Well,
December 31 is New Year’s Eve. It is a designated night of revelry and
semi-respectable over-indulgence and general tom foolery. It is also
considered amateur night by bartenders and regular imbibers, many
of the latter actually avoid going out because the amateurs are rowdy,
annoying, likely to puke on their shoes and frankly dangerous.
Like all
holidays and celebrations, New Year’s Eve has its customs. For those of us of a certain age, that
included welcoming the New Year from home with Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians first on radio and later on
television. Parents would let kids stay
up—or try to stay up—and blow on noisemakers and drink sparkling grape juice at midnight in New York as the band struck up its traditional rendition of Auld
Lang Syne.
Lombardo was
born in 1902 in London, Ontario, Canada,
one of five sons of an immigrant Italian
family. His father was an amateur singer
and had each of his sons learn an instrument to accompany him in an informal
home band. Guy’s first public performance was at a church party when he was 12
years old. Lombardo and his brothers formed their own orchestra and were
playing professionally on both sides of the international border by 1920.
In 1922
Lombardo made his first recordings at
the Gennett Studios in Richmond, Indiana. Soon the
orchestra, now dubbed the Royal Canadians, was ensconced in the Roosevelt Grill of New York City’s Roosevelt Hotel.
They played there for more than thirty years. Like other big city hotel bands, Lombardo’s
orchestra was soon making regular live radio broadcasts. It was a dance band, only lightly touched by jazz.
While contemporaries like Paul
Whiteman were adapting their music to the public’s developing taste for Big Band Swing, Lombardo continued to
play what he called the Sweetest Music this Side of Heaven. The band’s immediately recognizable signature
sound was a lead saxophone section
featuring a wide vibrato.
Lombardo first broadcast a New Years Eve
program on CBS Radio on December 31,
1928. He continued broadcasting from the
Roosevelt Room until 1959, and then moved his base to the larger Waldorf Astoria. In 1959 the New Years Eve program was
first aired on CBS Television and
continued on that network for 21 years.
After the move to television, the show
included coverage from Times Square for
the countdown to the Midnight Ball Drop
as described first by legendary broadcaster Robert Trout and then Ben
Grower. As soon as the ball would
hit the bottom Lombardo would strike up the familiar strains of Auld Lang Syne and the cameras would cut
between the proletarian mob in Times Square and the elegant revelers in tuxedos and evening gowns in the hotel ballroom.
Guy Lombardo died in 1977 having done 41
annual New Years broadcasts. His
brothers kept the orchestra together for a while and the show continued on CBS
for two more years.
Dick Clark launched
his Rockin’
New Years Eve broadcasts from Times Square on December 31, 1972 on NBC.
Lombardo was still the king of the night, but his music was old fashion
even for most of his faithful adult listeners.
The first Clark broadcast included per-recorded performances by Three Dog Night, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Helen
Reddy and Al Green with
cutaways to Clark in a studio overlooking Times Square for the Countdown.
The
broadcast moved to ABC after two
years and has dominated the night ever since.
After Clark suffered a stroke in 2004 primary hosting duties were
performed first by Regis Philbin and
then by Ryan Seacrest, best known as
the host for American Idol. Clark
returned for appearances on the program, although he remained somewhat impaired
by the stroke.
Clark died
this year on April 18 at age 82. The
program will continue tonight for at least one more year as Dick Clark’s Rockin’ New Years
Eve with Ryan Seacrest. Tributes
to Clark will be salted between the party line up of Carly Rae Jepsen, Flo Rida
and Pitbull, Neon Trees, and Taylor Swift, artists so hip and today
that I have never heard of most of them.
Other
networks and Cable stations have their
own New Year’s programming. CNN’s broadcast has become a cult
favorite because comedienne Katy
Griffith is expected to say something vulgar and outrageous while newsman Anderson Cooper cringes.
All of that
is for the stay at homes. New Years is
not quite the big night out it used to be, but it is still a huge money maker
for hotels, nightclubs and bars. Many
cities have midnight fireworks. A
non-alcoholic, family centered events called First Night had developed in many locations as an alternative to
the traditional revelry.
I will be
home tonight since I don’t have an overnight shift like some years. I will probably be the only one in the house
awake…and I just might miss the actual stroke of midnight if I am playing
around on this electronic gizmo.
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