Ted Grossman | |
---|---|
Born | Theodore Grossman June 17, 1942 Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Career | |
Show | Night Train (1977–present) |
Stations | 91.3 FM WLRN, South Florida 91.5 FM WKWM, Florida Keys* *Simulcast of WLRN |
Time slot | Sunday |
Time slot | 8 p.m. – midnight |
Style | Big band, Blues and Jazz music |
Country | United States |
Website | www |
Ted Grossman (born June 17, 1942) is an American radio personality. Since 1977, he has hosted the weekly big band, blues, and jazz music program Night Train on WLRN-FM in Miami, Florida, one of the longest-running radio programs still broadcast throughout South Florida.
Theodore Grossman was born in the Brooklyn borough of New York City in 1942. His family moved to Miami Beach, Florida, in 1949. [1] He graduated from North Miami High School in North Miami, Florida, in 1960 and was a speech major at Dade Junior College (now Miami-Dade College). Grossman left college at 22 to join the U.S. Air Force during the Vietnam War. [1]
One of his earliest jobs for which he was paid for his speaking skills was in 1967 when he announced the dolphin shows at the Miami Seaquarium for $90 a week. Later, he worked as a parts manager for an appliance store. Eventually, he became a postal employee, driving over 100 mi (160 km) a day carrying special delivery letters for the U.S. Postal Service. He worked for the USPS for 34 years. [1]
"The first live jazz I saw," Grossman told the Miami Herald in 1983,
"was when my father and a friend of his took me to the Sir John Hotel in Miami, about 1962. [Count] Basie's doing an afternoon concert, three bucks. It was 'April in Paris' they played, and Sonny Payne, the drummer, got the solo. The band got up and walked off, had a drink, while Payne put on a wild show, throwing up his sticks and all. He did ten minutes, then the guys came back and finished it off with a bang. I don't care what kind of music you like, you see that, it knocks you out."
While still a mail carrier, Grossman approached public radio station WLRN in 1975 when the station expanded its jazz programming. He volunteered his talents. The station's syndicated big band radio show had gone off the air. [1] As Grossman recounted to the Miami Herald in 1983, "You don't have any big-band show, I told them. They let me on to sink or swim." [2]
“I was always interested in big bands," he recounted to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel in 2023. "I started buying records before I had a phonograph. I had this collection. I called the station and told them, ‘Listen, I have this material. I’m used to a microphone. I can speak. You should let me have a job.’ I went in. They said we’re gonna try you out. They showed me how to work a board. Nobody ever pressured me. Nobody ever told me what to play, or what guests to have on the air — to this day. They’re still trying me out. So here I am.” [1]
Grossman's program, Night Train, premiered on WLRN in January 1977. [2] He has served as its sole regular host since its debut. In the late 1970s, it was a three-hour show that aired on Friday nights. In the 1980s, it moved to Sunday nights and expanded to four hours. Today, it is simulcast live to the Florida Keys on WLRN's affiliate, WKWM.
"Jazz is an intimate thing, a late-night form. So is radio. Johnny Carson talks to an audience, I talk to you, to one person."
— Grossman, in an October 1983 interview
In addition to playing the recordings on his show, Grossman supplies anecdotes and authoritative commentary about the bands and performers, including album notes and assorted trivia. He often peppers his show with mentions of the birthdays, deaths, or other anniversaries of jazz notables, past and present.
"As if you’re in my living room and I say to you, ‘Hey, come over here, I want you to listen to this.'" [2]
— describing his broadcast style, in January 2007
Occasionally, the show will feature local or nationally known recording artists or other musicians as in-studio guests, with Grossman playing recordings and quizzing his guest about the identity of the recording's performer(s) or vocalist(s).
In keeping with the show's locomotive-themed title, Grossman is known for donning a train conductor's striped railroad hat as he broadcasts each week. The Miami Herald once described Night Train as a "rambling, rumbling three-hour local service with stops at Big Band, Dixieland, The Blues and Crooner City."
Grossman lives in North Miami, Florida. He owns a recording collection numbering in the thousands that he “stopped counting years ago.” [1]
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