Radio Remembers Uncle Joe Benson
Longtime Los Angeles and syndicated Rock personality 'Uncle Joe' Benson passed away on Tuesday, February 24 from Parkinson’s Disease, Parkinson’s
radioinsight.com
radioinsight.com
So sad, Uncle Joe was a great guy, and one LA's Best. May he RIP.![]()
Radio Remembers Uncle Joe Benson
Longtime Los Angeles and syndicated Rock personality 'Uncle Joe' Benson passed away on Tuesday, February 24 from Parkinson’s Disease, Parkinson’sradioinsight.com
The Rock DJs I grew up with have been dropping off way too fast lately, especially the KLOS ones. Just within the last few years, Jim Ladd, Geno Michelini, and Shana have all passed. Now add "Uncle" Joe Benson to the list.![]()
Radio Remembers Uncle Joe Benson
Longtime Los Angeles and syndicated Rock personality 'Uncle Joe' Benson passed away on Tuesday, February 24 from Parkinson’s Disease, Parkinson’sradioinsight.com
Don't forget to ad JED THE FISH
Absolutely not forgetting Jed, who just passed this past year and was an amazing talent and a key component of the "World Famous" KROQ, but my post focused on the KLOS jocks that were all colleagues of Joe.Don't forget to ad JED THE FISH
The Rock DJs I grew up with have been dropping off way too fast lately,
Good points.Who was it who said "Life sucks, and then you die?" You're right, an entire generation of artists and the radio people who made them famous have been dying. Jed The Fish is another. These DJs played an important role in the lives and culture of young people at the time. Radio was really their only connection to the artists and the music. There were not many other places to see or hear AOR music. Pop music was occasionally featured on TV.
The thing about it is that very few of these rock jocks gained any fame outside of their home markets, and there were copy cat rock stations with knowledgeable DJs in practically every city. Boston had its share of rock stations. Peter Wolf, who later fronted the J. Geils Band, was originally a top rock DJ. WMMS Cleveland had Kid Leo, who now works with Little Steven Van Zant at Sirius. WMMR's Pierre Robert just passed away in October. I saw him included in the memorial segment at the Grammy Awards.
There was a direct connection between radio & records. I was just having a conversation with a record company friend who told me he began his career working at Licorice Pizza in LA. Talk about an entire industry that has disappeared. For a lot of people, their first job was working in a record store. That got them hooked on music, and for some of them, they either went into the record business or radio. Some did both. Some did neither.
But my point was there was this entire circular culture, with music, lifestyle, politics, and the radio. Yes, the radio. Hard to believe radio was part of the equation.
He was also the host of the nationally syndicated interview show "Rockline" for many years.
Actually, Jed did some nighttime fill-ins on KLOS a few years back. Otherwise, he wasn't officially on staff there.Jed was never on KLOS, though.
Joe Benson had an iconic voice and flow, "The Seventh Day" presentations were iconic... I just didn't know it at the time.
And that was always garbage. Did a few people tape the shows? Of course they did - on crummy cassette tapes with horrible sound that didn't have any artist packaging, artwork, liner notes, lyrics, etc. I guarantee that Uncle Joe sold way more legitimate albums than anyone taped.It's useful to point out that the recording industry included in the DMCA in 1998 rules that made it illegal for radio to play entire albums. They were angry that radio stations made it possible for people to avoid buying music by recording the albums off the radio. Previously they had lobbied the congress to pass a blank tape tax designed to compensate the industry for its losses. There were several provisions in the digital law that aimed to prevent satellite radio specifically from playing entire albums.
So while many view what Joe Benson and other DJs did as being wonderful for music, the industry itself didn't share that view, and sought to prevent them from doing it.
Did a few people tape the shows? Of course they did - on crummy cassette tapes with horrible sound
That "CD quality audio" on satellite radio is long gone, if it ever existed. So, the DMCA provision was a solution to a problem that wasn't there to begin with.The specific thing that triggered the rule was an ad campaign from one of the satellite companies that promised "CD quality audio." In their testimony before congress, the RIAA pointed to that specific ad. The DMCA was a copyright law, and satellite radio was making it possible for people to make CD quality copies of music. They wanted it banned. So it was written in the law and is still there today, even though nobody tapes music off the radio anymore. But when people talk about the things they liked about rock radio, this always comes up. People talk about hearing Abbey Road or Led Zepplin I for the first time on the radio. It made them buy those records. But the law prevents radio stations today from doing that.
That "CD quality audio" on satellite radio is long gone, if it ever existed. So, the DMCA provision was a solution to a problem that wasn't there to begin with.