Genre | Dixieland/jazz music |
---|---|
Running time | 30 minutes |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
Home station | WJZ |
Syndicates | Blue Network |
Hosted by | Eddie Condon |
Directed by | Jack Bland Addison Amore |
Produced by | Ernest Anderson |
Original release | May 20, 1944 – March 7, 1945 |
Eddie Condon's Jazz Concerts is an American old-time radio program featuring Dixieland and jazz music. It was broadcast on the Blue Network from May 20, 1944, to April 7, 1945. [1]
In 1942, musician Eddie Condon began staging concerts in New York City, with Carnegie Hall and Town Hall as venues. By 1944, the performances were sold out. [2] In 1944, the Blue Network began broadcasting the concerts, which The Directory of the Armed Forces Radio Service Series described as "Jazz music of a high standard". [3] The broadcasts began "about eight performances into the series". [4]
The program typically began with a jazz song, after which Condon commented on the song and introduced the band's members. The network described the programs as "the only unrehearsed, free-wheeling, completely barefoot music on the air." [4]
Condon was the program's host, with broadcasts featuring what the Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings called "many of the era's greatest musicians". [5] Among them was singer Lee Wiley, described in the encyclopedia as "a near-regular" on the show. [5] The broadcasts found Condon "surrounded by the greatest names in jazz—Louis Armstrong, Jack Teagarden, Willie “The Lion” Smith and Bob Haggart." [6]
Jack Bland and Addison Amore were the directors, and Ernest Anderson was the producer. [4]
The broadcasts of Eddie Condon's Jazz Concerts have been made available commercially by Jazzology, creating "jazz's time capsule [that] lives on through the Golden Age of Radio". [4]
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