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Curators Note: Anyone who
digs into keener13.com knows that celebrating radio as art is what we're all
about. Many contend that art has nearly vanished from our homogenized airwaves
today, but few have articulated the issue as well as Dr. George Pollard. If you
agree, circulate this page to your friends in the biz. If your an announcer
(Steve and I disdain the term "Disk Jockey"), think about Dr. Pollard's
observations the next time you crack the mic..
Scott Westerman - Curator(at)Keener13.com
A while back, a journalist friend asked if I'd make a point of listening to
radio. He wanted to do a piece on radio in the twenty-first century, and
up-to-date sources are always helpful. That was some time ago. He hasn't got
around to the piece. I, however, have listened to an awful lot of music radio,
with a gimlet ear.
What I didn't hear shocked me. Times change, and I was eager to hear a new and
different radio. There wasn't much happening. I didn't expect the depth of the
abyss or its emptiness.
Forty years ago, Newton Minnow, then head of the US Federal Communication
Commission, called television a "vast wasteland." I thought his denunciation was
unfair for what, at the time, was a relatively new industry. Only after World
War II were enough television stations licensed to allow a creative production
environment to flourish.
Radio has an eighty-three year history, and there have been two extended eras of
excellence - one as a national medium, the other as a local medium. Expectations
of a third wave of excellence were not out of line.
To listen and find a wasteland, across the dial, surprised me.
Studio musicians often walk through the charts they're playing and go home. The
tracks they lay down are technically good - perfect, usually - but passionless.
Such was the sound of radio, perfunctory, but far from perfect.
The radio I heard lacked energy, passion and commitment. Save for a very few,
there wasn't much emotion. Time, traffic and temperature were pervasive. Once
upon a time, a "three-t" jock, as in disc jockey, was a service provider, a live
voice to fill off-hours. The service provider is now ubiquitous.
Jocks, today, seem to meander through shifts, lifers, putting in time.
Everything seems to take energy, not create it. "Hey, mom, I'm on the radio,"
and boring. Maybe playing music that came and went before you were born - there
was almost no new music on radio - can't be made interesting or be fun. Could I
have found a way to make playing Percy Faith fun when I was twenty? If I
couldn't, ten thousand could and did.
Maybe it's time to dust off some oldsters. Old jocks never die, their volume
just needs adjusting. A generation ago, lot of quality radio artists left for
greener pastures. Many are itching to return. Dan Nevereth returned,
successfully, and rumor is Bill Gable will be back, shortly. Once you've
mainlined radio as art, you're forever hooked.
No energy and no passion make commitment unlikely. My sense is the jocks I heard
would accept a job in retail, if it paid better. Many do. Nothing suggested
radio was a priority. Some might even work the hospitality industry or on a used
car lot. They'd surely be successful as long as it didn't call for energy or
passion. A lot of the voices I heard are likely celibate.
Yes, the egos would stay. Once upon a time, there was a young jock, Jerry Blavat,
working WCAM, a thousand watt station in Camden, New Jersey. He billed himself
as the "Geater with the Heater." (Don't ask.) WCAM reputedly paid Jerry thirty
dollars a week, but he made $135,000 a year. He knew how to parley his station
job into hard currency. At one point, thousands of Jerry Blavats were working
radio. Egos would pull their shift for nothing, if necessary, and it didn't
affect their energy, passion, creativity, commitment or income.
There was a time when radio was performance art. Listeners tuned to jocks for
entertainment and inspiration. As Carl de Suze, the Boston AM Drive legend, told
me in an interview, many years ago, jocks "sold the music, we didn't rely on it
to attract attention; we made sure listeners tuned in to hear us." Time, traffic
and temperature were necessary evils.
In four or five hour shifts, jocks burst with infectious energy. They were
passionate about radio and, sometimes, about music, too. Then there were the
Brian Murphys, who were doubly passionate about the music and high on radio.
Passion was the point.
Mostly, jocks were uber-passionate about radio. They lived radio. Many married
it. One fellow I worked with had a studio set up in his living room so he could
practice, practice, practice. His wife is with him to this day. Tolerance seems
to know few limits.
Above all, these jocks were committed to exhausting all the possibilities radio
had to offer, and then finding some more. Their passion was so great, uber-energy
was a given. Their art was addictive for listener and creator, alike.
In those days, you'd con the car keys from dad. Dial the radio to WKBW, WABC,
WBZ or CKLW. Pick up your girl, go watch the submarine races and listen to the
radio.
On 'KB, Joey Reynolds played the same record for four straight hours and taunted
competitor, Jackson Armstrong. From the reverberation chamber that was WABC, the
energy of "Cousin Brucie" wired you to the nines and imbued a sense of
invincibility. Bruce Bradley, on WBZ, premiered "Rubber Soul" - a must for
boomers in the fall of '65. CKLW delivered the Motown wall of sound; what a
thrill were those nights when the weather was just right and "The Big Eight"
bounced into town. These were princes of the universe, one and all.
Dick Summer is one example of non-frenetic synergy. Night in, night out, on WBZ,
WNEW and WNBC, he was calmly creative, passionate and totally committed. On WBZ,
there were long, intense and interesting conversations with Rod McKuen, the best
selling poet of all time or comic Sandy Baron. Dick would read poetry to the
music of the day - "The Highwayman" to the beat of "Flute Thing," is the one I
recall most vividly. He was one of the first to play "Sound of Silence,"
understand it and convey his understanding to listeners. Couldn't wait for
midnight, to hear what gifts Dick Summer would bring for listeners. When he
moved to WNBC, after a spell doing "Milkman's Matinee," on WNEW, New York, Dick
had at least one long, truly intelligent conversation with a woman from
"Penthouse." It was so intimate, without a hint of anything untoward. Most, I
suspect, would've talked down to her and played up the "soft porn" angle, but
not Dick Summer. "Dignity, class and integrity," is the way Carl de Suze
described Dick, and this was a prime example. This was calm, synergistic radio
that made you want to listen, not for the music, but for the jock.
Listeners were loyal, in those days. Favorite jocks were local heroes. One time,
three jocks from CKLW were in the audience at the "Rooster Tail," the Detroit
showplace for Motown. Until the emcee introduced them, tension ran high. After
the introduction, they were among five thousand of their very best and dearest
friends - their listeners.
Jocks set the agenda of conversation. "Hey, did you hear what Pascal did during
'The Final Hour,' last night?" Speculating what he might do next was exciting.
Is there really someone named "Susie Creamcheese"? Did she really %$#@-up in
Europe? Tens of thousands listened to find out, every night. Few were aware of
Frank Zappa and thus not in the loop.
That station, now, is a shallow shadow of its former greatness.
We were never bored because radio was never boring. Jocks were on their toes and
kept reaching. They could hear for miles and miles and miles, and never rested
on their laurels.
What happened? The answer is simple. Non-creatives wrenched control from the
creatives. The same approach has overwhelmed movies, music and recording over
the past dozen or so years. When bottom lines become more important than art,
the art withers. Then the profits began drying up.
Bean counters seldom comprehend that art and authenticity equal profits.
The artistic temperament is volatile and talent is fragile. Artistry begets
peccadilloes. Many great radio artists were philandering, irreverent slobs.
Advertisers are seldom comfortable with creatives, as Stan Freeberg can attest.
So, replace artists with parrots that repeat time, traffic and temperature and
decrease the possibility of offending.
Contracts to buy time, moreover, are black and white, legally binding, easier to
manage and don't talk back.
What made radio artistic? Answering that question is difficult. To lift a line
from John Sebastian, "it's like trying to tell a stranger about rock 'n' roll."
You must hear it and when you do, you'll know it.
Radio as art is a sensation. You feel it much the way you sense a loving touch.
It compels your attention, like nothing else. When radio is art, everything is
in sync, working as a well oiled, if complicated, Swiss watch.
"Hitting the vocal" is a part of radio art. Done well, it's astounding.
In concept, it's simple - talk over the instrumental introduction of a record
until the vocal begins. In real life, the pressure of running a high-octane
show, with a heavy spot load, makes hitting vocal extremely difficult. If you
step on the vocal, you're an amateur. What must happen is the vocal begins in
lockstep with the cadence of the jock, on a natural breath pause. Most artful is
having the vocal finish your thought. Hitting the vocal is easy to write or
think about and entertaining to hear, but extremely difficult to pull off.
David Hayes, who writes for "The Walrus," a monthly magazine, relays a story
about the legendary Bill Gable, when he was at CKLW, in Windsor. "Papa Was a
Rolling Stone" was a big hit, at the time, and thus played often. The
instrumental introduction to "Papa .." is one minute and thirty-three seconds
long. Even the best jocks let this one go, but not Gable. One shift, as
co-workers watched in awe, Gable talked, on topic, for the full ninety-three
seconds, letting the first line of vocal finished his thought on a natural pause
in his vocal rhythm - "It was the third of September, a day I'll always
remember, yes I will." To lift a line from Steven Tyler, of Aerosmith, "Holy
shit!" Gable claims to recall little of the event. All in a day's shift, I
suspect, is his thinking. Still, it's radio history, a sound monument to the
possible.
This was radio performance art at its very, very best. Who, today, would imagine
such a thing? Most would deign to try.
When parts combine to produce results that exceed reasonable expectations, when
you get much more than you thought you would, you have synergy. Radio art is a
synergy of energy, passion and commitment -
always more than imaginable. It inspires jock and listener to reach for the
highest levels of possibility. It's an inspiration like no other.
Can we do better? Can we do it a little different? Each shift was synergistic.
In 1965, a fellow named Yarborough used the name Drake. He devised a radio
format that synchronized frequent repetition of a brief play list with audience
turnover. The goal was to optimize profits. The faster the audience turned over,
the greater the profits. When a listener heard a record for the second time, it
was their cue to move on. As all great notions, the Drake Format was simple in
concept.
Drake required jocks stick to strict time restrictions. Slogans and the three-ts
were about all most jocks could slip between commercial islands and records.
Alliteration was common. Los Angeles became "Boss Angelus," with the vowels
extended all the way to San Jose. The news was tabloidish - "frantic father
fries four," was the lead about a stressed-out parent who burned his home, while
his children slept inside.
It's a disgusting headline, if you're fifty-six, but one that made you a
strutting bad-boy newsroom star, if you worked the Drake format.
When the format premiered on KHJ, in Los Angeles, inflammatory criticism was
immediate. It was the Armageddon of radio! Who would or could listen to such
repetitive and tightly structured radio? At some point, the uber-cocky Drake
must have wanted to crawl into a hole. The negativity was relentless. In the
end, it turned out to be format-envy.
In no time, KHJ was number one in Boss Angeles. Drake imitators popped up
everywhere. WRKO, in Boston, was an especially authentic version. The format was
profitable, and audiences liked it. The boomers tuned to the Drake format,
everywhere, and stayed with it. Drake was an easy target. Many thought the
format dehumanized radio. In other words, it removed the performance art from
radio. Drake did just the opposite. It opened-up possibilities for radio art.
Seldom are things what you first think.
Drake was more flexible than believed. Robert W. Morgan and Charlie Tuna, among
others, could break format with impunity, and did. Their brand of radio art made
money, listeners loved them and they didn't detract from the overall approach.
It was the best of all worlds.
The Drake-jock forged new paths of creativity. "The Real" Don Steele typified
the artistry made possible by Drake. Steele had a spontaneous, quicksilver
intelligence, a mischievous sense of humor, an appreciation of the ridiculous
and an uncanny capacity for intense concentration, if only in bursts of twenty
seconds. Hitting vocal was a mere trifle for Steele. He could jam more
information into a few seconds than an ordinary person could convey in an hour.
During one PM Drive shift, Steele had twenty seconds to hit vocal out of a
commercial, but had to do a weather report and play a jingle along the way. He
had little room to inject any hint of personality, but did.
Coming out of the commercial, he banners, "LA weather," then comes the flood:
"Clouds and FOOGGGG!!!, along the coast, tonight.
Hazy-sunshine-of-your-loving-life SMOG, tomorrow . in the mid-70s downtown and
Orange Country. Low's near 55 . up to 83 in the Valley. Low tonight 55. Downtown
. now 73 and currently, here in Hollywood, 76 deee-greeeees." And a four second
jingle into vocal. Whew! You must hear it to sense the drama, and it's just a
weather report.
Day in and day out, Steele infused the mundane with high drama. Take a deep
breath and duplicate his sixteen-second weather report. Now, try to make it
interesting, with personality, and create drama. It's draining just to listen to
this forty-year-old clip. Steele is to radio what van Gogh is to painting.
Don Imus is one of the remaining radio artists. These days, he mostly comments
and interviews. In his early years, he was more a jock. Ian "Brother" Barrie
once schmoozed Jack Thayer, then manger of WNBC, into sending him a random
one-hour line check of Imus. If the hour was random, and there's no reason to
believe it wasn't. Imus was and is the Leonardo da Vinci of radio art.
The Imus aircheck is so jam packed, an adequate summary is impossible. There are
commercials, some music, time and temperature, and sports. Banter among jock,
news anchor, Chuck McCord, and a sportscaster presage the "Imus in the Morning"
of today. There is an Imus bedtime story and few other bits that, pure and
simple, are outstanding radio art.
A few years ago, a bunch of my Social Psychology students cajoled me into
playing the Imus tape for them. Since these students were born long after the
show aired, and were as cynical as most twentysomethings, I figured a polite
chuckle here and there was all I could expect. Was I wrong? To a one, they
thought it was a hoot, and second time through decided it was amazing art. And
there was no shining on my part. As do all great works, radio art stands the
test of time; its appeal is timeless.
In our irreverent twenties, "Brother" Barrie and I mused that stations would
likely continue to roll line checks of Carl de Suze, Rick Steele and B. Mitchell
Reed, among many others, long after they had passed.
Radio art is that enduring. Now, I've just given some hapless programmer an
idea.
Maybe some jock, somewhere, is doing radio art, today. I doubt it. I searched
and searched. What I heard was bland, at best. Some talkers were good at faking
the energy, emotion and commitment, jocks weren't.
Ronn Owen, on KGO, and David Brudnoy, on WBZ, are stellar, synergistic talkers.
Otherwise, there wasn't much to hear: a lot of time, traffic and temperature
presented in a straight-ahead way.
There's nothing wrong with a straight-ahead approach. Chuck Leonard and Jon
L'Heuri were straight-ahead jocks. Their popularity derived from an inherent
likeability, conveyed vocally and recognized by listeners. They were never
boring, even when reading some of the worst radio copy ever written. Synergy
takes many forms.
Most often, today, straight-ahead jocks lack conviction, leaving listeners
wishing and hoping for something, anything, more. Creatively packaging tiresome,
repetitive content seems antithetical to radio, today.
Listeners generally accept what radio gives them. Once upon a time, listeners
got daily gifts that were "imagineered," to lift a phrase from Stan Freeberg.
Radio artists busted their behinds to be creative, energetic, passionate,
likeable and visionary. Their synergy conveyed respect for listeners. Today,
well, I just wonder. Few seem up to the task or interested.
The woes of the music business are similar. There isn't much viable new product.
Levels of creativity, energy, passion and vision are at rock bottom. For the
music business, hope is on the horizon. Leading the way to a stable recovery are
Damien Rice, Norah Jones, Jamie Cullum, Joan Osborne, and, of course, the common
sense commentary of Bob Lefsetz.
Traffic is light and there's no construction blocking the road to the recovery
for radio. The most successful stations I worked or consulted were firmly in the
hands of creatives, men and women who'd come up the programming ranks, as did
Jack Thayer and Chuck Azzerallo, and knew radio as an art form, not merely as
temporal inventory to be moved, as fast as possible. It's time to wrest control
from the bean counters and return it to the creatives, the rightful heart and
soul of the medium, and those who can facilitate them.
Ring-tones are poised to capture the music-audience radio once relied on. The
corporations that control ring-tones also own lots of radio stations, and prefer
easy profits. An "all-traffic reports, all the time," format is poised take
over, sooner than later.
There's definitely a place for an all traffic format. As cities grow more
populous, the format becomes necessary. The point is that it grossly
under-utilizes the capacity of radio to provide creative, interesting and
entertaining art. Listeners deserve the full spectrum of radio possibilities.
Listeners deserve synergy. A political action committee to ensure fulfillment of
the rights of listeners is required.
It is four o'clock in the morning, and raining, to homage John Landau, and May
22, to boot. I'm 56, today, not feeling old for the first time in years. I'm
listening to air checks, growing young and pondering how different radio was
when we were fab. Thirty years ago, this day, Landau wrote he had seen "the
future of rock and roll and its name is Bruce Springsteen." Lately, I've heard
the future of radio and its name is the "all traffic report format." Now is the
time to act for change.
This is no lament for times past. It's a call to renew the dynamic, artistic
infrastructure of radio. A creative environment for jocks and radio to excite
and compel listeners are fair goals. Tomorrow is the time for the third wave of
radio excellence.
What medium or small market will take the chance to foster radio art?
Where will next Jay Thomas, Doug Tracht ("The Greaseman"), Rick Peterson, Sonny
Fox, Pat Holiday, Dale Dorman or Harry Harrison hone their art?
Tell me! If some forward-looking station did shine the radio art, where would
the artists go? Tell me! The shrinking number of major market station owners
rolls back the need to take chances; bean counters like safe, if smaller, bottom
lines. Do you believe WNBC would, today, have the nerve or need to hire Imus
from WGAR, Cleveland, as it did in 1970, and, again, from WHK, Cleveland, in
1979? Deprived listeners tell us it's a resounding "no!"
The sheer thrill of creation is a drug worthy of addiction. Future generations
of jocks deserve the option to know this octane high experience. Walking through
shift after shift isn't a career or a life; it is not exhausting the
possibilities of radio as art. Synergy is a good way to get a whole lot more out
of career and life and help listeners do the same. Good deeds play forward.
Someone always captures radio art, and saves it for posterity.
Aircheck-mania is more common than cine-mania. You can hear every radio artist
of the past fifty years. Tom Konard is curator of the most complete archive of
radio art available. Surf the aircheckfactory.com. Hear what went before. Imagine the sound of tomorrow. Or, visit
www.ReelRadio.com by clicking on its logo.
Struggling painters learn from da Vinci and van Gogh. New radio artists learn
and grow from the air checks of those who've gone before them.
Here are a few suggestions to get you started: Larry Lujack, the uber-creative
Gary Owens and Wolfman Jack, especially his nights on WNBC.
Go listen! Go create. Be well and synergistic.
Send criticism, death threats and comments to gpollard@ccs.carleton.ca.
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"Dr. George Pollard is a Social Psychologist at Carleton University in Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada"