DICK PURTAN WKNRaircheck date: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1966
— SPECIAL ACKNOWLEDGEMENT —
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NEW! A special THANK YOU to our website contributor, Peter Faulkner, of Calgary, Alberta, for recently donating this WKNR-AM radio aircheck (he personally recorded in 1966) with Motor City Radio Flashbacks.
SAN FRANCISCO — The music director at a top 40 station in a large city holds his job largely by continuing to demonstrate his ability to select the new records that eventually become hits. Every week, when he makes his top pick or discovery, he puts his reputation on the line.
It occasionally happens that even after his station has been playing his pick of the week once an hour for a week, none of the local stores can report any significant sales on it. Should such a thing happen with any degree of regularity. his boss will start looking for a new music director.
One annoying circumstance arises occasionally: a few weeks after a pick has been heavily played and yet has sold little or nothing in the market, it looms up in other cities and becomes a national hit. This is pretty frustrating. Why can’t the first station to spot a record’s potential break it for a hit?
BECAUSE, IN MOST CASES, the record isn’t in the stores. The dealers get customer calls but don’t have it. Sometimes they’ll try to order it from the distributor and find that he hasn’t stocked it. By the time it finally reaches its destination at the retailer point of sale, there may be no further demand for it. The station may have dropped it entirely, figuring that it was a bomb.
This kicks back at the station, too, in the form of listener displeasure. Those who have tried to buy the record, in the belief that it must be important, have their enthusiasm dampened when they find that it isn’t available in the stores. Their confidence in the station is shaken. It’s unfortunate all the way around. Everybody loses. Who gets blamed? Everybody.
The retailer should keep up with what is being picked for air play, and he should have the new items in stock. The distributor should have stock on the floor, ready to move it out to the stores at the first sign of action. The music director should make certain of the record’s immediate availability before he picks it. At least, that’s the way everyone involved tries to evade the responsibility by blaming someone else.
A closer liaison between the station and the distributor can avoid such situations. Some of the nation’s most successful music directors always check with the distributor before picking a record. When will stock he available? If the station goes on the record, will the distributor order it? Will he guarantee an initial allocation to key retailers?
IT HAPPENS OCCASIONALLY that two or three versions of a record will appear almost simultaneously. Which label gets the pick? It is not always the version with the better sound. It is often the version whose distributor is known to be alert and aggressive, and who can be depended upon to get it on the dealers’ shelves.
This doesn’t necessarily mean that the distributor must guarantee 100 per cent. It should be enough – and usually is – that he will back up the station’s confidence in his product by making it quickly available to the dealers if they need it.
Most important distributors follow this kind of a policy. It is hard to understand why all do not. It is a weakness more often encountered in factory owned or controlled branches, where stock is controlled by the national brass, who estimate which of their weekly releases are most likely to be in demand. In such cases, the decision of an important station to pick a left field possibility – something that is not considered by the bosses to be a top plug item – is occasionally ignored by the local branch manager.
Station music directors are becoming more discriminating with picks in relations to practical sales prospects in a local market. It is a trend that merits serious consideration by record people, in improving their co-ordination between promotion and sales. END
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Information and news source: Billboard; October 19, 1963
Many of the charted Billboard ‘Top 50’ R&B albums were also the most popular LP’s which were selected and featured on Detroit’s soul stations 1400WJLB and 1440 WCHB on the AM dial, November 1970.
The featured R&B Top 50 albums listing was the nation’s most popular R&B LP’s, as tabulated by Billboard, 50 years ago.
WEEK OF NOVEMBER 1-7, 1970
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Many of the above titled Billboard ‘Top 50’ R&B singles were also the most popular radio plays heard on Detroit’s soul stations 1400WJLB and 1440 WCHB on the AM dial, November 1970.
The featured R&B Top 50 hits list was the nation’s most popular R&B singles, as charted by Billboard, 50 years ago.
WEEK OF NOVEMBER 1-7, 1970
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ON YOUR PC? For a larger detailed view click above Billboard chart 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.
ON YOUR MOBILE DEVICE? Tap over above chart images. Open to second window. “Stretch” image across your device screen to magnify for largest print view.
Long known and since immortalized as ‘The Voice of Michigan Football’, Bob Ufer was the impassioned play-by-play announcer for Michigan Football games, spanning across five decades.
According to WiKipedia, Ufer called Wolverines football on WPAG from 1945 to 1976 and on Detroit’s WJR from 1977 to 1981. In 1978, he was inducted into the University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor.
Nine days after his last broadcast, Bob Ufer succumbed having lost his battle with cancer, Monday, October 26, 1981. He was 61.
This broadcast initially aired on WJR radio, Monday evening, October 26, 1981. It was later re-broadcast, Saturday, October 31. This special homage to Bob Ufer was written, narrated and was produced by Mike Whorf, WJR radio in Detroit.
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While the Saturday, October 31, 1981 tribute to Bob Ufer was previously featured three years ago on Motor City Radio Flashbacks (October 28, 2017), this site was able to obtain a stellar audio copy of this 1981 radio program from the WJR master tape, earlier this year.
On the very evening of Bob Ufer’s passing, this was the recording having first aired on WJR, 7:10 p.m., Monday, October 26, 1981.
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Motor City Radio Flashbacks
Six years ago. Detroit radio lost a friend.
In retrospect, we pause today. Honoring the memory ofGeorge L. Griggs, founder of Motor City Radio Flashbacks
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We extend a sincere thank you to Mrs. Patti Griggs. This website, today, would not have been possible without your generosity, your contributions, and your continuous support.
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Motor City Radio Flashbacks will resume website operations, Monday, November 2, 2020