Jonathan Schwartz is Back (And So is Sanity on Sunday Afternoons)

For me and plenty of other people who love decent music, sanity has returned to our Sunday afternoons. Jonathan Schwartz is back on the radio. Internet radio this time – TheJonathanStation.com – but no one really cares. After a long winter and spring with Jonathan absent from the airwaves, we’re just happy to have him back.

Jonathan’s new Sunday show debuted on Father’s Day, and the occasion was fitting. For more than 50 years, wherever he wandered on the dial, from WNEW-FM to WNEW-AM to WQEW-AM to Sirius and finally to WNYC, Jonathan had served as our idiosyncratic master teacher in The Great American Songbook, created by people like George Gershwin, Jerome Kern, Stephen Sondheim, Richard Rodgers, and his own father, Arthur Schwartz.

On a personal level, he was an almost palpable part of my existence, an angel on my shoulder with unusually good taste. In the late 1970s, as a homesick college freshman with hall-mates who favored Donna Summer and “Le Freak,” I discovered one night that if I opened my window, held my boom box in the air and tilted it at a 90-degree angle, I could hear Jonathan’s voice on WNEW-AM, 150 miles away from my Providence dorm. I could hear Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald too, but it was Jonathan’s voice that mattered the most to me. Still does.

Later, back in New York, I would listen to Jonathan pontificate about his beloved Boston Red Sox and Philip Roth as I wrote speeches and press releases at work. When the kids were little, I drowned out the “Barney” theme song that perennially emanated from my living room by keeping Jonathan at top volume in my kitchen. (The super-sized mimosas I hid in red Solo cups also helped.) Much later, it was Jonathan, and the little packages of graham crackers in my oncologist’s waiting room, that helped sustain me through six months of chemo.

In mid-December, a #MeToo frenzy exploded at WNYC and Jonathan was removed (along with fellow on-air host Leonard Lopate). The station’s paltry attempts at justification only made it apparent that the dismissals were without cause, which made the situation especially heartbreaking. Jonathan issued no public statement. Listeners, including me, promptly cancelled our WNYC sustaining memberships. Many of us congregated on the internet, gravitating to the Facebook group The American Songbook with Jonathan Schwartz – which was not formally affiliated with Jonathan — to express our anger and sadness.

On the Facebook page, listeners, both men and women, pointed to the lack of due process in Jonathan’s removal. Age-ism seemed the likely culprit. (Jonathan was 79 at the time of his removal; Lopate was 77.) It occurred to me, in the current un-nuanced climate, that if Sinatra himself had suddenly materialized and serenaded his female coworkers with a song like Rodgers’ “My Funny Valentine” – “Is your figure less than Greek? Is your mouth a little weak?” – well, he probably would’ve been fired too.

People joined the Facebook group from as far away as Dubai, and a community took shape around Jonathan’s absence. We mourned. We reminisced. We had a lone malcontent banned from the group. And we did our best to recreate what we’d lost, posting songs that Jonathan would play and even attempting our own “Salute to Baseball” like the one he hosted every Super Bowl weekend. We wondered if we’d ever hear Jonathan on the radio again.

In early April, after searching the internet regularly for news on Jonathan, I spotted a logo on Twitter for a new entity called The Jonathan Station. Shortly after that, the station launched a 24-hour music stream featuring the American Songbook. Finally, on Father’s Day, Jonathan went live for the first time in six months. There’s a photo of him, smiling, on the Facebook page, taken right before the inaugural show. He looks like he’s precisely where he’s supposed to be. One member of the Facebook group said that when she heard Jonathan’s voice, she cried.

There’s something to be said for loyalty, for continuity, for well-deserved resurrections, and for those memorable voices that make your heart sing. I’m not just talking about musicians here.

“Oh! So there you are,” Jonathan began his first show. “It’s become June.” As though he’d never been away.

JSpic

 

36 thoughts on “Jonathan Schwartz is Back (And So is Sanity on Sunday Afternoons)”

  1. Too much coincidence for real life? I sat down today and thought – Jesus, but I miss Jonathan Schwartz. I’ve tried to fill the gap with Broadway stations, old CDs, and far too much time spent in critical thought. Not bad, but not Jonathan. Where IS he, I thought. It seems impossible that a kid who managed to hook up his apartment’s intercom system to broadcast American Songbook music to his neighbors would be sitting on his hands and not finding a way to do what he’s always done. Here in Northwest Connecticut, we joked that nearly twenty years ago, we built a million dollar barn with a cupola high enough to house an aerial that would allow us to get Jonathan’s WNYC show. It was only a slight exaggeration. But I know he has many fans who would have done the same. I thought of reaching out to a friend who knows Schwartz, to petition some kind of response. But before I did, I thought I’d check the Internet – one more time – to see if there wasn’t some sign of life. And here it is. An article penned the day before yesterday, letting me know that this newfangled world of “media options” sometimes comes down on our side too! What a bloody relief.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hi Diane…..if you go on the website, there’s an archive of the handful of shows that you missed. He’s hoping, by the way, to expand beyond Sundays and that’ll likely happen in the near future. Best, Adrienne

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  2. A friend just sent me this, and it’s made my day. This could nearly have been written by me. I first heard Schwartz when he was on FM in the early 70s before he made the full switch to the Songbook. He’s done more to shape my musical aesthetics than anyone aside from my parents. I even twice went to hear him perform at Michael’s Pub, and even bought his album. I met his father a year or so before his death, after a show at the 92nd Street Y in which he performed with Jonathan. I tried finding old shows on the dark web, to no avail. I even started to dust off 1984 cassettes of the Sinatra from A to Z weekend I’d recorded, knowing he’s on there (including me calling in with a question!), just for a hit of his voice. I found little snippets of things on WNYC where, sans name, his introductions were intact. I found the new station before there was anything on it, and didn’t know he finally came back. I hadn’t found your Facebook group or I’d have joined. I was in one initially put up to “bring back” Schwartz and Lopate, but then became only about Lopate.

    Thanks for this.

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  3. As a lover of “The Great American Songbook” there is such joy today as I realise Jonathan is back with his own station – three cheers from this household. Whilst I know nothing about baseball, Jonathan had become a regular Saturday and Sunday evening “visitor” to our home here in England with his choice of music and his great knowledge and stories from the past.

    We really missed a 2017 Christmas special and since then, WQXR’s standards (the old Jonathan channel) has been heard here less and less. Now a return to sanity prevails and along with the legends, I get to hear the “new voices” on the scene today. From Jonathan I have heard of many new singers who have made their way into my CD collection. Great to see some of the shows are being archived too – his knowledge should be preserved for history.

    The BBC has had nothing like his show, with someone who had met many of the writers and performers, since the passing of Benny Green, now surprisingly 20 years ago. I’ve many friends who will be pleased to hear of his return.

    Long may Jonathan and this great music continue!

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  4. Oh, thank god. I was hoping that he would surface somewhere.
    I have even missed his endless rambling, his playing Dylan (dreadful use of time) and his obsession with baseball.
    Most of all, I have missed what I consider to be my music history education.

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  5. Me too – meaning that me too missed Jonathan terribly!!! I was so profoundly glad to find this station, and also had cancelled donations to WNYC. I have been listening to this station streaming and something in the music was very different. Of course, Jonathan’s archived shows are DIVINE. But when I go to the streaming. What? Barbra Streisand?! And lots of others I did not recall hearing and certainly not often. Much more soupy than the sparkle that Jonathan brings when he is on. Who is doing the programming here for the streaming? Please show us where we can donate to the show, please keep more of Jonathan’s presence here. Thank you so much.

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    1. Hi Loretta…..sorry for the delayed response. (I don’t check WordPress often.) A lot of Jonathan’s music was sitting in a storage facility, so the stream was less Jonno-ized than you recall from his former stations. That issue is being remedied. We’re also hearing some amazing stuff that Jonno never played before, including a concert that Arthur Schwartz gave in England and a remastered version of a Michael’s Pub appearance he did with Mel Torme. The music on the stream also includes new artists that eventually turn up on Jonno’s show. (This is due to the exquisite taste of Jonathan’s producer, Bob Perry, who programs the stream.) They’re not yet taking donations, but I’ll keep you posted if that changes.

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  6. Joyfuly the American Songbook’s rambling historian has returned to enlighten us all. Just two years younger than
    our hero, I have been listening for nigh on fifty years. Long may he continue his music lessons and unique stories.

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  7. Just discovered this and glad to know Jonathan is back! Now I have to figure out how to get Alexa to play the station on my Echo.

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    1. Sorry for the tardy response, but I don’t check WordPress that often. To listen to the Jonathan Station on your Alexa/Echo, just enable the Simple Radio skill and then ask: “Alexa, ask Simple Radio to play the Jonathan Station.” Works like magic. That’s how most of us listen.

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  8. This was a great read and gives me a feeling of closure, having located Jonathan and his fanbase on the Internet. I was blindsided by the way both he and Leonard Lopate were treated by WNYC. With Leonard having found a new home, my thoughts often turned to Jonathan.

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  9. I’ve been checking every several weeks for Jonathan news to no avail, I CAN’T BELIEVE THAT I MISSED THIS SINCE LAST JULY. – BETTER LATE ……..
    The music choice in my first 24 hours almost sounds more varied and better (if possible) than before. Have much Jonathan to catch up on.
    THANKS SO MUCH !

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hi Sid….so glad you found the station! You can listen to all of the shows you’ve missed on the archive at TheJonathanStation.com. A lot of folks listen via Alexa/Echo, too. If you own one of these doodads, just enable the Simple Radio skill and then say: “Alexa, ask Simple Radio to play the Jonathan Station.” Works like magic!

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  10. Thanks to you for leading me back to JS.
    I seem to be having a frustrating problem getting his station to play without shutting down from time to time.
    Do you know of a link I can use on my iPad that works better than the “archive” connection? Is there an AP
    I can buy that carries his stream live.
    My wife and I are going nuts being so close but yet so far from him and the music.
    We would love to tune in this Saturday and Sunday to hear a current show.
    Again… thanks.
    Symon Cowles

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  11. OMG ! Here I am in the beautiful Sonoran Desert of Tucson, Arizona listening, once again , to the Jonathan Station with great anticipation and a profound sense of appreciation for the range and diversity that Jonathan Schwartz has always aspired to in terms of immensely gifted performers and richly engrossing lyrics/ arrangements. A touch of beauty and awe from The Great American Songbook preserved in history and revered for all eternity. Thank you, Jonathan !

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  12. Hello — Don’t know if this will be read by anyone (just encountered this now), but I’m grateful to Adrienne Knoll for posting what she did — and for *doing* what she did (meaning de-connecting from WNYC). And, of course, for inspiring others to write replies.
    Adrienne, if you read this at some point, is there still a Jonno on-line group — and do you have to be on Facebook to join it? (I’ve always regarded FB *as* a virus.)
    And, Adrienne or anyone: Does anyone know why TJS is running only reruns of old shows? I ask because the virus hasn’t kept many radio people from broadcasting from their homes/ Is JS at his other, non-NYC address somewhere out West?

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    1. Hi Robert — Thanks for reading this! The show is on reruns until the pandemic is over. Bob Perry doesn’t want to unwittingly expose Jonathan and Zohra to germs in their Manhattan apartment. There is an online community but it’s on Facebook. I understand your aversion, but our “Jonathan’s Round Table” FB group (about 415 members at this point) is a very friendly group that’s morphed into a listening party during the show. Some of us have already had a Zoom meet-up. Best, Adrienne Knoll

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    2. Agreed Robt, I also see FB in the same way and avoid it. I hope that Jonathan is safe wherever he is. I always enjoy his live comments and observations on the world – slipped in between musical matters. So I miss that. I listen to his NY show streaming from out West in San Diego.

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  13. I’m so fortunate to be in that great Jonathan’s Round Table group! Unlike you, I came to this music late, so I am often humbled by the knowledge and experiences of the others (most of all you!) in our group. But once we found Jonathan on XM Radio, Gary and I soaked up his first-person knowledge and stories, and the wonderful music. We’ve never looked back!

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  14. Adrienne – Thanks for your lovely piece on Jonathan Schwarz and his show. The show on WNYC was an essential part of my memories about the time when lived in New York from 2005-200. Jonathan Schwarz teached me about the Great American Songbook and I spend many Sunday afternoons listening to his perfectly curated show. When I returned back to Germany I was a frequent listener via internet and I was very disappointed when the Johanthan Channel was cancelled. I am glad that he is back on his own channel and we can listen again to music that brings us joy and sometimes puts us into a sentimental mood. Both is important to stay sane in our world…… All the best from Frankfurt, Germany

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  15. This is a *very* — in fact, ridiculously — delayed reply to Adrienne Knoll — because I’d never thought of checking if she read my earlier post, let alone responded to it! Thank you, Adrienne!

    Is this FB group still up and running? Hell, maybe I should sign up, then — tho’ I’m absolutely spooked by FB, since it seems to just set you up to be hacked or spammed or whatever. I’d appreciate some reassurance, if such can honestly be given — and truthfully, I don’t even know *how* to sign in to FB! (Unless I did years ago and forgot.) Can you just sign in to *this* FB group? Help, anyone!

    Would actually welcome chatting w/ someone who can walk me through how to do this, if anyone’s up to it — tho’ I realize maybe an imposition.

    Am disappointed that so many of the shows (like today’s) are still, or again, reruns — and, truth to tell, I wish Jonno was doing the shows alone. But so be . . .

    Anyway, would welcome hearing back — and this time I’ll monitor this site — I see that Adrienne actually replied the same day I wrote! (And I also see that Loretta shares my aversion to FB, and wonder if she regards it as unsafe as well [?].)

    Anyway, would be glad to know if this group is still up and running, and appreciate the shared interest and devotion (and more) very much. And for me, WNYC — which has been increasingly non-stop woke in any case and an increasingly untrustworthy source of news — is a dirty word to me since they let him go.

    Cheers, all.

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