"Those were the days", said music man Bert Buhrman. For 20 years
in New York City, he was the organist whose mood-setting instrumentals
you heard behind the Guiding Light soap opera on daytime network
radio.
"Everything was live in those days," said Bert, a native Springfieldian
who began his career playing the organ at St. John's Episcopal
Church on the corner of Division Street and Benton Avenue. "You
were also allowed to freelance on other networks, going back and
forth from CBS to NBC. It was so hectic that one time I played
the Procter & Gamble theme song on a Colgate Palmolive-sponsored
show. I didn't get caught, but I learned to leave nothing to chance
as I had the control room in one ear and the program in another
on the headphones I had to wear."
The seven-days-a-week, 18-hour-days finally got to him, so he
retired in 1965 and came home. That's when he became well known
in the area for playing "The Mighty Wurlitzer" at College of the
Ozarks concerts that benefited the school's scholarship fund. "Crowds
were so large," said Bert, "that we had to limit attendance due
to hazards in the balcony, but we made lots of money for the College
of the Ozarks Scholarship Fund."
At these concerts, Buhrman introduced "the nostalgic theatre organ
sound" to Point Lookout audiences who loved the Broadway show tunes
and popular songs of the 1930s and 40s.
Before his death on January 29, 1999, he made more than 5,000
pieces of this sheet music available to the public by donating
his collection
to the
Springfield-Greene
County Library District. The sheet
music database, which is housed
in the Reference Department of the Library Center, is searchable
online by composer and title.
For more information, call the Library
Center Reference
Department at (417) 883-5341. |