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V-Disc ( "V" for Victory ) was a record label that was formed in 1943 to provide records for U.S. military personnel. Captain Robert Vincent supervised the label from the Special Services division.

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47-483: Many popular singers, big bands, and orchestras recorded V-discs. Under the leadership of James Caesar Petrillo , the American Federation of Musicians ( AFM ) was involved in the 1942–44 musicians' strike in which there was a recording ban on four recording companies. On October 27, 1943 George Robert Vincent convinced Petrillo to allow the union's musicians to make records for the military as long as

94-620: A Los Angeles record company served a prison sentence for the illegal possession of over 2,500 V-Discs. James Caesar Petrillo James Caesar Petrillo (March 16, 1892 – October 23, 1984) was the leader of the American Federation of Musicians , a trade union of professional musicians in the United States and Canada. Petrillo was born in Chicago , Illinois , United States. Though, in his youth, Petrillo played

141-432: A civilian bandleader. Recording during the last week was a long list of performers, including Count Basie , Woody Herman , Alvino Ray , Johnny Long , Claude Thornhill , Judy Garland , Crosby (again), Glen Gray , Benny Goodman , Kay Kyser , Dinah Shore , Spike Jones , and Duke Ellington , among others. Several months passed before any effects of the strike were noticed. At first, the record companies hoped to call

188-500: A member of the union. The orchestra joined the union (and the strike) in late 1942; this kicked off a long series of live BSO radio concerts broadcast on CBS . Some smaller recording companies did not have an extensive backlog of recordings and they settled with the union after just over a year. Decca Records and its transcription subsidiary World Broadcasting System settled in September 1943, agreeing to make direct payments to

235-568: A monkey turn a street organ while a gorilla collects donations. Bugs quips, "I sure hope Petrillo doesn't hear about this!" (The 1948 strike was ongoing at the time Hurdy-Gurdy Hare was in production.) In the 1950 burlesque revue Everybody's Girl , the comedians Bobby Faye and Leon DeVoe, playing anti-nudist street preachers, mention that the Devil has "two horns." DeVoe then jokes, "Two horns? Brother, we'll have to speak to Petrillo about that!" Slim Gaillard 's 1951 song "Federation Blues" (which

282-420: A recording session. The 1942–1944 musicians' strike remains the longest strike in entertainment history. The strike did not affect musicians performing on live radio shows, in concerts, or, after October 27, 1943, on special recordings made by the record companies for V-Discs for distribution to the armed forces fighting World War II, because V-Discs were not available for sale to the general public. However,

329-469: A secret". However, session dates of specialty labels such as Keynote , Savoy , and Apollo continued recording during the period when the ban was affecting the major labels. Those recordings for the most part showcased the more established styles of jazz, R&B , calypso , and gospel , with bebop first recorded for the Apollo label in early 1944. All of the recordings of bebop from 1944 to 1945 after

376-573: A union-controlled "relief fund", followed shortly by the recently established Capitol Records , on October 11, 1943. Capitol had only issued its first records on July 1, 1942, one month before the strike began. Other recording and transcription companies continued to pursue the case with the National Labor Relations Board and the National War Labor Board , culminating in a WLB directive demanding that

423-475: Is asked how he was successful in tracking down a long-missing musician, he points to the sky and quips, "I went straight to the top—Petrillo!" In 1945 or 1946, Robertson Davies had his "alter ego" write in a newspaper column, later collected in The Diary of Samuel Marchbanks , "Then to a party, where I showed my prowess at those games where you have to fill out forms saying who Cain's wife was, and whether it

470-412: Is entirely about the musician's union) begins: "You may play an instrument and think that you're a killer / But you still ain't get nowhere till you see J.C. Petrilla." In the 1952 film Road to Bali , Bob Hope shows Bing Crosby an instrument he's been using in his snake-charmer act. He quips, "Hey, I've been playing this flute all night. Have to clear it with Petrillo." There is a similar reference in

517-461: The American Federation of Musicians , at the instigation of union president James C. Petrillo , began a strike against the major American record companies because of disagreements over royalty payments. Beginning on midnight, July 31, 1942, no union musician could make commercial recordings for any commercial record company. That meant that a union musician was allowed to participate on radio programs and other kinds of musical entertainment, but not in

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564-595: The International Sweethearts of Rhythm . The "V" stands for "Victory" although Vincent said the "V" stood for "Vincent". The V-Disc program ended in 1949. Audio masters and stampers were destroyed. Leftover V-Discs at bases and on ships were discarded. On some occasions, the FBI and the Provost Marshal 's Office confiscated and destroyed V-Discs that servicemen had smuggled home. An employee at

611-675: The trumpet , he finally made a career out of organizing musicians into the union starting in 1919. Petrillo became president of the Chicago Local 10 of the musician's union in 1922, and was president of the American Federation of Musicians from 1940 to 1958. Petrillo stepped down as president in 1958. The round-faced, bespectacled Petrillo dominated the union with absolute authority. His most significant actions were banning all commercial recordings by union members from 1942–1944 and again in 1948 to pressure record companies to improve royalty payments to musicians. These were called

658-723: The "Petrillo bans". Petrillo joined the orchestra at WBBM in Chicago, Illinois, in 1937. For a decade, he had been assistant conductor and orchestra member at three Chicago theaters. In 1940, he became the conductor of the WBBM orchestra. In 1943, he was promoted to music director at WBBM, "supervising all live and recorded music on the station". His orchestra was featured on the CBS program Make Mine Music that debuted in May 1948. Petrillo died October 23, 1984, at St. Joseph Hospital in Chicago. He

705-505: The AFM rescind its ban on musicians recording for those companies. When the AFM refused to comply, the matter was referred to President Franklin D. Roosevelt , who wrote to James Petrillo: In a country which loves democratic government and loves keen competition under the rules of the game, parties to a dispute should adhere to the decision of the Board even though one of the parties may consider

752-616: The American Federation of Musicians, James C. Petrillo, President," or words to that effect. The Petrillo Bandshell , in Chicago's Grant Park , is named after James Petrillo. In the Lord Buckley riff "The Hip Gahn", there is a reference to "the Indian Petrillo" when the Indian people are planning a big musical party for Gandhi after independence is achieved. 1942%E2%80%931944 musicians%27 strike On August 1, 1942,

799-854: The Army, but soon music was provided for the Navy and Marines. Many V-Discs contained spoken-word introductions by bandleaders and musicians wishing good luck and prayers for the soldiers. Glenn Miller in December 1943, introduced a record by saying, "This is Captain Glenn Miller speaking for the Army Air Force's Training Command Orchestra and we hope that you soldiers of the Allied forces enjoy these V-Discs that we're making just for you." The Jubilee series, hosted by comedian Ernie "Bubbles" Whitman ,

846-454: The Chicago local chapter of the union in 1937 he had organized a strike there. Petrillo was elected president of the American Federation of Musicians in 1940. When Petrillo announced that the recording ban would start at midnight, July 31, 1942, most people did not take it very seriously; Petrillo had threatened a strike before and nothing had happened. The United States had just entered World War II in December, 1941 and most newspapers opposed

893-571: The Hope picture My Favorite Brunette . In the musical Sugar , two musicians witness the St. Valentine's Day Massacre . The gangsters are issued instructions to search for them in the song "Tear the Town Apart", which ends with "I'll call Petrillo". Over the closing credits of many music and variety television shows in the 1950s, the announcer would read "All musicians on this program are members of

940-627: The ban by having friends in England send him records produced in the UK, where the ban was not in effect. He was forced to discontinue this practice after the station's house orchestra staged a retaliatory strike, which was settled after WNEW agreed not to broadcast any records made after August 1, 1942. The only prominent musical organization not to be affected by the strike's onset was the Boston Symphony Orchestra , as they were not

987-420: The ban. By July, when it appeared that the ban would indeed take place, America's big three record companies ( RCA Victor , Columbia and Decca ) began to stockpile new recordings of their most popular artists. In the first two weeks of July, these performers all recorded new material: Tommy Dorsey , Jimmy Dorsey , Charlie Barnet , Bing Crosby , Guy Lombardo , and Glenn Miller , who made his last records as

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1034-408: The big bands just went right into the background." The other major cause of the decline of the big bands was World War II itself—and the resulting loss of band members who were drafted, curtailment of traveling by touring bands because of gasoline and other rationing, and a shortage of the shellac used to manufacture records. As discussed by James Lincoln Collier , Geoffrey Ward , and Ken Burns ,

1081-441: The big bands. When Frank Sinatra joined Tommy Dorsey 's band in 1940, most selections started with a Tommy Dorsey solo. By the time Sinatra left in 1942, his songs with the band began with his singing, followed by any solos by Dorsey or others. A significant moment in the rise of the vocalist occurred when Sinatra performed with Benny Goodman and his Orchestra at New York City's Paramount Theater on December 30, 1942. Sinatra

1128-562: The decision wrong. Therefore, in the interest of orderly government and in the interest of respecting the considered decision of the Board, I request your union to accept the directive orders of the National War Labor Board. What you regard as your loss will certainly be your country's gain. The union refused to budge, and with competing companies having made new recordings for over a year, RCA Victor and Columbia finally capitulated, agreeing to substantially similar terms as

1175-712: The discs were not sold and the masters were disposed of. Musicians who had contracts with different record labels were now able to record together for this nonprofit enterprise. A group consisting of Louis Armstrong , Coleman Hawkins , and Art Tatum recorded concerts that were released as V-Discs. Captain Vincent ran the program from the Special Services Division. Artists and repertoire responsibilities were handled by Steve Scholes and Walt Heebner, both of RCA Victor , Morty Palitz of Decca Records , and Tony Janak of Columbia Records . The program started for

1222-466: The excitement, there's one thing we forgot: Petrillo, Petrillo, Petrillo First we must learn if we can or cannot from Petrillo, Petrillo, Petrillo If you want a musician to beat on a drum Or a trumpet to toot or a banjo to strum You can't do a single thing 'til you hear from Petrillo, Petrillo, Petrillo In the 1947 recording of "Huggin' And A Chalkin'" Johnny Mercer sings "...when I met another fella with some chalk in his hand coming around

1269-484: The historically important recordings of jazz and R&B from the mid-1940s originated from these small labels, including an early 1944 recording of " Woody'n You " for Apollo featuring Coleman Hawkins and Dizzy Gillespie , which is often cited as the first formal recording of the form of jazz known as bebop . Although not lucrative for musicians, these small labels gained them exposure that sometimes led to contracts with more established labels. One unexpected result of

1316-526: The new musical style known later as bebop , developed by Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie and others during the period of the strike, was not recorded and was not available to the general public because of the strike. James Lincoln Collier wrote in The Making of Jazz : "By about 1942 it was clear to musicians that here was something more than mere experimentation. Here was a new kind of music. Unfortunately, we cannot pinpoint these developments [because of

1363-504: The nine songs released from these sessions, seven charted on the best–selling list. Other recordings made this way included: The strike also had an effect on radio programs that used recorded music, due to the limited number of new recordings available. Radio shows that relied mainly on records found it difficult to keep introducing new songs to their listeners. Martin Block , host of WNEW 's Make Believe Ballroom radio show, circumvented

1410-448: The other recording companies, on November 11, 1944. The new contract with the AFM included language releasing artists from exclusive recording contracts should the union strike those companies. Within a few hours after signing the new contract, RCA Victor had Vaughn Monroe and his orchestra record two songs from the new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film musical, Meet Me in St. Louis . The record

1457-535: The other side (it was Patrillo)". In the 1947 Bob Hope film My Favorite Brunette , a man says an imaginary George Washington is playing the fife all night long, and Hope replies "Why don't you tell Petrillo about it." Jon and Sondra Steele referred to Petrillo as "Little Caesar" on the B-side of their 1948 hit, "My Happiness". The 1950 Warner Bros. animated short Hurdy-Gurdy Hare , starring Bugs Bunny , ends with Bugs making large amounts of money by having

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1504-469: The record was on the best–selling list for 18 weeks and reached number 2 on June 2, 1943. In 1942, the song " As Time Goes By " became immensely popular after it was featured in the Warner Bros. film Casablanca . Rudy Vallée recorded the song for RCA Victor in 1931, and the reissue of his 12-year-old record became a number-one hit. As the strike continued into 1943, record companies bypassed

1551-446: The right connections took the opportunity to start small specialty labels, such as Savoy (1942) and Apollo (1943–44), that catered to musicians who were not under contract. Sometimes musicians under contract restrictions recorded for them under pseudonyms. That business model worked in large urban markets such as New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, where concentrated markets allowed a sufficient return from local distribution. Many of

1598-433: The strike was the decline in popularity of the big bands of the 1930s and early 1940s. The strike was not the only cause of this decline, but it hastened the shift from big bands with an accompanying vocalist to an emphasis on the vocalist, with the exclusion of the band. In the 1930s and pre–strike 1940s, big bands dominated popular music; immediately following the strike, vocalists began to dominate popular music. During

1645-417: The strike, vocalists could and did record without instrumentalists; instrumentalists could not record for the public at all. As historian Peter Soderbergh expressed it, "Until the war most singers were props. After the war they became the stars and the role of the bands was gradually subordinated." Even before the strike began there were signs that the increasing popularity of singers was beginning to reshape

1692-405: The strike. In 1941, 127 million records were sold; in 1946, two years after the strike, that number jumped to 275 million and it jumped higher in 1947 to 400 million. The strike stopped business between major record labels and musicians under contract with them. With recording and manufacturing equipment idle from the strike, enterprising music promoters, record distributors, and store owners with

1739-478: The strike]. As a result there are few commercial recordings of any of the bop players during the years they were working out their innovations." As Geoffrey C. Ward and Ken Burns put it in Jazz: A History of America's Music (based on Burns' miniseries ), "And so, except for a handful of dedicated collaborators and a few devoted fans, the new music Parker and Gillespie and their cohorts were developing remained largely

1786-519: The striking musicians by recording their popular vocalists accompanied by backup vocal groups in place of an orchestra. Columbia had signed Sinatra on June 1, 1943 and was eager to issue records featuring their new star; the company therefore hired Axel Stordahl as arranger and conductor for several sessions with a vocal group called the Bobby Tucker Singers. These first sessions were on June 7, June 22, August 5, and November 10, 1943. Of

1833-623: The union did frequently threaten to withdraw musicians from the radio networks to punish individual network affiliates who were deemed "unfair" for violating the union's policy on recording network shows for repeat broadcasts. The strike had a major impact on the American musical scene. At the time, union bands dominated popular music; after the strike, and partly as a result of it, the big bands began to decline and vocalists began to dominate popular music. Petrillo had long publicly maintained that recording companies should pay royalties. As head of

1880-417: The union's bluff by releasing new titles from their large stockpiles of unissued discs, but the strike lasted much longer than anticipated and eventually the supply of unreleased recordings was exhausted. The companies also reissued several long deleted recordings from their back catalogs, including some from as far back as 1925, the dawn of the electrical recording era. One reissue that was especially successful

1927-512: Was Columbia ’s release of Harry James ’ " All or Nothing at All ", recorded in August 1939 and released when James' new vocalist, Frank Sinatra , was still largely unknown. The original release carried the usual credit, "Vocal Chorus by Frank Sinatra" in small type. It sold around five thousand copies. When Columbia reissued the record in 1943 with the now famous Sinatra given top billing, and "with Harry James and his Orchestra" in small type below,

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1974-576: Was 92. Petrillo was unique among AFM presidents in that he was well known to the US and Canadian general public, especially during and after the 1942–1944 recording ban and was frequently referenced in pop culture of that era. For example, Phil Harris , the band leader on the Jack Benny radio show, claims on the show to have been married to his wife, Alice Faye , by Petrillo. When Jack Benny asks how Petrillo could do this, Harris replies "Why not? My dues

2021-532: Was Lincoln or Petrillo who said 'We must save the Union at all costs. ' " On the Fred Allen show of October 13, 1946, during a satire of radio advertising set to the music of Gilbert and Sullivan's " The Mikado ," Allen described an elaborate show involving hundreds of musicians in locations around the world, then lamented that it would all have to be called off. To the tune of "Tit-Willow," Allen sang, In all

2068-443: Was paid up!" On another occasion Rochester is asked to blow the car horn by putting it in his mouth, and he replies "Petrillo won't let me!" After Harris helped his children with their homework, the teacher had to correct his work. According to his daughter, "Teacher said George Washington was our first president, not Petrillo." In the 1945 Crosby / Bergman film, The Bells of St. Mary's , when Crosby's character, Father O'Malley,

2115-541: Was provided for black servicemen. The banter between Whitman and guests sometimes ventured into risque and racial humor, including the use of the ethnic slur " ofay " to refer to whites. In addition to a window into black entertainment styles, the Jubilee series chronicled the development of swing music on the cusp of bebop. V-disc recordings provide important archives of the Billy Eckstine Orchestra and

2162-425: Was quickly mastered, pressed and placed on sale just two days later. The end of the strike was not the end of the royalty dispute, however. As television was beginning, there were questions regarding musicians and royalties from this new medium, and a similar, but much shorter strike was called for 1948, lasting close to a year, ending on December 14, 1948. Over the long term the record companies were not hurt by

2209-430: Was third–billed on the program and although he was then the most popular singer in the country, Goodman had never heard of him. Goodman announced him and the audience roared and shrieked for five minutes. Goodman's bewildered response was, "What the hell was that ?" Once Sinatra started to sing, the audience continued to shriek during every song. As a saxophone player later said, "When Frank hit that screaming bunch of kids,

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