Ranier Radio: historic Seattle airchecks/jingles etc

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Ranier Radio: historic Seattle airchecks/jingles etc

Postby skyvalleyradio » Fri Jan 25, 2008 11:27 am

One of my old KYAC comrades turned me on to this link: its operated by Seattle Community College and has a wealth of old Seattle airchecks, jingles, ads, newscasts and radio programs stretching from the 1930's - current. Seattle radio fixtures Pat O' Day and John Maynard amongst others have donated old tapes and vinyl records to this project. You'll need to get a free username/password to log on but it's guaranteed to bring back plenty of memories from the days of REAL (REEL?) radio!

http://www.rainierradio.com
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Postby radiofan » Fri Jan 25, 2008 11:18 pm

New online station resurrects Seattle's rich radio tradition
By Jack Broom

Seattle Times staff reporter


Image

Two veterans of Seattle radio — John Maynard, left, and Pat O'Day — try out the equipment at Rainier Radio, based at North Seattle Community College. Both donated recordings to the station.

Listen to the urgency in newscaster Jim Harrison's voice and you might think a war had begun:

"Scores of persons living in the North End were late to work today," he reported, announcing that a car had hit part of the Aurora Bridge. No one was hurt, but get this: "Cars piled up behind the damaged machine for blocks!"

If that riveting traffic report from the 1950s doesn't get your blood pumping, maybe you'd prefer another clip from the same era: Seattle radio legend Pat O'Day announcing a KAYO cash giveaway of — fasten your seat belts — a whopping $9!

Or maybe you'd like to eavesdrop on a backstage session with The Beatles during their 1964 Seattle visit, in which George Harrison predicted the group would stay together "till death do us part."

All those bits of Seattle's radio past — and many more — are now just a few mouse clicks away on a new online radio station called Rainier Radio, introduced Thursday by the Seattle Community Colleges. The nonprofit Web site, www.rainierradio.com, has posted a vast archive of shows, jingles, news, interviews — more than 362 hours so far — and is collecting and cataloging more, dating back to the 1930s.

"This is part of the cultural history of Seattle, and we've been in danger of losing it," said Ross Davis, the general manager. For decades, Davis said, valuable recordings have been lying ignored in basements or attics, or have simply been tossed out.

1964 Beatles interview

At an event to spotlight the station at North Seattle Community College, O'Day, a longtime Seattle DJ and station owner, said, "For me, this is a sigh of relief, to know that these talents and great moments will be saved and stored." O'Day said he expects that broadcasting students now and in the future can learn from, and improve upon, what they hear in these samples.

O'Day, 73, is a major donor of the recordings, along with longtime radio host John Maynard, half of the well-known "Robin & Maynard" team (with Robin Erickson), which appeared on four Seattle radio stations over the course of 22 years.

O'Day provided the clip of the 1964 Beatles session. Before the Fab Four took the stage at the Seattle Center Coliseum, they met with a Seattle press corps still trying to figure out Beatlemania. One reporter asked if it bothered the boys from Liverpool that audiences were screaming so loudly no one could hear the performances.

(Short answer: No.)

The importance of collecting these sound clips is to preserve "the Second Golden Age of radio," Davis said.

The first Golden Age gets more attention. That was in the decades before television, when nationwide audiences tuned in to such favorites as Jack Benny, Fibber McGee and Molly, Superman and the Lone Ranger.

When television took hold in the 1950s, some predicted radio would virtually disappear, Davis said. Instead, the medium switched to a local focus — local programming, personalities, news and an intimate connection with listeners.

"Radio reinvented itself and became stronger than ever," Davis said. But few stations kept good libraries of their programs, and much of what people heard on their tinny transistor radios or dashboard decks has been lost forever.

Curious commercials

On some of the old-old clips on Rainier Radio, the commercials may actually seem stranger than the programs. A Dragnet show from the 1950s opens with a commercial stating flatly that "a medical specialist" has determined that Chesterfield cigarettes cause "no adverse health effects."

Listeners can browse the station's content, which is organized by decade, or listen to streaming broadcasts of randomly selected programs or music. College broadcasting students will add locally produced stories and features to keep the station vibrant.

Davis, 67, is a Northwest native who worked in commercial radio for 10 years and as an independent television producer for more than 20. He joined Seattle Community Colleges in 1996, and in 1998 helped found the colleges' cable and Web television station, SCCtv (www.scctv.net).

Among those at Thursday's kickoff was Washington Secretary of State Sam Reed, who said the Washington State Heritage Center, to be built on the capitol campus in Olympia, will include a link on its Web site to Rainier Radio.

John Sharify, a former KOMO-TV reporter, is taking over for Davis at the colleges next month, when Davis retires. Sharify said he hopes other people will come forward with old recordings to donate.

"This is a lost-and-found story," he said. "These were lost, but we're finding them, and we can share them."

Jack Broom: 206-464-2222

or jbroom@seattletimes.com

from the Seattle Times
Those who danced were thought to be quite insane by those who couldn't hear the music.
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Postby cart_machine » Sat Jan 26, 2008 5:44 am

It's really a shame that the old radio audio in the Provincial Archives in Victoria is doing nothing more than sitting there. It's a shame they either haven't the time or space to turn it into mp3 files, similar to OTR material you find at archive.org.

Once again, Seattle radio people are ahead of us.

cArtie.
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Postby jon » Sat Jan 26, 2008 8:56 am

Here is what a Seattle friend had to say about it:

It already has some fascinating airchecks, like Pat O'Day on KAYO in the
late 50s plus some earlier work at KLOG and a station in Yakima under
his birth name of Paul Berg. There's also a lot of KJR stuff from the
60s & 70s, and later stuff from other stations. Very little of KOL just
yet, and none from KOL in the late 60s/early 70s (or from non KJR top
40s from that era).
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Postby skyvalleyradio » Sat Jan 26, 2008 10:02 am

jon I'm sure as this project gains momentum, more people will come forward with tapes and material. If my reel-tape airchecks from KYAC were actually playable, I would convert these to mp3 but they're pretty much trash. I listened yesterday to the first hour of KKMI 96.5 with Pat O' Day and remember setting my alarm clock for 5:25am to get up and hear the launch. What a fantastic aircheck! Radio today doesn't even come close to matching this gem
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Preserving Airchecks

Postby jon » Sat Jan 26, 2008 12:54 pm

kjrseattle.com used to have some interesting KJR airchecks, but Norm Gregory was unable to continue it. I especially remember a studio quality Dick Curtis from 1962.

Which brings me back to the "axe to grind" of others that I have to agree with. Norm's site is a perfect example of why these sites are not as good an idea for airchecks as you might think. Loss of interest, financial issues, even deaths. They happen. And they kill a lot of smaller sites like Norm's.

Airchecks take a lot of work to properly preserve. And Uncle Ricky at reelradio.com is doing a better job than anyone else on the planet. And he has funding that will outlive him. But, yes, that does require a $12/year subscription fee to maintain.

So, I have to agree with Uncle Ricky. The best airchecks should go to reelradio where they can be preserved and restored to the best quality possible. He pays music licensing fees, so unscoped airchecks can go there. And he even has an Optimod audio processor!!

Remember: tape disintegrates over time. Usually slowly. But an awful lot of airchecks end up in landfill when someone dies and the relatives dump the possessions.

Seattle is a particularly poor example. Uncle Ricky has long since given up after repeatedly approaching some of the great Seattle DJs in the 1990s. Instead they "wanted to do it themselves". A couple of us have tried to reverse that trend. In my case, I've submitted a couple of Lan Roberts KOL airchecks that I recorded myself, a Robert O. Smith KTAC aircheck that a friend recorded for me off an FM simulcast, worked with Robin Mitchell on his KOL airchecks, and successfully encouraged two other Seattle radio fans to contribute some of their great material.
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