#TBT: I have produced shows for some of the most amazing talent out there! #Biondi #Landecker #Murphy #Jen Good Times! (at 94.7 WLS-FM) https://www.instagram.com/p/CDAiu-Ijrdu/?igshid=1agwsfk88wo7q
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#TBT: I have produced shows for some of the most amazing talent out there! #Biondi #Landecker #Murphy #Jen Good Times! (at 94.7 WLS-FM) https://www.instagram.com/p/CDAiu-Ijrdu/?igshid=1agwsfk88wo7q
John Records Landecker, Oldies 104.3 WJMK Chicago | April 1996
John Records Landecker, Oldies 104.3 WJMK Chicago | April 1996
If you ran down the list of radio stations where John Records Landecker work, it would be a list of some of the greatest stations in America. WTRX Flint, WERX Grand Rapids, Philadelphia’s iconic WIBG Radio 99 (Using the name Scott Walker). There was also Toronto’s CFTR 680, mornings in Cleaveland at Power 108 WPHR, & Talk on 720 WGN Chicago. He spent time on legendary rockers The Loop FM 98…
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I am producing as John Records Landecker sits in with Bob Sirott on WLS-AM 890. So cool!!! #Chicago #Radio #Landecker #SirottAndMurciano (at WLS-AM 890)
Free Reign with Zack East
I know exactly “why” radio should exist. As a kid, I listened to music radio while alone in my room writing or working on my homework--it was a huge presence in my public school years. It gave me sounds and ideas from somewhere out there that were unlike the world I knew, made the world bigger and stoked my imagination without the visual input of television. I learned the joy of the theater of the mind largely due to my radio listenership. I’m a fan of the medium as it once was.
In the womb-y cage of childhood, radio introduced me to disc jockeys who could pop in anytime day or night with the flick of a power switch, keeping me company. Good music radio could accomplish this because it had a personality, to the credit of the disc jockeys themselves and the wisdom of the management who enabled, chose and encouraged them. WLS–AM, the 50,000 watt, Class A Chicago station, allowed their jocks to have daily entertainment segments such as Larry Lujack’s ‘Animal Stories’ or John “Records” Landecker’s ‘Boogie Check’. These programs brought elements from classic radio drama into the music radio age with great effect and built up loyal listener followings.
Fast forwarding to my adult life, I found that everything about radio changed. The dawn of personal computing allowed software programs to automate programming to the point that the personality of music radio became nearly extinct, certainly in smaller markets. Hand picked playlists became a thing of lore. Successful music radio personalities were sequestered to talk radio and removed from music radio’s balance sheet as the bean counters of the industry cut cost. Unfortunately, they neglected to realize that while lots of money could be made broadcasting music, anything to do with music can’t only be about making lots of money or it eventually fails. Suddenly “radio” became just a thing that I had in my car that tried to sell me something. Radio had sold its soul: you could hear it and you could feel it, if you could feel anything coming from it at all. At that point, music radio was no longer a creative or enriching participant in my life.
In the “Market Zero” of Southwest Michigan, there seems to be a resurgence, a faint blip of actual lifeforce in music radio. In addition to WVBH, I found another source of hope borne over the summer in a one hour Saturday night broadcast on The Coast 98.3 called ‘Free Reign with Zack East’. East’s philosophy is to break the very mold he helps forge daily as the station’s Program Director. With the wise support of his station’s upper management, ‘Free Reign with Zack East’ got the greenlight to become his weekly mixtape.
East’s show is comprised of a combination of Alternative, Modern Rock, Adult Album Alternative, Indie, and New Wave formats from the last 20 years, all hand picked by East without the aid of outside consultants, who in my mind have contributed heavily to the formaldehyde stench that wafts around the radio dial. ‘Free Reign’ is both a breath of fresh air and a great step in the right direction, particularly in smaller markets. Nearly two months into its weekly broadcast life, ‘Free Reign’ has played artists that fill a hole in the standard radio experience such as Arcade Fire, Vampire Weekend, The Church, MGMT, and The Smiths. Not the normal broadcast playlist in markets under 75,000, that’s for certain.
Catching up with Zack over a chance meeting in the Arts District, he excitedly talked about his new digs and explained his love for the up and coming arts community, largely due to the feeling of inclusiveness he gets when he’s there. I couldn’t help but hear in our conversation a parallel between Zack’s newest creation and his life. To me, designing a new radio show that challenges the staid playlist limitations and ideas plaguing smaller communities while infusing an ear-opening musical inclusiveness clearly mirrors what he’s done with his recent move as well. I asked him if he’d made that connection: “Interesting…”, he replied pensively. Most definitely.
I love watching a friend spread their wings. Check out ‘Free Reign With Zack East’ on Saturdays at 10pm on 98.3 FM in Southwest Michigan or via live stream at 983thecoast.com
©2012 27 Sounds, Inc.
Dave Carlock is a 25-year veteran of the entertainment business whose work as a recording engineer and producer, touring musician, and songwriter made him Googleable. His continuing work as an Independent Content Creator of Sound and Image has earned him a Grammy Award certificate, two Platinum Record Awards, and a Paragon Award in advertising. Currently, he brings national and international artists to make records and music videos at his production studio in the Benton Harbor Arts District. www.davecarlock.com