COCA-COLA BOTTLING Co. * The Troggs * Coca-Cola Merchandising Ad 1966
DETROIT — The Supremes, hottest property on the Motown line-up, rolled up close to 300,000 orders for their new album, “More Hit By The Supremes,” prior to its release on Thursday, August 27, according to Barney Ales, executive vice-president of Motown Records.
This makes it six albums and six singles for the girls in the year they have been recording with the label — with the first five of the singles each hitting the number one spot on Billboard charts. The sixth single, “Nothing But Heartaches,” is moving up the charts. The Supremes Thursday, July 29, opened a three-week stand at the New York Copacabana.
Ales confirmed that Motown has just signed singer Connie Haynes, who has been doing nightclub and television work recently. She formerly recorded with a female trio under another label. END
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(Information and news source: Billboard; August 14, 1965)
A MCRFB Note: For more information on this extended-play lp,”More Hits By The Supremes,” click the underlined album “title” above. For information regarding the Supremes, click the underlined group/artist name above the audio bar to access Wikipedia link.
A MCRFB Note: For more information on the recording, “Americans,” click the underlined record “title” above. For more information on Byron MacGregor, click the underlined artist name above to access Wikipedia link.
NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO | CKLW | NPR.ORG
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NPR’s Don Gonyea remembers the heyday of powerhouse AM radio. Gonyea grew up in Detroit, where the big station in the 60’s and 70’s was CKLW. It broadcast from across the Detroit River in Windsor, Ontario. It was a loud, glitzy noise-making enterprise. Everything was shouted — even the news.
The 50,000-watt giant spewed rock and roll and hyped-news across 28 states and mid-Canada. Gonyea describes the formula that made CKLW and its imitators successful. Produced by Don Gonyea and Dale Willem. NPR.ORG
THANK YOU to the following people for opening up their personal archives, suggestions, participation and for their comments (1999) –
Jon Belmont, ABC News, New York. Charlie Brown, Perrysville, Ohio. Keith Radford, Buffalo, New York. Ron Hummany, Detroit, Michigan. Art Vuolo, The Michigan Radio Guide. Tom Connard, The Aircheck Factory, Wild Rose, Wisconsin. Dick Kernen, Specs Howard School of Broadcast Arts. Jo Jo Shutty MacGregor. NPR, August 27, 1999
NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO | CKLW | NPR.ORG
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NPR’s Don Gonyea remembers the heyday of powerhouse AM radio. Gonyea grew up in Detroit, where the big station in the 60’s and 70’s was CKLW. It broadcast from across the Detroit River in Windsor, Ontario. It was a loud, glitzy noise-making enterprise. Everything was shouted — even the news.
The 50,000-watt giant spewed rock and roll and hyped-news across 28 states and mid-Canada. Gonyea describes the formula that made CKLW and its imitators successful. Produced by Don Gonyea and Dale Willem. NPR.ORG
THANK YOU to the following people for opening up their personal archives, suggestions, participation and for their comments (1999) –
Jon Belmont, ABC News, New York. Charlie Brown, Perrysville, Ohio. Keith Radford, Buffalo, New York. Ron Hummany, Detroit, Michigan. Art Vuolo, The Michigan Radio Guide. Tom Connard, The Aircheck Factory, Wild Rose, Wisconsin. Dick Kernen, Specs Howard School of Broadcast Arts. Jo Jo Shutty MacGregor. NPR, August 27, 1999