60 YEARS AGO | NOVEMBER 1963: THE NATION’S TOP 30 RECORDS! WEEK-ENDING, NOVEMBER 2

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The Honor Roll of Hits comprises the nation’s top tunes according to record sales and sheet sales, disk jockey and jukebox performances as determined by The Billboard’s weekly nationwide sales.

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The above Honor Roll Of Hits music chart was digitally restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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60 YEARS AGO | OCTOBER 1963: THE NATION’S TOP 30 RECORDS! WEEK-ENDING, OCTOBER 5

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The Honor Roll of Hits comprises the nation’s top tunes according to record sales and sheet sales, disk jockey and jukebox performances as determined by The Billboard’s weekly nationwide sales.

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Audio digitally remastered by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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The above Honor Roll Of Hits music chart was digitally restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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RKO CKLW 80: APRIL 9, 1961 [Detroit Free Press] RADIO BACK-PAGE AD

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Above article/advertisement courtesy freep.com newspaper archive. Copyright 2023. Newspapers.com

The above featured Detroit Free Press CKLW advertisement/ article was digitally re-imaged by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

Missed any of our previous �?Detroit Radio Back-Pages�? features? GO HERE

MCRFB Note: Special THANKS to our friend, John Bartony (a.k.a. Jukebox John) St. Clair Shores, Michigan, for providing the above Detroit Free Press CKLW RKO General ad (April 1961) for this site, as featured today.

A special thank you to senior MCRFB consultant Greg Innis, of Livonia, MI., for contributing the Newspapers.com archives (Detroit radio related) articles, ads, and images we have provide for this site since 2016.

Thank you, Greg Innis, for making these historic Detroit radio features possible. 🙂

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THIS WEEK IN BILLBOARD: THE NATION’S TOP LPs! WEEK ENDING, OCTOBER 16, 1965

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Eight weeks on the Billboard LP’s chart, The Beatles’ �?Help�? is at the #1 spot, week-ending, October 16, 1965. The American LP version of Help! reached the number one spot on the Billboard Top LPs chart for nine weeks starting on 11 September 1965. In the US, the Capitol album sold 1,314,457 copies by 31 December 1965 and 1,594,032 copies by the end of the decade [Source: Help (Album) Wikipedia]

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The above Billboard LPs 10/16/65 chart was digitally re-imaged and restored in its entirety by 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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BLITZ MAGAZINE | CKLW RADIO LEGENDS, BURTON CUMMINGS, HONOR CKLW MUSIC DIRECTOR ROSALIE TROMBLEY

The Rosalie Trombley Commemorative Day Event: Windsor, Ontario. Sunday, September 17, 2023

 

FROM BLITZ MAGAZINE’S WEBSITE and FACEBOOK PAGE

By Michael McDowell

If you believe that the 1970s represented a banner era for hit singles, you can thank Rosalie Trombley.

[Photo: The Windsor Star]

The position of Music Director at a radio station could vary widely in terms of aesthetic gratification, commensurate with the state of the art. For such visionaries as Frank “Swingin’ ” Sweeney and Paul Cannon (who each held the position at suburban Detroit’s legendary WKNR Keener 13 throughout the mid to late 1960s), being Music Director meant selecting an average of six to ten new singles for airplay out of the roughly 300 to 600 stellar new releases that surfaced each week throughout that most dynamic and creative of musical eras.

However, doing so meant that hundreds of landmark singles were overlooked at the time of their release. For the past several decades, Blitz Magazine - The Rock And Roll Magazine For Thinking People has been working in tandem with countless musicologists and record collectors around the world to chronicle, celebrate and archive that tremendous body of material.

Deverons and Guess Who alumnus BURTON CUMMINGS, Saint Clair College President PATTI FRANCE and Rosalie’s son, TIM TROMBLEY after the unveiling of the statue honoring former CKLW Music Director ROSALIE TROMBLEY in Winddsor, Ontario on Sunday 17 September 2023. Photo by Michael McDowell. C&P 2023 Blitz Magazine - The Rock And Roll Magazine For Thinking People. All rights reserved.

Conversely, with mainstream music at large having entered into a protracted aesthetic slump by the end of the 1960s, the job of Music Director by definition required a great deal more due diligence in order to sustain the momentum that had been generated by the likes of Sweeney and Cannon. As Music Director for Windsor, Ontario’s CKLW-AM throughout that period, Leamington, Ontario native Trombley nonetheless managed to separate the wheat from the chaff in similar fashion. In the process, she helped enable The Big 8 to dominate the North American market throughout the decade.

On the morning of Sunday the seventeenth of September, hundreds of radio and entertainment industry veterans gathered together with Trombley’s family and friends at Windsor’s Open Streets Festival along Riverside Drive for the unveiling of a statue in her honor. Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens was joined in his opening remarks by Saint Clair College President Patti France, statue artist Donna Jean Mayne and others, including former Deverons and Guess Who vocalist and keyboard man, Burton Cummings.

“I remember the few times I really talked to Rosalie”, said Cummings.

“She really knew the stuff. There are many musicians who are very talented, who didn’t make it. I never took that for granted. Because of Rosalie, I still hear myself on the radio all the time. And she was there, right at the launching point”.

BURTON CUMMINGS (left, back to camera) after the unveiling of the statue honoring former CKLW Music Director ROSALIE TROMBLEY, as Windsor, Ontario Mayor DREW DILKENS and big8radio.com CEO CHARLIE O’BRIEN look on in amusement. Windsor, Ontario, Sunday 17 September 2023. Photo by Michael McDowell for Blitz Magazine - The Rock And Roll Magazine For Thinking People. All rights reserved.

Following the unveiling of the statue by Cummings, CKLW veteran and big8radio.com CEO Charlie O’Brien and others, Saint Clair College hosted a lunch reception for the industry vets in attendance. Also on board were CKLW legends Len Robinson, Pat Holiday, Ted Richards, JoJo Shutty-MacGregor and Joe Donovan, along with Motor City Radio Flashbacks’ curator Jim Feliciano, Edison Media Research’s Sean Ross, renowned musicologist Jim Johnson and Trombley’s son, Tim.

At the reception, Tim Trombley shared at length about his mother’s unwavering ability to balance her pioneering work at CKLW with her ongoing responsibilities as a single parent, In the process, he provided one of the event’s most moving moments.

Conversely, Richards spoke of Trombley’s lighter side by sharing the secret of “the record that Rosale hated”.

“It was C.W. McCall’s Convoy”, Richards said, in reference to the November 1975 MGM label tale of the world of truck drivers and their CB radios.

“We aired it late at night!”

After the reception at Saint Clair College in Windsor, Ontario, following the unveiling of the statue honoring former CKLW Music Director ROSALIE TROMBLEY. Left to righr: Musicologist JIM JOHNSON, CKLW alumnus LEN ROBINSON, Motor City Radio Flashbacks’ curator JIM FELICIANO, Blitz Magazine - The Rock And Roll Magazine For Thinking People Editor / Publisher MICHAEL McDOWELL, CKLW alumnus and big8radio.com CEO CHARLIE O’BRIEN. Copyright 2023, Blitz Magazine. All rights reserved.

Nonetheless, all concurred that Trombley (who succumbed to a lengthy battle against Alzheimer’s disease in her native Leamington in November 2021 at age 82) was unwavering in her determination to keep the atmosphere in the CKLW studios like that of one big, happy family.

“We had fun!”, said Holiday.

To be certain, it was fun that was augmented by gratitude. And perhaps no individual at the day’s festivities was more grateful in that respect than Cummings.

Having left the Deverons in 1966 to join the Guess Who for the release of their third album, ‘It’s Time’, the band went on to sign with Larry Uttal’s Amy label in the United States. At Amy, the Guess Who released their Dave Clark Five - inspired “His Girl” single.

Meanwhile, the Guess Who continued to record for Quality at home. The results included such magnificent singles as Clock On The Wall and their ambitious cover of Buffalo Springfield’s “Flying On The Ground Is Wrong”.

However, with the departure of original front man Chad Allan (who had provided the lead vocal for the Guess Who’s 1965 monster classic cover of Johnny Kidd And The Pirates’ “Shakin’ All Over” for Florence Greenberg’s Scepter label), the band remained in transitory mode for more than a year. In addition to those various projects for Amy and Quality, they managed to sustain their momentum in part by hosting a musical variety television series from their native Winnipeg, Manitoba.

But thanks to Rosalie Trombley, that all began to change at the end of 1968.

A summit meeting of sorts, at the reception following the unveiling of the statue honoring former CKLW Music Director ROSALIE TROMBLEY in Windsor, Ontario on Sunday 17 September 2023. Left to right: Edison Media Research’s SEAN ROSS, Blitz Magazine - The Rock And Roll Magazine For Thinking People Editor / Publisher MICHAEL McDOWELL, CKLW alumnus and big8radio.com CEO CHARLIE O’BRIEN. Copyright 2023, Blitz Magazine. All rights reserved.

Around the time they had completed a joint album project at home with Capitol Records stalwarts, The Staccatos, The Guess Who switched label affiliations to RCA Victor in the United States and Nimbus in Canada. Their resultant Wheatfield Soul album produced an ambitious original ballad (composed by Cummings and Guess Who lead guitarist Randy Bachman), “These Eyes”.

After that single had enjoyed brief success at home in late 1968, Trombley lent her support to the record, putting it in heavy rotation at CKLW in the early weeks of 1969. The single became an instant classic.

One magnificent Guess Who single after another followed in succession, from mid-1969 throughout the first half of the 1970s. Among the highlights were “Laughing / Undun”, “No Time”, “American Woman” / “No Sugar Tonight”, “Hand Me Down World”, “Rain Dance”, “Albert Flasher”, “Dancin’ Fool”, “Share The Land” / “Bus Rider”, “Sour Suite”, “Glamour Boy”, “Orly” and their sublime signature single,” Running Back To Saskatoon”. Without exception, Trombley afforded each and every one of them heavy rotation at CKLW.

“When it comes to Rosalie Trombley, I have no problem saying very easily that she changed my life”, said Cummings. “It would occur to me once in a while that if it weren’t for Rosalie, I wouldn’t be here.

“I kept a journal, as we didn’t have laptops back then. We traveled all over the world. I wouldn’t have had that luxury had Rosalie Trombley not launched our first (RCA Victor) record.

“Rosalie was a huge part in launching that record. This was the gateway into Detroit, where a lot of people heard it for the first time. I would not have a wall of beautiful gold records at home, were it not for Rosalie. For that, I am eternally grateful. I will never forget her.”

The statue of Rosalie Trombley can be viewed from Riverside Drive at the intersection of McDougall Street.

Mike McDowell September 19, 2023

Copyright 2023. Blitz Magazine. All rights reserved.

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A special THANK YOU to Mike McDowell, Editor of Blitz Magazine, for his guest article published here today at Motor City Radio Flashbacks.

All photographs were taken and is property of Mike McDowell.

A special THANK YOU to Terry Scott. The You Tube video presentation below is courtesy of CKLW 580 newsman Terry Scott.

Also, visit the newly-launched website (September 17, 2023), ‘Honouring Rosalie Trombley’, go HERE

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A MCRFB Note: For detailed and enlarged viewing of all images presented here, double-click over each photo with your PC mouse. Tap over photo and stretch image across your mobile device window for expanded detailed view.

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PROGRAM DIRECTOR SHOULD MEAN PEOPLE DIRECTOR . . . SEPTEMBER 19, 1964

Programming Newsletter

 

 

By BILL GAVIN
Billboard Contributing Editor

PROGRAM DIRECTORS handle a multitude of problems. They deal with promos, jingle packages, formats, news, music and everything else that goes on the air. At many smaller stations their jobs also include supervision of commercial production for local advertisers. The manifold responsibilities of a program director test his skills and try his patience. Of all his jobs, none is so important and none so difficult-as obtaining optimum effectiveness from his staff of disk jockeys.

It has been said that the most successful PD is the one who does the least directing. It could be said more accurately that the most fortunate PD’s are those who need to do the least directing. In an ideal situation, the PD can say “Here’s our policy-here’s our music-you’re all pros-you know how to do good shows-so go!”

There are hardly more than a dozen stations in the U. S. where the staff quality permits the PD to get away with such a do-it-yourself policy. The great majority of disk jockeys, with all their many skills and talents, do better jobs with some coaching, directing, urging, scolding, prodding and whatever other devices the PD may devise. The initials “PD.” which are synonymous with “Program Director,” could just as well stand for “People Director.”

Consider some of the combinations of talent and temperament which the PD must weld into an effective air force:

1. The witty DJ, who is clever and amusing, but who knows little and cares less about his music.

2. The DJ who depends on a set bag of tricks, but who seldom comes up with a fresh, original idea.

3. The record “expert,” whose poor voice and bumbling reading of copy are somewhat compensated for by his contagious enthusiasm about his
music.

4. The erratic genius, who poses a constant threat of embroiling the station in libel suits and license difficulties.

5. The conformist who plays it safe by running his shows according to the book, never doing anything wrong but never rising much above the minimum requirements.

6. The restless wanderer, always with an eye on the bigger job, whose long-distance approaches to other stations eventually reach the ears of his own boss.

7. The young prospect who shows signs of talent, and whose apparent potential persuades the PD to spend endless hours trying to develop him into a pro.

Then, of course, there are the rebels and gripers who would be fired tomorrow if they weren’t such very good DJ’s, and the loyal stalwarts who probably would be fired if they weren’t so terribly cheerful, co-operative and devoted to the station.

OUT OF THESE varying degrees of skills and problems, the PD must determine when and where to apply his authority, how and whom to help, and which are hopeless and must be dropped. The way in which he makes these decisions usually determines his own job tenure, for they vitally affect his station’s ratings. He doesn’t dare let his personal friendships for certain DJ’s blind him to their faults, nor can he afford to permit personal dislikes to obscure good performance. He must be detached and objective enough to judge by results, yet warmly human enough to inspire loyalty and enthusiasm from his staff.

Hiring the new man is always a tough decision. There have been countless occasions where the PD has hired on the basis of past ratings and a good aircheck and found later, to his dismay, that his new man simply would not fit the staff or help the station. One of the most successful PD’s I know follows a strict rule: he never hires anyone without a personal interview, and if he has to travel a thousand miles to meet the applicant, he does so.

A program director’s success is usually judged by his station’s ratings, and rightly so. That’s what he is paid for. It is a mistake to credit his success to an inspired music policy or brilliant promotions. His genius, if he has any, lies in his skill and understanding as a people director. END

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Information, credit, and news source (as published): Billboard; September 19, 1964

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RECORD WORLD | THE TOP COUNTRY SINGLES / LP’s CHART: WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 11, 1965

The featured Top Country Singles / LP’s chart courtesy of Record World, as published, for this week in September 1965.

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This Record World chart were digitally re-imaged and restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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MUSIC BUSINESS | A RCA VICTOR RECORDS CLASSIC ’45 RPM AD: SEPTEMBER 1964

The featured Music Business 09/05/1964 RCA Victor Records ad was digitally re-imaged and restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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