Hello EZway2go (and all)....
Thank you for the kind inquiry - I must say, it's nice to be remembered!
I don't post here much anymore, really just because of the passage of time. Back in the early to mid-2000's, my posts were fueled by the fact that I was actually working on-air in the format and by my own personal enthusiasm for the music.
I have, admittedly, an arch-conservative conception of a standards radio format. I worked on-air at a station that called itself "Home of the Great American Songbook." It was Sinatra, Torme, Ella, Tony, Peggy, Nat, Basie, Artie et al performing the music of the Gershwins, Cole Porter, Johnny Mercer, Harold Arlen, Jimmy Van Heusen, Sammy Cahn...you get the idea. It was not Neil Diamond, Anne Murray, the Carpenters, and David Gates and Bread.
Playing the Great American Songbook on-air was a radio rush like I'd never experienced. I really felt like I was at the apex of my career, doing what I truly loved on the radio.
The station was an echo of WNEW...which had gone off the air in the early 90s!
Back in that time, 8 - 10 years ago, I somewhat naively believed that there would always be a place for this great music on the radio. That it would never die. I used to get a lot of phone calls from listeners who shared my enthusiasm, but I closed my eyes to the fact that they were in their 60s, 70's, and 80's.
Around '05 I saw Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme in concert. Steve's performance, in particular, was breathtaking. He was in his early 70s, but could've been 45. That night, I really believed it would all go on forever.
But, the "Home of the Great American Songbook" soon changed to something more prosaic...oldies, then talk (gag me).
I consciously or unconsciously - not sure which - hung on to the hope that some nearby station would pick up the format. Of course, it didn't happen.
Now, gosh, 10 years have passed. What seemed like a viable radio niche back then is just a warm memory. I've moved my career into radio production over the past 5 years and I love it just as much as I loved playing the standards. At age 60, I am blessed to be working productively and joyfully in my lifetime craft.
So, I don't post much on the standards board because I've kinda drifted away, with some regret. Still love the music, but I pretty much get my fix from online sources like AOL Radio's "Sinatra Style" or AirstreamFM.com.
Still really like these boards and post mostly on Buffalo-Niagara Falls, my hometown board (even though I now live out of state)
Thanks again for the mention, EZ . Yes, I enjoyed those days and those robust discussions. I miss it.
Nick Gerard
aka Nick Summers or Nick Seneca, depending on the market
