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Archive for the ‘Interviews’ Category
11 Dec

Interview with Jeff Blazy

As promised … the interview with Jeff Blazy~

When did you begin your journey into Radio and what sparked your interest in being on the air.

My dad took my older brother, sister, and me to a radio station when I was four.  He worked for GE and we had a lot of interest in music, radio, and television.
My older brother Martin was into so much new music, that I learned all of it from him.  I was always a funny kid, so put it all together and entertainment was pretty much it.


When did you come to 98.5 KOME and had you heard of the station before you started on air there?

End of ’86,I was doing mornings in Denver at KBPI and the program director from KOME called and said he heard of me and that he had 65 tapes in front of him and mine was his favorite.  It had been sent by a friend.  The call was a total surprise. I had only been in Denver for a couple of months and turned down the offer. A few months later, Denver was not working out so I called KOME back and by January 2, 1987, I was the new morning guy.  Bob & I began on the air two weeks later. I had heard of KOME, but did not know of the legendary status of “Don’t touch that dial it has KOME on it.”  While I was in Texas starting my morning show career, a listener had given me a tape of bay area radio and KOME (Lori Roberts) was on the tape.


What was it like when you began working at the station, was it a wild place to work?

They were trying to get away from the “KOME” (come) references.  It had gotten them in trouble with some advertisers.  This was the mid-80′s and things had changed.  As for wild, we all worked separate shifts, so we really did not bump into each other much unless it was big events.  I mean, we were all cordial with each other, but we were all radio personalities.  It is a strange existence.

I have asked this of Bob Lilley and Dave Wohlman but would love to hear from you on this….. what was it like to be around all the raw rock talent that graced the halls of KOME?

Well, since I was a kid I would dream of meeting some of them.  Then all of a sudden they are next to you in the studio singing live.  It is like your own concert.  All the work pays off.  Gregg Allman is unforgettable.  He did “Melissa” and “Midnight Rider” on acoustic guitar.  His voice is so strong that it penetrated through my headphones.  It blows you away.  Same with Melissa Ethridge and Brian Adams.  Their voices are so forceful.

A few times it was not only the guests who were noticeable, it was who they were with.  Richard Marx (while he was rockin’) came in with his wife.  We thought she looked familiar, as well as hot.  ”Hey, isn’t that the blond chick from Dirty Dancing?” I asked. It was.  The biggest movie of the year and Cynthia Rhodes was sitting in the lobby.  It’s funny, because we did not ask to invite her in.  It was Stephen Page’s lunchtime interview with Richard.

Comedian Craig Shoemaker (the Lovemaster) and I became really good friends.  Early in our friendship he came in to do the show and I said “Your girlfriend looks like that actress in Robocop.”  He said, “That’s because she is.”  It was Nancy Allen. So the next time Craig was coming on, I asked if Nancy was coming it too.  She was.  So I rented all the big movies she had been in like “Carrie” and ” Dressed to Kill.”  We cued them up to all the scenes where she was naked.  She did not know.

So we are asking Nancy legitimate questions like working with John Travolta, what she did during the infamous blow job scene (“chewed gum”) and all of a sudden I would say “Oh, here’s the shower room scene.”  Nancy would be talking about it much like you would hear on a DVD extra nowadays, and suddenly it would hit her that she was going to be soaping up completely naked.  She playfully screamed, Craig was cool enough to run with the joke.  ”Hey, that’s my girlfriend!” he would shout.

Very funny.

As for rockers though, Alice Cooper, Brian May of Queen (who did the dedication on the KOME Acoustic Aid CD I co-produced to raise $ for SF Aids Foundation) and the list goes on and on.  It is always the perk of the job that most of us like so much.  Many times Bob and I would have listeners come in so they would get treated to a one of a kind event.  That’s when it is the best, for the listeners, because they will never forget that performance.  That is why we did those “Blazy & Bob Breakfast Clubs,” so the audience could see what we were seeing and get their chance to hear great musicians doing it “Live, Dammit!”

You and Bob did the Blazy and Bob show from 1987 until 1994 ( if I am correct) treating the fans to the creme de la creme of Rock music, that must have been pretty awesome for you. Were there ever times when you were just in awe of who you were talking with?

You are correct on the years.  The one I remember most was Graham Nash in LA during Grammy’s Week Live.  He even said, “Blazy is freaking out.”  I could play almost every CSN song on guitar and now here’s Nash sitting next to me. I picked up the guitar, and as Bob said, I would ask them to play.  When they wouldn’t, I would start playing their stuff.  I played the intro to a Hollies song and Nash was blown away.  I kept playing and he finally said he would not sing. Well, I tried.  Many others took the bait.

Ringo Starr on satellite was also a big deal for me.  We were always instructed “don’t ask for ID’s or autographs.”  During the interview, I mentioned that “my brother Martin played Ludwig drums because of you.”  A week later, the NBC radio rep had sent me a Ringo Starr autograph, made out to my brother, Martin.  I had it framed with a circa 60′s picture of Ringo by his famous drum set.  My brother wept when I sent it to him in NY for Christmas.


How was it to work on a morning show on the radio, was it very different from the other time slots?

Blazy & Bob mornings 6 to 10 (fast paced), the relaxed and conversational style of Stephen Page 10-3 (he was great…he plugged in separate mike so he could walk around the studio while he talked to you on the air…brilliant) Weird Uncle Frank afternoons, and Dennis Erectus at night.  Very different.  Very distinct styles from each show.  It made a great radio station.  A lot of variety throughout the day, instead of the monotony of most stations today.

This is a question that I personally hope to know more about, was it easy to do the interviews you did or was it a learning process? Was there ever an interview that just did not go well and if so how did you work it out?

Oh, I learned a lot, but I mostly remember us having great interviews.  Dia Stein in NY gave us a great compliment one time.  She told us after Sam Kinison died that she had guests grade each morning show after each interview. They would usually be on about 10 shows in a morning.  She sent us Sam’s scorecard.  We were the only one’s to get an “A” other than his pals in Houston.  That meant a lot to us.  And Craig Shoemaker told Nancy, “See?  They always have something different.”

Many guests would tell us of morning shows that did not even know who they were, or that they just did a horrible job.  Many comedians told us the same thing.

Most interviews went well, but when I was told by a publicist NOT to ask them to play, I did anyway.  One live show, I begged the classic Robin Trower to play “Bridge of Sighs” with my band, The Blazers.  As the crowd cheers at the idea, Robin leans over and says “Do you want me to knock you of of that f#@king chair?”  No one could hear what he said to me.  It is faintly heard on the tape.  But Bob and I made sure he had a great time and moments later he said he would play “Rock Me Baby” with the band!  Pat Simmons of the Doobies also played after we told, several times, NOT to ask.  He played two songs.  One, my fave from him, “South City Midnight Lady.”  It is amazing to hear and realize that it was 8:45 on a Friday morning, live from Mountain View.  Pauly Shore was also on that show and did “Lisa, Lisa” with The Blazers.

Your band the Blazers ( original members Peggy Bertsch – Keyboard, Dennis Coulter – Drums, Brian Cutts – Bass, Greg Mullins – Guitar) that backed you during the Morning Show jams, how did you get that started and do you still keep in touch with the members?

Don’t forget our other bassist/vocalist, Marcus Miller.  He ended up doing such a good job when Ronnie Montrose was a live guest, that Ronnie asked his to tour!

The Blazers started when I thought about doing live shows.  The station was behind the idea, although many thought, “Who is going to show up at 6:30am to see a couple of guys do a radio show?”  They did.  300 of them every month. So to find band members, we did a week with live auditions, over the phone.  One day guitarists, then drummers, etc.  Dennis and I are still best friends today.  He still owns the Shark’s season tickets we used to share, beginning with Season 1 at the tank (anybody else out there have the inaugural season puck proudly displayed?).

As for the others, I mastered many of their live performances on CD a few years ago and sent them out.  I thank them to this day for their rehearsing, performing, and professionalism.  Think of what they did for our show…they set up starting at 4:30am to go live at 6…they got paid next to nothing in the beginning.  Later we had a budget where they got paid better than if they were doing a gig at a club.  The real payoff was they got to play WITH some big names.  And those performers always said that the band was great.  Oddly enough, the only guy who would never let us replay his tune was Rick Springfield.  Douchbag.

What is the weirdest thing you experienced while on the air at KOME? 

It’s not really the weirdest, but the funniest odd moment was when we were having one of our many satellite conversations with Gilbert Gottfried.  Gilbert was at NBC studios and saw SNL classic announcer, Don Pardoe, walking down the hall.  He ran to get him, stuck him in front of a mike, and began to make Don announce anything he (Gilbert) said.  He was saying, “See Disney’s Aladdin, featuring the voice of Gilbert Gottfried!”  That big voice of Don’s would be interrupted by Gilbert’s loud whining.  Then Gilbert turned it into a classic bit by making Don say “Gilbert……who was unjustly….fired from Saturday Night Live….”  But Don wouldn’t say the last line, so Gilbert began yelling “Say it!”  Don: “No….not gonna do it!” …still in his announcer style.

Bob and I were in hysterics.  Don Pardoe was the voice of our show for several years…”It’s The Blazy & Bob Show….Live!”

I read that you were on the air in 2000 in Honolulu Hawaii, that must have been a beautiful place to work. Was the experience of being on air there any different from stateside radio stations?

Very different.  I was told “you can’t do that here.”  I got to #2 in the male demo which was way up.  I was also told that I would not be able to do stand-up comedy there because I was white.  It was my first time experiencing racism. It is a tough “club” to get invited into.  

Don’t get me wrong, it IS paradise, there were many great people.  I was on some local TV, got a number of feature articles written about the show…

I still call it a wonderful chapter in my career.  The Real World Hawaii was right down the street while I was there.  They were also filming Baywatch Hawaii during that time.  One day, I was in my office in Waikiki, and all of the model/actresses from the show were doing a music video down on the street in a big fountain. Many of us stood there watching in awe and I said, “Nowhere else in the world does anyone have such a great view.”

It is also where I met the great people of Sam Adams Beer and began a friendship with founder, Jim Koch.  They are a great team of people.

I saw that you were in Palmetto with Woody Harrelson, how was that for an experience? Hollywood can be a strange place, did you consider going into acting after being in the movie?

I am only heard in the movie when they are at Gina Gershon’s house.  You can clearly hear “the Blazy Show on YNF.”  I was on the set many days, got to interview the cast…  The producer asked if I could give him some info for an actor to read on a radio newscast.  I told him I had a home studio and could deliver it to him tomorrow.  I got paid, was credited, and was invited to the premiere in Westlake Village.  I sat across the isle from Rob Reiner.  Fun Stuff.


You are a stand up comedian, when did that spark hit you and do you still do stand up?

Funny kid, voted most funny in high school, did stand-up in beer bars, did it for fun while doing morning radio.  You get to hear a large group laugh instead of the silence of a radio studio. Yes, I still do stand-up in Northern California.  Most months at the Last Day Saloon in Santa Rosa.  Another great show is Mark Pitta’s Tuesday night show in Mill Valley.  Three of the shows I have done there have featured Robin Williams, Dana Carvey, Kevin Pollak, and more.

Who has been your biggest influence in comedy?

I guess George Carlin.  I was in the front row for his last HBO Special.  You can see me in light colored clothes.  I got to open for him in Texas, spend some real time talking to him, and he was cool enough when I was broadcasting live from Vegas one time to return my call personally and invite me backstage to do another interview.  He was a one of a kind and brilliant with our language.

What is the most fun part of doing stand up?  


Getting the big laugh.

What is your favorite genre of music? Who do you have on your MP3 player fav list?

I’ll say rock.  I know it up and down.  I have many styles on the iPod.  I have a pretty good collection of rarities…I’m sure nothing close to what Dave Wohlman has…oh, I envy him.  I heard a rumor that he got the KOME vault. I should let you know that in my entire career, there are not many stations that archived things well.  KOME did.  They had a wall of albums and when you needed to find the Rolling Stones first album for something, it was there.


If you were able to set up the dream line up of Rock Bands who would be on stag
e?

I don’t know.  Todd Rundgren opens for the Beatles and the they invite him on stage.

What was your reaction to KOME being killed off and do you think that there is any way that KOME could be brought back in some pure Rock form or is that a pipe dream of mine that should be left alone?

The mid-90′s, when the business world really began to change things.  Infinity wanted Stern in SF, not San Jose.  So it didn’t matter. KOME had a huge audience.  Very high ratings.  They were making a lot of money.  But it was in the wrong city for THEIR purposes.

And finally, last question ~ If it could be swung, would you possibly be interested in getting Blazy and Bob back on Bay Area air waves? Is there anything the dedicated and loyal Blazy and Bob fans could do to get the fires started?

Bob and I want very much to work together again.  Email to this website if you want us on in San Jose/San Francisco!!!  We will keep your messages and forward to the people who sit in the big chairs!  We promise you a great show every morning. Then we will owe one of the biggest fans of KOME, the webmaster of this site, a big favor!

Thanks for tuning in to The Blazy & Bob Show!  

*********** end of interview questions **********

I would like to thank Mr. Blazy for doing this interview with me, as always talking with these folks from my favorite Rock Station is a joy and these are memories I will never forget. I will be continuing the project to get all the folks I can to help support getting Blazy and Bob back on the air in the Bay Area. So I am calling all the fans of Blazy and Bob who feel like I do about both the Blazy and Bob show as well as KOME who would like to help me out ~ please get a hold of me at kystorms@live.com.

I will be getting the first newsletter ready to go by the end of this month, you can subscribe at the same email listed.

Thanks to everyone for all the support and comments!

Peace
~;-)

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19 Oct

Interview with James ~ Lead Singer of Virtual Zeppelin

 ~ Offical James Dylan Website ~

Okay folks, here is what I have been waiting on to post for all you fans of Virtual Zeppelin ~ the Interview with the Singer, James

Q: What inspired you to become a musician?

A: When I was 6 I had a crush on a girl named Susan O’Connell who loved David Cassidy… I figured the best way to her heart was through music. Me and some friends would put on concerts for the neighborhood.  We couldn’t actually play yet, but we put on some great shows faking it to the record, hahaha

Q: When did you begin your journey as a Zeppelin Fan.

A: My sister played the guitar and one of the songs she played was “Stairway to Heaven” I didn’t know who Led Zeppelin were at the time, but I remember thinking “Stairway to Heaven” sounded beautiful and somehow ancient like a long forgotten song from another time. It left an indelible impression on me. A few years later I saw “The Song Remains the Same” in a theater and I was an instant fan.

Q: How did you discover you were a perfect match for Robert Plants vocals?

A: When I was in High School I played guitar and my band used to play a lot of Led Zeppelin. We had the music down really well, but none of the singers we had could ever sing like Robert Plant. At one of our rehearsals I was trying to show our singer, Joe, the correct way to phrase one of the lines in a Led Zeppelin song. The guys were like WTF? …They didn’t know I could sing until then. Shortly after that I became the singer for that band.

Q: Have you ever considered recording in a studio together, if so what would you record?

A: Virtual Zeppelin has not recorded in studios yet. The distance between us makes that proposition a difficult one, but the process we are using is not terribly different from a studio recording. The only difference is that we don’t ever see each other.

Q: How did Virtual Zeppelin come about and when?

A: About 8 months ago I came across Jun’s channel and I wrote him a comment that I wanted to collaborate with him. He found the other members.

Q: Who are the band members and where do you all hail from?

A:
Keyboards – Karl – Texas, USA
Drums – Frank – New Mexico, USA
Bass – Bill – Canada
Guitar – John – Texas, USA
Guitar – Jun – Japan
Vocals – James – Virginia, USA

Q: When did you begin placing the videos on YouTube and is that the sole place you publicize your music.

A: About a year and a half ago I met a beautiful girl on MySpace and she was really into Led Zeppelin, so I wanted to leave her a video as a comment on her MySpace page. It was the song “That’s the Way.” I have been dating her since then and I’ve made several other videos for her.

Q: Do you play any instruments besides the guitar?

A: Yes, I play bass, mandolin and drums

Q: When did you all begin playing together?

A: We started working on our first video “Ten Years Gone” in March of 2008.

Q: Do you write your own music as well as play covers of Zeppelin?

A: Yes, I write my own music.

Q: Do you tour or play live?

A: Yes, I have been performing live since I was 18 and have toured with two bands. I am not in a band at the moment.

Q: Who is responsible for your technology side of making the videos and producing the music?

A: John, Jun and Karl do the video editing. Jun, John and I mix the music, but we all make contributions.

Q: Have any of the members of Led Zeppelin contacted you?

A: Haha, People keep asking me if I am the “American singer” who will be touring with Led Zeppelin in 2009. I went to Robert Plant’s official Web site and Robert Plant says the whole thing is a bunch of rumors regarding the “American singer” and plans to tour. If anyone else in Virtual Zeppelin has been contacted by the members of Led Zeppelin, they have not told me about it.

Q: Even though this is a totally unfair question to ask of a Zep fan, I would love to know … which Album or Song of Led Zeppelin’s is your most favorite?

A: Haha, yes very unfair… If I had to pick a favorite album it would be “Houses of the Holy”. Picking one song is going to be far more difficult… I will pick 4
1. Four Sticks
2. No Quarter
3. The Battle of Evermore
4. Ramble On
Now those answers will surely change in a day, lol

Q: For those of us who are waiting, will we be seeing a new video soon?

A: Yes, we have recorded “Black Dog” and will be posting it late October early November.

Q: Finally, are there any plans to bring Virtual Zeppelin to a more live band experience?

A: There aren’t any immediate plans to perform live together, but that could change should the stars align.

________________________________________________

Lisa, thank you for thinking to do this with me it was a lot of fun.

Talk soon, my friend.

~ Jamie

To contact James, or view more of his work please check the following links ~

James Page @ YouTube
and his MySpace Page @
http://www.myspace.co/jamesnorthernva

This Interview was a total blast, and one that I am so proud to have been a part of, my thanks to James and the band for not only the Interview but for some of the best music we have been treated to in a long time. I hope to get in touch with the other band members soon for Interviews.

And now the video that started my journey into being a Fan of Virtual Zeppelin ~

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07 Oct

Interview with Chili ~ Rock Blogger, DJ and Keeper of Rock History

Once again, I get to play at being an Interviewer (maybe I will end up on the air one day, who knows!) and today I have a Blogger who was also a DJ on the air for many years. You all know him as Chili on the web. He owns and operates two awesome Rock Music Blogs ~ Classic Video Jukebox, Rock and Roll Classics and Classic Rock Blogs. He has a wealth of Rock and Roll experience, stories galore and you can tell by his music selections each week on his blogs he is supremely Rock at heart. Give his blogs a read and I promise you , you will learn things about the Rock Bands you will not hear else where.

Many thanks to Chili for taking some time to sit down and talk with me, it is an honor.

1.When did you begin your career in Radio? Did you always want to be on the air as a Disc Jockey?

My career started in 1968. No I didn’t want to be an air personality, I actually stumbled into broadcasting and radio, as a additional source of income on the weekends (to stay out of trouble). But I had been raised in a household full of music, and my parents taught me to love all styles based on their merits.

2. What was it about Rock Music that grabbed your attention? What made it different than pop in the late 60s early 70s?
The discovery of rock music, started with my brother, but actually The Beatles and the first time I saw them on Ed Sullivan grabbed my attention. The music had a grittiness and was down and dirty, different then any musical style before. You ask what made it different way back then LOL. Listen to The Spenser Davis Groups Version of I’m a Man, then Bo Diddley’s version. Then finally Chicago’s version….it was all experimentation back then, something we are missing today. Today it’s corporate, cookie cutter hits very little fly by the seat of your pants Rock and Roll.

3.What states did you broadcast in? Any stations that were your favorites?

On the broadcasting side we will start this alphabetically, California, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Mass, Mich, New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont . On the programming side I handled quite a few more for the company. At one point or other probably having my hand in about every station across the US for them. Not always on the air at those stations.
Its sort of like your first kiss when you ask, do I have any favorites. I remember my first, in Flint Michigan, but I guess I loved them all equally. God it sounds like I’m going over my Ex list. Next Question LOL.

4. I have been asking other folks about ratings, did they ever interfere or hinder your musical decisions or hurt your shows in any way or were they helpful to you.

Ratings now we’re getting into the business side, to answer your question, yes ratings were extremely important, each percentage, point in morning or afternoon drive meant listeners. Listeners meant more station revenues, higher rates, more advertisers. I had to watch ratings constantly, Arbitron was our bible of sorts. But I guess when it came back to it if my formats worked, the listeners would follow, so basically they let me work my formula’s, to reach the listeners. Tweaking here and there.

5.Okay now for the nitty gritty, were you able to mix it up with bands while on the air, and if so who stands out in your memories the most?

Each format had it’s own free style created for the station as a whole with a lite, medium or heavy rotation. But the most important part of all the formats was giving the air personality the power to be creative within the frame work, they all had access to the Billboard Charts across the board, so they basically created their own mini programs within the format. Myself included. Probably Grand Funk Railroad, because I was lucky enough to know them in their infancy, back in Flint Michigan, before they were Grand Funk, but there were so many.

6. What is your favorite genre of music and who is your most favorite rock bands.

Wow, tough question, I’ll have to think about that one, I reserve the right to come back to this one later…I’ll have to think hard on that.

7. If you could be back on the air at a rock station today, what would your show most likely sound like? Would you have a style for it or just be free with the tunes?
Free For All, there is so much music out their, not heard, but within also the confines of the charts to a certain extent. There are so many NEW Artists who come from the roots of Classic rock today.

8. What is the most memorable part of having been a part of Rock Radio?
Meeting the Artists, early in the careers or at the beginning, and watching them succeed or fail. Along that vein in some small way breaking them as Artists in the music scene.

9 Do you still work in Radio today, and if so can we find the station on line to listen?

No longer in Radio or Programming, retired after 22 years, Woo Hoo!!!

10. I blog about the now deceased Rock station 98.5 KOME, have you ever heard the station and if it could be resurrected in some form would you consider working there?

Yes, but pretty much only thru their charts at the time. In Radio and Records. UMMMMM, excellent question, but the question should be can it be resurrected.

and finally -

11.Is Rock Radio in your opinion doing well, or has the pop scene killed it off? Are we doomed to experience only classic rock stations for ever more?

Rock radio is experiencing shrinkage as well as pop radio. It now longer holds the Iconic position it once did with multiple sources for music, its tough in the marketplace right now.

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30 Sep

METROman does it again ~ More Great KOME Related Photos

I need to get this guy in the payroll ( okay, I need to get a pay roll first, but then he is for sure on it)

These bring back memories for me, I loved going out to the raceway for the drag races!

So in the spirit of racing ( saw that car of yours METROman, nice ride :-) I am going to do some videos that bring to mind the fine art of going FAST!

Ronnie Montrose~ Bad Motor Scooter~

and one of my personal all time favorite albums Speed of Sound. This album makes me want to drive and never stop.

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Categories: Daily Picks, Interviews Tags:
26 Sep

Interview with Bob Lilley ~ 98.5 KOME

Wow, I have been so fortunate to have been able to Interview some of the best KOME had on the air! Today I have a awesome and detailed interview with Bob Lilley one half of the great morning crew Blazy and Bob that I am sure you all remember!
I can promise you that this interview will bring back the great days of Rock Radio! I am both honored and thrilled to have done this interview with you Mr Lilley and as I said before YOU ROCK!

Interview with Bob Lilley
KOME – FM On Air Personality

This photo was used with Permission by Ted Kopulos of http://www.ted.to/kome/stories.htm

Thank you very much for taking time to do this Interview with me, I was excited to know I was getting the chance to speak with you!

When did you begin your radio career and at what station?
I started in radio in 1976. I was fortunate to run in to a group of people who were in the process of putting a radio station on the air at Boise State University, my alma mater. It was suggested to me that I might be good at it so I attended a couple of meetings and they accepted me. I took the station over within a year. GOOD TIMES!

Have you always been a Rock DJ or are there other genres of music you appreciate as well?

My favorite type of music is Classical but I have only experienced doing Classical radio in college. Rock radio is much more fun. I tried my hand at Top-40 radio but wasn’t really cut out for it.

When did you come to KOME?

1986

How did you and Jeff Blazy come up with the comedy portion of your show, was it scripted or off the cuff? Did you know each other prior to starting Blazy and Bob?

I got to KOME in the fall of ’86 about the time that Frank Bennett had decided he’d had enough of doing mornings. I had never done mornings so I wasn’t really interested in doing that shift. Mornings is tough! You have to to get up so early that it screws up the rest of your day/life. Eventually the station decided to hire Blazy but he needed someone to work with. The station didn’t want to team him up with a real/professional news guy, they wanted a jock who was interested in news and who could read well on the air. So they asked me if I would consider teaming up with this new guy. We didn’t know each other from Adam, we just plunged in to it and hoped for the best. They told us they’d give us a couple of months to see if it would work out. I guess we passed the audition. As far as the comedy portion of the show goes, that was Blazy’s thing. He has spent years doing stand up comedy and he just has one of those “Class Clown” kinda personalities. Comedy comes natural to him. I’m much more laid back. I usually acted as a counter balance to his tendency to take things too far. I liked doing the news and offering useful information to listeners and I ran the board and took care of everything else that needed to be done. That allowed Jeff to just concentrate on what he had to do. I never paid a lot of attention to what Blazy was up to, fortunately we were in different studios. That way, when Jeff would do his thing, it was new for me, just like it was for the audience. We didn’t practice the stuff, he just did it and I was there to react to it. I told him, right off the bat, that I wasn’t a pushover. If he wanted me to laugh at his stuff, it had better be funny. He earned his laughs, they weren’t canned or to make him look good. He gave me plenty of opportunities to get in the punch lines but they weren’t rehearsed. If I missed my cue, well, I missed my cue and he’d pick it up and use it.

I read that you and Jeff were actually at Candlestick Park during the 89 Loma Prieta Quake, and that you both stayed on air, that must have been very hard to do. Do you have any memories of that day that you would like to share?

We broadcast from the Bay Bridge that day because it was the day the Oakland A’s were traveling over to take on the Giants in what I believe was the 3rd game of the World Series. We were long gone by the time the quake hit. Frank Bennett was on the air when the quake hit. He had some stories to tell!!

I saw on some web pages that are not online anymore, that your morning show had a great deal of Rock Bands come to visit with you. Are there any Bands that you had on your show that stand out in your memory the most?

Yeah, we had a great deal of Rock bands and stars come thru the show. You know we not only had in-studio guests and guests that we interviewed via telephone and satellite hook up but we also traveled a bit and talked to people all over the place. We must have done 3 or 4 Grammy broadcasts, a couple of the annual Universal Studio’s broadcasts, plus a week in New York, interviewing bands out of the old ABC ROCK Headquarters. We broadcast from the 1989 World Exhibition in Brisbane, Australia, the grand opening of Bill Wyman’s restaurant, “Sticky Fingers” in Kennsington, London, England and we did two trips to Jamaica and a week in Tokyo. I mention that because in every one of those places we got a chance to meet and talk to the kind of folks you’re referring to.

We interviewed Ringo Starr and Carlos Santana, two the biggest names I could drop for you. But those interviews were over a satellite feed and even though we did spend a good amount of time with each of them, we never actually got to meet them face to face. Those satellite interviews were convenient for everyone involved and a way for us to do things and expose our audience to more than what was available at hand. We once had James Taylor on a satellite feed and even though we appreciated that Taylor wasn’t a KOME type artist, we always felt that our core audience was full of people who just appreciated good music. We would have welcomed Yo Yo Ma to the show if the opportunity had presented itself. We both liked James Taylor’s stuff so we put him on the air. He picked up a guitar and pumped out 3 or 4 of his classics; not abbreviated versions but album-perfect. What a treat.
But it got even better when we would get to meet these people. Some of them we saw repeatedly and they became kind of friends. Melissa Etheridge used to give me great hugs after her 2nd or 3rd time on. What a sweet lady.

Its hard to whittle this down to a couple of names; Jeff and I met a lot of celebrities. When we were in NY, we invited Ray Davies to come talk to us. At the start of the interview, both Jeff and I blurted out, in unison, “Ya know, you’re a Rock God.” He protested vehemently, “No, I can’t even hold on to a recording contract. The only thing anybody knows about me and the Kinks is that my brother and I feud all the time. That whole scene passed me by.” Jeff and I were dumbfounded, we exchanged a look and then Jeff said something to the effect of “We’d put you in a class with Hendrix, Lennon, Page, Beck….” Ray just shook his head, “You guys don’t understand, I’m nothing compared to those guys. I’m starting from ground zero again, nobody cares. Those guys, if they had a project out, they wouldn’t even need to promote it, it would just be released gold.”

Such stunning stuff. He was right, I guess, but hell, all Jeff and I could think of was, “WERE TALKING TO RAY DAVIES!” He went on the Letterman show that night and we both went to see what he said. He just joked around with Letterman. With us he bared his soul. We were honored.
Kind of like the time we had Ray Manzarek on the show. It was right after the release of that Doors movie with Val Kilmer. We figured he’d be jacked about the movie, what great exposure for the band. So Blazy says, “So what’d ya think of the movie?” And Manzarek went off! “They disrespected us! The made fools of us! They made Jim look like a complete idiot!” On and on. And Leah Garchic (sp) of the SF Chronicle is listening and calls Jeff up for a copy of the tape. Next day in her column she writes how we had landed the primo critique of the Doors movie. A few years later, I walk into the bar at the Four Season’s in SF and there’s Ray, sitting at the bar. He recognized me and called me over. Told me how great it had been for him to get that off his chest. We sat around for a while, drinking spirits and discussing The Doors legacy and whether or not any of the so called fans had ever really gotten what they were trying to say. By the way, if you’re a Doors fan, pick up a copy of the book “The Poet in Exile.” Ray Manzarek attempts to bring a sensible ending to the Jim Morrison story/myth. A fun read.

When we were in London we had one superstar after the other drop by Bill Wyman’s place and talk to us. Peter Gabriel, who actually helped me personally get in contact with someone that we knew in common. Ian Anderson, whom we also had on the show at the station. Jon Lord of Deep Purple. Blazy had our Program Director, who had come along to produce the shows, go out and find one of those little toy pianos that kids have; the miniature baby grands, and Jon Lord played “Smoke on the Water” on this toy piano. Hilarious!

Of course during that trip we also talked to Bill Wyman! Hell, it was his restaurant. “So why did you quit the Stones?” “Those wankers didn’t give me the credit I deserved!” “Every song was attributed to Jagger/Richards, but who do you think wrote the bass lines for all those tunes? They didn’t! They’d come up with a tune of some kind and I had to invent the bass line, I did that! Did I get a bloody writer’s credit? NO!” Wankers!

At that same broadcast, (Sorry Jeff) Chrissie Hynde tried to pick up Blazy. I think I got under her skin by questioning some of her “Save the Planet” stuff by saying, “Ya know its not the planet that needs to be saved. When this planet gets sick enough, it’ll just dispose of us and begin the healing process. Your campaign should be “Save the Humans.” She told me that that was obvious, period. And she then ignored me as much as she could and zeroed in on Blazy. She kind of interviewed him a bit. Eventually we took control of the interview again. I remember asking her, “With all the stuff you tackle and as busy as you are, how do you relax?” Her response, which I still have on tape somewhere was short and sweet, “I smoke a lot of pot.” The Program director went nuts after she left, giving instructions back to the station that that whole thing should be cut out. The shows, by the way were being tape delayed due to the extreme time change. When the PD turned around, I counter manned his order and told Don West, back at the station, “Don’t you dare cut that out!” He later told me he was way ahead of me and that it had already been included.

But now, after the interview and before the flap about whether to keep that piece, when Chrissie ended the interview, you could tell there was something between herself and Jeff. She started asking personal questions and just making serious eye contact. I faded into the back ground and watched from a ways away. But Jeff had a steady lady back home and did the honorable thing. She asked him out for dinner and he turned her down. We were relentless in our ribbing him over that. What an evening it could have been. HA! How many friends of yours have been asked out to dinner by Chrissie Hynde?

We were at the Grammys one year and in walks Roger McGuinn. Now, Blazy always had a guitar with him. When artists would come to KOME he would have his guitar there and try to get any guitarists to play for us. Sometimes, if we were getting nowhere with that, he’d just grab the guitar himself and start to play one of the artist’s tunes, hoping they might get the hint. Sometimes we’d get lucky and other times we’d hit a brick wall, to the extent that one, so called rock star I vaguely remember saying something like, I only play for pay. Don’t remember who that was, but it happened. At other times, guys like Roger McGuinn would walk in, sit down, talk to us for a while about the great old days and then lean over to Blazy and ask, “Do you mind if I check out your guitar?” McGuinn played “Mr. Tamborine Man,” “Turn Turn Turn” and another tune that now slips my mind. Not just snipets but the whole tunes. Jeff and I just that there for our private Byrds concert with these huge grins on our faces. Wow!

I remember an embarrassing but fun moment for me at one of those broadcasts, I think it was at Universal Studios, but might have been at a Grammy’s broadcast. Steve Lukather, the amazing studio guitarist who was also a part of Toto was sitting with us. He had just grabbed the guitar, he knew why it was there and he was just one of those guitar rats. Couldn’t stand not to be playing. So he played us a bit of “Hold the Line” and then played some of “Africa” and then just started messing around, “You guys know this one?” And he’d launch in to like, Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love,” then something else and then something. Blazy started calling out tunes: “You Really Got Me” then another, I tossed a couple in too and we just couldn’t stump the guy. Finally, I yelled out “99″ and he came to a halt and looked at me with this strange look. I said, “Its one of yours….” It was the 2nd single off the album that had “Hold the Line.” And he went, “Oh yeah.” But by then I had broken the spell. That amazing moment was over because I chose the wrong song to yell out. I thought it would be an easy one. Oops
Hell, this could go on and on. Nils Lofgren played for us, Paul Rodgers and Neil Schon. Wow, did you catch their blues tour! Rick Wakefield, Ronnie Montrose, Leslie West, Steve Miller, Eddie Money, Graham Nash, Stephen Stills, Frampton, Fleetwood Mac….

Sometimes people would just drop by who weren’t there to be on the air. Once, I was working on a Saturday and one of the salesmen was on his way to take Al Dimeola to an in store promotion. They had had to stop by the station so the sales guy could do something. So he brings Al in to the studio so he won’t be bored sitting in the waiting room. I had a great conversation about the unfairness of the music business. Here he was, a graduate of the Berkeley School of Music in Boston and he was having a hard time getting exposure for his music when any idiot with a guitar could write pop songs and get rich. I told him I used to play him a lot in college but that KOME wasn’t quite ready for that. He understood. Spent quite a while in the studio and then took off. Not your typical studio visitor. Another day like that Eric Bloom of Blue Oyster Cult dropped in to the studio on a Saturday when I was filling in. He was actually at the station trying to get my boss to give him an air shift. He came in to the studio and started complaining about how he had another show that night and how he hated having to go thru the motions again and again. I remember sitting there in amazement as this guy complained about being a rock star. He moped, “I’d trade places with you in a heart beat. I wanna be a radio DJ, I’m tired of being a rock star.” I’m sorry but I just looked at him and told him that there are people out in the world who would cut their nuts off just to get a chance to experience one night of his rock star life. “And you’re cryin’ to me?” No sympathy. He left.

But I guess the coolest thing we ever did with a rock band was, with the help of a dear friend of ours, local South Bay Rocker Robert Berry, we facilitated the reunion of Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Berry had been working on an album with Emerson and Palmer, he was like the new Greg Lake. Well, they were all in Campbell, recording and we knew that Greg Lake was around because we had a pretty good relationship with him. We had had him on the show in London and had kept in contact. He had no problem with Emerson or Palmer and didn’t care that they were recording with a new guitarist, our buddy Berry. So we invited Robert and Emerson and Palmer to play on one of our monthly live shows. Then we invited Greg Lake. When they all showed up at the crack of dawn it was like old home week. Big hugs all around and during the show, after Berry had played a couple of songs with Emerson and Palmer, he gave way to Lake and we were all blessed with a mini ELP concert. The crowd went crazy!
I know I’ve left out a lot but I imagine this will suffice.

What was your reaction to the fact that your show was canceled for Howard Sterns show? Was there any recourse you were allowed to pursue to stop that from happening?

NO , My reaction to it was that it was business.


What was the feeling on the streets about how KOME was evolving? ( I was out of state by this time, and had no idea this was happening ) I am interested to know if there were any protests by the fans
.

I got fired in 1992 because the station was having problems and they thought that changing the morning show might help out. That, which started out as one of the worst experiences of my life, quickly changed in to one of the highlights of my life. The listeners jammed the phone lines and the fax machine. The station could not conduct business because the phone system kept maxing out. I was honestly touched and humbled. And the station called me back and renegotiated a much nicer contract for me. But when we left in 1994, nobody much seemed to care. The station had taken such poor steps over the last year that I think people were sick of us. They brought in Stern for mornings and a guy named The Greaseman for evenings. Frank Bennett had been fired, we were moved to afternoons, followed by the Grease, Scott Lewis was taken off the air. Erectus was gone. The station was ripped apart; the listeners were gone. Nobody cared anymore. Management had hung us out to dry, purposely, so they could create a Howard Stern in the Mornings, New Rock all day station. We should have seen it coming and left before it ended.

Who are your picks for the top five Rock Bands?

5 fave bands. Only 5?
Pink Floyd, Beatles, CSN&Y, Peter Gabriel, Doors, Traffic and lest we not forget, the most under appreciated super star in music, The Queen of Rock and Roll, Joni Mitchell. Is that 5?


What are you doing now, are you still in radio?

I am a house husband. Haven’t been on the air in years. Why bother when automation does radio so well……………..

Do you feel that the ratings system that is employed in Radio was to blame for KOME being taken off the air, and do you feel that the ratings system was accurately reporting for KOME during those last years?

Everyone in radio takes the ratings with a grain of salt. They can be right on or so far off base you have to scratch you head in wonder. Whenever we had bad books it was usually because the majority of San Jose diaries that period wound up in South San Jose zip codes. The latinos didn’t listen to us. The ratings weren’t to blame for our demise, our demise was the direct result of poor management. Our management lost its edge, fired their consultants and fell on their faces. What we needed was management that hadn’t lost its edge. But we never got it. There is a lot that goes in to running a radio station, and passion is a huge part of it; you have to care. Once your leader losses his/her passion, change must happen or you’re dead. We died because our parent company saw that management no longer had a passion for what we had been doing so they took the opportunity to blow the station up and create something new. And that is what they did, with Howard Stern, The Greaseman and New Rock.

I have to ask, was the Turkey Drop as outrageous as it sounded and did anyone get video of that day?

That was a mess. Wish I’d called in sick that day. I hope there is no video and if there is I don’t want to see or hear it.

And lastly – If by some miracle KOME were brought back to the airwaves in some form, would you be open to coming back to the Bay Area again, or do you think this idea is just a pipe dream? YES

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16 Sep

Another Soul Silenced – Richard Wright Founder of Pink Floyd 1943-2008

My husband loves Pink Floyd, to him the band, their lyrics speak to him, as they do for millions of fans across the world. I have a affinity for a few of their songs, especially Shine on You Crazy Diamond. We were so lucky to have his soul sing to us for as long as we did, God Bless him on his journey and bless his family. My thoughts are with them and all the fans who are missing such a wonderful talented man.

Remember when you were young, you shone like the sun.
Shine on you crazy diamond.
Now there’s a look in your eyes, like black holes in the sky.
Shine on you crazy diamond.
You were caught on the crossfire of childhood and stardom,
blown on the steel breeze.
Come on you target for faraway laughter,
come on you stranger, you legend, you martyr, and shine!
You reached for the secret too soon, you cried for the moon.
Shine on you crazy diamond.
Threatened by shadows at night, and exposed in the light.
Shine on you crazy diamond.
Well you wore out your welcome with random precision,
rode on the steel breeze.
Come on you raver, you seer of visions,
come on you painter, you piper, you prisoner, and shine!

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