Longtime L.A. radio production wiz. Details:
http://www.laobserved.com/archive/2013/01/bill_mouzis_khj_boss_radi.php
http://www.laobserved.com/archive/2013/01/bill_mouzis_khj_boss_radi.php
LARadioRewind said:There's an aircheck of KHJ's first day as "Boss Radio," April 25, 1965. The original was made by a friend of mine, Grant Manning, who thought it might be of historical value someday. He never made another aircheck and he forgot about the tape until he found it in a box after he moved from San Diego to Tennessee. Knowing I was (and still am) a big fan of KHJ, he sent me a copy. I was the first and only person he ever copied it for. Naturally I copied it for a lot of people, then they copied it for others, and now it's in the hands (or cassette decks) of hundreds of collectors. Bill Mouzis often said that "Boss Radio" debuted on May 2, 1965. Every time he made that claim (usually in a letter to LARadio.com, for which I was a contributor for nine years), I would write him and correct him and point out that even former KHJ program director Ron Jacobs acknowledges the April 25 date. Mouzis always gave me the same terse reply: "Who cares?" Well, Bill, we aircheck collectors care---and you will always have our gratitude for helping make KHJ the sound of Boss Angeles. Say hello to Morgan and Steele!
LARadioRewind said:I have to correct myself. My memory failed me---and for the first time too! I dug out the aircheck: KHJ's first day as Boss Radio was Wednesday, April 28, 1965, according to Grant Manning, who (apparently) was the only person to run tape during that historical first day. Mouzis claimed it was May 5. Other people have said May 2 or May 3. On page 13 of Ron Jacobs' book Inside Boss Radio he says it was April 27, largely because Ray Randolph says so. I wish the actual 45-minute aircheck had some references to the day of the week. When Grant sent me a copy of the original, he had labeled it "April 28." That's the date I've accepted. I haven't talked with Ray Randolph for a long time; I'll have to see how he came up with the 27th.
bossguy66 said:I can remember the day I discovered KHJ. It was a Saturday. I was a day camp and one of the kids had one of those large portable radios, and came over to me talking about a new station that plays lots of great music without any commercials. I had never heard of such a thing as no commercials before, wow, just the hits, and I was captivated. The old boring adult KHJ station had changed formats. Funny thing, I don't recall "the million dollar battle." Hearing songs from 1950 would have turned me off for sure. I recall the week later being slightly disappointed at hearing a commercial, but by then I was hooked.
LARadioRewind said:When KHJ had the "Million Dollar Battle" in April 1965, two songs would be played, a "champion" and a "challenger." While the "challenger" played, listeners would call in and say which of the two songs they liked better. As soon as the challenger was through playing, the champion would be played and then be followed by a new challenger. This meant that many times an hour, depending on which song won, we'd hear the same song twice in a row.
KHJ had another "Million Dollar Battle" in (I think) late 1967. (Mister hagerty will correct me if I'm wrong---I don't even need to ask him.) This time, a champion and a challenger were played, and then a song from the current Boss 30, so we wouldn't be hearing any song twice in a row. Unlike the earlier Battle, this one started not with 1950 but with Bill Haley's Rock Around The Clock, which came out in 1954 and went to number one a year later after being featured in the movie Blackboard Jungle.
Was the "champion-challenger" format fair? I don't think so. If a champion got played seven or eight times in an hour, people might be so tired of hearing it that they'd vote for a challenger that they didn't like as well, just to hear something different. The first Battle featured the songs in chronological order. Didn't the second Battle skip around so the champion and challenger were always from two different years? Hey, I can't remember everything.
LARadioRewind said:LBReport.com has a very detailed story about Bill Mouzis: http://www.lbreport.com/13obits/mouzis.htm
LARadioRewind said:It would have been fun if those Battles had ended with a competition among the champion songs of each year. We might have had Good Vibrations going up against Sixteen Tons, Delicado going up against Jailhouse Rock, or Johnnie Ray's Cry going up against Hey Jude.
LBReport.com has a very detailed story about Bill Mouzis: http://www.lbreport.com/13obits/mouzis.htm