DETROIT’S ‘DRQ SWITCHING TO ‘FORMULA 41’ AC FORMAT . . . APRIL 20, 1985

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logo (2015)From the MCRFB news archive: 1985

URBAN PROGRAMMER JIM SNOWDEN WILL REMAIN STATION PD

 

 

 

 

 

DETROIT — Well-known urban programmer Jim Snowden will remain in his PD seat at WDRQ here when the station drops it urban output for Transtar’s “Formula 41” adult contemporary service in the next two to three weeks.

Snowden, most recently morning man at Inner City’s WBLS New York, was unavailable to comment on his seemingly strange decision at press time. Amaturo Group radio president Monte Lang, however, is quick to mention that Snowden’s background “includes working with many different formats,”  and says Snowden “just loves this city, and we’re proud to say he is staying.”

While Lang claims that WDRQ was profitable as an urban station, he adds, “We were dissapointed with its success penetrating the market.” Explaining the choice of Transtar’s service, Lang says, “We’ve been happy with the success of ‘Formula 41’ at our WJQY Ft. Lauderdale, and saw the opportunity to do the same in Detroit.”

With the new adult programming, WDRQ will be re-christened with a yet undetermined set of calls (possibly WLTI) and will likely be clothed in a new image. “I’m not pounding my chest that this will be an overnight success,” says Lang, who cite’s all of Detroit’s adult stations as WDRQ’s new competition. “They are all terrific.”

Formula 41, being one of the lightest AC programs on the market, Lang intends to position the new WDRQ  as a “very relaxing station targeted at listeners who prefer Barbra Streisand and Neil Diamond and leaning toward easy listening,” against what he calls “the higher energy” adult outlets in Detroit.

Overseeing WDRQ’s new direction is forger general sales manager Jeff Slette, who steps into the general manager role after Chuck Borchard’s resignation earlier this month over what Lang calls “philosophical differences.” END

(Information and news source, Billboard; April 20, 1985).

WDRQ-FM station logo from the early - 1980s
WDRQ-FM station logo from early – 1980s.

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THE JAZZ CRUSADERS! ‘OLD SOCKS, NEW SHOES’ LP ’70

Motown Record MCRFB Logo

A MOTOWN ALBUM COVER SNAPHOT: 'OLD SOCKS NEW SHOES' by the Jazz Crusaders was released on the CHISA label (C-8010), late-1970. "Way Back Home" was track No. 10 in the album. Distributed by Motown, the CHISA label was a subsidiary of Motown Records, 1970.
A MOTOWN ALBUM COVER SNAPHOT: ‘OLD SOCKS NEW SHOES’ by the Jazz Crusaders was released on the CHISA (C-8010) label, late-1970. Way Back Home, a track from the LP, was released as single CS 804. CHISA Records was a subsidiary of Motown Corp., 1970.
THE JAZZ CRUSADERS circa 1971. Joe Sample (pianist); Stix Hooper (bassist); Wilton Felder (saxophonist); Wayne Henderson (Trombonist).
THE JAZZ CRUSADERS circa 1971. Joe Sample (pianist); Stix Hooper (bassist); Wilton Felder (saxophonist); Wayne Henderson (trombonist).

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NEARING THE END OF WKNR ERA: WEEK OF 03/13/1972

WKNR - March 13, 1972 - Front

 HEART OF GOLD * Neil Young * WKNR (No. 03) 03/13/72
WKNR - March 13, 1972 - Back
DAY DREAMING * Aretha Franklin * WKNR (No. 09) 03/13/72

WKNR - March 13, 1972 (MCRFB top cropped 3)

EVERYTHING GOOD IS BAD * 100 Proof (Aged In Soul) * WKNR (Hit Preview) 03/13/72

(WKNR Survey Guide courtesy the John Freist Collection)

A WKNR FOOTNOTE: Today, April 25, marks 43 years having passed since WKNR consigned itself to Detroit radio history. In the 1972 WKNR music guides, you’ll note the top 31 was no longer standard station play. Cut in half, the new WKNR playlist rotation, as this March 13 music survey indicates, would focus primarily on the top 15 singles listed for the week.

The WKNR playlist was also leaning more heavily into album oriented tracks as well. While listing their bottom 15 as “hit previews,” several of these song titles confirmed WKNR was also promoting selections from their top 10 ‘WKNR Albums,’ as listed on the back-side of the survey. Notice as well the moniker “Keener 13,” the station’s famous ID staple, was noticeably stricken from the WKNR vocabulary, likewise, in 1972.

By then priding itself as “Detroit’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll Station,” this WKNR March 13, 1972 issue was published the week before the station’s very last music guide would go to print, the week of March 20, 1972. A month later WKNR signed-off the air, April 25, 1972.

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THIS WEEK IN AMERICA! BILLBOARD: ‘HOT 100′ 04/1983

BILLBOARD HOT 100 April 23, 1983
BILLBOARD HOT 100 TABULATED BY NATIONAL RETAIL SALES AND RADIO AIRPLAY
BILLBOARD SONG No. 46 * Culture Club * WEEK ENDING 4/23/83

 

BILLBOARD HOT 100 April 23, 1983 (MCRFB HEADER B) BILLBOARD SONG No. 81 ‘NEW ENTRY’ * Kajagoogoo * WEEK ENDING 4/23/83

 

BILLBOARD HOT 100 April 23, 1983 (MCRFB HEADER B) BILLBOARD SONG No. 83 ‘NEW ENTRY’ * El DeBarge * WEEK ENDING 4/23/83

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WAY-BACK DETROIT RADIO PAGES: WAR YEARS DETROIT RADIO EVENTS . . . JULY 8, 1944

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logo (2015)From the MCRFB radio scrapbook pages: 1944

Army Air Show Sold In Detroit; One Newspaper Plus Every Detroit Radio Station Breaks Records for 20-Day Military Shindig

 

 

 

FLASHBACKDETROIT (July 1, 1944) — The consistent, but most important use of radio by the army was the major factor in building an all-time record attendance for the Army Air Show. Turnstile clicked 2,100,000 in the 20 days ended Sunday (June 25). Show was sponsored by The Detroit Times and received general space there, naturally, but as The Times itself commented, it was just “not publicized” by the other newspapers. Practically all credit therefore for the large attendance goes to radio.

John Payne in Army uniform, 1943.
Pvt. (film actor) John Payne in Army uniform, 1943.

The show, staged five miles from town at the municipal airport, had a mile of exhibits under tent of Detroit-made (military) war products. Covered stage at the center of midway was used for on-the-ground shows and for the series of programs aired.

The Army Air Show set a record of three shows fed to national networks, three fed to regional networks and 52 local stations shows. Originating stations for the network shows were WXYZ, feeding the Blue and the Michigan Radio Net, and, WWJ, feeding the NBC-RED.

Local stations taking the shows were WJLB, WJBK, WJR, and CKLW. One show each was also fed to WTOL, Toledo, and to WCAR and WHK, Cleveland.

How Variety Shows Pull Best

Most consistent air show were Victory Varieties, opening five days in advance of the show on WJLB and broadcast through the entire run of the show. Program was variety with patriotic angles. Features of this, as of every practically show aired, was a combination of standard radio entertainment, with the casts of the radio station making the daily trip, via police escort, to the exhibit.

Billboard, July 8, 1944
Billboard, July 8, 1944

Among guest artists were Lt. William Holden and Pvt. John Payne, Hollywood stars; “Skeets” Gallagher, Benny Baker, and Gloria Humphrey, of Good Night, Ladies; Russell Swann, noted magician, and Norman H. Birnkrant, general counsel for the National Association of Theatrical Agents.

Numerous shows were not broadcast because of lack of air time. These were broadcast over the show’s P.A. system to all tents.

Reopening of the shows, which was closed four days because of a blow-down of fourteen big tents, was plugged by 35 spot announcements over various local stations.

Top accolades for the success of the radio program go to two former radio men, Lt. Col. J. Gordon Lloyd, and Staff Sgt. Arthur Sutton, assigned to the public relations office of the Sixth Service Command, Detroit Command, Detroit office. Lloyd was formerly account executive at WJZ, Blue Network, New York. Sutton was formerly production man and continuity writer at CKLW, WXYZ and WWJ, Detroit. END

 

(Information and news source, The Billboard; July 8, 1944).

 
 
ARMY’S AIR DISPLAY AGAIN SHOW DETROIT AS WEEK-END TOWN

DETROIT (July 1, 1944) — The Army Air Show, which featured a mile of tent exhibits of war products made in Detroit, closed a twenty-day span Sunday with attendance of 2, 100,000. Admission was free, but a check was made by General Motors and Ford Motor Company, principal exhibitors.

Sunday crowd reached about 300,000, second only to the opening Sunday, June 4, when it hit about 500,000. Mid-week attendance was down.

The factor points to a moral to shows playing in Detroit for the duration at least. The Motor City has become a 100 per cent weekend town, with amusements generally starving about four days a week, followed by turn-away crowds on weekends. END

(Information and news source, The Billboard; July 8, 1944).

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WAY-BACK RADIO: HONOR ROLL TOP TEN! 04/19/1945

BILLBOARD Honor Roll Of Hits 04-28-45

 NATION’S WEEKLY MUSIC POPULARITY CHART: THE TEN TOP TUNES INDEX
LES BROWN * My Dreams Are Getting Better All The Time * (No. 01) 04/19/45

 

BILLBOARD Honor Roll Of Hits 1945 (MCRFB cropped header 3)
NATION’S WEEKLY MUSIC POPULARITY CHART: THE TEN TOP TUNES INDEX
MODERNAIRES w/ Paula Kelley * There! I’ve Said It Again * (No. 08) 04/19/45

 

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BILLBOARD Honor Roll Of Hits 1945 (MCRFB cropped header 2)

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WXYZ 1270 DETROIT SOUND TOP 35! THIS WEEK IN 1966

WXYZ 137 (MCRFB)

WIXIE DETROIT SOUND No. 8 * Terry Knight & The Pack * WXYZ (4/18/66)

WXYZ 137 (MCRFB) Header Cropped 2

  WIXIE DETROIT SOUND No. 18 * Johnny Rivers * WXYZ (4/18/66)

wixie174

WIXIE DETROIT SOUND No. 27 * Dave Clark Five * WXYZ (4/18/66)

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