Jazz, blues and nostalgia.
Various remarkable phenomena, such as Dr. Samuel J. Hoffman, who, besides a respectable life as a doctor, created furore as player of the theremin, the cabinet with antennas that could create ghostly sounds. He worked on the Hitchcock movie "Spellbound" and numerous horror and science fiction films. Also noteworthy: Kay Penton, a vocalist who succeeded in silencing the usually quite windy jerk Benny Goodman at her audition, and about whom pianist Teddy Wilson remarked that he liked her better than Billie Holiday. But what has become of her? Furthermore, a stewardess song by Gretchen Kauffeld, a beautiful melancholic song by Jules de Corte, from the early days of the folk music of the Monroe Brothers, swing by Charlie Barnet, and also, for listening at in front of a crackling fire: Julie London.