Lkeller said:
I mentioned it earlier in this thread, but as a "free form" album rock station, KPPC Pasadena had no equal (in my opinion) in 70-71 when Les Carter was running it - not even KSAN, and certainly not the KMET or KLOS of that era.
Llew:
The last days of Les Garland and the first days of Gerry Cagle were pretty rough. 1979 was fine. It was 1980 that it got sideways.
Dr. Don was about the only constant, oh...and Don Sainte-Johnn. Dave Sholin had moved on to an RKO corporate gig, Rick Shaw and Big Tom Parker crossed the street to KYUU, John Mack Flanagan had walked out over money, Mark McKay was at WRKO, Big Bob Anthony bought a station in Santa Rosa...
About the only thing that went right was that Mike Novak came back from KYNO.
And the music...well, 1980 wasn't a great year for Top 40 or album rock, the two styles that Garland fused to avoid disco. And KFRC was still making fun of New Wave, so that wasn't there to help.
It wasn't until '81, when Gerry Cagle threw out the charts and went seriously rhythmic, playing the Gap Band instead of Air Supply, that things began to work. Sholin came back, Gerry hired Jackson Armstrong, Mark McKay came back, Gerry hired Bill Lee, Gerry hired Bobby Ocean...and from there until Cagle's departure in very early '84, KFRC was arguably the best ever.
KBCA was remarkable...especially in the years I mentioned. I still miss it.
I never heard KPPC...not having a stick on Mt. Wilson, it wasn't one of the FMs on the cable system in Bishop, and by the time I was spending any kind of time in L.A. with an FM reciever, they were long gone. I need to round up some airchecks.