Thanks for the history. Just going from memory, but 'RKO really tightened up in the early summer of '71, using the same jingle package you linked to (I'd always heard it referred to as the "Drake AA package").
That was the official name, but a lot of people have also always called it "The Motown Package". Drake actually had the backing tracks cut by the Funk Bros. (Motown's in-house band) at Motown studios, then had the Johnny Mann Singers do the vocals as overdubs in L.A.

Don't remember a reduction of oldies (though they did reduce their million dollar weekend to just Sunday), don't remember much in the way of LP cuts initially either. They did play Jethro Tull's "Hymn 43", which seemed a bit out of place, but that was released as a single.
"Aqualung" was a HUGE album and mid-late teens were buying it.
The change back to slightly edited versions of the old acapella jingles happened around the same time as in LA, as did the introduction of LP cuts and/or LP versions of some of the chart songs ("One Fine Morning"-Lighthouse and "Tell Mama"-Savoy Brown are a couple that come to mind.
Again, the approach was piloted at KHJ and then rolled out to the other stations (KFRC, WHBQ, CKLW, WOR-FM and WRKO as well as KYNO, KGB and KAKC). It probably was summer by the time WRKO implemented it. The only thing that happened all at once were the jingles.
Despite having a reputation for uniformity, RKO and the Drake-consulted stations did have some local differences. For example, KFRC and KHJ played more R&B than KGB.
KFRC never embraced the laid-back thing the way KHJ did. And neither did KGB. In fact, they fired Drake as a consultant in late fall of 1971. And a few months later hired Ron Jacobs as PD, who over Easter weekend of '72 actually came up with an album approach for KGB, and a few months later, one on KGB-FM that complimented it.
Any idea why they made the change in jingles? I kinda liked that package.
KHJ-FM had been a pioneering Adult Contemporary with "Hitparade '70" (and '69 and '68 before it):
hp68khj-sc.mp3
drive.google.com
In the fall of 1970, it went all-oldies and changed the name of the format to "Solid Gold Rock and Roll" and just had the "Hitparade" jingles re-sung:
1971 KHJ-FM Solid Gold Rock and Roll.mp3
drive.google.com
When KHJ-AM launched the revised format in April, it flipped the FM to a 60/40 current/gold mix and shortened the name to "Solid Gold", and simultaneous to the launch of the Double A jingles on the AM, Drake started using different versions of the stager beds for the FM. This is from May 19, 1971:
19710519 KHJ-FM TOH.mp3
drive.google.com
But in the fall of '71, the full Double A package came off KHJ-AM and was used, re-sung for KHJ-FM:
19720205 KHJ-FM TOH.mp3
drive.google.com
I don't know if Drake just decided he liked it better for the syndication or what. I do know that Double A was available for sale in any market after it came off the RKO AMs, so Drake-Chenault/AIR may have made more money by selling it to their clients.
The Double A's only lasted about a year on KHJ-FM, because it became KRTH on October 16, 1972.
The Double A made a brief return to KHJ when Chuck Martin took over as PD in February of 1979, following John Sebastian, who had taken jingles off the air. He used the Double As as a stopgap until "The Rhythm of the Southland" was ready in the summer. Probably was 60 days or so.
Not mentioned in your account was the (brief) use of "mingles"/"pop-tops"/whatever else they were called (singing jingle over an intro made to sound like the song's artist). They only used them for a month or two.
They were gone quick. To be honest, they didn't sound great. Here are two I could find quickly---I have a vague memory of another on this production, of Bobby Sherman's "The Drum", but do you really want to hear it? This is cued to the intro of the record--there's some Bobby Ocean narrative for the 20th anniversary CD before the Pop-Top hits, and there's another right afterward.
RKO didn't play Sammy Jr, but they did play Gallery. They did not play "Troglodyte", don't remember anyone in the market playing that one.
And KHJ played the hell out of "Troglodyte", which sounded very strange when they were deep into their low-key sound.
There was an article in Rolling Stone from early '72 about the WMEX vs WRKO thing, it made it look like it was strictly a local thing...guess not.
Yeah, I remember reading that article. It was more of a take-down of WMEX than anything else.
And...son of a gun..it's online:
Boston Tests New Music & Flunks Out: WMEX and WRKO Battle
Boston AM radio stations WMEX and WRKO compete against each other, and FM stations, for listeners, relying on smart programming of album cuts
Last edited: