Phantom Dancer :: 5:00pm 2nd Nov 2024

Original air date - Phantom Dancer :: 12:00pm 29th Oct 2024

Bob Crosby was the singing, band leading younger brother of Bing Crosby. Bob also had his own radio and TV shows from 1936 on. He's your Phantom Dancer feature artist this week. 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 29 October) and weeks of Phantom Dancer mixes online at, at https://2ser.com/phantom-dancer/ [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pdx5EKuHfIQ[/embed]

BOB

Bob Crosby began singing in the early 1930s. He was with the Delta Rhythm Boys, which included vocalist Ray Hendricks and guitarist Bill Pollard, with Anson Weeks (1931–34) and then the Dorsey Brothers (1934–35). He became a bandleader in 1935 after Ben Pollack's band broke up, and many of the former members of that group elected him to lead them. Crosby's own band also formed a "band-within-the-band" called the Bob-Cats, a Dixieland octet including soloists from the larger orchestra, many of whom were from New Orleans. The band included at various times Ray Bauduc, Yank Lawson, Billy Butterfield, Charlie Spivak, Muggsy Spanier, Irving Fazola, Nappy Lamare, Jack Sperling, Joe Sullivan, Jess Stacy, Bob Haggart, Walt Yoder, and Bob Zurke. In the spring of 1940, during a performance in Chicago, teenager Doris Day was hired as the band's vocalist. For its theme song, the band chose George Gershwin's song "Summertime." The band's hits included "South Rampart Street Parade," "March of the Bob Cats," "In a Little Gypsy Tea Room," "Whispers in the Dark," "Day In, Day Out," "Down Argentine Way," "You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby," "Dolores," and "New San Antonio Rose." A bass-and-drums duet between Haggart and Bauduc, "Big Noise from Winnetka," became a hit in 1938–39. The Bob Crosby Orchestra featured in the 1936 series Ford V-8 Revue and Camel Caravan on CBS after Benny Goodman in mid-1939. Bob Haggart and Yank Lawson organized a band that combined dixieland and swing to try to carry on the legacy of Bob Crosby. From the late 1960s until the mid-1970s, the band was known as the World's Greatest Jazz Band, but when both became dissatisfied with the name they changed it to the Lawson-Haggart Jazz Band.
[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIHx8RSp_CI[/embed] CROSBY Bob Crosby spent 18 months in the Marines touring with bands in the Pacific during WW2. His radio variety series, The Bob Crosby Show, aired on NBC and CBS in different runs from 18 July 1943 to 16 July 1950. This was followed by Club Fifteen on CBS from 1947 through 1953 minus a brief interlude when he was replaced as host by singer Dick Haymes during parts of 1949 and 1950. On Club Fifteen, he was teamed with the Andrews Sisters three nights per week, singing with them and engaging in comedy skits. He first met the trio in 1938 when his orchestra backed their Decca recording of "Begin the Beguine". Bob Crosby and Patty Andrews recorded a hit duet on Decca Records with the novelty, "The Pussy Cat Song (Nyow! Nyot Nyow!)," which peaked at No. 12 on Billboard. From 1953-57, Bob Crosby had a  half-hour CBS TV daytime series, The Bob Crosby Show. Bob introduced the Canadian singer Gisele MacKenzie to American audiences and guest-starred in 1957 on her NBC television series, The Gisele MacKenzie Show. In 1952 he replaced Phil Harris as the bandleader on The Jack Benny Program, remaining until Benny retired the weekly radio show in May 1955 after 23 years. In joining the show, he became the leader of the same group of musicians who had played under Harris. Before joining Benny on the radio, Crosby, based on the east coast, would often play with Benny during Benny's live New York appearances. Bob Crosby continued singing and band leading into the 1980s. BOB CROSBY ON AUSTRALIAN TV According to an article in 'The Bulletin' 21 May 1966, Bob Crosby hosted a TV variety show in Australia on ATN 7 Sydney and HSV 7 Melbourne in the early 1960s. It was directed by a busy Australian TV director, John Collins. "...The ill-fated Bob Crosby show. Crosby’s supporters claim that Collins and the Willard King organisation notably failed to provide Crosby’s show with a satisfactory packaging. It was said that studio space at ATN was unavailable for rehearsals, that there were a host of technical hitches, and that Crosby had to take a guitar-player’s wages out of his own salary. (The Sydney and Melbourne shows were recorded on consecutive nights). He is also said to have offered to pay, himself, for a first-class script-writer, if one could be found, and to have (ultimately) resigned in frustration. It has also been suggested that Crosby thought he was coming out to a completely packaged (in the American sense) show. He thought it would be fully directed and produced by professionals and presented to the studio in its finished form. Others say that he treated his Australian sojourn as a holiday, spent too much time at the golf course, took too little or no interest in his interviewees, and failed to audition them personally. From the first, certainly, Crosby wore a defeated look, the look of a man who has played too many engagements in the American hinterland. The image of the sad, ineffectual, tired man was altogether wrong for Australian TV success, which depends on a rawly extrovert bounciness, physical vitality and pace, and a deep understanding of the audience’s needs. Whatever the faults of Willard King (and the show certainly had a very clumsy look) the simple fact is that Crosby didn’t have the right personality, or the youth, for audiences here to respond to him in the vast numbers essential for the right ratings. The shortage of suitable interviewees, a chronic Australian problem, can only be overcome here if the interviewer himself does most of the work, and uses them as part of his own act." [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7NZs1XeqrU[/embed]

29 October PLAY LIST

Play List - The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney LISTEN ONLINE
Community Radio Network Show CRN #680

107.3 2SER Tuesday 29 October 2024 12:04 - 2:00pm (+11 hours GMT) National Program 5UV Adelaide Monday 2:30 - 3:30am 5GTR Mt Gambier Monday 2:30 - 3:30am 3MBR Murrayville Monday 3 - 4am 4NAG Keppel FM Monday 3 - 4am 2MIA Griffith Monday 3 - 4am 2BAR Edge FM Bega Monday 3 - 4am 2BRW Braidwood Monday 3 - 4am 2YYY Young Monday 3 - 4am 7RPH Hobart Monday 3 - 4pm 3VKV Alpine Radio Monday 6 - 7pm 7MID Oatlands Monday 3am - 4 and 6 -7pm 2MCE Bathurst Thursday 9 - 10am 1ART ArtsoundFM Canberra Friday 10 - 11am and Sunday 11pm Reading Radio (QLD) Friday 1am - 2 2ARM Armidale Friday 12 - 1pm 5LCM Lofty FM Adelaide Friday 1 - 2pm 6GME Radio Goolarri Broome Saturday 4am - 5am Denmark FM (West Australia) Saturday 10 – 11am Repeat: Wednesdays 10 – 11pm 7LTN Launceston Sunday 5 - 6am 3MGB Mallacoota Sunday 5 - 6am 3BBR West Gippsland Sunday 5 - 6pm 2SEA Sapphire Coast Eden Sunday 9 - 10pm

Set 1
Glenn Miller Orchestra directed by Ray McKinley
Swing Low Sweet Chariot
Glenn Miller Orchestra directed by Ray McKinley
'One Night Stand' Cafe Rouge Hotel Statler WCBS CBS NYC AFRTS Re-broadcast 1956
My Prayer
Glenn Miller Orchestra directed by Ray McKinley (voc) Arnie Craig
'One Night Stand' Cafe Rouge Hotel Statler WCBS CBS NYC AFRTS Re-broadcast 1956
Bunkhouse Boogie Glenn Miller Orchestra directed by Ray McKinley (voc) Ray McKinley and Band
'One Night Stand' Cafe Rouge Hotel Statler WCBS CBS NYC AFRTS Re-broadcast 1956
Moonlight Cocktail + Close Glenn Miller Orchestra directed by Ray McKinley 'One Night Stand' Cafe Rouge Hotel Statler WCBS CBS NYC AFRTS Re-broadcast 1956
Set 2
1930s-40s Italian swing
La Canzone di Boscaiolo
Pippo Bazizza Orchestra (voc) Trio Lescano & Alberto Rabagliati
Comm Rec 1941
Maramao perchè sei morto
Trio Lescano & Maria Jottini
Comm Rec 1939
Non hai più la veste a fiori blu
Pippo Bazizza Orchestra (voc) Band & Alberto Rabagliati
Comm Rec 1946
Ba-Ba-Baciami Piccina
Alberto Rabagliati
Comm Rec 1940
Set 3
Bob Crosby
Summertime (theme) + Boogie Woogie Maxixe Bob Crosby Orchestra Blackhawk Restaurant WGN Mutual Chicago 29 Apr 1940
Sunrise Serenade Bob Crosby Orchestra 'Camel Caravan' WABC CBS NYC 27 Jun 1939
Jazz Me Blues + Reminiscing Time Bob Crosby Bob Cats & Orchestra Blackhawk Restaurant WGN Mutual Chicago 29 Apr 1940
Stumbling Bob Crosby Bob Cats 'Camel Caravan' WABC CBS NYC 27 Jun 1939
Set 4
Bing Crosby
When the Blue of the Night Meets the Gold of the Day (theme) + I've Got the Sun in the Morning
Bing Crosby & The Charioteers (voc) John Scott Trotter Orchestra
'Philco Radio Time' KECA ABC LA 27 Oct 1953
The Piccolino
Skitch Henderson (piano) Jerry Grey Orchestra
'Philco Radio Time' KECA ABC LA 27 Oct 1953
South America Take it Away
Bing Crosby & Lena Romay (voc) John Scott Trotter Orchestra
'Philco Radio Time' KECA ABC LA 27 Oct 1953
How High the Moon
Les Paul Trio
'Philco Radio Time' KECA ABC LA 27 Oct 1953
Set 5
Kai Winding
Always
Kai Winding Quartet 'All-Star Parade of Bands' Birdland WNBC NBC NYC 2 Sep 1952
Star Dust
Kai Winding Quartet
'All-Star Parade of Bands' Birdland WNBC NBC NYC 2 Sep 1952
Lady Be Good
Kai Winding Quartet
'All-Star Parade of Bands' Birdland WNBC NBC NYC 2 Sep 1952
Set 6
Raymond Scott 1944
Pop Goes the Weasel
Raymond Scott Orchestra
Radio Transcription 1944
In a Magic Garden
Raymond Scott Orchestra
Aircheck NYC Apr 1944
Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby
Raymond Scott Orchestra (voc) Dorothy Collins
Radio Transcription 1944
Mr Basie Goes to Washington
Raymond Scott Orchestra
Aircheck NYC 28 Apr 1944
Set 7
Bluegrass
I'm Getting Ready to Go
Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys
'Martha White Biscuit Time' WSM Nashville 1953
Doing My Time
Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys
'Martha White Biscuit Time' WSM Nashville 1953
I'll Be Going to Heaven Sometime
Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys
'Martha White Biscuit Time' WSM Nashville 1953
You Took My Sunshine Away + Steel Guitar Rag
Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys
'Martha White Biscuit Time' WSM Nashville 1953
Set 8
Dorsey Brothers
Rain Dorsey Brothers Orchestra 'NBC Bandstand' NBC TV 1955
I've Grown Accustomed to Your Face Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Lynn Roberts
'NBC Bandstand' NBC TV 1955
I'm Getting Sentimental Over You (theme) + Song of India Dorsey Brothers Orchestra Cafe Rouge Hotel Statler WCBS CBS NYC 1956

You may also like