Songs about the joy of listening to music on the radio

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nick007
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20 Jun 2024, 11:08 am

Dance Dance Dance by Wilson Phillips :arrow:


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ASPartOfMe
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31 Aug 2024, 5:31 am

It is that time of the year again. On https://rewoundradio.com/ it is WLS-WCFL Rewound featuring airchecks from those Chicago stations from the heyday of the Top 40 format (mostly 60s and 70s). You get to hear the DJ’s, the commercials, the jingles, some newscasts and of course the songs. It is as close as you can get in 2024 to the experience of being back then and listening to those stations.

Those Chi town stations had powerful signals, thus people over a large part of the midwest grew up listening to them. This special will run through the entire 3 day holiday weekend.

How did Top 40 radio become a hit?

Quote:
Renowned rock journalist Ben Fong-Torres, in his book “The Hits Just Keep on Coming,” declared that radio station owners and disc jockeys were able to create a “national jukebox” by adopting the Top 40 format — a rotation of the top hits of the day.

The category emerged in the 1950s, and it had its detractors, including the DJs themselves.
“Disc jockeys raised on ‘good music,’ or who liked jazz, R&B, and other roots music, sniffed at the pablum they were sometimes forced to play, then considered their employment options and cozied up to its performers at record hops and station-sponsored concerts,” Fong-Torres wrote.
Despite their hesitation, and although some in the industry were implicated in “payola” scandals (the practice of paying a station to play a song), Fong-Torres asserted that “Top 40 meant democracy in radio.”

Todd Storz — the owner of AM station KOWH in Omaha, Nebraska — is credited with inventing the format, according to Fong-Torres. However, he wrote that the precise origin story is murky.

Storz, with the help of the waitress, wrote down the names of records that people played throughout the evening and used this jukebox theory to inform the choice of songs his station played.

According to influential TV and radio personality Dick Clark, Storz would say, “Hey, people go into a saloon and they play the same forty records over and over again.”

But George W. “Bud” Armstrong — a manager at Storz’s New Orleans station, WTIX — said the format was devised in response to the music show “The Top 20” at 1280 from rival station WDSU.

“I simply thought that if 20 was good, 40 was better,” Armstrong said. Storz’s station then came up with the program “Top 40” at 1450.

Another description of Top 40’s origins comes from the book “The Emergence of Rock and Roll,” in which author Mitchell K. Hall also said Storz came up with the idea after observing people’s jukebox habits, but pegged the year at 1951.

Despite the uncertainty surrounding the format’s genesis, Storz generally remains at the center of its creation story. Gordon McLendon, a Texas broadcaster, also adopted the Top 40 concept and helped popularize it.

“McClendon and Storz were really the two big powerhouses, the two pioneers of the Top 40 format in the 1950s. Between them they covered a lot of markets,” said Rich Appel, the host of “That Thing with Rich Appel,” a nationally syndicated radio show, and a programmer for AccuRadio.

The term “Top 40” refers to a format used by radio stations, but also operates as a broader description of popular music.

Different genres of music have taken turns in the Top 40 spotlight. When Nirvana and Pearl Jam became popular in the ’90s, Top 40 started sounding more rock-oriented, said Geoff Mayfield, a music industry analyst who worked with Billboard magazine for more than two decades.

Then teen pop arose in the late ’90s, showcasing the Backstreet Boys, NSync and Britney Spears, followed by the emergence of hip-hop as a popular genre, Mayfield added.

“That kind of shows you what Top 40 always does, which is it’s always trying to hone in on whichever music flavor is gonna gather the most ears,” Mayfield said.

Despite the name, stations haven’t always played precisely 40 songs, with the number of selections fluctuating.

“The history of the format is that it keeps tightening and occasionally loosening back up over the years,” explained Sean Ross, a veteran radio industry researcher and the author of the newsletter Ross on Radio.

He said in the mid-’60s, it ranged between 30 and 40 songs. Then, in the ’70s, the format shrunk to about 25 records — comparable to what it is now — and could reach upward of 30 at some stations.

By the 1980s, the industry had stopped using the term “Top 40” and started using “contemporary hit radio,” according to Ross.
“Because at that point, people didn’t feel the literal ‘Top 40’ was relevant,” he said. “But we eventually reached a point where there were 40 hits again.”

Rich Appel recalled that his first job in radio was being an intern at WRKO, a Top 40 station in Boston, where he would help create the week’s list of hits.

“I would spend all Tuesday morning calling every record store on the list to get their top-selling singles and albums,” said Appel, who began working at WRKO in 1980.

But nowadays, with the decline of record sales and request lines, stations are taking into account a song’s success on streaming services.

Unless we’re talking about a popular artist with a devoted fan base, like Shawn Mendes or Harry Styles, a label will typically not pitch a song to a radio station unless it has “a story on Spotify or TikTok,” Ross said.

Appel said that “part of the allure of Top 40 was that you always knew where a song stood.”
In the early days of Top 40 radio, especially in the 1960s, a station would tell you a record’s rank on the list, counting down the songs each week, Appel said.

He remembers that when he was in junior high and high school, he and other fans would discuss whether the Rolling Stones would have a No. 1 hit or a song from Canadian singer Anne Murray would take over the charts.

Even amid the rise of streaming, the concept of a curated list of top songs lives on. Spotify, for example, has a hits playlist featuring 50 songs. So, too, does the intense interest in how artists are charting.

Listeners “will care about hearing the hits, and they will care about somebody choosing them so they don’t have to do the work all the time,” Ross said.


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ASPartOfMe
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01 Sep 2024, 7:33 pm

ASPartOfMe wrote:
It is that time of the year again. On https://rewoundradio.com/ it is WLS-WCFL Rewound featuring airchecks from those Chicago stations from the heyday of the Top 40 format (mostly 60s and 70s). You get to hear the DJ’s, the commercials, the jingles, some newscasts and of course the songs. It is as close as you can get in 2024 to the experience of being back then and listening to those stations.

Those Chi town stations had powerful signals, thus people over a large part of the midwest grew up listening to them. This special will run through the entire 3 day holiday weekend.

Even though I did not grow up in the midwest listening to those stations I am having a blast listening to the special all weekend.


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07 Sep 2024, 5:13 am

This is an aircheck from a unique DJ Allison Steele ‘The Night Bird’. Stream of conciseness. Get that incense out.
WNEW-FM New York February 11, 1969


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22 Nov 2024, 10:58 am


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22 Nov 2024, 11:06 am

Scott Muni a beloved New York Progressive Rock radio DJ was nicknamed “The Professor” for obvious reasons.

WNEW-FM February 26, 1976

His “gravely” voice was his trademark and would be disqualifying today.


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21 Dec 2024, 7:07 pm

I have an aircheck of historical import today.

In the South, there was this type of rhythm and blues music made by blacks called "race music". A DJ in Cleveland named Alan Freed started playing those records, called it "Rock and Roll" and the rest is history.

Alan Freed WINS New York March 23, 1955


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