[78-L] Sesac transcriptions
David Lennick
dlennick at sympatico.ca
Tue Aug 11 06:05:20 PDT 2009
Weren't the 16-inchers pressed by Columbia? And yes there's important music on
them..I have a few by Eddie South, now that I think of it.
And there's some Duke Ellington and other big bands on 7-inch discs.
dl
Michael Biel wrote:
> From: David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca>
>> SESAC was one of the later transcription companies.
>
> Not really. It is a public performance licensing organization like
> ASCAP and BMI. It originally was formed to license European works,
> hence the name Society of European Stage Authors & Composers. Because
> they had a relatively small and obscure catalog, they went into the ET
> business as a way of providing the stations which bought licenses from
> them with something for them to use with that license! The discs were
> always free to the stations. For us collectors, the most important of
> the discs they made were conducted by Nat Shilkret. There are at least
> 20 of them, I think, 12-inch LP format RCA pressings. But there are
> many other performers who made the discs, including some important
> country artists.
>
>> All intended for radio station use, obviously..the short cuts
>> were because stations often needed one minute pieces to lead
>> up to newscasts or other interruptions, without having to fade
>> a long piece. They might have been designed as commercial
>> backgrounds as well but this would depend on whether the company
>> licensed them for this purpose. dl
>
> The "Short Cut" series were mainly used as backgrounds for
> advertisement. They were part of the station's annual overall license
> and could be used any way they wanted, but into the LP era they had
> discs where each cut was exactly 60 seconds. But that was only one
> series that they occasionally provided. Most discs had pieces of normal
> length.
>
> When I was a regular attender of the National Association of
> Broadcasters conventions, the SESAC hospitality suite was THE place to
> be. They had the best food and they truely loved to have students and
> professors in their suite, unlike some of the big industry folks.
> Because SESAC was #3, they tried harder than even #2, and they knew that
> the students would be the future broadcast execs and that we professors
> taught them. Whereas most text books (or ANY book) that discusses music
> licensing talks about ASCAP and BMI, few mention SESAC, therefore it was
> up to us in the classroom to include SESAC in the discussion. And I
> DID. And I am doing it now! Thank you SESAC for providing me and many
> other broadcast educators with most of the food that we ate during four
> days of the conventions for many years. And occasionally they gave out
> a few discs.
>
> As for the 16-inchers, were these also RCA pressings? If so, they are
> datable.
>
> Mike (free food!!!!! free records!!!!!!!!!!) Biel mbiel at mbiel.com
>
>
> Ron L'Herault wrote:
>>> Gang,
>>> On Aug. 6 I posted a message about SESAC 16" transcription disks
>>> of Lazaro Quintero leading the Havana Dance Orchestra,, and didn't
>>> see any responses. Sometimes things get lost in the shuffle. So
>>> just in case, does anyone know anything about these transcriptions,
>>> such as why all the short cuts, who the intended audience was, the
>>> date it was issued and was this the real name of the band? Thanks,
>>> Ron L
>
> _________
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