D
DIZ Guy
Guest
Does anybody here realize that halloween marked the 30th Anniversary that Frank Zappa played the "Lather" album in its entirety on KROQ???????
calguy said:Funny thing about KROQ 30 years ago. Along with all the cool artists like Zappa, The Tubes, Flo & Eddie, Roxy Music, Sex Pistols, Patti Smith, The Runaways, Bob Seger, Bo Diddley, The Rolling Stones, Television, New York Dolls, etc you could also hear a tune out of nowhere like "Mack The Knife" by Bobby Darin. They were all over the map and played cool from other era's too.
JimmyJames said:The thing I wonder is with terrestrial losing young audience left and right, why don't some of these underperforming autopilot stations truly take a chance again like KROQ did?
Hire some young, enthusiastic talent and within the boundaries of FCC regs, let them go crazy. You might just stumble on something viable in the process. I'd like to hear a modern version of truly outside the box, break the playlist rules radio. At least give it a shot on HD.
calguy said:Funny thing about KROQ 30 years ago. Along with all the cool artists like Zappa, The Tubes, Flo & Eddie, Roxy Music, Sex Pistols, Patti Smith, The Runaways, Bob Seger, Bo Diddley, The Rolling Stones, Television, New York Dolls, etc you could also hear a tune out of nowhere like "Mack The Knife" by Bobby Darin. They were all over the map and played cool from other era's too.
I did middays at KROQ in '76 and '77. It sounded that way because it was that way. Complete anarchy encouraged by management (such as it was). Every show was different, reflecting the DJ's personality. With guys like Shadoe Stevens, Steven Clean and Jimmy Rabbitt, it was a pretty eclectic station, and we had the time of our lives!
Bob Gowa
I wonder what ever became of that KROQ?
Not to mention Rick Carroll's arrival in 1979, solidifying the Punk/New Wave/Modern Rock influence on the music played and his instituting an actual format which became "Rock of the 80s" over a three-year period.The music splintered into a bunch of micro formats, the audience got pickier about what they wanted to hear, and then they aged out of the demo.I wonder what ever became of that KROQ?
Hire some young, enthusiastic talent and within the boundaries of FCC regs, let them go crazy. You might just stumble on something viable in the process. I'd like to hear a modern version of truly outside the box, break the playlist rules radio. At least give it a shot on HD.