audio and the golden age of radio

21
Audio: Music and Talk Across Media

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Accompanies a Mass Media Class at Montana Tech.

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Page 1: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Audio:Music and Talk Across Media

Page 2: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Storing Sound• Creation of the recording industry• Changing ways of experiencing music• Popular music and social change• Technology and transformation of music• Radio and transformation of news• Changing role of radio

Page 3: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Storing Sound• 1877: Edison invents

phonograph, records sound on foil cylinders.

• 1888: Emile Berliner develops gramophone, plays music on mass produced discs.

Page 4: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio
Page 5: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Storing Sound

• 1953: Hi-Fi (High Fidelity) is combination of technologies to create better music reproduction.

When you're having friends over ... what makes a glass of beer taste so good?"Hi-Fi" by Haddon Sundblom | U.S. Brewers Foundation, 1956

Page 6: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Signals at a Distance• 1844: Samuel Morse’s telegraph allowed

messages to be sent over wires.• 1890s: Guglielmo Marconi develops wireless

telegraph.• 1905: Reginald Fessenden makes Christmas

Eve broadcast with voices and music.

Page 7: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Radio Music Box Memo• Written in 1915 by American Marconi engineer

David Sarnoff.• Suggested major uses for radio as mass

communication tool including news, music, and sports.

• Big surprise of the radio business was more receivers than transmitters were sold – following the model of print.

Page 8: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

RCA Monopoly• Radio Corporation of America created to bring together

patents, develop radio as medium.• Composed of General Electric, AT&T, Westinghouse, & United

Fruit Company.• United Fruit Company???

Held many radio patents to communicate with ships carrying fruit.

• 1920: KDKA in Pittsburgh first commercial radio station.• 1922: BBC created as noncommercial station for news.

Page 9: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

How To Make Money With Radio?• Taxes?• Selling radios?• Advertising?

• By contrast, BBC was supported by revenue from selling radio receivers.

Page 10: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Golden Age of Radio 1920s-40s

• People getting entertainment inside home not outside.• Music and Drama programming. Little Orphan Annie,

The Lone Ranger, The Shadow• Soap operas Guiding Light started on radio in 1937,

moved to television in 1952, ran until 2009.

Page 11: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Golden Age of RadioAmos ‘n’ Andy• Started in 1926, became most popular show on

radio.• Story of two African American men; writers/actors

were white.• Controversial, but popular with both black and white

audiences; portrayed a black middle class.

Page 12: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

The BBC• British Broadcasting Company created as public

service in the 1920s.• During World War II was international voice against

Nazis, transmitting around the world on shortwave.• Current BBC reaches 95 percent of world’s population,

uses Internet as well as FM, shortwave, and satellite.

Page 13: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

The Changing Musical Experience• Death of “Social Music.”• Rise of the “personal soundtrack” with Sony

Walkman, followed by iPod and other MP3 players, “personal music cocoon.”

• Can lead to “withdrawal from social connections.”

Page 14: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Rock ‘n’ Roll & Musical Integration• Rhythm & blues | Hillbilly music• Rock ‘n’ roll. Blend Black and White Music.• 1950s: Elvis Presley and Chuck Berry• 1950s and 1960s: Motown took black music

and sensibilities and took to mainstream.

Page 15: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

British InvasionA rougher sound from British bands• The Beatles• The Who• The Rolling Stones• Dusty Springfield• Many others

Page 16: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

“Payola”• Money or gifts provided to DJs to get them to play a

particular record.• Concerns persist eg 2004 when record companies

were accused of keeping music by indy artists off the air in favour of their own performers by paying off stations owned by major media companies.

Page 17: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Rise of Digital Music• Digital CDs introduced in early 1980s, sold for

premium price.• With analog recordings, quality of copies

degrades with each generation.• Digital recordings allow consumers to make

perfect copies.

Page 18: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Consequences of Digital Music• Consumers “share” music over the Internet,

violating copyright law.• But artists can use Internet to promote music

directly to consumers, bypassing record labels.

Page 19: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Public Radio• NPR founded in 1967• All Things Considered goes on the air in 1971• NPR’s Morning Edition news show has bigger

audience than any of the morning TV programs• NPR’s Web site is key part of network’s strategy. • Is no longer National Public Radio, just NPR.

Page 20: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Future of SoundRadio

• HD trying to bring new life to broadcast radio, but few receivers so not commonly available.

• Satellite Radio—XM and Sirius merge. • Are people willing to pay for subscription

radio?

Page 21: Audio and the Golden Age of Radio

Future of SoundLong Tail Alternatives

• WebcastingStreaming sound over the Internet

• PodcastingDownloading programs to take with you on your MP3 player.