The Longines Symphonette

The Longines Symphonette was a pre-recorded classical music program broadcast nightly on many Mutual Broadcasting System stations from 1943 to 1949. It then moved to CBS where it was heard Sundays at 2 pm from 1949 to 1957. The initial conductor was Macklin Marrow, followed for most of the run by Mishel Piastro, one-time concert master of the New York Philharmonic.

Frank Knight was the program's announcer. The introductory theme was the final movement of Beethoven's 5th Symphony. The series was sponsored by the Longines-Wittnauer watch company. A spin-off program was The Wittnauer Choraliers which aired on CBS from March 13, 1949, to April 22, 1955.

Uses of the name

The Longines Symphonette Society was a record label that specialized in releasing classic radio programs and multiple-record boxed sets.[1] The Longines watch company sold its record business to Warner Music Group; reissues of the Longines recordings since the 1990s have been credited to the "Symphonette Society" and no longer have any reference to the watch company.

Longines Symphonette is also the trade name of some electronic devices, including transistor radios,[2][3] televisions,[4] and electronic calculators produced by Texas Instruments.[5][6]

Longines Symphonette was referenced in the lyrics of "Birdhouse in Your Soul", the 1989 single by US alternative rock band They Might Be Giants.

gollark: Various ones. I think an iPhone X or whatever on what is presumably the latest version as of a few months ago, and an iPhone 5S on presumably the latest version for it as of a few months ago (yes, I know this is very outdated).
gollark: I know people with them and had to use them a bit.
gollark: I have tried iPhones.
gollark: I did get ~15s better boot times from the change. I just don't care.
gollark: People can read something like 300WPM. Be efficienter.

References

  1. Angela Morley (2004) THE LONGINES SYMPHONETTE RECORDINGS Some Recollections by Angela Morley. Robert Farnon Society (robertfarnonsociety.org.uk). Retrieved on 2015-12-11.
  2. Longines "Symphonette". Transistor.org. Retrieved on 2013-04-26.
  3. Longines "Symphonette" 1561. Transistor.org. Retrieved on 2013-04-26.
  4. 1967 Longines 3" Symphonette (USA). None. Retrieved on 2013-04-26.
  5. Texas Instruments Calculators (1972–79) – How rare are they?. Vcalc.net. Retrieved on 2013-04-26.
  6. Larry Gilbert (January 22, 2003) Longines Symphonette Electronic Calculator Version 1. Datamath (2001-12-05). Retrieved on 2013-04-26.

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