TOP STREAM 32Kbps (10Khz)
. . . You don't call the local grocery store, and say 'I'm sick and tired of looking at your lettuce' . . .
[Description by Contributor Jeff March]
After leaving his native Texas for KCBQ/San Diego in 1968, Jimmy Rabbitt began a colorful 10-year run on the air in Los Angles in 1969, beginning with KRLA, where he helped entrench that pop station's decidedly hip posture.
By 1972 he was at album rock FM station KMET, where his inclinations for country-flavored rock became apparent. After gigs at KROQ and KHJ, he had returned to KMET by the spring of 1975, but that summer his yearning for country music took him to KGBS-FM (97.1 FM) Los Angeles. The station simulcast with daytimer KGBS-AM (1020), which had a traditional country music format.
After the AM signoff each evening, Jimmy Rabbitt held forth in his loose, relaxed style with his brand of country, skillfully blending classic songs by legacy artists with progressive tracks by long-haired country rockers. The late night slot on the station had virtually no spots, which gave Rabbitt clear range to regale his listeners with tales and tunes. In this aircheck, a spot for a cheesy B-movie aired a couple of times, and after the tag listing the theaters, the entertainingly irreverent Rabbitt says, "It probably would be a lot easier if you just told 'em where it wudn't playing."
I recorded this program on my Teac open-reel tape deck beginning at 10:37 on this Tuesday evening, August 18, 1975, and let the tape roll through songs with only two song edits until just past midnight. By 1979, Jimmy Rabbitt left Los Angeles to settle in Colorado. By 1996, he had returned home to play country music in Tyler, Texas.
| ||
[MORE FROM THIS COLLECTION] [REELRADIO HOME] [FIND IT!] |
©2013 REELRADIO, Inc.