Return to Discography
|
Messages from Music and the Spoken Word
This volume commemorates seventy-five years of
broadcast excellence and recounts the history of
the program and the lives of those individuals who
have played principal roles in its production.
With an introduction by Lloyd Newell and brief
essays highlighting the history of the seven
intervening decades, written by Stephen Wunderli,
readers will be able to place the "spoken word"
messages in their historical contexts.
Continue reading...
|
n a hot summer afternoon, Monday, July, 15, 1929,
using a borrowed microphone, the first broadcast
of what would become known as Music and the Spoken
Word Iriginated from the Tabernacle on Temple
Square in Salt Lake City, Utah.
The lone microphone was suspended from the
ceiling, above the Choir, and the announcer,
nineteen-year-old Ted Kimball, climbed a ladder to
speak into the microphone and announce the songs.
From that humble beginning has come the oldest
continuous network program in broadcast history—a
program that is enjoyed weekly by millions of
people worldwide.
This volume commemorates those seventy-five years
of broadcast excellence and recounts the history
of the program and the lives of those individuals
who have played principal roles in its production.
With an introduction by Lloyd Newell and brief
essays highlighting the history of the seven
intervening decades, written by Stephen Wunderli,
readers will be able to place the "spoken word"
messages in their historical contexts.
The centerpiece of the book is a sampling of more
than 140 messages, chosen from among the more than
3,600 that have been given—brief,
nondenominational reflections on a myriad of
uplifting, encouraging, heartwarming, and
inspirational topics.
Music and the Spoken Word has been loved by
generations of listeners, who have em-braced not
only the music of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir but
also the simple eloquence and uncommon wisdom so
comfortably dispensed by the three men whose
distinctive voices are inexorably associated with
this American broadcasting treasure.
|