Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Radio Waves Podcast #268

Radio: October 4, 2020

    Internet-based KNXFM93.Com — available online at the site and on your smart speaker as well as through apps such as TuneIn, MyTunerRadio, and StreamS — has announced big event: another Classic Mellow Sound Music Special. This time it’s the words and music of John Denver, just as it was presented on KNX-FM (now KCBS-FM, 93.1) in 1973.

    The two hour special will run on Saturday, October 10th at 5 p.m.

    Hosted by Tom McKay, the program eludes positiveness. Denver was a tremendously positive about his career and his life, and he presented that in his music. The interview gave him a chance to “talk about things I don’t always get to talk about,” and speak of the joy that he has in his life. 1973 was just as his career was getting its high point; in 1974 he would become one of the best-selling artists in the country.

    His music spanned an era in which positiveness was needed by the country, coming off of  the Vietnam War and heading into Watergate. An avid pilot with a love of flying, Denver’s life was cut short on October 12, 1997, when at the age of 53, he crashed his experimental light plane into the Monterey Bay near Pacific Grove, California. Investigation into the accident indicated that Denver was unable (or did not notice the need) to switch to an auxiliary fuel tank as he was running low on fuel. The accident led to new standards on plane design and pilot training.

    In addition to his music, Denver starred in several movies and television specials; perhaps the best-known movie is 1977’s Oh, God!, in which he played supermarket manager Jerry Landers, chosen by God (George Burns) to spread His message to a skeptical public.

    Denver was also active politically, especially in later years, focusing on environmental issues, hunger, and humanitarian work.

    Stern to Spotify?

    InsideMusicMedia.Com’s Jerry Del Colliano says he is calling this one early: Howard Stern is moving to Spotify.
    Well, he’s not saying it’s definite. But apparently negotiations are taking place as his contract renewal talks at SiriusXM continue. Will it happen? In my opinion, the word is doubtful. But Del Colliano is not often wrong, so it makes for an intriguing story. Stay tuned on this one.

    More Letters

    “Delayed response to your Sept 13 column – sometime around the mid-late 60’s in L.A. was KBLA, I think 1580 or thereabouts; its playlist/format was a half-step closer to FM - it was to KRLA what KRLA was to KHJ. Didn’t seem to last more than a few years.” — Gary Peck

    You are soooo close: Super 15 KBLA was a hipper alternative to KHJ, but was found at 1500 AM. There isn’t much history of the station, but it definitely has its place in local radio history.

    Ken Levine once described KBLA’s signal as being “worse than a baby monitor.” Coming out of Burbank and high up on the AM dial, the station had trouble reaching all of Los Angeles due to limited power and a directional antenna system designed to protect the signals of stations in other parts of the country at night.

    But did it try. With a roster that included Harry Newman, Roger Christian, Harvey Miller, Dave Diamond, Vic Gee (Jim Carson), and William F. Williams, from 1965-1967 it played more “hip” songs that traditional AM stations of the time, including a few album cuts. Dave Diamond, previously of KHJ (930 AM) did an evening show second to none, The Diamond Mine. My friend (and true radio guy) Jeff Leonard once gave me a tour of the area in Burbank where the station was once found — now just outside of a mall — showing where he would go to try to meet the DJs.

    PastDaily.Com has a great set of recording of Diamond’s last show on KBLA, June 16, 1967, just as the station was going to change to country at midnight. Hear it at tinyurl.com/RWoct1

    “A while back, you put out a listing of local AM & FM radio stations in your column when you were using email as rwagoner@icloud.com

 
I would like to get an updated listing if you can provide me with one or tell where I can get such a listing.” — Mary Smith

    That’s been on my “to-do” list for, um, ever. Almost, anyway. I’m going to push it to the front of the list and hopefully have something soon!

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for the heads up on John Denver. I liked the story on watching TV. I wish the podcast was at least 2 minutes longer. I would think there was more local radio in in this market.

    ReplyDelete