The format in 1970 on 92-7 Stereo was the following: Male Vocal, Instrumental, Female Vocal, Instrumental, Group Vocal, Instrumental, and back again. How quaint. And absurd. Songs on albums that weren't crossed off with a magic marker or black crayon were NEVER to be played. So it was left to each jock to pick what he wanted.
I played Spanky & Our Gang as a GROUP vocal one night, (well it wasn't crossed off) and I got a call telling me to actually BREAK the record and put it under the PD's door. True. The point of ALL of these threads as I'm getting is the following: EACH radio station of any merit, especially those that have been around for over 30 years has a rich history of not only formats, but ownership, personalities, sales dogs (an affectionate term), and even OFFICE intrigue. It's like ANY other business in that way, but the missing ingredient that other businesses lack? Show business. It's zany, unpredictiable, fickle, back stabbing at times, and FUN most moments. I would hope that before radio disappears, each station designate a historic document that can be kept in a front display case (like WCTC has) just to show the history and very important nature that station's play in their respective communities. Do it NOW before it's gone forever. I would hate to lose all of that history. I know Rich Phoenix and the NJRM folks want to do that in ONE place, but each station needs to keep its own archive. And if ANY of you former employees or just casual listeners have momentos of the old days, share it with the station. They'd likely LOVE to see it and save it for future generations of radio folks (if their are any) to marvel.
BE BIG!