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FM100 - The Album Rock Days

Hello everyone,

I recently found about this site from Steve West and have nearly gone blind reading up on the Memphis and east Tennessee boards. I feel most fortunate to have grown up in Memphis and gotten the chance to listen to so many great radio stations in the 60's 70's and 80's. I used to love WHBQ-AM 56, WMPS-AM 68, and WMC FM100 in the late 60's and early 70's. I was really disappointed when FM100 dropped the album rock format in '75 and went with the "Easy Rockin' Stereo" programming. In fact I am still mad about that! To this day I have never heard another AOR station that is as good as FM100 was then. Although I have found Rock 103 versions 1 and 2 (before and after Z103 era) to be good, there was just something about FM100's choice of album cuts that made them different. They used to play everything from the Allman Brothers to ZZ Top, and everything in between. With FM100 you could get Joni Mitchell, Moody Blues, Frampton's Camel, Carole King, Jeff Beck, Emerson Lake and Palmer, Elton John, Henry Gross, David Werner, Velvet Underground, David Bowie, Savoy Brown, Wishbone Ash, Traffic, Santana, Uriah Heep, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Billy Joel, Todd Rundgren - the list goes on and on. The personalities were also great. Greg Hamilton in the morning playing those great country rock songs by Pure Prairie League and others, Mike Powell mid-days, Ron Michaels afternoons, Greg Siggers evenings (I recall him playing "Edward the Mad Shirt Grinder" by Quicksilver one evening and went straight to the record store and bought the album), and Leon Griffin and Henry Nelson nights. Also Sheila Hall weekends. Why can't the classic rock stations today play the sort of music FM100 used to play? Our so called classic rock station in Knoxville is little more than a steady diet of Aerosmith, Bad Company, ACDC, Lynryd Skynyrd and a handful of other super groups. Visits to other cities usually are the same thing - same old songs, same groups over and over. Rock 103 in Memphis is still fairly good about playing some of the older stuff, but all in all I don't think Rock 103 is as good as it was in the early 80's (although I was pleasantly surprised to hear Rock 103 playing "Tell Mama" by Savoy Brown on my last visit to Memphis). Anyway, I just wanted to reminisce about FM100 in the AOR days - hope some of you will relate your FM100 listening experinces. Anyone know the whereabouts of the DJ's I mentioned above? Also, it would be nice if any playlists from the AOR days were still in existence.

The record industry complains that album sales are low, usually blaming internet downloading. I maintain that if radio stations, particularly rock stations, would expand their playlists, album sales would pick up. I have yet to hear anything from the newest Sheryl Crow or Rolling Stones albums on the radio here in Knoxville. One rock radio station here in Knoxville did play John Mayer for a while, but only "Your Body Is A Wonderland" and "Daughters." It was only after I borrowed two of John Mayer's CD's from a friend that I discovered what great music he was putting out. There were several songs on the two CD's that I thought were worthy of airtime that never got it. I can't help but believe that if this had been 1972 that Mike Powell would have had these "lost" cuts playing on the radio.


Steve Forrest
Knoxville, TN
(Where you'll never hear "Legend of A Mind" by the Moody Blues on the radio)
 
> ...I used to love
> WHBQ-AM 56, WMPS-AM 68, and WMC FM100 in the late 60's and
> early 70's. ... there was just something about FM100's choice of album cuts
> that made them different....

Hey Steve...

Great post... as a kid growing up in rural Northeast Arkansas in the early 70s there's simply no way to understate the influence FM-100 had on me, even to this day. Modern-day "classic rock" formats don't even come close. I was also a WMPS baby, before I switched over to FM. WHBQ didn't put a listenable signal out where I lived, but I'd watch George Klein on his Channel 13 TV show every weekend (yes, we actually had cable TV in Walnut Ridge in 1970... got 5 different channels!).

Great memories... Here in Nashville the (low-rated, under-powered) AAA station WRLT does an oldies-AOR style show on Saturday mornings called Retro Lightning, which comes close to sounding like that style of radio, but they only focus on one year each week. Deep Tracks on XM channel 40 is also good at re-creating the early-AOR vibe.

-- MiddleAgedRocker
 
> > ...I used to love
> > WHBQ-AM 56, WMPS-AM 68, and WMC FM100 in the late 60's and
>
> > early 70's. ... there was just something about FM100's
> choice of album cuts
> > that made them different....
>
> Hey Steve...
>
> Great post... as a kid growing up in rural Northeast
> Arkansas in the early 70s there's simply no way to
> understate the influence FM-100 had on me, even to this day.
> Modern-day "classic rock" formats don't even come close. I
> was also a WMPS baby, before I switched over to FM. WHBQ
> didn't put a listenable signal out where I lived, but I'd
> watch George Klein on his Channel 13 TV show every weekend
> (yes, we actually had cable TV in Walnut Ridge in 1970...
> got 5 different channels!).
>
> Great memories... Here in Nashville the (low-rated,
> under-powered) AAA station WRLT does an oldies-AOR style
> show on Saturday mornings called Retro Lightning, which
> comes close to sounding like that style of radio, but they
> only focus on one year each week. Deep Tracks on XM channel
> 40 is also good at re-creating the early-AOR vibe.
>
> -- MiddleAgedRocker

Hey Rocker, give me a holler, I also grew up in WR and Hoxie....I think the email address is in my profile.
Dan
>
<P ID="signature">______________
....a broadcast service of Plough Incorporated.</P>
 
> Hello everyone,
>
> I recently found about this site from Steve West and have
> nearly gone blind reading up on the Memphis and east
> Tennessee boards. I feel most fortunate to have grown up in
> Memphis and gotten the chance to listen to so many great
> radio stations in the 60's 70's and 80's. I used to love
> WHBQ-AM 56, WMPS-AM 68, and WMC FM100 in the late 60's and
> early 70's. I was really disappointed when FM100 dropped
> the album rock format in '75 and went with the "Easy Rockin'
> Stereo" programming. In fact I am still mad about that! To
> this day I have never heard another AOR station that is as
> good as FM100 was then. Although I have found Rock 103
> versions 1 and 2 (before and after Z103 era) to be good,
> there was just something about FM100's choice of album cuts
> that made them different. They used to play everything from
> the Allman Brothers to ZZ Top, and everything in between.
> With FM100 you could get Joni Mitchell, Moody Blues,
> Frampton's Camel, Carole King, Jeff Beck, Emerson Lake and
> Palmer, Elton John, Henry Gross, David Werner, Velvet
> Underground, David Bowie, Savoy Brown, Wishbone Ash,
> Traffic, Santana, Uriah Heep, Quicksilver Messenger Service,
> Billy Joel, Todd Rundgren - the list goes on and on. The
> personalities were also great. Greg Hamilton in the morning
> playing those great country rock songs by Pure Prairie
> League and others, Mike Powell mid-days, Ron Michaels
> afternoons, Greg Siggers evenings (I recall him playing
> "Edward the Mad Shirt Grinder" by Quicksilver one evening
> and went straight to the record store and bought the album),
> and Leon Griffin and Henry Nelson nights. Also Sheila Hall
> weekends. Why can't the classic rock stations today play
> the sort of music FM100 used to play? Our so called classic
> rock station in Knoxville is little more than a steady diet
> of Aerosmith, Bad Company, ACDC, Lynryd Skynyrd and a
> handful of other super groups. Visits to other cities
> usually are the same thing - same old songs, same groups
> over and over. Rock 103 in Memphis is still fairly good
> about playing some of the older stuff, but all in all I
> don't think Rock 103 is as good as it was in the early 80's
> (although I was pleasantly surprised to hear Rock 103
> playing "Tell Mama" by Savoy Brown on my last visit to
> Memphis). Anyway, I just wanted to reminisce about FM100 in
> the AOR days - hope some of you will relate your FM100
> listening experinces. Anyone know the whereabouts of the
> DJ's I mentioned above? Also, it would be nice if any
> playlists from the AOR days were still in existence.
>
> The record industry complains that album sales are low,
> usually blaming internet downloading. I maintain that if
> radio stations, particularly rock stations, would expand
> their playlists, album sales would pick up. I have yet to
> hear anything from the newest Sheryl Crow or Rolling Stones
> albums on the radio here in Knoxville. One rock radio
> station here in Knoxville did play John Mayer for a while,
> but only "Your Body Is A Wonderland" and "Daughters." It
> was only after I borrowed two of John Mayer's CD's from a
> friend that I discovered what great music he was putting
> out. There were several songs on the two CD's that I
> thought were worthy of airtime that never got it. I can't
> help but believe that if this had been 1972 that Mike Powell
> would have had these "lost" cuts playing on the radio.
>
>
> Steve Forrest
> Knoxville, TN
> (Where you'll never hear "Legend of A Mind" by the Moody
> Blues on the radio)
>
When did FM100 go from "AOR" to "Easy Rockin' Stereo" to "Adult-Leaning Top 40" to now "Hot AC?" Anyone have any dates on these? I seem to remember it going to Hot AC officially when the rest of the country had a tug-of-war with their Top 40 stations going either mainstream or Hot AC around 1989.
 
> >
> When did FM100 go from "AOR" to "Easy Rockin' Stereo" to
> "Adult-Leaning Top 40" to now "Hot AC?" Anyone have any
> dates on these? I seem to remember it going to Hot AC
> officially when the rest of the country had a tug-of-war
> with their Top 40 stations going either mainstream or Hot AC
> around 1989.
>

I think the moniker was actually "Easy Rock In Stereo", which they adopted in 1972. I hated the new "mellow" format, though they still got heavy late at night. Eventually they dropped the "Easy" and became simply "Rock In Stereo" (73-74). In 1975 103.7 started playing Burkhart-Abrahms style AOR and FM-100 couldn't compete. By the time I was a senior in high school (1977) FM-100 was a CHR station. I don't know when and what subtle formatic changes they've had since then.

This is all from memory; feel free to correct me on dates, etc.

-- MAR
 
>
> I think the moniker was actually "Easy Rock In Stereo",
> which they adopted in 1972. I hated the new "mellow"
> format, though they still got heavy late at night.
> Eventually they dropped the "Easy" and became simply "Rock
> In Stereo" (73-74). In 1975 103.7 started playing
> Burkhart-Abrahms style AOR and FM-100 couldn't compete. By
> the time I was a senior in high school (1977) FM-100 was a
> CHR station. I don't know when and what subtle formatic
> changes they've had since then.
>
> This is all from memory; feel free to correct me on dates,
> etc.
>
> -- MAR

I'm virtually positive the above dates are not correct as I was a die-hard FM100 listener in my high school years, and I graduated in 1974 from Memphis Ridgeway. I am pretty sure it was 1975 when the "Easy Rockin' Stereo" (or Easy Rock in Stereo, whichever) began. Some 1975 albums I distinctly remember hearing tracks from were Joan Baez "Diamonds and Rust" which hit the charts May 1975, and Kraftwerk's "Autobahn" which charted in Feb 1975. In the spring of 1975 FM100 started playing songs that did not fit the album format. I remember calling and requesting something by Lou Reed and was told by the DJ (I think it was Clarence James) that he could no longer play that. He would not give any details, though. It was not a drastic overnight change. Softer rock tunes worked their way in and the harder stuff was phased out. For a while, Memphis did not have an AOR station except for Southwestern University's WLYX and twice a week for a short while on WMPS-FM. WMPS-FM 97.1 was a classical station, but twice a week after FM100's album days they had a program called "Choice Cuts." Can't remember the DJ, but seems like it was on Tue and Thur nights for two or three hours. I recall rumors that WMPS-FM was going to switch to AOR (I also remember rumors around 1974 that FM100 was going to switch to country) If I remember correctly, WZXR 102.7 made the change from automated country to album rock in 1977. WZXR and FM100 were never competitors in the AOR formats. By the time WZXR began AOR, FM100 had long abandoned it. If anyone knows Ron Olsen, he might be able to pinpoint these dates more precisely. I remember listening to Ron playing AOR on WLYX before he went to FM100. Rob Grayson also might be able to shed a little light on this since he spent a lot of time at WZXR. Does anyone have any contact with Mike Powell, Greg Hamilton or some of the other DJ's from FM100's album era?

Steve

An update to my post - for some reason during the night I remembered that I heard "Honey Honey" by Abba (or it might have been the version by Sweet Dreams) on FM100 when things began changing. I thought at the time it was a little out of format. I just looked up the chart date on that song and it was late 1974, so it was about that time that the changeover began to take shape. Wow this is becoming a real test for the memory bank.

SF
<P ID="edit"><FONT class="small">Edited by AlbumOldies on 02/12/06 08:26 PM.</FONT></P>
 
> > > ...I used to love
> > > WHBQ-AM 56, WMPS-AM 68, and WMC FM100 in the late 60's
> and
> >
> > > early 70's. ... there was just something about FM100's
> > choice of album cuts
> > > that made them different....
> >
> > Hey Steve...
> >
> > Great post... as a kid growing up in rural Northeast
> > Arkansas in the early 70s there's simply no way to
> > understate the influence FM-100 had on me, even to this
> day.
> > Modern-day "classic rock" formats don't even come close.
> I
> > was also a WMPS baby, before I switched over to FM. WHBQ
> > didn't put a listenable signal out where I lived, but I'd
> > watch George Klein on his Channel 13 TV show every weekend
>
> > (yes, we actually had cable TV in Walnut Ridge in 1970...
> > got 5 different channels!).
> >
> > Great memories... Here in Nashville the (low-rated,
> > under-powered) AAA station WRLT does an oldies-AOR style
> > show on Saturday mornings called Retro Lightning, which
> > comes close to sounding like that style of radio, but they
>
> > only focus on one year each week. Deep Tracks on XM
> channel
> > 40 is also good at re-creating the early-AOR vibe.
> >
> > -- MiddleAgedRocker
>
> Hey Rocker, give me a holler, I also grew up in WR and
> Hoxie....I think the email address is in my profile.
> Dan
> >I USE TO LOVE FM100 BACK IN THE 70'S AND 80'S.really liked the jingles like the fm100 i hear memphis , would love to have a copy of it.how long was that jingle?? oh yes, the good ole days....back when you could actually listen to good top 40 radio.IMHO
>
 
I came to town in 1976, and pretty well had my head in AM top 40, first at WHBQ then WMPS, so I still regarded FM100 as an "album rock" station at that time. I guess it was around the time 103 switched to Rock, FM100 did their "Star Rock 100" thing. I still remember hearing the first FM100 "jingles", a concept that at the time took some getting used to.
The "Crank It Up" Rock103 we remember so well really didn't get the hardened edge until late 1979 or early 1980. True, it was AOR from the beginning (1977), but when I started there in early 1979, "Tragedy" by the Bee Gees was in current rotation. I think the C-2's still had "Three Times A Lady" and "Strawberry Letter 23" strewn in. At one time I remember FM100 could play "Renegade" by Styx in middays, but it was dayparted out of middays on 103! Following one of the Superstars programming conventions, Tom Owens announced at jock meeting the the word had come down from on high to Rock! That meant AC/DC in middays and "rockin' the cradle from the birthplace of rock and roll". And it meant what we referred to as the "de-wimpification" of the library.
RG
 
> I came to town in 1976, and pretty well had my head in AM
> top 40, first at WHBQ then WMPS, so I still regarded FM100
> as an "album rock" station at that time. I guess it was
> around the time 103 switched to Rock, FM100 did their "Star
> Rock 100" thing. I still remember hearing the first FM100
> "jingles", a concept that at the time took some getting used
> to.
> The "Crank It Up" Rock103 we remember so well really didn't
> get the hardened edge until late 1979 or early 1980. True,
> it was AOR from the beginning (1977), but when I started
> there in early 1979, "Tragedy" by the Bee Gees was in
> current rotation. I think the C-2's still had "Three Times
> A Lady" and "Strawberry Letter 23" strewn in. At one time I
> remember FM100 could play "Renegade" by Styx in middays, but
> it was dayparted out of middays on 103! Following one of
> the Superstars programming conventions, Tom Owens announced
> at jock meeting the the word had come down from on high to
> Rock! That meant AC/DC in middays and "rockin' the cradle
> from the birthplace of rock and roll". And it meant what we
> referred to as the "de-wimpification" of the library.
> RG
> HEY Rob, do you have access to any of the old FM 100 jingles.especially the i hear Memphis(i think that is the name of it).i worked in Louisiana with a dear friend of yours,the late Skip Wilkerson.what a great guy with one of the smoothest voices ever.(WTIX) that FM 100 jingle was just a great sing along..
 
> > HEY Rob, do you have access to any of the old FM 100
> jingles.especially the i hear Memphis(i think that is the
> name of it).i worked in Louisiana with a dear friend of
> yours,the late Skip Wilkerson.what a great guy with one of
> the smoothest voices ever.(WTIX) that FM 100 jingle was
> just a great sing along..
>
The jingle you mention was actually a song by a local band, The Breaks, called "Memphis, I'm Coming Home". Email me ([email protected]) and I'll see if I can scrape it up.
RG
 
MAR brings back good memories

> > > > ...I used to love
> > > > WHBQ-AM 56, WMPS-AM 68, and WMC FM100 in the late 60's
>
> > and
> > >
> > > > early 70's. ... there was just something about
> FM100's
> > > choice of album cuts
> > > > that made them different....
> > >
> > > Hey Steve...
> > >
> > > Great post... as a kid growing up in rural Northeast
> > > Arkansas in the early 70s there's simply no way to
> > > understate the influence FM-100 had on me, even to this
> > day.
> > > Modern-day "classic rock" formats don't even come
> close.
> > I
> > > was also a WMPS baby, before I switched over to FM.
> WHBQ
> > > didn't put a listenable signal out where I lived, but
> I'd
> > > watch George Klein on his Channel 13 TV show every
> weekend
> >
> > > (yes, we actually had cable TV in Walnut Ridge in
> 1970...
> > > got 5 different channels!).
> > >
> > > Great memories... Here in Nashville the (low-rated,
> > > under-powered) AAA station WRLT does an oldies-AOR style
>
> > > show on Saturday mornings called Retro Lightning, which
> > > comes close to sounding like that style of radio, but
> they
> >
> > > only focus on one year each week. Deep Tracks on XM
> > channel
> > > 40 is also good at re-creating the early-AOR vibe.
> > >
> > > -- MiddleAgedRocker
> >
> > Hey Rocker, give me a holler, I also grew up in WR and
> > Hoxie....I think the email address is in my profile.
> > Dan
> > >I USE TO LOVE FM100 BACK IN THE 70'S AND 80'S.really
> liked the jingles like the fm100 i hear memphis , would love
> to have a copy of it.how long was that jingle?? oh yes, the
> good ole days....back when you could actually listen to good
> top 40 radio.IMHO
>

MAR, I remember WRLT and you sure are bringing back some fun memories from Nashville. We were mornings: Bootle, Rob and Rox at the Fox in Nashville (Classic Rock). Once we got in Carl P. decided to head over to Country, man did we have a blast! Bottle was formerly with Carl P., Rob was Rob Harder from here and me(Rox). Rob and I both came from Z-98 at that time. It was then Gen. Mgr. Diane Kruthaupt with some help from Randy Lane who put us together as a team and names. (grin) Talk about literally falling out of our chairs fun doing mornings there! Sure did some crazy stuff too.
 
Re: FM100 - And Rock 103 Album days

> The "Crank It Up" Rock103 we remember so well really didn't
> get the hardened edge until late 1979 or early 1980. True,
> it was AOR from the beginning (1977), but when I started
> there in early 1979, "Tragedy" by the Bee Gees was in
> current rotation. I think the C-2's still had "Three Times
> A Lady" and "Strawberry Letter 23" strewn in. At one time I
> remember FM100 could play "Renegade" by Styx in middays, but
> it was dayparted out of middays on 103! Following one of
> the Superstars programming conventions, Tom Owens announced
> at jock meeting the the word had come down from on high to
> Rock! That meant AC/DC in middays and "rockin' the cradle
> from the birthplace of rock and roll". And it meant what we
> referred to as the "de-wimpification" of the library.
> RG
>

Hello Rob, and thanks for the Rock 103 memories. I liked the era of Rock 103 with you, Tom Owens, Tony Yoken, etc that was around in the early 80's. The era of the Rock 103 Walrus, "Concert Kits," "Rock and Roll Control of the 80's" motto, and of course "Crank It Up." I really liked the album selection - you guys would play tracks from albums like Linda Rondstadt's "Mad Love." I think I have on tape you playing a cut from that LP called "Girls Talk," which was written by Elvis Costello. Great album. I was listening the night in 1977 when they made the change from country to rock on 103. I was also listening the afternoon when WZXR dumped the Z103 format and became "The Eagle" WEGR, playing "Quality Rock and Roll." I recorded the whole narration when they made the change and played "Layla," signalling the return of Rock 103. Do you remember the exact date on that change? I'd like to label the tape.
 
Re: FM100 - And Rock 103 Album days

I was also listening the afternoon
> when WZXR dumped the Z103 format and became "The Eagle"
> WEGR, playing "Quality Rock and Roll." I recorded the whole
> narration when they made the change and played "Layla,"
> signalling the return of Rock 103. Do you remember the
> exact date on that change? I'd like to label the tape.
>
I don't remember the exact date. I was in exile at WMC(We Milk Cows)79 during the Z103 thing. Art Wander was in charge of the changeover, and I quickly horned back in to do afternoons. It was a strange time. Remember, when Rock103 made the transition to Z103, THEY GAVE AWAY THE ALBUM LIBRARY. HOW STUPID WAS THAT? We had to rebuild the library, and some things were one-of-a-kind. CD's were just coming into vogue, so when we played something from CD we made a big deal about it. When Art went back to doing WREC, I took the interim PD slot, then they hired Howie Castle. Perhaps the most lasting thing I did during my tenure was to hire Zeke.
RG
 
Re: FM100 - And Rock 103 Album days

> >
> I don't remember the exact date. I was in exile at WMC(We
> Milk Cows)79 during the Z103 thing. Art Wander was in
> charge of the changeover, and I quickly horned back in to do
> afternoons. It was a strange time. Remember, when Rock103
> made the transition to Z103, THEY GAVE AWAY THE ALBUM
> LIBRARY. HOW STUPID WAS THAT? We had to rebuild the
> library, and some things were one-of-a-kind. CD's were just
> coming into vogue, so when we played something from CD we
> made a big deal about it. When Art went back to doing WREC,
> I took the interim PD slot, then they hired Howie Castle.
> Perhaps the most lasting thing I did during my tenure was to
> hire Zeke.
> RG


Rob (I live for the weekends) Grayson,

I wondered for years what happened to the album library at FM100. I had horrible visions of all these classic LP's going in the dumpster. I suppose few stations keep a real library anymore; guess it's mostly on a computer hard drive.

During a period in the 80's when Memphis had no album rock station (the Z103 era) I used to talk rock music a lot with a friend who was a manager of a Pop Tunes record store. He told me one day that someone had been in and bought tons of albums and we immediately began speculating that some radio station in Memphis was going to switch to album rock. Sure enough, it wasn't long that the word came that at 3pm (whatever day it was) there would be an important announcement on Z103. I do remember the Eagle 102.7 (I guess the first radio station in Memphis to mention the decimal point in their frequency) letting listeners know when something was on CD. I also remember a DJ named Carter Davis on the new Eagle playing some great stuff. There was a morning guy on the Eagle that didn't stay long - I later heard him on a rock station in Little Rock; can't recall his name offhand. I think this was about the time the current Wake-Up Crew was getting together. Interestingly, I had been out in Denver, CO some in the mid-80's listening to a rock station there and when I got back to Memphis I wrote them a letter complimenting their playlist and got a nice reply back. Copied on the letter was none other than Art Wander, who had set that station up. The station in Denver was KAZY.

Something I'd like to ask you since you are still in the business, and have experience in several formats - What has happened to rock and roll radio on FM? Is there no demand for a true rock station that plays the classics AND new stuff? FM100 in the 70's and Rock 103 in the 80's found all kinds of new stuff to play and mix in with the older stuff. Not only is there no new music to be found, you won't find today's classic rock stations playing Joni Mitchell like FM100 did in the 70's or Linda Ronstadt like Rock 103 did in the 80's. Is there not enough new stuff to keep listeners interested?

SF
 
Re: We had two turntables and a Volumax, and we liked it!

> Something I'd like to ask you since you are still in the
> business, and have experience in several formats - What has
> happened to rock and roll radio on FM? Is there no demand
> for a true rock station that plays the classics AND new
> stuff? FM100 in the 70's and Rock 103 in the 80's found all
> kinds of new stuff to play and mix in with the older stuff.
> Not only is there no new music to be found, you won't find
> today's classic rock stations playing Joni Mitchell like
> FM100 did in the 70's or Linda Ronstadt like Rock 103 did in
> the 80's. Is there not enough new stuff to keep listeners
> interested?
>
> SF
>
I guess I would say what everyone says to me every time I say "why don't we just do it like we used to.." They always say IT'S DIFFERENT NOW!
I'm not a big picture guy, but if I were, I would point back to when the new owners leveraged their way into buying chains, and came through with cookie-cutter employee lists sent down from the lenders... if your job description wasn't on the list, you were fired. They had to have a list because they didn't have a clue how to run a radio station without one. Focus groups, consultants and research don't give you Dewey Phillips, they give you Ryan Seacrest.
RG
 
for Rob grayson

I think I saw you on the internet in a picture at the old 56. Is that really you back then in a chair all leaned back and chillin'? Email me or reply here if that is you. Good talking to ya a while back at rock 103. Hows the Sirius Satellite thing goin'?
 
Re: for Rob grayson

> I think I saw you on the internet in a picture at the old
> 56. Is that really you back then in a chair all leaned back
> and chillin'? Email me or reply here if that is you. Good
> talking to ya a while back at rock 103. Hows the Sirius
> Satellite thing goin'?
>
Was it the one where I was wearing an MSU t-shirt? That was me, circa age 19, taken after the remodeling of the Control Room (we were broadcasting from the standby control room during all the Elvis death hoopla, incidentally).
I am currently not a part of the Sirius Elvis lineup, but I'm deep bench in case of emergency. About 7 people would have to be simultaneously sidelined for me to ever see the big bird again. Argo took mornings, and is belting them out daily from Graceland. Life, they say. comes at you fast!
I'm back at the new Wilkerson Sound Studios location in Brunswick. Right now I'm recuperating from a little light surgery, but next week when I can drive again, I'll resume doing the local part of WKNO's Morning Edition, and doing fill-in at FM100.
Thanks for asking!
RG
 
> > Hello everyone,
> >
> > I recently found about this site from Steve West and have
> > nearly gone blind reading up on the Memphis and east
> > Tennessee boards. I feel most fortunate to have grown up
> in
> > Memphis and gotten the chance to listen to so many great
> > radio stations in the 60's 70's and 80's. I used to love
> > WHBQ-AM 56, WMPS-AM 68, and WMC FM100 in the late 60's and
>
> > early 70's. I was really disappointed when FM100 dropped
> > the album rock format in '75 and went with the "Easy
> Rockin'
> > Stereo" programming. In fact I am still mad about that!
> To
> > this day I have never heard another AOR station that is as
>
> > good as FM100 was then. Although I have found Rock 103
> > versions 1 and 2 (before and after Z103 era) to be good,
> > there was just something about FM100's choice of album
> cuts
> > that made them different. They used to play everything
> from
> > the Allman Brothers to ZZ Top, and everything in between.
>
> > With FM100 you could get Joni Mitchell, Moody Blues,
> > Frampton's Camel, Carole King, Jeff Beck, Emerson Lake and
>
> > Palmer, Elton John, Henry Gross, David Werner, Velvet
> > Underground, David Bowie, Savoy Brown, Wishbone Ash,
> > Traffic, Santana, Uriah Heep, Quicksilver Messenger
> Service,
> > Billy Joel, Todd Rundgren - the list goes on and on. The
> > personalities were also great. Greg Hamilton in the
> morning
> > playing those great country rock songs by Pure Prairie
> > League and others, Mike Powell mid-days, Ron Michaels
> > afternoons, Greg Siggers evenings (I recall him playing
> > "Edward the Mad Shirt Grinder" by Quicksilver one evening
> > and went straight to the record store and bought the
> album),
> > and Leon Griffin and Henry Nelson nights. Also Sheila
> Hall
> > weekends. Why can't the classic rock stations today play
> > the sort of music FM100 used to play? Our so called
> classic
> > rock station in Knoxville is little more than a steady
> diet
> > of Aerosmith, Bad Company, ACDC, Lynryd Skynyrd and a
> > handful of other super groups. Visits to other cities
> > usually are the same thing - same old songs, same groups
> > over and over. Rock 103 in Memphis is still fairly good
> > about playing some of the older stuff, but all in all I
> > don't think Rock 103 is as good as it was in the early
> 80's
> > (although I was pleasantly surprised to hear Rock 103
> > playing "Tell Mama" by Savoy Brown on my last visit to
> > Memphis). Anyway, I just wanted to reminisce about FM100
> in
> > the AOR days - hope some of you will relate your FM100
> > listening experinces. Anyone know the whereabouts of the
> > DJ's I mentioned above? Also, it would be nice if any
> > playlists from the AOR days were still in existence.
> >
> > The record industry complains that album sales are low,
> > usually blaming internet downloading. I maintain that if
> > radio stations, particularly rock stations, would expand
> > their playlists, album sales would pick up. I have yet to
>
> > hear anything from the newest Sheryl Crow or Rolling
> Stones
> > albums on the radio here in Knoxville. One rock radio
> > station here in Knoxville did play John Mayer for a while,
>
> > but only "Your Body Is A Wonderland" and "Daughters." It
> > was only after I borrowed two of John Mayer's CD's from a
> > friend that I discovered what great music he was putting
> > out. There were several songs on the two CD's that I
> > thought were worthy of airtime that never got it. I can't
>
> > help but believe that if this had been 1972 that Mike
> Powell
> > would have had these "lost" cuts playing on the radio.
> >
> >
> > Steve Forrest
> > Knoxville, TN
> > (Where you'll never hear "Legend of A Mind" by the Moody
> > Blues on the radio)
> >
> When did FM100 go from "AOR" to "Easy Rockin' Stereo" to
> "Adult-Leaning Top 40" to now "Hot AC?" Anyone have any
> dates on these? I seem to remember it going to Hot AC
> officially when the rest of the country had a tug-of-war
> with their Top 40 stations going either mainstream or Hot AC
> around 1989.
>
FM100 was never AOR...it was BEFORE AOR at the time it was called Cosmic or Progressive Radio...same format different name. By the way Steve I don't do very well on time lines but Greg did Mid-days and Mike did Mornings unless they traded spots after I left town and before Mike went to "Quad" 104.<P ID="signature">______________
“I like pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.”
- Sir Winston Churchill</P>
 
> > >
> > When did FM100 go from "AOR" to "Easy Rockin' Stereo" to
> > "Adult-Leaning Top 40" to now "Hot AC?" Anyone have any
> > dates on these? I seem to remember it going to Hot AC
> > officially when the rest of the country had a tug-of-war
> > with their Top 40 stations going either mainstream or Hot
> AC
> > around 1989.
> >
>
> I think the moniker was actually "Easy Rock In Stereo",
> which they adopted in 1972. I hated the new "mellow"
> format, though they still got heavy late at night.
> Eventually they dropped the "Easy" and became simply "Rock
> In Stereo" (73-74). In 1975 103.7 started playing
> Burkhart-Abrahms style AOR and FM-100 couldn't compete. By
> the time I was a senior in high school (1977) FM-100 was a
> CHR station. I don't know when and what subtle formatic
> changes they've had since then.
>
> This is all from memory; feel free to correct me on dates,
> etc.
>
> -- MAR
>
Rock 103 signed on in September of 77. In 1975 Abrams only had three stations Louisville, New Orleans and Miami. I was working at WRNO "The Rock of New Orleans" in 1975. I came back home when Rock 103 signed on.<P ID="signature">______________
“I like pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.”
- Sir Winston Churchill</P>
 
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