Above article is courtesy freep.com newspaper archive. Copyright 2020.Newspapers.com.
The above featured Week’s Top Singles article was clipped, saved, and imaged digitally from the credited source by Motor City Radio Flashbacks
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Above article is courtesy freep.com newspaper archive. Copyright 2020. Newspapers.com.
This featured JIM HARPER article was ‘clipped,’ saved, and was digitally imaged from the credited source by Motor City Radio Flashbacks
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Missed any of our previous ‘Detroit Radio Back-Pages‘ features? GO HERE.
The entire Ed Sullivan Show catalogue hits the streaming platforms!
On June 12, came news Universal MusicEnterprises and Sofa Entertainment brokered a deal to license and make available the entire Ed Sullivan video performance from the Sofa library, who acquired the entire catalogue in 1990. UME will make available the entire catalogue for public streaming in restored, digitized form, according to the Detroit Free Press.
For its premiere launch this past Friday, several videos are now posted on the official Ed Sullivan You Tube channel, highlighting the Motown sound. As reported, it will take three years to upload the more than 10,000 performances which aired Sunday evenings on CBS-TV from June 20, 1948 to June 6, 1971.
Mr. Tambourine Man is the debut studio album by American rock band the Byrds, released in June 1965, by Columbia Records. The album, along with the single of the same name, established the band as an internationally successful act, and was influential in originating the musical style known as folk rock. The term was, in fact, first coined by the American music press to describe the band’s sound in mid-1965, around the same time as the “Mr. Tambourine Man” single reached thetop of the Billboard chart. The single and album also represented the first effective American challenge to the dominance of the Beatles and the British Invasion during the mid-1960s.
The album peaked at number six on the Billboard Top LPs chart and reached number seven in the United Kingdom. The Bob Dylan penned “Mr. Tambourine Man” single was released ahead of the album in April 1965, reaching number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and the UK Singles Chart. The second single “All I Really Want to Do“, also a Dylan cover, was moderately successful in the US, peaking at #40, but fared better in the UK, where it reached at #4.
Mr. Tambourine Man was released on June 21, 1965 in the United States and peaked at number 6 on the Billboard Top LPs chart, during a chart stay of 38 weeks, and reached number 7 in the United Kingdom, spending a total of 12 weeks on the UK albums chart. The preceding single of the same name was released on April 12, 1965 in the U.S. and May 15, 1965 in the UK, reaching number 1 on both the Billboard Hot 100 and the UK Singles Chart. A second single taken from the album, “All I Really Want to Do”, peaked at number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, but fared better in the United Kingdom, where it reached number 4.
In the months following the release of the Mr. Tambourine Man album, many acts began to imitate the Byrds’ hybrid of a British Invasion beat, jangly guitar playing and poetic or socially conscious lyrics. The band’s influence can be heard in many recordings released by American acts in 1965 and 1966, including the Turtles, Simon & Garfunkel, the Lovin’ Spoonful, Barry McGuire, the Mamas & the Papas, Jefferson Airplane, We Five, Love, and Sonny & Cher.
This jangly, folk rock sound that was pioneered by the Byrds on Mr. Tambourine Man has also been influential on successive generations of rock and pop musicians, including such acts as Big Star, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, R.E.M., the Church, Hüsker Dü, the Long Ryders, the Smiths, the Bangles, the Stone Roses, The La’s, Teenage Fanclub, the Bluetones, Wilco, and Delays among others.
The Byrds, formed in 1964, comprised of band-mates Jim McGuinn, Gene Clark, David Crosby, Chris Hillman and Michael Clarke.
(A side note, Mr. Tambourine Man, the single, hit the #1 spot on the WKNR Music Guide, in Detroit, June 9, 1965.)
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Source: (see) Mr. Tambourine Man (Album); Wikipedia
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A MCRFB LINK: Here is a Guardian “Rock’s Back Pages” article, from the July 17, 1965 issue of Melody Maker, published in the U.K., titled, ‘Behind Byrdmania‘.
The piece was published on Wednesday, July 15, 2015, in commemoration of the group’s 50th anniversary of The Byrd’s debut LP release in 1965, ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’.
This article was written by none other than the famed, former Beatles’ press spokesman, Derek Taylor.
This list is selected each week by WXYZ Radio from reports of record sales gathered from leading record outlets in the Detroit area and other sources available to WXYZ.
— ACKNOWLEDGEMENT —
A special THANK YOU to Larry Good of Saline, MI., for recently contributing this featured WXYZ chart — September 1964 — with Motor City Radio Flashbacks.
We are pleased to say Larry also contributed 16 WXYZ charts from 1964 🙂
Thank you Larry for this contribution, inasmuch, this site realizes these 1964 WXYZ charts are scarce, having become a most difficult find today. Much appreciated!
The above WXYZ chart was digitally imaged and restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks
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WJOI 97 * 1987 * THE SOUNDS OF JOY FM (Mark Taylor)
— WJOI 97.1 FM —
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NEW! WJOI aircheck date WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1987
WWJ 97.1 became ‘the sounds of beautiful music’ on the FM dial in Detroit in 1971.
In August 1981, WWJ-FM applied and petitioned the FCC for a call letter change, WJOI. Granted, WJOI officially became JOY FM on Thursday, December 17, 1981.
Owned by the Detroit-based Evening News Association, CBS Radio paid a reported $25,000,000 for WWJ-AM and its sister FM station WJOI in May 1989.
CBS’ WJOI-FM became the new WYST-FM, 6 AM, on Friday, September 2, 1994. Ditching its noted ‘beautiful music’ sound, the format instead was changed to a ‘soft-rock favorites’ format.
Before the end of its FM run in 1994, The ‘Sounds of Beautiful Music’ was heard for over 23 years in the Motor City.
On the AM side, WWJ-AM retained its all-news format, broadcasting regional and national news, sports, weather — 24 hours today — on AM 950 in Detroit.
Today, 97.1 FM is licensed with the calls letters, WXYT – branded “97.1 The Ticket” – a commercial sports radio station serving Metro Detroit and much of Southeast Michigan.
The station is owned by Entercom, with studios located in the nearby suburb of Southfield, and a transmitter site on Southfield’s eastern side.
(Source: Detroit Free Press; Wikipedia)
WJOI. 33 YEARS AGO
—ACKNOWLEDGEMENT—
A special THANK YOU to our senior contributor, Greg Innis, of Livonia, MI., for donating this WJOI-FM audio aircheck to the Motor City Radio Flashbacks archive.
The above featured WJOI aircheck was audio enhanced by Motor City Radio Flashbacks.
MEMORIAL DAY * Lee Alan * LEE ALAN CREATIVE PRODUCTIONS
WORDS OF REMEMBRANCE
“As we express our gratitude, we must never forget that the highest appreciation is not to utter the words, but to live by them.” – John F. Kennedy
“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We did not pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.”- Ronald Reagan
“Let their remembrance be as lasting as the land they honored.” – Daniel Webster
“It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God such men lived.”- George S. Patton
“Our flag does not fly because the wind moves it. It flies with the last breath of each soldier who died protecting it.”- Unknown
A DAY OF REMEMBRANCE
“From the opening battle of the American Revolution through the turmoil of the Civil War, World War I, World War II, Korea and Vietnam, to the Persian Gulf and today’s operations in the war on terror in Afghanistan, Iraq, and around the world, our members in the military have built a tradition of honorable and faithful service. As we observe Memorial Day, we remember the more than one million Americans who have died to preserve our freedom, the more than 140,000 service personal who were prisoners of war, and to all of those names who were declared as missing in action.
Gratefully honoring those who made the ultimate sacrifice in defense of liberty’s blessings. Please listen and just reflect what each of them must have gone thru in those terrifying moments before giving their lives. Bless them all.” — Lee Alan
WELCOME TO TIGERTOWN* ERNIE HARWELL’S AUDIO SCRAPBOOK
‘WELCOME TO TIGERTOWN’
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Besides the voice of Ernie Harwell, the various narratives you will hear throughout the entire audio book is by Raleigh, N.C. sports broadcaster Gordon Miller. Occasional questions you will also hear is by veteran Duke University sports broadcaster Bob Harris.
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Ernie Harwell
Ten years ago, Ernie Harwell passed away onMay 4, 2010. He was known as “the voice of the Detroit Tigers” for over 4 decades. He calledhis last Tiger gamein Toronto, on September 29, 2002. In 1981, Harwell was awarded baseball’s most prestigiousFord C. Frick Award.
He became only the fifth baseball broadcaster enshrined into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
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BILLBOARD HOT 100 TABULATED BY RECORDS RETAIL SALES AND RADIO AIRPLAY
BILLBOARD HOT 100 MAY 8-14, 1983
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