Exactly. Before the mid-60s, all the soap operas were broadcast live from New York. It's when they switched over to Los Angeles that they started going to tape (probably due to the lack of all those stage actors in LA). Could this be the reason they lost the organ?Were the soaps originally showed live? Like in the early-mid 50s? That would certainly justify having a musician just off the set, playing music to fit the story - kind of like theaters pre-talkie with organists playing over silent movies.
This question was inspired by me watching YT clips of old openings of ATWT, Secret Storm, etc.
And *why* was the organ removed? It hadn't gotten *that* tumorous surely!
ixnay
Exactly. Before the mid-60s, all the soap operas were broadcast live from New York. It's when they switched over to Los Angeles that they started going to tape (probably due to the lack of all those stage actors in LA). Could this be the reason they lost the organ?
… I'd like to link you to a video clip by a fine musician named Lance Jackson who demonstrates very well the way it was done by the studio organists of the past...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kN8XJb6LOWs
Enjoy!
Actually, many of the soaps remained in NYC until their numbers fell off in the past few years. I believe Procter and Gamble even built their own studios (in or near Brooklyn I think) in the 1970's and finally abandoned them when their last daytime serial, As The World Turns, ended in 2010.
NBC's Days Of Our Lives and ABC's General Hospital and Dark Shadows were probably the first West Coast soaps.
I'd like to link you to a video clip by a fine musician named Lance Jackson who demonstrates very well the way it was done by the studio organists of the past...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kN8XJb6LOWs
Enjoy!