31 March 2009

The GRIN

It's like I never left Gospel radio. I am so thrilled. If you follow the Eagles of Classic rock fame you'll know the line from the Hell freezes over album, to paraphrase, "We never broke up, we just took a 20 year break." Well, I can identify now. I never left radio, I just took a 14 year break. The GRIN puts me back in the air chair. I never lost my desire to minister through presenting the inspirational recordings of others. The only difference now is that I have matured to a point that I would have envied as a younger man lacking any real world life experience. I've been married, twice. Seen prosperity and lack, but never have I been out of His care. Praise God. My relationship with Christ is richer now and I do not shy away from referring to Him on the air as I once did. 

If you ever met me personally and did not know of my radio passion you'd think I was very shy. But, when I get behind the microphone I loose my inhibitions; somehow I'm bold betraying the timid Neal.

Angie, the love of my life, my best friend and wife of 8 years is a great support. Her entusiaism for my dream has been above and beyond the call of duty. She understands that this radio venture will take a little time to blossom into what I've envisioned. Thank you so much, my love.

If you haven't heard the station, why? It's on the Internet 24 hours a day with some live shows featuring yours truely. the address is http://gospelrewind.listen2myradio.com  Tune in. Untill the next time may the Good News of the Gospel go with you.

20 March 2009

My New Radio Home

It has been 18 years since I left WDCY radio in Douglasville, Georgia. It was the last radio home that was a full time situation for me. As I wrote before, this is remembered not very fondly due to internal staff conflicts. The Gospel was only a product sold by  that mostly non-Christian staff; a group of folks that would have switched formats sooner than they did had the the listener support been there. The whole experience soured me on radio in general. Two years after I left,  1993, WDCY was sold to a local Baptist Church and for now is in Christian hands, I made an unsuccessful attempt to rejoin 'DCY after the sale, but was told their staff were now all volunteers. I wound up at two other stations in the area, but it was never the same and by 1995 I left radio for good.

Or so I thought. It's 2009 and I am truly excited about radio again. I have started a new Internet radio station http://gospelrewind.listen2myradio.com 

We are 24 hours of Gospel Classics from the late 1950's to the early 1980's and beyond. We aren't restricted to one form of Gospel over another. I assure you the music will be complimentary though. I personally select the programming and will drop in occasionally to speak on the wonderful world of GR. Right now, I'm the only DJ on this commercial free station. The only ads you'll hear for now are the old ones on the occasional featured aircheck from my archives. We're recording live singing in churches and will be playing them soon. They will reflect the oldies singing styles. Till then, may the good news of the Gospel go with you.

12 March 2009

Radio "Daze"



Have you scanned your radio dial recently? Yeah, well I thought not. Radio is becoming a thing of the past. Our kids today have many more choices than we did. Ipods, digital downloads, Internet and God knows what else. I love the radio medium and at one time saw it as a powerful witness for the Gospel. In a way it is still viable, but how can it compete. 


That's why I've pretty much dismissed terrestrial broadcasting altogether. I think Internet broadcasting may be the way to get the Good News to the people. On the horizon in say, the next year and a half, is WiFi Internet radio. You'll be able to get 10,000 plus stations absolutely free! Satellite radio didn't catch on because it was subscription fee based and conventional broadcasters were not threatened. Now the same folks are shaking in their boots because all of a sudden the air is going to be much more crowded. Much as the transistor radio boosted listenership in the 1960's this new technology will bring net radio to the masses.


That's where I come in. Over the last couple of days I've been talking to various companies that provide the servers for live streaming audio. It's not all that expensive to get started when compared to regular radio. I am excited to report that the new Gospel 90 is slowly becoming a reality! Right now I need people; investors, talent, sales people, you name it. I will format the station to the unchurched, the believers and the seekers. We will feature all kinds of Gospel music. I'm preparing some audio examples that will post soon. May the Good News of the Gospel go with you.


11 March 2009

Generation to generation


Wow! times have surely changed. As I'm writing this blog I'm also making new mp3's for my website, transferring analog recordings to digital, editing them in a computer and posting them to the Internet. What an age we live in! Back in the dark ages when I learned audio editing you actually cut and pasted physically with razor blade and sticky tape. That was not so long ago. The progression of technology is astounding.


Don't get me wrong I've always been an early adopter of the new technical stuff.

One of the best things available today is reissues of old Gospel recordings on CD and iTunes, like the recording I found in the photo on the left at www.imperialsmusic.com . It is the Imperials first album. Now I've got a CD of an LP that has been in my family collection since it was new although it was in mono and scratchy, I cherished this jewel since I was a teen. Now through modern digital magic I can hear a pristine stereo copy of the album that can be passed on to my kids. The Imperials are my all time favorite group from their inception to all the line up changes to the mid 90's. I almost cried when I heard this new copy. I had never heard it without all the scratches, something kids today don't have to deal with unless that classic LP sound has been added back as an effect (how wierd). I went from LP's straight to CD's in the 80's and never looked back. On with technology.

Stay tuned

Generation to generation

Wow! times have surely changed. As I'm writing this blog I'm also making new mp3's for my website, transferring analog recordings to digital, editing them in a computer and posting them to the Internet. What an age we live in! Back in the dark ages when I learned audio editing you actually cut and pasted physically with razor blade and sticky tape. That was not so long ago. The progression of technology is astounding.

Don't get me wrong I've always been an early adopter of the new technical stuff.

One of the best things available today is reissues of old Gospel recordings on CD and iTunes, like the recording I found in the photo on the left at www.imperialsmusic.com . It is the Imperials first album. Now I've got a CD of an LP that has been in my family collection since it was new although it was in mono and scratchy, I cherished this jewel since I was a teen. Now through modern digital magic I can hear a pristine stereo copy of the album that can be passed on to my kids. The Imperials are my all time favorite group from their inception to all the line up changes to the mid 90's. I almost cried when I heard this new copy. I had never heard it without all the scratches, something kids today don't have to deal with unless that classic LP sound has been added back as an effect (how wierd). I went from LP's straight to CD's in the 80's and never looked back. On with technology.

09 March 2009

Audio Postings

Some examples of my work in Gospel radio are now available . I have upgraded the audio feed directly to this blog. I'm adding new stuff daily, podcasts and all . Look over in the right hand corner. Click play. If you're interested in the technical side of radio or would like to hear some more airchecks go to my podcast site

08 March 2009

WBKI

Skip ahead to 1992. It was my 10th year in Gospel radio. I had become a somewhat seasoned veteran of the game. My most recent gig in radio had been a disaster for me personally and professionally and tiny WBKI in Bremen, Georgia would be a fresh start. My previous radio home had been WDCY in Douglasville, Georgia. I was their program director and morning drive host for 10 excruciating months in 1990 and 1991. The Douglasville outfit had been full time Southern Gospel until their ill fated flirtation with Country music in February, 1991. WDCY had been purchased in 1990 by a non-Christian broadcaster who had no familiarity with the music tattooed to my spirit. He and I were like oil and water. Instead of trying to win this owner over to the Lord, I reacted in ways unbecoming a Christian. God delivered me from that situation along with two Christian brothers that worked with me in Douglasville at the same time.


These same two men were now involved with WBKI. One was the new general manager, the other a weekend DJ. As far as I know the entire staff there were Christians. What a difference in this situation!
Jesus was now front and center and not just a side line.

I did not hold an office. I was purely a DJ playing some music I loved and had a blast with some of the finest listeners ever. I stayed there only a year and made the hard choice of leaving following an ownership change in 1993. My buddy, the general manager, had decided not to buy the station and left during the transition. A fine Christian family bought WBKI and owns it now. It is now known as WGMI.

So what am I saying? Christian broadcasters should themselves be Christians. There is nothing worse professionally that to sell a product that the salesman does not believe in. Scan the dial to any Gospel format station and I assure you will be able to spot the genuine from the fake.

05 March 2009

Random musing


I’ve often thought I was born too late.  My tastes have mostly skewed to an earlier generation.  I loved the music of the 50’s and 60’s and 70’s even though I came of age in the 80’s. My parental influence can not be understated. I am grateful for the heritage they bestowed. Both Dad and Mom were blind. Music played a major role in their lives.

Mama’s natural talent was supplemented by a formal music education. Her critical ear is in my DNA through and through. I inherited her ability to hear everything at once. She can be on the phone, watching TV, conversing with those in the room with her, all at once with equal comprehension. 

Daddy grew up a preacher’s kid. His family were all song birds. They sang in church together as he developed a rich tenor.  He served the Lord all 51 years of is too short life as a singer and preacher of the Good News.

I never rebelled from them, much. They were cool. I did, however, develop my own tastes separate from my parents. I loved Contemporary Christian Music. It was tolerated in my home as a welcome substitute for the rock music I secretly listened to. Many Christian parents must have rationalized this for the youngsters that listened to my J-900 radio shows back in ‘86. As a parent now, I tolerate the music my teenager listens to. I'm thankful it's mostly Christian.

Church music of my kids' generation is praise and chorus oriented. I feel that it is weak as dish water and sounds like a few words strung together to a stock tune when compaired to the classics. I don’t mean let’s all sing hymns only. Just, where is this generation’s next Bill Gaither or Dottie Rambo or Andrae Crouch? I'm ready for some new classics!

Old fogey? Probably. Maybe I’ve matured. Nah!

That reminds this old man: What music will be played in Heaven? Will we all learn Latin and sing dirges eternally? I don't think so. Heaven's going to be a celebration!

"When we all get to heaven what a day of rejoicing that will be..."

No doubt, "Because He Lives", "Amazing Grace" and others from the hymn book. But what about the Imperial's "Praise the Lord" or Dallas Holm's "Rise Again"? I have had this string of thought for over 25 years. There are thousands of classics to choose from, not to mention other cultures and languages. All I know is that it will be better than we can even imagine! So a word to our up and coming composers: write prayerfully, spirit led, and as though your song will be sung by angels.

My little inspiration, my baby daughter is pictured above. My mother is teaching her first piano lesson.

03 March 2009

My First Radio Station


Gosh. My first station; what an odd, yet unique format. It was a Gospel station with at least three dayparted formats. That meant we played a different style of music or programming depending on the time of day you were listening. Southern Gospel in the morning then time brokered religious programs mid-day, followed by traditional and urban contemporary Black Gospel. By 1986 I began my afternoon drive show with 30 minutes of Southern Gospel; the the rest of my broadcast was Contemporary Christian till 9pm. The listeners were confused, but what an education I gleaned from Gospel 90 WEAS AM (later WWJD) in Savannah, Georgia. I got from it a deeper appreciation for all forms of music as well as a lexicon of Gospel trivia. 

The station was originally licenced to Savannah on 900kc in 1950 despite legal objections from the local broadcast community. See http://www.lawskills.com/case/ga/id/18820/Then it was known as WJIV. They played what was termed at the time "race records". Modeled after the highly successful WDIA in Memphis, Tennessee, WJIV served the African American community exclusively for about a dozen years. Forward to about 1963; WJIV station owner, E.D. "Dee" Rivers, Jr, moved the call letters "WEAS" from his Atlanta station on 1010 AM, today known as WGUN, to the Savannah station. I discovered that Rivers also made an unsuccessful bid for a TV station called WJIV-TV. Coinciding with the call sign change was a shift to a "Hillbilly" format, what we know now as Country. What a contrast! But it seems these listeners were under served and Rivers filled the need. I guess the sounds of Patsy Cline and Hank Williams were interspersed with preachers and the occasional Gospel tune. A few years later in '68 the 100,000 watt WEAS-FM was born. It began as an automated "Beautiful Music" or "Easy Listening" format. The FM later programmed  "Progressive Rock" till the mid 70's. That's when I believe the "E-93" brand became reality. They were now serving the black community full time, the format that's a ratings winner for them until this day. I understand that the AM and FM were simulcasting in the morning in those days. The AM split away from the FM mid-day with preachers and Southern Gospel music 'til sun down.

By the time I joined WEAS-AM in 1983 it was mostly Southern Gospel. During the next 3 years the format evolved into the hybrid I described. Each disk jockey picked his own music. I could usually tune in at home and know which DJ was on by the music he or she played! It sounds as though it would be chaotic, but it worked, mostly.

Late 1983 enter a new manager from Arkansas one Charles Lewallen. He was a minister and believed in strict format. He objected to diluting our music selections with other variations of the Gospel form. One time he told me not to play a certain New Gaither Vocal Band selection because it sounded too "rock". That seems so ridiculous now. Gaither? Rock? I was 17 in October of 1983 when Charles changed our call letters to WWJD. The new call sign didn't easily roll off my tongue and was ten plus years before the unrelated WWJD bracelets. The acronym did NOT represent "What Would Jesus Do". Our name stood for, "Walking With Jesus Daily". A possible motive for the switch was a disassociation with our sister, WEAS-FM. Being a green teenager I complied with whatever management said. I had very little to do with the business end of radio. 

The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported on January 30, 1985, that Mr. Lewallen had fired a female black announcer, Lucy Frazier, in summer '83. The report said she was suing the station for damages in US District court in Atlanta. I don't know how the case was settled but it explains a lot! Charles abruptly disappeared early 1984 or slightly before. The paper quoted him as saying, it was, "inappropriate for a black woman to play white gospel records ."

At the time we had a staff meeting admonishing us to remain quiet on the situation. I firmly believe that skin color should never enter the equation. Obviously, this manager had an eye on brand issues and image of the station. I'm not qualified to psychoanalyze his motive. His side is not very well represented in the article. I think this incident prompted the addition of black Gospel music to our line up. Lester "Leck" White was eventually added mid-days to provide some soul.

During this whole time the glue that held our little 5,ooo watt station together was Gloria (I omit last name to protect her privacy.) She had interviewed and hired me in the spring of 1983 and served as manager for my entire 3 1/2 year tenure and beyond. She had been pushed to the side briefly when Lewallen took over. I overheard a conversation between she and another DJ. She had felt slighted by the apparent demotion and threatened to quit. Long story short, she outlasted the new "manager" many years.

I would describe Gloria's management style as hands off. Our DJ's pretty much had free reign. Not that we were allowed to play Led Zepplin records or anything, I just mean we played almost any Gospel we wanted. She had a few exceptions though.  A lot of upbeat Contemporary Christian numbers were forbidden, such as the Imperials' "Water Grave", from the "Sail On" album. A great many of the "Do not play" list were deliberately scratched through on the record album and rendered unplayable; a primitive, but effective insurance of compliance.

This all blew up in September of 1986. We were going to switch to Contemporary Christian! As a 20 year old who loved mainstream top 40 this was super news. The station had now been granted approval for 24 hour operation. For the 36 years prior to this occasion we were a "Daytimer", signing on at sunrise and signing off at sunset. As a concession to more powerful clear channel AM stations, our transmitter power was greatly reduced at night. I was made music director and coined "J-900" as a brand for our new sound.

The novelty wore off. I was disappointed to find out that the "format" would only apply to certain dayparts. CCM would be heard only after 3:30 pm. I blame sponsor control for the station's weak commitment to the music. The local preaching shows must have dictated our sound. Bummer! Our aim was to reach the youth demographic with the hotter sound. It was reasoned that most kids listened after class. Most callers to the station during that time were typically Christian private school students whose parents did not allow them to listen to secular music. We had a small captive audience.

We ventured into late night to the likes of Michael W. Smith's "Rocket Town" and maintained the genre until I left the station for the Atlanta market in late November of '86.