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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From the Desk of Bill Gavin Billboard Contributing Editor
“DIRTY LYRICS!” That’s a term we’re hearing these days more often than ever before. Radio people are becoming increasingly critical about the song lyrics offered for air play. In several instances, program directors have withdrawn a record from the playlist because of listener complaints.
One correspondent, referring to a new record, writes: “A definite hit sound. If stations refuse to program this record because of the lyrics, then there must be 25 more records that should be dropped for the same reason. What is the answer? Action on our part? Action on the record industry’s part? There are so many questionable records that if we refused to play them all there would be a gigantic hole in our playlist.
“I dislike this trend in lyrics, and I feel a deep obligation to serve the public interest, but it is getting more difficult all the time to do that and program some of this trash at the same time.”
OUR NEWSPAPERS carry frequent stories about juvenile immorality and violence. No one would go so far as to place all the blame on the records heard over the radio. The records are simply a mirror of teenage tastes, interests and problems, just as the teenagers themselves reflect some of the turbulent pressures and changes in modem society.
Another radio man writes: “This is a tough problem. If we don’t play (title deleted) the competition will, and we lose listeners who want to hear it. These kids learn real fast when your station isn’t playing something they want. Of course, we’re taking the chance that some screwball will squawk to the Commission. I guess that’s just one of the hazards of the business.
“THE RECORD COMPANIES have to put out this stuff because the kids buy it, I suppose. Maybe it’s just a passing trend. I hope so.” Is it contrary to the “public interest” to broadcast a record dealing with teen marriages? Or with a girl who asserts that she is no “pushover?”Or with a love so great that “I’m gonna give him everything he wants?” Or a boy who sings “Come on, baby, love me all the way?”
Regardless of what lines are to be drawn, and where, one fact seems clear. Radio is in a peculiarly vulnerable position. It holds its right to broadcast from an agency of the government. Unlike a newspaper, whose emphasis on sex and violence is limited only by editorial policy, a radio station is always susceptible – theoretically, at least – to being put out of business because an aroused public opinion demands it.
So far no station license has been canceled because of any records that have been aired. However, thoughtful broadcasters must certainly be aware that public opinion is growing moreconcerned over the problems of youth. Statistics on illegitimate pregnancies among high school girls are being given prominent newspaper space. The press recently quoted a prominent educator as urging that high school students be given instructions in the use of contraceptives.
IT IS LIKELY that if a responsible citizen’s group were to monitor the song lyrics broadcast by the top 40 stations in their community, a strong basis for an official complaint would be found. Regardless of how insensitive a broadcaster’s social conscience maybe, an enlightened self -interest should warn him of the need for cleaning up his playlist.
In fairness, it must be pointed out that only a small percentage of the current singles output contains offensive lyrics. It is also true that the great majority of radio stations resolutely ban any material that is questionable in the slightest degree. Unfortunately, however, this minority influences reaches a majority of teenagers. If only a few of them are wrongly influenced by some of the things they hear on radio, it is still too many.
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Information and news source: Billboard; June 8, 1963
WJOI 97 * 1987 * THE SOUNDS OF JOY FM (Mark Taylor)
— WJOI 97.1 FM —
*****
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.
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.
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The above CKLW chart was digitally restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks
— In MemoryofGeorge Griggs —
A SPECIAL THANK YOU
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A sincere, thank you, Mrs. Patti Griggs. This featured presentation would have not been possible without you and without your continuous support.
Above CKLW music chart courtesy of Mrs. Patti Griggs and the George L. Griggs estate.
Diana Ross (born March 26, 1944) was born and raised in Detroit, Michigan, Ross rose to fame as the lead singer of the vocal group The Supremes, who during the 1960s becameMotown’s most successful act, and are the best-charting female group in US history, as well as one of the world’s best-selling girl groups of all time.
The group released a record-setting twelve number-one hit singles on the US Billboard Hot 100: “Where Did Our Love Go”, “Baby Love”, “Come See About Me”, “Stop! In the Name of Love”, “Back in My Arms Again”, “I Hear a Symphony”, “You Can’t Hurry Love”, “You Keep Me Hangin’ On”, “Love is Here and Now You’re Gone”, “The Happening”, “Love Child”, and “Someday We’ll Be Together”.
Following her departure from the Supremes in 1970, Ross released her eponymous debut solo album that same year, featuring the No. 1 Pop hit “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough”.
In May 1970, Ross released her eponymous solo debut, which included her signature songs,“Reach Out And Touch (Somebody’s Hand)” and “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough”, the latter becoming Ross’ first number-one solo single. Follow-up albums, Everything Is Everything and Surrender came out shortly afterwards. In 1971, the ballad “I’m Still Waiting” became her first number-one single in the UK
She later released the album Touch Me in the Morning in 1973; its title track was her second solo No. 1 hit.
She continued a successful solo career through the 1970s, which included hits albums like Mahogany and Diana Ross and their No. 1 hit singles, “Theme from Mahogany” and “Love Hangover”, respectively.
“Reach Out and Touch (Somebody’s Hand)” is the debut solo single of singer Diana Ross, released in April 1970.