New York Radio — Scott Muni

Original card provided by Dennis Rogers.

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The audio player has two sound clips:  Muni’s theme song, an odd instrumental from 1961 called “Grasshopper Jump,” and Muni’s promo for the WABC Beatles Fan Club.

I don’t remember Scott Muni as well as some of the other WABC disk jockeys, because he left the station in 1965.  Muni is better known as a pioneer of Rock music on FM radio, but he was memorable on AM as a presence during the initial, wild rush of American Beatlemania.

Scott Muni on WABC
Scott Muni on WABC, 1965

New York Radio — A Go-Go!

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Sounds/Wordpress/WABCJockJingles.mp3]

Before I post part 3 of the video on New York Rock and Roll radio, here’s a series of jingles for some of the WABC disk jockeys from the 1960’s. These are not air-check quality, but were instead taken from the original master tapes. Here, have some more!

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Sounds/Wordpress/WABC/WABCJingles.mp3]

New York Radio — A Commentary

The next part of the video documentary about New York Rock and Roll radio will get into what is, for me, everything.  77WABC.  I don’t care if you grew up in Los Angeles and think you had great radio stations there in the 60’s.  You were getting second best.  There were top-notch voices in L.A., to be sure; including the superb Gary Owens, who became a TV celebrity on Laugh-In, and Roger Christian, who co-wrote songs with Brian Wilson.  But I feel that WABC in New York in its heyday remains unique.

WABC was the audio wallpaper of my childhood.  Away from the city, in Connecticut, WMCA’s 5,000-watt signal couldn’t compete with ABC’s 50,000-watt transmitter.  Thanks to my best friend, pop culture historian Dennis Rogers, who has many radio station playlists, I can now see that WMCA catered more to the inner-city audience, and was much less restrictive than WABC, which dominated the suburbs.

As conservative, in a sense, as WABC was, as the 60’s progressed, and the teen audience grew up — or at least got older — the music became increasingly wild.  WABC’s morning man, the incomparable Herb Oscar Anderson (affectionately known as HOA), held down the fort for the Adult Contemporary format as long as he could.  And as long as there were songs like “Strangers in the Night” topping the charts, he would also play “Satisfaction.”

By 1968 the shift had begun in the radio market from singles on AM to albums on FM.  The Summer of Love bands that had appeared in 1967, like The Doors and The Jefferson Airplane, pushed AM radio playlists pretty darn hard.  Too hard for HOA.  Still #1 in the ratings, he nevertheless left WABC in September, 1968.  By coincidence, my family left Connecticut a few weeks later.

Arriving in Massachusetts, my siblings and I heard the legendary Boston FM alternative station WBCN, which had been on the air for only six months, and that changed everything.  AM radio turned to a younger audience and The Archies appeared at pretty much the same time as Led Zeppelin.  Personally, I listened to both, and I liked both!

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Sounds/Wordpress/CousinBrucie.mp3,http://www.dograt.com/Sounds/Wordpress/HOA.mp3]

Here are two audio clips.  First, a brief air check of Cousin Brucie from September ’68, when HOA walked, playing the beginning of Steppenwolf’s “Born to be Wild.”  Then, for contrast, Herb Oscar Anderson’s self-penned and performed theme song, the Lawrence Welk-inspired “Hello Again.”  Is it any wonder that HOA could no longer bridge the Generation Gap?

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New York Radio — 1

Between 1962 and 1968 my family lived in Norwalk, Connecticut. Fortunately, those years coincided with the ascendency and supremecy of radio station WABC in New York. ABC disk jockeys Cousin Brucie and Dan Ingram inspired me to become a radio announcer. I had a short, but memorable, 2-year stint in the business.

Here begins a video series from 1990 on the history of New York Rock and Roll radio. Part one starts with the effect of TV in the 50’s on the radio business, and goes to the end of Alan Freed’s career, without specifically mentioning the payola scandal that ended it.
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