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The 50s/60s live at WINY-Putnam CT (and so does Bill Alley)

U

uncleDJ

Guest
Greetings,

A SE New England voice from the past has been quietly making noise in the Quiet Corner of northeastern CT with a 'truer than true' Oldies show Sunday mornings from 6-11am on WINY-1350AM/Putnam (Osbrey Broadcasting).

It's me...Bill Alley...always somewhere in this business trying to bring back the good old days when radio was fun, the music was infectiously good and everyone felt better about tuning in.

A little history first, latest to earliest, on 'moi':

-2007, May: Gary & Karen Osbrey and I agreed to my hosting Juke Box Gold on WINY, a 5-hour Sunday morning adventure into the 50s and 60s quickly disappearing from other stations. This is PERSONALITY MUSIC RADIO like we used to do!!! Audiences listening in (including online at winyradio.com) instantly take to the show which replaced a nostalgia music program hosted by friend and UPBEAT DJ owner/operator Greg Bugbee. Goal here has always been to keep it fun, interesting, and packed with the doo-wap, oldies standards, early rock, soul, jazz & country crossovers we knew and still love today. It is truly radio we all remember from this era, not the typical 'hits' most oldies stations keep in rotation...(when was the last time you heard 'Roll With Me Henry' -Etta James on Oldies radio?)

-2003-04: WINY-1350AM/Putnam CT again, this time hosting PM Drive with newsman and good buddy John Ryan (retired). People still talk about this quirky duo and the stuff we'd yap about on air. Add the other news junkie on staff at the time (Josh Walsh, still with ESPN HQ and occasionally on traffic for WTNH9/New Haven CT) and you have probably one of the best teams I've ever worked with behind the mic over 30 years of dabbling in this biz.

-1993 to 2002: Working new formats, having reviews from stations and groups of potential investors (including PriceWaterhouse Coopers, an ABC/Cap City insider who shall remain en cognito) but sadly not getting much headway. The formats I've been told then were '10 years ahead of their time', a great pat on the back but didn't do squat to change the sound radio has desperately needed. Some of that formula had to do with format merging, or in some cases, 'smashing' formats together to make a wider base of music with great appeal (yeah, even my real estate agent has asked for a copy of the demos) but no 'buyer'.

-1992: WRIB-1220AM/Providence, a show called 'The Creation Station' which was all Contemporary Christian and featured interviews from up and coming artists plus news of the day. Part of the adoring fan base? The birthing rooms at Women & Infants' Hospital; they loved it!

-1989-92: More format work, formed some exploratory teams to find a station and financing. Was very serious about 1370/WKFD and knew of its plight, took a look at it with the broker at the time (Mike Rice) and saw the potential of reviving it, but alas, no money. Now Astro Tele-Communications has the license for sale and the new 'origin' at Narragansett. As long as that stick is right by the water, with its improved day/night strength (according to the stats I've obtained from the FCC files) it will kick out a mighty good and clean signal as it did in the old days with a paltry 500 watts. Anyone wanna do oldies with me owning that license? Let's talk...

-1989: Greater Media Cable/Worcester, your sales agent for Videopages TV40, all ads, all the time, with music underneath. Got there with the help of longtime friend and manager at the time Margaret Coward and brought in old friend Scott Singmaster.

-1983-88: Most of the time was spent doing broadcast engineering with Sister Mae Jeffers on Martha's Vineyard from my home studio in Oak Bluffs MA. The show was 'House of Prayer', and I traveled extensively with this incredible lady evangelist. Show heard regularly on WROL/Boston, WACE/Springfield MA and WWRL/NYC. When not recording, I was refining 'Real Life Media', my Real Life format merging Contemporary Christian music to popular music...again, getting attention but no takers.

-1982-83: WMVY 92.7FM/Martha's Vineyard, PD and managed with Carl Shmidt (yeah the old Manager at WEEI 103.3FM/Boston when they were a killer progressive music station) to move the station from canned to AOR-Adult (the format is still in place today).

-1982: WGFP 940AM/Webster-Dudley MA as PD. My 'Oh God' moment as the station was poorly managed during time time; we used to joke that the calls stood for 'We've Got Financial Problems' or 'We're Going For Poverty'. Actually had to hold down the electrical panel there one day while screaming at the old GM (who believe it or not moved on to WBZ...!!!) to get engineering in to fix this hazard or I'd walk. Loved the audience there, though, and still connect with them today on the oldies show at WINY.

-1981-82: Overnights, WSNE 93.3FM/Taunton-Providence. Under the PD-ship of the great Holland Cooke and with associates like the late great Mike Sands (who also lived in Swansea MA as did I), Charlie Jefferds (words fail to say enough wonderful things about this person and legend) and Bob Holland (Charlie & Bob were also friends of my aunt, so it kinda made things like an extended family!)

-1980-81: WARA 1320AM/Attleboro MA, under the PD-ship of the great Tom Cuddy (yeah, the WBZ dude). Tom, John 'Coach' Colletto and I made up the voices of WARA's music lineup (yeah, Colletto is WPRO sports legend). Of all the teams I've played with in this business the one photo I still cling to is the TOM/JOHN/SELF snapshot at a WARA event...proof positive of a team which is to this day one of the best I've ever had the privilege to join. Managed some ratings romp in the Providence book on my afternoon show too...good days!

-1979: WGNG/Pawtucket. That is when 550AM was Gold 'n Great, the days after their impressive books against powerhouses WPRO-AM/FM and WPJB-FM in the hits days of the 70s. Still, the format they ran is almost identical to the one I use today...and being around the likes of Chuck Stevens, Dave Grayson (another WINY/Putnam voice and one who always kept me in stitches!) and Vic Kovich (great voice, even greater personality and truly wonder what became of him) it was a time when the right people were there...but the wrong management was in place.

-1978: WBET-AM/WCAV-FM, Brockton MA. Brought in by fellow Curry College associate Dave Richards (aka Richard Perez) I had nights on AM and tended to the Harris automaton on FM when they were rock and disco. (And yes, everyone, I still love disco and always will.)

-1977-78: Where it all began, on the '50,000 WATT STATION WITH THE 1,000 WATT SOUND' as we called it...WRLM/Taunton (bought in the early 80s by Outlet to become WSNE). It was not the fault of the on-air and behind the scene folks (Al DeStafano, Gene Faltus aka Stevie Nicks's biggest fan as engineer and Coby Anderson, the office darling who was the reincarnation of Lonnie Anderson in the WKRP sitcom role). The RLM stood for co-owners Ronald and Lucy McCarthy, and the owners plus their station manager called the shots. They were elderly back then and not too trusting of change. Always a bad sign in this business when resistance comes from the top! At the same time I had stints at Curry College on WMLN-FM during their 10-watt days and still keep in touch with one of the greatest people connected with communications. Truly, George Wharton is, was, and always will be revered for being the perfect 'glue' to keep us broadcast wannabees sane, and is one of the most incredible people I've ever known; compassionate, loyal, trustworthy and resolute. Those were the days when Curry put out some great talent, and had the strength of professors like Roger Allen (WRKO fame) to get us fledglings in line. And, if you go way, way back to 1974, you'll find out that I really got my feet wet at RI School of Broadcasting (Salty Brine recommended I start there first) when it was in East Providence.

OK, so now you know and now I've realized that first book I'm working on has had some more documentation finished. Hope I didn't bore any of you and those of you who remember this stuff take some time to jot me a note, OK? If you're serious about kicking butt again on air find me sometime and we'll do some 'stragedy' as I like to say.

You can contact me here, by email ([email protected] and put 'FOR BILL ALLEY' in the subject line or direct: [email protected]) or by just listening in on Sunday mornings to WINY 1350 if west of Providence (or online at winyradio.com).

'Til next time...-Bill
 
Hey Bill,
You didn't bore anyone. I remember you & our radio paths did cross at one point but I remain anonymous on here since the Internet is such an evil place. You were a good guy & a real pro. Nice to see you're still doing it, & more importantly, enjoying it. I'll try to catch your show online some time. By the way, do you remember a Bill Lally? He was probably on the air in the area around some of the same times you were. I know he worked at WWON at one point among other stations in RI. Always confusing between the 2 of you since your names sounded identical when pronounced.
 
Runrigger said:
Hey Bill,
You didn't bore anyone. I remember you & our radio paths did cross at one point but I remain anonymous on here since the Internet is such an evil place. You were a good guy & a real pro. Nice to see you're still doing it, & more importantly, enjoying it. I'll try to catch your show online some time. By the way, do you remember a Bill Lally? He was probably on the air in the area around some of the same times you were. I know he worked at WWON at one point among other stations in RI. Always confusing between the 2 of you since your names sounded identical when pronounced.
WOW...a blast from the past...I've never seen such a FULL resume. How can you even remember all of those places ? I was at 15 stations, but some are just a blur. Had the pleasure of working with Bill at WGNG, and also steered him toward WARA...have wondered what ever happened to him since then ???
 
Bill:

I have tuned in on the stream--wonderful job! Those old WINY jingles add that theater of the mind touch. Have any idea what company made them (PAMS, JAM, etc.). I think those should be put on CD and sold in the WINY listening area with proceeds to a charity in the area. Of course it would be for the hardcore WINY listener.

And in terms of the music on Jukebox Gold, needless to say the old cliche of they don't play that stuff anymore would apply. Of course you have the old standbys like you would hear on nearby stations like DRC-FM, B 101, WODS and that new 790 AM True Oldies Channel.

One more question, ever considered moving the show to Saturday nights?
 
I'm enjoying the music True Oldies 790 is playing. Same goes for WLKW/WNBH. Sure you'll hear the usual songs.
But they're playing deeper cuts. That the FM stations will never play.. Props to the AM side!!
 
Keep that great music alive! I had to write since I passed through several of those stations you cited on a previous post (WKFD, WARV, WEAN, WJAR), all in the 1970s, before I moved to television and later to newspapers - here in Florida. WKFD, co-owned by Ron Hickman and Lou Adler (the AM-drive co-anchor on WCBS), played The Statler Brothers, Vikki Carr, Henry Mancini, etc. WARV, a Sconnix station if memory serves, was Top 40. I'd put on "Taxi" by Harry Chapin so I could dash next door to the Steak & Shake for lunch. WEAN was an all-news operation when I worked there in 76-77, the first and last R.I. station with a 24-hour news format and a place of great memories. This is am absolutely true story any radio person can appreciate: On a Saturday afternoon, I was in the newsroom with a colleague, Dave Cokely, when we got word that the governor's helicopter crashed in rural West Greenwich. Gov. Phil Noel was rushed to a hospital in serious condition. We're the only news station in the state. So Cokely rushes to the hospital, uses alligator clips to connect a land-line phone so we can carry the doctor's medical briefings live on the radio. We were proud of ourselves -- until Monday, when the station G.M. sent us a nasty memo for "breaking format." At "920-JAR," during the '80 Winter Olympics, I taped pieces every night for Charlie Jefferds' show the next morning. He was a fantastic guy to work with.
 
Steve,

Great to see you're alive and kicking! I fondly remember the old WKFD 1370-which I later worked at under 2 different ownerships.I remember you also on 790 during its all-news days, and Dave Cokely, too. I left New England in 2001, and am now working in the Philly market at a couple of AMs.
 
I weekended at WARV Steve, but it was after you left. After another of your WEAN compadres Dave Nickerson too. It was definitely Sconnix. All I remember about them is one guy named Randy, but from what little I saw of them they seemed like nice people. Loved that side studio door that you could dash out of for a food run, but for what they paid you ended up breaking even if you hit the Steak'N'Shake too often. I loved that station. There was just something about broadcasting out of what used to be someone's kitchen.
 
More golden memories of Rhode Island radio: I talked my way into WHIM's control room one night in the early 70s, at that little building on Warren Avenue in East Providence. The 6-to-midnight guy was a deep-voiced jock named Danny Williams and I got to see that custom-made console with the four turntables on it.
 
Well, Steve...a foray into the inner sanctum of Mr. Franks' legendary habitat! Had a feeling that board was customized. Some of my show is based on what WHIM did back in the 60s. Can't believe it, I'm not a country guy at all...but find myself drawn to many of their old crooners who did cross over back in the day, whose work is now the stuff of legend.

By the way, if anyone can dig up a copy of something I heard on WEAN eeons ago - Charlie Rich doing a jazzified version of Old Man River - please let me know. (Maybe it wasn't Charlie Rich...but if not a darn good sound-alike).

-Bill Alley
 
Hmmm...the show on Saturday nights? Well, no...this show replaced a slowly dated big band/crooner program which my good buddy Greg Bugbee ran in the Sunday 6a-11a timeslot. It was a progression that allowed the audience to welcome Juke Box Gold, all of us knowing it was the next step in our nostalgia programming.

The show at this slot is a big hit...you may never see it show on the ARBs but the phones are active, it's on all over the listening area, and the log gets good advertising.

Sadly, we deal with just 79 watts at dusk, so it would be pointless to run JBG Saturday nights unless (or until) the online listening public were cramming on live.

For the die-hard oldies enthusiast, give a listen to AM740/Toronto overnights (CHWO) or am740.ca anytime. I get some pretty darn good ideas from this creative bunch. Got a few friends there, they can send ideas along too.

Stay tuned to this spot as well, got some special stuff coming up later in the year and I'll post here to fill you in.

-Bill Alley
JUKE BOX GOLD
WINY-AM1350/Putnam CT
winyradio.com
[email protected] (to write to Bill personally)
 
OK gang, it's been a long while since a post ended up here...but keeping the thread going for those who want a follow up on the show and yours truly.

Since the last post the show has been a Sunday staple, with folks in area towns telling me 'everyone's radio in town is tuned into you, Bill!' I know these people, I'm humbled and pleased; this program has been 'part club, part cocoon' to everyone. The club mentality is in the presentation, I've always got the coffee & danish going (and some great listeners literally send in the danish on occasion). The show's typically non-political, pro-community approach to information give listeners a chance to escape the all too increasing alarm of problems surrounding our land and nation these days. Heck, I need the escape...thought they'd enjoy the bliss of food, folks and fun (sorry about the snatching of that phrase o holder of the Golden Arches) and the hunch has paid off.

The music world has also taken notice, with one of the loveliest groups of the oldies genre as ardent supporter. The Angels - with hits like 'My Boyfriend's Back', 'Til' and 'Cry Baby Cry' - and specifically latest 'Angel' Joanne Dumas have been sharing the show with other oldies heavyweights. September of this year we opened up the microphones to Joyce Vincent (one of the 'Dawn' singers from Tony Orlando's gang) who shared with the audience both past and present endeavors. The Angels have made a few appearances on the show; it's a kick to have them so close to the studio via Joanne. She's an endless, boundless dynamo with a fire for this music.

With the holidays upon us, we'll be steeped in Christmas for a few weeks and planning more interviews, and just 'more' for 2010.

One of the side projects taking completion is with longtime friend and DJ associate Greg Bugbee, owner of Upbeat DJ LLC, a 'top shelf' music, staging and consultation business which has grown over nearly 15 years from a young DJ with turntables to a leading business involved with weddings (including planning, vendors and the like), staged productions, broadcasts and even large scale stuff (Worcester Auditorium, Relay For Life and Woodstock Fair at the fairgrounds in Woodstock CT, to name a few). The business finally has a website which I penned for the company, nearly completed but running, and you can get a glimpse of 'moi', Greg and Patrick Kuhn (who also worked at WINY earlier this decade). Check it out at:

upbeatdjllc.com

PS: Yes, I am the one with the forever beard...the old guy...but as you will witness I can still jump! And if you get a sense the photos are eerily similar to ideas from the Beatles, Bo Donaldson, etc., well then...you know how my creative mind works. A BIG thank you to Jeff Crandall who is the state of CT's photographer of record among being a helluva shutterbug for all kinds of other endeavors.

Bill Alley
WINY's Juke Box Gold
1350AM/Putnam CT
[email protected]
 
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