kip_w: (Default)
kip_w ([personal profile] kip_w) wrote2006-08-28 02:48 pm

audio cartoons and more

.
I just happened to wander by the Internet Archive, looking for something else, and thought to look into their holdings of old radio shows. I'm pleased to report they have a load of them, including "Gunsmoke" (and two of those are rehearsals, in which the very able cast members wander from the script to break each other up), "Lum & Abner," "Jack Benny," "Bob and Ray," "Academy Award Theatre," and "Lux Radio Theatre."

I was a little disappointed to check out Academy Award's version of Pinocchio, only to find a different voice for Jiminy Cricket. Change the rest of the cast if you like, but he's the soul of the show. Then I poked through the years of Lux, and found that their version of Pinocchio has Cliff Edwards himself. Good show! I'll be listening to it in the car later. I also downloaded The Wizard of Oz (from 1950), and before I step out, I might as well start it going on Snow White too.

The Archive is very misleading in one way. It says it has 361 entries in Old-Time Radio. What this works out to is that an entry might have one show on it, or it might have a whole season of shows on it. Their way of indexing them seems almost random, so it's best to just go look through all 8 pages of entries. Tabbed browsing helps me, otherwise I get lost in a maze of nesting parentheses.

Lux Radio Theatre is a good place to start. Lots of good movies with original cast members recreating their roles.
.
ext_63737: Posing at Zeusaphone concert, 2008 (Default)

[identity profile] beamjockey.livejournal.com 2006-08-28 07:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I've never understood how copyrights and licenses are done for old radio shows. Are all of these tapes totally out of copyright? They're younger than 1923, but maybe the rules are different for such material.

I listen to a good four-hour weekly show hereabouts that broadcasts lots of old-time radio. Just wondering how permissions are handled.