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On Sun, 30 Jul 2006 20:43:34 +0900, "Brenda Ann"
wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I wasn't on the left coast for Wolfman Jack in his heyday, but you would think the whole rock and roll biz depended on him from listening to the that show. Often musical trends start in clubs long before the recording companies get in the picture. I was out west when Wolfman was in his hayday.. and I can say that he was quite instrumental in bringing rock and roll to much of the western US, far beyond the 'local' reach of the stations he worked at. There was much of rock and roll that was never played on stations in places like Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico, because of the very conservative nature of these states. Though my listening to Wolfman and his contemporaries on border radio didn't start till I was 13 in 1968, they were still a significant influence in those areas. At that time, stations in Salt Lake City were still playing 'cleaned up' versions of top chart songs like Lou Christie's "Lighting Strikes" and "Rhapsody in the Rain", and not playing some of the chart records at all. We turned to the border blasters to hear the stuff our locals weren't giving us. Long before he was in L. A., the Wolfman broadcast out of Del Rio, Texas late at night on 1570. I remember him from the early '60s and it was just plain creepy. ''Stan's Record Shop, 728 Texas Street, Shreveport, Louisiana'' was his sponsor. |