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Something similar was said about Lawrence Welk in the 70's. I heard somewhere that he was turning away good musicians, because he could have the pick of the litter of the great ones. How many other places were you going to get a job in a big band of any sort of notoriety? They were out there, but not as plentiful as during the 1940's.
Hit the nail on the head right there! Archie and Edith were middle-aged in the 70's and just listen to their stories, clearly the Golden Era was not gone to them.
Wispy threads connect us to those times. Doc Severinson said in an interview that he was a very lucky man, getting the job of Johnny Carson's band leader when he did, in 1967. All the great Big Bands that survived from the forties were breaking up in the early seventies and he had his pick of the best musicians in the country.
Was Doc Severinson's the last nationally famous mainstream Big Band? He continued as Carson's musical director until 1992.
Hit the nail on the head right there! Archie and Edith were middle-aged in the 70's and just listen to their stories, clearly the Golden Era was not gone to them.
All you have to do is watch the first few seasons of All In The Family to see that vestiges of the "Golden Era" were still alive and well in the mid 70's.