by Ben Fong-Torres Radio and rock and roll needed each other, and it was their good fortune that they intersected at the exact moment when rock and roll was being born and radio was facing death. Radio had experienced a ?Golden Age? since the 1930s, broadcasting popular swing bands and comedy, crime, and drama series. In the early 1950s, however, its standing as the electronic centre of family entertainment slipped. America had discovered television. With a mass exodus of both the listeners and the stars of radio's staple programs, radio needed more than new shows if it was to survive. It needed something that would attract an entire new generation of listeners, something that would take advantage of technological advances. While television replaced radio in the living room, the invention of the transistor set the radio free. Teenagers no longer had to sit with their parents and siblings to hear radio entertainment. Now they could take radio into their bedrooms, into the night, and into their own private worlds. What they needed was a music to call their own. They got rock and roll. They got it because radio, forced to invent new programming, turned to disc jockeys. The deejay concept had been around since Martin Block, in New York City, and Al Jarvis, in Los Angeles, began spinning records in the early 1930s. By the time the founders of Top 40 radio?Todd Storz and Bill Stewart in Omaha, Nebraska, and Gordon McLendon in Dallas, Texas?came up with their formula of excitable deejays, contests, jingles, abbreviated news, and a playlist of 40 hit records, the deejay ranks had swelled and changed. At independent stations?those not affiliated with the networks that dominated the early years of radio?disc jockeys had played a wide range of music, and many of them discovered an audience that the larger stations had ignored: mostly younger people, many of them black. These were the disenfranchised, who felt that the popular music of the day spoke more to their parents than to them. What excited them was the music they could hear, usually late at night, coming from stations on the upper end of the radio dial, where signals tended to be weaker. Thus disadvantaged, owners of those stations had to take greater risks and to offer alternatives to the mainstream programming of their more powerful competitors. It was there that radio met rock and roll and sparked a revolution. The first disc jockeys were both black and white; what they had in common was what they played: the hybrid of music that would evolve into rock. The first new formats were rhythm and blues and Top 40, with the latter exploding in popularity in the late 1950s. Top 40 had been conceived after Storz, sitting with his assistant, Stewart, in a bar across the street from their Omaha station, KOWH, noted the repeated plays certain records were getting on the jukebox. The format they implemented proved to be a free, democratic music box. If a song was a hit, or if enough people called a deejay to request it, it got played. Although the staples were rock and roll, rhythm and blues, and pop music, Top 40 also played country, folk, jazz, and novelty tunes. ?You say it; we'll play it,? the disc jockeys promised. Inevitably, as teenagers grew up, the Top 40 formula began to wear thin. In the late 1960s so did rock. A new generation sought freedom, and on the radio it came on the FM band with underground, or free-form, radio. Disc jockeys were allowed?if not encouraged?to choose their own records, usually rooted in rock but ranging from jazz and blues to country and folk music as well. Similar latitude extended to nonmusical elements, including interviews, newscasts, and impromptu live performances. While free-form evolved into album-oriented rock (or AOR, in industry lingo), other formats catered to an increasingly splintered music audience. Initially labeled as ?chicken rock? when it emerged in the early 1970s, adult contemporary (A/C) found a large audience of young adults who wanted their rock quieter. A/C blended the lighter elements of pop and rock with middle of the road (MOR), an adult-oriented format that favoured big bands and pop singers such as Tony Bennett, Peggy Lee, and Nat King Cole. Specialized formats such as rhythm and blues, later referred to as urban, also splintered. A wedding of urban and A/C resulted in formats such as quiet storm and urban contemporary. An urban version of Top 40 (also known as contemporary hit radio, or CHR) was called churban. Urban-based music, including rap, continued to influence Top 40 in the 1990s. Meanwhile, the focus of country music radio ranged from new music (with banners such as ?young country?) to oldies and alternative country, also known as Americana. Rock was equally fragmented, ranging from classic rock and hard rock stations to those with a more eclectic presentation called A3 or Triple A (for, roughly, album adult alternative) and alternative (or modern rock) and college stations, which provided exposure to edgier new sounds. A former editor and writer for Rolling Stone who covered radio for the magazine and deejayed on free-form KSAN in San Francisco, Ben Fong-Torres is also the author of Not Fade Away: A Backstage Pass to 20 Years of Rock & Roll and The Hits Just Keep on Coming: The History of Top 40 Radio.
SIDEBAR - ROCK AND RADIO IN THE UNITED STATES
Meaning of SIDEBAR - ROCK AND RADIO IN THE UNITED STATES in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012