Archive

Archive for September, 2008
12 Sep

TGIF and TG for RUSH!

Hello my dear friends, missed you all!

I have been so damed busy I have almost forgotten to sleep, but it is Friday and time for some much deserved rest, relaxation and any fun I can get my hands on :-)
Remember when just about every radio station on the planet played ‘Working For The Weekend” and it just about drove you insane? Well, now I am old and instead of bringing me to the verge of insanity, it brings back fond memories; weird how that works.

And that made me think of what song usually followed WFTW in say the years 1986 to 1989 ( those are my favorite years of all time ) and I could not think of anything specific. So I went in search of play list’s for KOME-FM and instead, what do I find? At MIT you can search for Radio Stations world wide using the call letters……. and where do I find my beloved letters???? In F*%#@ Meridian Texas! Good part, the station is on a construction permit and is OFF AIR!
I am going to contact the station owners and see if they will sell me the letters and god what could that cost if they say yes?? :~/ Very interesting point to consider, if for sale what would the call letters possibly cost? I have a feeling that I will need a seizable chunk of cash, oh well… I will step out of the boat and see what I will see, right? A woman can dream, dreams are what fuel this great planet.

Another thing I am looking into is a professionally made template for this blog that is more KOME appropriate in looks, I am not exactly sure if I can plaster the decal all over the blog without bringing down some Corporate Layer on my head, we do after all live in a litigious age.

In my search for more KOME specific information to bring home to the blog, I found some old emails for the station -

KOME FM-98.5, San Jose, CA NewRock@kome.com
http://www.kome.com/ Promotions@kome.com

Those were found at this webpage ~ Newspaper and Magazine E-Mail Addresses & Other Media E-Mail Addresses
Oh well… once I start tripping on KOME on the internet, my brain sizzles so I will give it a rest for the night.

Now for my pic’s for tonight, and once again I have to give thanks to Tim Jeffreys at KFOX for being my Muse , I was listening to the station as I was researching and he once again pulled a great Band out , RUSH.
So here are my two choices ~
Closer To The Heart and Tom Sawyer ( my most favorite RUSH tune ever)

And please make sure to go to the Artist Web page in support - RUSH

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07 Sep

Interview With Dave Wohlman ~ On Air Personality @ 98.5 KOME

This interview was a real peach for me, I am so excited to get a DJ from the station on here!
Dave Wohlman did a show on Sunday Mornings called The Sunday Morning Time Machine and as you will read he was involved in so much more at KOME!
So read his thoughts, enjoy a walk down memory lane if you are from the Bay Area and relax on this fine, fine Sunday.

************************* Interview w/Dave Wohlman*

Thank you for taking time to answer my questions Dave. You and the other Disc Jockeys from the station 98.5 KOME were very important to mine and so many other peoples lives. To me it was the Greatest Rock Station that ever existed in the US then and now.

You were the Production Director, Promotion and Marketing Director, Assistant Program Director and on air Personality of the Sunday Morning Time Machine from 1982 to 1998.

1. Which of your jobs at KOME were your favorite?

The APD/Promo Director job was a work intensive position, but I never had so much fun working in my life! Every time I came up with a fun contest, angle, party, etc. – I had to one-up it the next time around. But I enjoyed it all.

2. As Promotion and Marketing Director can you tell me some of the Promotions that were the most fun to do and do you still do Promotional work?

It was my job to produce all live remotes (which we did hundreds of), so I was always on the road going to concerts, Blazy & Bob Breakfast Club sessions, Erectus Pajama Parties and the infamous Weekend Starter Parties to name but a few.
I really enjoyed my fun bits as Dink Martindale (the alchaholic black-sheep brother of Wink), Blazy and Bob’s announcer. I was Santa Dink, Dinko the Clown, etc. It was an overblown character and I got to really ham it up!

I recently served as Greg Kihn’s Director of Kihndication of his now syndicated Big Rock Beat show and am available for consultancy promo work with my Radio Free Wohlman company based in Oregon.

3. What was the motivation behind the Sunday Morning Time Machine?

The Time Machine was a labor of love and my baby. It was the precursor to my Radio Free Wohlman broadcasts of today! It was a chance to dig deep and play music from an artists career, rather than hits! It was entertaining and educational. Instead of sleeping in – I did the Time Machine!

In today’s world, we have Blog’s and the Internet that give us all instant gratification when we are in need of a fix for music or info. Back in the 1980′s and 1990s we had to call the station to talk to you all and ask for songs or chat.

4. Was there enough interaction between the DJ’s and the kids of the Bay Area to allow you to see how much influence you were having on the kids in the Bay Area?

The KOME Mainline was ringing non-stop with requests and comments. We kept a feedback book and I always took calls as APD in the office. At remotes, everybody wanted to make suggestions and talk about their likes and dislikes. It all got fed into the machine and came out on-air. You were very important!

5. What was it like to be at the infamous KOME in its most vigorous years?

We had more fun than legally possible( in fact some of it was illegal). We all worked really hard – but the vibe and our love/respect for each other was so strong that the time blew by. We knew we had something very special going on. I am honored to have been part of that team. They are all still very close to me today.

I also met my wife Pam, who was our Traffic Director , at KOME. She is my main supporter and inspiration.

6. I have heard stories that many great bands graced the halls of the station, were there any bands that really made an impression on you?

So many that it is hard to keep track. I had all the members of Jethro Tull in our little Production Studio for an impromptu recording session that I produced (can I have the flute again Ian), Brian May played guitar over Queen records live in the studio, John Lee Hooker, Greg Allman, Scorpions, Alice Cooper, Ian Hunter, literally hundreds of top-notch artists. KOME was a big draw.

7. I read that you were at WMBR in Boston MA back in the 1970′s, a Punk Station! Can you tell me how you came to be a DJ and how you came to be at WMBR?

I was 20 in 1976 and my first DJ gig was at WTBS, 88.1FM in Cambridge. Ted Turner bought the call letters soon after and we became WMBR. My first show was called “Son Of Rock, Etc.” I was immediately on Mon-Thru mornings in a top market! Quite a learning experience and I made all my mistakes on-air for all to hear. But it was the best school I could have attended.

8. How did the Late Risers Club come to be?

Punk was just starting to become a major local/nation/international force in 76 and bands started to make records. The Ramones, Blondie, Talking Heads, The Clash, Sex Pistols, Buzzcocks, The Jam, etc were mixed with Boston locals like Mission of Burma, Willie Alexander, Unnatural Axe, Human Sexual Response, DMZ and “oldies” like Iggy & The Stooges, Cheap Trick and Bowie. My show soon became The Late Risers Club with like-minded DJ’s including Thom Lane, Greg Reibman, Carter Allen, Blowfish, The Dentons. Others including Tony V. and our spiritual mentor (and later my PD at WBCN, Boston) Oedipus were on every Saturday. I was the Monday morning guy. For a complete look at the Late Risers Club (which is still going on strong 32 years later), read about Marissa Acosta’s Late Risers Club Documentary( http://www.laterisersmovie.com/)- it was very flattering and exciting to see how many lives and bands we touched.

9. I also read that you were at KFJC 89.7 in 2000 and 2001, and your play list was also filled up with Alternative and Punk if I read that correctly ( you have to forgive me, Punk is not my thing )
Is Punk a genre you gravitate towards most?

I think of myself as non-genre specific, but the years of 1976 to 1982 were the most exciting for me musically. I still love The Beatles, Stones, Led Zep, Sabbath, etc. of my youth and all that came before and after, but rock got a kick in the ass in 1976 and it paved the way for exciting times. I am also a big fan of reggae, blues, soul, funk, R&B, jazz, electronic, prog – just about everything but C&W, but I will listen to anything at least once.

Between working for Viacom and Clear Channel, I did shows at KFJC to scratch the itch. It was fun.

10. You now have a Blog called Radio Free Wohlman , what is the history behind the blog and what do you hope for it’s Future?

I always wanted to produce/host a show that had no musical format or rules – and if the were any rules, I wanted to break them. I knew in my head and heart that there was an audience for kitchen-sink type programming where all genres were back-to-back with no discrimination or hesitation. And I was right! I started Radio Free Wohlman (www.radiofreewohlman.blogspot.com) in September, 2006 and in two years, I have over 5200 podcast subscribers, listeners in 135 countries and a daily presence on KYOU, 1550 AM in San Francisco! It is the most satisfying radio I have ever done and it is my daily therapy.

I think the show is perfect for a spot or entire channel of Sirius/XM Sat Radio and have a personal goal to get there. Mel, you can call or write me any time.

11. I was reading over your blog last night and could not help but notice that your musical choices are very eclectic, but in a really interesting way. Do you have a method for how you choose your play list or is it purely random how it comes together?

It is eclectic only because I will play Sonny and Cher next to Frank Zappa or classical next to punk or do a cowboy, rainbow or shoe show. I put all bands, known or unknown, on a level playing field.
Sometimes I have a theme and research/plan – other times I do it seat of the pants style and that is the theme. I sit (actually stand) in my home studio and rock. It is me at my most creative and satisfied. I also take lots of care and effort in the pictures and posts as well. It is a total package experience – and it seems to have struck a nerve in thousands of people. I could not be more happy. Please visit often!

Finally, I hope to ask this question of as many of the folks who were at KOME as I can over time just to see if my idea is fantasy or not.

Do you feel that KOME can be resurrected in some form or is it a impossibility? And do you feel that your ratings for the station were done correctly and did ratings have anything to do with KOME being chosen as the station to be closed down?

Research and managerial stupidity killed the station. They had really smart people like Stephen Page as Music Director telling them what music should be played . But instead, they listened to these research consultants who said – (and I paraphrase) play the same old shit over and over again. It became common-denominator radio. The format change and the subsequent end was a very sad chapter in a wonderful story.

In 2005 – I was the PD of KSJO before it went Spanish (what a sin). I was talking to Blazy & Bob, Stephen Page, Fran Bennett and Dennis Erectus (all so talented) along with other KOME personnel such as King Raffi and Michael Solari (both now with Channel 104.9, San Jose) about moving in that direction. It never made it off the drawing board. It think that was our last chance – but if I ever get the call from a very smart person that wants to rule the Bay Area airwaves once again – I think I and many of the old crew would give it serious thought. Wouldn’t that be something.

Again, thank you Mr. Wohlman for taking time to speak with me, it has been a total blast to do this interview with you, and it has brought some awesome memories back for me. You and the other DJ’s at the station were a very important part of my life, I wanted to tell you thank you for all the great times.

You and all the KOME listeners were as much a part of the station as we were!

Something like KOME only happens once in many lifetimes – lightning in a bottle! I feel very privileged to have had such an impact on so many!

Thanks Lisa!

*************************************** fin****************************************8

* edit — just have to add this here, OMG did you read who he recalls as having walked through the doors of KOME?
This just gets better and better each day I write this blog, I can not tell you how stoked I am at this moment!!!

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06 Sep

Interview with Loren Charles ~ Promotion Director at 98.5 KOME

One of my main goals with this blog is to find, maintain and keep a running history if you will of the station. I have started with asking for Interviews with a few people ( well, okay, two so far ) and will definitly send out more requests to as many people from the station as I can get my hands on.

Today I am thrilled to say that my First Interview is with Loren Charles, who was Promotion Direction of 98.5 KOME.

Please read and enjoy ~
My Interview with Loren Charles

Thank you for talking with me Loren, it’s a pleasure to be able to talk with someone who was so deeply involved with KOME during its greatest times on the air.

I read a few of your stories over at Ted Kopulos KOME website, and it sounded like you all had a total blast working at KOME.

When you were growing up, did you plan on a career in Radio/communications?

When I began to transition into a young adult, quite honestly no career path was really “planned” until after I graduated from college as an English Major, with a minor in Speech and Mass Communications.

I found the mass communications courses most interesting, and it slowly occurred to me that the two things I really loved, music and photography, were both addressed in the field of mass communications, through radio and television.

So the transition to radio was quite natural, even though I worked for 3 years at a television station before my first job in radio.

Have you always been involved in Rock Music in some way?

Well, “always” is quite a long time. But let’s put it this way. Since about the age of 8, I gradually became aware of a new phenomenon as I listened to music on my parents’ radio in Los Angeles. I started hearing an interesting new music that really appealed to me, performed by people I did not know.

Gradually, certain names kept repeating — Bill Haley and the Comets, Gene Vincent and the Blue Caps, Duane Eddy, Link Wray, then Elvis Presley (what an event hearing him for the first time on radio was for me!) Eddie Cochran, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins. Those people made a BIG impression on me at a very early age.

So as soon as I could be sufficiently persuasive, I asked my mom and dad to buy me a drum kit. Although I wanted to play guitar, my cousin Jeff had already started to learn it, and I didn’t want to appear as if I were copying him. Then a band came to town, and I remember looking up and watching the drummer, who seemed to be having lots of fun. I decided that’s what I’d learn. When the Beatles appeared on Ed Sullivan, the world changed overnight!

What are your favorite Rock Bands?

Well — this question could take pages! But I’ll try to narrow it down just a bit. However, I do ask your indulgence as this is one of those questions which I truly enjoy answering. So in no particular order, here goes:

The Kinks, The Tubes, Led Zeppelin, The Beatles, The Yardbirds, The Rolling Stones, Def Leppard, Black Sabbath, The Who, Bill Nelson, Steve Winwood, The Police, Procol Harum, Sparks, The Sensational Alex Harvey Bank, Dave Davies, Ray Davies, Gary Numan, Jimi Hendrix, The Animals,The Moody Blues, Yes, The Pretty Things, Sting, Cheap Trick, Roxy Music, Bryan Ferry, Peter Frampton, Duran Duran, Howard Jones,
Living Color, Pink Floyd, Dire Straits, Steppenwulf.

What years were you at KOME?

1978 — 1982

What was your job at KOME?

I started out doing an unpaid job, that of Music Librarian. This consisted of listening to LPs, deciding which tracks were worth playing on-air, and marking them on the LP sleeve.

I was given this first job by Mikel Hunter, the legendary Program Director from Los Angeles. The Movie “FM” was a very tame interpretation of his reign on the West Coast.

After a few months, the KOME Promotions Director decide to go elsewhere, and I applied for the job and, miraculously, was appointed to that position. I say miraculous because working in radio at a rock station was my dream come true.

As KOME’s Promotion Director, I was responsible for setting up all the on-air contests, securing prizes, supervising the promotions in the field, writing on-air copy and creating radio and television ads and on-air promotions, jingles, slogans, etc.

I was also in charge of ordering all of the promotion items, which actually was a job all by itself, because it included distribution of these items to our advertisers and listeners,.

Besides the obvious promotion items, like the legendary KOME decals, hats, shirts, pins — there were also pens, lighters, desk sets, beach balls, shopping bags, crystal pyramids, brass paper weights, antenna balls, posters, desk graphics, key fobs, paper holders, coffee mugs, playing cards, patches, frisbees, nightlights and — my favorite — the KOME Glass.

The KOME “glass” (which boasted under the KOME Logo “our glass”) was both uniquely extraordinary and a “product” of its time.

This was a 4 inch square clear glass with the KOME logo underneath and, for who knows for what purpose, 4 etched “lines” ground right into the glass. Very “peculiar”, highly unique and, shall we say, a true “market”-driven promotional item.

There were usually 3-6 things happening at any one given time at the radio station, so there was always a list of items I had to constantly track.

The best part of being the Promotion Director was giving the station tour to visiting rock stars when they came to the station. I was able to meet many of my favorite musicians and briefly get to know them. They were all interesting, whether outgoing, friendly, sullen, withdrawn, sarcastic, crazy or simply brilliant.

It was pure Rock ‘n’ Roll Circus!

Did you know when you went to the station that it would grow to be the best Rock Station in the West?

No, none of us had any idea of what a profound influence KOME would have on multiple generations of listeners. When I joined the station, my goal was very simple. I wanted KOME to be Number One in the entire market, which we eventually managed to do.

KOME’s influence, however, gradually spread far beyond San Jose, even far beyond San Francisco and the Bay Area. We became a true institution for Rock in Northern California. I couldn’t be happier or more proud of what we achieved during those years.

Do you have any favorite memories that you can share about your time at the station? Were you involved in the Infamous Turkey event?

Favorite memories? Wow, now there’s another question that could keep me writing for hours on end. How does one condense the thrill of being at the center of a musical universe populated by wonderful, talented, creative, crazy people 24/7 for nearly four years?

Ok…. I will do my best to mention a few of many “favorites.”

One promotion that stands out at the forefront was our KOME tour of the Napa and Sonoma wineries with a crew of very lucky contestants who won a spot on that bus with us.

We started very early one Saturday morning in front of KOME and filled up a chartered bus with everyone from the station plus about 20 listeners, then set off for the wineries.

One of the major wineries we thoroughly checked out was the Robert Mondavi vineyards. It was the 3rd winery of the day, and by then we were feeling no pain. However, we all did our very best “I’m sober, really!” impersonations.

Fortunately, none of us were driving, so as long as we could somehow get on the bus and get everyone else back on the bus, everything was OK. I think we hit about 6 wineries that day, and even though all of us just sipped very small portions, the cumulative effect was staggering. By the last winery, we were pouring ourselves into the seats of the bus. Fortunately, the ride back to San Jose was about 2 1/2 hours, so by the time we got back, we had sobered up substantially.

Another great party turned out to be the KOME Kruise on the Bay. Again, we had all the gang from KOME and lots of radio and record people for a party on San Francisco Bay aboard a chartered boat.

We even had an authentic Jamaican steel drum band on board, with complimentary Ramos Fizz drinks from the bar. Yes, it was another “no pain” KOME event.

No, none of us really got “drunk”; we simply felt a great deal lighter on our feet, shall we say. We were a party-hearty krew and knew what to do. And the best part about it is that everyone got along well.

The “turkey event” you referred to was actually the KOME Chicken Flying Contest. I take full blame and responsibility and credit for this little “turkey” as I personally dreamed up the entire concept and then I somehow convinced Mike Hunter to approve of it. It turned out to be one hell of a funny time.

We invited listeners to bring their favorite pet chicken out to a large field where we had erected one of those mailboxes you see on the side of the road, the kind where front door flap folds down so that one can retrieve the mail.

Well, we created a custom mail box with 2 drop-down doors, front and rear. The idea was that our listeners would load their favorite chickens into the rear of the mailbox, we would have the front door closed, and then we would use a toilet plunger to push the bird out the front door, and measure how far they flew.

This contest was filled with surprises for everyone, because even though we promoted it heavily, we really had no idea how many of our listeners had chickens to fly. After all, we were in a suburban environment, not a farming community.

But on the appointed day, we were rather stunned to find we had about thirty contestants and their chickens! So one by one we stuffed the chickens in the mailbox one at a time, gave them a push with the toilet plunger, then measured their brief “flight” out the other end of the mailbox until they touched down.

Eventually we found a bird that really performed quite well, and gave its owner and the next 2 runners up some very neat prizes and KOME stuff.

The main point, though, is that everyone had a hilariously good time, although we did receive a bit of grief from the local SPCA, who thought we had traumatized the birds. On the contrary, even they had a great time!

Of all the visiting bands to grace the halls of the KOME studios, who sticks out in your mind the most?

I can answer that in two ways: the “band” that made the biggest impression on everyone actually came to the station on a weekend; it was Van Halen, as they were riding the crest of their first, huge, monster album. Yes, they were “full of themselves” but also funny and charming. Diamond Dave was obnoxiously ingratiating, Eddie was very funny, and Alex and Michael were quiet but very observant.

For me, personally, the member of the band that really was the highlight of my time at KOME had to be the visit of the legendary guitarist Dave Davies, founder of The Kinks, and originator of both the “punk rock” and “heavy metal guitar.” That was an extremely vivid day in my memory banks, because to me, Dave and the Kinks personified arrogance, attitude, bad assness, naughtyness, sarcasm, intelligence, talent and English Rock in all its glory.

I wont ask who your favorite DJ’s were, know you loved them all… but in your opinion who was the DJ who epitomized what KOME was to its fans?

This is the easiest question for me to answer: it had to be Dennis Erectus, who epitomized and focused all the insanity that was KOME-FM on a nightly basis.

There has never been anyone like him, and there never will be. Dennis was totally unique, an extraordinary natural talent who was literally light years ahead of other DJs, most of his audience, and certainly far beyond the understanding and appreciation of the sycophants and talentless hacks that now populate the airwaves and offices of radio in this country.

Dennis’ fan base was utterly enormous, spanning very young children to very old adults (yes, in their 60’s) who loved him for his dry, sarcastic wit and socio-political insights. He enjoyed nothing better than to skewer hypocrisy and deflate boated egos. He ridiculed sexism and macho attitudes. He deflated hypocrites and blowhards. He championed truth over orthodoxy.

He was utterly brilliant. And he was also my very best friend.

I have read that KOME was involved in many charitable events, can you tell me about that aspect of the station and its crew?

KOME would have numerous charity events such as the KOME baseball game, where it was “the station” versus a rock group, like “Journey.” We raised money to benefit such organizations as the Susan G. Komen Foundation for Breast Cancer Research, and we held quite a few rock concerts to benefit other local charities. In this fashion we developed closer ties to our community.

What was your feelings when you heard the move to shut down KOME?

I really have to answer this question in two ways: from a radio “professional” point of view, and separately, as a participant and contributor to KOME’s initial “glory” years.

As a former radio professional, I thought the move to abandon the KOME call letters and have them disappear from radio was one of the most stupid, shortsighted, lunatic and asinine things that I have ever personally observed even purely from a “business” perspective.

I mean, just THINK of what the owner of this unique call letter combination threw away, and for what in return???!!!

This ass (or asses, if it was a corporate “decision”) threw away the fruits
of more than 30 years of promotion, public relations, close community ties, and instantaneous audio call letter and visual logo recognition; threw away a 30+ year relationship with all the advertisers and listeners in the KOME community, and yes, actually threw away the KOME community, which in reality, was most of the Bay Area at the time the KOME call letters were retired.

They were even too blindly stupid to even think of selling or trading these call letters to another station!!! Just the KOME call letters alone were worth a few million in promotional identification!

But this decision perfectly illustrates the vast stupidity that inhabits and haunts the board rooms and executive offices of the world of radio today.
It’s the same stupidity that decided to promote a Howard Stern to stardom, rather than Dennis Erectus (yes, both DJs were part of Infinity Broadcasting).

And if you buy me a drink, I might really tell you what I think about it!

From a personal point of view, I was simply stunned and dumbfounded. These are call letters — K O M E — that should have, pardon the pun, lived into Infinity (that’s an insider joke!).

Seriously, the loss of KOME was like having a friend who is here today, in seemingly good health, who then just disappears with no warning… with no symptoms, no indications of disappearance… just suddenly disappears without a trace… and then they’re just no longer there, and nowhere to be found. Their absence makes you see and view life from a very different perspective.

It’s like a very big audio /mental mind set hole that no other station could ever possibly fill again. Simply because there couldn’t possibly ever be an insanely passionate and creative place and group like KOME or the KOME Krew again in the increasingly corporate, buttoned-down world of radio.

2/2
Do you still keep in contact with the crew you worked with, how is everyone doing these days, and is there any plans for another reunion?

I keep in fairly close contact with Dana Jang, the former music director, and Jona Denz, one of our top on air jocks. However, there is a loose connection I still maintain with almost everyone who worked there.

We had our 25th anniversary reunion just a few years ago in Campbell, California, which Jona Denz was instrumental in instigating and coordinating. It was a blast to see so many, many faces from the “good ol’ days.”

What a party THAT was!

What are you doing now?

Currently, I am the president of Mark & Daniel Audio Labs based in Tucson, Arizona. We import high-end audio speakers that possess totally unique, leading-edge technology and make music sound like you are right there at the moment it’s being created.

They are spectacular speakers and, if I may, I invite your readers to check out our website: www.markdanielofamerica.com.

I am also president and manager of Hemispheric Audio & Video of America. Both companies exist to bring the pleasures of affordable of high end audio to music fans and enthusiasts throughout North America.

And finally, do you feel there is any way possible to resurrect KOME in some form? I know the numbers are now KUFX, but is there a way the fans could possibly stage a campaign to bring it back?

Personally, while I’d love to see that happen, it really can’t. You can never go back, you can’t rewind the clock, you can’t recreate even one day of it. That realization teaches one to appreciate “the moment” for in reality, as cliche’ as it may seem, it is perfectly true, and it is all that exists.

Whether or not you could ever resurrect the KOME call letters, the unique persons, and personal chemistry, that existed at that time can never be duplicated.

It’s like a great baseball team or any great sports team. Those unique individuals get together for a certain-space and time, and gradually change occurs and the team changes, so that twenty years later, while there still may be a team called the San Francisco Giants, the individuals who compose that team are entirely different than the legendary players and team you remember from your youth.

Coincidentally, I overheard someone ask Dennis Erectus this very question at the 25th Anniversary party a few years back. Dennis just sadly shook his head and said, “…it’ll never happen again, man. Just won’t happen. It’s not possible.”

And as much as I hated to admit it myself, Dennis was right.

Best wishes to everyone who keeps the legend of KOME alive,

Sincerely,

Loren Charles
former Promotion Director
KOME – FM Radio
San Jose, California

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03 Sep

Permanent Vacation Gave Me Sweet Emotions ~ Aerosmith

So, guess where I was on January 30, 1988? Oakland Coliseum, Oakland, CA. And why would I have been there? Not for any sporting event that is for sure, I was on a Permanent Vacation! Yep, I finally had a chance to see a band, a great band from my youth, one of Bostons Treasures - Aerosmith!

Aerosmith Logo by

I went with a friend ( hey Marilyn Sotello, where ever you are girl, MISS YA TONS!) and I have to say the night was amazing. Not only was the music great but the band was freaking out of sight! And check this , Marilyn and I sneaked as far backstage as humanly possible and we got so close! I saw the most gorgeous women standing back there, one blond had to have been 10 feet tall in these outstanding heels, a White Mink Coat, and NOTHING ELSE underneath… I swear it! Ya know , funny thing was she was waltzed right behind those metal doors…. wonder why?

Back inside to hear the music and leer at Joe Perry , we went up to an upper level. As Joe in his fine fine black leather pants walked my way I almost feel, er okay… jumped off onto the stage. Yep, I am a Joe Perry woman for sure.
But really, it was the music that blew my mind. Not many bands that I have seen live have what it takes to bring me my music exactly the way it sounds on the album – Aerosmith is vastly able to do it for me. But then, I always loved Live! Bootleg the most out of all Aerosmiths albums, so maybe that is why. My Uncle Joe back in Boston has an album collection that can literally go to the moon, and that was one that I would play over and over when I lived back there. My favorite song on that album is of course Back in the Saddle.

So for tonights picks, a couple of my fav Aerosmith Jewels ~ Sweet Emotion ( the only song that would play in the ‘smoking area’ at Toufanian High in Isfahan Iran where I spent a few years in the late 70′s :-) and Back in The Saddle ~ enjoy!

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