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Command Performance in the Internet Archive's Old-Time Radio Collection; Command Performance 1942-03-01 to 1949-10-18 (OTR.NETwork Library) Pentagon Channel: Command Performance; New York Public Library: AFRS collection; Library of Congress essay on episode added to the National Recording Registry.
As of April 2020, the collection includes nearly 113,000 digitized items preserved on-site at the Library of Congress, and 53,000 items in the collection are streaming online in the AAPB Online Reading Room. [2] Funders include the CPB, the Council on Library and Information Resources, and Institute of Museum and Library Services. [3]
Radio broadcast premiere: Kate Smith: November 11, 1938: The John and Ruby Lomax Southern States Recording Trip John and Ruby Lomax 1939 "Strange Fruit" Billie Holiday: 1939 Grand Ole Opry First network radio broadcast: Uncle Dave Macon, Roy Acuff, and others October 14, 1939: Béla Bartók and Joseph Szigeti in Concert at the Library of Congress
On September 21, 1939, radio station WJSV in Washington, D.C. made an audio recording of its entire 19-hour broadcast day. This undertaking was a collaboration between the station and the National Archives, and it was the first time that such a comprehensive recording of a radio broadcast had been made.
Old Time Radio Researchers Group; Internet Archive's Old Time Radio Collection; A full day's broadcast on September 21, 1939 on the Washington, D.C. CBS affiliate station WJSV; The John R. Hickman Collection from American University Library; Fybush, Scott. Frequently-Asked Question. The Archives@BostonRadio.org. Armed Forces Radio Services ...
The Library of Congress is so huge that it takes in three separate buildings on Capitol Hill; the Thomas Jefferson Building, the John Adams Building, and the James Madison Memorial Building. With ...
The Golden Age of Radio, also known as the old-time radio (OTR) era, was an era of radio in the United States where it was the dominant electronic home entertainment medium. It began with the birth of commercial radio broadcasting in the early 1920s and lasted through the 1950s, when television gradually superseded radio as the medium of choice ...
[11] [28] They are the Easy Aces episodes long since available to old-time radio collectors, in above-average sound condition, but minus their commercial spots, edited away the better to foster future, differently-sponsored airings. (The Library of Congress is believed to have perhaps one or two hundred more Easy Aces episodes in its collection ...