Quantcast Phil Baker on WMYQ Miami | 1974 : Airchexx.com

Phil Baker on WMYQ Miami | 1974

Once again, from a small 3″ reel, comes this hi-fi scope of WMYQ. This reel upon first glance was in terrible shape. The reel was cracked and the tape old and brittle, not even in it’s own box. Still, after playing it on a well-maintained Otari deck (Thank you WMC-FM), the audio came out crisp and quite stunning!

This sounds very much like it was recorded directly off the board. Phil Baker could have been the all-night jock, but I doubt this was recorded overnight since the newsman that you’ll hear on this scope coming out of the top and bottom of the hour reports is none other than the legendary Terrance McKeever! Hearing McKeever’s voice on a couple of news outros is worth the 10 minutes of scoped liners read by Phil Baker!

Comments: One of the purposes of Airchexx.com is to show what radio was really like back in the days before music moved to FM, and corporate consolidation ruined what we perceive as ‘good radio’. Unfortunately, IMHO, the ‘RKO’ sound featuring short liners into songs, while great when done by jocks with real personality like Robert W. Morgan, sounded TERRIBLE with a jock who did nothing WITH the liners except to read them. True, all was not perfect in radio, even in the 70s. Still, this is Miami’s version of the “Q” format (in most markets, this was the ‘post Drake’ era), and the format, for all intents and purposes sounded great on the air.

Visitors, if you remember this station, why not write a history about it by clicking the ‘Comment’ button at the bottom of this post.

Click HERE to Listen!

Total Time: 10:54 Scoped | Real Audio | Monaural

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August 27th, 2005 Karl PhillipsMiami | 6 comments

Comments


6 Responses to “Phil Baker on WMYQ Miami | 1974”

  1. Steven Green on September 20th, 2005 4:04 am

    Thank you for posting an aircheck from the first radio station that I worked for. I was there within a year before this aircheck yet I do not remember Phil Baker.

    Bob Shannon, on the survey, never worked in New York City. He left in the summer to do evenings at WCFL as Johnny Driscoll. I think he took over Dr. Brock’s slot.

    Steven Green

  2. Jim Burgan on May 23rd, 2006 11:24 am

    A great aircheck from the early days of WMYQ, but the date of this aircheck is definitely wrong.
    Judging from the music this was in late-summer 1972.. probably August or September 1972. Plus WMYQ stopped using the TM shotgun jingle and started using the TM Shockwave jingle package in early 1973.

  3. Wally on July 13th, 2006 10:44 pm

    Thanks for the posting; what great memories. My visits to Miami would never have been complete without hours of listening to WMYQ.

  4. Adam Jacobson on September 14th, 2006 2:14 pm

    This aircheck is from late 1972, as Gilbert O’Sullivan had the No. 1 hit on Sept. 10 — the day I was born!
    It’s great listening to the first successful FM Top 40 in the days before Y-100 signed on the air and perfected the sound of Top 40 on FM for a generation of South Floridians. With WMYQ becoming 96X and guys like Joel Denver running the show, along with the dominance of Y-100 and its monster image in the market, the AMs in the market became irrelevant by spring 1978 — the Miami Heat aircheck on this site is a great historical artifact in that Miami was the first market to see Top 40 listening evaporate from the AM dial. WQAM was hurt to some extent by WMYQ, but the ‘Q’ calls with both stations only led to listener confusion when it came time to “write it down.”
    With Y-100, WQAM tried to fight but the days of AM hits were over long before Chicago. Perhaps F-105 in Boston is another great example of an FM Top 40 that did much to change listening habits.

  5. Richard baugher on October 23rd, 2007 1:46 am

    I was in the Air Force stationed in south Fla when WMYQ switched from MOR WJHR to WMYQ. I don’t remember exactly when but around Feb 1971 seems close. I remember the first contest was “when we call you, don’t say hello, say I listen to fun lovin WMYQ”.

  6. Don Anthony on May 5th, 2008 11:00 pm

    Terrific hearing this aircheck! I listened constantly to WMYQ in high school… and it was the station that inspired me to get into radio!
    I can pinpoint when this aircheck was recorded. It was late summer / early fall of 1972. In those days, WMYQ used those musical call-letter “inlays” for current songs. “Brandy,” “Long Cool Woman,” and “Too Late to Turn Back Now” have the call letters sung into the beginning of each song. They were specifically recorded to sound as if the actual artist was singing the station’s call letters. WMYQ used them on current songs only as they became popular and peaked; once they burned out and started back down the charts, WMYQ used the regular “plain” version of the song, w/o the calls. These three songs peaked in late summer of 1972. And that great shotgun jingle was only used in 1971 and 1972.
    I listened constantly, but don’t ever remember hearing Phil Baker. He must have been a weekender or someone there for a very short time. That strange southern accent doesn’t ring a bell.
    Although it was great to hear this aircheck, it doesn’t accurately represent the level of talent that was on WMYQ in the early 70s. This guy just read liners. The stars in those days included Roby Yonge, G. Michael McKay, Johnny Dark, Bobby Rich, Jefferson Stone, Robt W, Kris Erik Stevens and others who made the station a living entity.

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