The announcer was Dr. Charles Aaron Culver, Chief High Frequency Engineer of the Canadian Independent Telephone Company (CITCo). Sitting in front of a little boxy wooden horn in the cafeteria on the fourth floor of the new Canadian General Electric factory at Ward Street and Wallace Avenue, he announced that this wireless telephone concert was being put on as a demonstration by The Toronto Daily Star. Dr. Culver repeated the call letters and the announcements several times, to allow the few amateurs and pioneering radio broadcast listeners in the district to adjust their receivers to 450 metres before the concert began.
For years the Star had presented weekly series of free public concerts around Toronto, the programs managed by The Star critic (Augustus Bridle?) and featuring the wealth of musical talent in Toronto: music teachers, advanced students, church soloists and instrumental ensembles. The venture into radio was an exciting experimental leap for the newspaper,to use the new and still imperfect wireless telephone to transmit these Star demonstration concerts to a wider public. Delivering concerts broad-cast through the ether was still a new, daring concept that was just catching on in the United States, for this was just at the beginning of the radio boom. Preparations for the debut wireless telephone concert had been made in secret. The Star’s announcement wasn’t published until March 27, 1922,just the day before the big event.
In this first series of Toronto Star radio concerts, broadcast over CITCO’s 9AH (later CKCE, before the opening of The Toronto Star station CFCA), many of the artists had already or were soon to make gramophone recordings, often in Montreal. Toronto had no recording studios.
There were perhaps a thousand wireless amateurs in and around Toronto who could pick up the broadcast, and many people still did not believe that sound could be transmitted through the ether without wires, so the newspaper arranged for the demonstration to be heard in public auditoriums as well. One was at the Masonic Temple at Davenport and Yonge and a second was for the veterans and the nursing sisters at the Christie Street Military Hospital. The Masonic Temple was jammed minutes after the doors opened and hundreds were left out on the street. The young Edward S. "Ted" Rogers was a CITCo employee around that time and may have assisted technically at one of the three locations.
"Stand by," broadcasted Dr. Culver at half- past eight....... "The first number on the program" .....the National Anthem played by Mrs. Evelyn Chelew Kemp...... "Number two on the program furnished by The Toronto Daily Star" Mrs. RJ. Dilworth singing "Down in the Forest." Every number was announced by Dr. Culver, speaking into the magic horn in a slow, distinct voice.
The inaugural experimental radio concert gathered together some of the best Toronto artists. Luigi Romanelli’s Orchestra starred on that first transmission, fresh from a successful "Jazz Week" at the Allen Theatre in downtown Toronto. Romanelli’s Jazz Musikers played a "Popular Medley of Syncopated Harmony": "The Sheik"; "Oh Me, Oh My"; "Sweet Hortense"; "Wabash Blues"; "Say It With Music"; "If Winter Comes" and "Moonlight Serenade". The history books say that Romanelli’s Orchestra was the first to broadcast "live" in Canada, in 1922, over The Toronto Star station CFCA. In fact, the first was this very broadcast over 9AH, CITCo’s experimental 9-call, and a sort of grandparent of CFCA. Romanelli’s Orchestra recorded for Berliner’s HMV label in 1922 and for RCA Bluebird around 1940.
Victor artist Boris Hambourg, cello, Director of the Hambourg Conservatory, did a solo turn on this first concert, playing "The Swan". He was later the cellist of the world famous Hart House String: Quartet (1923-1946), which also recorded for Victor and for RCA.
Pianist Alberto Guerrero, who supposedly made some home recordings with his young pupil, Glenn Gould, played a piece by Liszt. Recordings of his artistry might survive in the CBC Archives. Assisting on that program were the unrecorded Mrs. Dilworth, soprano, the well-known Mrs. Kemp, piano (former pupil of patriarch Michael Hambourg), Victor Edmunds, tenor, and the notorious Henri Czaplinski, violin soloist and teacher (an Auer pupil).
The second concert from the CITCo plant at Ward and Wallace, "designed to demonstrate the marvel of the wireless telephone", included two recording artists. Miss Vera McLean, the celebrated Toronto contralto, soloist at Timothy Eaton Memorial Church, had cut two sides for Herbert Berliner’s 216000 series in late 1919, and had already broadcast over the Toronto Marconi station, CHCSB, for transmission to the Canadian National Exhibition in 1921. She sang "For You Alone" and "I Passed By Your Window". Pianist Clement Hambourg, of the Hambourg Conservatory and later of the House of Hambourg, played a Chopin Prelude and "Nightingale" by Nevin. His artistry is preserved on instantaneous recordings cut in his own studio, plus a privately issued Gershwin disc. The unrecorded Lionel H. Bilton, cello teacher at the Hambourg Conservatory and himself a pupil of David Popper, and violinist Ferdinand Fillion appeared as well. Dr. Culver announced.
The Star arranged for three public venues for listening-in: Riverdale Collegiate Institute, St. Steven’s Parish Hall at Bellevue and College, and again at the Christie Street Hospital.
No recording artists appeared on the third concert in the series, but the fourth, April 12, 1922, featured Leslie Allen, saxophone, later of the New Princes’ Toronto Band (NPTB; see CAPS' initial CD release, "Dance Bands from Canada 1922- 1930", CAPS 001).
Feet could hardly be restrained from breaking into a syncopated dance. "When Buddha Smiles", while more subdued, belonged to the same family.
"It was a peculiar sensation,” said Miss Maude Buschlen (violinist), as though I were going to be electrocuted.
I felt as if something might fly at me out of the horn." ...... Mr. Allen disclaimed nervousness.
Leslie Allen was later a member of several recorded bands, such as the NPTB in England, Dave Caplan’s Toronto-Band from Canada in Germany, and with Carroll Gibbons, George Melachrino and Alfredo and His Band back in England. In the 1930's, Allen was a huge radio and recording star with the BBC-Dance Orchestra, and a rival of the popular Al Bowlly. Leslie Allen was an uncle of Eddie Allen, singer and accordionist of the CBC’s "Happy Gang".
Luigi von Kunits, the founder of the New Symphony Orchestra (which became the Toronto Symphony Orchestra) and teacher of most of the violin section of the TSO, played on the fifth broadcast, the Easter program, April 13. Von Kunits, unfortunately, did not record. By this time the wooden horn in the CITCo studio had been replaced by a little fibre funnel which measured about a foot across.
Concert #6, on April 18, was a popular music night for dancing to radio syncopation. The regular announcer was now revealed as Gordon W. Hogarth of The Toronto Daily Star, and the broadcast began with the words, "This is radio station CKCE testing". The program featured Frank Wightman’s Famous Orchestra (Frank Wightman, piano; Leslie Chaplin, violin; Alfred Noakes, trumpet; Wilfred Wheeler, trombone; Harry Foss, sax and Gene Fritzley, drums). Alfie Noakes recorded later with the NPTB and with Alfredo and his Band in London, England. Eugene Fritzley was a regular in Romanelli’s Orchestra and later recorded with Captain Plunkett’s Overseas Orchestra (see CAPS 001).
Bibliography and credits
Thanks to Bill Pratt and David Lennick
Arthur E. Zimmerman is author of "In the Shadow of the Shield" (657 pp), a fully documented oral history of wireless and radio broadcasting at Queen’s University and in Kingston, Ontario, 1902-1957. He is currently researching the earliest years of the Montreal and Toronto Marconi radio stations, XWA/CFCF and CHCB, respectively, and is looking for biographical information on the Canadian singers Gus Hill, and Dorothy Lutton, as well as for copies of the magazine Canadian Wireless (June 1921-July 1922). He can be reached by telephone at (416) 923-2001 or by e-mail at arthurz@look.ca