The Rock and Roll Revisited Week in Review - February 21
Here are some quick takes from the Rock and Roll Revisited Week in Review for the week ending February 21.Highlights from the R3 Twitter Feed:Kermit's earliest and most bizarre TV appearances.. And they get more bizarre with each new entry. (Video)30 young celebrities Photoshopped beside their current day selves.Dick Clark moves American Bandstand Podium from Philly to LA this week in 1965. The new AB logo ties to the host network, ABC.This week in 1986, Yul Brynner's then controversial anti-smoking ad first ran on network television, just 4 months after his death from lung cancer. (Video) The wire copy from the 1971 false EBS activation message.This week in 1971 a false Emergency Broadcast System activation message panicked just about everyone of us who were on the air. If you were around back then, what do you remember about it? “The extraordinary power of the computer,” a British demonstration of what was then considered high tech. 1962. (Video)
Three things I’ve learned about creating email lists that stick: stratify by subscriber interest. Make it relevant and personal. Put your best stuff in the first paragraph. Here's Fred Jacobs' treatise on how to effectively integrate email into promotion strategy.
Rock and Roll Revisited Week in Review - This Day in History:1947, Dr. Edwin Land demonstrates his instant developing camera, which Polaroid would later turn into a best seller.1964, New York band The Echoes recruited a new young unknown piano player, named Billy Joel.1965, Malcolm X is shot dead by Nation of Islam followers at Audubon Ballroom in New York City.1968, Otis Redding had his first entry on the UK singles chart when '(Sittin' On) The Dock Of The Bay' entered the chart, it went on to be a No.3 hit. The song became the first posthumous single to top the charts in the US.1976, Florence Ballard of The Supremes died of cardiac arrest, aged 32. Ballard had left The Supremes in 1967, lost an $8 million lawsuit against Motown records and was living on welfare when she died.1982, American DJ Murry The K died. Murray is thought to be the first person to play a Beatles record on radio in America. During the early days of Beatlemania, he frequently referred to himself as "the Fifth Beatle". Married six times, he died of cancer a week after his 60th birthday.Happy Rock and Roll Revisited Week in Review Birthday to: Nina Simone, 1933 (d. 2003); Rue McClanahan, 1934 (d. 2010); Gary Lockwood, 1937; David Geffen, 1943; Alan Rickman, 1945 (d. 2016); Vince Welnick (The Tubes), 1951; Mary-Chapin Carpenter, 1958Much More Music:Let's do a deep track Thursday, with some tunes you might not have heard in a while.Loggins & Messina - "Vahevala". Kenny Loggins with Jim Messina Sittin' In was released in 1971, this first single release didn't get much notice. Thanks to an aggressive concert tour, college students began to realize just how good these two guys were and both the LP and the single started to gain traction in 1972. (Video)Michael Murphy - "Carolina in the Pines". The second and final single from 1975's Blue Sky - Night Thunder album was written about Murphy's then wife, Caroline Hogue. She was the second of four. Members of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band provided backing on some of the tracks. The LP became Murphy's most successful reaching #18 on the Billboard album chart, eventually selling 800,000 US copies. He took on the moniker Michael "Martin" Murphy after the actor with the same name claimed the shorter brand. (Video)Poco - "Rose of Cimarron". From the 1976 album of the same name, written by founding member Rusty Young, the song featured lead vocals by Paul Cotton and Timothy B. Schmit. It's a sobriquet given in American frontier lore to Rose Dunn, who at age 15 was romantically involved and an accomplice with the outlaw George Newcomb. Originally composed at the request of actor Stuart Margolin, for a comeback album he hoped to produce for Roy Rogers. Our album track clocks in at 6:42. The single edit was 3:14. (Video)Today's Quote Worth Re-quoting: "The art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook." ~William JamesOne more for the Rock and Roll Revisited Week in Review road. A mash-up of two versions of the tune that Boz Scaggs selected to close the "Silk Degrees" LP. "We're All Alone" was the flip side of the "Lido Shuffle" single and as we DJs often do, we sampled it and liked it. Then came Rita Coolidge's nearly note for note rendition. I went into the WVIC production room and this was the result.[audio mp3="https://scottwesterman.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Were-All-Alone.mp3"][/audio]Thanks for listening!Scott WestermanCurator: Keener13.comHost and Producer - Rock and Roll RevisitedAuthor: Motor City Music - Keener 13 and the Soundtrack of Detroit