Poco and Golden Earring together - that is a strange combo.
Since we're on the concert scene - how about those great FM100 sponsored shows at the Overton Park Shell (thinking Trapeze here) and Lafayette's Music Room (thinking Billy Joel)! And the Wishbone Ash CD "Argus" has three bonus tracks on it that were broadcast live from FM100 - liner notes give credit to Jon Scott and Mike Powell.
Any recollections from those events guys?
I've told a number of people that a fair number of the LP's in my collection are the result of hearing them on FM100. Right off hand, Babe Ruth's "First Base" album, "Argus" by Wishbone Ash, and other albums by Frampton's Camel, Audience, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Moody Blues, Joni Mitchell, Henry Gross....all because FM100 played them. Now, to be fair, I'll have to give credit to Rock 103 in the Rob Grayson era for doing the same - Linda Ronstadt's "Mad Love" album and Tom Petty's "Damn the Torpedoes" come to mind here, but my point is FM100 in their album/progressive rock era would play multiple tracks from these albums and generate SALES. You're lucky today if you even hear the name of a song announced on the radio. FM100 would play 3 or 4 songs, and back announce all of them - you always knew what you were hearing. Apparently most classic rock stations these days don't even carry a record or CD library - play lists are limited mostly to supergroups, and only a select few songs from them. You WILL NOT hear the Moody Blues, Joe Cocker, and a host of other rock artists on our putrid classic rock station here in Knoxville. You will hear enough Van Halen, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and AC/DC (never liked AC/DC anyway) to last a lifetime. No wonder kids these days seek alternate sources for their music - commercial FM won't play anything!
"White Bird" (It's A Beautiful Day), "Legend of a Mind" (Moody Blues), "A Day in the Life" (Beatles), "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" (Rolling Stones), "Country Song" (Pure Prairie League) - Thanks again guys for putting this stuff on the air!!
SF