Showing posts with label WMCA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WMCA. Show all posts

Saturday, November 30, 2019

Rock Radio DECEMBER 1969 True or Falsetto?


Rockin’ through Christmas into the New Year ~ New Decade!  

50 Years Ago this Month we faced a not-so-different New Year and New Decade. Our country struggled with the beginning of the first military draft “peacetime” lottery since 1942, and today, the wars still wage. Hardly a traditional Holiday for the countdown to Christmas. All the while, the music plays on.

No different than other industries, radio stations revel in change before the New Year, with format flips and staff severances. December can be a lot of fun or a lot of heartache. That choice is up to you. Every change is opportunity! My choice? Let’s keep Rockin’ …

Your Tinny Transistor Radio News ~ DECEMBER 1969          
December 6th: With a lead singer still of middle school age, The Jackson 5 released their debut album on this date, bolstered by the incomparable Diana Ross. From Diana Ross Presents The Jackson 5, “I Want You Back” shot up the December 30th chart at *KGB/San Diego to #9, forging up to #2 before starting a downward slide.

December 17th – In the early 1960s, falsetto singing could be heard from beach to shining beach; although now waning, one musical anomaly showed it wasn’t dead yet. After a dainty “Tiptoe Through The Tulips” in 1968, on this date in 1969, peculiarly falsetto, Tiny Tim (Herbert Butros Khaury), was flanked by yellow tulips for for his marriage to “Miss Vicki” (twenty years his junior) on Johnny Carson’s The Tonight Show.

December 30th: While it didn’t make a huge chart splash, The Archies’ “Jingle Jangle” made it to *KGB/San Diego’s “Boss 30” (barely, at #27). Filmation Associates produced The Archie Show animated television series on which the title-named fictional band’s antics delighted fans. BFYP DJ, Norm Prescott, a Filmation co-founder, had transitioned away from the DJ mic and into animated TV in the early 1960s, but his heart was never far away from popular music’s tinny transistor radios.

Rockin’ Retro Radio
December 1969, Blast from Your Past Rockin’ DJs were scattered across the country. Mitch Michael, aka Ron Terrell / Terrell Metheny, spent the mid-Sixties at WOKY/Milwaukee, then grabbed his buddy, Lee Gray, and skipped over to WMCA/New York in 1968, to become a popular program director.
            In BFYP’s The Swinging Sixties, by December ‘69 “Mitch” finally switched to his real name, Terrell, and had this to say about WMCA: We switched from DJs playing Rock & Roll to half Rock & Roll and half talk. Some sort of nightmare that the owner had … it was such a horrible nightmare.
            Of course, switching formats willy-nilly and literally overnight, was/is common for stations, but often a career disappointment at best, for DJs and staff, and job loss, at worst. The only constant is change.

*
Featured Radio Survey: KGB/San Diego, California, Boss Jocks were all the rage in ’69 and at KGB they were giving away up to $15,000 per day! "The good ol' days." Poke your memory as you reminisce over their "Boss 30" Issue No. 166, December 30, 1969, heading into the 1970s ... ♪ Well, I’m your Venus ♪ … 50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio! Where were you that groovy day when …

Celebrate DECEMBER 1969 and … Rock On!

Share on Twitter: @BlastFromPastBk
LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books (of three) in her Blast from Your Past series, available on Amazon (eBook and print): Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959; and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging Sixties. Coming soon … The Psychedelic Seventies!

Note: FYI – All links in the BFYP site are personally visited, verified, and vetted. Most are linked to commonly accessed sites of reputable note. However, as with everything cyber-security, use at your own discretion. 

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Monday, July 1, 2019

Rock Radio JULY 1969 When Life was Spacey


Anything was Possible … In Mind, Music & the Moon 

There’s no denying we were a spacey lot in the late 1960s. No month confirms that description more than JULY 1969. Let’s ROCKet into space …

50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio 
July 11th:Take your protein pills and put your helmet on … ♪ we’re in for a bumpy ride! David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” was odd, indeed. Though the 7-inch single did well in his native UK after its July release, it caused nary a ripple on US charts, even with the country’s space travel hype in a frenzy.
Its re-release in 1973 however, shot it up to spacey heights for Bowie’s first big hit in the US. Speculation is the ’69 melancholy tune’s rise was stunted in the US until after Apollo 11 touched down safely on the moon …

July 20th: The United States created worldwide news when Apollo 11 Lunar Module Eagle landed two men, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, on the silvery moon. Well, that’s what it looks like to us. The dusty sphere might have popped some eons-old romanticized bubbles, but it promoted global unity that summer, like we (sadly) haven’t known since.

Let’s add a couple more memories to our out-of-this-world month!
In The Year 2525” is an ethereally depressing tune not directly related to space travel but perhaps its eventual rise to the top twenty was a runoff from spacey thinking, to futuristic fears …
In the Year 2525 | If man is still alive The one-hit-wonder by Zager & Evans released in May, but took a while to work its way up the musical ladder to July 1969 radio charts. It hung ominously at the top for six weeks.

On W’R-IT/Milwaukee, Wisconsin “Pop Power” top 40 for July 7, 1969, while Zager & Evans held the top star, #5 was no slouch for Oliver’sGood Morning Starshine.” The Earth says hello which is about the most intelligent line in the song. And there’s gloomy Earth talk with Credence hit, “Bad Moon Rising,” at #15.
            But my lunar loony favorite is a silly, knee-slapping spoof on the moon landing craze that must have caught the fancy of many, to land on the W’R-IT chart at a lofty #8. How about the astronaut on the ceiling | what’s your name? Moonflight” by Vik Venus, “Alias: Your Main Moon Man,” is a must-listen memory! Even more fascinating is popular WMCA/New York City DJ, Jack Spector (1928-1994), was Vik Venus. (“Moonflight” debuted at #28 on WMCA.)
He mixed faux-media news interview questions with answers from real lines in previous song hits … Let’s talk to the astronaut who just finished eating | How’s the food? …[reply] Yummy, yummy, yummy, I got love in my tummy. ♪ Heehee.

Featured Radio Survey: W’R-IT/Milwaukee’s Pop Power chart of top 40 tunes ran the gamut from moody to moonbeams … and we tagged along for the ride. 50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio. That awesome day when … 

Celebrate JULY 1969 and … Rock On!
  
Share on Twitter: @BlastFromPastBk

LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books (of three) in her Blast from Your Past series, available on Amazon (eBook and print): Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959; and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging Sixties. Coming soon … The Psychedelic Seventies!

Note: FYI – All links in the BFYP site are personally visited, verified, and vetted. Most are linked to commonly accessed sites of reputable note. However, as with everything cyber-security, use at your own discretion. 

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