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At last! Someone remembered Edward R. Murrow and the group [Shirer,
Trout, Eric Sevareid, Charles Collingwood, Larry LeSueur, Richard C. Hottelet, Winston Burdett and Cecil Brown] known affectionately as "The Murrow Boys" P.B.S. did a 2 hour "American Master" documentary entitled: "Edward R. Murrow: This Reporter [Part I]. May still be available at P.B.S. Some shots of early transmitters and Philco receivers and shortwave audio clips from London [during the "Blitz"] and Berlin and the great journalistic reporting from the concentration camp, Buchenwald. You can hear the QRM, QRN, and the RTTY from an adjoining frequency. You can also search for a 33 RPM vinyl record entitled, "This Is Edward R. Murrow". It was produced by CBS News for the CBS network. It was an original broadcast, aired just a few days after Murrow died on April 27, 1965. Several s.w. broadcasts there also. John wrote: SR wrote in message ... I was wondering if durring WW2, did people record audio broadcast on shortwave and if they, what are these recording called and where could I hear them at? 73 You might try searching out some OTR (Old Time Radio) sites and checking out the 'news' files. Many have news mp3 files of WWII. Though there are no files directly linked to shortwave, the nightly radio news back then would feature live reports from the different theaters of combat via 'shortwave' -- if the 'atmospherics' were cooperating. Sort of like live via satellite (when live satellite feeds were a big deal for the nightly news). It's kind of fun listening to these live reports and hearing the static and other QRM and QRN one gets used to when listening to shortwave. And sometimes the atmospherics didn't cooperate and all you heard was static and then the anchor, like Robert Trout, would apologize for the static. I believe the news files you need to check out are like...CBS WORLD NEWS TONIGHT. This particular news division featured a lot of live reports via shortwave during their nightly broadcasts. Used effectively by Edward Murrow. It was the way William Shirer would report nightly from Berlin. And as he later said, he wouldn't know whether he was giving a great report, or if all his efforts were simply dissipating into the static. He would get reports back from New York the next day through phone calls whether his live reports had made it through. -- MZ |
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