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Is it time yet?

SFStatic said:
Very well said, Sky! As long as people remember you and JMF and a number of others fondly, you will live forever.

Ditto, SFStatic!...
Especially your line, Bobby:
>> They died out, not because of the times or advancing digital age, but because of lack of support, no back up. Once clusters of frequencies began to form, loyalty to Listeners and their Pipers, faded to black, replaced immediately with the ubiquitous, intemperate, piggishness that we know now.

And, JMF, we will continue our good thoughts, despite the negativity that permeates
what's left of the (creative) radio arena...
--jay
 
skyrocker said:
The once buoyant, boisterously cheerful voices behind the mics and music of the 60s and 70s are not with us any more. DJs, as we have known them, are dead.

They died out, not because of the times or advancing digital age, but because of lack of support, no back up. Once clusters of frequencies began to form, loyalty to Listeners and their Pipers, faded to black, replaced immediately with the ubiquitous, intemperate, piggishness that we know now.

No doubt, JMF and Bobby Ocean were incredible to listen to. But this post reminds me of an old James Cagney movie where everybody's bemoaning the death of Vaudeville because the Next Big Thing, talking movies, has come on the scene.

C'mon folks! Times change. You want DJs? Listen to the non-comm stations, where interesting DJs are alive and well. You want to hear interesting mixes? Go to a club or bar where DJs are in big demand for their mixes.
 
DavidKaye said:
skyrocker said:
The once buoyant, boisterously cheerful voices behind the mics and music of the 60s and 70s are not with us any more. DJs, as we have known them, are dead.

They died out, not because of the times or advancing digital age, but because of lack of support, no back up. Once clusters of frequencies began to form, loyalty to Listeners and their Pipers, faded to black, replaced immediately with the ubiquitous, intemperate, piggishness that we know now.

No doubt, JMF and Bobby Ocean were incredible to listen to. But this post reminds me of an old James Cagney movie where everybody's bemoaning the death of Vaudeville because the Next Big Thing, talking movies, has come on the scene.

C'mon folks! Times change. You want DJs? Listen to the non-comm stations, where interesting DJs are alive and well. You want to hear interesting mixes? Go to a club or bar where DJs are in big demand for their mixes.

Chill, David. First, the discussion is about radio DJs - radio personalities, really...but in any case, it's not about club DJs and mixes. Last time I checked, this was radio-info.com.

Second, people are allowed to engage in a little nostalgia - and talk about the "good ol' days," and it doesn't necessarily mean they're denying the existence or the greatness of the new "Big Thing." Actually - despite the reported evils of radio consolidation, there are a few good young DJs on commercial radio - including a few on Wild 94.9, MOViN, and other stations. But I can like them and even enjoy the occasional hip-hop song, and still talk about Ocean and JMF, and what a great station KFRC was...right?

Blame that KIFR guy...he started it.
 
I take full responsibility. But LKeller, you stand corrected, you can reminise all you want. As a matter of fact, amyone on this board can reminise.
 
David Kaye makes an interesting point about noncomms. I've found that the jocks who are closest to what I grew up with (in terms of content and relatability, if not style) are the ones on the NPR classical and jazz stations here in Phoenix. And I was stunned to discover this. I'm digging the midday jock (Janine Miller) on KBAQ more than anybody else on the air (save KOOL's Steve Goddard, who continues to amaze me with how he does more with less).

But beyond that, David...this isn't merely an exercise in nostalgia, nor tilting at the windmills of changing times. As Osh notes in his post, the DJ (and with him/her, the passion, excitement and human element of radio) wasn't done in by technological advance or changing tastes, but by a lack of support from those who run the stations, who over a 25-year period have devalued the contribution of those talents to the point where they're forbidden to create, entertain and inform and are now seen by the audience as irrelevant...because that's all they've been allowed to be for so many years.

It has, simply, killed a once-vital American industry. And it's because the industry didn't maintain the relationship with its audience.

As much as I love Bobby Ocean and John Mack Flanagan, I'd love more to be able to post on here about the dozens of great talents I've heard since Osh and JMF moved on to other endeavors. The ones that are on the air right now.

But the problem is there haven't been dozens. The business hasn't fostered the replacements...and every conversation about attempting to do great radio in San Francisco....not just among the contributors to this board, but apparently in the executive suites at CBS, keeps coming back to the call letters KFRC...a station that for all intents and purposes was dead the day Walt Sabo walked in the door a quarter-century ago.
 
michael hagerty said:
David Kaye makes an interesting point about noncomms. I've found that the jocks who are closest to what I grew up with (in terms of content and relatability, if not style) are the ones on the NPR classical and jazz stations here in Phoenix. And I was stunned to discover this. I'm digging the midday jock (Janine Miller) on KBAQ more than anybody else on the air (save KOOL's Steve Goddard, who continues to amaze me with how he does more with less).

But beyond that, David...this isn't merely an exercise in nostalgia, nor tilting at the windmills of changing times. As Osh notes in his post, the DJ (and with him/her, the passion, excitement and human element of radio) wasn't done in by technological advance or changing tastes, but by a lack of support from those who run the stations, who over a 25-year period have devalued the contribution of those talents to the point where they're forbidden to create, entertain and inform and are now seen by the audience as irrelevant...because that's all they've been allowed to be for so many years.

It has, simply, killed a once-vital American industry. And it's because the industry didn't maintain the relationship with its audience.

As much as I love Bobby Ocean and John Mack Flanagan, I'd love more to be able to post on here about the dozens of great talents I've heard since Osh and JMF moved on to other endeavors. The ones that are on the air right now.

But the problem is there haven't been dozens. The business hasn't fostered the replacements...and every conversation about attempting to do great radio in San Francisco....not just among the contributors to this board, but apparently in the executive suites at CBS, keeps coming back to the call letters KFRC...a station that for all intents and purposes was dead the day Walt Sabo walked in the door a quarter-century ago.

Wow! Great post! You really get it. Thanks
 
"KFRC died the day Walt Sabo walked in the door a quarter-century ago."

"Michael: Nobody on this board could have said it any better! I was listening the morning "The Game Zone" started during the last 30 minutes of the doctors show, had no idea that there was going to be any different programing coming up at 9 am till the newspeople mentioned it. I remember thinking to myself whomever came up with this idea is out their minds! That was the real day KFRC died without a doubt.

"Walt Sabo burn in Hell!"
 
michael hagerty said:
the DJ (and with him/her, the passion, excitement and human element of radio) wasn't done in by technological advance or changing tastes, but by a lack of support from those who run the stations, [....]

I disagree. If listeners wanted to hear radio personalities the stations would still have them. What people wanted was the music. During the heyday of the DJ/personality, there was only the radio. Listeners heard the song first on the radio and then if they could afford it, they bought the record at the store.

Now they get the music from their iPods and MP3 players, CDs, etc. It's clear they don't want to hear radio personalities much anymore. Or if they do, they want to hear talkshows. While radio personalities are still alive and well on non-comms and eclectic stations such as KPIG, the audience is barely there for them.
 
"Now they get the music from their iPods and MP3 players, CDs, etc. It's clear they don't want to hear radio personalities much anymore. Or if they do, they want to hear talkshows."

DavidKaye: Well, who would have thought it? Why do you think there are so many talk stations in the bay area? DUH! Tell us something we don't know already. But thanks for playing!
 
DavidKaye said:
michael hagerty said:
the DJ (and with him/her, the passion, excitement and human element of radio) wasn't done in by technological advance or changing tastes, but by a lack of support from those who run the stations, [....]

I disagree. If listeners wanted to hear radio personalities the stations would still have them. What people wanted was the music. During the heyday of the DJ/personality, there was only the radio. Listeners heard the song first on the radio and then if they could afford it, they bought the record at the store.

Now they get the music from their iPods and MP3 players, CDs, etc. It's clear they don't want to hear radio personalities much anymore. Or if they do, they want to hear talkshows. While radio personalities are still alive and well on non-comms and eclectic stations such as KPIG, the audience is barely there for them.

Michael Hagerty's post was teriffic...really well written too. But I have to agree with David too, up to a point. Even back in the heydey of Top 40 and MOR radio, the majority of people I knew wished they would just "shut up and play the music." We who post here all loved the Real Don Steele. Many of my friends thought he was loud and obnoxious - they just didn't appreicate his 'act.'

By the 80s, when there were still many great personalities on the air, most of my friends couldn't name more than a couple of jocks, and often didn't even know station call letters...they'd say things like "I listen to that station..y'know...99 point something."

Like most things, it's been evolutionary, and gained momentum with the growing popularity of the FM band. I remember when KLOS came on the air in Los Angeles - I thought it was a truly dull, bloodless station. Unlike KMET which had a few jocks that liked to talk - KLOS only allowed their jocks to back-announce the songs, read the weather, and say "Rock N'Stereo KLOS." I'm sure they talked less than KOIT jocks do these days. As I remember, KLOS was the first AOR station in LA that gained mainstream popularity, and beat the competitors in the ratings for a number of years. That was 38 years ago.
 
Let me see if I can be more clear...because David and Llew are right...most listeners do want the jocks to shut up and play the music.

But...the truly great jocks connect and entertain at least some of those people some of the time...reducing the impression of interruption. Scale ALL on-air talent back to marginal liner card readers and you actually increase the impression of interruption...because the listener KNOWS when they hear that voice that they won't be entertained, informed or engaged...just told the same stuff they were told 40 minutes ago...which doesn't even include the time or temperature anymore...

In short, radio has stopped adding anything to the music beyond commercials and plugs for the website...and who wouldn't choose an iPod over that?
 
michael hagerty said:
Let me see if I can be more clear...because David and Llew are right...most listeners do want the jocks to shut up and play the music.

But...the truly great jocks connect and entertain at least some of those people some of the time...reducing the impression of interruption. Scale ALL on-air talent back to marginal liner card readers and you actually increase the impression of interruption...because the listener KNOWS when they hear that voice that they won't be entertained, informed or engaged...just told the same stuff they were told 40 minutes ago...which doesn't even include the time or temperature anymore...

In short, radio has stopped adding anything to the music beyond commercials and plugs for the website...and who wouldn't choose an iPod over that?

Very clear and very well said. I can't disagree with a word.
 
Lkeller said:
We who post here all loved the Real Don Steele. Many of my friends thought he was loud and obnoxious - they just didn't appreicate his 'act.'

I think you can count me out of the Don Steele lovefest, too. I didn't much go for Robert W. Morgan, either. Yeah, both had ballsy voices and could deliver liners with the best of them, but I seriously found them lacking in conversational skills. This is probably why then eventually left the Bay Area and ended up in LA, where big voices are more important than anything else in radio there.

JMF, Bobby Ocean, and Beau Weaver could/can all talk circles around RWM and Steele.
 
A ballsy voice is great to have, so long as it is saying things that matter to listeners. When it is just reading liners or obviously coming from someone that just loves to hear themselves, it's a total waste. You might as well just have Mr. Big Voice record station liners. The same is true of bad jingles...they fly right by, but the great ones you can see listeners singing along with in their cars.
 
[/quote]

You want to hear interesting mixes? Go to a club or bar where DJs are in big demand for their mixes.


[/quote]

To quote the great Jerome Lester Horwitz (Curly Howard, to the uninitiated) "I resemble that remark!"

And the reason I say that is, when I'm DJ'ing live upstairs in the Poster Room Lounge at The Fillmore on a "retro" show like Foreigner, Pat Benatar, Tower of Power, Santana, The Monkees, The Zombies, etc. , I am basically paying homage to the great radio DJ's that I grew up listening to here in San francisco during their heydays of the '60's & '70's, like John Mack Flanagan, Bobb Ocean ,Chris Edwards, Tom Campbell.

I grew up listening to the great Bay Are Top 40 AM stations like KFRC, KYA, KLIV, KDIA, & KSOL, while buying every 45 RPM single released from 1967 to 1972.

Still having & playing those very same records 40 some odd years later for those appreciative audiences at The Fillmore is my way of keeping those tradtions alive.

As I'm posting this right now (1:10 pm PST, 11-06-09) I'm listening to KFRC 1550 AM playing Scott McKenzie's "San Francisco (Wear Some Flowers in Your Hair), another record that i bought during the "Summer ofd Love", 1967.

Now how's that for serendipity?!

I don't care what anyone says about Scott Shannon's "True Oldies Channel", it's better than the alternative, having no oldies at all to listen to on the radio!

Love, cheers, & long live pop music on the radio,

Bowler "Professor Phil Moore, Jr." Bob in Brisbane

P.S., If you're at the Joe Perry Project show at The Fillmore on Wednesday, November 25th, come up and request something!
 
Having grown up with LA radio, and only having heard KFRC at night, the big surprise for me when I moved to Ukiah at age 20 in 1976 was how much more human and relatable SF jocks were....not just Top 40 either, but KSAN more so than KMET...KSFO more than KMPC...KNBR more than KFI.

Whether it's the insular showbiz nature of LA or what...jocks that made the human connection there were few and far between. SF seemed to have them with every turn of the dial.
 
DavidKaye said:
Lkeller said:
We who post here all loved the Real Don Steele. Many of my friends thought he was loud and obnoxious - they just didn't appreicate his 'act.'

I think you can count me out of the Don Steele lovefest, too. I didn't much go for Robert W. Morgan, either. Yeah, both had ballsy voices and could deliver liners with the best of them, but I seriously found them lacking in conversational skills. This is probably why then eventually left the Bay Area and ended up in LA, where big voices are more important than anything else in radio there.

Huh? Morgan and Steele didn't 'eventually' leave the Bay Area...they weren't here for that long. And they left because they were offered an exciting chance to leave not-so-hot KEWB to get in on the ground floor of a new Top 40 station in Market #2. And I believe Morgan had already worked with Bill Drake in Fresno.

I was never a big Morgan fan, either. In the morning...er...morgan...I was usually listening to Lohman & Barkley on KFWB - who were brilliant, or whoever was on KRLA. I always thought Steele was fun though. My feeling at the time was that he was playing the stereotypical loud Top 40 jock, but satirizing it at the same time. That's what I meant when I said many people didn't get his 'act.' With his act, conversational skills were more or less irrelevant. CERTAINLY, baby...can you dig it?

DavidKaye said:
Lkeller said:
JMF, Bobby Ocean, and Beau Weaver could/can all talk circles around RWM and Steele.

I do agree with that, and with Michael's point. The great SF jocks were/are much more relatable as people.
 
Llew beat me to it. Steele to me was a studied parody of showbiz insincerity, broadened from '67 on to include a sense that he wasn't fully in control and that it could all spectacularly blow up at any moment. To allow a connection would have been to break character.

I found him very entertaining until about '72, when he seemed to stop having fun with it. He got some of his mojo back and loosened up a bit at KTNQ from '76-'78 and was arguably at
his best from '85 on at KRLA, KODJ, KCBS-FM and KRTH.

Morgan was all about the line he was delivering at any given moment. Great voice, stellar delivery...but it was focused at all times on the punch line. And from about '69 until his move to weekends at KMPC in '75, there was a real mean streak to it. I think he developed an ability to converse, be relatable and connect while at KMPC. You could sense the genuine warmth between him and Big John McIlhenny.

But as time went on, he was faced with competitors who were more naturally communicative with their audience (Charlie Van Dyke), better able to transition to it (Charlie Tuna) and/or made it a bigger part of what they did (Rick Dees).

And none of those guys...good as they were...could touch Dr. Don Rose.
 
Lkeller said:
Huh? Morgan and Steele didn't 'eventually' leave the Bay Area...they weren't here for that long. And they left because they were offered an exciting chance to leave not-so-hot KEWB to get in on the ground floor of a new Top 40 station in Market #2. And I believe Morgan had already worked with Bill Drake in Fresno.

Not so hot KEWB? KEWB was an incubator for DJ talent. Note that not only Morgan and Steele, but also Casey Kasem and Gary Owens went through KEWB. KEWB wasn't exactly podunk. Prior to KEWB, Morgan had been in Monterey, Fresno, and Sacto, and Steele in Spokane and Portland. So, for both, KEWB was a step up.
[/quote]
 
DavidKaye said:
Lkeller said:
Huh? Morgan and Steele didn't 'eventually' leave the Bay Area...they weren't here for that long. And they left because they were offered an exciting chance to leave not-so-hot KEWB to get in on the ground floor of a new Top 40 station in Market #2. And I believe Morgan had already worked with Bill Drake in Fresno.

Not so hot KEWB? KEWB was an incubator for DJ talent. Note that not only Morgan and Steele, but also Casey Kasem and Gary Owens went through KEWB. KEWB wasn't exactly podunk. Prior to KEWB, Morgan had been in Monterey, Fresno, and Sacto, and Steele in Spokane and Portland. So, for both, KEWB was a step up.

[/quote]

I wasn't trying to put down KEWB. I'm aware of their history and the great jocks that came through there. KEWB and the Bay Area were definitely steps-up for both Morgan and Steele. But I'm under the impression that KEWB's best days were already behind it by 1965 - against KYA - even before KFRC joined the picture. I know that was true in LA of KFWB, which had been eclipsed by KRLA after 4 or 5 years of competition. Maybe Michael can verify with some ratings info from that era.

Going to LA under Drake was a HUGE step for both men, and I have to believe that even before KHJ premiered, there was a sense that it would be a winner.
 
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