PS: Again, at the time of this aircheck as well, Paul Drew was the National Program Director for RKO (a position he held from May of 1973 until late summer of 1977).
In a speech at a trade convention in August of 1974, he announced that RKO would not consider any record longer than 3:30 for airplay. That's how that got reported in R&R at least (and unfortunately, that's one of the few issues of R&R that's not in the World Radio History library---August 23, 1974).
Drew went to Billboard to clarify his position, and re-reading it, I see that I got the story wrong over the years---Drew had always intended a carve-out for huge records by huge acts of the day, including Elton John. It's a worthwhile read---it begins on page one of this issue (center column) and I'm linking to the entire issue rather than the story, to allow you to scroll to where the story continues further into the magazine:
https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Billboard/70s/1974/Billboard 1974-09-07.pdf
In a speech at a trade convention in August of 1974, he announced that RKO would not consider any record longer than 3:30 for airplay. That's how that got reported in R&R at least (and unfortunately, that's one of the few issues of R&R that's not in the World Radio History library---August 23, 1974).
Drew went to Billboard to clarify his position, and re-reading it, I see that I got the story wrong over the years---Drew had always intended a carve-out for huge records by huge acts of the day, including Elton John. It's a worthwhile read---it begins on page one of this issue (center column) and I'm linking to the entire issue rather than the story, to allow you to scroll to where the story continues further into the magazine:
https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Billboard/70s/1974/Billboard 1974-09-07.pdf
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