Friday, February 28, 2014

My First Music Survey

Back in October, I posted about some of my early record collecting and referred to a local radio station survey that I couldn't find. Well, I found it recently and here it is. It's from December 1966 (a week or 2 before Christmas), and as I said earlier, it got me started on buying records.

WFIL was one of the two AM radio stations in Philadelphia that played rock and roll in the 1960s. They had only switched to that format in September 1966, and had soon overtaken WIBG (which had been playing rock since the late 1950s) for the #1 spot.

Unlike their normal bi-fold survey with the record list on the inside, this one was a tri-fold, due to the seasonal design on the inside.

Of the records on this list, I had "I'm a Believer" (#2), "Good Vibrations" (#9), "Lady Godiva" (#22), and (for reasons unknown to me now) "Hey Leroy" (Future Hit #2).

It's interesting to note that #38 is "Gallant Men" by then-US Senator Everett Dirksen.  I assume it was a Vietnam-era tribute song/spoken-word thing to the troops.


The inside features the 6 weekday disc jockeys, each in their own ornament. Perhaps the most well-known was George Michael, who by the early 1970s had moved on to WABC in New York City (replacing Cousin Brucie), and later had a syndicated weekend sports wrap-up show on TV, named "George Michael's Sports Machine".

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Fifty Years Ago This Month: February 1964


Here come the Beatles!


Music: 
After months of #1 songs from the likes of The Singing Nun and Bobby Vinton, the Beatles' fifth single "I Want To Hold Your Hand" was the #1 song for all 5 weeks in February. In fact, it remained at #1 until mid-March, when it was overtaken by "She Loves You" (which was the #2 song for the last 2 weeks of February).

2/9 - The Beatles make their first appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show.
2/11 - The Beatles play their first US concert - in Washington DC.


News: 
In addition to all the Beatles' hoopla:
2/2 - GI Joe toy is introduced
2/24 - Muhammed Ali defeats Sonny Liston for the heavyweight boxing crown


Movies: 
No new movies were released this month.


Births: 
2/05 - Guns N' Roses bassist Duff McKagan
2/10 - TV talk show host Glenn Beck
2/11 - politician Sarah Palin
2/11 - singer Sheryl Crow
2/15 - actor Chris Farley
2/18 - actor Matt Dillon
2/20 - actor French Stewart


Deaths: 
2/15 - Chicago Cubs' 2nd baseman Ken Hubbs (plane crash at age 22)


Thursday, January 30, 2014

Fifty Years Ago This Month: January 1964

The countdown to The Beatles continues... 




News: 
1/5 – Barry Goldwater announces his bid for the 1968 presidency.
1/11 – The first warning about the health risks of smoking is issued by the Surgeon General.
1/13 – B-52 carrying nuclear bombs crashes in Maryland.
1/16 – John Glenn resigns from NASA. The next day he runs for senator from Ohio.
1/18 – Plans are unveiled for the World Trade Center in NYC.
1/29 – Winter Olympics in Innsbrook, Austria begin.


Music: 
Last month until the Beatles take over! In the US, the #1 song for all 4 weeks in January 1964 was “There I Said It Again” by Bobby Vinton. #2 every week was "Louie, Louie" by the Kingsmen. Various songs were #3, with “I Want to Hold Your Hand” jumping from #45 to #3 for the last week in January. (More on that next month!)


1/10 – Vee-Jay Records releases the LP “Introducing the Beatles”
1/20 – Capitol Records releases the LP “Meet the Beatles”


Movies: 
Notable movies released in January 1964 were:
The Fall of the Roman Empire (1/1)
Man’s Favorite Sport (1/1)
Marnie (1/1)
Zorba the Greek (1/1)
Dr. Strangelove (1/29)


Births: 
1/7 – Nicholas Cage
1/17 – Michelle Obama
1/23 – Mariska Hargitay
1/27 - Bridget Fonda (co-starred with Cage in the 1994 movie “It Could Happen to You”)


Deaths: 
1/29 – Actor Alan Ladd

.

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Fifty Years Ago This Month: December 1963

Just under the wire...

December 1963 was a relatively slow month, certainly when compared to the previous month.

News:
12/3 - The Warren Commission begins investigating the JFK assassination.
12/7 - Instant replay was invented, and debuted at the Army-Navy game in Philadelphia.
12/8 - Frank Sinatra Jr was kidnapped at Harrah's Lake Tahoe in Nevada.
12/10 - Chuck Yeager was nearly killed during a test flight.


Music:
In the US, the #1 song in December 1963 (all 4 weeks) was "Dominique" by The Singing Nun.  The #2 song for 2 weeks was "Louie, Louie" by the Kingsmen.  (Beatles! Hurry up and get here!)

Over in the UK, the top songs were the Beatles' "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and "She Loves You", along with "Glad All Over" by the Dave Clark Five, and "You Were Made for Me" by Freddie and the Dreamers.




Movies:
Notable movies released in December 1963 were "Charade" (starring Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn),  and Disney's animated "The Sword in the Stone".  (It was the next-to-last animated movie personally supervised by Walt Disney.)


Births:
12/18 - Actor Brad Pitt
12/19 - Actress Jennifer Beals
12/26 - Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich, in Denmark.


Deaths:
12/02 - Actor Sabu Sabu - age 39
12/14 - Singer Dinah Washington - age 39
12/26 - Professional wrestler "Gorgeous" George Wagner

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Herman's Hermits (part 2)

Back in late September, I blogged that I was going to a Herman's Hermits' show at the end of that month. I saw them at the American Music Theater in Lancaster, PA, which has a lot of big-name acts from yesteryear.


What a great show it was! The opening act was Mickey Dolenz of the Monkees. This was a pleasant surprise, because although I knew Dolenz would be there, for some reason I thought he would just be sitting in with Herman’s Hermits for a few numbers. Instead, he did a whole set, with a 6-piece backing band (all non-Monkees), including his sister Coco on backing vocals.

For the 2nd number "That Was Then, This Is Now", the band was joined onstage by Vance Brescia, who wrote that song for the Monkees in 1986, and is now a guitarist and the musical director for Herman’s Hermits.

Mickey and his sister Coco did an a cappella duet on “Bye Bye Blackbird”, after saying it was the first song their mother taught them. Coco followed that song with lead vocals on “Different Drum”, a song written by the Monkees’ Mike Nesmith and recorded in the late-1960s by Linda Ronstadt and the Stone Poneys. As she sung the song, Mickey retreated into the shadows near the drummer, so that the audience focus would be solely on her.

Throughout the show, Mickey praised the songwriters he had over the years, including Carole King, Neil Diamond, Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart, and Mike Nesmith.

Set list (as best I can remember the sequence):

Steppin’ Stone
That Was Then, This Is Now
She
Sometime in the Morning
Words
D. W. Washburn
Bye Bye Blackbird
Different Drum
Daydream Believer
Last Train to Clarksville
Pleasant Valley Sunday
Gimme Some Lovin’ (cover of the Spencer Davis Group song)
I’m a Believer

("Daydream Believer" was sung as a tribute to the late Davy Jones.)



After a short intermission, Herman's Hermits took the stage. Peter Noone mixed in a lot of comic narrative between his songs, sometimes going out into the audience exchanging banter (and distributing free CDs and t-shirts). He also did some imitations, specifically Johnny Cash, Tom Jones, and Mick Jagger (while singing their song snippets), and John Lennon.

Herman’s Hermits set list (not in order):

I’m Into Something Good
Listen People
Mrs. Brown You’ve Got a Lovely Daughter
I’m Henry the VIII, I Am (with audience participation)
Silhouettes
Sea Cruise
Wonderful World
The End of the World
Can’t You Hear My Heartbeat
Just a Little Bit Better
Leaning on a Lamp Post
A Must to Avoid
No Milk Today
Dandy
There’s a Kind of Hush

Do Wah Diddy (Manfred Mann cover)
Love Potion No. 9 (Searchers cover)
I’m Telling You Now (Freddie & the Dreamers cover)
It’s Not Unusual (sung in Tom Jones' voice)
Ring of Fire (sung in Johnny Cash's voice)
Start Me Up (sung in Mick Jagger's voice)


As an aside after singing "No Milk Today", Noone said that when he was a kid, his neighborhood milkman was Freddie Garrity, who went on to front Freddie and the Dreamers. Peter then sang their song "I’m Telling You Now".

Peter Noone’s "Hermits" include guitarists Billy Sullivan and Vance Brescia, Rich Spina on keyboards and occasionally on bass guitar, and Dave Ferrara on drums. Sullivan and Spina have worked together extensively in the past, mostly as latter-day members of Gary Lewis & the Playboys.



After the show, both Peter and Mickey were available in the lobby (in separate lines) for photo ops and autographs. We got autographs from, and took photos with "Herman", but by then, the line for Dolenz was gone, and he had left the lobby.


Sunday, November 17, 2013

Fifty Years Ago This Month: November 1963

I’m starting a new feature on this blog, titled ‘Fifty Years Ago This Month”. (The idea just occurred to me last week, when I saw the pop music charts for the week, but WHAT a month to start this!) 


Of course, the most well-known event of November 1963 was JFK’s assassination. Since there is already wall-to-wall coverage of this on the internet and on TV, I won’t duplicate that here. I’ll just say that I was sitting in my elementary-school classroom on a Friday afternoon when the news came. I don’t remember if we were dismissed early, but my family spent the entire weekend glued to the black-and-white.


On the same day, the Beatles released their 2nd album in the UK, “With the Beatles”. The most popular track from the album was “All My Loving”, which was never a single. This was the 2nd album to sell over 1 million copies in England (after the “South Pacific” soundtrack).

The #1 songs in November 1963 according to Billboard were “Sugar Shack” (by Jimmy Gilmer and the Fireballs), “Deep Purple” (by April Stevens & Nino Tempo), and “I’m Leaving It Up To You” (by Dale & Grace). Thank goodness the British Invasion was just around the corner! (The Beatles didn’t hit the US charts until January 18, 1964, when “I Want to Hold Your Hand” entered at #45, then took 2 weeks to climb to #1.)


Notable movies released in November 1963 were “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World” and Elvis Presley’s “Fun in Acapulco”.


Births:
Actress Nicollette Sheridan, NFL quarterbacks Vinny Testaverde and Bernie Kosar, and MLB outfielder Dante Bichette.


Deaths:
John F. Kennedy on the 22nd, Robert Stroud (the real-life “Birdman from Alcatraz”) on the 21st, and novelist C. S. Lewis (The Chronicles of Narnia) on the 22nd.

Saturday, October 26, 2013

My early record-collecting days


My interest in listening to rock and roll radio (and buying records) began in December 1966. Prior to that, I recall only listening to the radio when I stayed home from school because of illness. When we missed school, our mother would confine us to our room (after all, if we were too sick to go to school, etc, etc) with only the radio to listen to. For some reason, it was always set to the easy listening station (Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Petula Clark, Roger Miller, etc) and it never occurred to me to see what other stations were playing. Even though I knew about the Beatles (and had collected Beatles cards in 1964), I was content to listen to whatever Frankie and his pals were singing.

This all changed in December 1966, when I went on a field trip to the WFIL radio and TV station in Philadelphia, one of the two AM radio stations playing rock and roll in Philly. I’m not sure how the field trip came about, but it may have been with the Cub Scouts.

Anyway, I don’t remember anything about the trip other than that I took home one of the weekly Top-50 record surveys that radio stations distributed to record stores back then (to help kids decide what records to buy). This one was a special Christmas issue, with tree ornaments drawn on the cover – each one containing a photo of one of the disc jockeys. I’m sure I still have it, but when looking around for it a few months ago, all I could find were the smaller surveys from the early 1970s. I did find some of the mid-60s surveys posted on one of the blogs on my sidebar (Nick's Radio Corner), but not the survey I described above. The closest one I could find on that blog was from 1/23/1967 (shown below).

I’m going to assume that first record survey I took home was for the week of 12/10/1966 and not 12/17/1966 – since it had a Christmas theme, but who’s organizing field trips one week before Christmas? That week, the top 5 songs were Good Vibrations (Beach Boys), Mellow Yellow (Donovan), Winchester Cathedral (New Vaudeville Band), Devil With the Blue Dress On (Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels), and You Keep Me Hangin’ On (Supremes).

Now armed with this souvenir from WFIL Radio, my brother and I immediately made more use of the radio, switching it from “our parents’ music” to WFIL. This was quickly followed by our first of many trips to the local record store. Looking back, my record-buying days were from early 1967 to about 1972 or 1973 when I switched over to 8-track tapes. (I still have almost all my old 45-rpm records, and a quick look through those produced no records released after 1972.)



So, why is the “Georgy Girl” 45 at the top of this post? That may very well be the first 45 I ever bought. If not, it’s certainly among the first half-dozen, along with Penny Lane (The Beatles), Lady Godiva (Peter & Gordon), 98.6 (Keith), and Kind of a Drag (The Buckinghams).

Besides buying various current singles, I made up for lost time and bought many of the Beatles singles going back to 1964. (In fact, between my brother and me, by 1970 we ended up with all the Beatles singles and LPs. I tended to have all the singles up through Penny Lane, and all their albums before “Help!”, while my brother bought all the later stuff.)

With all the Beatles 45s, plus some Beach Boys singles, Georgy Girl, and several Peter and Gordon 45s, I was quickly awash in Capitol’s orange-and-yellow swirl. By the early 1970s, I was also a Grass Roots fan, and had many of their singles too. I recall my brother accumulating as many Creedence Clearwater Revival and Guess Who singles as possible, and by the mid-1970s, I think he had all of the Kinks’ LPs.

Earlier, I mentioned switching over to 8-tracks around 1973. My early 8-track collecting was influenced by what my friends had, as I bought many of the same tapes: Who’s Next (The Who), Seventh Sojourn (The Moody Blues), Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (Elton John), Hot Rocks (The Rolling Stones), and (now embarrassingly enough) something by Bread.

Recently, I have been buying some old 45s as I find them at flea markets or antique stores, and digging into my old record collection from back in the day. (In fact, that sparked my interest in starting this blog.) In future posts, I will delve into specific records and artists.


(WFIL survey courtesy of Nick's Radio Corner blog)