Showing posts with label WLIS/WMRD-AM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WLIS/WMRD-AM. Show all posts

Friday, July 31, 2015

Ed Henry

I have written about Ed Henry in the past, usually in January when his radio program, "The Polish Melodies Show", celebrated its anniversary. The program began its Sunday run in 1950 on WCNX-AM1150 in Middletown as a 30-minute blast of polkas, waltzes, and obereks, expanding to 60 minutes along the way (and 2 hours for a few years in the 1990s.) WCNX became WMRD-AM when Don DeCesare purchased the station in 1996, adding WLIS-AM Old Saybrook later that year.

Mr. Henry, as we politely called him, turned 88 this past March, 2 months after the show began its 66th year. And, he continued to show up at 9:30 a.m. every Sunday in bad or good weather until he passed away suddenly Saturday night July 18th. Ed Henry was buried last Friday in the Veterans Cemetery on Bow Lane after a High Mass at St. Mary of Czestochowa Church in Middletown.  I was asked by Jean Henry, his wife of 62+ years to deliver one of the eulogies (Mr. DeCesare gave the other.)  The text of mine is below.

In one’s lifetime, you may be lucky to meet 2 or 3 people who change your life for the better.  For me, Ed Henry was one of those people. I was born and raised in Middletown and our family listened to WCNX-AM1150 just about every day and, some days, from sunrise to sunset.  I first started paying attention to the voice that was Ed Henry’s on Saturdays when my sister tuned in to the Top 30 Show.  Soon, I was the one sitting close to the huge floor radio to check out this music I was beginning to enjoy.    To be honest, I did not discover the Polish Melodies show, which began its run the year after I was born (you do the math), until I came back to Middletown after college to work alongside my father in his business.  The small radio he kept in the store was always tuned to AM1150 and, on those Sunday mornings I helped with bookwork or washed the floors, we’d listen to Ed.
            I finally entered the wondrous world of radio one day in the fall of 1996 to do my very own show. Now the station had the call letters of WMRD.  Originally, my show aired at 2 p.m. on Sundays but I soon realized that was not the most opportune time for a Jewish music and culture program.  Owner and General manager Don DeCesare figured the only solution was to move the show to the morning and, to manage that move, Ed Henry would have to relinquish the second hour of Polish Melodies.  To my undying gratitude, he said yes without a question or a hint of annoyance.
            I soon became part of the Sunday Morning Crew and, even better, one of the Ed Henry Singers. Slowly but surely, I arrived earlier each week so that I could sit in at the beginning of Ed’s hour, creating sound effects, cracking wise and generally creating a friendly mayhem.  And, Mr. Henry loved it, the crazy voices, the head bump, the horse hooves, the chicken clucks….remember, I grew listening to AM radio in the 60s before it became innuendo and shock jocks and right-versus-left.
            Over the years, the crew of 2 Eds (chief engineer and unsung hero Ed Litos is the younger of the Eds) and me grew to include a former radio station engineer and Navy veteran Don Meno who became the Birthday Man – Once in a while, the entire Crew would go out to Sunday dinner with Bill Glynn, who had been station manager at WCNX in the early 1950s and, basically, Ed’s boss, along with Ro Badeau (Roland), who was Ed’s engineer before Mr. Litos took over. O, the stories Ed and Bill told.
            Here’s what I discovered about Ed Henry over the past 19 years. He never said a bad word about anybody, he loved his family (especially the grandchildren and now the great-grandchildren), he loved the United States, and he loved his radio show and especially his audience.  And that audience loved him right back. And, for a little station, Ed Henry had quite the coterie of grateful listeners over the years (even more became fans after Don D acquired WLIS in Old Saybrook).  Once we started streaming on the Internet, people who had moved out of state could now listen on Sunday morning and, even better, with On-Demand, people can listen 24/7.
            More than anything, you should know that Ed Henry liked to have fun on the radio. He celebrated birthdays and anniversaries, taught the Crew to sing “Stolat” and to applaud good deeds. He liked to sing along with certain songs, such as “I Love Everybody”, Bobby Vinton’s “Santa Claus is Coming to Town”,  “God Bless America” as well as the many Polish prayers he played through the Holidays.
            Yet, the two items that will stay with me more than anything is his sign-on “Is It Sunday Yet?”, ringing out of the speakers at high volume at 10 a.m. and, the ultimate memory, the song that closes the show every week.  Many of you already these words -  “I don’t want to go home, I don’t want to go home. I’m having too much fun” – I have to admit, I used to think that was a younger Ed Henry singing – “I don’t want to go home, I don’t want to go home, the band has just begun” – see, this 60 minute radio show was what Ed truly enjoyed, not that he didn’t want to spend time with Jean and his family, but – “I don’t want to go home, I don’t want to home, I’m having too much fun” – truer words have never been written or sung. By the third verse, “I” has become “we” and everybody in the building and listening on the radio is singing right along – “The whole gang is here. We’re full of good cheer/ Ohh, we don’t wanna go home!”
            That’s the essence of the Polish Melodies Show and its host.  We are having fun, Ed has filled us with good cheer, he has made us smile, made us laugh and, be honest, why you would want the party to stop?  When you look around, this world is rife with danger, loaded with sadness – let’s have a good time for an hour – the world can wait – reality is always in your face – let’s smile for a few minutes.
            That’s what I learned from Ed Henry. Savor your time on this planet.  Even as your body falters, stay young in your head, enjoy as much as you can, because, even though “you don’t wanna go home”, you have to. Even though what awaits you may be negative or intolerable, if you remember  “the whole gang is here” and will be every Sunday at 11 a.m., some of that “good cheer” may get you through the days and the week until it’s Sunday yet again.

            My friend, you’ve done quite a lot to make our world a happier place. Bless you and may Jean, sons Robert and James, daughter Suzan, your grandchildren and great-grandchildren be comforted that you brought so much joy to so many people for such an amazing number of Sundays!   Thank you for this honor. 
            Ed, rest easily among the stars.

(By the way, the show will continue for the foreseeable future with Chief Engineer Ed Litos and me co-hosting.)

Friday, January 2, 2015

Polish Melodies Reaches Landmark

Jerry Dougherty's Connecticut
Ed Henry celebrates another milestone in his long radio career.  The Middletown resident began broadcasting his "Polish Melodies Show" in January 1950 on WCNX-AM1150 and continues to do so every Sunday at 10 a.m. on WMRD-AM1150 (simulcast on the CT shoreline on WLIS-1420AM but, even better, available online at www.wliswmrd.net.)

Over the decades, Mr. Henry, who turns 88 in March, has rarely missed a show (his tagline is "I can't wait for Sunday!") - even when he's feeling poorly, a raucous polka acts like chicken soup making his voice get a lot stronger.  Reading birthday announcements or celebrating anniversaries of longtime listeners is always part of the hour as are reminders of the Polish heritage that Ed and his wife enjoy so much.

If you tune in this Sunday, you'll hear lots of people calling in or stopping by the River Road radio building, all to honor the joy, the silliness, the music and the positive message that Ed Henry has brought to listeners young and old for 65 years.

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Ed Henry Keeps Rolling Along

As we turn the calendar to January 2012, Ed Henry begins his 62nd year as host of "The Polish Melodies Show".  Originally broadcast from the Main Street Studios of WCNX-AM 1150, the show is now heard on WMRD-AM (the call letters changed in 1996 when current Don DeCesare purchased the station) and WLIS-1420 AM in Old Saybrook.

This New Year's Day morning, Mr. Henry will drive 1 mile from his home to WMRD on River Road and will do what he has done since the show began over 6 decades ago - he will turn on the microphone at 10 a.m.  For the next 60 minutes, he will have fun, announce birthdays, celebrate Polish heritage, play waltzes, polkas and oberiks, read ads from his loyal sponsors, pay homage to his friends and family and make his loyal audience smile and tap their feet.  Even when he's not feeling 100%, his hour on the radio rejuvenates him and his listeners.

52 Sundays a year (53 on rare occasions), Ed Henry makes people happy.  As he always says, "I never miss a show" and that's true - in the 15+ years my show has followed his at 11 a.m., Ed only has taken off when the weather has made it impossible for him to get to the studio.  He missed a show once when he and his wife Jean went to Poland and also when his sister passed away. 

61 years - it's tough to contemplate all the events and changes Ed Henry has seen in that span of time but, one thing has not changed; the man loves what he does and that love is shared by many people every Sunday.  GratulujÄ™!

Friday, August 27, 2010

Taylor Ho Hits the Road

Taylor Ho Bynum, composer/cornetist/bandleader, is my guest today (8/27) on WMRD- AM 1150's "Best of the Valley-Shore" at 12:30 p.m. Taylor, who earned both his undergraduate and Master's Degree at Wesleyan, is one of the busier musicians I know and is about to embark on a unique tour of New England.  In this picture (snapped by his wife, dancer and teacher Rachel Bernsen), you can identify his mode of transportation (bicycle) and catch a glimpse of his brand new pocket cornet.  After Taylor and his new sextet open the Fall 2010 season at Firehouse 12 in New Haven on September 10, he brings his Trio (including fellow Wes alum Mary Halvorson on guitar) up to Middletown on September 11 to open the Fall 2010 season at Wesleyan's CFA.

The following day, he hits the road for Hartford and a 2 p.m. gig at Real Art Ways with trumpeter Stephen Haynes and it's off for a 6-state/14 day tour.  He'll play in Springfield, Mass, then Brattleboro, VT, off to Portsmith, NH, Portland, ME, Newburyport, MA, Boston, MA, Rhode Island (no gig scheduled there yet), Amherst, MA, and finishing in his hometown of New Haven.

We talk about this, and more, on the show.  He promises his website (www.taylorhobynum.com) will have all the tour information up soon but, if you want tickets to the New Haven show (which also features former Wesleyan Professor Bill Lowe) go to www.firehouse12.com.  For more information about the exciting new season at the Center for the Arts at Wesleyan, do go to www.wesleyan.edu/cfa

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Saturday Night & Sunday Morning

Despite the lack of fireworks (save for recent events in City Hall), this Holiday weekend should be just about perfect for get-togethers, picnics and the like.  The thermometer will rise rapidly over the next 4 days but, hey, it's July.

On Monday, I'll post about the numerous arts opportunities for next week (ART FARM, Center for the Arts at Wesleyan, Herb Garden Concerts, South Green Concerts, Wadsworth Mansion Concerts, etc) but just a short note here.

Tonight (July 3), the Cypress Restaurant and Grill, 1265 South Main Street, welcomes Shaka & the SoulShakers to its Patio Music Series. Led by vocalist Bill "Swamp" Shaka, the quartet describes its music as "a rhythm 'n' roll swamp soul gumbo", meaning the sounds you'll hear have their roots in New Orleans, Memphis and Muscle Shoals, Alabama.  In other words, the band will "kick butt" and do it by "laying down some serious funk."  They'll start playing at 7:30 p,.m.  For more information, call 860-346-3367.  To learn more about the band, go to http://shakaandthessoulshakers.com.

 Next Thursday, the Center for the Arts at Wesleyan present saxophonist Joel Frahm in concert at 8 p.m. in the CFA Theater.  Frahm, born in Wisconsin, moved to West Hartford in his early teens and went to Hall High where he met life-long friend and jazz pianist Brad Mehldau.  While Mehldau has become world famous, Frahm has become one of the most versatile players on the scene.  Just in the past few months, I've received CDs by vocalists Dana Lauren (also from the Hartford area) and Beat Kaestli,  from drummers Ernesto Cervini and Roland Vasquez, and percussionist Samuel Torres, all of which feature Frahm. 
I had the opportunity to interview the saxophonist and you can hear our chat tomorrow  at 11 a.m. on WMRD-AM 1150. 

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Chat on the Radio (2/14 & 15)

My guest this Sunday morning at 11a.m. on "N'Shomah" (WMRD-AM 1150) is composer and multi-reed player Sam Sadigursky.  The native of Los Angeles, California, now lives in New York City is a very busy person, playing in several ensembles (including Darcy James Argue's Secret Society, Pablo Mayor & Folklore Urbano, Rob Mosher's Storytime) and backing vocalists such as Julie Hardy and Andrea Tierra.  As a leader, he has issued 3 "Word Projects" CDs on New Amsterdam Records for which he has written music for works by Paul Auster, Sylvia Plath, Osip Mandelstam, Maxine Kumin, Donald Justice, Langston Hughes, Audre Lorde and others.  His newest release, "words projects iii: miniatures" is a departure from the earlier recordings in that Sadigursky decided to use shorter poems, no band, and hardly any improvisation.  Poems by Carl Sandburg, Emily Dickinson, William Carlos Williams, Fernando Pessoa and others are featured. To find out more about this fine young musician, tune in the show or go to www.samsadigursky.com.

Monday afternoon at 12:30, you can hear my chat wth Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl, author of "Drink This: Wine Made Simple", one of the best books I have ever read about wine.  Having spent 30+ years helping people pick wines for dinners and/or parties, I have often seen the glazed look in the eyes of customers whern they walk into a store full of hundreds of varieties.  I've watched people in restaurants looking at a 30-page wine list and get nervous when it comes time to choose. (To be fair, a good restaurant will have an educated staff that help one pair wine with food but, many's the customer who wants to impress someone by picking an expensive beverage that obliterates the taste of dinner.
But Ms. Grumdahl, restaurant critic and senior editor of "Minnesota Monthly" and the proprietor of "deardara.com", avoids the b.s. that can creep into wine talk.  She knows that really learning about wine takes many glasses over many years so she arms the reader with the right amount of information that takes the sting out of picking wine (and won't make one feel like a dolt.)  Informative, humorous and well-written, "Drink This" is impressive. 
My Monday show, "CT Food & Wine", is also aired on WMRD-AM 1150.

Friday, January 1, 2010

This New Year's Weekend

Earlier this week, I wrote about Ed Henry's 60th Anniversary show this Sunday at 10 a.m. on WMRD &WLIS but this weekend also sees the debut of Phil Mikan (pictured) on the local stations.  Mikan decided not to renew his contract at WDRC-AM and immediately moved his program to Middletown.  The first show, "The Weekend Corner", will air Saturday January 2 from 9 - 11 a.m. and features Mikan discussing the economy, banking issues, housing and more with a panel of guests. At some point in the near future, Mikan will begin appearing daily (Monday - Friday) on the Bob Muscatell Show during the 9:30 a.m. segment. 

For an idea of the range of topics his show has covered, go to www.talkofconnecticut.com/audio/phil_mikan.shtml where you can listen to streaming audio.

Pianist/composer/Middletown resident Noah Baerman makes a rare solo appearance this Sunday (January 3) at 3 p.m. as part of the Hartford Public Library's "Baby Grand" series.  The concert, lasting around 60 minutes, takes place in the Library's lovely Atrium Room where you can also attend the opening of a photographic exhibition featuring the fine work of Hartford resident (and WWUH-FM show host) Maurice Robertson.  Maurice has been photographing jazz concerts for many years and his images (especially those of jazz musicians) are quite impressive and evocative.  The event is free and open to the public.
The Library is located at 500 Main Street in Hartford.  For more information, go to www.hplct.org/. To find out more about Noah Baerman, go to www.noahjazz.com.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Quick Chat about 12 Fugues

Wesleyan Professor of Music Neely Bruce stopped by the WLIS/WMRD
studios to record a short interview for my Sunday morning program. Next Saturday (October 10), he's premiering a new work by his close friend, Gerald Shapiro (pronounced "Shah-pie-row"), composer and Professor of Music at Brown University. "12 Fugues" is the name of the piece and Bruce has been working extremely hard to get ready for this performance. The show on Saturday starts at 8 p.m.and takes place in Crowell Concert Hall. Also on the program will be selected pieces by Stravinsky and Ravel. For ticket information, go to www.wesleyan.edu/cfa or call the Box Office at 685-3355. The program will be repeated at Brown on Thursday October 15.

Professor Bruce is always a joy to talk to (he even sings a bit during our chat), he's one busy performer, professor and composer. His 2005 work, "The Bill of Rights: 10 Amendments in 8 Motets", will be performed Tuesday October 20 at 7 p.m. in the Pequot Chapel of Mitchell College in New London. For more information, go to www.neelybrucemusic.com/bill-of-rights.htm.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Farewell Friend

As someone who grew up listening to AM radio and wanting to one of those "voices in the aether", I was thrilled to get a weekly spot on WMRD-AM 1150 in November of 1996. Instead of spinning "stacks of wax", the subject was the world of Jewish music and "N'shomah" has been on the air just about every Sunday morning since then. Ed Henry, whose "Polish Melodies" celebrates 60 years(!!) on the local airwaves the first Sunday of 2010, was kind of enough to give up 1 of his 2 hours to accommodate this upstart.

One month later, a sharp-dressed fellow began his "Sounds of Italy" program right after my show. Raffaelo Valentino had been on the air at WNHU-FM in New Haven since 1969, was an active D.J. and just looking for another outlet for the music he loved. As befits the music "zealots" who work at small AM and FM station for little or no pay, Raff never missed a show and he showed tremendous taste in the selection. "Pop" songs mingled with folk songs,, the occasional classical tune, the Italian-language version of a standard or American Top 40 classic, all types of Italian music came across the airwaves. He saluted listeners on birthdays and anniversaries, created advertisements in Italian and English, always answered the phone when he could and never failed to replied to listeners' letters.

Sadly, Raff passed away Saturday September 26 after a shockingly short but courageous fight with cancer. It's so hard to believe that his friendly voice has been silenced, that this horrid disease has robbed us of a truly good community-minded person. Because his show was often shortened by broadcasts of sporting events, Raff had left a large number of show segments in the WMRD computer. This coming Sunday (October 4), the station will broadcast his final show from 12noon - 2 p.m. with tributes from his co-workers and the station management. Of course, there will be plenty of that delightful Italian music that he broadcast throughout the Connecticut River Valley down to Long Island Sound. We'll miss his smile and optimistic attitude. To read his obituary and a tribute from WMRD/WLIS owner & general manager Don DeCeasare, click here.