
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On today’s date in 1923, the comedy team of Flournoy Miller and Aubrey Lyles were the star attraction in a new musical called “Runnin’ Wild,” which opened at the Colonial Theater at Broadway and 62nd Street.
In their day, Miller and Lyles were the African-American equivalent of Abbot and Costello or Laurel and Hardy. The plot they crafted for “Runnin’ Wild,” like many musical plots back then, was flimsy: two Southern con-men on the run head north to St. Paul, Minnesota, but find the natives too strange and the climate too cold. This “plot” provided an excuse for comic sketches to be sandwiched in between snappy song and dance numbers, the latter invariably involving leggy showgirls.
One dance number in the show struck gold for its composer, James P. Johnson.
Johnson called this tune “Charleston,” after the dockside home of many recent African-American immigrants to New York City’s west side. Scholars have traced this dance step back to the west side of Africa, however – an Ashanti Ancestor dance, to be exact. But whatever its source, this catchy rhythm made Johnson famous, and rapidly became the signature tune for the “Roaring Twenties,” a decade of flappers, bathtub gin, and all that jazz!
James P. Johnson (1894 - 1955) — Charleston (Leslie Stifelman, piano; Concordia Orchestra; Marin Alsop, cond.) MusicMasters 67140
By American Public Media4.7
1010 ratings
On today’s date in 1923, the comedy team of Flournoy Miller and Aubrey Lyles were the star attraction in a new musical called “Runnin’ Wild,” which opened at the Colonial Theater at Broadway and 62nd Street.
In their day, Miller and Lyles were the African-American equivalent of Abbot and Costello or Laurel and Hardy. The plot they crafted for “Runnin’ Wild,” like many musical plots back then, was flimsy: two Southern con-men on the run head north to St. Paul, Minnesota, but find the natives too strange and the climate too cold. This “plot” provided an excuse for comic sketches to be sandwiched in between snappy song and dance numbers, the latter invariably involving leggy showgirls.
One dance number in the show struck gold for its composer, James P. Johnson.
Johnson called this tune “Charleston,” after the dockside home of many recent African-American immigrants to New York City’s west side. Scholars have traced this dance step back to the west side of Africa, however – an Ashanti Ancestor dance, to be exact. But whatever its source, this catchy rhythm made Johnson famous, and rapidly became the signature tune for the “Roaring Twenties,” a decade of flappers, bathtub gin, and all that jazz!
James P. Johnson (1894 - 1955) — Charleston (Leslie Stifelman, piano; Concordia Orchestra; Marin Alsop, cond.) MusicMasters 67140

38,492 Listeners

43,691 Listeners

25,862 Listeners

7,710 Listeners

3,874 Listeners

1,343 Listeners

527 Listeners

181 Listeners

247 Listeners

73 Listeners

112,351 Listeners

2,145 Listeners

56,419 Listeners

4,129 Listeners

74 Listeners

37 Listeners

6,374 Listeners