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graham4anything

(11,464 posts)
53. I was also referring to actual recording history itself-see 3rd paragraph.
Mon Mar 4, 2013, 01:06 PM
Mar 2013

Harry Lillis "Bing" Crosby (May 3, 1903 – October 14, 1977)[3] was an American singer and actor. Crosby's trademark bass-baritone voice made him one of the best-selling recording artists of the 20th century, with over half a billion records in circulation.[4]

A multimedia star, from 1934 to 1954 Bing Crosby was a leader in record sales, radio ratings and motion picture grosses.[5] His early career coincided with technical recording innovations; this allowed him to develop a laid-back, intimate singing style that influenced many of the popular male singers who followed him, including Perry Como,[6] Frank Sinatra, and Dean Martin. Yank magazine recognized Crosby as the person who had done the most for American G.I. morale during World War II and, during his peak years, around 1948, polls declared him the "most admired man alive," ahead of Jackie Robinson and Pope Pius XII.[7][8] Also in 1948, the Music Digest estimated that Crosby recordings filled more than half of the 80,000 weekly hours allocated to recorded radio music.[8]

Crosby exerted an important influence on the development of the postwar recording industry. He worked for NBC at the time and wanted to record his shows; however, most broadcast networks did not allow recording. This was primarily because the quality of recording at the time was not as good as live broadcast sound quality. While in Europe performing during the war, Crosby had witnessed tape recording, on which The Crosby Research Foundation would come to have many patents. The company also developed equipment and recording techniques such as the Laugh Track which are still in use today.[9] In 1947, he invested $50,000 in the Ampex company, which built North America's first commercial reel-to-reel tape recorder. He left NBC to work for ABC because NBC was not interested in recording at the time. This proved beneficial because ABC accepted him and his new ideas.[9] Crosby then became the first performer to pre-record his radio shows and master his commercial recordings onto magnetic tape. He gave one of the first Ampex Model 200 recorders to his friend, musician Les Paul, which led directly to Paul's invention of multitrack recording. Along with Frank Sinatra, Crosby was one of the principal backers behind the famous United Western Recorders recording studio complex in Los Angeles.[10]

During the "Golden Age of Radio," performers often had to recreate their live shows a second time for the west coast time zone. Through the medium of recording, Crosby constructed his radio programs with the same directorial tools and craftsmanship (editing, retaking, rehearsal, time shifting) being used in motion picture production. This became the industry standard.

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When I've subbed in history, I'm always amazed at what's glossed over. knitter4democracy Mar 2013 #1
Or the REAL reason TX fought for independence from Mexico hobbit709 Mar 2013 #3
I'm not a history buff, kentauros Mar 2013 #13
I know several teachers who teach by the connections. knitter4democracy Mar 2013 #26
And I think I learned (not to mention retained) more kentauros Mar 2013 #34
Wars are easy to teach. Dates, names, battles, etc. Recursion Mar 2013 #33
I would think teaching peace-history would be more inspiring to students, too. kentauros Mar 2013 #35
except there's not that much "peace" history to teach about... nt msongs Mar 2013 #58
Sure there is! kentauros Mar 2013 #59
Even politics: what if Clay, Calhoun, and Webster got as much time as the Civil War? Recursion Mar 2013 #73
That's true. kentauros Mar 2013 #76
"Peace" history could be incredibly fascinating Benton D Struckcheon Mar 2013 #97
Debs, Norman Thomas, and many others. hobbit709 Mar 2013 #2
I think this is gonna be a good thread. Ron Green Mar 2013 #4
Kind of accidental if it is. Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #7
Oliver Stone had the movie rights to Butler's story, but hasn't produced it. leveymg Mar 2013 #5
P.P.S. - For more background on Oliver Stone's aborted Butler film project, please see: leveymg Mar 2013 #10
History is a discipline and the fact is that there are few who actually possess that discipline. Cary Mar 2013 #6
Butler, at least, is pretty famous Recursion Mar 2013 #8
That is an incredible misrepresentation of what happened. leveymg Mar 2013 #12
Oh, it's clear MacGuire, Bush, and Du Pont would have liked to have done it Recursion Mar 2013 #22
Committee report found that a number of major financiers and industrialists signed on. leveymg Mar 2013 #31
Don't leave out Prescott Bush, HW's father and W's grandfather. brush Mar 2013 #39
Prescott Bush and George Herbert Walker were involved in financing Hitler, not this plot. leveymg Mar 2013 #61
Yet another group of fascists during the '30s? brush Mar 2013 #63
The DuPonts and Morgan Bank interests were at the heart of the '34 plot. Bush/Walker worked at leveymg Mar 2013 #64
BBC fellah found a box of stuff in Washington... Octafish Mar 2013 #87
Yes it is. Are you surprised? Egalitarian Thug Mar 2013 #27
Well... not so fast: Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #14
Isn't that from "War is a racket"? Recursion Mar 2013 #16
News to me if it is. *Marines* are assigned this? n/t Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #19
Well, a biography of him that included it. We also read Che Guevarra Recursion Mar 2013 #21
House Speaker McCormick maintained his committee's conclusion the "business plot" was real. leveymg Mar 2013 #20
the whole Native American history is only told rurallib Mar 2013 #9
That is a *given*. Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #18
That's why I try to cover what I can in my classes. knitter4democracy Mar 2013 #29
Is it a good movie? kwassa Mar 2013 #88
It's an excellent movie! knitter4democracy Mar 2013 #94
To be fair, they didn't exactly build enormous libraries documenting their history (nt) Nye Bevan Mar 2013 #37
"War is the Health of the State" Great essay by Randolph Bourne villager Mar 2013 #11
"Following the death of Christ, there was a period of readjustment that lasted FSogol Mar 2013 #15
Going to a history museum in Mexico City was very eye-opening. Starry Messenger Mar 2013 #17
There's a theory that that unit was where the term "Gringo" came from Recursion Mar 2013 #25
I went to the same museum about 20 years ago and remember thinking.... Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #62
That would be an amazing film. Starry Messenger Mar 2013 #65
Right about now it would catch *fire*. (In more ways than one.) Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #72
Here's some more folks and things kids should be taught about in U.S. schools: Ken Burch Mar 2013 #23
Centralia Massacre... nt Bigmack Mar 2013 #30
That's a hard one Recursion Mar 2013 #36
Are we thinking about the same Centralia massacre? Hayabusa Mar 2013 #45
Oh, I guess not Recursion Mar 2013 #46
I didn't know about the WA, one. Hayabusa Mar 2013 #50
Wiki describes it as a "massacre" not as a shootout. The account reads more like self defense. Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #70
You skipped the part where the Wobblies shot three unarmed Legionnaires with their rifles Recursion Mar 2013 #71
Didn't skip it. Included it: Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #75
Sorry, I missed that. The bloodstains were in the center of the street Recursion Mar 2013 #78
And those at Everett and Ludlow as well. Ken Burch Mar 2013 #91
And Denmark Vesey. nt raccoon Mar 2013 #43
Good one. Ken Burch Mar 2013 #90
I don't think Nat Turner or John Brown are glossed over at all RZM Mar 2013 #48
I probably would not include Nat Turner hfojvt Mar 2013 #67
You could use Turner as an example of what something like slavery does to the human mind. Ken Burch Mar 2013 #92
The Civil Rights folks would have been massacred. Benton D Struckcheon Mar 2013 #95
Yes, they would have-that wasn't my point, though. Ken Burch Mar 2013 #98
There's plenty of people who are forgotton for a number of reasons el_bryanto Mar 2013 #24
Louis Armstrong was integral to music in general.Without him and Bing Crosby, there was nothing. graham4anything Mar 2013 #28
And he's also easier to teach - he pandered to a white audience. el_bryanto Mar 2013 #32
Why not teach all 3 of them. Bing Louis Duke graham4anything Mar 2013 #40
That goes back to my original point el_bryanto Mar 2013 #44
I was also referring to actual recording history itself-see 3rd paragraph. graham4anything Mar 2013 #53
Until you get to college (and even then it depends on the professor)....... marmar Mar 2013 #38
You got that right. nt raccoon Mar 2013 #107
Because the time allotted to "social studies" or "history", kiva Mar 2013 #41
Our high schools no longer teach pre-1900 American History Nevernose Mar 2013 #42
I think that some aren't even teaching post-WWII history. DearHeart Mar 2013 #93
And that was the case until recently Nevernose Mar 2013 #99
Since I don't have kids, I don't know what they're teaching in high schools DearHeart Mar 2013 #108
I'm an English teacher, actually Nevernose Mar 2013 #109
It does seem like some people are trying to turn the schools into little factories. DearHeart Mar 2013 #110
Basically, there is only so much time in the school day and the school year. SheilaT Mar 2013 #47
Good point RZM Mar 2013 #51
You might be interested in Smedley's role in blowing the whistle on this.... OldDem2012 Mar 2013 #49
What I noticed was the treatment of Smedley Butler in the National Museum of the Marine Corps Nay Mar 2013 #52
My point exactly. Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #56
These two: Ephram Squire and Edwin Davis...sorta my heroes... Tikki Mar 2013 #54
How many humans have lived just during recorded history? One_Life_To_Give Mar 2013 #55
Good points. Excellent post. JDPriestly Mar 2013 #105
The labor movement is pretty well glossed over. Blue_In_AK Mar 2013 #57
I dunno. I remember learning about Gompers, Debs, and Lewis, plus Haymarket and the Bonus army Recursion Mar 2013 #80
That may be true, Blue_In_AK Mar 2013 #85
Oh, me too, definitely Recursion Mar 2013 #86
I don't remember ever getting much past WW II Blue_In_AK Mar 2013 #96
Whole swaths of labor history nadinbrzezinski Mar 2013 #60
It (they) conflicts with the narrative of US exceptionalism Spike89 Mar 2013 #66
And pretty much anything that happened in large swaths of the country before the Anglo-Americans Retrograde Mar 2013 #68
U.S. history and actual historians have not so done. U.S. school textbooks are a different issue. WinkyDink Mar 2013 #69
Every day there is more "history", and school boards decide SoCalDem Mar 2013 #74
Given how much military worship is ingrained in us from childhood Blue_Tires Mar 2013 #77
Helen Keller was a Socialist. Manifestor_of_Light Mar 2013 #79
AND... a Wobblie: Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #83
Isabella Baumfree aka Sojourner Truth. Cleita Mar 2013 #81
Lucretia Mott Skittles Mar 2013 #103
Malcolm X KamaAina Mar 2013 #82
Malcolm is well known to my generation. Smarmie Doofus Mar 2013 #84
We read "The Autobiography of ..." in high school English class. kwassa Mar 2013 #89
The history I've read is quite broad and comprehensive. Guess the difference is . . . Journeyman Mar 2013 #100
Glaringly absent from history in the US is the way we treated Native Americans sabrina 1 Mar 2013 #101
On a different, local level, in LA, we have the fascinating JDPriestly Mar 2013 #102
First name that comes to mind is Nellie Bly. Neoma Mar 2013 #104
The Rockefellers and other oligarchs, and, woo me with science Mar 2013 #106
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