WXYZ-AM BACK ON THE RADIO WITH: LEE ALAN!

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WXYZ HEARD HERE 24/7 ON MOTOR CITY RADIO FLASHBACKS

From the MCRFB AIRCHECKS archive featuring: WXYZ-AM (’65) w/ LEE ALAN

A special THANK YOU goes out to GREG INNIS for donating this WXYZ LEE ALAN (September 22, 1965) aircheck to MCRFB.COM!

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NEW! 2015 EDITION! LEE ALAN: ‘TURN YOUR RADIO ON’

Lee Alan 'Turn Your Radio On' Audio Book

‘TURN YOUR RADIO ON’ | Narrated by LEE ALAN | 2015 Book /Audio Book EDITION

WANT YOUR COPY? YOU’D BETTER HURRY

Motor City Radio Flashbacks highly recommends this wonderful book feature. The book and the audiobook, “TURN YOUR RADIO ON,’  are both MOVING FAST. For more information contact Lee Alan, by going to the link the author has provided. GO HERE.

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WXYZ: THEME FROM ‘CLUB 1270’ TV DANCE SHOW, ’63!

WXYZ CHANNEL 7 IN DETROIT: Joel Sebastian, Connie Van Dyke (Better Made Potato Chips Show Sponsor) with Lee Alan on the CLUB 1270 set, 1963. (Photo courtesy of Lee Alan. Property of Lee Alan. Used previously by permission).
WXYZ CHANNEL 7 IN DETROIT: Joel Sebastian, Connie Van Dyke (the Better Made Potato Chips sponsor rep) with Lee Alan on the CLUB 1270 set, 1963. Deejay on WXYZ radio at the time, Joel and Lee (both until 1964) hosted the Detroit Channel 7 teen dance show which aired from 1962-1965. (Photo courtesy of Lee Alan. Property of Lee Alan. Used previously by permission).
VARSITY DRAG” * Les Elgart  * WXYZ CLUB 1270 Show Theme (ABC-TV Detroit) ’63

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WXYZ 1270 DETROIT SOUND TOP 35! THIS WEEK IN 1966

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WIXIE DETROIT SOUND No. 8 * Terry Knight & The Pack * WXYZ (4/18/66)

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  WIXIE DETROIT SOUND No. 18 * Johnny Rivers * WXYZ (4/18/66)

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WIXIE DETROIT SOUND No. 27 * Dave Clark Five * WXYZ (4/18/66)

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WXYZ & YMCA: ‘THIS HORN IS LIKE TO SET ME FREE’ ’63!


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 “SET ME FREE” * Lee Alan with the Vandellas * Recorded at Motown Records (1963)


 A   M C R F B   P O S T S C R I P T

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THE YMCA, once vibrant in popularity as it was in the greater Detroit metropolitan area, this organization has seen better years prior the 1980’s and 1990’s decades. Once scattered throughout Detroit and its surrounding suburbs, many YMCA began closing their local branches, for the most part, prior the year 2000. Many of these YMCA buildings were enormous, as these structures were intended by design for supporting temporary lodging and housing as well.

By the end of the 1970s, many of the YMCA buildings were either too old in structure or were no longer found adequately sustainable as “living” quarters. Thereby many were forced to close — due to lack of funding, high maintenance costs, and primarily due to lack of charities once sustained and supported by local communities the “Y” once had served.

Later up in years, many of the YMCA abandoned buildings were either purchased by local counties or were left vacant, only to be razed. Today, several of the former YMCA buildings left in Detroit now stand in urban blight, ruin and decay, such as the one pictured below in SW Detroit. Only a few YMCA locations exist dotting the Detroit map to date. 

AND NOW. For the REAL story behind Lee Alan’s Motown’s single, “Set Me Free,” as only Lee Alan could personally re-tell it, please GO HERE.

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An abandoned YMCA, Western Branch, located in southwest Detroit on Clark Street near Vernor Hwy.
An abandoned YMCA. The Western Branch. Located in southwest Detroit on Clark Street, just yards north of W. Vernor Hwy., as it currently stands today. This local branch permanently closed it’s doors some twenty-five years ago.

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DANLEY MAKES DETROIT WHFI-FM SING . . . OCTOBER 3, 1970

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logoFrom the MCRFB news archive: 1970

Station Air Talents Control Shows: Avails Audience Appeal via Telephone

 

 

 

 

DETROIT — Personal contact blended with a consistent music policy directed at adults is paying off for WHFI-FM, a stereo station. Tom Danley, in slightly over a year at the station, has taken it from billings of only $20,000 per year to approximately $250,000 this fiscal year and by next year expects to be far above those figures.

Joey Ryan, WHFI-FM circa 1970
Joey Ryan WHFI-FM circa 1970

The first thing Danley did upon arriving at the station, which is located in the suburbs of Detroit in Birmingham, was raid-local AM stations for top-flight personalities. Then he gave them not only control of their show, but made them available to the listeners not only through radio, but through the telephone.

There are three direct phone lines into the studio “and the phones are constantly ringing . . . sometimes all three at once,” said Danley.

He confessed that once a phone call received by evening Don Alcorn was a wrong number. “Turned out she’d never heard of WHFI-FM or Alcorn and thought she was kidding her when he told her she was on the air. He convinced her into getting an FM radio and then helped her dial it to 94.7, chatting with her all the time. ‘Is that me,’ she yelled, after she got the station. I think she’s now a confirmed WHFI-FM fan.”

Danley said it would be difficult to find at least 60 seconds when those phones are not ringing . . .  even on the all-night show. The air personalities — which includes music director Marc Avery, Lee Alan, Joey Ryan, program director Don Zee, Alcorn, and all-night man Bob Bereten — can talk when they want to . . .  segue when they want to . . .  “they’re in complete control of their show,” said Danley.

The air personalities operate from a playlist of about 100 records, plus a huge volume of albums from which oldies are taken. The oldies are records that were previous Top 40 hits which fit the uptempo easy-listening format of the station. The only restriction is that is that no more than three oldies can be played per show, although the air personality doesn’t have to play any if he doesn’t want to.

Chain Planned

WHFI-FM is on an upgrading drive and the company plans to grow into a chain of stations . . .  all of them strictly FM. The station is building a new station and will move into completely new facilities in October.

“FM radio has arrived,” said Danley, “especially in regards to being a profit vehicle for advertisers. I have never received so many call-ins from potential clients . . .  listeners who operates businesses and want us to come out and talk to them about an advertising schedule on the station. And I’ve worked for some major stations.”

To spur further call-ins, WHFI-FM has a series of brief promotions on the air asking: “Mr. Businessman, are you listening to WHFI right now? So are a lot of other people.” WHFI-FM is also very promotional-minded off the air. “I tell potential clients there’s no such thing as ‘one’ place to advertise. It’s a valid rule for us to follow, too. So, we’re involved in everything, including bumper stickers.”

The music policy that Danley installed when he first came to the station in August, 1969, was consistency.” Previously, the music format was in the right direction (Tom Jones and Pet Clark), he felt, but occasionally  heavier records were thrown in. Danley set a more consistent policy on record. “The sound is hard to describe, but you can more or less tell when you turn on the station now.” END

(Information and news source: Billboard; October 3, 1970).

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