Friday, July 1, 2022

Rock Radio JULY 1972 Lovin’ the Oldies

Love is in the Air & on the Charts! 

Long before the Disco era’s song by John Paul Young ("Love is in the Air"), we were filling our Rock Radio music charts with Love. Along with love, guitar riffs heated up our radio speakers, as hot as the summer sun, 50 Years Ago This Month ... let’s Rock! 

Then & Now  Rockin’ News & Views 
JULY 1972 created “Oldies” ... oh, and so did Paul McCartney! Radio would never be the same, we proved, Rock & Roll will never dieeeeeee ... 

> JULY 1972 Rockin’ News Then …
July 7th: Wouldn’t ya know it. New York City, which loves to be biggest, best and first for everything, apparently became host to one of the nation’s first full-time radio stations to Rock an Oldies format, on this date 50 Years Ago. Iconic WCBS-FM (101.1 FM) began their “classic hits” with Dion’s “Runaround Sue” from 1961. Now owned by Audacy, Inc.—yay!—it’s still host to the Oldies with Scott Shannon in the Morning Show

July 9th: Like now, major changes were a way of life during the 1970s. Music charts were no longer dominated by The Beatles. The Fab Four were exploring their options. For “the cute one,” Paul established McCartney & Wings, and honed their tour skills at UK universities early in 1972. On this date in July 1972, away they went in a splashy double-decker bus, to begin their first extended tour, Wings Over Europe. Remarkable? Not necessarily. However, to give you a spatial timeline perspective ...
     
McCartney spent ten years as frontman for The Beatles, before Wings. Last month, June 18, 2022, to be exact, Sir Paul McCartney celebrated his 80th birthday by performing a taxing-at-any-age concert with Jersey mega-stars (also from yesteryear), Jon Bon Jovi and Bruce Springsteen. Sir Paul gives new meaning to the term, “Oldies” Rock! I think he’s outplayed the Energizer Bunny ...

> JULY 2022 Rockin’ News Now  
Well, Boomers, here’s a news headline we don’t see often ... um ever ... anymore ... “Manufacturers struggle to keep pace with vinyl record demand.“ It blared from the AP (Associated Press) newsline late last month. An interesting and welcome state of affairs that took 50 Years to re-manifest! Like everything else these days, the industry struggles from various shortages that present a frustrating manufacturing dilemma. Perhaps what is available will give a needed boost to pandemic-stressed small businesses for ...

Independent Retailer Month! Shopaholics unite! Gone are the past decades’ mega record stores like Tower Records and Sam Goody. There are, however, still many small business owners of vinyl record shops, offline and online, that sell vintage and more recently, new vinyl records. The once-ubiquitous shiny black, grooved disks, now come in a rainbow of colors, and sales have grown back into favor.
      
We can thank some visionary recording artists and producers who realize that for all our technology, nothing surpasses the quality sound of a well-made vinyl recording. IndieRetailerMonth.com encourages consumers to shop local and celebrate indie retailers of all products. Let’s start with
Rock & Roll music!

July 4th: Break out the fireworks, even if they’re only on your computer or phone. It’s Independence Day! Those of us born in the United States have this celebratory day ingrained in our DNA. But regardless of where or when you arrived in this grand country—by birth or by car, air or boat—chances are, freedom and independence are part of your lifestyle plan. Celebrate this all-inclusive United States holiday for the grand meaning it was meant to embrace—FREEDOM.
     
And if you think the “Star Spangled Banner” is old, stodgy, stale and stupid, you obviously never heard it wailing out of a guitar solo in slow-mo by Jimi Hendrix (Woodstock, 1969). Stay to the end and hear his proud response to late night show host, Dick Cavett, who assumed Jimi would receive hate mail for his rendition of the then-revered national anthem (like Diana Ross sang it, 1982). 

July 8th: Vroom, vroom ... rev your engines and crank up the radio ... race ya to the diner! It’s Collector Car Appreciation Day (CCAD)! I’ve often said that vintage cars and Oldies music go together like a kid with a lollipop. Car collectors and Oldies Rock & Roll came of age together in the 1950s, ‘60s and ‘70s, which is BFYP’s strategic timeline ... if you can’t get to a vintage car show, at least head over to the SEMA Action Network (SAN) to see what’s going on for classic car collectors. From their website: “The date marks the thirteenth consecutive commemoration in what is now an annual holiday to raise awareness of the vital role automotive restoration and collection plays in American society.”
     
For some of us, it’s fun to observe, for others, it’s a way of life. Either way, let’s not allow vintage car collecting to disappear into a soulless mist of bureaucratic prohibitions. Fun fact: do you know a contender (among many) for the very first Rock & Roll song (slash/R&B) is about a car? (Circa 1951) ... Let me introduce you to my Rocket ’88 ...  

July 30th: At times I veer off the beaten path of Rock Radio and DJs. Though I still find a link, however thin it might be, I try never to miss an opportunity to remind you of why we’re here together ... Welcome to Paperback Book Day! There is no official link—so in the spirit of all that’s Rock & Roll, take a break from your day to visit our Blast from Your Past Amazon page of books featuring pioneering Rock & Roll Radio DJs (1954-1969). Have fun!

July 31st: Besides being smack-dab in the middle of summer, this is National #LOVE Day! And how appropriate for those of us who love Oldies Rock & Roll Radio DJs. The day was created by radio DJ Rick McNeely. His fun site proclaims “#LOVE” as the most-used hashtag in social media. Long before hashtags were anything but a symbol for a number, we “numbered” our Love tunes on radio charts. Check out our Monthly Song of Note for the word’s prolific use in Oldies music titles ... but the question remains ... why this day and not, oh say, Valentine’s Day? I Love a good mystery.

On Your Tinny Transistor Radio 
JULY 1972 WING, 1430 on your radio dial in Dayton, Ohio, makes our Featured Radio Survey this month. Good thing they weren’t up for a Great Survey of the Year contest, they would have had the judges scratching their heads as to how to rate them.
     
On one hand, WING gets flying colors for ‘70s art graphics. Their downfall, was trying to put it all on one 3” x 7” (folded) chart. Song titles and artist names are a little crowded, pushing and shoving each other on the paper. Some titles were chopped off, others simply ran into their artist names.
      
Little Woman Love”/“Flip” by McCartney & McCartney is downright laughable, running into all kinds of aesthetic trouble at #25. However, we gave it a little love in the Monthly
Song of Note below.
     
WING’s
DJ Mike Duff is apparently another DJ lost in the winds of time ... or at least not an Internet celeb, and if he used his real name. Extensive research turned up nothing about the smiling jock on the phone, gracing the survey cover.
      So scouring the ‘Net for July 1972, I found afternoon DJ dude,
Chuck Brady in the driver’s seat of WKLO/Louisville’s Boogie Line choo-choo (07/19/72 survey). Meanwhile, Tom George in upstate Rochester, New York, at WBBF, tamed the late-night crowd with top tunes on the stack (07/12/72), urging fans to jump in the pool for a summer splash.

Monthly Song of Note  
Speaking of National LOVE Day, long before social media was a “thing,” we find the word in two of WING’s top ten tune titles #50YearsAgo this Month! Flack & Hathaway (Roberta Flack and Donny Hathaway) ask “Where is the Love” at the #7 spot, while the Carpenters found it and let it go in “Goodbye to Love” at #9. But for your Song of Note, I chose “Little Woman Love”/”Flip” McCartney & McCartney. Far and away the most interesting of the three.
     
This simple song was obviously a tribute to Linda. When the Beatles split, Paul began including her on many of his song credits, thus the lengthy “McCartney & McCartney” artist listing. However, it took me a few days of pondering to figure out WING’s listing of “Flip” printed with the Love song title. Hovering at #25 this week, WING’s survey didn’t have room for the dual-released “flip side,” even though it was considered Side A: “
Mary Had a Little Lamb.” Yep, the McCartneys’ new take on an age-old kids’ ditty wasn’t as beloved in the US. Both songs were pretty much history by the end of the month. ... You know I’ll always love | My little woman love ...

Quirky Band Names 

Let’s begin this fun section with Mouth & MacNeal! Say, whaaaat? The instant visual conjures a floating set of lips ... but according to Wiki, popular 1970s Radio DJ, Jim Connors, apparently found more to the Dutch duo than a mouth and, um, a weirdly fun dummy, along with a willowy blonde (Maggie MacNeal). He’s credited with sending  How Do You Do” up the charts, likely while spinning the tunes at Boston’s WMEX. This month it hit #2 on our Featured Radio Survey. Word is, “Big Mouth” was the solo stage name for Willem Duyn. Now you know which one is Mouth—and it isn’t the dummy!
     
We can’t really count
Godspell as a musical band or artist—more of a stage full of cast members who graced us with “Day By Day” to scamper up the WING chart to #2 the previous week, and starting back down to #6 by end of July. The popular folk Rock ballad spun out of the 1971 off-Broadway musical of the same name. Lead singer, Robin Lamont, was uncredited. That’s practically sacrilegious ...
     
Which brings us to those who seek, and ye shall find ... the
New Seekers! Their original claim to fame came the previous year with “Never Ending Song of Love” and shortly after, an ad jingle-turned-popular-pop-song, “I’d Like to Teach the World to Sing (In Perfect Harmony).” Trading on that blockbuster, their “Circles” started up the charts this month from the same titled album that would release in September. Why are they the New Seekers? Because Keith Potger created them from his former band, the Seekers. And now you know. 

BFYP Featured Radio Survey 
JULY 30, 1972
~ WING/Dayton, Ohio, “14/WING Thirty Heavy Hits” list may have been a bit crowded, but their cool scrolling artwork makes up for lack of space. DJ Mike Duff is busy talking to fans on the cover, while inside, a brooding Cat Stevens (now Yusuf Islam) gives us a piercing stare of the Hitbound and Albums lists … 50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio! Where were you that groovy day when your radio played

Let’s Celebrate JULY 1972 and Rock On!    

BFYP Book 1 (1954-1959) on Amazon
BFYP Book 2 (Swinging ‘60s) on Amazon
 
Blast from Your Past Gifts
 
Share your Oldies R&R fun 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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Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Rock Radio JUNE 1972 Summer Day Dreamin’

 We’re Summer Day Dreamin’  

Welcome to summer songs of 1972! 50 Years Ago this Month we blasted away with Elton John’s “Rocket Man,” still dancing to Michael Jackson’s “Rockin’ Robin,” and learned how life-reflective a “Taxi” ride could be, with Harry Chapin.

Then & Now  Rockin’ News & Views   

Taking center stage this month, the sun seems intent on warping our minds, along with our vinyl. Soulful to sensitive love songs still held tight to radio surveys’ top five spots, but we see music changing as the charts become littered with more pessimistic life musings. 

Before all the fun goes out of the first month of summer, let’s see what’s stirring in the sand, surf and asphalt of music and the DJs who played it for us, June 1972 ...

> Rockin’ News Then …  

June 9th: Bruce! Bruce! Bruuuuuuce! Fans still scream his name though it’s been 50 Years Ago that Bruce Springsteen signed his John Henry to a record deal with Columbia Records. Wow—how time flies when you’re listening to the radio. By January 1973, Springsteen debuted Greetings from Asbury Park, NJ, which included “Blinded by the Light” and “Spirit in the Night”—neither of which were particularly popular at the time. Undeterred, Springsteen kept writing and awaaaay he went, never looking back, and still going strong. And they dance like spirits in the night (all night) in the night (all night) ...   

June 10th: So who out there was lucky enough to be at New York City’s Madison Square Garden on this night in 1972? If you were, you likely have fond memories of Elvis Presley’s opening night of a fourteen-date tour. All four of his shows were sold out but he recorded a live album, and it was available in a week! Keeping the fire burning after the tour, Elvis’s mighty single, “Burning Love” was released and would prove to be his final top ten hit on US charts. You light my morning sky | With burning love | I’m just a hunk-a hunk-a burnin’ love ...  

June 10th: Busy day was June 10th back in the day! Per WIKI, on this day while concert goers sang along with Elvis, radio listeners were belting out a duet with Sammy Davis Jr.’sThe Candy Man.” The tune first appeared in 1971’s fun film, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, before becoming Sammy’s biggest hit single. On this date, it reportedly hit #1 on the Billboard chart, but WABC/New York boosted it up to #1 even sooner, on its MusicRadio 77 chart for June 5th. Talk about your childhood wishes | You can even eat the dishes ...   

> Rockin’ News Now JUNE 2022  

Although June as International Surf Music Month wasn’t created until 2002, is sponsored on an unsecured website, and touts the prowess of East Coast Surf, of course, it had to be in the summer!
     
Their link is respectfully attached to the title, but let’s face it, Surf Music belongs to Dick Dale, The Beach Boys and Jan & Dean (among many other surf-and-turf artists), from surf music’s heyday of the 1960s—on the West Coast. Grab your beach blanket, shades, and fave summer libation ... Let’s go surfin’ now | Everybody’s learnin’ how | Come on a safari with meeeeeee!

And, of course we must recognize National DJ Month! The Music Talkers ink is viable with current music news, but hasn’t posted anything new about DJ Month since 2018. It’s always disheartening to feel excitement when you come across a cause or holiday that fits you to the proverbial “T,” only to turn away, disappointed in the sponsor’s lack of enthusiasm past the first idea incarnation. I’m sure it originally launched with great fanfare ... but the thrill is gone. Never fear—BFYP is here! We’ll honor it anyway because ... well, we love pioneering Rock Radio DJsour books prove it. 😊 

June 21st: Grab your gui-tar, harp, horn, or sit down to the piano—today is Make Music Day! Of course, the sponsoring organization is talking about all genres of music and though we’re mostly Rock & Roll, we fully admit R&R is a melting pot of all music that went before ... so hum, strum, high, low, loud and proud ... enjoy making music today!

On Your Tinny Transistor Radio   
JUNE 1972 ~ No DJs feel the love on this month’s two-fer San Diego Featured Radio Survey(s) but lots of curvy art, psychedelic style. Still, we wonder what DJs fueled their fans into a summer frenzy in other parts of the country ... who remembers Jay Reynolds spinning the platters in the WABC/New York City studios (anyone know if that was Joey Reynolds in early disguise)? If you were tapping your toes to Larry O’Brien’s picks at WCFL/Chicago, you may have helped Jackson Browne’s “Doctor My Eyes” grab #1. Or were you a little further west in Omaha, listening to KOIL with Joe Light and the Good Guys?

Monthly Song of Note  
Hooray! It’s finally summer ... we’re making time for backyard and balcony BBQs, concerts in the park, and hot love tunes on your transistor radio—well, that’s what we had in 1972. I’m swaying to Aretha Franklin’s “Day Dreaming.” Summer is perfect to dream about love—past, present, and future. After an earlier run up the KCBQ Q Hits chart to #5, by June 16, it had slipped to #11. Hey, baby, let's get away | Let's go some place, huh? | Where? I don't care.  

Quirky Band Names  

Another robust rendition of “Amazing Grace” slowly made its way up the KCBQ June 16th chart, this time by the staunch Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, arriving at #19, up four steps from previous week. If you’re into bagpipes, this expressive instrumental version is for you. Meanwhile, three soulful ladies of Love Unlimited were “Walkin’ in the Rain (with the One I Love),” about to drop off the chart at #25. But Griffin with “Music’s Calling Me” is the most baffling. It took a little digging just to find an image of the “DJ Copy Only” vinyl 45rpm record. Never did locate anything about the band—nor the Brady Brothers shown in parentheses on its label. The epitome of a one-hit-wonder-where-they-went tune.  

BFYP Featured Radio Survey(s)  
JUNE 16 & 30, 1972
~ a 2-fer from KCBQ/San Diego! This month we’re watching what songs have staying power through two fan-favorite cycles. Which tunes grabbed our top ten attention on their Q Hits for most of the month? Check out the groovy, kaleidoscopic art and hot summer tunes on two charts, with “I’ll Take You there” #1 for June 16th and “Song Sung Blue” hitting the top by June 30th50 Years Ago this Month in Rock & Roll Radio! Where were you that groovy day when your radio played …  

Let’s Celebrate JUNE 1972 and Rock On!    

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

Original LATE post ~ LR / BFYP NOTE 06/01/22: Try as I might, just couldn’t get the blogs up on time. I did it to myself—what was I thinking, writing three blogs, all to be posted on the same day? Sigh. Please come back later today (or tonight or tomorrow) for JUNE 1972’s funtastic time ... We’re Summer Day Dreamin’! Work in progress … and Rockin’ On ... don’t touch that dial!

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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