MUSIC BUSINESS | AMERICA’S FABULOUS SURFIN’ FAVORITES: THE BEACH BOYS

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The above Music Business 08/15/1964 (two-page spread) Capitol Records ad was digitally re-imaged and completely restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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BILLBOARD! ABC-PARAMOUNT RECORDS CLASSIC LP AD: AUGUST 1963

 

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The above Billboard 08/31/1963 ad was digitally re-imaged and completely restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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BILLBOARD! MONUMENT RECORDS CLASSIC ’45 AD: AUGUST 1963

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The above Billboard 08/31/1963 ad was digitally re-imaged and completely restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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TODAY! WPON ‘RARE OLDIES’ SHOW with KEVIN O’NEILL, GREG INNIS, and JUKEBOX JOHN

Kevin O’Neill

When it comes to rare oldies on the radio in the Detroit area, WPON is the only place to be.

Today, join Detroit oldies aficionado (and Detroit radio veteran) Kevin O’Neill, along with oldies musicologists Jukebox John and Greg Innis for three hours with their special ‘rare oldies’ show this afternoon, Saturday, August 27 — 2:30 PM to 5:30 P.M. — on WPON 1460.

To LISTEN LIVE to the WPON broadcast this afternoon go HERE. Or, you can also listen to the live stream on your PC by downloading the free BIRACH BROADCASTING app in the Apple Store or Google Play Store.

Kevin O’Neill says, “If you love those oldies from ’50s and ’60s you grew up with, as I do, join us on WPON 1460 for some of the greatest and forgotten oldies we’ll be playing for you this afternoon on WPON 1460 radio. It’s on today. Three hours of great oldies. You won’t want to miss it!

WPON. A BIRACH BROADCASTING STATION

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MUSIC BUSINESS | THE BEACH BOYS RIDE THE TRENDS . . . . AUGUST 15, 1964

Songs about surfing, hotrods and motorscooters have made them the symbol of California youth and helped them sell millions of records

 

 

One of the most exciting new sounds in the record business, created and started by American artists and producers, is the West Coast pop sound. It has taken its place as one of the powerful forces in the industry, sparked by a flock of young, male artists on the West Coast like The Beach Boys, Jan & Dean, The Rip Chords, The Chantays, The Marketts, The Surfaris, and Dick Dale &The Deltones.

The West Coast pop sound has been identified as the “surf,” the” hotrod,” the “motorscooter, “or in general, the outdoor sound, a sound loosely tied in with various favorite outdoor sports practiced by youthful cultists in the California sunshine. Basically, the West Coast approach breaks down into two categories: the vocal style, as exemplified by the Beach Boys, Jan & Dean and the Rip Chords, and the instrumental music, proponents of which are Dick Dale, The Chantays and the Marketts. The Beach Boys, one of the hottest acts on record today, started their hit string with a surfing record on Capitol, and claim to have sired the original surf.

The Surfing Sound

Says Beach Boys leader, Brian Wilson: “All the kids were interested in surfing and I remember one day when my brother Dennis came home from high school telling me about his friends who thought I should write a song about surfing. I was always playing around with songs anyway, hoping maybe I could get into the business someday, so I took a crack at it right away. We called it “Surfin’, ” and my two brothers and a couple of friends and I recorded it on our own. My brother Carl, who was 14, was the only one who could play an instrument, the guitar, and he played it on the record. That was in September of ’61 and we got the record out on a small label.

“Then, a few months later, my father, Murry Wilson, got excited about our possibilities and took one of our masters to Capitol Records where he saw Ken Nelson. Mr. Nelson referred him to Nick Venet who finally saw him after a five week wait and flipped over the record.” Capitol’s a.&r. vice president, Voyle Gilmore, says that when Venet played him the tapes, he (Gilmore) said “Don’t let that man get away. We want to sign these boys up.” And that’s what happened. The two sides, “Surfin’ Safari” and “409,” were released right away. “We thought the` Surfin’ side would hit on the West Coast and that ‘409’ (which was about a Chevrolet) might hit in the East. But `Surfin’, broke in Detroit and we figured we had something,” said Gilmore. It was one of the first major so-called “surf” hits. At nearly the same time the Marketts, one of the beach-based instrumental groups, came out with “Surfer’s Stomp,”and “Balboa Blue,” examples of another wing of the evolving West Coast sound.

“After that one hit,” said Wilson, a good looking young Californian, who prefers to sit in his office and think and work to cavorting on the beach, “We all took up instruments. We learned how to play in a very few months. Now I play bass and we have two guitars and drums. We’ve evolved about 800 per cent since we started and that’s in just two years. What happened was that I learned the art of production. In fact, now, I think we’ve evolved away from the strictly West Coast feeling. I’ve brought some eastern production values into our records, because you can’t stand still in this business.

Riding The Trend

“We rode the surfing trend while it was hot. There was a good identification there. You know, like the outdoor image and that scene. But I saw a chance to maybe broaden the appeal without really changing the style at all. You know how kids are with the cars. Well, I just started writing different types of lyrics with the same musical sound, and right away we had another something going for us.”

Capitol and the Beach Boys actually contrived to break the new hot-rod trend while holding the surf beach-head at the same time. That happened with the single which coupled “Surfin’ U.S.A.” and “Shut Down.”

It’s the only single in recent memory that ever spawned two separate hit albums, each one bearing the title of each individual hit single side. It also gave birth to a rash of hot rod albums from a rash of West Coast labels. Just as it happened at first with the surf scene. Typically, the albums were profusely illustrated with magnificent four color photos of action surf scenes, and of the many kinds of favorite hotrods in vogue with the drag-minded set. “A lot of those albums were sold”, Wilson observed, “and for several reasons. Partly it was the material, but it was also the pictures and the information and the tables of words used by this group or that group. They were playing on the two great loves of young kids, their music, and their fads.

The Honda Scene

“But now you don’t see so many of the surfing and the hot rod albums. Surfing, in fact is strictly passe. And hotrods have hit their peak too. Now it’s the Honda scene. You’ve got to be on the motor scooter kick now to be really in”.

“We have a song about ‘Little Honda,’ in our new album and it’s getting played like it was a single. That is the new kick. I don’t know what will be next. Some of  the younger people are trying sidewalk surfing now, where you get aboard and put some wheels under it and stand upon it going down a hill just like you were going down a wave. But I don’t think that will catch on.

“As far as the Beach Boys are concerned, we just want to keep on identifying with what the young people like to do and like to think about. It doesn’t have to be specifically about surfing or cars or scooters. Our new single will be called ‘When I Grow Up (To Be A Man)’. That certainly touches what every guy is thinking about.

“I’m a little afraid of limiting our subject matter too much. In fact, I want us to just keep building as a good vocal group with a well developed sound. Some people say some of our harmonies sound like the Four Freshmen. That’s no accident. The Freshmen have been the greatest for years. Their arranger, Dick Reynolds, is practically a god to me. What he does has been a great influence on me and the group.

“I just want to keep developing that sound. I don’t know where we’ll be five years from now. I can’t look that far ahead. One year is enough and we’ll be here, I hope, singing better than ever. But there’s no sense in moving too fast.

“There’s a lot of work in this but I like working. The other guys can have the fun, and they do. Dennis is the only real surfer we’ve got and he still does it. He also has an XKE and a Sting Ray. Carl drives around in a Grand Prix. But I’m usually in the office thinking and writing stuff. I don’t go out of my way to write a lot for others but I did write ‘Surf City,’ ‘Drag City’ and ‘New Girl In  School’ for Jan and Dean. Once in a while I get out long enough to play some tennis. I played football in school and I like the competitive sports, but I like record hits too.”

Career vs. Marriage

One of the boys in the group is already married, and Brian Wilson is thinking of it too. He has a girlfriend, Marilyn Rovell, who sings with her sister, Diane, and a cousin, Ginger Blake, in a group known as the Honeys. The Honeys had perhaps the first and one of the few girl surfer records.

“I’d like to get married, “Wilson continued, “But there’s a hang-up there for the image. I don’t think it would be good right now. With the Beatles, it’s different. John Lennon was married before they made it. It’s accepted. But to get married after you’re in the public eye could shatter the illusion.”

Why haven’t girl artists made it with the West Coast sound? Wilson has an answer. “In all this music, there’s an association of the outdoors and sports. This is a masculine identity. The girls a resort of spectators. Besides, there’s been so much female influence in the last couple of years with all the eastern girl groups, I think it’s kind of a reaction.

“When I said I thought surfing was passe, I meant not as a sport, but that other things are making more excitement on records, like the Hondas and the other scooters. Other sounds are too, like the Beatles; they are as “in” as any sound could ever be. They’ve done a number of interesting things, I think.

“For one thing they really broke things wide open for vocal groups. They’re a new concept too, because every one of their guys is a known personality in his own right, separate from the group image. That has really never happened before. The Beatles also glorified the drummer. Drums will be even bigger in group work from now on.

“I admire the Beatles. They have a lot of creative ability and they present their music well. It’s a synthetic-sound in a way, combining Chuck Berry, the Everly Brothers, Buddy Holly and others. But they do it very well.”

Watching The Field

Wilson watches carefully what other people are doing in records and will readily offer thumbnail opinions . . . on, for example, who is making the big impact and why . . .  like Burt Bacharach. “He fascinates me. He has incorporated good music with the teen stuff and it just knocks me out to think about it.

“And Phil Spector. Some say he’s cold now but there’s no such thing as a cold great talent and in any era he would be a great talent. He did so much for the production world, bringing in drums and saxes like nobody else had done. And Tamla Motown. Well with them it’s so obvious . . . like saying the sky is blue.

“And Chuck Berry. It’s hard to really state how much his revival has meant. It’s just tremendous. You hear that ‘Memphis’ beat in dozens of the new records. Johnny Rivers had a hit with it but the beat is everywhere. If there’s a soul of rock and roll, Chuck Berry has to be it.”

As for the Beach Boys, Wilson wants to “expand our style and versatility. I hope we can ramify our basic feel into just one of the best vocal groups. There isn’t any pat formula but it helps to know what the others are doing in the business. We’ve never been to the east but we’ll be there in September to do some concerts, and then in October, we hope, off to England, where our first hit ‘I Get Around’ is just breaking now.” END

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Information, credit and news source: Music Business; August 15, 1964

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MCRFB Notes: Click over photos (PC) or ‘tap and stretch’ photos (Mobile) for largest detailed view possible. Article featured below is also from the August 15, 1964 edition of Music Business.

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BILLBOARD! THE NATION’S TOP LPs: WEEK-ENDING, AUGUST 31, 1963

BILLBOARD TOP LP’s August 31, 1963

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Only three weeks on the Billboard LP’s chart, Allan Sherman’s ‘My Son, The Nut‘ hits the  #1 spot, week-ending, August 31, 1963. The album held the top spot on the Billboard Top LP’s for nearly two months, from August 31 to October 25, 1963. It stayed on the charts for 140 weeks and sold 1.2 million copies. [Source: Wikipedia]

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The above Billboard LP’s 8/31/63 chart was digitally re-imaged and restored in its entirety by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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BILLBOARD! HOT 30 COUNTRY SINGLES: WEEK ENDING, AUGUST 24, 1963

BILLBOARD HOT COUNTRY SINGLES August 1963

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The above charted country singles (notably the top 10) were some of the most popular radio plays heard on Detroit’s only country station 1340 on the AM dial at the time, WEXL.

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SPECIAL SURVEY CHART TABULATED by BILLBOARD

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The above Billboard Country survey chart was digitally re-imaged by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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CKLW THE BIG 8! THE WEEK’S MOTOR CITY ‘BIG 30’ RECORDS: AUGUST 16, 1977

CKLW BIG 30 SURVEY August 16, 1977

CKLW BIG 30 SURVEY August 16, 1977

CKLW BIG 30 SURVEY August 16, 1977

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“The listing of records herein is the opinion of CKLW based on its survey of record sales, listener requests and CKLW’s judgement of the record’s appeal.”

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The featured CKLW chart was digitally restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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A Special Thank You

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A sincere, thank you, Mrs. Patti Griggs. This featured presentation would have not been possible without your generosity, dedication, and your continuous support.

Above CKLW music chart courtesy of Mrs. Patti Griggs and the George L. Griggs estate.

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CKLW BIG 30 SURVEY August 16, 1977

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MCRFB AUDIO CALL-OUT: EDDIE CHASE on CKLW, WXYZ, ‘MAKE BELIEVE BALLROOM’

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CKLW EDDIE CHASE 1955 (Press Photo)

Motor City Radio Flashbacks is in search of anything audio relating Eddie Chase, renown Detroit radio legend in the 1940s and 1950s on WXYZ and CKLW.

His granddaughter, Kathleen Thompson (resides in Anchorage, Alaska), and for the benefit of her immediate family as well, has reached out to this site for any audio recordings of Eddie Chase on the radio, which may include his top-rated WXYZ show program, Make Believe Ballroom. Material we have yet to find and add into our Detroit radio archive.

If there is someone out there who may possibly have a recording of this Detroit radio treasure, please contact me at (copy and paste):

motorcityradioflashbacks65@gmail.com

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MUSIC BUSINESS | “SWIM” SWEEPS SAN FRANCISCO . . . AUGUST 15, 1964

Sexiest of the New Dances Is a Smash In Northern California, Sparked by the Bobby Freeman Recording of “C’mon And Swim”

 

Not since the twist swept all before it two years ago has any dance created so much excitement in the picturesque city of San Francisco. It has caught on in just a few months and one of the reasons, besides the excitement inherent in the dance itself, is the Bobby Freeman recording. Freeman’s new single, on the Autumn recording label, is in the Top 20 in sales in that city.

The recording of “C’mon and Swimwas made by Tom Donahue and Bob Mitchell of the Tempo Weekly Newsletter, a publication that tips the trade on current and new best-sellers in that city. The duo, top rated jockeys of KYA in San Francisco, says of the swim, “We think it has the potential to become the biggest dance sensation since the twist.”

An explanation of the popularity of the swim is apparent by a description of it in a story in Variety July 15. Story says it is a variation of the twist, which pantomimes various swimming strokes, like the breast stroke, dog paddle, back- stroke, etc. “Done well it is the most graceful of these dances. It is also far and away the sexiest.”

Another reason for the success of the swim in San Francisco could also be attributed to the fact that it is done in clubs along Broadway, the late-night districts in North Beach, and in several of these clubs by girls in topless bathing suits. Crowds usually gather before the open windows of these clubs and try to peer in to see the dancers.

About 25 clubs in San Francisco‘s North Beach nightclub belt are now featuring the swim. It’s the biggest attraction the clubs have had in two years and San Francisco clubs play all types of acts, from nudes to hypnotists. Best known are The Galaxie and The Condor.

Bobby Freeman is credited with having originated the swim about a year ago. He taught it on his appearances at dances and shows in the Bay Area. Suddenly it caught on and turned into a high school sensation. One high school principal banned the swim from school dances and it became famous.

The Bobby Freeman record, issued in May, broke wide open in the Bay area after a weekend of play by disc jockey John Hardy of KDIA. Subsequently it caught on in Seattle, San Diego, Fresno, San Jose, Sacramento, Stockton and other California cities.

C’mon and Swim” has built into a national hit. The dance has yet to break out of the West Coast. However, with the Dick Clark show featuring the dance and with Freeman demonstrating it on the Dick Clark tour, it could happen nationally too. END

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Information, credit and news source: Music Business; August 15, 1964

Bobby Freeman upstaging his own performance of The Swim (Credit: Music Business)

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