- Acousticon Hour
Acousticon Hour was a "musicale" radio program aired during 1927 and 1928 on
NBC . It offered selections from classical music, orchestral favorites, operas and operettas.The show was sponsored by a hearing aid called the Acousticon. As broadcast historian Elizabeth McLeod has noted, in the 1920s a product name used in a show's title was considered a more acceptable form of advertising than the use of intrusive commercial messages::The most popular program format of the late twenties was the sponsored musical feature. It could be a large symphonic group, a dance orchestra, or a song-and-patter team -- and it would usually carry the sponsor's name.
The A&P Gypsies , for example -- a large, genre-crossing orchestra conducted by Harry Horlick.The Ipana Troubadors -- a hot dance band directed bySam Lanin . The Goodrich Zippers -- a banjo-driven orchestra conducted byHarry Reser , when he wasn't leading the same group under the name ofThe Clicquot Club Eskimos . Everyone remembers The Happiness Boys, Billy Jones and Ernie Hare -- but what about Scrappy Lambert and Billy Hillpot, who performed exactly the same sort of material as Trade and Mark, The Smith Brothers. The list is endless: The Silvertown Cord Orchestra, featuring the Silver Masked Tenor. The Sylvania Foresters. The Flit Soldiers -- yet another Harry Reser group. The Champion Sparkers. The Fox Fur Trappers. The Ingram Shavers, who were the Ipana Troubadours on alternate Wednesdays. The Yeast Foamers. The Planters Pickers. And, the magnificently named Freed-Eisemann Orchestradians. All playing pretty much the same sorts of music, all announced by Phillips Carlin or John S. Young or Alwyn Bach orMilton Cross in pretty much the same sort of stiffly formal style. [ [http://www.midcoast.com/~lizmcl/rfy.html McLeod, Elizabeth. "Radio's Forgotten Years"] ]The "Acousticon Hour" was not a 60-minute show as the title suggests. It was a 30-minute program which NBC broadcast from 5:30 to 6pm on Sunday afternoons. In 1928 the Acousticon male quartet sang "The Palms" in recognition of Palm Sunday. The singer-songwriter
Jack Norworth was a guest in March 1928, and the pianist-songwriterJean Schwartz appeared as a guest the following month. Selections from the operas "Carmen " and "La Gioconda" were included in the April 1928 schedule.References
ee also
*
List of U.S. radio programs
*Old-time radio Listen to
* [http://www.archive.org/details/JackNorworth Jack Norworth (five songs)]
External links
* [http://www.geocities.com/hollywood/hills/5284/120928.html Associated Press radio schedule for Sunday, December 9, 1928.]
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