Monday, March 16, 2026

NRR Project: Leonard Bernstein's debut conducting the New York Philharmonic (Nov. 14, 1943)

 

NRR Project: Leonard Bernstein’s debut with the New York Philharmonic

Nov. 14, 1943

Leonard Bernstein is the best-known and most honored conductor in American history. His commanding presence, supreme interpretive skills, and ease of communication made him a master of classical music in performance. He vaulted to overnight fame after this concert.

Bernstein was a newly hired, 25-year-old assistant conductor of the New York Philharmonic. On Nov. 14, 1943, a Sunday afternoon concert by the orchestra was scheduled at New York’s Carnegie Hall, set to be broadcast live on CBS radio. The guest conductor, Bruno Walter, became ill. The Philharmonic’s regular conductor, Arthur Rodzinski, was snowed in miles from the venue. It was up to Bernstein to lead the orchestra – without a single rehearsal.

Bernstein delivered. The program featured Schmann’s “Manfred” Overture, Rozsa’s Theme, Variations, and Finale, Strauss’ “Don Quixote,” and Wagner’s Prelude to “Die Meistersinger.” Hearing the selections today, it is remarkable how assured he seems with these not-so-easy pieces. The orchestra responds magnificently to his direction. The audience in the hall and those listening at home were amazed by Bernstein’s confidence and vitality. He received the plaudits of the crowd.

Bernstein would go on to become the music director of the orchestra, and would play world-wide. His numerous televised Concerts for Young People turned a whole generation of children onto classical music. Then, as a composer he created everything from symphonies to choral works to musicals such as On the Town and West Side Story. His remarkable career started with this pinch-hit triumph, which propelled him to the headlines of newspapers around the country.

The National Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: Johnny Mercer sings ‘Ac-cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive’.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

NRR Project: Horowitz/Toscanini, Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1 (April 23, 1943)

 

NRR Project: Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 23, B-flat Minor

Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Vladimir Horowitz, piano; Arturo Toscanini; conductor; NBC Symphony Orchestra

Recorded April 25, 1943

31:27

I simply can’t do better than Caesare Civetta’s essay at the National Recording Registry.

The National Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: Leonard Bernstein’s debut.

Friday, March 13, 2026

NRR Project: Mary Margaret McBride interviews Zora Neale Huston (Jan. 25, 1943)


NRR Project: “Mary Margaret McBride” – McBride interviews Zora Neale Hurston (Jan. 25, 1943)

45 min.

This is another entry I can’t explore as a recording is not available. Read Cary O’Dell’s excellent essay at the National Recording Registry.

The National Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 23, B-flat Minor. Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Vladimir Horowitz, piano; Arturo Toscanini; conductor; NBC Symphony Orchestra. (April 25, 1943)

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Thursday, March 12, 2026

NRR Project: 'Straighten Up and Fly Right' (Nov. 30, 1943)

 

NRR Project: “Straighten Up and Fly Right”

Written by Nat ‘King’ Cole and Irving Mills

Performed by the King Cole Trio

Recorded Nov. 30, 1943

2:26

It’s important to know that Nat ‘King’ Cole was originally renowned for his piano playing, not his smooth, warm, and effortless voice.

Beginning in the early ‘40s, Cole was renowned as a session pianist whose playing constituted part of the West Coast bebop movement. Cole’s clear, crisp attack is clear as a bell, melodic and measured.

At the same time, he became the “name” in the trio that also included the sensational Oscar Moore on guitar and Wesley Prince on bass. In 1940, they scored a hit with “Sweet Lorraine.” These three produced immensely pleasurable numbers, including “Route 66” and “Too Marvelous for Words.”

“Straighten Up and Fly Right” was Cole’s and Irving Mills composition, a little musical fable rendered in a catchy swing arrangement.


“A buzzard took a monkey for a ride in the air

The monkey thought that everything was on the square

The buzzard tried to throw the monkey off his back

But the monkey grabbed his neck and said, ‘Now listen, Jack’

 

Straighten up and fly right

Straighten up and stay right

Straighten up and fly right

Cool down, papa, don't you blow your top

 

Ain't no use in divin'

What's the use in jivin'?

Straighten up and fly right

Cool down, papa, don't you blow your top

 

The buzzard told the monkey

You are chokin' me

Release your hold and I'll set you free

The monkey looked the buzzard right

Dead in the eye and said

"Your story's so touching, but it sounds

Just like a lie"


Straighten up and stay right

Straighten up and fly right

Cool down, papa, don't you blow your top

Fly right!”

It was a big hit for the trio. Sadly, Cole had sold his rights to the song for $50 in the late 1930s. By 1950, Cole was on his own and working primarily as a singer, although he could get to a piano bench and accompany himself expertly.

His career was marred by racism. Throughout the 1950s, he consistently charted with his velvety ballads, but he suffered from racial prejudice as well. Ahead of his time, he hosted the first variety show featuring a Black man, albeit for one brief season. He was only 46 years old when he died in 1965 from lung cancer.

The National Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: “Mary Margaret McBride” – McBride interviews Zora Neale Hurston.

 


Tuesday, March 10, 2026

NRR Project: 'Suspense' - 'Sorry, Wrong Number' (May 25, 1943)

 


NRR Project: ‘Suspense’ – “Sorry, Wrong Number”

Written by Lucille Fletcher

Columbia Broadcasting System

Broadcast May 25, 1943

30 min.

There are already three excellent essays on this topic out there:

Christopher H. Sterling’s at the National Recording Registry; 

John Dunning’s thorough and masterly focus on this particular show, citing it as one of the best in old-time radio history (On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio, pgs. 648-649)

And Martin Grams, Jr.’s “Suspense: Twenty Years of Thrills and Chills,” which I only know from its reference by Sterling.

The premise is simple. A nervous, ill woman is bedridden. She tries to call her husband at his office. Suddenly, she cuts in on the conversation of two men planning a murder – that very night She can’t make herself heard. She dials the operator, the police: they treat her with polite indifference.

This was one of Agnes Moorehead’s greatest roles. (She repeated this story seven more times). It involves a woman panicking, of her trying to make someone, anyone, listen to her and stop this foul crime! Then she hears footsteps. They’re coming for HER. (Screenwriter and playwright Lucille Fletcher’s script, much like the rest of her respectable radio output, is unmatched in its relentless ratcheting up of menace.)

The woman, Mrs. Elbert Stevenson (we never do get her name) is expertly played by Moorehead, who simply comes unglued when she discovers the murderer has her marked as his victim. Moorehead went into controlled hysterics in the role, and often ended the episode exhausted.

She could go full-out in a dynamic and convincing performance – she was a boss of the air. She had played Margo Lane, the companion of Lamont Cranston, aka The Shadow (Sept. 26, 1937 – March 20, 1938). She was resigned, later, in film and TV, to play mean old ladies, exotic villainesses, stout-hearted plain folk, sarcastic best friends – she won four Oscar nominations for Best Supporting Actress (The Magnificent Ambersons, Mrs. Parkington, Johnny Belinda, Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte). She was part of Orson Welles’ original Mercury Theater (she played, in one heartbreaking scene, Charles Foster Kane’s mother in Citizen Kane); she goes mad in Welles’ original Ambersons; she is redeemed with a hastily rigged one-shot happy ending alongside Joseph Cotten.

So she brought a lot of firepower to whatever she did. She could get to the truths underlying the hypocrisies of daily life. She was excellent being direct, being fully present, in roles in good films and bad, and radio whenever she wanted.

But they didn’t pick her for the film. The movie version, directed by the under-regarded and versatile director Anatole Litvak, came out in 1948. They got Barbara Stanwyck to play the lead. She earned an Oscar nomination for Best Actress for it. And yet you wonder what we might have seen if Moorehead had embodied her voice in this, just for one film. 

At any rate, Sorry, Wrong Number was the most popular episode of a show that had many, many excellent episodes. Producer William Spier made sure the show had strong scripts, adept sound effects, and compelling music, once a week, in the service of the realistic thriller (no ghosts or the supernatural). And Spier’s successors, such as Anton M. Leader, Elliott Lewis, and Norman Macdonnell continued the tradition with imaginative and surprising tales that intrigue the curious listener.

The show stayed at its 30-minute length for its run (1940-1962), save for four-and-a-half months in 1948 at an hour long each, hosted by Bob Montgomery.

Top-notch “serious” performers would appear on the show, and they all took their roles quite seriously, even those primarily known as comic actors. The tension was high, and was usually sustained until the often-sardonic, bitter twist ending.

For an amazing 20 years, the show maintained its pedigree as one of the most listened-to fictional shows on the air. (As compared to the similar, also excellent but short-lived Escape [1947-1954]). Suspense was the dramatic radio’s ne plus ultra.

The National Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: The King Cole Trio performs “Straighten Up and Fly Right”.

 

 

Sunday, March 8, 2026

NRR Project: Paul Robeson's 'Othello' (1943)

 

NRR Project: “Othello”

Written by William Shakespeare

Performed by Paul Robeson, Uta Hagen, Jose Ferrer et al

Released 1943

2 hrs., 7 min.

This recording commemorates the first time an African-American man played Shakespeare’s tragic protagonist Othello on Broadway. It was not an easy path to get there.

Paul Robeson (1898-1976) was an extraordinary individual. He transcended all the barriers that typically kept a Black man in American society at the time “in his place.” A Phi Beta Kappa scholar, he became a lawyer – but soon found he could find no work as one due to his color.

Undaunted, he turned to his prodigious acting and singing skills and soon became a fixture on Broadway, most notably in Eugene O’Neill’s All God’s Chillun Got Wings and The Emperor Jones. In 1928, he originated the role of Joe in Jerome Kern’s groundbreaking musical Show Boat, and debuted the classic song “Ol’ Man River” in his distinctive and penetrating bass-baritone voice.

His interests were many, and he continued his research into various topics. A self-respecting man, he spoke out eloquently and frequently about the racism he encountered in America. He also advocated for social justice and for anti-fascist and anti-capitalist causes, which brought him to the attention of the FBI, who began to track his movements. He fought for desegregation long before the days of the Civil Rights Movement.

Robeson went to England to perform onstage and in film, as he found a marked lack of racial prejudice there. He traveled across Europe, singing and speaking out. He played Othello in London’s West End in 1930, and in 1943, he was encouraged to take up the role again by director Margaret Webster. Supported by Jose Ferrer as Iago and Uta Hagen as Desdemona, he opened as the Moor of Venice on Broadway.

Up to this point, Othello had been played by white actors in blackface. The idea of an actual Black man playing a noble Black man on stage was anathema to many. To the delight of the performers, the show was a smash success, running for 296 shows – a record for Shakespearean performance on Broadway that still stands.

Listening to the recording, it is obvious how compelling and fit his performance was. His grave and resonant voice gave him a profound sense of authority – and made his jealous rages later in the play terrifying. The performance is expertly played by all involved, and retains clarity and emotional connection.

After the Broadway run, the cast went on an eight-month tour of the United States. They pointedly refused to play to any segregated audiences. All in all, this production of Othello was a triumph.

As the years went on, Robeson continued to speak out forcefully for the causes he believed in. His life was threatened. He was condemned by those in power. He was blacklisted. His passport was voided. His recordings and films were banned. Eventually, as the years passed, these oppressions faded away and America caught up with his enlightenment. Robeson, toward the end of his life, was given the honors so frequently denied him.

The National Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: ‘Sorry, Wrong Number’ (May 25, 1943).

Friday, March 6, 2026

Notes on writing


“But in order to exist in any form, art must be giving pleasure.” – W.H. Auden, Lectures on Shakespeare

"Being a professional means doing the things you love to do, on the days you don't feel like doing them." -- Julius Erving

I have been writing for money since 1981. How am I doing? You tell me.

My writing career took off in fits and starts, with plenty of detours, dead ends, and nonsensical tangents, personal and professional. At this point, I’ve written three books, published two of them (busy selling Number Three as we speak), and composed thousands of essays, articles, and stories. I’m a non-fiction writer, although I have recently been tempted to make something up, a challenge about which I am exceedingly nervous.

Over the course of 45 years, I have learned a few things. These are some of the things that get me through the day – and I take it day to day.

1.     Building a chair

You can’t think of it as “art”. That’s too intimidating. Usually your work is considered art only after you’re dead, and sometimes not even then. Instead, think of yourself as a craftsperson. When you write something, you are building the equivalent of a chair. (The metaphor’s not mine, I stole it from Gabriel Garcia Marquez.) The first thing you have to make sure of – is it functional? Does it do what it is meant to do? Does it hold up or does it fold up? Can it sustain your weight? Is it durable? Is it comfortable? That is the baseline of acceptability. Beyond that, you can speculate. You can make it anything. Are you building a throne? A milking stool? It’s up to you.

2.     Find your style by telling the truth

When I was just starting out, I was obsessed with the idea of my style. What was it? How could I find it? I began by imitating writers I admired. First, I copied Raymond Chandler, reveling in his terseness, his absurd, over-the-top similes, his hard-bitten outlook. The result was awful. I moved on to other influences – John Steinbeck, most prominently. Again, I found myself butting my head against a wall. I did not know what I was doing.

Then I starting working as a journalist. This was an invaluable experience for me because it taught me discipline. (I believe Hemingway said everyone should be a journalist, but only for five years!) For in journalism, there is always a deadline, usually one about four hours away. It forced me to talk to multiple people, gather information, think of how to present it, execute it, and send it out for the world to read in that abbreviated time frame. If it sucked, it sucked. I made many, many, many mistakes – fortunately, I wasn’t working for the New York Times, so my failures were small ones and nobody got hurt.

I got through the job by focusing on simple clarity. Tell the story as simply and honestly as you can. Make it understandable. This does not mean writing down to people. Respect the reader, but do so by being clear and straight with him or her. It helps to keep an “ideal reader” on your mind. Write for that person.

What do I really feel, think, taste, touch, smell, see, hear? How do I process that? This is difficult. This is what cannot be faked. That is where your truth is, and your true voice.

When I moved on to bigger projects, I found that there was a way I had of writing that sounded distinctly like me – informal, kinda jokey, friendly. That was my style. Through sheer repetition, I removed all the parts of my writing that got in the way between me and the reader. In simply communicating effectively, I have established a mode of expression that is uniquely mine.

Now, am I happy with my style? I read other writers, and am jealous of their eloquence and perception, their seemingly effortless ease. But this is the voice I was born with, the limitations I have to deal with, and now when I reread myself, I say, “That’s OK. That sounds like me.” I just do my best.

3.     Repetition

There is no such thing as inspiration. Malcom Gladwell’s “10,000 hour” rule, which states that that much practice is required to endow someone with mastery of a subject, is right on point. The only way to get better as a writer is to write. Not take classes, not look for magic formulae. When I was in college, I attended an interview with the playwright Edward Albee. “Who here wants to be a writer?” he asked. Hands shot up. “Why aren’t you writing, then? Get out of here,” he said.

I work at it every day, six days a week. On average, I can produce about 1,000 usable words a day. Everyone has a different production capacity; as you go along, you will find out what yours is. On good days, my output creeps up to 1,500 to 2,000 per shift. On lousy days, I still manage to crank out a few hundred words. Keeping at it is essential. The comedian George Carlin had a time clock at his desk at home, and he punched in and out every day, just like a factory worker. He sat there and ground it out. You have to, too. If you can’t do that, don’t try. You’ll just make yourself crazy.

Being a writer is much like being an old-time prospector. You head off into the wilderness, looking for a likely spot. You dig and dig, and sift and sift. You live on bacon and beans, and wear worn-out, patched-up clothes. Sometimes you strike gold. Most of the time, you get enough of a return to show a little profit that grubstakes you for your next attempt.

Someone smart whose name I can't remember said writing a book is like filling a swimming pool using a teacup. It requires patience. Do you like being alone with your thoughts for long periods of time, every day? Are you undaunted by the prospect of sitting there patiently, pulling words out of yourself like teeth? Congratulations, you may be a writer.

 4.     Rewrite

The first draft is always terrible. I hate first drafts. The blank page still makes me sweat. What gets me through, what allows me to write ANYTHING down, is the knowledge that I can fix it later. The first draft is just a mess of words that fight toward your goal of being understood. The first draft is filled with wrong directions, mistakes, and vile stupidities. Get over it. I LOVE rewriting. Once I have something down, I can shape it into something usable. When you are starting out, it seems impossible to wrestle something into an acceptable form. Once again, keep at it. Rewrite, rewrite, rewrite. The more you do it, the better you will get at it.

5.     Read

Throw away your video games. Life is too short. Read, read, read! Keep reading. I read fiction and non-fiction, poetry, plays, the back of the cereal box. I read deathless prose and complete shit. I love it all. There is no way you will get to read one-tenth of what you want to read in this life – but you can die trying. Don’t try to cheat by reading only what tops the best-seller lists. You will not discover the magic trick that will make you a great writer. In fact, most people who are good writers were stimulated by reading something so bad that they declared to themselves, “I can write something better than this crap!”

6.     Do what you can do

You have to live somehow. You have to take that day job. You have a life, people you love, obligations, hindrances. You have to write in the cracks of your working day, early in the morning, late at night. The conditions are never ideal (again, writing in the middle of a loud, busy, newsroom filled with constant interruptions on four things at a time is excellent practice). You have to forgive yourself for not getting as far in a day as you wanted. I have few readily marketable skills. I didn’t get a degree. I have raised three children, been married twice (the second one worked!), held every kind of menial job there is. I waited tables for seven years. And I kept writing.

I continue to scrape along. It’s in my blood now, I can’t help myself. When I don’t get to write, I moo like a distressed cow with overfilled udders. I do OK.

The writer typically swings between complete self-loathing and delusions of grandeur. The truth is somewhere in the middle. Don’t aspire to “be a writer”; aspire to write. It’s fun!

NRR Project: Leonard Bernstein's debut conducting the New York Philharmonic (Nov. 14, 1943)

  NRR Project: Leonard Bernstein’s debut with the New York Philharmonic Nov. 14, 1943 Leonard Bernstein is the best-known and most honor...