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Mike Perlowin


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Los Angeles CA
Post  Posted 2 Oct 2016 5:30 am    
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http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/02/arts/music/oscar-brand-folk-singer-whose-radio-show-twanged-for-decades-dies-at-96.html?emc=edit_th_20161002&nl=todaysheadlines&nlid=42160768

Oscar Brand, Folk Singer Whose Radio Show Twanged for Decades, Dies at 96


By DOUGLAS MARTINOCT. 1, 2016

Oscar Brand, the lanky, affable, gravelly-voiced folk singer and songwriter whose weekly on-air hootenanny was the longest-running radio show in history with a single host, died on Friday at his home in Great Neck, N.Y. He was 96.

Doug Yeager, Mr. Brand’s personal manager, said the cause was pneumonia.

In addition to performing and recording prolifically, Mr. Brand wrote books, articles and the scores for Broadway musicals and documentary films. He also hosted television shows. But it was his radio show, “Folksong Festival,” for which he was best known.

Every week for more than 70 years, with the easy, familiar voice of a friend, Mr. Brand invited listeners of the New York public radio station WNYC to his quirky, informal combination of American music symposium, barn dance, cracker-barrel conversation, songwriting session and verbal horseplay. Mr. Brand’s last show aired on Sept. 24, Mr. Yeager said.

Everyone who was anyone in folk music dropped by. Woody Guthrie — Woodrow Wilson Guthrie, as Mr. Brand called his rambling friend — was known to burst in unexpectedly to try out a new song. Bob Dylan told a riveting tale about his boyhood in a carnival, not a word of it true.

The music roamed hither and yon, and back again — from fiddlers to folk songs of the Appalachians to ethnic songs of the big cities. In the 1940s Mr. Brand played what were then known as “race records” by the likes of Memphis Minnie and Tampa Red, precursors of rhythm and blues and rock ’n’ roll.

He also established his own one-of-a-kind reputation. In 1959, The New York Times called him “one of radio’s most genial fanatics.”

His radio career began in December 1945, after he wrote a letter to New York stations offering to present a program of Christmas songs he claimed most people had never heard. WNYC, which at the time was owned by the city, accepted the challenge. His song about Santa’s distinctive body odor proved his point.

At the show’s end, WNYC’s program director asked Mr. Brand what he was doing the next week. He boldly replied that he’d be right back in the same studio in the Municipal Building.

So began what Guinness World Records eventually verified as radio’s longest-running show with a single host. (It beat out Alistair Cooke’s “Letter From America,” which ran for just under 58 years.)
Mr. Brand never had a contract, but he kept coming back. His employers particularly appreciated that he never asked for compensation — nor did he ever receive any.

His guests included the Weavers (who took their name from a listener’s suggestion), Lead Belly, Judy Collins, Harry Belafonte, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs, Harry Chapin, Emmylou Harris, B.B. King and Woody Guthrie’s son, Arlo, who as a teenager gave one of the earliest performances of his song “Alice’s Restaurant” on Mr. Brand’s show.

In 1995, Mr. Brand won a Peabody Award for “more than 50 years in service to the music and messages of folk performers and fans around the world.”

Mr. Brand’s own singing voice had an offhand (and sometimes off-key) authenticity, which he applied to old, new and sometimes deliberately mangled songs, both on and off the air. He was also an accomplished songwriter. Doris Day’s version of his song “A Guy Is a Guy” reached No. 1 on the Billboard chart in 1952.

He scored ballets for Agnes de Mille and commercials for Log Cabin Syrup and Cheerios. He wrote music for documentary films, published songbooks and hosted the children’s television shows “The First Look” and “Spirit of ’76” as well as, from 1963 to 1967, the Canadian television series “Let’s Sing Out.”

He also wrote, with Paul Nassau, the music and lyrics for two shows that made it to Broadway, although neither had a long run: “A Joyful Noise” (1966) and “The Education of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N (1968), based on stories by Leo Rosten. He was curator of the Songwriters Hall of Fame and served on the advisory panel that helped develop “Sesame Street.”

He was born on Feb. 7, 1920, on a wheat farm near Winnipeg, Manitoba. His father was an interpreter to Indians for the Hudson’s Bay Company and later ran a theatrical supply company and a pawnshop.

Young Oscar fell in love with music while listening to player-piano rolls. His family moved to Minneapolis when he was 7, then to Chicago and finally to Brooklyn, where they sought treatment for Oscar, who had been born with a missing calf muscle.

He graduated from Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn, then roamed the country with his banjo, working on farms along the way. He later graduated from Brooklyn College with a degree in psychology.

In 1942 he joined the Army, where he worked in the psychology section of an induction center and edited a newspaper for psychiatric patients. After his discharge, he moved to Greenwich Village and tried to insinuate himself into the world of music. One of his first initiatives was writing a book called “How to Play the Guitar Better Than Me.”

Few have sung and strummed more prolifically. The hundreds of songs he recorded include election songs, children’s songs, vaudeville songs, sports car songs, drinking songs, outlaw songs and lascivious ditties about Nellie the Barmaid.

Mr. Yeager, Mr. Brand’s manager for 40 years, described him “as one of the strongest, most indefatigable men I’ve ever known.”

“At 90 years old, I’d call and I’d say, ‘Oscar, where are you?’” According to Mr. Yeager, Mr. Brand replied, “‘I’m up in the tree, cutting some limbs.’”
Mr. Brand is survived by his wife of 46 years, Karen, with whom he had a son, Jordan; three other children, Jeannie, Eric and James, from a previous marriage that ended in divorce; and nine grandchildren.

In 1950 Mr. Brand was listed in “Red Channels: The Report of Communist Influence in Radio and Television,” a pamphlet that contained the names of artists who supposedly had Communist connections. Unlike some of his colleagues, he was never asked to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee (he insisted that he never would have cooperated if he had been), and while he did lose some work, he continued to make money from his songwriting.

He also invited blacklisted performers like Pete Seeger to be on his show, with no opposition from WNYC. He invited Burl Ives, too, even though he had alienated many of his fellow folk singers by naming names to the House committee. The singer Dave Van Ronk, in his autobiography, “The Mayor of MacDougal Street” (2005), recalled taking Mr. Brand to task for this, only to be told, “Dave, we on the left do not blacklist” — a response that, Mr. Van Ronk recalled, “put me right in my place.”

A few years before Mr. Brand was targeted by “Red Channels,” he had been accused of playing Nazi music by Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia, whose third and last term was ending around the time Mr. Brand’s radio career was beginning. Called to the mayor’s office, Mr. Brand explained that the German songs he had played were actually centuries old.

As pleased as the mayor was to hear that Nazis had not infiltrated the municipal radio station, he was even more delighted to learn that Mr. Brand worked without pay.
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Andrew Roblin

 

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Various places
Post  Posted 3 Oct 2016 5:17 am    
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Rest in peace, Oscar Brand. Thank you for playing my music on your show.
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Jay Yuskaitis

 

From:
Massachusetts, USA
Post  Posted 3 Oct 2016 11:30 am    
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One of "the Kremlin Krooners". Jay Y.
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Mike Perlowin


From:
Los Angeles CA
Post  Posted 3 Oct 2016 3:17 pm    
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I attended one of Oscar Brand's concerts whee I was 14 or 15 years old, and just starting to learn how to play the guitar. I don't remember any of the songs he sang. But he said something that stayed with me all these years. He introduced his 2 accompanists, Billy Faier, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_Faier on banjo and Eric Darling (who was playing with the Weavers at the time and later had the hit Walk Right In with the Rooftop Singers,) on guitar.

Brand talked about what an honor it was for him to play with these 2 musicians. He said that the only thing that would be a greater honor for him would be if they gave a convert, and he could accompany them.

I will always remember the dignity and respect he showed when talking about his fellow musicians. It was a lesson in how to comport oneself when on stage.
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Jay Yuskaitis

 

From:
Massachusetts, USA
Post  Posted 4 Oct 2016 1:26 pm    
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I was 14 or 15 years old when I first heard Brand, that was 60 years ago, and some of the "Bawdy" music as they called it then. I was told of "Stalin's Songbird" and the "Kremlin Krooners". At the time after WWII during the cold war, and the practice we had daily of hiding under our school desk if'n we saw a light brighter than the sun, along with the fears we lived with during that and the Korean era, left a lifelong mark on me. Unless you were born between 1937 or before, 'til about 1943,you have absolutely no idea of the "Kremlin Krooners or Stalin's Songbird". To this day some are idolized and lyrical heros. I do remember what you do not. The only song Brand recorded that I recall bits of, was "She Married a Man Who Had No Hips At All". Some of the lyrics, as I remember, "she reached for his shoulder, his shoulder was small, she reached for his hips he had no hips at all". In my young and virile days I thought it was cute. You have your heros, I have mine, none of which are "Stalin's Songbird or the Kremlin Krooners". If'n you read this, thanks. Jay Y.
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