And what's more important, writers and musicians.
About as close as you'll get is Aux Anciens Canadiens in Quebec City. And it's still just cozy and homey. Like a French bistro from the '60s located in the sub-Arctic zone, where they put cinnamon in the meatballs. (It's better than it sounds.)
Here's one 78 you will probably never find. Johnny Hamp and Ork stepping pretty with a tune by the "queen of tin pan alley," Bernice Petkere. From April, 1932, here's By a Rippling Stream.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gICiE-OiFHE
Joe Haymes and orchestra in 1934 with Johnny Mercer's swingy Saturday night anthem, The Bathtub Ran Over Again.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eR_meNodrng
It's 1931, and the electronics industry needs trained men! Hear all about it in this transcribed program, and enjoy the cracking up-to-date melodies of Paul Specht's orchestra while you're at it.
Radio and Television Institute Revue
I've been told this loads very slowly. I wish I could link to a better quality dub, but Fischinger's people are notorious about keeping his work out of the cloud. Even this file probably won't be here long.
Allegretto (1936), a 2 1/2 minute abstract animation by Oskar Fischinger, the originator of "visual music." A riot of colors and shapes to orchestral jazz by hit songwriter Ralph Rainger.
Not so much for the hats as for an unusually intimate view of people at a moment in time when large-format vernacular photography was very rare. Solar eclipse watchers on the 86th floor deck of the Empire State Building, August 31, 1932.
It is not enough to have an expensive object. It must be known to be expensive, preferably without you telling anyone.
That's why status brands command such prices, even when better quality and style can be had for less money. Not everyone you meet will appreciate quality or style, but all...
Let's not forget the sizable anti-dancing, anti-drinking, anti-smoking, anti-fun voting bloc in those days. Every state had its bluenoses, and they were organized. In Iowa, especially, their power was absolute outside the big rivertowns. My city of Ames didn't have Sunday movie shows till 1926...
In 1932, Lafayette meant:
a) a city in Louisiana
b) the man to whom the AEF said "...we are here"
c) a line of low-priced Nash automobiles
d) a manic early swing number played by Bennie Moten and his Orchestra
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJJbzfYUF_Y
(All answers are correct)
What strikes me as typical of the Era: the apparent lack of public protest about the tax. If there was a war on and you weren't running a labor union, you did NOT back-talk your government.
I imagine James Petrillo of the American Federation of Musicians had some choice words about the dance...
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