THE ‘HISTORY OF ROCK AND ROLL’ HITS: A TIME SWEEP!

Philip Yarbrough’s impact on Top 40 radio can’t be overemphasized. Known to just about every aspiring 60s DJ, “Bill Drake” helped refine the format to it’s bare essence, generating millions of dollars of ad revenue for legendary stations like Ron Jacob’s KHJ and Paul Drew’s CKLW, when the Detroit Top 40 station first aired the program in March 1969.

Drake’s magnum opus has to be the gargantuan “History of Rock and Roll“, a “rocumentary” that covered the rock era with a depth and detail that still sounds fresh today. The show ran for 48 straight hours when it premiered in 1969. An updated version, broadcast in 1978, clocked in at 52 hours.

One of the program’s many highlights is a time sweep, featuring the musical hooks of every Billboard Top 40 number one song from 1957 to 1977.


CKLW * HISTORY of ROCK & ROLL TIME SWEEP * 1969


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UP ON THE WEBSITE: JIMMY HAMPTON RADIO RECALL!

JIM HAMPTON has had a prolific career both in front of and behind the microphone. After cutting his teeth at Flint’s WTRX, Jim worked his way toward Detroit and memorable stints at WXYZ, WABX, WJBK and WCAR before taking his act WLS in 1970.

As the years passed, Jim amassed an amazing resume as a program producer, creating literally thousands of syndicated shows for independent stations. In 1999, Jim launched Greenhouse Marketing Group, “helping the biggest brands and the hottest start-ups grow their businesses with strategic thinking and ahead of the curve marketing.”

We’re honored to showcase Jim’s talents HERE at Motor City Radio Flashbacks!


JIM HAMPTON * RADIO RECALL – HR 01 (WPON) * MEMORIAL WEEKEND 2009


 



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Does Anyone Know What This Is From?

If this one sounds familiar and you can’t quite place it, here’s some help. It first turned up as the march music that introduced the Gillette Cavalcade of Sports. The program debuted on radio in 1944, moving to NBC when television became ubiquitous. Bob Haymes (billed as “Bob Stanton”) was the original announcer,  joined by Ray Forrest in 1948. The program covered a wide array of sporting events, but is perhaps most remembered for it’s Friday nigh boxing coverage. “Look Sharp, Be Sharp” became the show’s theme when it moved to television. If you played in a marching band in the early 50s, you probably played this one often.

The Bob Haymes and Ray Forrest combination wasn’t lost on two other radio comedians when they appropriated “Look Sharp, Be Sharp” for their act. Fans of the comedy of Bob Elliot and Ray Goulding will remember it as the theme song for Elliot’s character, Biff Burns. The faux sports reporter interviewed a plethora of Goulding’s characters from “Little Lightnin'” who was beating the drum for a professional Ring-Around-The-Rosy league, to Stuffy Hodgson, the bitter veteran ball player who couldn’t find the cheese that the younger athletes had hidden in his ball cap.

Biff Burns Sports Room was a fixture from Bob & Ray‘s earliest days on network radio, right up until their Bob & Ray Radio Show for NPR in the late 70s.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0i_cT_6H93s



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From Keener13.com: The Backstory Behind Jungle Fever

If WKNR’s owner, Mrs. Knorr, thought that Tommy James’ “I Think We’re Alone Now” was a little too much for the Keener airwaves, then “Jungle Fever” by the Chakachas was well over the edge of the envelope. That it became a hit at all is one of those improbable stories that seem to proliferate in the music business. Here’s the backstory from Keener13.com.



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