Incredible catch!Mega Hertz wrote: ↑Wed Jun 12, 2019 5:44 pmReceiving KUHF out of Texas in July of 2010. One minute I hear 89x, then something fighting it. Suddenly, I hear classical music and think "yep. Another rock station bites the dust". But when I went into my music room, the display said KUHF, and even had an HD lock. I managed to get a short video, which is linked below. At the time, I was living at Clinton River and Schoenherr in Sterling Heights. To this day, I have never received such a faraway signal on FM on a standard radio receiver.
https://youtu.be/_1rwPLb-tOU
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Unique Radio Experiences
Re: Unique Radio Experiences
Re: Unique Radio Experiences
I know what you're saying. My family moved to Michigan in 1977 when I was 18 and fully primed to discover Detroit rock radio—WABX, WRIF, WWWW. WABX was my favorite.KC wrote: ↑Wed Jun 12, 2019 6:39 pmThe summer of 1969 the first time I listened to Underground Rock or Progressive Rock (as it was called back then) on WABX 99.5 and WKNR 100.3 this was totally the best radio to hear in my youth I was only 14 years old and thought I discovered a new world of different music.
Re: Unique Radio Experiences
Mike Halloran was a great Dude in the 80’s and actually did a lot for new music in that era.TC Talks wrote: ↑Wed Jun 12, 2019 2:20 pmMike Halloran was an awful lot of fun to listen to. He was a favorite of Fred Jacobs. Not many people can trash a studio with a fire extinguisher and become a program director on the other end of the country.
Martin Bandyke was great earlier in his career on Dimensions at WDET.
Re: Unique Radio Experiences
With WKAR-AM off the air at local sundown, WWL was a regular catch. I wonder if they were on some kind of emergency authorization--or if that would have made any difference in the state irst place. This probably happened in 1979 but might have been 1980.Bobbert wrote: ↑Wed Jun 12, 2019 6:41 pmI remember something similar when the earthquake hit San Francisco in 1989 during the World Series. I think either WJR or WWJ switched over to KGO out of San Francisco.Vic Doucette wrote: ↑Wed Jun 12, 2019 12:45 pmI was listening to WKAR-AM one afternoon before heading into work. I forgot to turn off the radio before I left my apartment.
When I got home after midnight, WWL from New Orleans was blasting in. There was nothing unusual about that, but Louisiana was getting blasted by a hurricane. Regular programming, The Charlie Douglas Road Gang, was tossed out the window in favor of weather and safety announcements, lists of shelters, places where food and water wer available, etc. I stayed up until sunrise listening.
Re: Unique Radio Experiences
For a lot of years I lived in a small Ontario town with only one radio station, an AM. Unless you were into DXing it was THE radio station. The high lite of their day was the funeral announcements. Every day during the noon hour, they would play creepy organ music and read off the names of everyone who had died in the community that day and a list of their surviving relatives.
I knew a guy who was an announcer at the station. He said one of their favourite tricks was to gather outside the booth where the person was reading the announcements and try to make him laugh. One day when he had been assigned to read it, someone came in with a cigarette lighter and set his notes on fire. He had to read quickly that day.
I knew a guy who was an announcer at the station. He said one of their favourite tricks was to gather outside the booth where the person was reading the announcements and try to make him laugh. One day when he had been assigned to read it, someone came in with a cigarette lighter and set his notes on fire. He had to read quickly that day.
I don't mean to brag, but I just put a puzzle together in 1 day and the box said 2-4 years.
Re: Unique Radio Experiences
Greg St. James was one of the guys who started 89X. Before that he was a DJ at WRIF. I remember driving home late one night from my girlfriend's house listening to WRIF. Greg was signing off for the night but hinted he was done at WRIF and moving on to something much different. On his way out the door of his last shift at WRIF he played "I Wanna Be Sedated" by The Ramones.
Also I'll never forget listening to Drew and Mike on 09/11/01 for obvious reasons, I was listening when the first plane hit.
Also I'll never forget listening to Drew and Mike on 09/11/01 for obvious reasons, I was listening when the first plane hit.
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Re: Unique Radio Experiences
Bobbert,next Monday is the 25th anniversary of the slow speed Bronco chase . (Yesterday was the 25th anniversary of Ron and Nicole's murder .)
Re: Unique Radio Experiences
A night in March 2004. A cold rain pouring outside. I was in a hotel room at Toronto airport and feeling bored Holiday Inn, Toronto Airport. Do you know it? If you don't, you know a hundred others just like it. Sam wallpaper, same spread on the bed, same pictures, same cheap clock radio beside the bed.
Didn't want to go out, because of the weather so I was trying to decide between looking for hidden pictures in the stains on the ceiling or maybe having a go at the Gideon Bible in the drawer. Then I just remembered that it was Saturday night and one of my favourite DX programs was on the radio that night. I always carry a portable short wave radio when I travel.
At the end of the program the host, Kim Andrew Elliot, announced that it was his last program. He ended tho show by playing the song Time, by the Poso Seco Singers. Those who know it know it has a haunting melody and lyrics. It did nothing to lift my melancholy mood that night.
Didn't want to go out, because of the weather so I was trying to decide between looking for hidden pictures in the stains on the ceiling or maybe having a go at the Gideon Bible in the drawer. Then I just remembered that it was Saturday night and one of my favourite DX programs was on the radio that night. I always carry a portable short wave radio when I travel.
At the end of the program the host, Kim Andrew Elliot, announced that it was his last program. He ended tho show by playing the song Time, by the Poso Seco Singers. Those who know it know it has a haunting melody and lyrics. It did nothing to lift my melancholy mood that night.
I don't mean to brag, but I just put a puzzle together in 1 day and the box said 2-4 years.
Re: Unique Radio Experiences
I found the interview with Mike Halloran where he talks about Radio's in Motion, mostly about his time with WDET. I was too young to remember his early shows in the late 70's, but from 83 on I think Mike Halloran introduced me to much of my favorite bands and songs.
http://detroitpunkarchive.com/media/wde ... in-motion/
http://detroitpunkarchive.com/media/wde ... in-motion/
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Re: Unique Radio Experiences
In Nov.1974,I met WKNR's Jerry Goodwin (who was stoned out of his gourd) while he was DJing at long-defunct Windsor station CJAM . Wolverine kicker Mike Lantry's missed field goal gave Ohio State the win over Michigan that Saturday,and Goodwin had WJR on in the background ,listening to the game as he spun records and talked to me.
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Re: Unique Radio Experiences
Borderboy...Goodwin was at CJOM, not CJAM. CJOM, I think, was Canada's answer to WABX.
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Re: Unique Radio Experiences
WDMJ. You mean AM 1320, or was there a WDMJ-FM then?sfpcc wrote: ↑Wed Jun 12, 2019 12:08 amHearing Laurie Anderson's O Superman on WRIF's Rock Cafe.
Listening to Marquette's WDMJ's brief, (1988/1989) Classic Rock programming. It sounded like no AOR station I will ever hear again, (mostly 70's and 60's, very little 80's, more Van Morrison,Guess Who and Robin Trower than you will ever hear anywhere.) Basically it was the most uncorporate song list I have ever heard.
If not, an AM Classic Rock was a rare animal indeed (though WFAA was one of the first to try it, complete with AM stereo).
As for WDMJ, they would go through tough times, operating on 280 watts to save on electricity under STA to avert paying for their licensed 5,000.
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Re: Unique Radio Experiences
Mega Hertz wrote: ↑Wed Jun 12, 2019 5:44 pmReceiving KUHF out of Texas in July of 2010. One minute I hear 89x, then something fighting it. Suddenly, I hear classical music and think "yep. Another rock station bites the dust". But when I went into my music room, the display said KUHF, and even had an HD lock. I managed to get a short video, which is linked below. At the time, I was living at Clinton River and Schoenherr in Sterling Heights. To this day, I have never received such a faraway signal on FM on a standard radio receiver.
https://youtu.be/_1rwPLb-tOU
I love Sporadic-E skip. I was up in Honor, MI during the legendary 7/171980 opening. KUHF dominated the channel for four hours that day/evening.
It's getting harder to DX the FM broadcast band, because the band is so full of stations nowadays.
Sporadic-E is more frequent on the Low-VHF TV channels (2-6) than it is on FM.
Re: Unique Radio Experiences
[quote=innate-in-you post_id=575841 time=1560704325 user_id=14794]
[quote=sfpcc post_id=575384 time=1560312535 user_id=4168]
Hearing Laurie Anderson's O Superman on WRIF's Rock Cafe.
Listening to Marquette's WDMJ's brief, (1988/1989) Classic Rock programming. It sounded like no AOR station I will ever hear again, (mostly 70's and 60's, very little 80's, more Van Morrison,Guess Who and Robin Trower than you will ever hear anywhere.) Basically it was the most uncorporate song list I have ever heard.
[/quote]
WDMJ. You mean AM 1320, or was there a WDMJ-FM then?
If not, an AM Classic Rock was a rare animal indeed (though WFAA was one of the first to try it, complete with AM stereo).
As for WDMJ, they would go through tough times, operating on 280 watts to save on electricity under STA to avert paying for their licensed 5,000.
[/quote]
It was AM. As far as I know it was the only AM Rock station I've ever heard.
[quote=sfpcc post_id=575384 time=1560312535 user_id=4168]
Hearing Laurie Anderson's O Superman on WRIF's Rock Cafe.
Listening to Marquette's WDMJ's brief, (1988/1989) Classic Rock programming. It sounded like no AOR station I will ever hear again, (mostly 70's and 60's, very little 80's, more Van Morrison,Guess Who and Robin Trower than you will ever hear anywhere.) Basically it was the most uncorporate song list I have ever heard.
[/quote]
WDMJ. You mean AM 1320, or was there a WDMJ-FM then?
If not, an AM Classic Rock was a rare animal indeed (though WFAA was one of the first to try it, complete with AM stereo).
As for WDMJ, they would go through tough times, operating on 280 watts to save on electricity under STA to avert paying for their licensed 5,000.
[/quote]
It was AM. As far as I know it was the only AM Rock station I've ever heard.
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Re: Unique Radio Experiences
I also caught WWL out of NO after Hurricane Katrina. It was after 4am, and they were still on the air. They were taking calls from whomever was out there, discussing what that person was seeing or experiencing, and answering questions as to what to do and where to go for assistance. It was reminiscent of small-town radio, and fascinating to listen to. I hated to see the sunrise come that morning.
I also recall years earlier at a small-town AM station where they played an entire album on a weekday afternoon, sponsored by a local business. I had just stopped in to see the station, and the DJ named Dave let me sit in the studio as we talked. I remember him flipping the album over to play side 2, and I think it was just silence on the air as he did - I don’t think they went to a break there, for some reason.
The small local stations were where it seemed most like the radio was both fun and relevant.
I also recall years earlier at a small-town AM station where they played an entire album on a weekday afternoon, sponsored by a local business. I had just stopped in to see the station, and the DJ named Dave let me sit in the studio as we talked. I remember him flipping the album over to play side 2, and I think it was just silence on the air as he did - I don’t think they went to a break there, for some reason.
The small local stations were where it seemed most like the radio was both fun and relevant.