Fran Allison, Don McNeill, Dick Noel, Betty Johnson and the show’s humorous Sam Cowling. The Breakfast Club was a long-run morning variety show on NBC Blue Network/ABC radio (and briefly on television) originating in Chicago, Illinois.
Hosted by Don McNeill (right), the radio program ran from June 23, 1933 through December 27, 1968.
McNeil’s 35½-year run as host remains the longest tenure for an M.C. of a network entertainment program, surpassing Johnny Carson (29½ years) on The Tonight Show and Bob Barker (34? years) on The Price is Right.
Above article is courtesy freep.com newspaper archive. Copyright 2019. Newspapers.com.
The above WJBK newspaper feature was ‘clipped,’ saved, and imaged from the credited source by Motor City Radio Flashbacks.
A MCRFB VIEWING TIP: On your PC? You can read this entire article ENLARGED. For a larger detailed view click above image 2x and open to second window. Click image anytime to return to NORMAL image size.
Click your server’s back button to return to MCRFB.COM home page.
Missed any of our previous ‘Detroit Radio Back-Pages‘ features?GO HERE.
Above article is courtesy freep.com newspaper archive. Copyright 2019. Newspapers.com.
The above WKNR newspaper feature was ‘clipped,’ saved, and imaged from the credited source by Motor City Radio Flashbacks.
A MCRFB VIEWING TIP: On your PC? You can read this entire article ENLARGED. For a larger detailed view click above image 2x and open to second window. Click image anytime to return to NORMAL image size.
Click your server’s back button to return to MCRFB.COM home page.
Missed any of our previous ‘Detroit Radio Back-Pages‘ features?GO HERE.
Some Radio Stations Pulling Stops From Losing Adult Audiences to Current ‘Beatlemania’ Hysteria
NEW YORK – With the Beatles safely home after their record-breaking tour of the United States and Canada, broadcasters are mulling the cause and effect of “Beatlemania.”
In attempting to evaluate a phenomenon like the Beatles the inevitable question arises as to what caused the hysteria – the Beatle fans as a result of radio, or radio, under pressure of Beatle fans.
No matter who caused it, never before in the history of radio broadcasting has any group or individual from the entertainment world received such overwhelming support. Beatlemania struck radio with unprecedented impact, sending many thousands of hours of related programming into the airwaves.
The involvement by radio has gone far beyond the mere playing of Beatles records. Contests, promotions, extensive news coverage, pilgrimages to England, etc., became standard procedure.
The cities with more than one contemporary music-formatted station enjoyed (or cringed) as two or three stations battled to out-Beatle each other.
Radio programmers explain that the affair was not one of love alone, but an effort to cash in on what was mushrooming into the latest (and perhaps biggest) pop music craze ever to hit this continent.
Others argue that the mania is attributable primarily to the tremendous radio station involvement and identification with the Beatles. The “Monster” was of their own making.
Serious Drawbacks
Industry programmers caution that Beatlemania with its strong appeal to teenagers could result in driving away adults that enjoy contemporary pop pop music. It has also been noted by many the possibility that rhythm and blues and the more conservative music stations have attracted many listeners away from pop stations as a result of the latter’s preoccupation with the English sound.
Just how much good, or harm, the Beatles have done to radio is being measured. Programming executives are carefully watching station audience composition studies and the ratings to determine if the new seven to 12-year old listeners captured by Beatle broadcasting has resulted in a loss for contemporary music stations of adults.
The Beatles of Liverpool, like the Pied Piper of Hamelin, have a mysterious musical lure for even the smallest of tots. Why?
“It’s their honesty, in part, plus the fact that they look like cuddly dolls,” says producer Jack Good of ABC -TV’s “Shindig,” on which the Beatlemania of John, Paul, George and Ringo will resound Wednesday, Oct. 7.
Another ABC-TV show bows Saturday, Oct. 10 to the demand of Beatle fans. Dick Clark will present an all-Beatle program on the “New American Bandstand-’65,” including the pick of their latest recordings, a portion of their latest motion picture, several taped interviews procured from KRLA, Pasadena, and KRLA deejay Casey Kasem’s recording of “A Letter From Elena.”
The flames were further fanned by many stations, who not content to refer to the group in the second person, dispatched their top newsmen and deejays on the recent 30 -day junket made by the boys from Liverpool.
Among the air personnel who traveled with the Beatles to tape on-the-spot personal reports and interviews for their stations back home included Larry Kane, newsman, WFUN, Miami; Art Schrieber, news director of KYW, Cleveland; Jim Stagg, KYW deejay, and Long John Wade, WDRC, Hartford, deejay. Most stuck it out for the whole tour.
Contests and Promotions
Nearly every conceivable type of contest and promotional tie-in with the British group has been tried by stations here and in Canada.
CHWO, in Canada, conducted a “Beatle Bonanza” in connection with the showing of “A Hard Day’s Night.” A special phone answering switchboard set up to handle the calls was swamped and eventually broke down. KDKA’s promotion manager, Owen Simon, and 17 other station staffers went into the streets of Pittsburgh with 40 tickets to the movie. WOWO, Fort Wayne, Ind., “Pussycats” were similarity beaten in a group singing honors. The “Pussycats,” comprised of deejays from WOWO, were edged out in a contest which drew 52,000 postcards during the three-week battle.
WIBC, Indianapolis, selected 35 questions from more than 3,500 submitted by listeners to he relayed to the Beatles in London. They recorded their answers, sent the tape to WIBC and the WIBC Beatles Press Conference became a ruddy success. The station was also designated as the “Mid-America Chapter of the Beatles National Fan Club.”
Both WQAM and WFUN iMiami, flew a planeload each of listeners to the Beatle concert in the Gator Bowl. The stations ran contests to pick the lucky entourage. WJZ -TV, Baltimore, ran a “Beatles Forever Contest” in conjunction with the station’s “People Are Talking” program. The grand prize winner received an all-expense-paid trip for two to Pittsburgh to see the Beatles. Toronto was typical of the cities that experienced personal Beatle visits.
CHUM garnered all of its manpower to cover the event and featured broadcasts from the hotel lobby while George Harrison’s sister Louise (flown to town courtesy of CHUM) broadcast her comments from a suite overlooking the hotel entrance.
The next day – Beatles Day – every second record played by CHUM was by the Beatles. CHUM played a part during and after the concert at Maple Leaf Gardens.
One of the footnotes to Beatlemania was the WGUY, Bangor, Me., ban on Beatles records which resulted in a group of teenagers picketing the studios.
In announcing the Beatles disk ban, William Hart, general manager of WGUY, declared the station would “no longer be part of a drive to build a Beatle empire.” END
___
(Information and news source:Billboard; October 10, 1964)
A special THANK YOU to CKLW’s Charlie O‘Brien for sharing this (10/10/1968) Don Patrick 20/20 News memory with Motor City Radio Flashbacks.
— THE 1968 WORLD SERIES on NBC RADIO —
Motor City Radio Flashbacks featured the seven games of the 1968 World Series to commemorate the Detroit Tigers World Series victory over the St. Louis Cardinals — fifty years ago — last year in October.
All seven games of the 1968 World Series broadcasts over the NBC Radio Network is archived on this site,HERE.
*****
On your mobile device? Tap over newspaper images. Open to second window. “Stretch” image across your device screen to magnify for largest print view.
On your PC? Click on all newspaper images 2x for largest print view.
Ascension of FM Radio Popularity Stokes Consumer Choice For 2 Band Radios, 1965
CHICAGO – Dealers have been reporting a revolution in radio sales that could see AM-only models go the route of 78 r.p.m. There is one exception to the trend: low-end AM portables in the $5-$10 range which serves as the vital link between the teenager and his rock ‘n’ roll radio station.
“Even in the moderate-cost table lines our customers want AM FM,” goes the typical dealer observation. The changing market is clearly reflected in factory sales figures just released by the Electronic Industries Association. And one need not go too much further in search of an explanation than the record of FM station growth during recent years (see chart below).
Sales Tripled
EIA figures show that sales of auto and home radios equipped to receive FM have more than tripled since 1960. An increase of 40 per cent above 1964 is expected before the end of next year. In 1960 – the year FM really started to catch hold – one FM receiver was sold for every nine radios purchased. Last year one of every four radios sold could receive FM. By 1966, EIA expects the ratio to increase to one of three.
AM-only sales have hovered between 16 and 20 million since 1960. Some 20 million of these sets are expected to move this year. Of the domestic-brand FM sets sold, the EIA has found that some 40 per cent are incorporated in phonographs, 25 per cent are table models and the remainder are portable or combined with clocks and TV sets.
Portables Lead
Portables have registered the highest rate of FM sales increase. Radio Advertising Bureau statistics indicate that 23 million FM sets were included in the 151 million reported in home use today. This share is expected to rise to 30 million of 161 million this year and 38 million of 170 million in 1966.
The increase in FM model sales has remained in step with FM broadcasting growth. While set sales have tripled since 1960, station number has increased from 821 in 1960 to 1,205 in 1964.
___
(Information and news source: Billboard; October 9, 1965)
Billboard and Recording Music Industry Pays Homage to Ray Charles’ on His Twentieth Year in the Recording Business, 1966
The record business since its earliest years has been marked by the occasional appearance of an artist whose career added something fresh, or unique, to the world’s musical heritage. Such an artist was Caruso; another was Gene Austin; and yet others were Duke Ellington and Charley Parker. The list is a wonderful one . . . it is a list of what may be called the “great originals” and it includes Jimmie Rodgers, Frank Williams, Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra.
Each had his bag, as they say; and we may be grateful that several of the names are still carrying on in the great tradition. But the wellspring of talent never runs dry, and it is our pleasure to formally take note of – and document – the latest addition to the ranks of the “great originals.” Ray Charles is the name, as The Genius himself says in one of his early singles.
Ray has been on the scene some 20 years. His biography is the theme of another story; but for our purposes – the consideration of Charles as a recording artist – it is important to note that the years he spanned, two decades, were years of profound change in the music business.
Charles had recorded for some obscure labels on the West Coast in his initial years; but his first major development came when he joined Atlantic Records in 1952. “Root” influences were entering the mainstream of pop music. Rhythm and blues was selling in the pop market. This was an exciting blues – based music which was filling the vacuum created by the decline of the bands of the 1930’s and early 1940’s.
As the band business declined, the jazz world went off into new directions; and its prophets were Charley Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Christian and others who flocked to Minton’s in Harlem. Locations like Bird – land and Bop City echoed with the new music. Simultaneously – in the late 1940’s and early 1950’s – in another segment of the music business, another “root” influence was about to enter the mainstream of pop music.
This was the country and western ‘field, with its spiritual home in Nashville. It was during this time that several pop artists – notably those recorded on Columbia by Mitch Miller – such as Tony Bennett, Rosemary Clooney and Joe Stafford, garnered big hits with such country material as “Cold Cold Heart,” “Half As Much” and “Jambalaya“.
In still another area of the world of music – Memphis – an innovator named Sam Phillips was laying the groundwork for a history – making musical development: the creation of the “rockabilly” sound, a fusion of blues and country as done by white artists such as Carl Perkins, Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and Johnny Cash.
Assuredly, the times were changing. Tin Pan Alley, once centered in New York, had become the entire nation; and the wealth of American music was coalescing into one stream. Today it has coalesced in the artistry of Ray Charles. He has brought to the record buying public the elements outlined above – blues and country and pop; but “his bag” is infinitely greater, for it includes the great treasury of ballads written by the cream of composers affiliated with both ASCAP and BMI.
He is – in one – a great vocalist, a jazz pianist, a fine songwriter, a great arranger; and, as has been pointed out by Jerry Wexler, vice-president and general manager of Atlantic Records, Charles is a constant influence on the contemporary jazz scene. Indeed, he is one of the “great originals” – and this at a time when American music is richer and more complex than it has ever been.
Ray in his early years was influenced by the great, late Nat King Cole and the noted rhythm and blues artist, Charles Brown. He then came to Atlantic (1952) and recorded his first sides – one of which was “Losing Hand,” a notable blues side, particular with regard to the piano and guitar interchange. The first recording date included another interesting side, “Mess Around,” a rousing uptempo blues, written by Ahmet Ertegun, the president of Atlantic. But thus far, Ray was not writing his own material or arrangements.
One year later, however, Atlantic recorded Ray while he was playing around New Orleans. The session, cut at radio station WDSU studios, produced “Don’t You Know” – not one of his big sellers but nevertheless a milestone record because it was a Ray Charles tune, a Ray Charles arrangement and a Ray Charles band.
The year 1954 was a very important one for Charles. He was now writing and arranging, and his famous gospel style -using gospel chord progressions -was very apparent in his work. Wexler recalls: “In November of 1954, Ray called us to Atlanta to dig his new band. We got with him in the afternoon at the Peacock nightclub . . . as soon as we walked in Ray counted off and they hit into ‘I’ve Got a Woman’ and that was it. Zenas Sears got studio time for us, and after much confusion we got out with a tape containing ‘I’ve Got A Woman,’ ‘Greenbacks,’ ‘Come Back Baby‘ and ‘Blackjack‘ . . . it had now happened. Ray was full-fledged, ready for fame.“
From this point forward, Charles made many hit records with his own songs, his own arrangements and his own seven -piece band. Until 1959, he emphasized his gospel-styled songs. Then in 1959 Atlantic cut the noted Genius” session. This featured six sides with strings and voices with arrangements by Ralph Burns. Six sides were done with a big band. This group contained Charles’ own small group plus Ellington and Basie sidemen.
Arrangements were by Quincy Jones, Ernie Wilkins and others. Released under the title, “The Genius Of Ray Charles,” this album opened up for Charles a new segment of the record audience.
So during his Atlantic years, Charles developed greatly in blues, giving it his distinctive gospel orientation; he also developed as a jazz artist, as an arranger and writer; and finally, he also showed his capacity for handling ballads, such as his great performance of the Johnny Mercer-Harold Arlen standard, “Come Rain Or Come Shine.”
During his term on Atlantic, Charles had brought to the awareness of the public the term “soul” (see separate story) as characterizing his type of performance. It is also worthy of mention that his Atlantic blues sides, in addition to their gospel feeling, contained Charles’ own version of the vocal break so characteristic of blues performances, and a diversity of interesting rhythm patterns including a rumba blues beat – as exemplified in his “What’d I Say” record. In these years he also developed his capacity for wit and humor, as illustrated by such sides as “It Should Have Been Me” and by his subtle voice inflections.
Finally – on June 26, 1959 – to be exact, Charles cut a prophetic record. This was “I’m Movin’ On,” written by the great country artist, Hank Snow. As Wexler had said: “Regardless of the genre -gospel, pop, even hill-billy, Ray Charles now has the world for an audience.”
How true. Charles was already very interested in country and western material. He was hip to the songs, to artistslike Chet Atkins and Hank Snow, and he was getting ready to project himself to the public in new dimension-country music, with string and big band arrangements.
This was to happen early in Charles’ association with his new (and current) label – ABC. Charles’ recordings on ABC represent a flowering of his talent in many areas – all of them merging into one: pop. He took jazz, rhythm and blues, country and western and big ballads and gave to them all his unique touch; and sold them all in the mass market.
Ray’s first albums on ABC were “Genius Hits The Road” and “Dedicated To You“. These were not in the old Charles jazz or rhythm and blues style; the sides made use of big band arrangements, strings and a chorus, arranged and conducted by Marty Paich and produced by Sid Feller.
The first album produced the notable “Georgia On My Mind,” which became the nation’s No. I single. These two albums, with songs like “Georgia,” “Ruby,” and “Stella By Starlight” broadened Charles’ audiences. His exploration of sophisticated musical areas continued with such albums as “Ray Charles And Betty Carter,” using such great standard material as “People Will Say We’re In Love” and “Baby It’s Cold Outside,” with arrangements by Marty Paich and the Jack Halloran Singers.
But a blockbuster development was coming: This was Charles’ increasing interest in country music. Two albums, “Modern Sounds In Country & Western Music, Volumes I and II,” were milestones in several ways. Volume I gave ABC its first million-selling album and this included the million-seller single, “I Can’t Stop Loving You,” the Don Gibson song published by Acuff-Rose. In Nashville, where Acuff-Rose headquarters, President Wesley Rose was heard to remark: “That man (Charles) has done a lot for country music.”
Rose, of course, was correct. Charles, a great performer with blues and with jazz, who subsequently proved his artistry with standard ballads, now was proving his artistry with the country and western idiom. The prophecy inherent in his recording of Hank Snow’s “I’m Moving On” was about to be realized. In a set of revealing notes written for the liners of the country albums. Rick Ward, ABC publicity advertising director, tells how a&r director Sid Feller was at first confused when Charles requested a list of country hits of the past 20 years. Sid started collecting the songs, and by the time the recording session was due, Feller was completely sold on the idea.
Working with arrangers Marty Paich, Gerald Wilson and Gil Fuller, Charles produced a body of recorded material which accomplished several things: I) The country sides gave Charles a new dimension – one which had been hinted at in his Atlantic era; 2) Charles’ recordings of country music gave the country field a new dimension, for it brought country music even more firmly into the pop mainstream of American music.
Meanwhile, in an industry which is marked by the phenomenon of changing tastes and artists of short-lived fame, Charles keeps on turning out hit after hit: “Hit The Road Jack,” “Busted,” “Let’s Get Stoned” and others, plus his current “I Chose To Sing the Blues.” The last two decades – the era of Ray Charles – have been important ones for musicologists and scholars of the social scene. These people have realized that integration developed on a musical level long before the present civil rights movement picked up steam.
In this article we have sketched the broad outlines of this development – the influence of Memphis and Presley; the influence of Nashville, and finally, the influence of Charles who saw and understood the entire scene and made it his own with his fusing of blues, gospel, country and standard ballads and jazz-making all of these musical forms desirable to the pop market. In this way, Charles exercised a highly significant socio-musical influence whose total effect on our culture is still gaining momentum.
Meantime, he has not forsaken any of the musical forms which have been part of his development. One of his albums, for instance, is titled “Together Again“ (from the hit song of the country writer-artist Buck Owens). This contains, in addition to the title song, a veritable pot-pourri of both country and rhythm and blues material.
It includes, for instance, Bill Monroe’s “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” which was the first song (and a country song at that) ever recorded by Elvis Presley. It also contains the country items, “I’ve Got A Tiger By The Tail” and “I Don’t Care,” and such rhythm and blues sides as “Watch It Baby” and “Maybe It’s Nothing At All.” This album, incidentally, was first issued under the title: “Country And Western Meets Rhythm And Blues“.
In his latest album, to be released momentarily, there is reflected the broadest range of material. Titled “Ray’s Moods,” this package presents something for all the different types of Ray’s fans. Those hankering for rhythm and blues have it in “What-Cha-Doing In There.” For the jazz buffs there’s “Chitlins With Candied Yams“. His ballad style is illustrated by “Please Don’t Say Goodbye,” and his whimsical, humorous side is reflected in “Granny Wasn’t Grinning That Day“.
And finally, for the country fan, there’s “She’s Lonesome Again.” Buffs of Ray’s piano style will like “Maybe Because It’s Love” and “It’s A Man’s World,” the latter with gospel chord progressions. And Ray, of course, is continuously an innovator, so in this package he sings “Sentimental Journey” as no one has ever done it before.
Such is the artistry of Ray Charles, whose career spanning two decades has brought together the diverse strands of American music fashioning them into a creation that is at once fresh and new while still remaining faithful to the roots from whence it all sprang.END
___
(Information and news source: Billboard; October 15, 1966)
The CKLW BIG 30 hits in Windsor/Detroit. This survey was tabulated overall by record popularity appeal,sales, listener requests and record airplays based on the judgement of CKLW Radio.
Previewed for the week of October 7, 1969
On your mobile device? Tap over chart image. Open to second window. “Stretch” image across your device screen to magnify for largest print view.
On your PC? Click on all chart images 2x for largest print view.
— In MemoryofGeorge Griggs —
A SPECIAL THANK YOU
___
Above CKLW music chart courtesy of Mrs. Patti Griggs and the George L. Griggs estate.
The CKLW BIG 30 hits in Windsor/Detroit. This survey was tabulated overall by record popularity appeal, sales, listener requests and record airplays based on the judgement of CKLW Radio.
Previewed for the week of October 2, 1973
On your mobile device? Tap over chart image. Open to second window. “Stretch” image across your device screen to magnify for largest print view.
On your PC? Click on all chart images 2x for largest print view.
— In MemoryofGeorge Griggs —
A SPECIAL THANK YOU
___
Above CKLW music chart courtesy of Mrs. Patti Griggs and the George L. Griggs estate.