Monday, June 1, 2020

Rock Radio JUNE 1970 War & Beanbag Chairs


Answer to War: Bean Bag Chair & a Lava Lamp! 

Have you lounged in a Bean Bag Chair lately? 50 years ago, they were fun and challenging. Now they’re just infuriating to anyone over fifty. In 1970 we paid around $19.99 for the kitschy seating. That’s about a quarter of the price you’ll pay now, to purchase one you might actually roll out of!

While vegging in a bean bag chair, June 1970 also saw us entranced by a lava lamp, with the radio blaring “Lay a Little Lovin’ [on me]” (Robin McNamara), or particularly pertinent to a June 1 post 50 years later, “War” by Edwin Starr.

I’ve been around for five decades with both—foreign and domestic war—and it is absolutely good for nothing. It devastates lives needlessly. Whatever the warring principle reason (except for country protection), no amount of violence is going to solve it. In most cases, war makes everything worse, dealing with the aftermath—governmentally, financially, psychologically, and individually.

That said, let’s get on with the lighter, musical side of life and put all the violent people in a bean bag chair—they’ll eventually be laughing too hard trying to get out, to fight! Rock On

50 Years Ago this Month ~ JUNE 1970
Our Featured Radio Survey for this month took their survey design to a subtly salacious level and I seriously doubt they paid for using the trademark bunny logo. It was a more lenient era when companies often thought that any publicity was good publicity—even if the logo generated commercial revenue.

I miss those days. Obviously, if a brand’s logo is used for blatant massive profitability, that’s one thing; but a radio station or other business / individual who uses a logo for fleeting or common-interest promotion and/or comment, is another. But I digress (again).

“Back in the good ol’ days,” radio stations often grabbed a company’s emblem for fun and frivolity, like the WAIR/Winston-Salem’s (NC) June 26,1970 music chart. It was Playboy magazine’s heyday and everyone knew the cute little bunny meant surreptitiously sexy. I’ll bet it got the intended attention.

Poignantly, this Spring marked the final print issue of Hugh Hefner’s steamy legacy—its first issue bounced off the presses for December 1953. The publication is still digitally available (and some might say even better), but can that ever be the same?

Seriously, how can teenage boys everywhere stash a print issue under their mattress so the parents won’t see it? Although it does likely make the print versions even more desirable for collectors. (And mom knew it was there; and dad likely knew, chuckling at his own youthful memories.)

BFYP Collection. The white carafe is bigger but the Bunny gets noticed.
About the man behind the bunny, Art Paul (1925-2018), Playboy says, “Paul was Hefner’s very first hire—founding art director of the nascent PLAYBOY—and he quickly proved his worth, drafting the now ubiquitous Rabbit Head in less than an hour.”

Partly in thanks to Paul’s imagery, women and girls wanted to be a Playboy Bunny, and the guys … well … the bunny will live on in the archives of Boomers’ memories.

On Your Transistor Radio Dial ~ JUNE 1970
Although “Lay a Little Lovin’” made WAIR’s top twenty, “War” hit the chart as a “Hot Prospect,” bubbling under the radar and on its way up.

Other pockets of the country kept love tunes—won and lost—at the top, for this traditional wedding month, like KYNO/Fresno, California, and DJ Sean Conrad. Fans obviously disillusioned with marriage thought Freda Payne’s “Band of Gold” was Right On! and boosted it up to #2 in the June 24th issue of their “Boss 30.”

On the other hand, and other side of the country, DJ Pat O’Day kept the turntable spinning for Orlando Florida’s WLOF fans who heated up the “Fun 40” chart with Rare Earth’s “Get Ready” hugging the #1 spot. ♪ And I'm bringing you a love that's true | So get ready, so get ready … ♪

Featured Radio Survey: WAIR/Winston-Salem, North Carolina personified the sexy ‘70s in this month’s “Music Power Survey” with that playful Playboy Bunny, decidedly not your Easter Bunny! Check out the list of airwave attributes they claimed for their DJ “Playboys” … 50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio! Where were you that groovy day when your radio played …

Celebrate JUNE 1970 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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Sunday, May 3, 2020

Rock Radio MAY 1970 Righteous & Outasight!


Expressive Creativity Comes with Personal Freedom 

The 1970s erupted in decadence, personal freedoms, and expressive creativity. Oh wait … let me rephrase that … it reminded us of all those expressions. We’ve enjoyed them in various degrees of inanity and insanity, every decade since the inception of our country.

Truth be told, much of those movements resurfaced in the late 1960s, but we embraced and honed their definitions in the ‘70s. Enjoying a modern-day Renaissance of sorts, art permeated every aspect of life, from ornate and “mod” fabrics, to elaborate scrollwork jewelry, even adorning the music charts of our Rock and Roll radio stations …

50 Years Ago this Month ~ MAY 1970 
Let’s face it, the major market stations and neophyte wannabes played the same songs, over, and over, and over … but in all fairness, we did request them. Our voices gave structure to the order of songs’ appearance in any given week and various geographical radio markets, reflected in Radio music charts.
The point being, we could drive across the country and still hear the same songs. So why choose one station over another in our local areas?
From coast-to-coast In May 1970, stations took 1960s’ pop art, added a little elaborate Art Nouveau, and leaned heavy into the psychedelia, to adorn their surveys and grab our attention. Many were quite unique in creative designs, if not in their top 40 tunes.
Traditional scrollwork blended with swirls and curlicues that flowed into celestial details, punctuated with “Outasight” and “Righteous” exclamations. And often, they inserted “let’s-see-if-they’re-really-reading-this” text into the art, with amusing or outlandish statements like, “Under 1 billion listeners.”
The stations’ artistic music charts reflected life around us in carnival mirror images. We were treated to ornate artistry reminiscent of the past like—KOL/ Seattle, Washington, May 29, 1970—while others capitalized on the ‘70s popularity of futuristic space travel, astronomy and astrology like—KADI/St. Louis, Missouri, May 6, 1970.
Establishing an identity with art was not a priority for others, though. Take the plain-Jane chart for KSLY/San Luis Obispo, California’s “Famous Fourteen” list, May 1, 1970. It got the job done, listing the top 30 tunes, without all the hoopla.

On Your Tinny Transistor Radio ~ MAY 1970 (radio/music & DJs)       
With the songs all the same, it took outstanding musicality to grab our attention with a tune. Calling all memories! What songs stood out for us in this spring month, oh so long ago? While your reminiscences bubble to the surface, let me ask if you recall …
Everything is Beautiful” by Ray Stevens … apparently we thought so (and still do). This upbeat, truly righteous tune hit several stations’ top 20 about the same time, as it climbed into the top 10 for a nice run. It marked Stevens as a serious songwriter, after a run of novelty songs. Did you hear him a year earlier in the top 10, without a serious bone in his body, belting out, Gitarzan he’s a gitar man in a thin disguise defining the music industry’s “jungle”?
Two of this month’s showcased surveys carried “Cecilia” in the top 10. Seattle’s KOL only got it up to #29 by the end of the month. Simon & Garfunkel outdid themselves again, with another hit song from their much-touted Bridge Over Troubled Water album. Rumor has it, the title pays tribute to the Catholic patron saint of music … but Simon reportedly wrote the lyrics with a deceitful paramour in mind … two very conflicting concepts. Celia, you’re breaking my heart
Ya know what can make one vintage music survey more collectable than another? Misprints & misspellings. For instance, two of the three survey charts for the above radio stations gave “Cecilia” the common name spelling of “Cecelia.” Only KOL spelled it properly for the patron saint.

Featured Radio Survey: KADI/St. Louis, Missouri, wins the coveted Featured Radio Survey spot for this month. It’s colorful, fun, and truly “Déjà Vu” (C.S.N.&Y., aka, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young), as the song tops the chart.  50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio! Where were you that groovy day when your radio played …We have all been here before

Celebrate MAY 1970 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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