The Bill Tash Collection
Bill Tash having fun (date unknown)
Bill Tash, 1995 |
Former DJ and now Broadcast Engineer Bill Tash of St. Petersburg, Florida, has been storing hundreds of reel-to-reel airchecks for years. Most of them are from the Great Lakes area (Cleveland, Toledo, and Detroit).Bill's radio career began at WZAK and continued at WABQ, WXEN, WZZP, WLTF-FM and WJW radio in Cleveland. Bill has worked in television engineering since 1985.
Bill writes: "Imagine my horror when I put some of these old tapes on my reel player, and discovered they barely played, oxide falling down onto the table! I've been desperately trying to save these sounds and am transferring them to CD whenever I can. Some of the tapes have survived better than others. Back when I recorded these, I was positively anal about high quality recording! I even designed and built my own AM radio detector, designed to produce full-bandwidth audio without that nasty 10Khz whistle. The result was some of my aircheck tapes actually sounded like studio recordings."
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The Repository thanks Bill Tash for sharing!
Here it is – the true roots of American Top 40 radio: An outrageous disc jockey, with
a maniacal laugh, playing “race music”. It’s no wonder that some older folks were terrified by the sounds coming from their radios!
(1) Jingles: PAMS Series 33 (Fun!) is featured prominently, as is an all time favorite Voices of PAMS acapella jingle. (2) Spots: Classics for the YoungMobile, Petula Clark for Plymouth, Newport Cigarettes, Campbell’s Soups, Budweiser and Jenos Pizza. Is that Dick Cavett on the Excedrin headache spot? Cavett did a lot of radio work in the 60’s, it seems.
Dave Hull, at that time at KRLA in Los Angeles, appears in a PSA as Chairman of the National Disc Jockey Committee supporting The Breath of Life month; and we are reminded that in 1965, it was still OK to buy your beverages in TIN cans: “stackable, packable and never-go-backable!”
His playlist expanded too, no doubt at the direction of WHK, to include some pop-based hits of the time, and distinctly non-Blues & Rhythm artists like Jimmy Clanton.
In addition to the one-of-a-kind performance of Pete Myers, a short WHK news report is featured, along with a truly classic commercial for “Light, Refreshing Pepsi-Cola, the sociable refreshment.”
Pete Myers’ first New York City appearance as Mad Daddy lasted one night on WNEW in 1959, after which “Mad Daddy” was asked to go undercover as mild-manned Myers, a straight-laced WNEW MOR jock.
He did much better in 1963 when he began a two-year run on rival WINS. In this aircheck, we hear much greater “Top 40” influence than we heard at WJW and WHK, though the WINS playlist must have been broader than that of WABC and WMCA at this time. Mad Daddy was singin’ and swingin’ (straight jacket and all) from “Sponge Rubber Tower” until WINS changed to news in 1965.
Following WINS, Myers returned to WNEW. He took his own life on October 4, 1968.
[Thanks to The Hank Hayes Collection for background.]
[Description by Bill Tash]
A sleepy little 16,000 watt FM radio station in a major market, happy to be delivering multi-ethnic programming (polkas, waltzes) to an ever-dwindling Cleveland, Ohio audience, gets the word from the owners at Booth American Broadcasting (Detroit) that the format would be changing to Rock. The entire WXEN staff was about to be fired (all except for one engineer… me).
Public protests by the station’s staff fell on relatively deaf ears. A few of the ethnic language “program producers” scrambled to claim a tiny Sunday morning public-affairs time slot offered to them on this new rock station, and that is how the first day of this radio station began on Sunday morning, March 13, 1977.
Around 12 Noon, after the former station manager Kalmann Novak broadcast some spirited dialog to his Hungarian listeners, WXEN became ZIP-106. (Kirk Russell is featured here with the opening set.)
The call letters were soon changed to WZZP to better reflect the ‘ZIP’ image, and a new 50,000 watt transmitter also came online, to complete this solid rock station’s new image in Cleveland. As the long-term studio engineer for both the ethnic and rock operations, I had the extraordinary experience of destroying a firmly embedded mainstay station and building a rock success. I will not soon forget the mental and physical highs and lows this project created. The last time I checked, WZZP had become WLTF, and was playing “Lite Rock”.
[Note from Uncle Ricky: This composite also includes a few sets from contributor Bill Tash. This engineer was a jock, too!]
The higher-fidelity recordings of AM stations after 1965 were made by contributor Bill Tash utilizing his custom high-bandwidth AM detector. These "from-the-air" recordings are the best recordings of AM radio stations we've been privileged to feature at this site. They are comparable to airchecks taken from station air monitors. Amazing!