Ah, but they are fun to wade through!For those who don't want to wade through that entire issue of R&R, here's a link to that specific page:
Ah, but they are fun to wade through!For those who don't want to wade through that entire issue of R&R, here's a link to that specific page:
For those who don't want to wade through that entire issue of R&R, here's a link to that specific page:
Ah, but they are fun to wade through!
And further digging now indicates that it may have not happened. Kind of like the Uncle Don legend. But they were very popular in Atlanta, and they were all of a sudden off the air, enroute I think, to WABC.For those who don't want to wade through that entire issue of R&R, here's a link to that specific page:
Urban legend. Did not happen. I read an interview with Brian Wilson, and he said "Another One Bites the Dust" was not played in morning drive. Also, I know their PD, John Young. Ross and Wilson did not leave Z93 on the best of terms, but that story is not true.The same issue also reported that Ross and Wilson 'resigned' from Atlanta's Z93. That's not exactly how I recalled it - although I did not hear it directly, a friend who did winced at their dedication of "Another One Bites the Dust" to the missing and murdered children that was plaguing Atlanta at the time. I think the DJ's were suspended (or maybe fired?) before the record finished playing, and the General Manager issued a public apology. A lot of rough stuff happened on the radio that was not appropriate - then or now.
KLEO was a great station. In the late 70s, recall hearing that in others' cars when I was a teen before I could drive.In the Midwest KCMO In Kansas City went from Top 40 to News/Talk in 1980. They had the resources of their co-owned TV station to make that move. In 1984 in Wichita KLEO switched from what would be called a HOT AC today to Music Of Your Life. It worked out well for them ratings wise for a few years
Both great stations.I had seen it listed in some places and others call it Top.40 or Contemporary. The Kansas City Star radio listing's from early 1980 lists it as Middle Of The Road. I will say you are right. We lived in Emporia from 1978-81. I remember my dad listening to Music 81 KCMO on his AM car radio. He had to drive a lot for work in east central Kansas in those days and probably listened because of their strong signal. He switched to KMBZ after KCMO dropped music. KMBZ in the 1980s is a whole other story.
I believe that.As for "Brown Eyed Girl", it had been on the Hot 100 four weeks and was #66 when KHJ added it. It peaked at #10 in Billboard, but #2 at KHJ.
KHJ's chart ran fast in those days, though. It made #2 in just four weeks. That same week, it was still climbing in Billboard and was at #27.
At KHJ, after a week at #2, it went 3-4-14-gone. It was still climbing in Billboard, and didn't peak at #10 until a week after that.

I believe that.
Reading more about KHJ, I noticed, while the station took MANY chances playing "hitbounds" -- songs their PD thought would become big hits -- many weren't.
Also odd, The Beach Boys' Barbara Ann and Wouldn't It Be Nice never charted on KHJ's Top 30 charts.
Now, that doesn't mean the station didn't play the songs (I wasn't around to listen), but, reading a RD forum topic on it, it seems they weren't played), but that they didn't place on their charts.
Instead, KHJ played the flip side, God Only Knows, which was No. 39 on BB but Top 10 KHJ.
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Odd because the first went to No. 2 on Billboard and the other No. 8, but was AWOL on the charts.
I hope other LA stations played the great groups' hits.
I do like how they took chances and didn't wait inexplicably long to play a charting hit single, something that got rarer in the early 80s.As for the stiffs that did get played---Jacobs believed in his own ears and was willing to be wrong and "hear the hits first" was a big damn deal in L.A. in those days. Anyone who played the WABC game of waiting for a record to prove itself would have been roadkill. That changed over time and by 1973, that's how Paul Drew played it.
I recall a story about Brian Wilson in 1967-68 appearing at one of the LA Top 40s, offering to let the station be the first to play The Beach Boys' latest single.
The slow jock said thanks, but no thanks, "it's not on our playlist..."
A call to his PD had the PD almost screaming at him:
"It's BRIAN WILSON, dummo!! Play the song!!"
Terry was present at the public debut of “Heroes and Villains.”
“Brian was holding onto this single, like: ‘All right, world – I’ve got it,’ and waiting for the right time. He felt it was important to wait for the right time. It was a good record. This woman, I guess she was an astrologer – of sorts – she came by Brian’s house. She said to him, ‘Brian – the time is right.’ He was waiting for the word from this woman to release the record, I guess.
‘So he said, ‘All right.’ He called the whole group. It was like: ‘OK. Look. Here it is.’A small disk, you know. Seven inches. It was very solemn, very important. Weighty. A heavy situation. It was all, ‘Brace yourself – for the big one.’ All the group had those limos. And there was a caravan of Rolls Royces taking the record to KHJ. He was going to give the station an exclusive, just give it to them without telling Capitol.
“We got to the gate of KHJ. The guard wouldn’t let us in.
“A little talking, a little hubbub, a little bullshit. The guard was finally intimidated enough by four or five Rolls Royce limousines to open his gate. We got in the building, got to the disc jockey who was presiding over the turntable. It was pretty late, probably around midnight. Brian said, ‘Hi, I’m Brian Wilson, here’s the new Beach Boys single. I’d like to give you and KHJ an exclusive on it.’ And this asshole turned around and he said: ‘Can’t play anything that’s not on the playlist.’ And Brian almost fainted. It was all over. He’d been holding the record, waiting for the right time. He’d had astrologers figuring out the correct moment. It really killed him.
“Finally they played it, after a few calls to the program director or someone, who screamed, ‘Put it on, you idiot.’ But the damage to Brian had already been done."


Don't recall which station that was, but would a jock really refuse to play the latest Beatles song if Paul McCartney or another big well-known singer from another group made a station such an offer?
It took a lot less than that to get Jacobs to scream, on the phone or in person. At Radio Express, I just would not answer until he quit yelling, so he stopped using that technique with me. Years later, he told me in a email that I was "about the only person to figure that out".If you ever wanted to hear Ron Jacobs scream into a phone, that would do it.
True. It didn't really take anything to make Ron do that.It took a lot less than that to get Jacobs to scream, on the phone or in person. At Radio Express, I just would not answer until he quit yelling, so he stopped using that technique with me. Years later, he told me in a email that I was "about the only person to figure that out".
KRIZ/1230 Phoenix was sold to Family Life Radio in 1978. It ended Top 40 and got religion on 7/30/1978 as KFLR.
Also in Phoenix, KRUX/1360 switched from Top 40 to all-news via NBC's short-lived News and Information Service
in 1975.
KTAR/620 tried a Top 40 format in the early '70s, but dumped it for all-news in 1973.
Speaking of the Beatles, here's how I feel about the KTNQ approach:
If you ever wanted to hear Ron Jacobs scream into a phone, that would do it.
It is odd that some radio stations don't play big hits.I always wondered why KHJ didn’t play those Beach Boys songs.
Sometimes it is understandable why a station didn’t play a big hit. Maybe too controversial or too heavy or too easy or too R&B.
Other times it can seem odd. KHJ never charted the Monkees Valleri, although I’m almost certain I’ve heard that song on a Real Don Steele aircheck.
Another one, KHJ only played Sly Stone’s Everybody Is A Star, the B Side of the BB #1 Thank You.
KHJ didn’t like The Ohio Express although they did play sister act 1910 Fruitgum Co. In general, KHJ didn’t play nearly as much bubblegum as Midwest stations. WLS was all over the Ohio Express and the Archies and other similar records. However, KHJ played a lot of Sunshine Pop records, which in many ways is a more lightweight genre than bubblegum.
As I said on another thread, I love that Bill Drake let the RKO stations sound like their market musically. KFRC, KHJ, WRKO, WHBQ and CKLW playlists are very different in the 1960s and that makes that era so interesting

I always wondered why KHJ didn’t play those Beach Boys songs.
Sometimes it is understandable why a station didn’t play a big hit. Maybe too controversial or too heavy or too easy or too R&B.
Other times it can seem odd. KHJ never charted the Monkees Valleri, although I’m almost certain I’ve heard that song on a Real Don Steele aircheck.
Another one, KHJ only played Sly Stone’s Everybody Is A Star, the B Side of the BB #1 Thank You.
KHJ didn’t like The Ohio Express although they did play sister act 1910 Fruitgum Co. In general, KHJ didn’t play nearly as much bubblegum as Midwest stations. WLS was all over the Ohio Express and the Archies and other similar records. However, KHJ played a lot of Sunshine Pop records, which in many ways is a more lightweight genre than bubblegum.
As I said on another thread, I love that Bill Drake let the RKO stations sound like their market musically. KFRC, KHJ, WRKO, WHBQ and CKLW playlists are very different in the 1960s and that makes that era so interesting
It is odd that some radio stations don't play big hits.
I notice KHJ didn't play Chicago's Color My World, or rather, it didn't chart on the station's list. As it was a flip of Beginnings, they might have played it.
But still seems odd as the station,, from the airchecks I've heard, leaned more toward the AC stuff.

It's not so odd when you realize that back in those days, you didn't have one or two companies dominating a local radio market. What you instead had were many different stations with many different owners whose quirky tastes sometimes assisted in determining whether specific songs were added to the station's playlist, regardless of how well they were doing nationally.It is odd that some radio stations don't play big hits.
I notice KHJ didn't play Chicago's Color My World, or rather, it didn't chart on the station's list. As it was a flip of Beginnings, they might have played it.
But still seems odd as the station,, from the airchecks I've heard, leaned more toward the AC stuff.
I notice The Dave Clarke Five didn't chart so well on KHJ either.
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