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KFRC Memorial day weekend

Or for that matter, "Dinah Flo" (the follow-up to "We Were Always Sweethearts").

Boz is a local boy...that mattered at KFRC back in the day. Maybe it's mattering again. Can Tower of Power be far behind?

Actually, a countdown of hits by Bay Area artists (Boz, Tower of Power, Jefferson Airplane/Starship, Santana, Greatful Dead, Van Morrison, Huey Lewis and others) could be interesting.

---Michael Hagerty
 
Well heres an idea for any of the KFRC programmers for future holiday weekends.

I live in Tampa, Fl and i was waiting to see what our CBS Oldies Station was going to do after reading about the KFRC top 106 plans.

WRBQ the Lengendary Q-105 actaully played all #1 Songs from 1964-84, if it was on the charts and made it to #1 even for a week it was included in the rotation from Dolly Partons 9-5 to the Eagles Long Run, Men at Work's Down Under, Steve Martin's King Tut and a blast from the 70's Past the SWAT TV show theame song.

Word was spreading through out the Tampa Bay Area all weekend to bars, pool parties, beach decks as people were enjoying thease songs from the past that you just dont heare on a regular basis.

KFRC could pull this off from the 1966 when KFRC kicked into TOP 40 and right up til 1986 when they switched formats.
 
I'm surprised no one has yert suggested KFRC do what WLS has been doing on Memorial Day. Bring back the former jocks and let them rock.
 
michael hagerty said:
Actually, a countdown of hits by Bay Area artists (Boz, Tower of Power, Jefferson Airplane/Starship, Santana, Greatful Dead, Van Morrison, Huey Lewis and others) could be interesting.
---Michael Hagerty

You forgot Syndicate of Sound and Quicksilver Messenger Service (and I'm sure others I can't remember either). ;)
 
Maybe they didn't want to spend the bucks. Too bad, because a Bay Area version of the Big 89 Rewind would have been cool- the Rewind sure was!
 
I program an oldies station now, and KFRC just doesn't have any punch to it. Its more than just the same old songs thats affecting it. Listen to K-Earth, with a tighter playlist, its brighter, with personality and sounds great all the time. I haven't listened enough to completely put my finger on it, but compared to most oldies/classic hits success stories in the major markets and beyond, KFRC would be ranked dead last.
 
"I program an oldies station now, and KFRC just doesn't have any punch to it. Its more than just the same old songs thats affecting it. Listen to K-Earth, with a tighter playlist, its brighter, with personality and sounds great all the time. I haven't listened enough to completely put my finger on it, but compared to most oldies/classic hits success stories in the major markets and beyond, KFRC would be ranked dead last."

My opinion only as a listener - the KFRC play list is fine - it's a good balance of songs with a decent amount of variety...so it would make a good juke box - but the other elements of a fun radio station are missing.

The K-Earth jocks are obviously on a very short leash, and I think they're usually reading liners. But they never sound like liners. The DJs are pros who make it sound like they're having fun, without any of that stilted liner reading attitude you hear on stations like KOIT. They're also allowed to open the mic more often than the KFRC jocks. And never underestimate the hook of those old Drake style jingles. They're short, catch, fun, and they stick in your brain like glue. KFRC is using an odd combination of their mid and late 70s post-Drake jingles which I never thought were that great to begin with.

Another thing I've noticed lately...I'm not a radio professional or a technical person, so I probably can't explain it well. The microphone sounds tinny or something, and it seems like on the talk-ups, the mic volume is turned too low. I was listening to Jay Coffey yesterday who has a strong voice, and it seemed like he was talking loudly, but you could barely hear him. This morning, Tom Gomez sounded flat and tinny on air...he doesn't have the strongest set of pipes in the business, but he usually sounds fine.
 
Lkeller said:
"I program an oldies station now, and KFRC just doesn't have any punch to it. Its more than just the same old songs thats affecting it. Listen to K-Earth, with a tighter playlist, its brighter, with personality and sounds great all the time. I haven't listened enough to completely put my finger on it, but compared to most oldies/classic hits success stories in the major markets and beyond, KFRC would be ranked dead last."

My opinion only as a listener - the KFRC play list is fine - it's a good balance of songs with a decent amount of variety...so it would make a good juke box - but the other elements of a fun radio station are missing.

The K-Earth jocks are obviously on a very short leash, and I think they're usually reading liners. But they never sound like liners. The DJs are pros who make it sound like they're having fun, without any of that stilted liner reading attitude you hear on stations like KOIT. They're also allowed to open the mic more often than the KFRC jocks. And never underestimate the hook of those old Drake style jingles. They're short, catch, fun, and they stick in your brain like glue. KFRC is using an odd combination of their mid and late 70s post-Drake jingles which I never thought were that great to begin with.

Another thing I've noticed lately...I'm not a radio professional or a technical person, so I probably can't explain it well. The microphone sounds tinny or something, and it seems like on the talk-ups, the mic volume is turned too low. I was listening to Jay Coffey yesterday who has a strong voice, and it seemed like he was talking loudly, but you could barely hear him. This morning, Tom Gomez sounded flat and tinny on air...he doesn't have the strongest set of pipes in the business, but he usually sounds fine.

The KRTH jocks are on a short leash, but they do have a small amount of freedom. As for the mic's, I took a look at recent video of KFRC on You Tube and I can't tell what they are. From the wind screen and shape of mic it looks like they may be using a short shotgun mic, but it's hard to tell. The problem is that it's very hard to find engineers now days who have the "ears" needed to know how to supply the studio with good mic and most of all how to process them.

The other problem is that most of us remember what 610 KFRC sounded like. For the most part they had the very best engineers and for much of KFRC's golden years they used an RCA BK5B Ribbon mic that had phenomenal processing on the mic chain. Where I work we have engineers who just don't seem to be able to tell the difference anymore. This could be the case at CBS SF now as well... By the way, KRTH is using Shure SM5B's now. A great mic and a Jhani Kaye favorite. Problem is that Shure quit making them in the mid 1980's...
 
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