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History of radio disc jockeys

The history of radio disc jockeys covers the time when gramophone records were first transmitted by experimental radio broadcasters to present day radio personalities who host shows featuring a variety of recorded music.

Disc jockeys at WMCA (AM) New York in 1964

For a number of decades beginning in the 1930s, the term "disc jockey", "DJ", "deejay", or "jock"[1] was exclusively used to describe on-air personalities who played selections of popular recorded music on radio broadcasting stations.[2][3]

The term "disc jockey" first appeared in print in a 1941 issue of Variety magazine,[4][5] although the origin of the term is generally attributed to American radio news commentator Walter Winchell who used it to describe radio presenter Martin Block's practice of introducing phonograph recordings to create a "Make Believe Ballroom" experience for radio listeners. The term combined "disc", referring to phonograph disc records, and "jockey", denoting the DJs practice of riding the audio gain, or alternately, riding a song to success and popularity.[6]

Culminating in the "golden age" of Top 40 radio, from approximately 1955 to 1975, radio DJs established a style of fast talking patter to bookend three minute pop songs.[7] Unlike the modern club DJ who mixes transitions between songs to create a continuous flow of music, radio DJs played individual songs or music tracks while voicing announcements, introductions, comments, jokes, and commercials in between each song or short series of songs.[8]

During the 1950s, 60s and 70s, radio DJs exerted considerable influence on popular music, especially during the Top 40 radio era, because of their ability to introduce new music to the radio audience and promote or control which songs would be given airplay.[9][10]

1900s to 1950s edit

 
Lee de Forest broadcasting Columbia phonograph records on New York station 2XG in 1916.

In 1892, Emile Berliner began commercial production of his gramophone records, the first disc records to be offered to the public. The earliest broadcasts of recorded music were made by radio engineers and experimenters. On Christmas Eve 1906, American Reginald A. Fessenden broadcast both live and recorded music from Brant Rock, Massachusetts. In 1907, American inventor Lee de Forest broadcast a recording of the William Tell Overture from his laboratory in the Parker Building in New York City, claiming "Of course, there weren't many receivers in those days, but I was the first disc jockey".[9]

Ray Newby, of Stockton, California claimed on a 1965 episode of CBS I've Got a Secret to be regularly playing records on a small transmitter while a student at Herrold College of Engineering and Wireless in San Jose, California in 1909.[11][12]

In 1917 Captain Horace Donisthorpe, who was training radio operators for the British Army near Worcester, England, made unofficial broadcasts as engineer from a field. At first his wife Gertrude spoke into the microphone to Captain Donisthorpe alone, but later she broadcast to army camps nearby playing gramophone records. In 1967 she spoke about these experiments in a BBC radio programme called "Scrapbook for 1917".[13]

By 1910, radio broadcasters had started to use "live" orchestras as well as prerecorded sound. In the early radio age, content typically included comedy, drama, news, music, and sports reporting. Most radio stations had an orchestra or band on the payroll.[14][15] The Federal Communications Commission also clearly favored live music, providing accelerated license approval to stations promising not to use any recordings for their first three years on the air.[16] Many noted recording artists tried to keep their recorded works off the air by having their records labeled as not being legal for airplay.[17] It took a Federal court ruling in 1940 to establish that a recording artist had no legal right to control the use of a record after it was sold.[16]

Elman B. Meyers started broadcasting a daily program in New York City in 1911 consisting mostly of recorded music. In 1914 his wife Sybil True broadcast records borrowed from a local music store. The first official British DJ was Christopher Stone, who in 1927 convinced the BBC to let him broadcast a program consisting of American and American-influenced jazz records interspersed with his ad libbed introductions.[18]

One of the first woman disc jockeys was Halloween Martin. She was on WBBM (AM) in Chicago as early as 1929, hosting a morning program she called the "Musical Clock." She played up-beat songs, gave the time and temperature, and read the latest weather.[19] Martin's morning radio show format was uncommon in the late 1920s.[20]

 
DJ Martin Block with Stan Kenton.

In 1935, American radio commentator Walter Winchell used the term "disc jockey" (the combination of disc, referring to the disc records, and jockey, which is an operator of a machine) as a description of radio announcer Martin Block, the first announcer to become a star. While his audience was awaiting developments in the Lindbergh kidnapping, Block played records and created the illusion that he was broadcasting from a ballroom, with the nation's top dance bands performing live. The show, which he called Make Believe Ballroom, was an instant hit.[16]

Block was notable for his considerable influence on a records popularity. Block's program on station WNEW was highly successful, and Block was described as "the make-all, break-all of records. If he played something, it was a hit". Block later negotiated a multimillion-dollar contract with ABC for a syndicated nationwide radio show.[18]

The earliest printed use of the term "disc jockey" appeared on August 13, 1941 when Variety published "... Gilbert is a disc jockey, who sings with his records." By the end of World War II, disc jockeys had established a reputation as "hitmakers", someone whose influence "could start an artist's career overnight".[18]

Disputes with the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) and the American Federation of Musicians (AFM) affected radio DJs during World War II. ASCAP and AFM cited the decline in demand for live appearances of musical artists due to the proliferation of radio disc jockeys playing recorded music. The disputes were settled in 1944.[21]

1950s to present edit

 
Dick Clark in 1963

The postwar period coincided with the rise of the radio disc jockey as a celebrity separate from the radio station, also known as a "radio personality". In the days before station-controlled playlists, the DJ often followed their personal tastes in music selection. DJs also played a role in exposing rock and roll artists to large, national audiences.

While at WERE (1300 AM) in Cleveland, Ohio, DJ Bill Randle was one of the first to introduce Elvis Presley to radio audiences in the northeastern U.S.[22] At WMCA (AM), DJ Jack Spector was the first New York City radio personality to play the new Beatles' Capitol Records' single, "I Want to Hold Your Hand".[23]

A top-rated radio host at WINS in New York City in the mid 1960s was Murray Kaufman, aka Murray the K. Kaufman took over the station's 7-11PM time period for several years. His show was known for its frenetic pace that incorporated segues, jingles, sound effects, and antics. After being invited by Beatles manager Brian Epstein to travel with the band, he came to be referred to as the "Fifth Beatle".[24]

Notable U.S. radio disc jockeys of the period include Alan Freed, Wolfman Jack, Casey Kasem,[25] and their British counterparts such as the BBC's Brian Matthew and Alan Freeman, Radio London's John Peel, Radio Caroline's Tony Blackburn, and Radio Luxembourg's Jimmy Savile.[26][27]

Radio DJ Alan Freed on New York City's WINS (AM) in 1955.

Alan Freed is commonly referred to as the "father of rock and roll" due to his promotion of the music and his introduction of the term rock and roll on radio in the early 1950s. Freed also made a practice of presenting music by African-American artists rather than cover versions by white artists on his radio program. Freed's career ended when it was shown that he had accepted payola, a practice that was highly controversial at the time, resulting in his being fired from his job at WABC.[28]

WLAC radio DJ John R. (aka John Richbourg) in Nashville, Tennessee adopted the African-American Vernacular English of African-American DJ's in the early 1950s. Richbourg's practice of imitating African-American street dialect of the mid-twentieth century was so successful, that WLAC programmed an entire cohort of white DJ's that spoke like blacks did while playing music that was popular in the black community. It was not common knowledge that WLAC DJs were white until the mid-1960s. By then, the rebellious youth market made the nightly rhythm and blues station the one they tuned to for rock and roll, as atmospherics carried the signal enabling the station to be heard throughout much of the North American continent and Caribbean islands.[29]

 
Wolfman Jack

Bob Smith (aka Wolfman Jack) began his career as an announcer on XERF located in Mexico and became an influential DJ who advocated for African American music on his long running rock and roll radio show. Many people thought Smith was a black DJ until he appeared as himself in the 1973 film American Graffiti. Smith hosted TV shows such as Midnight Special and Rock and Roll Palace.[30]

A number of actors and media personalities began their careers as traditional radio disc jockeys who played and introduced records, such as Hogan's Heroes star Bob Crane, talk show host Art Bell, American Idol host Ryan Seacrest, and Howard Stern.[31] Dick Clark was a radio DJ at WFIL in Philadelphia before he began hosting WFIL-TV's American Bandstand.[32]

Radio DJs often acted as commercial brokers for their program and actively solicited paying sponsors. They could also negotiate which sponsors would appear on their program. Many wrote and delivered the commercials themselves, talking the place of advertising agencies who formerly executed these responsibilities.[33]

Drive time or "morning drive" shows capitalized on a listening audience of weekday commuters and parents getting children ready for school. Morning DJs such as New York's Don Imus and DJ teams such as Mark and Brian in Los Angeles are examples of notable radio personalities whose morning drive format included playing songs as well as sharing stories and taking listener phone calls.[34]

Radio disc jockey programs were often syndicated, at first with hourly musical programs with entertainers such as Dick Powell and Peggy Lee acting as radio DJs introducing music and providing continuity and commentary,[35] and later with radio personalities such as Casey Kasem who hosted the first nationally syndicated Top 40 countdown show.[36]

Record hops edit

In the 1950s, radio disc jockeys from local and regional radio stations took advantage of their popularity and augmented their income by playing records and performing as master of ceremonies at teen dance parties called sock hops or record hops. The term came about because these events were commonly held at high schools, often in the school gym or cafeteria, and dancers were asked to remove their hard-soled shoes to protect the varnished floor of the gymnasium.[37][38]

Record hops became strongly associated with early rock and roll. "At the Hop", a 1957 hit song by Danny and the Juniors, described the scene: "where the jockey is the smoothest, and the music is the coolest at the hop".[39]

In addition to the DJ introducing and playing popular records, local bands and solo recording artists sometimes performed live at these events. Record hops were often sponsored by radio stations as a way to promote their disc jockeys, or by record stores to promote the sale of records. They were also sponsored by school or church organizations who considered them "wholesome recreation" for teenagers.[40] Admission was either free, or a small admission fee was charged.[41][42]

During the 1950s, Cleveland radio DJ Bill Randle personalized his own style of record hops called "Randle Romps" which he used to gauge the reactions of teenagers to new records he wished to promote while on the air. Cleveland DJ Alan Freed is credited with breaking down racial barriers by playing and promoting African American music at record hops in the early 1950s and 60s.[43][44] In 1957 alone, disc jockey and American Bandstand host Dick Clark made 157 appearances at dances and record hops.[45]Detroit radio DJ Robin Seymour is credited with influencing the success of The Supremes and The Four Tops by promoting their appearances at his record hops.[46]

The practice of dancing to recorded music at record hops hosted by radio DJs in the 1950s influenced the emergence of the discotheque and modern club DJs who would later specialize in mixing a continuous flow of recorded music for live audiences.[47]

Pirate radio DJs edit

 
Radio Caroline DJ Emperor Rosko

During the 1960s, pirate radio stations proliferated off the coast of England in response to popular demand for new music not provided by traditional radio outlets such as the BBC. Up to 21 pirate stations were active at one time, including Radio Caroline, Wonderful Radio London and Radio Atlanta. DJs such as John Peel, Tony Blackburn, Kenny Everett, Tony Prince, Emperor Rosko and Spangles Muldoon pioneered an innovative, American-influenced style of presentation, often programming their personal music choices rather than adhere to a strict playlist, thereby winning large audiences hungry for youth-oriented sounds and the latest musical trends. When the Marine Broadcasting Offences Act 1967 virtually ended pirate radio in 1967, many offshore pirate radio DJs moved to the relatively progressive land-based BBC Radio 1 which was established that same year as a response to the public's changing musical tastes.[48]

Wartime radio DJs edit

 
Willis Conover on the Voice of America in 1969

During World War II, disc jockey programs such as GI Jive were broadcast by the U.S. Armed Forces Radio Service to troops. GI Jive initially featured one of a series of guest DJs for each broadcast who would introduce and play popular recordings of the day; some were civilian celebrities, while others were servicemen. In May 1943, however, the format settled on a single regular host DJ, Martha Wilkerson, who was known on the air as "GI Jill."[49][50][51] Axis powers radio broadcasts aimed at Allied troops also adopted the disc jockey format, featuring personalities such as Tokyo Rose and Axis Sally who played popular American recorded songs interspersed with propaganda.

During the Vietnam War, United States Air Force sergeant Adrian Cronauer was a notable Armed Forces Radio disc jockey whose experiences later inspired the 1987 film Good Morning, Vietnam starring Robin Williams as Cronauer.[52][53]

Cold War radio DJ Willis Conover's program on the Voice of America from 1955 through the mid-1990s featured jazz and other "prohibited" American music aimed at listeners in the Soviet Union and other Communist countries. Conover reportedly had "millions of devoted followers in Eastern Europe alone; his worldwide audience in his heyday has been estimated at up to 30 million people".[54]

African American disc jockeys edit

 
Plaque commemorating radio DJ Nat D. Williams in downtown Memphis, Tennessee

African American radio DJs emerged in the mid 1930s and late 1940s, mostly in cities with large black populations such as New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and Detroit.

Jack L. Cooper was on the air 912 hours each week on Chicago's WCAP and is credited with being one of the first black radio announcers to broadcast gramophone records, including gospel music and jazz, using his own phonograph.[55]

DJ Herb Kent began his career in 1944 playing classical records on Chicago's WBEZ, then an FM broadcasting service for the Chicago Public Schools. During the 1950s, Kent worked at WGES in Chicago and then at WBEE where he coined the phrase "dusty records" or "dusties." He spent several years as one of the original DJs at WVON, a "heritage" station to Chicago's black community.[56]

 
Hal Jackson

In 1939, Hal Jackson was the first African American radio sportscaster at WOOK-AM in Washington, DC, and later hosted The House That Jack Built, a DJ program of jazz and blues.[57] Jackson moved to New York City in 1954, and was the first radio personality to broadcast three daily shows on three different New York stations.[58] In 1990, Jackson was the first minority inducted into the National Association of Broadcaster's Hall of Fame.[59]

Other prominent black DJs included Al Benson on WGES, who was the first popular disc jockey to play urban blues and use "black street slang" in his broadcasts. Jesse "Spider" Burke hosted a popular show on KXLW in Saint Louis, Missouri. James Early was featured on WROX (AM) in Clarkesdale, Mississippi. Ramon Bruce became a prominent DJ at WHAT (AM) in Philadelphia. Some of these radio pioneers of the Black-appeal radio period presaged the Top 40, playing recordings that were targeted to the black youth and reflected jukebox selections that were popular.[60] Most major U.S. cities operated a full-time rhythm and blues radio station, and as African Americans traveled the country they would spread the word of their favorite radio personalities.[61]

Nat D. Williams was the first African American disc jockey on WDIA in Memphis with his popular Tan Town Jamboree show. African American radio DJs found it necessary to organize in order to gain opportunities in the radio industry, and in the 1950s Jack Gibson of WERD formed the National Jazz, Rhythm and Blues Disc Jockey Association. The group's name was later changed to the National Association of Radio and Television Announcers. In 1960, radio station managers formed the Negro Radio Association to foster and develop programming and talent in the radio broadcasting industry.[62][61]

Women disc jockeys edit

With exceptions such as Halloween Martin's work in 1929 at WBBM in Chicago,[20] the radio DJ profession in the U.S. was historically male-dominated. However beginning in the Top 40 era, female disc jockeys became more common. Judy Dibble on WDGY in Minneapolis started as "sidekick" to a male DJ in the mid 1960s and later went on to host her own DJ show.[63]

Marge Anthony became a regular member of the DJ staff in 1963 at CKGM in Montreal.[64][65]

Alison Steele began her career at WNEW-FM in the late 1960s. Responding to an ad for female disk jockeys, Steele auditioned with 800 other women and was chosen with three others to launch an "all woman" format. When WNEW abandoned this format in 1967 after an 18‐month trial, Steele was the only one asked to stay on.[66] As a late night show host, Steele created an on-air persona, calling herself "The Nightbird". Her popularity grew, drawing an average nightly audience of 78,000. In 1976, Steele was the first woman chosen by Billboard magazine as "FM Personality of the Year", and she was instrumental in promoting performers such as the Moody Blues. She worked as an announcer for Search for Tomorrow and also as a producer at CNN, returning to WNEW in 1984. In later years, she was known as "The Grand Dame of New York Night".[67]

Maxanne Sartori was the first female progressive rock DJ on KOL-FM in Seattle and was subsequently hired in 1970 as an afternoon DJ for WBCN-FM in Boston. Sartori has been credited with influencing the success of artists such as Aerosmith and The Cars.[68][69]

In 1973, Yvonne Daniels was the first female DJ hired by WLS (AM) in Chicago. 99X FM, RKO radio group in New York hired Paulie Riccio in 1974. WABC (AM) in New York hired DJ Liz Kiley in 1979.[63][70][71]

Radio disc jockey Donna Halper is credited with discovering the rock band Rush while working as a radio DJ at WMMS in Cleveland in 1974. After Halper played a track called “Working Man” on the air, listeners began requesting more Rush songs, prompting other radio stations to add Rush songs to their playlists. Acknowledging her role in their success, the band dedicated its first two albums to her.[72][73] Halper appeared in the documentary, Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage,[74] and spoke at Rush's Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony.[75][76]

DJ Karen Begin (aka Darian O'Toole) is credited with being the first female shock jock. She promoted herself as the "Morning Beyotch" and "The Antidote to Howard Stern" on her show on San Francisco radio stations KSAN and KFRC-FM in the late 1990s.[77]

"Less than a handful" of women were employed as radio DJs in Britain before the 1970s. DJ Annie Nightingale hosted a progressive rock show on BBC Radio 1 in 1969. In 1998, Zoe Ball began hosting the BBC's key breakfast show slot, followed by Sarah Cox in 2000.[78]

Payola scandal edit

Especially during the 1950s, the sales success of any record depended to a large extent on its airplay by popular radio disc jockeys.[21] The illegal practice of payment or other inducement by record companies for the radio broadcast of recordings on commercial radio in which the song is presented by a DJ as being part of the normal day's broadcast became known in the music industry as "payola". The first major United States Senate payola investigation occurred in 1959. Nationally renowned DJ Alan Freed, who was uncooperative in committee hearings, was fired as a result. DJ Dick Clark also testified before the committee, but survived, partially due to the fact that he had previously divested himself of ownership interest in all of his music-industry holdings.[79]

After the initial investigation, radio DJs were stripped of the authority to make programming decisions, and payola became a misdemeanor offense. Programming decisions became the responsibility of station program directors. As a result, the process of persuading stations to play certain songs was simplified. Instead of reaching numerous DJs, record labels only had to connect with one station program director. Labels turned to independent promoters to circumvent allegations of payola.[80]

Format changes edit

As radio stations moved from the AM Top 40 format to the FM album-oriented rock format or adopted more profitable programming such as news and call-in talk shows, the impact of the radio DJ on popular music was lessened. The emergence of shock jock personalities and morning zoo formats saw the DJs role change from music host to cultural provocateur and comedian.[81]

From the late 50s to the late 1980s when the Top 40 music radio format was popular, audience measuring tools such as ratings diaries were used. However a combination of financial pressures and new technology such as voice tracking and the Portable People Meter (PPM) began to have negative effects on the role of radio DJs beginning in the late 1990s, prompting one radio program manager to comment, "There was a time when the “top 40” format was ruled by legends such as Casey Kasem, or Wolfman Jack, and others who were known for both playing the hits and talking to you. Now with PPMs, it is all about the music, commercials and the format."[82] Such format changes as well as the rise of new music distribution models such as MP3 and online music stores led to the demise of radio DJs reputation as trendsetters and "hit makers" who wielded considerable influence over popular music.[9][10]

In film edit

See also edit

References edit

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  68. ^ Richard Neer (18 December 2001). FM: The Rise and Fall of Rock Radio. Random House Publishing Group. pp. 245–. ISBN 978-0-679-46295-8.
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  70. ^ Christopher H. Sterling (13 May 2013). Biographical Encyclopedia of American Radio. Routledge. pp. 134–. ISBN 978-1-136-99375-6.
  71. ^ Mary Kosut (1 May 2012). Encyclopedia of Gender in Media. SAGE Publications. pp. 531–. ISBN 978-1-5063-3828-6.
  72. ^ Wagner, Vit (2002-05-11). "What A Rush!". Toronto Star. p. J8.
  73. ^ McLean, Chuck (2008-07-09). "Quincy Woman Still Promoting Rush 34 Years After Discovering Band". The Patriot Ledger.
  74. ^ "Women see 'underlying theme' in Rush documentary film" 2010-06-19 at the Wayback Machine
  75. ^ "Rush gets a star in Hollywood with an assist from Quincy woman"
  76. ^ Tsui, Nick. "Legendary DJ Donna Halper was first to spin Rush in America". Howl Magazine. Howl Magazine. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  77. ^ Justin Berton, Darian O'Toole, S.F. disc jockey dies at 40 SFGate.com
  78. ^ Christopher H. Sterling (1 March 2004). Encyclopedia of Radio 3-Volume Set. Routledge. pp. 377–. ISBN 978-1-135-45649-8.
  79. ^ "Dick Clark survives the Payola Scandal". history.com.
  80. ^ Cartwright, Robin (August 31, 2004). "What's the story on the radio payola scandal of the 1950s?." The Straight Dope.
  81. ^ Laurence Etling (19 July 2011). Radio in the Movies: A History and Filmography, 1926-2010. McFarland. pp. 4–. ISBN 978-0-7864-8616-8.
  82. ^ McKay, Jeff. "The State of the Disc Jockey". Radio Info. radioinfo.com. Retrieved 7 July 2016.

history, radio, disc, jockeys, history, club, disc, jockeys, history, djing, history, radio, disc, jockeys, covers, time, when, gramophone, records, were, first, transmitted, experimental, radio, broadcasters, present, radio, personalities, host, shows, featur. For the history of club disc jockeys see History of DJing The history of radio disc jockeys covers the time when gramophone records were first transmitted by experimental radio broadcasters to present day radio personalities who host shows featuring a variety of recorded music Disc jockeys at WMCA AM New York in 1964For a number of decades beginning in the 1930s the term disc jockey DJ deejay or jock 1 was exclusively used to describe on air personalities who played selections of popular recorded music on radio broadcasting stations 2 3 The term disc jockey first appeared in print in a 1941 issue of Variety magazine 4 5 although the origin of the term is generally attributed to American radio news commentator Walter Winchell who used it to describe radio presenter Martin Block s practice of introducing phonograph recordings to create a Make Believe Ballroom experience for radio listeners The term combined disc referring to phonograph disc records and jockey denoting the DJs practice of riding the audio gain or alternately riding a song to success and popularity 6 Culminating in the golden age of Top 40 radio from approximately 1955 to 1975 radio DJs established a style of fast talking patter to bookend three minute pop songs 7 Unlike the modern club DJ who mixes transitions between songs to create a continuous flow of music radio DJs played individual songs or music tracks while voicing announcements introductions comments jokes and commercials in between each song or short series of songs 8 During the 1950s 60s and 70s radio DJs exerted considerable influence on popular music especially during the Top 40 radio era because of their ability to introduce new music to the radio audience and promote or control which songs would be given airplay 9 10 Contents 1 1900s to 1950s 2 1950s to present 3 Record hops 4 Pirate radio DJs 5 Wartime radio DJs 6 African American disc jockeys 7 Women disc jockeys 8 Payola scandal 9 Format changes 10 In film 11 See also 12 References1900s to 1950s edit nbsp Lee de Forest broadcasting Columbia phonograph records on New York station 2XG in 1916 In 1892 Emile Berliner began commercial production of his gramophone records the first disc records to be offered to the public The earliest broadcasts of recorded music were made by radio engineers and experimenters On Christmas Eve 1906 American Reginald A Fessenden broadcast both live and recorded music from Brant Rock Massachusetts In 1907 American inventor Lee de Forest broadcast a recording of the William Tell Overture from his laboratory in the Parker Building in New York City claiming Of course there weren t many receivers in those days but I was the first disc jockey 9 Ray Newby of Stockton California claimed on a 1965 episode of CBS I ve Got a Secret to be regularly playing records on a small transmitter while a student at Herrold College of Engineering and Wireless in San Jose California in 1909 11 12 In 1917 Captain Horace Donisthorpe who was training radio operators for the British Army near Worcester England made unofficial broadcasts as engineer from a field At first his wife Gertrude spoke into the microphone to Captain Donisthorpe alone but later she broadcast to army camps nearby playing gramophone records In 1967 she spoke about these experiments in a BBC radio programme called Scrapbook for 1917 13 By 1910 radio broadcasters had started to use live orchestras as well as prerecorded sound In the early radio age content typically included comedy drama news music and sports reporting Most radio stations had an orchestra or band on the payroll 14 15 The Federal Communications Commission also clearly favored live music providing accelerated license approval to stations promising not to use any recordings for their first three years on the air 16 Many noted recording artists tried to keep their recorded works off the air by having their records labeled as not being legal for airplay 17 It took a Federal court ruling in 1940 to establish that a recording artist had no legal right to control the use of a record after it was sold 16 Elman B Meyers started broadcasting a daily program in New York City in 1911 consisting mostly of recorded music In 1914 his wife Sybil True broadcast records borrowed from a local music store The first official British DJ was Christopher Stone who in 1927 convinced the BBC to let him broadcast a program consisting of American and American influenced jazz records interspersed with his ad libbed introductions 18 One of the first woman disc jockeys was Halloween Martin She was on WBBM AM in Chicago as early as 1929 hosting a morning program she called the Musical Clock She played up beat songs gave the time and temperature and read the latest weather 19 Martin s morning radio show format was uncommon in the late 1920s 20 nbsp DJ Martin Block with Stan Kenton In 1935 American radio commentator Walter Winchell used the term disc jockey the combination of disc referring to the disc records and jockey which is an operator of a machine as a description of radio announcer Martin Block the first announcer to become a star While his audience was awaiting developments in the Lindbergh kidnapping Block played records and created the illusion that he was broadcasting from a ballroom with the nation s top dance bands performing live The show which he called Make Believe Ballroom was an instant hit 16 Block was notable for his considerable influence on a records popularity Block s program on station WNEW was highly successful and Block was described as the make all break all of records If he played something it was a hit Block later negotiated a multimillion dollar contract with ABC for a syndicated nationwide radio show 18 The earliest printed use of the term disc jockey appeared on August 13 1941 when Variety published Gilbert is a disc jockey who sings with his records By the end of World War II disc jockeys had established a reputation as hitmakers someone whose influence could start an artist s career overnight 18 Disputes with the American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers ASCAP and the American Federation of Musicians AFM affected radio DJs during World War II ASCAP and AFM cited the decline in demand for live appearances of musical artists due to the proliferation of radio disc jockeys playing recorded music The disputes were settled in 1944 21 1950s to present edit nbsp Dick Clark in 1963The postwar period coincided with the rise of the radio disc jockey as a celebrity separate from the radio station also known as a radio personality In the days before station controlled playlists the DJ often followed their personal tastes in music selection DJs also played a role in exposing rock and roll artists to large national audiences While at WERE 1300 AM in Cleveland Ohio DJ Bill Randle was one of the first to introduce Elvis Presley to radio audiences in the northeastern U S 22 At WMCA AM DJ Jack Spector was the first New York City radio personality to play the new Beatles Capitol Records single I Want to Hold Your Hand 23 A top rated radio host at WINS in New York City in the mid 1960s was Murray Kaufman aka Murray the K Kaufman took over the station s 7 11PM time period for several years His show was known for its frenetic pace that incorporated segues jingles sound effects and antics After being invited by Beatles manager Brian Epstein to travel with the band he came to be referred to as the Fifth Beatle 24 Notable U S radio disc jockeys of the period include Alan Freed Wolfman Jack Casey Kasem 25 and their British counterparts such as the BBC s Brian Matthew and Alan Freeman Radio London s John Peel Radio Caroline s Tony Blackburn and Radio Luxembourg s Jimmy Savile 26 27 source source Radio DJ Alan Freed on New York City s WINS AM in 1955 Alan Freed is commonly referred to as the father of rock and roll due to his promotion of the music and his introduction of the term rock and roll on radio in the early 1950s Freed also made a practice of presenting music by African American artists rather than cover versions by white artists on his radio program Freed s career ended when it was shown that he had accepted payola a practice that was highly controversial at the time resulting in his being fired from his job at WABC 28 WLAC radio DJ John R aka John Richbourg in Nashville Tennessee adopted the African American Vernacular English of African American DJ s in the early 1950s Richbourg s practice of imitating African American street dialect of the mid twentieth century was so successful that WLAC programmed an entire cohort of white DJ s that spoke like blacks did while playing music that was popular in the black community It was not common knowledge that WLAC DJs were white until the mid 1960s By then the rebellious youth market made the nightly rhythm and blues station the one they tuned to for rock and roll as atmospherics carried the signal enabling the station to be heard throughout much of the North American continent and Caribbean islands 29 nbsp Wolfman JackBob Smith aka Wolfman Jack began his career as an announcer on XERF located in Mexico and became an influential DJ who advocated for African American music on his long running rock and roll radio show Many people thought Smith was a black DJ until he appeared as himself in the 1973 film American Graffiti Smith hosted TV shows such as Midnight Special and Rock and Roll Palace 30 A number of actors and media personalities began their careers as traditional radio disc jockeys who played and introduced records such as Hogan s Heroes star Bob Crane talk show host Art Bell American Idol host Ryan Seacrest and Howard Stern 31 Dick Clark was a radio DJ at WFIL in Philadelphia before he began hosting WFIL TV s American Bandstand 32 Radio DJs often acted as commercial brokers for their program and actively solicited paying sponsors They could also negotiate which sponsors would appear on their program Many wrote and delivered the commercials themselves talking the place of advertising agencies who formerly executed these responsibilities 33 Drive time or morning drive shows capitalized on a listening audience of weekday commuters and parents getting children ready for school Morning DJs such as New York s Don Imus and DJ teams such as Mark and Brian in Los Angeles are examples of notable radio personalities whose morning drive format included playing songs as well as sharing stories and taking listener phone calls 34 Radio disc jockey programs were often syndicated at first with hourly musical programs with entertainers such as Dick Powell and Peggy Lee acting as radio DJs introducing music and providing continuity and commentary 35 and later with radio personalities such as Casey Kasem who hosted the first nationally syndicated Top 40 countdown show 36 Record hops editIn the 1950s radio disc jockeys from local and regional radio stations took advantage of their popularity and augmented their income by playing records and performing as master of ceremonies at teen dance parties called sock hops or record hops The term came about because these events were commonly held at high schools often in the school gym or cafeteria and dancers were asked to remove their hard soled shoes to protect the varnished floor of the gymnasium 37 38 Record hops became strongly associated with early rock and roll At the Hop a 1957 hit song by Danny and the Juniors described the scene where the jockey is the smoothest and the music is the coolest at the hop 39 In addition to the DJ introducing and playing popular records local bands and solo recording artists sometimes performed live at these events Record hops were often sponsored by radio stations as a way to promote their disc jockeys or by record stores to promote the sale of records They were also sponsored by school or church organizations who considered them wholesome recreation for teenagers 40 Admission was either free or a small admission fee was charged 41 42 During the 1950s Cleveland radio DJ Bill Randle personalized his own style of record hops called Randle Romps which he used to gauge the reactions of teenagers to new records he wished to promote while on the air Cleveland DJ Alan Freed is credited with breaking down racial barriers by playing and promoting African American music at record hops in the early 1950s and 60s 43 44 In 1957 alone disc jockey and American Bandstand host Dick Clark made 157 appearances at dances and record hops 45 Detroit radio DJ Robin Seymour is credited with influencing the success of The Supremes and The Four Tops by promoting their appearances at his record hops 46 The practice of dancing to recorded music at record hops hosted by radio DJs in the 1950s influenced the emergence of the discotheque and modern club DJs who would later specialize in mixing a continuous flow of recorded music for live audiences 47 Pirate radio DJs edit nbsp Radio Caroline DJ Emperor RoskoDuring the 1960s pirate radio stations proliferated off the coast of England in response to popular demand for new music not provided by traditional radio outlets such as the BBC Up to 21 pirate stations were active at one time including Radio Caroline Wonderful Radio London and Radio Atlanta DJs such as John Peel Tony Blackburn Kenny Everett Tony Prince Emperor Rosko and Spangles Muldoon pioneered an innovative American influenced style of presentation often programming their personal music choices rather than adhere to a strict playlist thereby winning large audiences hungry for youth oriented sounds and the latest musical trends When the Marine Broadcasting Offences Act 1967 virtually ended pirate radio in 1967 many offshore pirate radio DJs moved to the relatively progressive land based BBC Radio 1 which was established that same year as a response to the public s changing musical tastes 48 Wartime radio DJs edit nbsp Willis Conover on the Voice of America in 1969During World War II disc jockey programs such as GI Jive were broadcast by the U S Armed Forces Radio Service to troops GI Jive initially featured one of a series of guest DJs for each broadcast who would introduce and play popular recordings of the day some were civilian celebrities while others were servicemen In May 1943 however the format settled on a single regular host DJ Martha Wilkerson who was known on the air as GI Jill 49 50 51 Axis powers radio broadcasts aimed at Allied troops also adopted the disc jockey format featuring personalities such as Tokyo Rose and Axis Sally who played popular American recorded songs interspersed with propaganda During the Vietnam War United States Air Force sergeant Adrian Cronauer was a notable Armed Forces Radio disc jockey whose experiences later inspired the 1987 film Good Morning Vietnam starring Robin Williams as Cronauer 52 53 Cold War radio DJ Willis Conover s program on the Voice of America from 1955 through the mid 1990s featured jazz and other prohibited American music aimed at listeners in the Soviet Union and other Communist countries Conover reportedly had millions of devoted followers in Eastern Europe alone his worldwide audience in his heyday has been estimated at up to 30 million people 54 African American disc jockeys edit nbsp Plaque commemorating radio DJ Nat D Williams in downtown Memphis TennesseeAfrican American radio DJs emerged in the mid 1930s and late 1940s mostly in cities with large black populations such as New York Chicago Los Angeles and Detroit Jack L Cooper was on the air 91 2 hours each week on Chicago s WCAP and is credited with being one of the first black radio announcers to broadcast gramophone records including gospel music and jazz using his own phonograph 55 DJ Herb Kent began his career in 1944 playing classical records on Chicago s WBEZ then an FM broadcasting service for the Chicago Public Schools During the 1950s Kent worked at WGES in Chicago and then at WBEE where he coined the phrase dusty records or dusties He spent several years as one of the original DJs at WVON a heritage station to Chicago s black community 56 nbsp Hal JacksonIn 1939 Hal Jackson was the first African American radio sportscaster at WOOK AM in Washington DC and later hosted The House That Jack Built a DJ program of jazz and blues 57 Jackson moved to New York City in 1954 and was the first radio personality to broadcast three daily shows on three different New York stations 58 In 1990 Jackson was the first minority inducted into the National Association of Broadcaster s Hall of Fame 59 Other prominent black DJs included Al Benson on WGES who was the first popular disc jockey to play urban blues and use black street slang in his broadcasts Jesse Spider Burke hosted a popular show on KXLW in Saint Louis Missouri James Early was featured on WROX AM in Clarkesdale Mississippi Ramon Bruce became a prominent DJ at WHAT AM in Philadelphia Some of these radio pioneers of the Black appeal radio period presaged the Top 40 playing recordings that were targeted to the black youth and reflected jukebox selections that were popular 60 Most major U S cities operated a full time rhythm and blues radio station and as African Americans traveled the country they would spread the word of their favorite radio personalities 61 Nat D Williams was the first African American disc jockey on WDIA in Memphis with his popular Tan Town Jamboree show African American radio DJs found it necessary to organize in order to gain opportunities in the radio industry and in the 1950s Jack Gibson of WERD formed the National Jazz Rhythm and Blues Disc Jockey Association The group s name was later changed to the National Association of Radio and Television Announcers In 1960 radio station managers formed the Negro Radio Association to foster and develop programming and talent in the radio broadcasting industry 62 61 Women disc jockeys editWith exceptions such as Halloween Martin s work in 1929 at WBBM in Chicago 20 the radio DJ profession in the U S was historically male dominated However beginning in the Top 40 era female disc jockeys became more common Judy Dibble on WDGY in Minneapolis started as sidekick to a male DJ in the mid 1960s and later went on to host her own DJ show 63 Marge Anthony became a regular member of the DJ staff in 1963 at CKGM in Montreal 64 65 Alison Steele began her career at WNEW FM in the late 1960s Responding to an ad for female disk jockeys Steele auditioned with 800 other women and was chosen with three others to launch an all woman format When WNEW abandoned this format in 1967 after an 18 month trial Steele was the only one asked to stay on 66 As a late night show host Steele created an on air persona calling herself The Nightbird Her popularity grew drawing an average nightly audience of 78 000 In 1976 Steele was the first woman chosen by Billboard magazine as FM Personality of the Year and she was instrumental in promoting performers such as the Moody Blues She worked as an announcer for Search for Tomorrow and also as a producer at CNN returning to WNEW in 1984 In later years she was known as The Grand Dame of New York Night 67 Maxanne Sartori was the first female progressive rock DJ on KOL FM in Seattle and was subsequently hired in 1970 as an afternoon DJ for WBCN FM in Boston Sartori has been credited with influencing the success of artists such as Aerosmith and The Cars 68 69 In 1973 Yvonne Daniels was the first female DJ hired by WLS AM in Chicago 99X FM RKO radio group in New York hired Paulie Riccio in 1974 WABC AM in New York hired DJ Liz Kiley in 1979 63 70 71 Radio disc jockey Donna Halper is credited with discovering the rock band Rush while working as a radio DJ at WMMS in Cleveland in 1974 After Halper played a track called Working Man on the air listeners began requesting more Rush songs prompting other radio stations to add Rush songs to their playlists Acknowledging her role in their success the band dedicated its first two albums to her 72 73 Halper appeared in the documentary Rush Beyond the Lighted Stage 74 and spoke at Rush s Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony 75 76 DJ Karen Begin aka Darian O Toole is credited with being the first female shock jock She promoted herself as the Morning Beyotch and The Antidote to Howard Stern on her show on San Francisco radio stations KSAN and KFRC FM in the late 1990s 77 Less than a handful of women were employed as radio DJs in Britain before the 1970s DJ Annie Nightingale hosted a progressive rock show on BBC Radio 1 in 1969 In 1998 Zoe Ball began hosting the BBC s key breakfast show slot followed by Sarah Cox in 2000 78 Payola scandal editMain article Payola Especially during the 1950s the sales success of any record depended to a large extent on its airplay by popular radio disc jockeys 21 The illegal practice of payment or other inducement by record companies for the radio broadcast of recordings on commercial radio in which the song is presented by a DJ as being part of the normal day s broadcast became known in the music industry as payola The first major United States Senate payola investigation occurred in 1959 Nationally renowned DJ Alan Freed who was uncooperative in committee hearings was fired as a result DJ Dick Clark also testified before the committee but survived partially due to the fact that he had previously divested himself of ownership interest in all of his music industry holdings 79 After the initial investigation radio DJs were stripped of the authority to make programming decisions and payola became a misdemeanor offense Programming decisions became the responsibility of station program directors As a result the process of persuading stations to play certain songs was simplified Instead of reaching numerous DJs record labels only had to connect with one station program director Labels turned to independent promoters to circumvent allegations of payola 80 Format changes editAs radio stations moved from the AM Top 40 format to the FM album oriented rock format or adopted more profitable programming such as news and call in talk shows the impact of the radio DJ on popular music was lessened The emergence of shock jock personalities and morning zoo formats saw the DJs role change from music host to cultural provocateur and comedian 81 From the late 50s to the late 1980s when the Top 40 music radio format was popular audience measuring tools such as ratings diaries were used However a combination of financial pressures and new technology such as voice tracking and the Portable People Meter PPM began to have negative effects on the role of radio DJs beginning in the late 1990s prompting one radio program manager to comment There was a time when the top 40 format was ruled by legends such as Casey Kasem or Wolfman Jack and others who were known for both playing the hits and talking to you Now with PPMs it is all about the music commercials and the format 82 Such format changes as well as the rise of new music distribution models such as MP3 and online music stores led to the demise of radio DJs reputation as trendsetters and hit makers who wielded considerable influence over popular music 9 10 In film editThe Fog Adrienne Barbeau plays fictional small town radio DJ Stevie Wayne Private Parts Howard Stern plays himself in a dramatized treatment of his career as a radio DJ American Hot Wax Tim McIntire plays real life radio DJ Alan Freed Pirate radio Based on radio DJs of the real life offshore pirate Radio Caroline Play Misty for Me Clint Eastwood plays fictional radio DJ Dave Garver who is menaced by a stalker Good Morning Vietnam Robin Williams plays real life Armed Forces Radio DJ Adrian Cronauer Talk to Me Don Cheadle plays real life radio DJ Petey Greene Pontypool Stephen McHattie plays fictional radio DJ Grant Mazzy FM Michael Brandon plays fictional DJ Jeff Dugan See also editRadio personality Black appeal stations Archives of African American Music and CultureReferences edit Michael C Keith The Radio Station Broadcast Satellite amp Internet Taylor amp Francis 13 December 2006 ISBN 978 1 136 02777 2 p 52 Shelly Field 21 April 2010 Career Opportunities in Radio Infobase Publishing pp 2 ISBN 978 1 4381 1084 4 Harris Arthur S Jr November 1961 How To Become A Disc Jockey Boys Life Boy Scouts of America Inc pp 27 Ben Fong Torres The Hits Just Keep on Coming The History of Top 40 Radio Backbeat 2001 ISBN 978 0 87930 664 9 p 22 Marc Fisher Something in the Air Radio Rock and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation Random House Publishing Group 2 April 2009 ISBN 978 0 307 54709 5 p 13 John Shepherd 8 July 2003 Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World VolumeII Performance and Production A amp C Black pp 187 ISBN 978 0 8264 6322 7 Weingarten Markk Radio Patter From the Past Vintage D J s Rock On New York Times Retrieved 2 January 2017 Higgins Terry Club Features New Breed of Disc Jockey Milwaukee Sentinel Milwaukee Sentinel June 29 1984 Retrieved 7 July 2016 a b c Udovitch Mim Last Night a DJ Saved My Life The History of the Disc Jockey By BILL BREWSTER and FRANK BROUGHTON Grove Press New York Times Book Review Retrieved 8 July 2016 a b Battaglio Stephen Television Radio When AM Ruled Music and WABC Was King New York Times Retrieved 8 July 2016 Ray Newby appearance on CBS I ve Got a Secret 27 September 1965 Secret listed as I was the world s first radio disc jockey in 1909 Rebroadcast on the Game Show Network on 22 May 2008 Bay Area Radio Museum Doc Herrold and Ray Newby Archived from the original on 22 July 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2008 Pause For Thought Fri 26 Mar 2021 bbc co uk BBC Retrieved 5 March 2022 Roddy Bill NBC s Radio City San Francisco Roddy Bill Retrieved 26 April 2010 Samuels Rich The NBC Chicago Orchestra Samuels Rich Retrieved 26 April 2010 a b c Fisher Marc 2007 Something in the Air Random House pp 11 ISBN 978 0 375 50907 0 Keep Your Big Mouth Shut Disc Jockeys Learn To Toil And Spin Eugene Register Guard 23 June 1955 Retrieved 29 December 2013 a b c Brewster Bill Broughton Frank Last Night a DJ Saved My Life The History of the Disc Jockey New York Times Retrieved 8 September 2015 Jane Connolly Meet DePaul Legend Halloween Martin DePaul University Archives a b Michael C Keith 2008 Radio Cultures The Sound Medium in American Life Peter Lang pp 83 ISBN 978 0 8204 8648 2 a b Disc jockey Radio personality Encyclopaedia Britannica britannica com Retrieved 6 July 2016 Curtis James M 1987 Rock eras interpretations of music and society 1954 1984 Popular Press p 42 ISBN 978 0 87972 369 9 disc jockey Spizer Bruce 2003 The Beatles Are Coming New Orleans 498 Publications p 139 Murray The K Kaufman Radio Hall of Fame National Radio Hall Of Fame Richard Sisson Christian K Zacher Andrew Robert Lee Cayton 2007 The American Midwest an interpretive encyclopedia Indiana University Press pp 636 ISBN 978 0 253 34886 9 Retrieved 13 October 2011 Christopher H Sterling Michael C Keith Communications Museum of Broadcast 2004 Encyclopedia of radio Taylor amp Francis pp 375 ISBN 978 1 57958 249 4 Retrieved 13 October 2011 Big Day Belongs To The Local Hero The Glasgow Herald 12 September 1983 Retrieved 29 December 2013 Glenn C Altschuler 16 July 2003 All shook up how rock n roll changed America Oxford University Press pp 152 ISBN 978 0 19 513943 3 Retrieved 13 October 2011 Horace C Boyer 1995 How sweet the sound the golden age of gospel Elliott amp Clark Edward Komara 2006 Encyclopedia of the Blues Psychology Press pp 1096 ISBN 978 0 415 92699 7 Peyton Paxson January 2003 Media Literacy Thinking Critically about Music amp Media Walch Publishing pp 28 ISBN 978 0 8251 4487 5 Lisa Jo Sagolla Rock n Roll Dances of the 1950s ABC CLIO 12 September 2011 ISBN 978 0 313 36557 7 p 54 Alexander Russo 20 January 2010 Points on the Dial Golden Age Radio beyond the Networks Duke University Press pp 165 ISBN 978 0 8223 9112 8 Lessons Learned from Popular Culture SUNY Press 28 June 2016 ISBN 978 1 4384 6147 2 p 92 Margaret A Blanchard 19 December 2013 History of the Mass Media in the United States An Encyclopedia Routledge pp 569 ISBN 978 1 135 91742 5 Christopher H Sterling 13 May 2013 Biographical Encyclopedia of American Radio Routledge pp 207 ISBN 978 1 136 99375 6 Partridge Eric 2006 The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English Routledge p 1811 ISBN 9780415259385 Throughout the 1950s and 60s WPOP disc jockeys were all over Central Connecticut emceeing various record hops WCRG WPOP Man From Mars Productions Retrieved 14 February 2018 Ron Nief Tom McBride 2 September 2014 The Mindset List of the Obscure 74 Famously Forgotten Icons from A to Z Sourcebooks pp 199 ISBN 978 1 4022 9347 4 Clay Cole 1 October 2009 Sh Boom The Explosion of Rock n Roll 1953 1968 Morgan James Publishing pp 16 ISBN 978 1 60037 768 6 Tony Renzoni 7 August 2017 Connecticut Rock n Roll A History Arcadia Publishing Incorporated pp 22 ISBN 978 1 4396 6207 6 William Graebner 25 September 2010 Coming Of Age In Buffalo Youth and Authority in the Postwar Era Temple University Press pp 39 ISBN 978 1 4399 0475 6 Philip H Ennis December 1992 The Seventh Stream The Emergence of Rocknroll in American Popular Music Wesleyan University Press pp 155 ISBN 978 0 8195 6257 9 Carlo Wolff 2006 Cleveland Rock and Roll Memories True and Tall Tales of the Glory Days Told by Musicians DJs Promoters and Fans Who Made the Scene in the 60s 70s and 80s Gray amp Company Publishers pp 6 ISBN 978 1 886228 99 3 Ralph G Giordano 5 June 2017 Pop Goes the Decade The Fifties ABC CLIO pp 18 ISBN 978 1 4408 4472 0 Gordon Castelnero 2006 TV Land Detroit University of Michigan Press pp 147 ISBN 0 472 03124 4 John Shepherd David Horn 8 March 2012 Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Volume 8 Genres North America A amp C Black pp 180 ISBN 978 1 4411 4874 2 Hugh Chignell 5 March 2009 Key Concepts in Radio Studies SAGE Publications pp 146 ISBN 978 1 4739 0360 9 The Directory of the Armed Forces Radio Service Series Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 30812 8 Mackenzie Harry 1999 The Directory of the Armed Forces Radio Service Series Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 30812 8 Bivins Tom World War II on the Radio J387 Communication History document University of Oregon Jim Barthold March 1 2005 The real life of Adrian Cronauer Urgent Communications archived from the original on May 9 2012 retrieved 2013 01 13 Adrian Cronauer Air Force Radio Announcer in Vietnam at HistoryNet com Freund Charles Paul The DJ Who Shook the Soviet Union With Jazz Newsweek Newsweek Retrieved 23 August 2016 Chicago s Radio Voice Jack Cooper at African American Registry Retrieved 20 May 2014 Herb Kent David Smallwood 2009 The Cool Gent The Nine Lives of Radio Legend Herb Kent Chicago Review Press pp 80 ISBN 978 1 56976 254 7 Hal Jackson National Radio Hall of Fame New York black radio pioneer Hal Jackson dies New Haven Register Watkins Mel May 2012 Hal Jackson 96 New York Broadcaster Who Broke Racial Barriers in Radio Dies New York Times Barlow William 1999 Voice Over The Making of Black Radio Philadelphia Temple Univ press ISBN 1 56639 666 2 pg100 a b Christopher H Sterling 1 March 2004 Encyclopedia of Radio 3 Volume Set Routledge pp 45 ISBN 978 1 135 45649 8 William Barlow 1999 Voice Over The Making of Black Radio Temple University Press pp 97 ISBN 978 1 56639 667 7 a b Donna Halper 11 February 2015 Invisible Stars A Social History of Women in American Broadcasting Routledge pp 260 ISBN 978 1 317 52018 4 Broadcast pioneer Marjorie Anthony Linden dies 77 The Globe amp Mail Retrieved October 29 2022 CKGM las solanas com ARSA Retrieved 29 October 2022 In the World of Radio She s a Rare Bird New York Times Retrieved 3 April 2017 Christopher H Sterling Biographical Encyclopedia of American Radio Routledge 13 May 2013 ISBN 978 1 136 99375 6 p 363 Richard Neer 18 December 2001 FM The Rise and Fall of Rock Radio Random House Publishing Group pp 245 ISBN 978 0 679 46295 8 Carter Alan 2013 Radio Free Boston The Rise and Fall of WBCN UPNE pp 63 ISBN 978 1 55553 729 6 Christopher H Sterling 13 May 2013 Biographical Encyclopedia of American Radio Routledge pp 134 ISBN 978 1 136 99375 6 Mary Kosut 1 May 2012 Encyclopedia of Gender in Media SAGE Publications pp 531 ISBN 978 1 5063 3828 6 Wagner Vit 2002 05 11 What A Rush Toronto Star p J8 McLean Chuck 2008 07 09 Quincy Woman Still Promoting Rush 34 Years After Discovering Band The Patriot Ledger Women see underlying theme in Rush documentary film Archived 2010 06 19 at the Wayback Machine Rush gets a star in Hollywood with an assist from Quincy woman Tsui Nick Legendary DJ Donna Halper was first to spin Rush in America Howl Magazine Howl Magazine Retrieved 22 January 2018 Justin Berton Darian O Toole S F disc jockey dies at 40 SFGate com Christopher H Sterling 1 March 2004 Encyclopedia of Radio 3 Volume Set Routledge pp 377 ISBN 978 1 135 45649 8 Dick Clark survives the Payola Scandal history com Cartwright Robin August 31 2004 What s the story on the radio payola scandal of the 1950s The Straight Dope Laurence Etling 19 July 2011 Radio in the Movies A History and Filmography 1926 2010 McFarland pp 4 ISBN 978 0 7864 8616 8 McKay Jeff The State of the Disc Jockey Radio Info radioinfo com Retrieved 7 July 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of radio disc jockeys amp oldid 1184312326, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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