He is not on the radio any more. What happened?
a
WJR was created on 1922-05-04.
W.J.R Squance has written: 'The People's Convention movement'
W.J.R Gibbs has written: 'First School Music Course'
The music played during the fireworks display on the Detroit side can be heard on the radio in Windsor, at, AM760 WJR.
Hello there! As you can imagine this answer will be manyfold, as there's not just one Joe Gagnon: #1 is known as the "appliance doctor". He's an expert on apliances maintenance, with more than 30 years of experience. He host a radio show on WJR-AM, where he dispenses free advice on home appliances. #2 is a food industry expert who dispenses answers to your questions on this field at the website www.monkeymedia.net. #3 is a morning show reporter for the KKCO News team in Grand Junction, Colorado. #4 is a computer networking salesman in the greater Atlanta area. Of all of these, the appliance doctor seems to be the most popular, understandably. On the other hand, if the person you're asking about is Joe Gannon, then I must say that this one is quite a remarkable and prolific person: He's a recording producer, director, stage lighting designer and production designer. He has worked, in diverse capacities, with Frank Zappa, Bill Cosby, Madonna, CBS, Julio Iglesias, Luther Vandross, Barry Manilow, Alice Cooper, Neil Diamond, Pink Floyd, etc, etc, etc. On top of that Gannon is a prolific script writer, for TV and movies: Law & Order, in the Heat of the Night, Friday the 13th, a Different World, the Twilight Zone, Moonlightning, Hunter, Archie Bunker's Place, Dinasty, Dallas, among many, many more.
program was out of Detroit on wjr 760 during 1960 -1970 contact me at dsflaks54@comcast.net, I have a set of 6 cassetts he put out. My aunt wrote for him
I'm sorry, but I don't have information on Dayna Clark's age or personal details. If you are looking for specific information about her, you might want to check public records or her official social media profiles.
A group of robot astronauts lands on a remote planet WJR 1100 and settles a colony there. Their mission is to find artifacts of their long-lost ancestors. One day they find a skeleton of a humanoid which they feel is this ancestor.
1930 as the Portsmouth Spartans. Poor revenues, in part due to playing in a small town and in part due to the Great Depression, led to financial problems for the team. The Spartans were bought by George Richards, the owner of radio station WJR, in 1934 and moved to Detroit and renamed the Lions.
Helen Hunt Jackson, American author of novels, poems, and writings about the plight of American Indians. Born 1830, Amherst, MA; died in San Francisco, CA, 1885. The poem "October's Bright Blue Weather" published c.1893. [WJR]
Initially, FEE RECORDS of Detroit on Grand River managed this husband and wife group along with Chapter 8, the vocal group which featured Anita Baker as lead, and The ADC Band. Fee was named after the daughter of the founder Woody (last name to be provided in a forthcoming update) with the corporate team including Detroit radio legend "Butterball" Junior of WCHB. Secretary was Leslie Goines, sister of urban writer Donald Goines, with promotional expertise provided in part by veteran promo rep Jon Louis Barrow, nephew of boxing great Joe Louis. Jon Barrow was the Atlantic Records rep responsible for the first hits of Aretha Franklin, Cream, Archie Bell and The Drells, among others, and was noted for editing down Iron Butterfly's hit "Inna Gadda Da Vida" from 23 minutes to a more radio friendly 4:44. In 1977, the group was signed by Ariola Capitol EMI Records, with their first album due out in 1978. First hit with producer Will Hatcher was "Glad I Gotcha, Baby" and was released with an extended length disco version, followed by the beautiful love song"Living In A World (All By Myself) and the upbeat "Take A Ride" depending on the part of the country you lived in. The duality of the release was owing to a professional dispute at Fee Records and Beverly and Duane's newly appointed management team BARSTO, consisting of Barrow and Myron D. Stokes ( later an automotive industry correspondent for Newsweek Magazine and currently Publisher of the automotive/aerospace industries analysis site eMOTION! REPORTS.com). As part of his entree into the music game, Barrow introduced Stokes to the legendary Ahmet Ertegun, Warner Bros A&R VP Don Draper as well as radio personalities Rosalee Trombly of CKLW, WJR's J.P. McCarthy, reknowned Rock 'N Roll DJ "Frantic Ernie" Durham, and Chicago jock Tom Joyner. It is of note that Stokes' father, Dr. Rufus Stokes, an inventor listed as an "Energy Pioneer" with the U.S Department of Energy, sang with Sam Cook in his gospel group, was a friend of Nat "King" Cole and whose wife Bessie babysat Natalie Cole. Through Will Hatcher, the management team was introduced to renowned Baseball announcer Ernie Harwell, who sent a congratulatory telegram to the first live performance by the Beverly and Duane in Detroit subsequent to the release of the album. In an unfortunate oversight that affects Stokes to this day, Hatcher was not mentioned as producer during the club presentation. Beverly, incidentally, was pregnant at the time with their first child, and toured for the duration of the pregnancy. "Glad I Gotcha, Baby" was receiving airplay at the same time as Peaches and Herb's "Shake Your Groove Thing", while "Living In A World" competed with that group's "Reunited". In 1980, Jon Barrow founded the "Brown Bomber" record label in Detroit with partners that included Beverly and Duane Co-Manager Myron D. Stokes. The company's first product was the 45-rpm single "Love"; a moving melody that again exploited the marvelous vocal talents of Beverly & Duane (Beverly's upper range voice could shatter glass, putting her in the company of Sarah Vaughn and Ella Fitzgerald --really.) was released that year. = Factoids = -- Beverly toured subsequent to album release in expectation of the duo's first child. She was an administrative assistant at Ford Motor Company. -- Beverly & Duane's first release "Glad I Gotcha Baby" took off in earnest after Detroit pop station WNIC FM 100.3's Alan Almond, the host of the immensely popular and long running "Pillow Talk" program, introduced and placed in top rotation. -- Responding to an entertainment coordinator from Jackson Prison in Michigan, the duo agreed to perform for the prison population. Co-Manager Myron D. Stokes was invited to sit with the population during the performance, which he did over the objections of his colleagues. The performance went off without a hitch... -- Eddie "Bongo" Brown of Motown's Funk Brothers lent his rhythmic expertise to this album.