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[personal profile] chrishansenhome
A post on my Facebook page about listening to Classic FM rather than continue to listen to sad, awful news on BBC Radio 4 seems to have captured a bit of attention from my friends. Can I muse for a moment about my radio listening history?



When I was a wee babe in the late 1950's, the first radio station I listened to in Marblehead was WEEI. At that time it was one of the 6 or so radio stations that the CBS Radio Network was allowed to own, and it was on 590 kc on the AM band. Kiddies, you might want to ask your grandpa about the AM band.

I listened to it in the evenings after I got home from school, and heard the World News Tonight with Lowell Thomas, as well as short little remnants of the humour programs of network radio from a few years before: Burns and Allen, and even, sadly, Amos and Andy. Other than that, there was CBS radio news on the hour with people like Richard Hottelet, Robert Trout, Winston Burdett in Rome. Edward R. Murrow was on the way out at the time, but we heard him too, before he went to the Voice of America in the Kennedy Administration.

Between the news there were talk shows. The less said about them the better. However, there were broadcast battles about the Massachusetts sales tax (not yet levied on the citizens of the Commonwealth) and no-fault auto insurance. There was even a souvenir map of every hot news spot in the world—I wish I had it now. I recall that Algeria's rebellion against France and the wars in Southeast Asia, especially Laos were particularly prominent at the time.

One other CBS daytime offering comes to mind: Arthur Godfrey Time. Every morning Arthur's variety show rode the kilocycles. When I was home from school because of illness (I often got bronchitis) I would listen to Arthur in between coughing jags and applications of Vicks Vapo Rub.

And in the night hours, when I found it difficult to sleep, I would turn on WEEI and listen to "Music Through the Night", sponsored by American Airlines. I listened on an old 5-tuber radio that gave off heat and light, both of which were comforting in the cold dark Massachusetts winters. The music was long stretches of classical music—a lot of US modern classical composers like Howard Hanson.

In Marblehead it was difficult to get some of the other Boston stations—I expect that they broadcast toward the west of Boston, as toward the East there was only Boston Harbour. There was WEZE, which was The Wonderful World on Music like Mantovani. There was also WNAC, which was the NBC Radio Network station in Boston. It was woefully inadequate toward the Northeast, and was quite difficult to receive reliably at home. I did listen to their "Monitor Radio". And WCRB broadcast commercial classical music until 2009. We also found it difficult to hear in Marblehead.



As for FM, it was in its infancy then. I started listening to WBCN-FM when it was a classical station, part of the Concert Network. Then it shifted to rock and roll on 104.1. Looking at Wikipedia, it's been shifted to an all-digital station.

I shall continue tomorrow. with stations in New York City.

Date: 2016-07-22 03:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] maxauburn.livejournal.com
There was a fantastic classical music station in Philadelphia for many years.

WFLN - FM.

It was no longer on the air when I moved back to Phila. after George had died in 1998.

I miss it still. It was the station that had played much of the classical music that I still love,
many year later.

Date: 2016-07-22 07:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rsc.livejournal.com
Interesting that you should post the logos of the two Boston-area radio stations that I listen to on anything like a regular basis.

WCRB because it is now the classical-music arm of WGBH.

WEEI because they broadcast (avert your eyes as necessary) Red Sox games.

Date: 2016-07-23 08:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chrishansenhome.livejournal.com
Well, there's no need to avert my eyes as I no longer have any interest in US sports. We get little or no news about them here, and almost none about baseball. So, in a welcome life triage event, I just ignore them. If I cared I could Google to find out who won last year's World Series.

WEEI was an interesting radio station when it was CBS news and talk.

WCRB was interesting to me as a classical ad-supported music station. WGBH was good as the non-commercial classical radio station—it could broadcast works that a commercial station might not be able to because of their length or their genre.

Date: 2016-07-23 03:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rsc.livejournal.com
30-odd years ago, WCRB played a lot of good and interesting music, which made it an acceptable alternative (despite the ads) at those times when WGBH, which really did its best to expand its listeners' experience, wasn't doing music. Over the years, in response to (perceived) market pressures, WCRB became more and more of a Lite Classical station, and in later years (especially after the death of Robert J. Lurtsema, who, whatever one thought of him, did go in for adventurous and educational programming) WGBH trended more and more in that direction. Now, with the purchase of WCRB by WGBH to be its classical music station, it's pretty much indistinguishable from commercial WCRB in its later years -- even down to the "ads", as the announcements of the various corporate entities who "make this music possible" become indistinguishable from paid commercials.

And you kids get off my lawn, while you're at it.

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