
You Better Go Now
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Billie Holiday (voc) Percy Faith Orchestra
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‘Woolworth Hour’
KNX CBS LA 1956 |
Billie’s Blues
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Billie Holiday
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Storyville
Copley Square Hotel WMEX Boston Apr 1959 |
Interview + Fine and Mellow
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Billie Holiday
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‘Studio 58 The Sound of Jazz’
WCBS TV CBS NY 8 Dec 1957 |
You Go To My Head
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Billie Holiday
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Storyville
Copley Square Hotel WHDH Boston Oct 1953 |
Set 8
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1940s Big Band Radio | |
Tangerine
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Dizzy Gillespie Orchestra
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Birdland
WCBS CBS NY Jun 1956 |
Artistry in Rhythm (theme) + Artistry Jumps
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Stan Kenton Orchestra
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‘One Night Stand’
Palladium Ballroom LA AFRS Hollywood 27 Nov 1945 |
Bommpsie
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Chubby Jackson Orchestra
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‘Symphony Sid Show’
Royal Roost WMCA NY 5 mar 1949 |