Thursday, March 06, 2008

Triple Pass

Winters are hard.

Seems like more people pass away during the colder weather months than the warmer months. I wonder if statistics bare this out.

This winter has been most sad for radio folks. Three people, all radio people, who I was somehow connected with, passed on this winter. All three of them had some form of cancer. The "C-word" - the word that worries us all. All three of these individuals suffered - undeniably - through their illness.

There's definitely a sense of personal loss, and perhaps for me, even guilt associated for each of these passings. All and all, I wish I'd have paid more attention to each one of these individuals while they were still here with us.

Fred Horton - I never met him. But my friend Cary Pall spoke so highly of him so often, that I wished I had. Fred was one of those radio guys who would get into a station - one that was a real dog - and clean it up, get it sounding good despite the odds and turn it around. One outstanding example was WRUN Utica NY. The station had a great signal, but was a dog. Fred came in, tightened it up and quickly the station became a winner. (And incidentally, it slipped back to bein' a dog after he left.) Anoter station Horton fixed was WGNA Albany. That stations success as a tight highly produced Country station continues on to this day. Fred was also at WDRC, WYNY, WGNA, WTRY, WXTA, WGXK Memphis, TN, and WBEE FM Rochester. Horton was only in his mid 50's when he passed.

Jess Cain - Boston morning man and radio legend, the ultimate gentleman and listeners friend. His morning show on WHDH was filled with down right hilarity and subtle dignified humor. His 33 year reign started in the late 1950;s and ended in the early 90's. He was the kind of radio personality that regular listeners, after he retired, actually mourned his leaving. Cain was in a category of his own, although he also is in the category Boston greats, like Larry Glick, Carl deSuze, Gary LaPierre and Dale Dorman.

Gary Zoehfeld - Hudson Valley radio guy and super market cashier. I first heard Gary on WHUC Hudson, NY in about 1972. Incredibly, he replaced a guy named "Bob Evans" aka Al Bandiero. Upon hearing Gary, my reaction was wow - who is this guy? He sounded WAY BIGGER than Hudson NY. Like Bill Bailey on WLS. Ended up that Gary had been at WKNY in Kingston NY prior. I got to know Gary through buddy Neil Young. Gary was eccentric - a collector of stuff - radio and otherwise. Mostly, he loved radio. His radio career stretched the Hudson Valley and Albany areas on WSNY, WTRY and WPTR and he branched out to Connecticut and Western MA to work at WSPR, WAQY and WDRC. He lived his last 20 years in the Woodstock NY area and worked at WHVW, WHUD and at the Grand Union supermarkets in Woodstock and Tannersville NY. He bravely fought lung cancer for 2 1/2 years. He was sincerely touched by the support he got toward the end of his life from folks at WDST, WHUD, the Grand Union - and from that group of guys who worked with him at WHUC, all those years ago.

Spring can't come fast enough.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

WRPI 50th Anniversary






WRPI 91.5 Troy NY celebrated 50 years of broadcasting at the beginning of November.

WRPI was a favorite of mine growing up in Waterford, NY. I listened to Jerry Cohen playing jazz, Ed Dague doing talk and Chuck Phelan, Den Jackson and Dev Gualtieri on "Campus Session" every Saturday, where WRPI played Top 40 music.

I airchecked a four hour retrospective of the station that was broadcast. You can download it as an mp3 file by RIGHT CLICKING HERE. The file is about 120 mb, encoded at 64 kbps/22khz.

RPI Grad Den Jackson also wrote me about the anniversary:

"What a blast! All in celebration of the 50 anniversary of when WRPI started at 91.5 FM with 710 Watts, on November 1, 1957 with a GE Serrasoid modulated 1 kW beast of a transnmitter donated by the defunct WROW-FM. Today, at 10 kW from the old Channel 41 tower in Menands, it's one of the most powerful and interestingly programmed 100% student operated college stations in the country. People returned from RPI Classes of 1962 through 2004. All really great people! The current student staff and alumni office staff provided great hospitality and made us all feel very welcome! We all recorded promos and talked about old times and new. Richie Glassberg, the WRPI PBP announcer from when the RPI Engineers became national college hockey champs in 1984 returned to call the game against Yake Fri note (1-1 tie in overtime.)

"We all recorded promos and talked about old times and new. The long time line represented made us all realize that station has metamorphosized over and over again through the years. When my Class of '68 group arrived in Fall 1964, "rock and roll" was taboo. The year after I graduated (1968), WRPI station became totally free-form progressive. It went through an era where community volunteers did most of the shows, to where it became a voice for underrepresented minority student groups, and back to all student run with some venerable community show-hosts remaining."

Your buddy Rick did some time at WRPI - as a board op for my cousin John in 1970. So - my 3rd Class License hung at the 15th Street Lounge for a short time.

Congratulations to WRPI on their 50th!

Labels:

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Gary's New England Radio Pictures... Boston

The WBZ lobby, with the gallery of air talent, from 1974.



Ron Robin at the WVBF studio, 1974.


Larry Justice in the WBZ studio, 1974.



The WBZ newsroom, 1974.


The WKOX Framingham control room in 1974.


WBZ's control room, 1974.


Thanks to our friend Gary Tompkins for these great photos!

Gary's New England Radio Pictures... WAQY and WTYM

Dave Lane in the WTYM East Longmeadow, MA studio, 1975.


The WAQY, East Longmeadow, MA control room in 1977. Note the CCA board, along with the ITC cart machines.


The Raytheon Board in WTYM East Longmeadow, MA main studio in the early 1970's.

WAQY East Longmeadow, MA automation system, early 1970's.


Building the WAQY, Springfield MA automation in the early seventies. Gary says: This is from when we upgraded the Schafer 901 (mechanical relay control) to 903 (digital CPU). The upgrade was a compable to changing a timing belt with the engine running.


Thanks to our old friend Gary Tompkins for these great photos!

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Elvis Freak

Received this in email:

"My name is Fabris G.Luca,40 years old,Italy.
I'm an Elvis Presley researcher expecially on the early days. At the
mo all my researches are in relation to a book/CD project for
the Elvis fan club network. It's a 3/4 CD 200 pages book about
Elvis stay at SUN records done by Ernst Jorgensen(BMG chief on Elvis music
catalogue) which I'm now helping detailing the period from July of 1954 t
hrough the end of 1955.

"The book will consist of more than 400 early photos - half of them
previously unpublished. It's not an attempt of once again write the story
of Elvis Presley, but more a collection of information, photos,
memorabilia and stories shared by fans who where there at the time.
The book will not deal in gossip or other unpleasant material,
it's all about the innocence of the time and the impact
of Elvis'music. We are trying to document every single show Elvis
did, and we have come fairly close.

So I'm looking for photos, recordings from Louisiana Hayride
(KWKH program transmitted also by KTHS) or Opry,or any live radio gig
or interview ....Saturday night Country Style CBS program,
Big D Jamboree ANYTHING IS WELCOME FROM THE 50s!!

I?m trying to locate DJ called Mr Red Smith. When he worked for
WBOK,New Orleans,LA in 1955 he organized many gigs with Elvis?.

Does anybody know his real name??

And then looking also for Mr Lynn McDowell.He worked for WBIP
in Booneville,Ms in 1955?.Could you help?

Do you have friends owning photos or recordings?

Your help,anyone's help is welcome!

Write soon

I hope this is not too much of an intrusion.

Sincerely yours
Fabris G.Luca
Elvis Researcher"

If anyone can help Mr. Luca, you can contact him through me.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Jim Lewis - early 1960's Boston Radio Personality?


Listener Emily R writes:
Rick, I know you are the one who can help me.
I am looking
for ANYTHING on tape from
the radio that my father did. His name was Jim

Lewis. He was a DJ in the late '50's I know
at one time he was Fenway!
My brother was
born in Boston in (I think) 1961. Before that they were

in Northern California; San Francisco and
Sacramento. I have demo tapes from his
voice-over days in the '70s and '80s in
Chicago
but I really
want to hear him doing
Schtick on the radio. I have searched him on the

nternet like crazy and don't seem to get
anywhere. Yours is the most
promising
website I've seen! Can you help me?


I
've made a couple of contacts, but so far, can't seem to be able to
identify the station he worked at. If anyone has an idea,
please email me.

Allen B. Shaw Jr in WPTR's Studio, 1966

Wow.

I remember Allen B. Shaw Jr. Pretty good jock, and there will be an aircheck of him, along with some very interesting history of his life AFTER after WPTR in the future. In the meantime, dig Allen suckin' a cigarette in his skinny tie, those HUGE cart machines, and the Gates "Yard" Board.

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

WAQY Time...

I love it when people send me photos about radio. No really, I do. Here's a cool one: the main control room of WTYM East Longmeadow, MA from 1975. That Bob Brooks sitting in front of the board, with morning man Dave Lane in the foreground. The WTYM studio later became the main studio for WAQY, WACKY 102 while I was there. It's interesting to see what was recycled for the WAQY re-build. The cart carosel (left and in back of the board) was used at WACKY; so was the phone. As for Brooks and Lane, that is probably for another time. Feel free to send me your radio photos that pertain to the northeast area.

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Super Market(ing)

So, I'm over at the local grocery store picking up my daily avocado, and what greets me on my windshield but this thing. It's interesting that Entercom went to such lengths to get the word out about the new station. I don't listen much to talk radio, but so far it has been kinda neat to have WEEI/WVEI on in Springfield. The signal does NOT seem particualrly great... and of course multi-path and picket fencing are always more prominent on a signal with no music. I wish them luck.