Showing posts with label Wolfman Jack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wolfman Jack. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Rock Radio 50 Years Ago ~ OCTOBER 1974

BFYP Breaking News 10/21/24: It's official - WMGK/Philly ...

revamped its personnel and tragically cut  longtime afternoon DJ, Andre Gardner, from its schedule (his last day was Friday 10/18/24). Do they know what they're doing? Jus' askin'. Andre's presence in radio will surely be missed in Philly--Best wishes to Andre for whatever lies ahead. It's a growing sign that digital radio is taking over. Sad day for terrestrial Rock Radio ... 

Back to your regularly scheduled article ...

We Can Dig that Werewolf … um … Wolfman!  

Mixing in a little Halloween magic with Rock & Roll is always fun. We’re mingling ROCKtober’s fun Rock Radio History with ghosts, goblins, and werewolves! Well, at least hairy DJs and a wolf-related song.

From the beginning of his DJ career, Wolfman Jack made Halloween his natural fave holiday. Even before he became a broadcast icon, he chased his nephews around the house in a black cape, growling like a scary wolf while they ran giggling down the hall. To him, his Radio listeners were just big kids, chuckling at his on-air gravelly voiced antics, sparking jealousy from werewolves everywhere. So in ROCKtober, though we mentioned it last month, we “Clap for the Wolfman” in our monthly Song of Note!

Another bearded DJ phenom who deserves a mention, is San Diego’s beloved Shotgun Tom Kelly—a TV and radio personality, the pioneering DJ entertained listeners at KCBQ, KGB, B-100, & K-EARTH 101/L.A. just to name a few. In his ranger hat for more than 40 years, Shotgun flaunted a beard that often rivaled that of Wolfman Jack. Today, it’s trimmer and more sculpted, as he excels in the role of DJ extraordinaire-emeritus, complete with his own nostalgic book of fun memories and a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
       “It was April 30, 2013. I’d been preparing for this moment for years, since I was 10, although back then I could never have imagined it. This was the morning I was going to be awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame!”*  Are you a nostalgic Rock Radio buff? Ya gotta READ *“
All I Wanna Do Is Play the Hits!

Shotgun’s story in BFYP Book 2: The Swinging Sixties, is a snippet of his sparkle that reminds us of the fun and quirky experiences Rock Radio life was in the early days. Meeting up with him at his book signing, we laughed all over again at his amazing adventures. (Photo: author Judy Pendell, Shotgun Tom Kelly, LinDee Rochelle [that be me!], and author/journalist, Joe Naiman, in famed Corvette Diner, September 2024. Of course, we all had to wear a hat of some kind!)

So, with visions of werewolves and Halloween fun dancing in your heads, let’s get on with it. Spooky songs and haunting memories await 50 Years Ago this Month 

ROCK-TOBER 1974 Radio News & Muse  

Although there’s nothing spooky about Country Music Month, many Country tunes have their haunting lyrics. Does your conscience bother you? | Tell the truth  Asking questions of life and missing home from Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama” at top of charts. But we’re a li’l bit o’ Country and a whole lotta Rock & Roll!

October 25th: The official release date of Wings’ "Junior's Farm" was November 1, 1974, but it escaped a little early in a few areas, on this date. Set in a farmland area where Paul McCartney and family stayed during the Beatles’ contentious break-up, it may be set in the Country, but it’s all Rock & Roll. Well let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go | Down to Junior's Farm where I want to lay low   

On Your Tinny Transistor Radio  
Where were you bein’ witchy in October 1974? San Francisco, Dallas, Chicago? Here’s a sample of what and who you were listening to …

Were you trick-or-treating in San Francisco Bay Area listening to Chuck Buell on your afternoon drive with KFRC? Or were you meeting a ghoul in Dallas and listening to KAFM-92.5’s Metroplex Singles?

Though you may have been in the Halloween mood in Chicago, you didn’t opt to vote up the charts any Country crossovers other than the marginal “Sweet Home Alabama,” or get in the haunting mood with spooky songs (except for Wolfman’s). WCFL’s “Super CFL Survey” for October 5, 1974, is just an awesome Top 40 list of now-iconic tunes. You might recall, however, your amusing mornings with the DJs in their “Dick and Doug Show.” ‘Climb On Board”! Or, getting a jump on Valentine’s Day with the tune that tops the survey list, “I Honestly Love You” by Olivia Newton-John   Maybe I hang around here | a little more than I should    

OCTOBER Song of Note

Well, I strayed out of the Top Ten again this month, but please, how could I not choose a Halloween sorta/kinda-related monthly Song of Note?! 
       Last month I mentioned the Guess Who’s "Clap for the Wolfman," the idolizing tribute to
Wolfman Jack, but it didn’t get top honors here. Since it’s still climbing at #25 on WCFL/Chicago’s October 5, 1974, “CFL Survey,” I just had to do it.
       Wolfman Jack was obviously honored by the homage paid him by songwriters, Burton Cummings, Bill Wallace and Kurt Winter. He had no problem adding to segments of the song with his distinctive voice, and their release timing made it a Halloween favorite.
       Off the spooky topic for a moment, Boomers, tell me now, how often did you sing along with Steve Miller in “The Joker,” (1973) Some people call me Maurice | Cause I speak of the pompitous of love
 Or do you imitate Wolfman Jack while listening to “Clap for the Wolfman,” when he brags   … Everybody's talkin’ about the Wolfman's pompitous of love …      
       Do you know pompitous is not even a word? Yet there we were, singling along like we were so cool … just like the Wolfman.
       Of course, if you know Rock Radio History, you’re aware that DJs often helped tunes trek to the top and in the process, band members were known to become life-long friends with the DJs. Guess Who and the Wolfman shared a kinship from the beginning. Not to be confused with DJs who favored music in pay-for-play schemes that got them into trouble. Think that payola no longer exists? Think again … just last week (October 3, 2024) …
       Up to #14 in Chicago by Halloween, “Clap for the Wolfman” had jacked up to #5 at KYNO/Fresno, California, more than thirty days before. Following its peak at #11 first week of November, it slid down the list as the weather cooled.

Quirky Band Names
Now, many music artists using "real names" for stardom derive a singing persona from their birth name. However, Sami Jo Cole is in no way discernible from “Jane Annette Jobe” (except for the JO), giving her our Quirky Band Name Award. But I like Sami Jo—it’s short, sweet and easy to remember.
       You might recall her first hit, “Tell Me a Lie” (February ‘74). After her second hit, which landed on this month’s chart at #28, “It Could Have Been Me,” her career rather faded away and by the end of the ‘80s, she reverted to civilian life. Perhaps she took the song’s lyrics to heart
 It could have been me | Wearing that dress of white | It could have been me | Holding you close tonight     

OCTOBER 2024 Music Events & More

I’ll bet ya don’t remember that Country Music Month came from the inspiration of … drumroll* please … ultimately scandalized, President Richard M. Nixon. (Well, unless you saw it here last year!)
       Yup. He did do something good while in office. Perhaps his final pleasant experience as the nation’s leader before leaving the Whitehouse in disgrace, was to become the first president to visit the Grand Ole Opry. 
       Of course, we celebrate it because we wouldn't be Rock & Roll without Country ... and R&B, and Gospel, and Bluegrass, and boogie-woogie, and anything else they could throw in the '50s musical pot. Hail, Hail, Country-Rock!

Thursday ~ October 10th: *And while we’re drumming up accolades, today, make time to hug your favorite drummer! Seriously. It’s Hug a Drummer Day! Though woefully out of date, the sponsor site still offers plenty of drumming info and proudly states, “At the World Drumming Network we believe the oldest, simplest instrument in the world is still the most magical. Like 8000 years of generations before.”  

Thursday ~ October 31st: Boo! It’s Halloween! Where will you be Rockin’ on Halloween? From Tarrytown, New York’s Sleepy Hollow Cemetery to San Diego’s Hardrock Hotel, Halloween Rocks musical ghosts and goblins across the nation! Want to trick-or-treat in your neighborhood? Halloween Festivals across the country are waiting to lift the veil on your spooky fun.

BFYP Featured Radio Survey  
October 5, 1974 ~ is a little early in the month to hone in on Halloween for WCFL/Chicago, but they did focus on their popular DJ duo with the “Dick and Doug Show.” The star of this survey, though, is a McDonald’s ad for their new breakfast menu with the Egg McMuffin. By 1974 the recent advent of the now-breakfast staple by franchisee, Herb Peterson in Santa Barbara, California, still had not yet become a national offering. That happened in 1975. Talk about the “good ol’ days”—the McMuffin only cost 63¢ … mmmmm, “Can’t Get Enough” … 50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio! Where were you that groovy day when your radio played 

Let’s Celebrate a Fun, Spooky Halloween & ROCK-TOBER 1974 Rock On!  

Winsome Witch of the West
BFYP Book 1 (1954-1959) on Amazon         
BFYP Book 2 (Swinging ‘60s) on Amazon
 
Blast from Your Past Gifts
 
Share your Golden Oldies R&R fun on “X”/Twitter:
@BlastFromPastBk 

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LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and author by way of Rock & Roll. Two books (of three planned) are published in her Blast from Your PastTM series, available on Amazon: Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959TM (eBook only; coming soon in updated print edition) and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging SixtiesTM (eBook & print). Coming soon-ish … Book 3 – The Psychedelic Seventies!TM 

Note: FYI – All links in the BFYP site are personally visited, verified, and vetted. Most are linked to commonly accessed sites of reputable note. Occasionally, since I often feature real people and/or singular sources there may be an unsecured link. As with everything cyber-security, use at your own discretion and risk. This site is wholly owned by LinDee Rochelle & sponsored by PenchantForPenning.comTM. No compensation is received for any mentions of businesses, products, or other commercial interests. *All holiday and special event days are found at Brownielocks.com’s calendar site. Enjoy! 

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Thursday, August 1, 2024

Rock Radio 50 Years Ago ~ AUGUST 1974

It’s a Beachin’ Summer of ‘74 at BFYP!   

Oh, do I have a mid-summer’s dream article for you! Grab a brew or your other fave libation, kick back, and enjoy the read. It’s gonna be a long but most excellent adventure! 

With three fun Rock Radio music charts vying for the coveted Featured Radio Survey spot, we shan’t be lacking for a cool mountain of memories to help stave off our summer sweat. One of those charts grabbed the spotlight for this gal’s hometown San Diego connection. Oh yeah, it’s gonna be fun. Let’s get Rockin’ 50 Years Ago this Month 

AUGUST 1974 Radio News & Muse  

Back then, and to a large degree even now, long hair on guys equates to a rebel … but today there are many more varying degrees of rebelliousness and its intent. In music of any era though, rebel is good! And when it came to playing the maverick music for listeners of the 1970s’ Rebel Rock Radio, our own BFYP DJ Shotgun Tom Kelly had the hair—and the ATTitude—for it! 

Though it pains me to admit I don’t have BFYP Book 3Psychedelic Seventies—finished yet, Shotgun, who I interviewed for inclusion, was a vibrant part of San Diego’s AUGUST 1974 music radio scene, of which KCBQ played a vital role. Scroll down for a BIG surprise that will tune you in to his 1970s life behind the mic & more! In the meantime, check out the flowing mane on this guy ...  

And I have a not-so-secret source of rebel gossip from back in the day … our DJ Extraordinaire, Bill Gardner, featured in July’s BFYP article continues his story of the Bill-and-Shotgun’s most excellent adventure to NYC for Bill’s Billboard Award.

“We hit not only New York,” Bill revealed, “but several East Coast cities that trip, including my hometown, Philly. Shotgun actually 'shared a doobie' with my FATHER in their staid suburban home! 

“Andre [Bill’s younger bro also in radio—see below!] and I will never forget it, and always laugh about it to this day. We also visited Washington DC. Shotgun brought his video camera and was recording many things, among them of course, the White House and when security approached us, they told him he wasn't allowed to record the White House on videotape [the only means of recording back in the day] and asked us to leave 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue! I think it's because we both had long hair back then.” Hmmmm, like I said—rebels. 

Bill spilled more beans, “We also visited Toronto and when I asked him to PLEASE pack my extra six bottles of Labatt's Blue beer in his suitcase for our return flight over the border, to head back to San Diego, he was very nervous. But I'd run out of room! I reassured him everything would be fine ... don't worry! When we got back, several of the bottles had broken in his suitcase via the airline's rugged luggage compartment, and all his clothes were soaked in it and smelled like BEER!”

Like that was a problem in 1970s San Diego? LOL Yup, August 1974 was a hairy time for San Diego’s favorite DJ! Bill snapped this photo as Shotgun slumbered at a NYC friend’s place. 

More fun with Shotgun below, On Your Tinny Transistor Radio 

August 10th: The era of glam rock and all things to excess, was a perfect backdrop for the hot, steamy, Summer August Jam at the Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. Dubbed “Carolina’s Woodstock,” it drew more than double the expected attendance, weighing in at 200-300,000 music lovers jammin’ over the weekend. Like Woodstock, the organizers weren’t prepared for unruly patrons and weather, which eerily imitated Woodstock’s muddy quagmire. Hearty entertainers included The Allman Brothers, Emerson, Lake & Palmer, and The Marshall Tucker Band. A fitting five-year anniversary tribute to Woodstock; and of course, it was sponsored by local radio powerhouse stations of 1974, WAYS and WROQ. 

August 16th: Arguably credited with starting the punk rock era, it was today, The Ramones debuted their unique style and resonance—a simple but effective three-chord sound—at the infamous CBGB’s in New York City. They had so much fun, they continued concerts with rare breaks for twenty-two years. Sadly, all four original members jammed up to music heaven in early-to-mid 2000s. You may know “The Blitzkrieg Bop!” their first single release, February 1976. 

August 23rd: Was John Lennon your fave Beatle? Then you likely know that on this date in 1974, he and then-girlfriend, May Pang (while on a Yoko break), in all their all-togethers, saw a UFO over the New York City skyline. Kinda makes ya wonder what “mothers’ little helper” they were enjoying at the time. Seriously though, they were serious. So much so, that Lennon started a song that Yoko finished for posthumous release in 1984, “Nobody Told Me.” Apparently around 400 sightings were recorded from other New Yorkers that night, in various stages of attire. Everybody’s smoking and no one’s getting high | Everybody’s flying and never touch the sky | There’s a UFO over New York and I ain’t too surprised   

On Your Tinny Transistor Radio  

Where were you sweating up a storm and listening to cool radio stations in August 1974? We go West this month for an odd line-up of decidedly not Top 40 Tunes. Making our way from the hot red dirt of Pueblo, Colorado, we head to heat-stricken Bakersfield, California, before hitting the cool waves of San Diego. Here’s a sample of what and who we were listening to …  

These radio stations marched to their own drumbeat in their list of popular tunes, with KAFY and KCBQ giving us their Top 26, and KDZA stretching the musical spectrum with a belligerent list of Top Forty-Two. Perhaps the Summer sun got to them as all three of these cities in the West were a little slower in picking up on new August top tunes. Their surveys, at least for their Top Ten, mimic our JULY’S WOKY/Milwaukee Top 30. The East is always a bit pushy.  

So, having explored much of August's Top Ten in July, our August Monthly Song of Note and Quirky Band Name contenders are taken from the surveys’ bottom of notable songs, as they begin scrambling up the ladder. 

Were you hanging out in the Rocky Mountain city of Pueblo, Colorado, 50 Years Ago? Strolling through the Steel City’s streets and visiting its many historic museums, you flipped the dial on your tinny transistor radio to KDZA. Wolfman Jack’s* tribute tune, “Clap for the Wolfman” by the Guess Who, jumped up 7 rungs to #10 on their “Pueblo’s Rock 1230” survey #317 for 08/09-08/15/1974. No wonder they aired his syndicated show to stir up their listeners on Saturday nights. What was #1? Going into its third week, Paper Lace’s “The Night Chicago Died.” *The BFYP series is dedicated to Wolfman Jack. Check out his early years, here.

Let’s head over to the left coast where DJ Chris Conner graces the cover of KAFY/Bakersfield; a small market station that had an historic effect on the DJs who began careers there. Some, however, like Chris, made Bakersfield home early in his radio days, and never left. He became the “voice of Bakersfield radio” for decades. Chris passed away at 70 in 2017, while still sharing the hits as a beloved DJ since 1977 at Bakersfield’s KUZZ (originally KAFY). News Director, Mark Howell, remembered Chris as “an old school, high energy radio personality on air and a great guy off mic” … Chris brought you the hits at KAFY when Paul Anka’s “(You’re) Having My Baby” was in its second week at #1; Anka hadn’t had a chart-topper since “Lonely Boy” (1959). 

So we hit the sand in San Diego next, and what a Summer treat! Who remembers the ubiquitous italic typeface of the IBM Selectric typewriter? It’s instantly recognizable in KCBQ’s list of Top 26 hits. Oh—and another now-famous DJ face on the “Q Hits” survey?—San Diego’s very hairy Shotgun Tom Kelly! 

Shotgun Tom just couldn't get enough of San Diego. With most of his career at one San Diego radio station or other, he’s been our “resident DJ” for most of the past fifty years. Radio was a mere steppingstone to a myriad of fantastic achievements in Radio and TV that led Tom to a prestigious star on the celebrated Hollywood Walk of Fame (2013). Corner of Hollywood & LaBrea if you’d like to see it.  Have a quick read with Shotgun’s excerpt from BFYP Book 2: The Swinging Sixties! And “Shotz” just released his own book of memoirs! Pick up a copy of his NEW book, All I Wanna Do Is Play the Hits! Enjoy the memories with him!

Like KDZA, “The Night Chicago Died” was still hanging around at #1 for KCBQ listeners, “Compiled by ‘Q’ – Based on YOU!” Beginning to slip behind the waves, “Sundown” was down from #6 to #10.

If you’re in a hurry to find out which radio station made the Featured Radio Survey page, scroll down … or ... you’ll have more fun if you just keep reading ‘til ya get there. 

Monthly Song of Note  
I found it! Another Summer song we can cruise the main with and like last month’s “Wild Thing” it’s great for warbling off-key at the top of our lungs.
Beach Baby” by British band The First Class, entered KDZA/Pueblo, Colorado’s “Top 42” at #39 this month. Though it never passed the top twenty with Pueblo fans, it crawled slowly up to the Top Ten lists in California for San Diegans by late September and Bakersfield listeners by mid-October.  

The bouncy bubble-gum tune written by The First Class organizer, John Carter and wife, Gillian (Jill) Shakespeare, was this band’s sole solid hit—however, Carter (born John Nicholas Shakespeare) is a prolific and multi-faceted creator of many musical works and tuneful entities. One of his many outlets, The First Class was an odd little band that used “front men” and session players for their recorded music, but a mishmash of other musicians to tour as The First Class. Alrighty.  

Though sketchy in some radio markets, like KDZA, “Beach Baby” nearly didn’t get heard at all. At the time of its production, the UK was suffering an energy crisis and frowned upon using electricity for anything other than basic human necessities. To do so could have resulted in a fine or worse. But Carter was convinced “Beach Baby” was a hit and persuaded top-notch record producer, Jonathan King, to hear a master demo tape. As Wiki quotes Kasey Casem’s American Top 40, “He [King] invited the artist to come in, and, in a room lit only by candles, keeping the volume turned way down, he listened to that tape, and he knew he'd bought a hit song.” Beach baby, beach baby, give me your hand | Give me somethin' that I can remember | Just like before, we can walk by the shore in the moonlight    

Quirky Band Name Award  

A growing presence since 1964, Kool & the Gang from Jersey City, New Jersey, didn’t really catch on until 1973 w/”Jungle Boogie” & “Hollywood Swinging,” the latter hitting California stations’ charts at #19 KCBQ, and #26 for KAFY in August 1974. We’re not privy to know what group name(s) the ten-man team began with, but by 1969 the versatile band, led by brothers, Robert "Kool" Bell and Ronald Bell aka "Khalis Bayyan," had become Kool & the Gang. Their ample musical repertoire includes jazz, rhythm and blues, soul, funk, disco, rock, and pop music. Even with some tough member losses, the groovy band is still performing and in April this year (2024) became inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.*  

Who else caught our eye on the August 1974 surveys to vie for Quirky Band Name Award? 

Do you have time to remember the good Tymes? While the Tymes is memorable for several chart-toppers in their long career in Philadelphia (since 1956 as the Latineers—the only hint of a name history), “You Little Trustmaker” wasn’t one of them. It did, however, catch the bottom rung of KDZA/Pueblo, Colorado, at #36. It also gave them recognition for their better known, “Ms Grace” that came along the following year. It was the group’s earlier top tune, though, “So Much in Love” (1963) that garnered a spot in the 2001 Songs of the Century list (#215 of 365). And by 2005, Tymes was invited into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame.

And a drum roll, please … which of these admiral bands grabbed the Quirky Band Name Award? It was a tough call, but for pure versatility and still-current popularity, I chose Kool & the Gang. *Interestingly, their wildly popular tune, “Celebration” (1980) came in at #214 of the 2001 Songs of the Century list.

AUGUST 2024 Music Events & More    

BIG Blast from your Past DJ NEWS! 
Our DJ Extraordinaire, Bill Gardner, blasted the news on his website recently that he’s retiring from flying—his enjoyable “side job” to radio. Flying not only provided transportation as he flitted from station to station, spreading his golden voice across the country over five decades, but created an off-air “professional” job in-between the love-of-his-life radio gigs. While it was always a second love throughout his esteemed radio career, flying less will give him more time to devote to Rock Radio Memories on his site. He updates it every week …
go now and enjoy! 

Another “grounding” love in life for Bill, is family. He also announced the recent prestigious award presented to his “little brother,” also with a big radio presence. “Congratulations to my amazing talented brother Andre Gardner!  The Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia just named Andre a 2024 Hall of Fame Honoree!” Andre has graced the airwaves of Philadelphia at WMGK-FM for 22 years of his 47 in radio! And he says he owes it all to his Big Bro, Bill. Awesome. 

CONGRATS to you both for long and distinguished careers. You can read about Bill’s early radio life in BFYP Book 2 (The Swinging Sixties), available on Amazon. And I swear, Andre, yours and brother Al Gardner’s, true tales behind the mic, are coming up (sigh, eventually) in Book 3, Psychedelic Seventies. While life has gotten in the way of my career-love, writing, after an interminable hiatus I am back working on Book 3.  

August 9th – 17th: Like every year at this time, Graceland—the palatial grounds of Elvis Presley’s home—is celebrating Elvis Week! Not only can you visit and enjoy everything Elvis, but there’s a special opportunity for virtual access to the festivities. Through the miracle of technology, online participants can have online front row seats without even being there! Schedule & pricing. Check out Elvis: Return to Vegas Show on August 16th, featuring Elvis on the big screen accompanied by a live band … so cool. 

August 17th: We're Rockin' on for Baby Boomers' Recognition Day! Well darn, there is no longer a viable sponsor link for this auspicious day—but you know too, our Sis site, 39 and Holding Club celebrates Boomers every month! We’re more than happy to share even more recognition for those who remember the “Good ol’ Days,” to spice up the dog days of Summer! You may recall this special day used to be celebrated in June, but now jams and jiggles in August for more celebration with Woodstock Festival memories (August 15-18, 1969)! I hesitate to assume, but it’s likely not ALL Baby Boomers loved Rock & Roll—just the zaniest, hippest, and most fun ones! LOL  

BFYP Featured Radio Survey  
AUGUST 16, 1974 ~ KCBQ/San Diego, California, where the surf’s up and long hair is “in” no matter what decade or music is making waves. In August 1974 Shotgun Tom Kelly ruled the airwaves on KCBQ, playing all the hot tunes of Summer listed in the “Q Hits.” We were feelin’ salacious and steamy with Roberta Flack’s “Feel Like Makin’ Love” (#5) and “Tell Me Something Good” (Rufus) at #7. Clear time in your day to check out … 50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio! Where were you that
groovy day when your radio played 

Let’s Celebrate AUGUST 1974 ~ And Rock On!  

BFYP Book 1 (1954-1959) on Amazon         
BFYP Book 2 (Swinging ‘60s) on Amazon
 
Blast from Your Past Gifts
 
Share your Golden Oldies R&R fun on “X”/Twitter:
@BlastFromPastBk 

♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪

LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and author by way of Rock & Roll. Two books (of three planned) are published in her Blast from Your PastTM series, available on Amazon: Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959TM (eBook only; coming soon in updated print edition) and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging SixtiesTM (eBook & print). Coming soon-ish … Book 3 – The Psychedelic Seventies!TM 

Note: FYI – All links in the BFYP site are personally visited, verified, and vetted. Most are linked to commonly accessed sites of reputable note. Occasionally, since I often feature real people and/or singular sources there may be an unsecured link. As with everything cyber-security, use at your own discretion and risk. This site is wholly owned by LinDee Rochelle & sponsored by PenchantForPenning.comTM. No compensation is received for any mentions of businesses, products, or other commercial interests. *All holiday and special event days are found at Brownielocks.com’s calendar site. Enjoy! 

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