ARCHIVES| MEEKS: INVENTOR OF MUSICAL STATION BREAKS . . . NOVEMBER 21, 1970

From the MCRFB NEWS archive: 1970

Meeks Enters Third Decade Providing PAMS Jingles Service . . . And More

 

 

 


 

 

 

DALLAS — Nearly twenty-years ago Bill Meeks thought up the name PAMS for a banking client. A short time later the bank gave it back to him. PAMS then became the name of Meek’s new company, one which would revolutionize the commercial jingle and station industry.

PAMS means Production-Advertising-Merchandising-Service. To Meeks and his companions, it means a great deal more. Not only is it the largest company of its kind in the world (more than 1,000 clients), but it has been a salvation to the music industry in Dallas.

It was on March 8, 1951, when it all started.  Bill Meeks was a musician — a saxophone player — who worked in a staff band for WFAA, and then for KLIF, when Gordon McClendon put it on the air in 1947.

It was here that Meeks invented the concept of musical station breaks. He was the contractor for the station, and he sort of “put things together.” Leaving his saxophone (plus clarinet and flute) behind him, he went into time sales. He sold many accounts, began to form a good relationship with his clients, and then — inevitably — formed his own agency. That’s when he invented the PAMS name, only to have it given back. It would be the greatest bit of Indian giving in musical history.

Meeks began his musical jingles with a syndicated series, “We put a man on the road, cut the background music and sang the call letters over the music, customizing for each city,” he said.

The jingle impresario said he immediately began to check with the Union to be sure we were on safe ground. “As an old Union musician, I wanted to be sure. Petrillo told us to do our own thing in Dallas, whatever we thought best. He told us to ignore the rule that said the voice and sound must be done at the same time, so we did.” That rule of course, has since been changed. And Dallas has always continued to do its own thing, despite some pressure from unions in other cities.

PAMS had about 12 or 13 jingles in its first series, and 23 in its second. Series 3 was a disk jockey introduction. Series 4 was the first variable length station ID. Series 5 was a group of merchant jingles cut for Chevrolet dealers, and made available to the entire United States.

It was Meek’s first big commercial success.

Series 6 was a new sound, using a group called the Moonmaids. On and on it went; rhythm and blues on one, a top 40 sound on another, all-male groups, all-female groups, mixed groups, mixed groups, station signatures, music logos, a living radio series, high school fight songs (done on location), sounds of the cities (with seasonal backgrounds), a New Frontier series, and then a pair of Sonovox series, with talking guitars, flutes, trombones, etc.

There were weather-ettes, “sonomagic and animajic” His and Hers Radio, an All-American series, a Jet Set thing utilizing “iconagentics,” a go-go series, pussycat, swisle, music power, the new generation, and modules.

Right now Meeks and his associates are working on Series 41, which hasn’t yet been named. Musical contests are being put together at this time.

 

Basic Staff

 

All of this, of course, has required not only great musicianship, but the ability of singers to sight read, to innovate, to adopt a mood at once, and to perform anytime of night or night.

“Through the years we have maintained a basic staff,” Meeks said, “but we always brought in outside musicians when we need them. Among them has been such guitar players as Glen Campbell. We could name many other big ones.”

Bill Meeks circa 1958

Bill Meeks is president of the company, and his wife, Majorie, is vice-president. Another vice-president is Clifford Moore. Toby Arnold, a ten-year veteran with the firm, is sales manager, and has a working knowledge of virtually every radio operation in America. Bob Piper is musical director and  Marvin Show is an arranger-producer. Ray Hurst is a creative writer and producer, and Jim Kirk is a writer-producer-musician-singer. There are two engineers and mixers. Bruce Collier, chief engineer, is regarded one of the finest in his field. He is ably aided by Bob Peepols.

Alan Box works in editing, and Gloria Watkins is a friendly, attractive, capable singer, writer, musician. Jim Clancy is a singer, and there are two lead girl singers (unusual in itself) in Carol Piper and Jackie Dixon. Jack Peters is another writer-arranger-musician.

Only people who believe in being a full part of the staff work for PAMS. All are on a guaranteed staff salary, and some of those salaries are extremely high even by Texas standards.

“There are many advantages in having our own people,” Meeks said. “First of all, they’re an integral part of the organization and they are loyal. They work well together. And when we play an audition for a client he knows exactly what the master will sound like.”

PAMS does sound tracks for films, and does many commercials but station ID’s constitute about 80 per cent of the business. Yet, Meeks estimates that 50 per cent of all jingles done in Dallas comes from the PAMS studios. There are three studios in all.

To make his point emphatic about bringing in musicians when he needs them, Meeks points out that PAMS has spent $110,000 on outside talent through the first nine months of this year.

Meeks began his company modestly. Originally he had a couple of Ampex machines, with no equalization equipment, no echo-chamber. Now, with three studios, he has a complete operation.  His newest board, a Neuman, was custom-made in Germany with 10 and 16 tracks. His American board is an Electrodyne. He has his own Moog.

The newest studio is for privacy, for creativity. Its doors are locked, with keys held only by the staff talent. It has a telephone, but the number is unlisted. This is where creative production is done.

“We serve as production arm to radio stations,” Meeks said. “We give them complete service; we owe it to them.” This close relationship is attested to by the fact that the clients, now above the 1,000 mark, keep climbing.

Dallas is attracting new talent, according to Meeks. “We used to have to shuffle around to find people, but now they come in to audition. And they’re coming in droves from such places as New York and Los Angeles. They know it’s happening in Texas.”

PAMS now is scoring many films — and it has the talented musicians to get the job done. This is being done by both American and Canadian companies.

And what is next? “I’ve been thinking for a long time about the record business,” Meeks said. “All of us have been talking about it, and we just might involve ourselves in records.” And why not, with 1,000 satisfied radio stations already customers. END

 

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(Information and news source: Billboard; November 21, 1970)

 

PAMS studios in Dallas

 

 


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‘PAMS’ LEADER MEEK MAKES TOP 40 JINGLE . . . DECEMBER 2, 1967

From the MCRFB news archive: 1967

Meek Gave Top 40 Radio Its Identity

 

 

 


 

 

Dallas — Bill Meeks, Pams’ President, didn’t invent top 40 radio, but it’s quite likely that top 40 radio wouldn’t be where it is today if there hadn’t been a Bill Meeks. Meeks helped give top 40 radio its zing . . . its identification.

Bill Meeks circa 1958 (Photo courtesy PAMS Productions)

Meeks, a musician at home on saxophone, clarinet, of flute, got into the jingles-producing business while serving as air personality and salesman with KLIF here in 1947 . . . “the first jingles I ever heard of,” he said. He remembered one of those jingles as slashing on TV: “No worn-out old-time movies, no picture tubes to fail . . . ” It should be pointed out that Gordon McLendon, head of KLIF, was one of the pioneers in top 40 radio.

When Meeks began selling some of his jingles to other radio stations, “an odd thing began to happen. These stations began to climb in ratings.” In 1951, Meeks started Pams.

That first year of business, Pams did $300,000 worth of business. Meeks expects to close out 1967 with more than $1.5 million in business. Some of these will be new logos for all four of ABC’s new networks. Meeks was in town last week working on the project. In addition, he is branching out of the pop music field to also specialize in R&B and country music formats. Pams tailored the jingles used on WVON (R&B) in Chicago; the station climbed to No. 1 in a recent general Pulse audience survey and, as Meeks put it, “We were there when it happened.” Meeks is also going into the TV field on a larger basis.

Started In 1936

Meeks entered the radio business in 1936 with WRR in Dallas playing with a kid band called the Humdingers. The late Ben Riddle was a member of the band.They had a Sunday show on the station called “Primrose Parade” sponsored by an oil company. Then Meeks entered North Texas State. He continued to perform, substituting with bands like the Light Crust Dough Boys and the Cass County Kids. It was about this time he met McLendon, who encouraged him to become a KLIF salesman. KLIF had two salesmen, Meeks and a man named Bruce Collier. Meeks said he had Collier’s phone tapped “so I’d know who his clients were, I had to . . . he was really a slick salesman.”

While selling advertising, Meeks was also a deejay. At one point he had a CBS show starring one of his bands — the Circle Five Ranchhands — that originated out of Houston (the band would drive down from Dallas every Saturday). He also had a live show with a band doing a daily remote from a Dallas used car lot.

Employs 33

Today, Meeks operates a firm employing 33 (most of whom are professional musicians) and keeps two studios in Dallas busy. To illustrate the flexibility of his staff members, Rick Sklar, program director of WABC in New York, and Walter Schwartz, then general manager of WABC, once saw Pams’ Tommy Lloyd at work in the studio on trumpet. Later the same day, they saw and heard Lloyd playing in a band at the State Fair. That night, visiting the local LeVee nightclub, Schwartz and Sklar were surprised to see Lloyd , this time playing in a club band. He then saluted WABC right in the middle of “Sweet Lorraine,” by playing the WABC logo.

Meeks said that the turning point for Pams was in 1960 when he came up with a variable logo recording method to allow the various logos of stations to be recorded over the same big band instrumental, giving every station its own big band sound.

Besides having jingles packages in every major market in the United States, Pams products are in countries like Australia, Great Britain, Canada, Hawaii, Mexico, and South America. The firm just completed logos for the new BBC pop music programming service in England. END

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(Information and news source: Billboard; December 2, 1967)


The legendary PAMS facility with office and studios, Dallas. PAMS: Production, Advertising and Merchandising Service (Photo courtesy PAMS, Dallas)

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TOBY ARNOLD ASSOCIATES BUYS PAMS . . . MAY 12, 1979

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logo (MCRFB)From the MCRFB NEWS archive: 1979

 

 

 

 

 


pams_logo_(mcrfb2)DALLAS — Radio syndicator Toby Arnold & Associates have agreed to acquire the entire master tape library of PAMS, producer of jingles and production music.

“It’s taken us over two years to reach an agreement to purchase and clear the PAMS tapes and productions,” Arnold comments. “The inventory amounts to more than one-million in music and recording. It includes all of the PAMS jingle packages, commercial music back- grounds, concepts, syndicated programming libraries, sales features, program specials as well as television and film scores,” Arnold notes.

PAMS for more than 20 years was recognized as a leader in the jingle field. Financial difficulties in 1977 resulted in the shutdown of operations.

Arnold says many stations have asked him about the possibility of updating the PAMS productions. “I’ve contracted Dick Starr to serve as executive producer in charge of PAMS projects,” Arnold says.

Arnold also stated that Starr “helped us create many new ideas for syndication” while he served as program director for KYA-AM, San Francisco, and WFUN-AM, Miami. “Now with Dick in Dallas and heading up our I6-track Starr Studios facility, he’s the natural choice to work on the updating, remixing, sweetening and repackaging for today’s radio needs.” END

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(Information and news source: Billboard; May 12, 1979)


'JINGLES' GALORE CASH COW: PAMS, 1965
‘PAMS’ DALLAS. A jingles galore cash cow by 1965.


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JINGLES: BILL MEEKS ENVISIONS A NEW SOUNDING ID . . . APRIL 15, 1972

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logo (MCRFB)From the MCRFB news archive: 1972

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DALLAS — Transitions, instead of jingles, may be the future method of identifying a radio station on the air and, in fact, Bill Meeks is currently developing a musical set of transitions for a progressive rock station in a major market.

Bill Meeks at work inside his PAMS studios, Dallas.
Bill Meeks at work inside his PAMS studios, Dallas.

Meeks, president of PAMS, the largest jingles firm in the world and creator of jingles for major stations in the U.S., such as WABC in New York and all over the world, says he doesn’t think jingles, as we know them, are appropriate for progressive rock stations and “smooth music” stations.

“Jingles will still be around, but I don’t think they’ll be called jingles. They won’t be straight logos, such as now used by most Top 40 stations, but will more than likely musically identify the station. The radio station will be able to go from record to record without pause, but still identify their call letters or the station itself.”

Meeks, a Texan whose business backyard is the world, says that he has created this type of transitional ID before . . .  transitions that have no definitive starting or ending on the cut.

Meeks, who wrote one of the first jingles ever broadcast – an ID for KLIF in Dallas broadcast on November 11, 1947 – now has a staff of 26 people working for his Dallas firm.

In addition, he’s on a rampage at this moment, expanding into other radio fields such as station ownership, marketing of programming for Alto Fonic Programming, producing and marketing programming services and jingles with Dick Starr of Professional Programming in Miami, and partnership in Cybrix, a firm that has a cassette broadcasting system which Meeks says is better than a reel-to-reel system.

In addition to all of this, Meeks is back in college studying music at North Texas State. His musical career extends as far back as the days when he was a staff musician, writer and arranger for WFAA in Dallas. It was about this time that Gordon McLendon hired him and four other WFAA studio musicians for KLIF’s live band. The band used to play lead-ins to KLIF’s various programs, and it was from these lead-ins that Meeks got the idea of using short, punchy intro material to identify a radio station — in short, jingles.

Actually, his musical career started at the age of 14 when he played on the radio with the Ben Ribble’s Humdingers. Later, he played with the Early Bird Orchestra on WFAA and later performed with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, playing sax and flute. His first commercial jingle was produced by Earl Hayes’ Chevrolet dealership in Dallas.

And his interest in music from a scientific viewpoint has never waned. For example, he has been deeply involved in the studies currently being conducted at Texas Women’s University at Denton, Tex., by Drs. Tom Turrachi and Vance Cotter. The doctors are studying behavioral audio graphics of records, commercials, jingles and news.

Studies are broken down by demographic age groups and economic entities. Some of the test cases are even hooked up so that the sensitivity of their skin can be measured in order to determine their reaction to all of the various elements of programming.

Meeks notes that three New York radio stations were involved in the study- WOR-FM, WABC, and WWDJ – “and the latest ARB showed that the studies were exactly on target. The results of the ARB were predicted by the studies.” END

(Information and news source: Billboard; April 15, 1972)

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DALLAS IS JINGLES CAPITOL OF WORLD; HERE’S WHY! . . . OCTOBER 5, 1974

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logo (2015)From the MCRFB news archive: 1974

 

 

 

 

 

 

DALLAS — To an extent, Dallas is the jingles capitol of the world and its stations IDs are heard literally around the world on just about every station — either in purchased legitimate form or in ripoff imitation.

The backbone of viable radio since the booming, thundering popularity of Top 40 exploded under the guidance of Todd Storz, Gordon McLendon, and Bill Stewart in the early, middle 1950s, jingles have been going through some rather interesting flip flops the past couple of years.

And, in the past few weeks things have changed again and longer jingles — more imaginative and thematic — are easing unto the music theme . . . . not just for Top 40, but for other formats.

TM jinglesJingles, of course, began in commercial form on Top 40. Tom Merryman, head of TM Productions now in Dallas, did the first set. Bill Meeks, president of PAMS, Dallas, and a close associate with Gordon McLendon, has to be considered the father of modern jingles, though, because he made them commercially acceptable and actually popularized them; the stations featuring his jingles shot to audience successes.

A few years ago, MOR and country music stations, along with soul formatted operations, also began paying more attention to jingles. Larry Greene and Hugh Keller were two of the custom producers that scored well in MOR formats. Greene was responsible, basically, for a package on KFWB-AM in Los Angeles that became the talk of radio during that station’s early rock success.

William Tanner and Co., once known as Pepper-Tanner, has been one of the largest producers of jingles and is the only major firm not operating in Dallas (though lately some of the firm’s productions are being produced in Dallas studios).

Today, PAMS and TM Productions are swinging high, wide, and expanding clientele and, Century 21 Productions under Mike Eisler, vice president and general manager, has been extremely successful in its two years of operation.

You have, of course, AIR Productions and EMI Programmes, both located in London, that are emerging on the scene and may be entering the U.S. market  before long.

But, by and large, Dallas is the fountainhead of most jingles packages.

And, Bill Meeks, PAMS, states that: “More and more people are asking me to put some showmanship back into jingles.

There’s a definite tread back towards more melodic jingles and longer jingles.”

He points out there for awhile radio stations wanted short “stings.”

But these program directors have discovered that shorter jingles do not have the recall value of longer efforts.

“I feel there’s a place for the short jingle . . . according to the exposure it has. For example using such a jingle every hour or two would be okay. I’d think. But when a jingle has 1,000 impressions a month, that will wear a jingle out. I feel the exposure on the clock should dictate the type of jingle. A high usage jingle, for instance, should be bland.

“Have you ever noticed that no matter how often you hear a Coca-Cola commercial, it never gets you mad? The reason is the music is so pleasant.”

PAMS, he said, is coming out with a new concept series. “Were going to call it Series I or Series II, meaning that we feel its a whole new thing . . . a mirror of the current trend in radio towards naturalism. Its as different as Top 40 radio itself was when it came on the scene.”

At TM Productions, Jerry Atchley, general sales manager, also thinks jingles are growing longer. “It’s kinda interesting. In the past few years, the trend has been from story jingles to shorter and shorter jingles. Then, to the so-called shotgun jingle. 

What’s replacing the shotgun jingle now — and the trend is not back to the beginning, but . . . well, stations are wanting promotion lines more and more.” The reason, he feels, is that ARB ratings service now allows a station to get credit for a listener mentioning that they: “Listen to the Music Machine.”

So, radio stations are asking again for such slogan lines or “Radio K47.”

Also, Atchley says, many program directors are buying 60-second jingles that come equipped with five or six editing points, meaning that the air personality can use either the full version or different lengths.

“The usual method of using these is to play the full version for a while to establish it firmly in the minds of the listeners, then use shorter lengths of it just to identify the station from time to time.”

One of the first stations to use editable jingles, so far as it is known, was WCBS-FM in New York when it was a rock station; it went on the air with a unique rock package created for it by Chuck Blore Creative Services, Los Angeles. Atchley points out that the TM package “Good Feelings” developed about two years ago also had 10-to-12 cuts that were in editable lengths. “The package was an enormous success . . . really a super thing for us.”

Overall, there has been excitement missing from jingles the past five years, he feels. “My opinion was that jingles weren’t generating excitement at the radio station level among program directors . . . they’d perhaps forgotten how functional they really were for identifying the station and entertaining.

He also notes that a jingles package is being used for longer periods today; previously, a station might change jingles every six months to give a station a new identity; now program directors seem to stick with a package for about a year.

Mike Eisler, vice president and general manager of Century 21 Productions, points to not only the use of longer jingles, but one station that wants a package of jingles using the music of the customized commercials it airs more frequently.

“Jingles are getting longer, though the short version is still also in demand.”

Two packages that are doing quite well for the firm at the moment are the “Getting Together” package of 20 vocals and 15 instrumentals and the “Chrome Key” package of 96 cuts with 12 keyed to uptempo music keys and 12 to moderate music keys.

May and June were extremely soft sales months, he admits, but “we’ve had a phenomenal July in sales.”

Marjorie McIntyre is president of the firm, which is planning construction of its own studios within the next 90 days. Currently, the firm also has production facilities and Dick Starr, veteran program director and producer, has joined as executive creative producer and vice president of programming.

One and all, jingle creators believe that jingles will be around as long as radio is around and all saw a very bright and exciting future for radio. And some stations have even unearthed some of the older PAMS jingles, according to PAMS president Bill Meeks. Radio stations playing oldies are finding great nostalgic value, too, in old jingles. END

(Information and news source: Billboard; October 5, 1974).

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CLASSIC ‘PAMS’ RADIO JINGLES AS HEARD ON: WXYZ!

PAMS Dallas

WXYZ ‘PAMS’ CUSTOM SERIES ON MOTOR CITY RADIO FLASHBACKS

From our MCRFB JINGLES archive: WXYZ-AM 1270 * “The Big Z!” * 1967-1968

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MEEKS: INVENTOR OF MUSICAL STATION BREAKS . . . NOVEMBER 21, 1970

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logoFrom the MCRFB news archive: 1970

Meeks Enters Third Decade Providing PAMS Jingles Service . . . And More

 

 

 

 

DALLAS — Nearly twenty-years ago Bill Meeks thought up the name PAMS for a banking client. A short time later the bank gave it back to him. PAMS then became the name of Meek’s new company, one which would revolutionize the commercial jingle and station industry.

PAMS_IMAGEPAMS means Production-Advertising-Merchandising-Service. To Meeks and his companions, it means a great deal more. Not only is it the largest company of its kind in the world (more than 1,000 clients), but it has been a salvation to the music industry in Dallas.

It was on March 8, 1951, when it all started.  Bill Meeks was a musician — a saxophone player — who worked in a staff band for WFAA, and then for KLIF, when Gordon McClendon put it on the air in 1947.

It was here that Meeks invented the concept of musical station breaks. He was the contractor for the station, and he sort of “put things together.” Leaving his saxophone (plus clarinet and flute) behind him, he went into time sales. He sold many accounts, began to form a good relationship with his clients, and then — inevitably — formed his own agency. That’s when he invented the PAMS name, only to have it given back. It would be the greatest bit of Indian giving in musical history.

Meeks began his musical jingles with a syndicated series, “We put a man on the road, cut the background music and sang the call letters over the music, customizing for each city,” he said.

The jingle impresario said he immediately began to check with the Union to be sure we were on safe ground. “As an old Union musician, I wanted to be sure. Petrillo told us to do our own thing in Dallas, whatever we thought best. He told us to ignore the rule that said the voice and sound must be done at the same time, so we did.” That rule of course, has since been changed. And Dallas has always continued to do its own thing, despite some pressure from unions in other cities.

PAMS had about 12 or 13 jingles in its first series, and 23 in its second. Series 3 was a disk jockey introduction. Series 4 was the first variable length station ID. Series 5 was a group of merchant jingles cut for Chevrolet dealers, and made available to the entire United States.

It was Meek’s first big commercial success.

Series 6 was a new sound, using a group called the Moonmaids. On and on it went; rhythm and blues on one, a top 40 sound on another, all-male groups, all-female groups, mixed groups, mixed groups, station signatures, music logos, a living radio series, high school fight songs (done on location), sounds of the cities (with seasonal backgrounds), a New Frontier series, and then a pair of Sonovox series, with talking guitars, flutes, trombones, etc.

There were weather-ettes, “sonomagic and animajic” His and Hers Radio, an All-American series, a Jet Set thing utilizing “iconagentics,” a go-go series, pussycat, swisle, music power, the new generation, and modules.

Right now Meeks and his associates are working on Series 41, which hasn’t yet been named. Musical contests are being put together at this time.

Basic Staff

All of this, of course, has required not only great musicianship, but the ability of singers to sight read, to innovate, to adopt a mood at once, and to perform anytime of night or night.

“Through the years we have maintained a basic staff,” Meeks said, but we always brought in outside musicians when we need them. Among them has been such guitar players as Glen Campbell. We could name many other big ones.”

Bill Meeks in the late-1950s
Bill Meeks in the late-1950s

Bill Meeks is president of the company, and his wife, Majorie, is vice-president. Another vice-president is Clifford Moore. Toby Arnold, a ten-year veteran with the firm, is sales manager, and has a working knowledge of viratually every radio operation in America. Bob Piper is musical director and Marvin Show is an arranger-producer. Ray Hurst is a creative writer and producer, and Jim Kirk is a writer-producer-musician-singer. There are two engineers and mixers. Bruce Collier, chief engineer, is regarded one of the finest in his field. He is ably aided by Bob Peepols.

Alan Box works in editing, and Gloria Watkins is a friendly, attractive, capable singer, writer, musician. Jim Clancy is a singer, and there are two lead girl singers (unusual in itself) in Carol Piper and Jackie Dixon. Jack Peters is another writer-arranger-musician.

Only people who believe in being a full part of the staff work for PAMS. All are on a guaranteed staff salary, and some of those salaries are extremely high even by Texas standards.

“There are many advantages in having our own people,”Meeks said. “First of all, they’re an integral part of the organization and they are loyal. They work well together. And when we play an audition for a client he knows exactly what the master will sound like.”

PAMS does sound tracks for films, and does many commercials but station ID’s constitute about 80 per cent of the business. Yet, Meeks estimates that 50 per cent of all jingles done in Dallas comes from the PAMS studios. There are three studios in all.

To make his point emphatic about bringing in musicians when he needs them, Meeks points out that PAMS has spent $110,000 on outside talent through the first nine months of this year.

Meeks began his company modestly. Originally he had a couple of Ampex machines, with no equalization equipment, no echo-chamber. Now, with three studios, he has a complete operation.  His newest board, a Neuman, was custom-made in Germany with 10 and 16 tracks. His American board is an Electrodyne. He has his own Moog.

The newest studio is for privacy, for creativity. Its doors are locked, with keys held only by the staff talent. It has a telephone, but the number is unlisted. This is where creative production is done.

“We serve as production arm to radio stations,” Meeks said. “We give them complete service; we owe it to them.” This close relationship is attested to by the fact that the clients, now above the 1,000 mark, keep climbing.

Dallas is attracting new talent, according to Meeks. “We used to have to shuffle around to find people, but now they come in to audition. And they’re coming in droves from such places as New York and Los Angeles. They know it’s happening in Texas.’

PAMS now is scoring many films — and it has the talented musicians to get the job done. This is being done by both American and Canadian companies.

And what is next? “I’ve been thinking for a long time about the record business,” Meeks said. “All of us have been talking about it, and we jus might involve ourselves in records.”

And why not, with 1,000 satisfied radio stations already customers. END

(Information and news source: Billboard; November 21, 1970).

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