Quantcast CKLW Windsor/Detroit “Million Dollar Weekend” | 1976 (40:04) Scoped : Airchexx.com

CKLW Windsor/Detroit “Million Dollar Weekend” | 1976 (40:04) Scoped

CKLW may have been Canadian, but it was likely the most creative and best station in the RKO chain. It’s also likely that the period of 1970-1976 was probably the height of “The BIG 8″.

CKLW was a 50,000 watt music blowtorch covering most of Eastern North America… and it catered to interests in Detroit as well as to it’s own Canadian listeners. Today, however, this is known as “The Information Station” and primarilly serves the Canadian side of the boarder only. If only Canada’s CTRC knew the monster that was created way back when had the power to affect people thousands of miles away… well perhaps they did know. Either way, the CanCon rules enacted in the 70s may have helped Canadian artists, but it did spell doom for CKLW– as the audience shifted to other, U.S. stations within earshot right across the river.

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October 25th, 2004 Detroit/Windsor | 5 comments

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5 Responses to “CKLW Windsor/Detroit “Million Dollar Weekend” | 1976 (40:04) Scoped”

  1. steve touma on January 5th, 2005 10:09 am

    cklw, is a legend, that said it all when you talk about detroit/windsor radio.

    The Jocks were all legend, all of them and from pat holiday,johnny williams, brother bill,gary burbank, dave schafer, tom shannon, etc .

    They set the trend the memories, will always live on at cklw , the big 8

  2. george on August 21st, 2005 9:28 pm

    I was only eight years old in 1976, but i vividly remember listening to the latest hits by Bob Seger, Paul McCartney and Elton John on CKLW coming from the AM radio in my dad’s car. If you lived in Detroit or Windsor in the 1970’s, you could hear CKLW literally everywhere you went-the mall, grocery store, community centre etc. CKLW was more than a Top 40 radio station, it was the MTV of its’ day.

  3. Ray Mead on September 25th, 2005 2:52 am

    II grew up in the samall northwest Ohio town of Fayette. listened to CKLW from the early 1960’s until I went into the Army .in 1965. When I was in the states I always had one button on my radio set on CKLW. I could pick it up as far away as Baltimore, FT Bragg NC, and FT Knox KY. CKLW was more than a legend, it was a piece of home for those of us from the midwest. I can remember myself and other guys from Ohio and Michigan gathered around a transistor radio after “lights out” listening to CKLW in the barracks and singing along with our favorite hits. It was a whole different world in those days and CKLW was the soundtrack of our lives.

  4. Jay Hunt on May 3rd, 2006 8:48 am

    Has anyone ever found an aircheck of Ron Knowles hosting Platter Express on CKLW around 1957-58? Glen Miller’s “Take The A Train” was his theme song and it was one of the most popular teen rock & roll shows of the time.

    Jay Hunt
    Ottawa, Canada

  5. Jay on March 21st, 2007 2:42 am

    I grew up listening to CKLW from the early 70s to the early 80s, when it changed format to swing and big band. I have an idea: Why doesn’t the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland have an exhibit of classic powerhouse radio stations of the past? I think this would be an excellent idea! The exhibit would showcase the DJs, the station location, the music, as well as the music format technology of the era (records, tapes, CDs).

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