World War II Radio Broadcasts, sound archives from WWII PRO EDITION


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Materiały źródłowe Rozrywka
Desenvolvedor: Llorenc Palliser Barber
3.99 USD

This wonderful application collects a total of 273 of the best sound archives from the Second World War.

* Adapted to the new iphone 5S (64 - bit).

1. Franklin Delano Roosevelt speeches: 25 speeches.

2. Winston Churchill Speeches: 85 speeches. To anyone with even the vaguest interest in 20th-Century history these recordings are an amazing archive. 85 Wartime Winston Churchill´s speeches.

3. D.Day Complete Broadcast: 24 audios. One hears in real time, moment by moment, the actual breaking news of the June 6 1944 D-Day landings just as CBS studios on the other side of the Atlantic received it.

4. Pearl Harboor Attack Radio Broadcast: 10 audios. December 7, 1941. On a lazy Sunday morning at the Pearl Harbor naval base the day was just beginning. Meanwhile, in New York City it was already afternoon.

5. World War II Soundtrack: 4 audios. Great World War II Songs. Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra - Ill Be Seeing You. Perry Como - Long Ago (And Far Away). Swing and Sway with Sammy Kaye ... and much more

6. Glenn Miller Orchestra: 10 audios. Glenn Miller was an American big band musician, arranger, composer, and bandleader in the swing era. He was one of the best-selling recording artists from 1939 to 1943.

7. RAF Bomber Complete Series: 7 audios. WWII Docu-drama of the effects of Allied bombing runs over fictional German city, both on RAF crews, and German pilots and civilians.

8. Words at War Radio Broadcast: 72 audios. Produced by N.B.C. in cooperation with the Council on Books in Wartime the episodes of Words at War were based on literature created during the war by a variety of authors.

9. One World Flight Radio Broadcast: 12 audios. To help heal the wounds of WWII, this series chronicles Norman Corwins travels in 1946 and his recorded interviews of different peoples perspective around the world.

10. Speking of Liberty: 24 audios. Speaking of Liberty was sponsored by "the Council on Democracy" and broadcast by the N.B.C. Red network. Rex Stout hosted a variety of guests who were "speaking of liberty."