This is a great thread... I’m really enjoying the reflection here, but I won’t be lured into the “CONsultant” debate... It’s been raging for decades, and like certain notorious political issues—no cogent opinion seems to sway ANY critic or apologist. I can easily recall a dozen good stations destroyed by such outside quarterbacking... Then I’m reminded of the “class acts” like Ted McCallister (working for E. Alvin), Gary Havens, and Ron White (who I had a VERY PRODUCTIVE experience with).
Secondly, I’m not going to cry over that spilled-milk known as “the disappearing Oldies/Classic format”. ‘Never did—‘never will—I don’t need to... My 240-gig hard-drive and $300 StationPlaylist software suite, iPod, and XM subscription more than provide for my happiness. So long as “radio” remains obsessed with its over-competition for 30-somethings and fantasizes about its fortunes with a youth demo that [for the first time in nearly sixty years of media history] maintains little or NO “hip factor” for over-the-air broadcasting; while content to casually dismiss listeners with many-decades of loyalty—in my mind, this industry fully invites what it is destined to receive.
Steppenwolf said:
I'd like to hear the same radio station play:
Move Over by Steppenwolf
Out In The Country & One Man Band by Three Dog Night
Land Of 1000 Dances by Wilson Pickett
Theme from Shaft by Issac Hayes
Polk Salad Annie by Tony Joe White
25 or 6 to 4 by Chicago
My Cherie Amour by Stevie Wonder
Go Down Gamblin by Blood Sweat & Tears
All of these songs received airplay on top-40 legend WLS, Chicago.
Ever gonna happen? Of course not. But with my "mp3 radio station", I do hear them all.
I kinda’ like Steppenwolf’s “mp3 radio station”... As for his namesake—what an awesome rock band that managed throughout their chart career to remain true to their roots [unlike REO Speedwagon]—yet maintain a T-40-friendly nature.
“Hey Lawdy Mama” was a killer tune—but charted no higher then the mid-30s. I’d add
“Sookie Sookie [SOO]” to his S-Wolf favs that never charted [maybe it was TOO risqué at that time for the mother/daughter hit-music station]. I could never understand the mindless “AM edit” of
“Magic Carpet Ride” [they removed ALL of the “carpet ride”]... Granted, the over-seven-minute album version was a radio no-go, but there was an obscure “FM edit” (4:25) that saved some of that element. It recently re-surfaced on a import Steppenwolf anthology on the UK MCA label.
“Go Down Gamblin” is my favorite BS&T tune (and the perfect “summer rocker”)... Another is the uncharted
“I Can’t Quit Her”. Indianapolis’ WNAP [FM] had a penchant during that era for snagging cool cuts from major albums and turning them into “station hits”. While the AM T-40 in town was burning
“Spinning Wheel”, ‘NAP elected the latter. They also gave shorter-shift to Three Dog Night’s
“Out in the Country”—instead choosing to rotate
“Cowboy” from the same LP, because (as they boldly-proclaimed on-air:
“It’s a better song and WE CAN”.
I’ll reserve a preset for any Classic Hits station that plays
“Polk Salad Annie”... Nothin’ like a bit of southern-fried “smooth” to balance-out the Stones.
1. How Do You Do by Mouth & McNeal – That one’s a poster child for the “Oh-Wow” category... I disliked it as a “current”... It later “grew” on me—but so does gray hair these days 
2. When I Die by Motherlode – Mr. Wolf... What a memory you have... Dick Bartley would be proud! I liked that tune [‘still do!], but never had the canabbas to play it on my own (terrestrial) Oldies station. It’s “popularity” may well be evidenced by its near-total lack of CD availability... I FINALLY found a quality copy of it last year on an obscure (and over-priced) series of imported oldies compilations from Canada.
4. Psychadelic Shack by the Temptations – I enjoy that one also, but it was shadowed by a station’s tendency to burn-out their higher-charting songs [granted, many of those were better plays]. It may have been shorted simply for the mere number of great hits from the Temps.
6. Soul Deep by The Box Tops – Just inside the top-20 and their third-highest performer, but a MUST on ANY classic-intensive station worth their electric payment... But what about “Sweet Cream Ladies”?—another WLS affection.
Speaking of “WLS affections”... How about The New Colony Six [
“I Will Always Think about You” and
“Things I’d Like to Say”]? Both were mid-chart nationally on the Mercury label; while back in Chi-Town—they were top-sellers. “The Big 89” even played several earlier non-charting NC6 tunes from their local Sentar-label era. My distant memory was jogged within a few seconds of hearing
“Love You So Much” on the recent Sundazed-label CD re-release of that group’s
“Colonization” album. It NEVER charted... But I remembered it well—despite FOUR DECADES passed... I had often heard it on WLS!
Now for
my personal “low-chart—low-play” favorite...
“Baby Come Back” by The Equals [with Eddie Grant]... I had to pay $28 to an Amazon private seller for the British import unauthorized for distribution here. Nearly every person [outside that
crock known as
“the money demo”] I have played it for, somehow recalls it, and exclaims:
“What a cool song... I haven’t heard that one since the seventh grade.” I’m sure the corporate radio apologists here who still manage a “meal ticket” from an industry at the brink of “life-support” will tell us why!