Ah, a sample of (I assume) your work, preserved (apparently by chance) for your own reference 46 years later!
Nope. Never worked at KBIG. Or in Los Angeles, for that matter. Just came up when I was looking around for examples to post here.
Ah, a sample of (I assume) your work, preserved (apparently by chance) for your own reference 46 years later!
Remember, Shulke (SRP) and Bonneville had "matched flow" versions where each quarter-hour set was pre-programmed. Shulke and Marlin Taylor put a lot of thought and time into "perfectly" combining the segues. That service was more expensive than the random select version because there were many more reel exchanges each month.In the 60s, 70s and 80s, Beautiful Music stations really didn't put that much thought into segues, either. Each set was largely a tempo progression, and built into the format was that one song did not touch the other.
Except Peters Productions "Music for the Two of Us" which had fades and overlaps between songs.There was always a pause---at least one second---in between the end of one record and the beginning of the next. Not a huge gap---more like what you'd hear between songs if you were playing an album, maybe a touch longer.
Except Peters Productions "Music for the Two of Us" which had fades and overlaps between songs.
I ran it, somewhat modified, in San Juan and was vastly the #1 FM, beating all the others as well as 4 competing Beautiful Music formats. I never noticed songs being shortened, just faded for the overlapping segues.And it was a terrible version of Beautiful Music. They would force fade songs after about two minutes.
After about 2 years, I switched to FM100 Plan. Paid more, ratings went down. After another year, went to all Salsa as Z-93 and from a 4 share to 33.5.(That was what replaced my groundbreaking AC format on KAAP-FM in the Oxnard/Ventura CA market after the station was sold in 1981. I was very happy to see that it lasted less than a year.)
Ah, I misunderstood.Nope. Never worked at KBIG. Or in Los Angeles, for that matter. Just came up when I was looking around for examples to post here.
(he had to ask---yikes!)Ah, I misunderstood.
Are there any airchecks of stations you did work at?
c
Sorry(he had to ask---yikes!)
Scoped.Sorry
Are these scoped or unscoped?
c
Sounds like it Petered outAnd it was a terrible version of Beautiful Music. They would force fade songs after about two minutes.
(That was what replaced my groundbreaking AC format on KAAP-FM in the Oxnard/Ventura CA market after the station was sold in 1981. I was very happy to see that it lasted less than a year.)
This is true. There were gaps between songs on B/EZ one could drive a Kenworth through, on some stations as long as five seconds, but typically 2-3 seconds.In the 60s, 70s and 80s, Beautiful Music stations really didn't put that much thought into segues, either. Each set was largely a tempo progression, and built into the format was that one song did not touch the other.
There was always a pause---at least one second---in between the end of one record and the beginning of the next. Not a huge gap---more like what you'd hear between songs if you were playing an album, maybe a touch longer.
By the time that the format became "Beautiful Music" in the very late 60's, the more Big Band styles of instrumentals had pretty much been dropped.I have heard Jackie Gleason attributed as a major player in the creation of what became beautiful music.
Ah, I misunderstood.
Are there any airchecks of stations you did work at?
c
drive.google.com
By the time that the format became "Beautiful Music" in the very late 60's, the more Big Band styles of instrumentals had pretty much been dropped.
Apparently Gleason's albums made money for Gleason as he was still recording them up to 1971. (We had several in the KOVA library before I got the format updated a couple of years after that.)
Gleason believed there was a ready market for romantic instrumentals. His goal was to make "musical wallpaper that should never be intrusive, but conducive".[31] He recalled seeing Clark Gable play love scenes in movies; the romance was, in his words, "magnified a thousand percent" by background music. Gleason reasoned, "If Gable needs strings, what about some poor schmuck from Brooklyn?"[12]
Gleason's first album, Music for Lovers Only, still holds the record for the longest stay on the Billboard Top Ten Charts (153 weeks), and his first ten albums sold over a million copies each.[4] At one point, Gleason held the record for charting the most number-one albums on the Billboard 200 without charting any hits on the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart.[32]
Gleason could not read or write music; he was said to have conceived melodies in his head and described them vocally to assistants who transcribed them into musical notes.[12]