Monday, May 31, 2021

Rock Radio JUNE 1971 Here to Stay

When June’s Here to Stay♪*  

How do you know or recall 1971? As never a dull moment? A musical year like no other? You’re not alone. British author and journalist, David Hepworth remembers all that and more in his Apple TV docuseries, 1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything.

“It was an incredibly tumultuous year, politically, socially, musically … the peace and flowers and love-thing, was over … ” Inspired by his book, 1971 – Never a Dull Moment: Rock’s Golden Year, we can pretty much agree and disagree with his assessment. Your choice. 

06/12/21 BFYP Update: Annnnnd, if you wonder how relevant this article is (being about old Rock and all), since posting it, 1971 has been the cover story in Parade magazine (“The Songs of 1971” by Jim Farber, 06/06/21); and AccuRadio is currently featuring the popular Fillmore venues (San Francisco and New York City) that closed this month (and July), 50 Years Ago. **See below

Let’s see what angst, surprises, music, and fun, we can remember from JUNE 1971, 50 Years Ago this Month

Rockin’ News & Views ~ Then & Now 
Memories and moments make the year. JUNE 1971’s music on the radio was hotThen I love you with hot passions like the summer sun | When June’s here to stay … (*“I Love You For All Seasons,” The Fuzz, on the charts this month.)

Then … Not quite ready to leave the nostalgic Fifties and Sixties era, Elvis Presley's birthplace in Tupelo, Mississippi, opened to the public on June 1, 1971. The two-room shack still pulls on fans’ heartstrings in a popular tourist attraction, complete with museum and statues with photo-op spots. Hunk-a-hunk o’ burnin’ love

As one door opens, two more close. Prolific concert promoter, **Bill Graham, ended the Fillmore East’s mighty music run in New York City’s East Village on June 27th with a simulcast through radio stations WPLJ and WNEW-FM. Popular DJs including Alison Steele (her mini-bio coming up soon in BFYP Book 3), gave their fans lively banter during set changes.
      It was a sad preview to a few weeks later when Graham also shuttered Fillmore West in San Francisco. Many outstanding musical memories remain of those two iconic venues.

Now Bring ‘round the family, get out the ol’ turntable, and slap on a Rockin’ 45. Let ‘em hear what real music sounds like …. Need more records, old and new ? Read on …

June 5-6th:  We may be a little worn around the edges, but apparently, we’re still relevant! Starting now, a new-old “History of Rock ‘n’ Roll” radio show returns to the airwaves in syndicated fashion! The two-hour weekly program debuting on Memphis WMPS (Sunny 103.1 FM and AM 1210) is hosted by none other than pioneering broadcaster of radio and TV, Wink Martindale. Memphis is where Martindale began his broadcasting odyssey. The show airs Saturdays (on this station) at 9:00a and Sundays at noon. Rock on!

June 12th: If your old vinyl records are wearing out or you need to hear one you didn’t save from back in the day, hit the stores today! It’s Record Store Day.** Not only for the Oldies, but in case you haven’t kept up with the times, even the kids making new music are makin’ vinyls too.** Like Rock & Roll, vinyl records will never dieeeeeeee. (**It happens again, July 17th.

June 19th: Let’s dig our toes into the “Summer Sand”*** of life and dance with abandon on International Surfing Day! (***By Dawn before Tony Orlando struck out on his own.)
      But surf's up every day at BFYP! You don't even have to get wet to enjoy a vintage summer surf day with
Beach Boys tunes and a “beach party,” complete with limbo bar, all still popular party leftovers from the Sixties!
     
If you’re near a beach, why not
volunteer to clean it up. The oceans in all their majestic beauty are in danger of becoming one big cesspool of trash. Bring your old transistor radio and let’s get Surf-Rockin’!

50 Years Ago on Your Tinny Transistor Radio  
Um, what was the #4 tune for JUNE 1971 at KRLA/Los Angeles? It’s “Right on the Tip of My Tongue”!  50 Years Ago we easily spit it out. Although our ol’ gray memories ain’t what they used to be, it maybe doesn’t come to mind so quickly because it’s often considered a one-hit-wonder.
     
Apparently,
Brenda & The Tabulations forgot to say I love you enough (though their “Dry Your Eyes” did well a few years earlier), but they did break the top five in a hint of retro doo-wop and R&B with this tune.
 Riding their radio high, Brenda (Payton) paid WIBG/Philadelphia, a studio visit, summer of ’71. With obvious delight at seeing her mentioned here, our fave BFYP DJ consultant, Bill Gardner, sent this photo and recalls that his shy smile hid her playful cheekiness as he flanks her left side in the pic with other station bigwigs. Bill still counts Brenda as one of his all-time favorite artists on a long and winding radio road.

We continue the ‘70s wild-and-crazy band names (see May ’71 BFYP blog) with *The Fuzz, Beginning of the End (“Funky Nassau”), and 8th Day (“She’s Not Just Another Woman”), punctuating the song chart as we recall 1971 in head-scratching wonderment at their creative monikers.

Also on your cute, functional, or beer can transistor radio, were the DJs. Our Featured Radio Survey this month includes a smoldering picture of Johnnie (or Johnny) Darin (1940-2014), who personified the Southern California radio music scene.
      His golden boy good looks (reminiscent of “Kookie” in TV’s 77 Sunset Strip) surely helped his fans fall in love and kept his ratings high at many radio stations like KRLA, KGB (San Diego), and KMEN (San Bernardin). It’s rumored that his first encounter with a DJ as a young’un, went something like this: Johnnie: “When I grow up, I want to be a disc jockey.” The DJ exclaimed, “You can’t do both!”

BFYP Featured Radio Survey  
Rockin’ JUNE 1971
~ KRLA/Los Angeles, flaunted an ad on the back cover welcoming fan fave, Jethro Tull to the city, for two big days in mid-June … Carole King tops the chart with “It’s Too Late” (also a featured artist in 06/06/21 Parade magazine)50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio! Where were you that groovy day when your radio played …

Celebrate JUNE 1971 and … Rock On!  

Blast from Your Past Gifts
Share on Twitter: @BlastFromPastBk

LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and author by way of Rock & Roll. Two books (of three) are published 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. 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. 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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Saturday, May 1, 2021

Rock Radio MAY 1971 Rockin’ Boo & Pooh

 Back to the ways of Pooh … ♪*  

What were we doing in May, 1971? We started paying an exorbitant $0.08 for a first-class stamp … highway robbery, right?! Oh my … little did we know what the future would hold.

What may have seemed like a whimsical, innocuous tune reminiscing the past, *“House at Pooh Corner“ was a wistful seventeen-year-old Kenny Loggins’ way of lamenting the loss of our short childhood. (*See the Featured Radio Survey info.) The budding high school senior’s chat with Pooh first hit the charts as a Nitty Gritty Dirt Band tune, 50 Years Ago this Month

Rockin' News & Views ~ Then & Now 
Rat-a-tat, rat-a-tat, rat-a-tat, tat, BANG! It’s Drum Month. Although no official link appears with this special day, if you have a hankering to “bang the drum” (insert your own interpretation), or just listen to some drum-based Oldies, including “The Drum” (Bobby Sherman) sitting at #24 on a WEEX/Easton, Pennsylvania, May 1971 survey, just sing … Boom ba boom ba boom | Your turn to dance will come

May 13th: Speaking of boomin’, hey Boomers, do you recall that we nearly lost a dynamic voice in Rock & Roll on this date? Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane-turned Jefferson Starship, made a foolish decision (gee, none of us have ever done that). She learned the hard way that drag racing belongs on a monitored strip, not in a tunnel near San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge.
     
Grace and fellow band member, Jorma Kaukonen, felt a need for speed and both jammed the gas pedals to over a hundred miles per hour. Only very lucky can describe the outcome of their defying odds to bring us musical joy for many more years.

May 18th: Can you play the guitar like Jorma but your instrument is holding you back from sure stardom? Celebrate *Buy a Musical Instrument Day! The official link visits a Wiki page in a terrific tribute to honor master music maker, Meredith Wilson (1902-1984). The Music Man creator (Broadway 1957, and more) composed some of our still most-enjoyed songs … “Seventy-Six Trombones” (1957), “Till There Was You” (1950 as “Till I Met You”), and “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” (1951) … 
     
Be adventurous! What’s your tuneful favorite? The hard beat of a drum, the strum of a guitar, or the high hum of Wilson’s favorite piccolo? As they say, “music soothes the soul.” You don’t have to be good, just enjoy the moment!

May 31st: We end the month with a missive of world strife. If you believe in “one world,” you will recognize former Beatle George Harrison’s 1971 message. A territory of Pakistan striving to shed oppression, declared this date the birth of the Bangladesh government.
    
Why is this important to popular music? Artists have been making musical political statements for nearly a century. Following its early pro-democracy struggle March through May 1971, which ultimately became the Bangladesh
Liberation War, George Harrison felt strong enough about their rights to produce a song (“Bangla-desh” released July 28th) and New York City concert (August 1st) to help their cause. 

50 Years Ago on Your Tinny Transistor Radio 
MAY
1971 ~ Pooh may have tinkered with our inner child, but it was “Me and You and a Dog Named Boo” that captured a spot in the top five of the charts, by a guy called Lobo (Roland Kent LaVoie).
     
From a dirty band to a peanut gallery, to a dinosaur and a handful of fuzz, we loved our crazy ‘70s psych artist and band names. Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, P-Nut Gallery, T-Rex, and Fuzz, respectively, kept company on
WEEX’s chart with Tin Tin, Daddy Dewdrop, and of course, Three Dog Night. Cool.

BFYP Featured Radio Survey  

Rockin’ MAY 1971 ~ DJ Frantic Freddie Fredricks adorns the chart of featured WEEX/Easton, Pennsylvania, “Big ‘X’ Hit Parade” May 27, 1971. But it’s DJ Jim Floyd who snagged the cover of Lehigh Valley’s survey … 50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio! Where were you that groovy day when your radio played …

Celebrate MAY 1971 and … Rock On!  

Blast from Your Past Gifts
Share on Twitter: @BlastFromPastBk

LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and author by way of Rock & Roll. Two books (of three) are published 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. 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. 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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