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In addition to the tracks and dates listed above, we also found these incredible gifts: Music that was salvaged of an amazing array of performances that define the era. And, thankfully, now these boxes of shellac and aluminum discs are you to finally hear in brilliant sound thanks to the artistry of jazz fan and restoration engineer extraordinaire Doug Pomeroy. Loren, as senior scholar and archivist at the National Jazz Museum in Harlem, made the deal to acquire them and the hope was that someday they would be made available to the public. Scott Wenzel of Mosaic was with jazz educator and musician Loren Schoenberg to help catalog and bring these precious discs to NY from Chicago where they were being stored.
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A chance for him to loosen up, stretch out, and experiment.
#The 1975 somebody else m4a tv#
It was an era when TV didn’t exist yet, live music was everywhere, and radio stations would serve it to their audiences – in what everyone thought were once-in-a-lifetime experiences. The recordings are from the personal collection of Bill Savory, a quirky and secretive studio engineer in New York whose day job in the late 1930s and early 1940s was transcribing radio broadcasts for foreign distribution, and whose nighttime passion was turning on the disc recorders to pull in and preserve what was happening in the clubs of New York City and other cities. Mosaic Records presents “The Savory Collection” – six CDs with 108 tracks locked away for more than 70 years and finally available on CD for the very first time anywhere. For us at Mosaic, it’s the “find” that has us re-examining an era we thought we knew inside out.Īnd now, for listeners, it’s an historic and fleeting opportunity to own a treasure trove of previously unknown music. Everything from Miller to Fats to Basie and even a Martin Block Jam Session photo from the studios of WNEW.įor Loren Schoenberg of the Jazz Museum of Harlem, it’s the discovery that capped nearly forty years of searching.