
Compact Discoveries™
a series of one-hour radio programs produced, written, hosted, recorded and edited by Fred Flaxman
©2002 and 2006 by Fred Flaxman
Program 11
“Radio Revisited”
MUSIC: “Lone Ranger theme” from the William Tell Overture by Rossini [Telarc CD-80334, track 1] [down and under the following]
Hello and welcome to Compact Discoveries. I’m your guide, Fred Flaxman.
When I was growing up in the 1940s, I learned to love Rossini, Liszt,
Gounod and their crowd from a group of nationally famous, inspired
instructors. I can still remember their names: One was called
“The Lone Ranger;” another, “Sergeant Preston of the
Yukon;” a third, “The Shadow.”
Each concentrated exclusively on teaching me just one part of one
composition. This same excerpt was played over and over again, every
week, at the beginning and end of each half-hour lesson. And all
instruction was given at home, coming to me with the switch of a
button, over the radio.
I was absolutely spellbound by these teachers and the fascinating
stories they told. Oddly enough, these instructors never talked about
sharps and flats or treble and bass clefs, and the tales they told
never had anything to do with music. Nevertheless “The Lone
Ranger” taught me Rossini’s William Tell Overture. “Sergeant Preston” introduced me to the Donna Diana Overture by Reznicek. “The Shadow” scared me with sections of Saint-Saën’s Le Rouet d’Omphale.
Then TV came along, and with it, a new set of exciting classical music
lessons. There was “The Big Story,” in which newspaper
reporters solved a different real-life mystery every Friday night, but
which played the same exciting theme from Richard Strauss’ Ein Heldenleben
for each case. And there was “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” in
which his hefty shadow appeared every week accompanied by
Gounod’s Funeral March of a Marionette.
I came to love this music more than the programs they introduced and
closed, though, at the time, I didn’t know the names of the
pieces or the composers.
I came to love classical music the way I think everyone who loves
classical gets to appreciate it — by hearing beautiful pieces
over and over again until, finally, they want to hear more where those
came from... and they’re hooked for the rest of their life.
Either that or they’re hooked on Alfred Hitchcock and “The
Shadow.”
On today’s Compact Discoveries program, I’m
going to return to the exciting yesteryears of radio and television,
and play for you the very pieces which first introduced me to the world
of classical music. Let’s begin with the work I first heard as
the theme music to “Sergeant Preston of the Yukon”: the Donna Diana Overture by Reznicek.
CLIP: Excerpt from the original radio program.
MUSIC: Reznicek’s Donna Diana Overture [Telarc CD-80116, track 5] [6:01]
The Donna Diana Overture by Reznicek. It was performed by the
Cincinatti Pops conducted by Erich Kunzel on a Telarc compact disc.
I can’t remember the story from a single episode of
“Sergeant Preston of the Yukon.” On the other hand,
I’ll never forget Reznicek’s theme music.
I once thought that the use of classical music themes in radio, TV and
motion pictures was a tribute to the good taste of the producers. I
realized, only when I started working in the media myself, that it was
a testament to frugality. It was much less expensive to use existing,
public domain compositions by deceased, out-of-copyright composers than
it was to pay a living composer to create new music.
Although “The Lone Ranger” used a part of the William Tell Overture
as its theme, and other parts of the music behind the action of the
story, the entire piece was never played from beginning to end. That,
of course, is what is going to distinguish Compact Discoveries from the yesteryears of radio when the Lone Ranger rounded up outlaws in the West with his faithful Indian companion, Tonto.
CLIP: Opening from the original Lone Ranger radio program.
MUSIC: Rossini: William Tell Overture [Telarc CD-80334, track 1] [11:13]
The William Tell Overture by Rossini. Yoel Levi conducted the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra on a Telarc compact disc.
“The Lone Ranger” also made use of a symphonic poem by Franz Liszt: Les Préludes. We hear that work now in its entirety, as performed by the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra conducted by Kurt Masur.
MUSIC: Liszt: Les Préludes [Musical Heritage Society MHS 522171L] [15:02]
Les Préludes, Symphonic Poem No. 3, by Franz Liszt. The Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra was conducted by Kurt Masur.
You are listening to Compact Discoveries. I’m your guide, Fred Flaxman.
[optional one-minute break]
On Compact Discoveries today I am playing for you the
pieces that first attracted me to classical music. This was due to
their use as theme music on old-time radio dramas like “The Lone
Ranger” and “Sergeant Preston of the Yukon.” Another
old-time radio drama that made extensive use of classical music was
“The Shadow.”
CLIP: Opening from the original The Shadow radio program.
That program’s music of choice was Le Rouet d’Omphale
— Omphale’s Spinning Wheel — by Camille
Saint-Saëns. We hear it performed by the Orchestre National de
France conducted by Leonard Bernstein.
MUSIC: Saint-Saëns: Le Rouet d’Omphale [DGG 400 070-2, track 4] [9:22]
Le Rouet d’Omphale by Camille Saint-Saëns.
Leonard Bernstein conducted the Orchestre National de France. Parts of
this piece were used in the olden days of radio drama, on a mystery
program called “The Shadow.”
Early television drama continued the practice of using classical compositions as theme music, and I learned to love Ein Heldenleben
by Richard Strauss due to its repeated use at the beginning and end of
“The Big Story,” the weekly dramatization of a front-page
newspaper report. Ein Heldenleben lasts about 43 minutes, but this exciting theme is only used once in its entirety.
MUSIC: Excerpt from Ein Heldenleben by Richard Strauss [London 414 292-2] [fades out after the excerpt]
The “Big Story” theme from Ein Heldenleben by Richard Strauss. The Cleveland Orchestra was conducted by Vladimir Ashkenazy on a London CD.
Alfred Hitchcock Presents taught me to whistle Gounod’s Funeral March of a Marionette, though I had no idea who Gounod was at the time.
Does this bring back any memories for you?
MUSIC: excerpt: Gounod: Funeral March of a Marionette [London 436 797-2]
Gounod’s Funeral March of a Marionette, otherwise known as
the theme music to the old “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” TV
series. It was performed on a London compact disc by the Orchestra of
the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, conducted by Alexander Gibson.
MUSIC: Gounod: Funeral March of a Marionette [London 436 797-2] [under:]
And that concludes this personal look at some of the radio and television themes that first interested me in classical music. How did you
first find out about classical? What were the first pieces that you
heard and liked? Please respond to these questions by mail or e-mail.
Write me in care of this station or through the Compact Discoveries web site: www.compactdiscoveries.com.
At compactdiscoveries.com you can find the titles of all Compact Discoveries
programs, brief descriptions of the themes, and complete scripts, as
well as a list of stations carrying the series, listener comments, Compact Discoveries
articles, and information on helping to underwrite the series’
low-cost production and distribution costs. You can stream this and
other Compact Discoveries programs on demand at the Public Radio Exchange: prx.org. Compact Discoveries is distributed internationally by the Public Radio Exchange.
MUSIC: ends
ANNOUNCER: Compact Discoveries is made possible in part by Story Books, publishers of The Timeless Tales of Reginald Bretnor, selected and edited by Fred Flaxman. Samples and ordering available at bretnor dot com, b-r-e-t-n-o-r dot com.
and by
Educate Yourself for Tomorrow, an on-line guide to 37
different Liberal Arts courses for personal development, including
“Mozart and the Evolution of Western Music.” On the web at
onlinehumanities.com.
PROGRAM ENDS AT 58:00