June 25, 1939: Musicians from Wheeling Steel Perform to 26,000 at New York's World Fair

On June 25, 1939, musicians from the Wheeling Steel Corporation performed at New York’s World’s Fair before 26,000 listeners. The performers, selected from Wheeling Steel’s extended family, had become the surprise sensation of the late ’30s. It was all the brainchild of Wheeling Steel’s advertising director, John Grimes, as a way to promote the corporation’s image and products.

Grimes launched It’s Wheeling Steel on WWVA radio in 1936. It featured light classics, popular songs, and show tunes, performed by an orchestra of local musicians and amateur headliners. The program was an instant success and was picked up nationally by the Mutual Broadcasting System in 1939.

In 1941, It’s Wheeling Steel jumped to NBC and rose to fifth in the ratings. During World War II, the show encouraged listeners to buy war bonds, generating $663,000 in bond sales in just one program broadcast from West Virginia University’s field house. In 1944, at its peak of popularity, the show was discontinued, primarily due to John Grimes’s failing health. The show’s arranger, Lew Davies, would later develop Lawrence Welk’s TV variety show based largely on the format of It’s Wheeling Steel.

November 17, 1927: Composer and Performer Robert Drasnin Born in Charleston

Composer and performer Robert Drasnin was born in Charleston on November 17, 1927. His parents were Eastern European immigrants who met while working at a munitions factory in Nitro, about 15 miles west of Charleston.

When Drasnin was 10, his family moved to California. In high school, he played sax and clarinet in an all-star band that provided music for Hoagy Carmichael’s NBC radio show. He also performed with big band leaders Tommy Dorsey and Les Brown. His 1959 solo release, Voodoo, remains a classic of the “exotica” genre.

After that album, Drasnin worked primarily as a studio musician and arranger. In the late 1960s, he wrote the scores for CBS Playhouse’s Death of a Salesman along with 26 made-for-television movies and two feature films: John Huston’s The Kremlin Letter and an early Jack Nicholson western, Ride in the Whirlwind. He eventually became musical director for CBS television, where he scored the shows Lost in Space, The Wild, Wild West, and Mission: Impossible.

Shepherd Grad Impresses Judges on NBC's "The Voice"

A Shepherd University graduate scored big with judges last week on NBC’s, “The Voice.”

Shepherd University graduate, Paul Pfau impressed NBC’s, “The Voice” judges Blake Shelton, Pharrell Williams, and Adam Levine of Maroon 5 last week in a blind audition.

Pfau told The Journal the audition was taped in November and says keeping it a secret until now has been “super hard.” He says he’s grateful for this opportunity and attributes his time at Shepherd and in Shepherdstown as part of his growth in music.

Pfau is originally from Texas, relocated to Maryland, and then attended and graduated from Shepherd University in 2010. He says he wants to go back to Shepherdstown and perform after his time on “The Voice.”

Pfau joined Team Pharrell and has faced off in his first “battle round” to stay on the show.

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