The Vikings (radio program)

The Vikings, a radio program offering vocal renditions and light music, was broadcast by NBC during the late 1920s and early 1930s.

The series starred the Vikings, a male quartet under the direction of William Wirges. The group featured Richard Miller and Robert Perry, tenors; Richard Maxwell, baritone; and Charles Pearson, bass.

Their earliest programs in 1926 aired at 8pm on Tuesday; by 1930, they were heard on Sunday evenings. In a broadcast of October 5, 1930, the Vikings performed "The Old Woman in the Shoe" from the musical comedy Lord Byron of Broadway. Later that month they opened the program with "Bye Bye Blues". In another program, they harmonized on songs from films.

They should not be confused with later music groups also known as the Vikings.

References

Viking (disambiguation)

The Vikings were seafaring Scandinavians engaged in exploring, raiding and trading in waters and lands outside of Scandinavia from the eighth to eleventh centuries.

Viking or Vikings may also refer to:

Places

  • Viking, Alberta, Canada, a town
  • Viking, Minnesota, United States, a city
  • Viking, Wisconsin, United States, an unincorporated community
  • Viking Valley, Alexander Island, Antarctica
  • Given name

  • Viking (given name)
  • Aircraft

  • ASL Viking, a two-seater biplane first flown in 1912
  • Bellanca Viking, a four-seat American plane introduced in 1967
  • Grob Viking, a Royal Air Force plane introduced in the 1980s
  • Lockheed S-3 Viking, a U.S. Navy aircraft introduced in 1974
  • Vance Viking, an American single-seat cargo and racing aircraft first flown in 1932
  • Vickers VC.1 Viking, a British airliner introduced in 1946
  • Vickers Viking, a British military aircraft introduced in 1919
  • In astronautics

  • Viking (rocket), a series of sounding rockets
  • Viking (rocket engine)
  • Viking (satellite)
  • Viking program, two NASA missions to Mars
  • The Vikings (band)

    The Vikings were a band from Jacksonville, Florida in the early 1960s. The members were brothers Bill Snow (tenor sax) & Ronnie Snow (alto sax), Larry Dreggors (lead guitar), Billy Harden (rhythm guitar), Tommy House (bass guitar) and Claude "Butch" Trucks (drums). They released one 7" record titled "Rosemary/You're The One" in 1964, which featured guest vocalist & pianist Dana Burney on side B.

    After The Vikings disbanded, Dreggors and Harden went on to join the Deep Six, and later Mouse & The Boys. Trucks went on to become one of the founding members and one half of the drumming duo of The Allman Brothers Band in 1969.

    They should not be confused with another 1960s group of the same name, a British group formed in the Birmingham area who included vocalist Carl Wayne, bassist Ace Kefford and drummer Bev Bevan, all of whom later joined The Move. They are usually remembered as 'Carl Wayne and the Vikings', to avoid confusion with their US contemporaries.




    The Vikings (reenactment)

    "The Vikings" is a British-based society of re-enactors, dedicated to the study and re-enactment of the culture of the Viking Age (790 – 1066) and the display of authentic Dark Ages living history and combat.

    Origins

    The Vikings, previously known as the Norse Film and Pageant Society (NFPS), which was founded in 1971 by Peter Seymour and Alan Jeffery, initially as an extension to their 'Central Focus' WWII film club, with the purpose of bringing an awareness of the Norse Myths and the Viking culture to the public through dramatic entertainment. They are the oldest and largest Dark Ages society in the UK. They are a founding member of the National Association of Re-enactment Societies. In its N.F.P.S days, the society consisted of some thirty core members, including the 'Odin Guard' an elite combat group maintaining Norse Heathen religious practices and values, but which eventually left the society during the leadership of Gerry East, whose recruitment tactics eventually took the membership into the three hundred plus bracket. The Society now has over 1100 members throughout Britain, Europe and North America. While the Society concentrates mainly on the 10th Century, events are often set in the wider period from 790 to 1066, with the appropriate modifications to dress and equipment used.

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