World Broadcasting System

{{Short description|American radio program distributor}}

World Broadcasting System, Inc., was an American recording service for the radio industry founded in 1929 by Percy L. Deutsch (1885–1968), with key investors and creative artists (Walter) Gustave Haenschen and Milton Diamond (both of whom had worked with Deutsch at the Brunswick Record Company) and was originally based in New York. The company recorded and, through its subsidiary, World Program Service, distributed discs to radio stations for broadcast. The discs themselves were 16 inches in diameter, vertical-cut, recorded at 33 1/3 r.p.m., and would play for 15 minutes per side on average. These recordings, which were made especially for radio studios that could not afford to maintain a studio orchestra, were not sold to the public.

In 1932, WBS built studios in Washington, D.C., for use by "members of Congress and other public officials" for distribution to their home radio stations.{{cite news|title=World System Studios Opening in Washington|url=http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC/BC-1932/1932-05-15-BC.pdf|accessdate=2 October 2014|agency=Broadcasting|date=May 15, 1932}} An article in Broadcasting magazine reported that the facilities would be made available at no charge except for a nominal fee to cover the cost of discs. The facilities were formally opened June 7, 1932.{{cite news|title=D.C. Studio Opened By World System|agency=Broadcasting|date=June 15, 1932}}

Additional expansion occurred late in 1932, when WBS opened a production studio in Chicago, in a building that housed the Chicago Daily News and WMAQ radio.{{cite news|title=World System's Third Production Studio Now At Chicago News Plant|url=http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC/BC-1932/1932-11-15-BC.pdf|accessdate=October 6, 2014|agency=Broadcasting|date=November 15, 1932}} A Hollywood studio, at 1040 Las Palmas Avenue, began producing discs for WBS in 1933. The first was Tarzan of the Apes, which was done for Signal Oil Company and Fould's Milling Company.{{cite news|title=WBS in Hollywood|url=http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC/BC-1933/1933-03-01-BC.pdf|accessdate=October 8, 2014|agency=Broadcasting|date=March 1, 1933}} Also, in March 1933, the company's Chicago facility began producing transcriptions of The Air Adventures of Jimmie Allen for Skelly Oil Company.{{cite news|title=(untitled brief)|url=http://www.americanradiohistory.com/hd2/Archive-BC-IDX/33-OCR/1933-03-01-BC-OCR-Page-0033.pdf|accessdate=December 22, 2014|agency=Broadcasting|date=March 1, 1933}}

The company expanded its operations on an international scale in 1934, forming World Broadcasting System of Australasia, Ltd., as a subsidiary. An announcement at the time said that the subsidiary would promote the use of the World Program Service in Australia and New Zealand, with station 2GB in Sydney, Australia, as the first subscriber.{{cite news|title=WBS Service Subsidiary Organized in Australia|url=http://www.americanradiohistory.com/hd2/Archive-BC-IDX/34-OCR/1934-08-15-BC-OCR-Page-13.pdf|accessdate=19 October 2014|agency=Broadcasting|date=August 15, 1934}}

In 1948, an advertisement in a trade publication said, "over 640 stations now use this great world library."{{cite news|title=(World Broadcasting System ad)|url=http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC/BC-1948/1948-04-19-BC.pdf|accessdate=10 December 2014|agency=Broadcasting|date=April 19, 1948}}

Ownership

Before being sold to George H. Buck, Jr. (born 1929), in 1971 — a jazz enthusiast who, since 1949, has run Jazzology Records — World Broadcasting Systems had changed owners several times.

Decca Records acquired it for $750,000 from Deutsch in 1943 — a bargain price during the musicians strike.[https://books.google.com/books?id=m_cDTOIdVRcC&pg=PA98 Ernest Tubb: The Texas Troubadour], by Ronnie Pugh, Duke University Press, pg. 98 (1998) {{OCLC|34517556}}

Frederick W. Ziv, Co. acquired World Broadcasting System, Inc., for $1.5 million on August 4, 1948, but later, sold it to a Philadelphia firm, which in turn sold it to Commercial Recording Corporation, a Dallas-based corporation founded in 1955 by Tom Merriman. CRC sold World Broadcasting Systems to George H. Buck in 1971.

Innovations

In 1932, WBS announced the use of its Washington studios for producing Visaphone disks for the Fairchild-Wood Visaphone Corp. The 12-inch, 33 1/3 rpm disks were used to record lectures that were synchronized with still pictures on film that was shown through projectors. The system was described in a trade publication as "an improvement on Stereopticon slides used for lecture purposes."{{cite news|title=World System Records Disks for the Visaphone|url=http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC/BC-1932/1932-09-15-BC.pdf|accessdate=5 October 2014|agency=Broadcasting|date=September 15, 1932}}

Historic recording artists

Other transcription services

References

{{Reflist|30em|refs=

[https://books.google.com/books?id=EzVesnkLEtUC&pg=PA131 American Popular Music and Its Business: The First Four Hundred Years; Vol. III, From 1900 to 1984], Russell Sanjek (1916–1986), Oxford University Press (1988) {{OCLC|300414899}}

[https://books.google.com/books?id=yggEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA1 World B'Cast Recordings Sold], by Ian Dove, Billboard, September 11, 1971, pps. 1 & 66

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Category:Mass media companies established in 1929

Category:Electrical transcription companies

Category:Radio organizations in the United States