Scott Fybush said:
I was out for much of the evening, but a dial scan here in Rochester around 10 PM turned up nonstop MJ on WDKX...and nothing (at least in my brief check) on the other usual suspects, WFKL, WPXY or WKGS. I forgot to check WLGZ.
I can't think of Michael Jackson and radio without remembering the one time I saw him in concert, when the Jacksons Victory Tour stopped at Rich Stadium in - what, 1984? WNYS was all over the thing - banners everywhere, as I recall. I don't remember WKSE having had a presence...or were they still WRXT at that point?
It was August, 1984. Nearly 25 years ago. CHR WNYS 104.1 was all over that show, although they weren't the co-sponsor. I was Production Director at 97 Rock at the time, but that didn't keep me from going to the show with my oldest son, who would start kindergarten that September. We were so much younger then. 97 Rock played "Beat It" for a very short time, mostly because of Eddie Van Halen's wicked guitar on the track.
My son, now an adult, stopped over the house last night and talked about the event, which he remembered surprisingly well. It was a packed house. We had average seats, not radio comps but good enough, in the lower bowl. The weather was pleasant. The crowd was an encouraging mix of young and old, black and white, hipsters and gawkers; there were plenty of families. The atmosphere was as electric as any of the Stones and Who concerts I'd seen and worked at the stadium, with substantially less alcohol and pot. I won't go as far as saying the Michael Jackson concert impressed me as being
great, but it was an entertaining
show. More of a spectacle. I enjoyed it and so did my son.
With all the Michael Jackson trubutes pouring in, I'd like to remember the superstar who entertained 70 thousand people that evening in August 1984, with hits from "Off the Wall" and "Thriller." I'd like to remember the kid with the vibrant voice and energy who fronted the Jackson 5 with radio hits like "ABC," "I Want You Back" and "I'll Be There." (We'll try to forget about "Ben.") But the tawdry weirdness and his own admission of his associations with children in his adult life leave me feeling ambivalent about his death, without being judgmental.
No one can deny Michael Jackson's genius as an entertainer. And didn't it feel good to talk up "I Want You Back," "Thriller" or "Off The Wall" back in the day, or in Oldies-Classic Hits formats. Those songs always seemed happier than the young man who sang them.