[78-L] Early announcers on records, was Clamp 'em down agin, Paw

Taylor Bowie bowiebks at isomedia.com
Wed Apr 29 20:51:29 PDT 2009


I have Tony Wons on the Jacques Renard Brunswick of "R You Listenin'" where 
he talks and Smith Ballew sings (I prefer the latter).

Don't forget the Harry Von Zell vocal on I Want You,  I Need You by Charlie 
Barnett on Perfect et al.  I really like the record and don't at all mind 
Harry's "sincere" singing.

BTW,  before he left for greener pastures and network announcing,  Wendell 
Niles led a dance band here in Seattle ca. 1932.  Wendell and brother Ken 
were big time radio announcers...their brother Donald stayed in Seattle and 
for many years was a King County Superior Court  Commissioner.

Taylor



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "David Lennick" <dlennick at sympatico.ca>
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Sent: Wednesday, April 29, 2009 8:35 PM
Subject: [78-L] Early announcers on records, was Clamp 'em down agin, Paw


> Tony Wons on Hit of the Week..gotta make a note of that somewhere. Who 
> else?
>
> Milton Cross, of course, on that Victor "Victory" demo (Milton Cross made
> records forever, I think)
>
> Norman Brokenshire duetting with Johnny Marvin on a couple of Columbia 
> sides
>
> J. M. Witten..was he a for real announcer anywhere?
>
> Norman Long, on "Introducing the Savoy Hotel Orpheans"
>
> David Ross on "How to Be a Jewish Mother"
>
> And of course a lot of later records by Harry von Zell, Jim Ameche, Frank
> Gallop, Jack Arthur, Don Wilson (to hear him sing "The Ugly Duckling" is 
> to
> know true agony).
>
> dl
>
> Michael Biel wrote:
>> This was the first of the small Duriums I ever found, and I've had it
>> since the 1960s.  I also have never seen the book.   I used the CBS
>> announcer at the end of it, Frank Knight, in my 1973 presentation
>> "Announcing Styles of the 20s" as an example of the smooth vocal style
>> of CBS announcers like Knight and David Ross, vs.the rougher accents of
>> NBC Red announcers like Graham McNamee and Phillips Carlin, and the
>> over-cultured voices of the NBC Blue announcers like Milton Cross and
>> Alwyn Bach.
>>
>> By the way, the announcer with the syrupy fey voice on some of the
>> 5-minute Hit of the Weeks is Tony Wons.  I had discussed him in that
>> presentation but had not yet found a recording of him -- so I thought.
>> It turns out that unknowingly the voice that closed my talk was his!  I
>> used his announcement at the end of one of the college songs "Are you
>> listening?  I know you Illinois fans are.  Next Thursday a new Hit of
>> the Week that plays for five minutes.  And that makes a lot of
>> difference, doesn't it?"  (Music up to conclusion.)
>>
>> I am planning on revising this presentation in the next year and taking
>> it on the road to Old Time Radio conventions.
>>
>> Mike Biel  mbiel at mbiel.com
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