Here's a fun topic for the weekend:
Back in the 1980s, my alarm went off at about 5:45 AM, tuned to 96 Rock. I always noticed that the last song played before Mark McCain's Wake Up Crew came in at 6 was often something unusual. These unusual songs all seem to fit in one of the following categories:
--Long songs, such as "Free Bird", "Layla" (which, oddly, wasn't in rotation on WKLS at the time), "Blinded By The Light", "Hey Jude", or "Love Is Like Oxygen" (which could also fit in the second category, which is...)
--Songs that weren't part of the usual playlist, like "Body Talk" by Kix or "Telephone Operator" by Pete Shelley
--Novelty songs, such as "Shaving Cream" by Benny Bell or "There Coming To Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!" by Napoleon XIII
I assume the long song was to cover the shift change and perhaps a bio break. And I assume the unusual song was probably to satisfy some indie. And the novelty songs were just for fun.
Any comments?
Back in the 1980s, my alarm went off at about 5:45 AM, tuned to 96 Rock. I always noticed that the last song played before Mark McCain's Wake Up Crew came in at 6 was often something unusual. These unusual songs all seem to fit in one of the following categories:
--Long songs, such as "Free Bird", "Layla" (which, oddly, wasn't in rotation on WKLS at the time), "Blinded By The Light", "Hey Jude", or "Love Is Like Oxygen" (which could also fit in the second category, which is...)
--Songs that weren't part of the usual playlist, like "Body Talk" by Kix or "Telephone Operator" by Pete Shelley
--Novelty songs, such as "Shaving Cream" by Benny Bell or "There Coming To Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!" by Napoleon XIII
I assume the long song was to cover the shift change and perhaps a bio break. And I assume the unusual song was probably to satisfy some indie. And the novelty songs were just for fun.
Any comments?