I hope you agree that is appropriate.
That's cool, K.M.
I hope you agree that is appropriate.
I would just like to welcome back Oldies from his lifetime, er, two month hiatus. If we can't have entertaining radio, at least we can have an entertaining radio board.
Brother John never did program AM 930 KRTH Los Angeles, an RKO Radio Station. Phil Hall was PD of the AM & FM from the start. Rick Scarry was on his way out and Bob Hamilton was long gone by the launch of Smokin' Oldies. Mr Rock N' Roll was the assistant PD, followed by Dave Michaels. I find it hard to believe that Brother John actually wrote to you as it was my understanding after his on air stroke he was barely able to read or write or speak. Even the Voicers that were heard 20 hours a day when Dave Hull wasn't doing mornings were painstakingly edited. I had 1000's of hours of high quality in studio Stereo airchecks, as I was one of the talented board op's that made Brother John shine, probably doing my best Radio work ever? In fact the entire crew of the 'Brother John's' were very talented, on the same level as the Union KHJ Boss Radio operators like Jon Badeaux & Fred Cote, he killed, literally, except we were paid close to minimum wage. Those were the days!On February 1, 1986, KHJ became KRTH-AM and was known as "Smokin' Oldies AM 930." John Rydgren, also known as Brother John, programmed the station. A few weeks into the format, I wrote him a letter pointing out that the slogan "Music from rock'n'roll's first ten years" was inaccurate because the station played 1955-65, an eleven-year span. I also requested more doo-wop and r&b hits. Finally I expressed doubt that the format would last long; besides the audience getting older, the music would become increasingly tiresome and repetitious unless KRTH started adding later '60s songs. Rydgren sent me a handwritten reply, thanking me for my comments and noting that "the numbers are going up." RKO sold KRTH-AM/FM to Beasley Broadcasting in September of 1989. A month later, Beasley sold the AM to Liberman Broadcasting for $23 million and it switched to Spanish-language as KKHJ. I thought the Smokin' Oldies format and the Smokin' Oldies name were dumb and I didn't make any airchecks. Now I wished I had.
Thanks KM! I sent my resume to Phil Wall, not Hall as Tom Murphy thought that was his name. I guess they got a kick out of itFor the record, I am very much inclined to believe MadMan's account above as I am well aware of his work at KRTH/930 during that period. (Just to stop any arguing before it can start.)
He was able to talk but at the one meeting I had with the crew he didn't speak at all, and just sat there listening to others. I know AM 930 said the 1st 10 years of Rock & Roll and might have taken liberty with that a little but never qualified the years on air as 55 to 65?MadMan, I did indeed get a short letter from John Rydgren. It's somewhere in one of my many boxes of radio memorabilia. It was typewritten and signed simply "John." I had written KRTH in February 1986, soon after the "Smokin' Oldies" format started. I noted that 1955-65 is eleven years and not "rock'n'roll's first ten years" (as the slogan said) and I also pointed out that the audience will get older while the playlist will never change. I suggested expanding the playlist beyond 1965. Rydgren thanked me for listening and for making the comments. He closed with, "Incidentally, our numbers are going up!" Because he is the one who replied to my letter, I assumed that he was program director. Rydgren had a stroke while on the air at KRTH-FM in 1982. He returned to radio in 1986. He obviously had regained his speaking ability by then.
Question to KM Richards or David Eduardo:
There are old music surveys that were issued in the mid to late 50's called "Los Angeles Hit Line".
A source "Doug Schmidt" who assisted at KRTH in the early and mid 80's, mentioned on the Facebook, MIA Lost Hits thread that these charts were used to tally some of the specials aired back then, specifically the 1955 to 1957 period, before the KFWB surveys were used in Jan 1958.
Do you have any information on these Hit Line surveys and a reference on where I can get more info on them?
Doug mentioned that these old surveys may have been 3rd party.
I'd appreciate it.
We didn't have any DJ's in 1986 aside from Dave Hull in mornings, but if you say that is what he said I have no problem with that? I was pretty sure the 1st 10 years meant 54 to 64 with a possible 1965 song thrown in.I was listening on Memorial Day in 1986 when KRTH played several "fightin' songs" such as PT 109, Ballad Of Davy Crockett, Battle Of New Orleans, Blowin' In The Wind and Where Have All The Flowers Gone, and one DJ---I don't remember which---said he wished he could play Ballad Of The Green Berets but "we play only up to 1965." Of course 1955 to 1965 is eleven years, not ten...and KRTH also played Gee, Sh-Boom and Rock Around The Clock from 1954.
I, too, would love to find out about those "Hit Line" surveys. Could they possibly have been put out by Record Merch? WMCA was printing weekly music surveys as early as 1957. Were there any top-40 stations publishing surveys prior to that?
We didn't have any DJ's in 1986 aside from Dave Hull in mornings, but if you say that is what he said I have no problem with that? I was pretty sure the 1st 10 years meant 54 to 64 with a possible 1965 song thrown in.
No, not true I will repeat what I said, on AM 930 Dave Hull was the only live voice & Brother John voicers ran the other 20 hours. I seem to remember Al Connors did some limited on air work. In 88 or 89 they dropped the all Brother John soundYou also had Steve Scott and Brian Beirne back then among others
Ron Thompson for one. Rick Scarry moved on, all the KHJ announcers, most of the News staff I think some sales people and others I didn't know. I found KRTH to be a very demeaning place to work, and the work was really hard for $8.50 an hour. Playing mostly 2 minute songs, having to pull the voicers for those songs along with the commercial load was tough work. The facilities were top notch and maintained well. The Carts ran at 15 IPS in full Left minus Right Stereo where available, the On site engineers were creepy, one sold Coke to the staff. One engineer screamed at our guard who was an off Duty Highway Patrol officer who mentioned what he could have done to that Engineer. The same Engineer yelled at me once and I told him if he said another word he could finish the shift and I would just leave. The stank of what was still RKO permeated the operation like a new General Tire, plus it was common knowledge that the Smokin' Oldies format was truly bad, popular with the Mexicans who loved it. In an all Union operation to be non union made the Board op's feel like scabs. There were quite a few employees double dipping with an FM & AM Union Salary. Located in a very bad area of town, when Beasly took over and then CBS, they fired the armed Security. My buddy Bruce Chandler was on the air when two robbers broke in. One opened the Studio door and asked Bruce where his co robber "Doobie" was. Bruce said "I don't know" and the guy left and continued with stealing. While they were caught, even during my RKO stay someone threw a brick into my windshield. The current GM Pat Norman felt bad and paid for it. Looking back I hated that State of the Art facility for many different reasons. Worked 7 days a week, now I haven't worked a day in 10 years although I still see 40% of my former federal salary and Blue Cross for life or age 62, which ever comes first!On January 31, 1986, KHJ's final day---yes, those call letters returned in 2000 but let's not get picky!---the Los Angeles Times ran a story about the next day's call-letter change. The article included this:
"Beginning Saturday, KHJ listeners who switch to the middle of their AM dial will hear the same basic 'Smokin' Oldies' format it has been playing in recent weeks as well as some of the same deejays."
The "some" was just Dave Hull, correct? And 23 employees of KRTH-AM/FM were fired. Who were they...and why were they fired?
http://articles.latimes.com/1986-01-31/entertainment/ca-2910_1_los-angeles-radio-stations