D. Whiteman - the 1930's
from Mass Observation jazz directive, respondent 1012, January 1939, pages 9-11:
I don’t think jazz of itself has ever meant sufficient to me for me to have given it serious thought before. But I’m attached to certain tunes for their personal associations – e.g. ‘Dancing Cheek to Cheek’ + ‘The Lady in Red’ – they played them a lot at the first dance or two I went to (I was about 15), ‘When I grow too old to Dream’ – a friend used it in her music-hall act. ‘Let’s put out the light + go to sleep’ – a pleasant party. ‘Sitting in the Dark’ – well worn on a caravan holiday. On the whole I prefer the more wistful sort of things (’When I grow… more >>
cite as
D. Whiteman, Mass Observation jazz directive, respondent 1012, January 1939. In University of Sussex, number 1012, p. 9-11. https://led.kmi.open.ac.uk/entity/lexp/1385486640040 accessed: 24 November, 2024
Listeners
Listening to
hide composersExperience Information
Date/Time | the 1930's |
Medium | broadcast, live, playback |
Notes
The original MO project ran from 1937 to 1949 with the aim of compiling ‘a weather map of popular feeling’. This is an extract from a volunteer’s response to what was called a ‘directive’; this directive requested views on jazz.
Originally submitted by hgb3 on Tue, 26 Nov 2013 17:24:07 +0000