Rediscovering the Remnants of Yiddish Radio
By 1985, when musician/historian Henry Sapoznik showed up at a rummage sale
thrown by New York broadcasting legend Joe Franklin, the heyday of Yiddish radio
had been all but forgotten. Sapoznik, then the sound archivist at the Yiddish
research institute, YIVO, had come to the sale looking for old klezmer 78s.
But what Sapoznik wound up tripping over was far rarer: a few dozen aluminum
discs, larger and more unusual than any he had ever seen.
On the worn-away labels Sapoznik, a native Yiddish speaker, could make out
some Yiddish writing: WEVD . . . WBNX . . . Yiddish Melodies in Swing
. . . Stuhmer's Pumpernickel Program . . . Life Is Funny with Harry
Hirschfield, Sponsored by Edelstein's Tuxedo Brand Cheese. He gave Franklin
the $30 in his pocket, tracked down an old transcription disc turntable, and
sat down to listen to his find. He put on the first disc. A clear, strong voice
announced:
"From atop the Loews State Theater Building, the B.
Manischewitz Company, world's largest matzo bakers, happily presents Yiddish
Melodies in Swing . . .
And the band launched into a raucous, swinging rendition of the Passover song
"Dayenu."
"It was simply unbelievable, unlike anything I'd ever heard," Sapoznik
recalls. "I felt like I was being transported back in time to this real,
living moment in history. I was transfixed." He was also hooked. Sapoznik
spent the next 17 years searching for more such surviving discs.
These discs were not your ordinary LPs or 78s. They were transcriptions: single-cut,
acetate-coated aluminum discs the stations were required to have on hand in
case the Federal Radio Commission showed up with a complaint. The vast
majority of these discs were melted down during World War II scrap metal drives
or simply disappeared over the decades. The thousand-plus discs Sapoznik succeeded
in rescuing were found mostly in attics, storerooms, and dumpsters.
But locating the discs was only half the challenge. Acetate-coated discs were
never meant to be an archival medium. The materials were quickly disintegrating,
and it was only a matter of time before they would pass the point of no return.