GOING UP, THE NEXT TWO WEEKS! TEN NEWLY RESTORED DETROIT RADIO AIRCHECKS FROM THE ARCHIVE

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By the time you will read this, I will be on my way traveling overseas, during the next two weeks. But Motor City Radio Flashbacks will remain open, business as usual! Here is what I have per-scheduled to post on this site while I will be away. Beginning Friday, September 22:

WXYZ Detroit Sound Survey [September 22, 1964]

AUDIO REMASTERED AIRCHECKS September 25-29 (four airchecks randomly selected from the Aircheck Library, WKQI is new):

WKQI-FM Danny Donabuce [August 30, 1996] Monday, September 25 (NEW!)

CKLW-AM Tom Clay [June 17, 1964] Tuesday, September 26

WMJC-FM Jeff & Jerr [February 28, 1983] Wednesday, September 27

WXYZ-AM Jim Hampton [July 29, 1966] Thursday, September 28

WNIC-FM Harper & Gannon [March 3, 1988] Friday, September 29

AUDIO REMASTERED AIRCHECKS October 2-6 (four airchecks randomly selected from the Aircheck Library, WKQI is new):

WKNR-AM J. Michael Wilson [October 3, 1966–July 29, 1967] Monday, October 2

WKQI-FM Roy Stephens [January 25, 1997] Tuesday, October 3 (NEW!)

WKSG-FM Lee Alan  [Program: June 13, 1963] Wednesday, October 4

WHND-AM Richard D. Haase [November 15, 1994] Thursday, October 5

WKNR-AM Tom Neal [November 23, 1969] Friday, October 6

All above featured audio airchecks were digitally remastered and restored, audio reprocessed and/or enhanced through the Sound Forge Audio Studio 16 Magix application software.

I will be back right here, after this brief two week hiatus, on Monday, October 9. In the meantime, keep it right here at Motor City Radio Flashbacks.

And I hope that you will enjoy these ten Detroit radio memories – newly remastered – all over again. Be back soon!

Jim Feliciano | Curator, Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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WJLB IN NEW PROGRAM POLICY . . . SEPTEMBER 23, 1967

New Detroit R&B Soul Station PD Will Launch “Young Sound” and Apply Consistency To Programming

 

 

DETROIT — WJLB, Booth Broadcasting’s 1,000-watt R&B operation here, has just launched a new programming policy centering around tighter production, faster pacing, and a new set of custom jingles created and packaged by Quincy Jones.

Wash Allen

Wash Allen, who just recently took over WJLB program director duties after being transferred from Booth’s WABQ in Cleveland, said the Detroit station would be “running with a full-blast, exciting young sound.” Playlist will be 40 records, to which he will add as necessity demands. “You can never tell how many good tunes will come out in a good week, but I think the average will be about five new records a week,” he said.

WJLB Martha Jean ‘The Queen’, 1967

The aim will be to establish consistency in programming, Allen said. He felt his philosophy in programming was the same as Bill Drake, consultant to RKO General stations, and Paul Drew, program director of CKLW in Detroit. “Certain top tunes must be played consistently and deejays must be consistent in their shows. One dee-jay can’t make a station; it has to be a total operation and this is a new concept in R&B radio. In the old days, one guy could make a station; he could make a record. It can’t be like that today.”

Things are changing so fast in radio, especially in R&B radio, that Allen felt many older dee-jays were finding it difficult to grasp what was happening. “To some extent,” Allen said, “it was necessary to teach radio to these people. It wasn’t anybody’s fault that this situation developed. It’s just that times are changing and a radio station has to move with the times.”

WJLB ‘Frantic Ernie’ Durham, 1967

Allen began his radio career with WVOL in Nashville while attending Tennessee State University. He had been with WABQ about two and a half years before moving to WJLB. He considers himself a “derivative of Ed Wright,” who’d been program director of WABQ prior to joining Liberty Records as head of its Minit label.

Allen wrote lyrics and produced the Jones jingles. Future plans call for psychedelic jingles. Station has brought in new equipment and is building up its news department. In Martha Jean Steinberg and Ernie Durham, Allen felt he had two of the top air personalities of any station in the nation. “Now, with the new equipment, we find we have everything to work with. END

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Information, credit, and news source (as was published): Billboard; September 23, 1967

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