[78-L] More on Mitch Miller

jack palmer jackpalmer1 at att.net
Thu Aug 5 00:04:19 PDT 2010


The honky tonks that I hung out in around El Paso in the 50s were almost all 
country music.    Jack




________________________________
From: Bill McClung <bmcclung78 at gmail.com>
To: 78-L Mail List <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Sent: Thu, August 5, 2010 1:04:14 AM
Subject: Re: [78-L] More on Mitch Miller

I'm thinking that if the 50's radio mix was much more pop than rock that
there was a better assortment on juke boxes of the time.  Especially
regional and genre variations.  Can't imagine that anyone on our list has
any honky tonkin' experiences that can verify this.

On Wed, Aug 4, 2010 at 12:40 PM, Malcolm Rockwell <malcolm at 78data.com>wrote:

> Actually by the time I taped WBAI it was a classical station by day and
> the loonies came on at midnight one or two days a week. But you are
> right that was probably c. 1963.
> But the station I taped and listened to most was WINS 1010 beginning
> around 1957. And where I got WMCA from I haven't a clue - probably meant
> WMGM, thanks! Oddly I just heard an obscure song on my local community
> supported radio station, KEAO-LP,  "And That Reminds Me" (aka, If There
> Could Be No Roses...) by Della Reese that dates from around that time
> which is on one of the tapes. What a strange piece of music.
> Anyhow, armed with my trusty "Magic Eye" Webcor I discovered that if I
> ran a lead from my radio's speaker, added in a resistance bridge to
> attenuate the signal (yes, I was building my own mostly passive
> electronics by the time I was 12) that I could plug it into the input of
> the Webcor and get a clean recording. Much to my father's chagrin this
> also worked well with the phone lines. Unfortunately nothing with dad's
> voice on it has survived. I've looked.
> Mal
>
> *******
>
> On 8/3/2010 11:31 AM, Michael Biel wrote:
> >    I also grew up in NYC, and I think you will find that you are
> > remembering the 60s, not the 50s.  WBAI was free-form hippie in the
> > mid-60s and was commie talk prior to that.  WOR-FM did not go rock
> > until 1967 -- the absolute first rock FM in NYC, and it was album
> > oriented rock -- and WOR (AM) never did play any rock (except for a
> > little on Martin Block's Make Believe Ballroom in the 60s after he left
> > WABC.  WMCA didn't really go rock till around 1960.  Same with WABC.
> > Post-payola scandal.  Other than the Negro stations high up on the dial,
> > the 50s rock stations -- pre-payola scandal -- were WINS 1010 and WMGM
> > 1050.  The prime time jocks were respectively Alan Freed and Peter
> > Tripp.  Freed was no longer Moondog, and was much tamer.  These two
> > competitors were playing as many slow dance numbers as fast rock.  While
> > Freed would not play a Pat Boone cover of Fats or Little Richard, he did
> > play April Love, Love Letters In the Sand, etc.  Since we are talking
> > about the rise of rock 55-59, those are the years that air-checks would
> > show what was REALLY being played.
> >
> > Mike Biel  mbiel at mbiel.com
> >
> > On 8/3/2010 2:02 PM, Malcolm Rockwell wrote:
> >
> >> Yes and no.
> >> I grew up in NYC in the 50s and 60s and we evidently had a much wider
> >> variety of rock n roll to choose from, as did the popular jocks. Yes,
> >> all the pop artists you mention were there, and more, but we also had
> >> material from as far away as Philadelphia (!) and New Orleans as well as
> >> all that early R&B. I still have tapes I made of the air from WOR (I
> >> think),  WMCA and WBAI. The WBAI stuff is esoteric, and so outside the
> >> scope of this thread, but the other two were mainline rock/pop. I
> >> specifically remember Murray The K (and his Swinging Soiree) and I guess
> >> he musta been progressive because a lot of the stuff out of New Orleans
> >> showed up there. Don't know how much Memphis material showed up in NY,
> >> though.
> >> Hmm, I'll have to dig up some of the play lists of my tapes and see
> >> who's right here. Could be different views from different sources.
> >> Mal
> >>
> >> *******
> >>
> >> On 8/3/2010 7:13 AM, Michael Biel wrote:
> >>
> >>> If you listen to REAL rock station air-checks from the 50s and look at
> >>> their published charts, you will find to your amazement that usually
> >>> less than 25% of the records played on these formats were really what
> we
> >>> now consider to be rock 'n' roll.  There was a LOT of Perry Como, Doris
> >>> Day, Johnny Mathis, Pat Boone, Four Aces, Four Lads, Kingston Trio, and
> >>> even Yellow Rose of Texas, and very LITTLE of Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck
> >>> Berry, Little Richard, etc.  We are remembering the era thru the filter
> >>> of oldies stations in the 70s and 80s, and those Oldies But Goodies
> LPs,
> >>>
> >>> Mike Bielmbiel at mbiel.com
> >>>
> >>>
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> >
>
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