Kelly, the winner was Semoochie and about ten other people on pages one and two. Getting someone to agree with you on page 11 doesn't cut it, especially in the face of facts.Ladies, gentlemen and nerds, we have a winner! God bless you my son!
Sounded very interesting, thanks! I'll look through most those and the "lettheuniverseanswer" links.gr8oldies:
If you go back to yesterday, I posted playable links to airchecks of most of the major FM rock stations in California—-dozens, if not hundreds of hours.
Being a native Californian, that’s what I know, but there’s a guy, Javed Jafri, with a great site full of album rock airchecks from other parts of the country and Canada. Like the ones I posted, all you do is click and play:
Dayton was still mostly British Progressive Rock though.
No, it was a composite based on what "album rock" and "progressive" stations were playing in February 1975.
It went beyond length---a lot of classical influences and "we're creating art" pretensions ("In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" couldn't really argue that given that the song was supposed to be "In The Garden of Eden" but the singer was too stoned to enunciate):I could look it up I guess, but since I'm on a radio board, what are a few examples of progressive rock? From what I can gather, it's longer-length songs like "In A Gada Da Vida" or "Roundabout." At any rate, that was pretty much over by the time MTV debuted in 1981, right?
Genesis, Yes, Alan Parsons Project, Emerson Lake & Palmer, Pink Floyd, etc. Even the Moody Blues could be considered light prog.I could look it up I guess, but since I'm on a radio board, what are a few examples of progressive rock? From what I can gather, it's longer-length songs like "In A Gada Da Vida" or "Roundabout." At any rate, that was pretty much over by the time MTV debuted in 1981, right?
Well before that. I mean, some groups were still trying, but the moment was long gone.I could look it up I guess, but since I'm on a radio board, what are a few examples of progressive rock? From what I can gather, it's longer-length songs like "In A Gada Da Vida" or "Roundabout." At any rate, that was pretty much over by the time MTV debuted in 1981, right?
Looking at these dates, I just missed the Progressive party. Of course, I'm familiar with Pink Floyd, Alan Parsons, Genesis and the like; but I had never heard of a lot of groups on the Top 50 list you were kind enough to post.What he did worked for a while, but by 1983 (only four years after he implemented that approach and AOR stations that weren't his clients tried to keep up), the format (which is the basis of what people now consider Classic Rock) was in trouble---having its lunch eaten in the ratings by newly-energized CHR stations on FM and by the emergence of Modern Rock.
Early1980's, New Wave era. Clash, Police, The Go Go's, and Men AT WorkI could look it up I guess, but since I'm on a radio board, what are a few examples of progressive rock? From what I can gather, it's longer-length songs like "In A Gada Da Vida" or "Roundabout." At any rate, that was pretty much over by the time MTV debuted in 1981, right?
A lot of us who were there at the time would draw a blank, too. A lot of those acts didn't get much airplay or got it late at night. The truly big sellers were rare.Looking at these dates, I just missed the Progressive party. Of course, I'm familiar with Pink Floyd, Alan Parsons, Genesis and the like; but I had never heard of a lot of groups on the Top 50 list you were kind enough to post.
The progressive rock station in Columbus Ohio at the time was 96.3 WLVQ, not WCOL. Anyway, I never heard Carly Simon played on any progressive rock station anywhere on this Earth. Where was she played on the air as classic rock?A sampling (again, for consistency, from the same issue of R&R in February, 1975) of what individual FM rock stations were playing:
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At the time, WLVQ was still WTVN-FM and still playing Beautiful Music. It didn't go rock until Valentine's Day of 1977. First song? Eagles. "New Kid In Town".The progressive rock station in Columbus Ohio at the time was 96.3 WLVQ, not WCOL.
Well, you might enjoy reading this, then:I listened mostly to CJOM 88.7 from Canada at the time.
Which isn't surprising, since you couldn't listen to them all, and weren't listening all of the time. But, as we've established over the past few days, Carly Simon is one of those artists that started on FM rock radio and then crossed over to Top 40. Let's face it, "That's The Way I've Always Heard It Should Be" doesn't have out-of-the-box-Top-40-smash" written all over it.Anyway, I never heard Carly Simon played on any progressive rock station anywhere on this Earth.
Thank you for backing me up, Michael! I only said that Carly Simon "used" to be considered "Rock". Part of the problem we're having is that 1975 is a little late. Carole King's album time was early '70s. Think "Tapestry". As Tommy Lee Jones said in "Space Cowboys", "I may be blind as a bat but there's nothing wrong with my memory!".Kelly, the winner was Semoochie and about ten other people on pages one and two. Getting someone to agree with you on page 11 doesn't cut it, especially in the face of facts.
The tapes exist and are listenable with the click of a mouse. A nearly complete archive of Radio & Records (thank you, David!) is online and viewable.
Carly Simon was a legitimate artist on FM rock radio through at least 1975. I'm gonna guess "Nobody Does It Better" was the point of no return.
Semoochie, scroll about two or three posts up and you’ll see, via the stations themselves reporting to R&R that Carly (and Michael Murphey, Minnie Riperton and Melissa Manchester) were doing well on FM rock stations.Thank you for backing me up, Michael! I only said that Carly Simon "used" to be considered "Rock". Part of the problem we're having is that 1975 is a little late. Carole King's album time was early '70s. Think "Tapestry". As Tommy Lee Jones said in "Space Cowboys", "I may be blind as a bat but there's nothing wrong with my memory!".