Showing posts with label L.A. Radio-Com. Show all posts
Showing posts with label L.A. Radio-Com. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Today, March 2nd, in Music History

From the web site, http://www.laradio.com/, for L.A. Radio People, in the REWIND section, there's the bit of music history that I saw that I caught my attention and a few other things for March 2nd I picked out to note here.

On March 2, 1999, Dusty Springfield died of cancer. She was always one of my favorite singers- The Look of Love, Wishin' and Hopin', I Only Want To Be With You, and Son of a Preacher Man from the "Dusty in Mephis" album. That was released on March 1st of 1969 and was considered to be one of the all time great albums.

I liked Dusty Springfield's recording of "The Look of Love" that I associate somehow with the last year of high school, 1967. It's one song that for me just takes me back to a different time every time I hear it and it always gets my attention like that whenever I hear it. The other song that has that same effect for me, but is more upbeat and minus all the melancholy, while still putting me back into that same period of time is The Fifth Dimension's "Up, Up and Away." I liked all those other songs on that album, too, and I know I played it a lot. Just great sounding voices all around for Dusty and for The Fifth Dimension.

I've read that Dusty Springfield just came on the scene too early and could have been a more successful artist had she arrived later when women were able to do more in the way of managing themselves in the music business. She was one considered one of those blue-eyed soul singers and the Memphis session for Atlantic Records did much to support that opinion.

March 2, 1974- Stevie Wonder's "Innervisions" won a Grammy for Best Album of the year. I remember that time since I bought that album and three others of the 5 nominees, Paul Simon's "There Goes Rhymin' Simon" album with "Kodachrome," Bette Midler's "The Divine Miss M," and Roberta Flack's "Killing Me Softly." I bought these before the Grammy nominations were made and this was back was when there was so much music that really sounded like music, and most with stories to them.

One other very interesting fact from that L.A Radio column today was, "1964 - Beatles begin filming their first movie, A Hard Day's Night, budgeted at $500,000." That year was the beginning of the "British Invasion" and it seeme that no one could get enough of the Beatles. I wish that I had the time to listen to all the music I managed to accumulate, but there's always a lot that work like time machines to bring back memories, but that's all from so long ago that I think I avoid playing some on purpose so as not to think about how much time has passed. ============================================================

Here's a few other March 2nd events in Music History that I found on my own:

Born: Karen Carpenter – March 2, 1950- and she died so young so needlessly. She died on February 4, 1983 of anorexia nervosa.

Number One on March 2: 1963 Four Seasons: Walk Like a Man US #45
In 1963, the Four Seasons became the first group to have 3 consecutive #1’s in the US when “Walk Like A Man” started a three week run at the top.

Born today in 1938 , Lawrence Payton, vocals, The Four Tops. Payton died on June 20, 1997.

There's a lot of artists that I like to listen to that now have on their biographies, right next to the date of birth, their date of death. Time just seems to pass so quickly.

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Radio's fill-in hosts' challenge begins on KFI and KABC tonight; Radio present and past

There's going to be a few temporary changes that begin tonight as radio stations KABC 790 AM and KFI 640 AM will shift evening assignments for a few days. That move should benefit the listener by bringing back a couple more of the choices that have been missing from terrestrial radio- for over a year in one case and for about a month in another.

The changes will happen at SAME TIME: 7 PM, on the two competing stations- is this a conspiracy of sorts or just some good counter programming moves? No matter, it's the results for the listener that count.

Tim Conway, Jr., is one of my favorite radio guys to listen to. He will be on KFI 640 AM beginning tonight for a few more nights to fill-in for the "Kennedy and Suits Show"- Kennedy is out on maternity leave now with her newborn, and Brian Suits is covering another time slot. Tim Conway, Jr., if you have heard him in the past is a very funny guy. He was on the FM side at KLSX-FM TALK until they completely changed the format to music, AMP-FM, and cut everyone loose. 7pm to 10 pm time slot.

Tim Conway and his former radio partner, Brian Whitman, now have a podcast show that's free and is a lot more loose- a warning if you happen to have hypersensitve ears- over on "The Conway and Whitman Bodcast Show" (and the "Bodcast" is not a typo). http://conwayandwhitman.com/newsite/ You can get it by mp3 downloads or just subscribe on iTunes for free. They also have Randy Wang and Gina Grad with them which makes this podcast setup very complete. Don Barrett of http://www.laradio.com/ was their guest a couple of weeks ago-March 18, show #18- and offered some insightful comments that were entertaining, too. The past shows are all available as podcasts on their website, mp3 and iTunes.

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Marc Germain, formerly "Mr. KABC" and "Mr. KFI," will be over on KABC radio. He's been on in the past at KFI, KABC, and KTLK, with his assortment of features on the shows. You can hear Marc filling in FROM 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. for John Phillips, the "fill-in" host for The Al Rantel Show" while Al recovers from surgery.

Aside from this spot, he's got really good podcast at http://www.talkradio.one/, done live by podcast at 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. most nights; but this gig at KABC-790 AM is from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. so that will alter things for a bit.

Marc is very knowledgeable on lots of things and has a history of hosting a show with "no screener, no contrived topics, and no guests" but he always managed to have a lot of different people showing up. He is a lot more tolerant and I think fair when it comes to handling callers when you compare how a lot of AM Talk Radio goes, but he still will move things along at a good pace. Always a lot of things going on with his shows.

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AND RADIO IS MORE A CORPORATE ANIMAL NOW, REFLECTION OF MOST OF WHAT ELSE IS GOING ON IN THE BUSINESS CLIMATE.
The radio horizon is less bleak for a few nights and the corporate owners continue their personnel bloodletting as a cost-cutting measure
. The days of old in what I remember of high school era radio was a lot better. But that's what a lot of us say as we get older. There's a lot good now, but newer is not always better. The material that you find on radio is a lot less diverse and the multiple station ownership by the Clear Channel giant and Citadel have eliminated a lot of mom and pop operations.

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As an asisde on the CORPORATE INFLUENCE- and even Public Radio has that going on.
There was a KPCC 89.3FM show bacl when Pasadena City College ran the station, called, The Sancho Show, that I miss. It was on for about 14 years on Saturday evenings, until the station operations were sold to Minnesota Public Radio and all the music was eliminated immediately on closing the deal. I will try to get to more about that story in the future, since it was one of the more "culturally relevant" adventures into radio broadcasting, a positive and entertaining influence for young people while it lasted, and it lasted a long time.