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ON THIS DATE (39 YEARS AGO) April 3, 1972 - The Mar y Sol festival ends.
ON THIS DATE (39 YEARS AGO)
April 3, 1972 - The Mar y Sol festival ends. The final box score: four persons dead (including one sixteen-year-old boy who was hacked to death while lying in his sleeping bag); a general lack of sufficient food supplies; a general abundance of brutal Puerto Rican sun; and even after the festival, a major sn...afu in which hundreds of Americans are stranded at the San Juan airport. Promoter Cooley calls the festival a success, but Richard Kimball of KMET-FM in L.A. sums it up this way: "It was a f****** drag."
In general many critics considered this festival a disaster. Several accidental deaths, a murder, rapes, etc. But New York Times reporter Les Ledbetter printed a column on April 9 entitled "It was a success -- ask the people"
LIST OF PERFORMERS
Alice Cooper
Allman Brothers Band
Ashton, Gardner and Dyke
BB King
Banda del K-rajo
Bang
Billy Joel
Black Sabbath
Bloodrock
Brownsville Station
Cactus
Dave Brubeck w/ Gerry Mulligan
David Peel
Dr. John
Elephants Memory Band
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Faces (w/ Rod Stewart & Ronnie Wood)
Flash Cadillac
Fleetwood Mac
Fran Ferrer
Goose Creek Symphony
J. Geils Band
Jonathan Edwards
John Baldry
Herbie Mann
Mahavishnu Orchestra w/ John McLaughlin
Malo
Michael Overly
Nitzinger
Osibisa
Poco
Pot Liquor
Roberta Flack
Rubber Band
Savoy Brown
Stonehenge
"Mar y Sol was Puerto Rico's Woodstock Nation, except that by 1972 people were beginning to lose faith in the peace and love schtick". ~ Jorge Luis Medina, The San Juan Star
The dark eyes of violence were always staring over your shoulder. Gangs of Puerto Ricans roamed the grounds in varying shades of belligerence, many carrying knives and apparently itchy fingers. It was like an ugly New York City against a postcard backdrop.
- Barry Kramer, CREEM Magazine, July 1972
"Quite ironically, the festival's major drawing card, old sun, readily proved to be one of its most formidable villains. Even the most fanatical sun-worshipers soon found themselves crawling for cover after only minimal exposure; the medical tent reported that a vast majority of cases handled related directly to this torturous sun blaze".
- Barry Kramer, CREEM Magazine, July 1972
"More than once during the three days, in fact we were to feel like a yellowing photograph in Life Magazine; a living theatre re-enactment of hippiedom 1968 staged for the benefit of curious Puerto Ricans."
- Barry Kramer, CREEM Magazine, July 1972
The MAR Y SOL festival was produced by Atlanta's legendary promoter Alex Cooley. Cooley had produced 2 Atlanta Pop Festivals and the Texas Intl. Pop Festival prior to MAR Y SOL.
The tickets were $15, but most people chose one of the packages which included round trip air fare, ground transportation, camping facilities & tickets.
The chosen date for the festival was the weekend of Easter, or Semana Santa (Holy Week) as is called in Puerto Rico. Shortly after the announcement of the dates of the festival, the government turned against Alex Cooley, who wasn't aware at that time how serious Semana Santa is in the island.
After this, everything went downhill, companies/organizations that were supporting him at first started to turn their backs. Rumors started to spread about whether or not the festival would take place due to the strong legal problems Alex Cooley was having with the government. His lawyer helped him fight back, but that didn't change the fact that there was a lot of people against the festival.
This also affected the list of bands. Some bands opted not to fly down to the island to avoid trouble, forcing Cooley to bring other bands that were not on the promo like David Peel, Mahavishnu Orchestra and others.
On Monday March 27th people started arriving at the area, approx. 400. By the end of the day there were about 5,000. By the next day (Tuesday 28th) the area started looking like some kind of hamlet. All kinds of merchants were there too as well as security guards and even undercover agents.
On Wednesday 29th the judge José Rivera Barreras issued an injunction to stop the festival based on evidence from the Police Drug Division on the selling of Marihuana and LSD pills. Groups of teenagers (both locals and visitors) were planning a protest in front of Fortaleza (Official Residence). If that wasn't enough, on that same day one of the visitors, Willie Wardlaw (East Orange, New Jersey) was found dead (drowned on the beach). By then there were approx. 10,000 people. Still the question remained, "will there be a festival?" By Friday 31st there were about 25,000 people.
Saturday April 1st. The long waited festival started at 3:00 pm with local group Rubber Band. The highlights of the day were B.B. King & Allman Brothers Band.
THE BIRTH OF BILLY JOEL’s CAREER
The birth of Billy's career - Most people don't know this but it was at this festival that doors were opened for Billy Joel.
"Columbia records took notice of Billy Joel at the Mar Y Sol Pop Festival in Puerto Rico... Billy played in rainy conditions, and earned some major standing ovations from the crowd".
- Barry, New York, NC
Still not sure if he played on the first or the second day (some reviews say it was April 1st while band member Larry Russell and other eye witness say it was on Sunday the 2nd).
"Before Mar Y Sol nobody had ever heard of Billy Joel, outside of the New York area, and even there, nobody cared about Billy Joel. But as the sun broke through the clouds at Mar y Sol, Billy Joel had the place reeling and rolling".
- Hank Bordowitz (from the book Billy Joel: The Life and Times of an Angry Young Man)
"It was a moment I'll never forget. He had the crowd in the palm of his hands. He had never had that kind of command of an audience before. That was the first moment that he took command of the stage"
- Irwin Mazur, Billy's first manager (from the book Billy Joel: The Life and Times of an Angry Young Man)
Sunday April 2nd. After dealing with some technical problems the music continued at 1:00 am. Crowd size grew to approximately 50,000 by now. Some highlights of the 2nd day were ELP & Alice Cooper.
Aside from music and other things normally seen in festivals, this was also a day of tragedy. Two more people drowned. Locals Vanessa Rivera and Celestino Santiago, both from Fajardo. Also a murder was committed. Visitor Christopher S. Gilligan from St. Croix (16) was killed by a local with a knife and a machete.
Monday April 3rd.
Some highlights of the 3rd day were Nitzinger, Cactus, Faces & J. Geils Band.
The Black Sabbath deception - One of the main attractions was going to be the british band Black Sabbath, scheduled to play at the very end of the festival. Unfortunately this never happened. They made it to the island, but never to the festival.
"Black Sabbath had flown over from Miami for the MAR Y SOL festival. The crew arrived at the site as usual, before the band did. However, as it drew closer to the time for the band to leave for the gig, it became clear that they would never make it, at least on land. The road leading to the festival ground was grid locked. Spock Wall [producer] used a payphone to call Patrick Meehan [producer], who was with the band at the Redondo Beach Hotel, to warn him of the traffic problems. Meehan told him to expect the band.
Rod Stewart (w/ Faces) @ Mar y Sol, April 3rd.
Their only chance would have been to hire a helicopter, but none was available. Meehan then decided that the band should admit defeat. They had nothing to lose as they had been paid in advance, unlike many of the other acts on the bill." (from the book How BLACK was our SABBATH)
The end, the escape & ...life at the airport:
The end of the festival was also the beginning of a new adventure for promoter Alex Cooley who found out he was going to be arrested anytime soon by the police.
"The last night of the festival. Of course, there was a lot of Puerto Ricans that DID help us. Just people, Not organizations but people that were helping us. And a guy who was working in the festival, came over to me, the last night of the festival, and said they'd issued a warrant in San Juan and they were coming to arrest me. So they smuggled me out of there with a Volkswagen bus. I got in the bus and they put things on top of me and they took me to the airport and there were people at the airport that were very sympathetic towards this and they let them.... of course you'd never be able to do this now - they let them drive the Volkswagen out on to the runway. So I got out of the Volkswagen and got directly on the plane. So that's how I got out of San Juan, out of Puerto Rico. That was the first time I had to leave a country like that before, so it was quite an experience." - Alex Cooley
But the music wasn't over yet, while Cooley was being smuggled out, already Tuesday April 4th, the last band to play, Osibisa, went on stage very early in the morning (aprox. 3 am).
"For the four days I was at the Mar y Sol Pop Festival, the only thing that made any sense to me was the music" - Arthur Levy (Zoo World rock magazine)
"Hundreds of young people from the United States mainland were stranded in San Juan today. Airport officials said that the situation could get worse tomorrow when most of the 30,000 youths who attended the weekend Mar y Sol pop festival tried to get home.
Many of them had no return tickets or money. They said that return transportation had been arranged and paid for in advance, but there was no sign of it. "
- Don Heckman, New York Times (April 4, 1972)
"People had begun making the long trek back to San Juan and points beyond after the first day of the festival, but even this steady exodus didn't avert the Tuesday tie-up at the airport. Many of the people who had purchased the $149 festival package found that their return plane tickets were good only for stand-by, thus effectively leaving the stranded until auxiliary flights could be arranged."
- Barry Kramer, CREEM Magazine, July 1972
The authorities took care of all the people stranded at the airport. Tents were set just outside the main terminal by the the Ports Authority and extra festival vibes were offered. Elephant's Memory (one of the bands at the festival) came out and played for the people at the airport. The Red Cross, airlines & the Department of Social Services provided food, water & medical attention. Pan American Airlines provided the flights for about 3,000 people who attended the festival from outside Puerto Rico. This took several days.
ON THIS DAY (February 11, 1994) - First Beatles' "Reunion" Session
The historic first Beatles reunion session, when they began work on Free As A Bird, takes place on this day at Paul McCartney’s Mill Studios in Sussex, England. (The Mill is a converted windmill on a hill, overlooking English farmland and the English Channel.)
An Open Letter from Tower Records President
This letter was recently sent to artists and industry leaders....
For those that know me know that I have written this myself, no PR folks or copywriters, etc. You also know how passionate and serious I am about changing the current business climate, if even just from my little corner of the world….so here it goes.
In my first year at Tower, my focus has been on recapturing the vibe of a brand that had seen a lot of damage incurred since the initial 2004 bankruptcy. We believe that a good plan, honesty and transparency are how we have succeeded in the initial stages. We are in the process of updating a business plan/model that I strongly believe will succeed financially, fit with the Tower Records brand as a cultural icon, and provide a strong advocate of artists.
For many of you that have worked with me know, my mission revolves around how to make music enjoyable again to a large audience. Thanks to various “improvements” in the industry music, especially with the younger generations, music is now background, white-noise. The majors only get behind the latest fad – content about an artist and the effort they put behind their art is lost.
Our shareholders have decided that Tower may not fit their portfolio, thus Tower.com, Inc. (Tower Records), including all intellectual property (international trademarks), is on the market for investor(s) or purchaser(s). Note that this decision was made internally months ago, so this status does not mean that Tower is closing, liquidating or filing bankruptcy. My reason for sharing this with you is in the spirit of transparency and to ask for your help in “spreading the word.” If you or anyone you know may have any interest I would greatly appreciate it if you contact me at the below.
We have had many great moments in 2010, but, we are at a point when execution is the key. The industry is (again) in a state of flux; there are some great models out there but in my opinion, too many choices within them, which means that there is a great opportunity for the right plan with the right brand. Those who know me or have worked with me understand that my passion is in the advocacy of the arts. If your music is listened to and enjoyed it is beneficial for the listener as well. Tower Records is the brand that can get us there.
I would greatly appreciate the following:
- Please join the Tower Records facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/pages/Tower-Records/54075391196) and pass it on to peers, colleagues and friends.
- Please feel free to contact me or pass on my information at the below to discuss ways we can help you get in front of an audience.
Peace,
Richard Flynn, President
Tower Records
Tower.com, Inc.
email: rflynn@tower.com
ON THIS DATE (February 9, 1964) The Beatles on Ed Sullivan
February 9, 1964, 8:00 p.m., EST, CBS' "The Ed Sullivan Show" took to the airwaves to broadcast the Beatles' first U.S. television appearance. An estimated 73.7 million Americans – a record for its time, and still one of the highest ratings ever – watched as John, Paul, George and Ringo performed "All My Loving," "Till There Was You," "She Loves You," "I Saw Her Standing There," and "I Want to Hold Your Hand" to 703 screaming teenage fans (mostly girls) in the studio audience. During "Till There Was You," a message flashed on the screen when John appeared: "Sorry, girls, he's married."
Although the group realized how important America was to their career, they had no idea just how important the Sullivan show was to domestic audiences. When the full impact of the event hit them just before showtime, John Lennon became so nervous he taped the band's song lyrics to the back of his guitar, just in case.
Sullivan read a telegram to the audience just before the band's performance: "Congratulations on your appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show and your visit to America. STOP. We hope your engagement will be successful and your visit pleasant. STOP. Sincerely Elvis and the Colonel."
Although the music can barely be heard over the screams, this one show had an enormous effect on aspiring rock stars who would later attempt their own version of Beatlemania. In fact, one future music star from Britain also appeared on the Sullivan stage that night – Davy Jones, two years before he became a Monkee, performing as part of the cast of Broadway's "Oliver!"
ON THIS DATE (February 7, 1964) Beatlemania Arrives in the US
When The Beatles left the United Kingdom on 7 February 1964, an estimated four thousand fans gathered at Heathrow, waving and screaming as the aircraft took off. "I Want to Hold Your Hand" had sold 2.6 million copies in the US over the previous two weeks, but the group were still nervous about how they would be received.
The Beatles arrive in the United States for the first time, being welcomed with extreme media coverage and already rampant Beatlemania. The demands on their time never let up from the moment they set down at John F. Kennedy International Airport, greeted by 5,000 screaming fans, until their return home on February 21. Reporters, photographers, radio stations, and TV news crews follow their every move. Added to this was the film crew accompanying The Beatles to shoot a documentary of their first American visit. The results of the documentary filming was a UK broadcast on February 12 titled, "Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! The Beatles in New York" and a US broadcast on February 13 called, "The Beatles in America" (the US broadcast was presented by actress Carol Burnett as part of a weekly documentary series called "The Entertainers").
The Beatles Arrive in New York
Over the next few days, The Beatles give extensive interviews to disc jockey Murray the K and Ed Rudy. The Beatles' US merchandising company, Seltaeb, is inundated with requests for licenses to market Beatles merchandise. It was also the day that Baskin-Robbins introduced "Beatle-Nut" ice cream. The Beatles entourage included record producer, Phil Spector, a hearty contingent of press, and for the first time in public, Cynthia Lennon. They are wisked through immigration into a chaotic press conference: a reporter asks, "Aren't you embarrassed by all this lunacy?" John Lennon says, "No. It's crazy." When asked what he thinks of Beethoven, Lennon says, "He's crazy. Especially the poems. Lovely writer." Their off-the-cuff wit wows the hard-nosed American media...and the world will never be the same.
The band appeared on the weekly Ed Sullivan Show a second time, before returning to the UK on 22 February. If The Beatles expected to be able to rest upon returning to England, they were wrong. Arriving at London Airport in the morning, they hold a press conference, which is broadcast in the middle of a popular sports television show, "Grandstand." Pathe News covered The Beatles return to England and made a documentary film out of the footage for distribution to theaters. There was plenty of radio coverage, too. The Beatles gave a phone interview to Brian Mathew for the program "Saturday Club." That interview was followed by a song request dedicated to George Harrison for his upcoming birthday; it was sent in by his mother (and the song was Shop Around).
During the week of 4 April, The Beatles held twelve positions on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, including the top five. That same week, a third American LP joined the two already in circulation; all three reached the first or second spot on the US album chart. The band's popularity generated unprecedented interest in British music, and a number of other UK acts subsequently made their own American debuts, successfully touring over the next three years in what was termed the British Invasion. The Beatles' hairstyle, unusually long for the era and still mocked by many adults, was widely adopted and became an emblem of the burgeoning youth culture.
SHOP: The Beatles Boutique at Tower
The Beatles arrive in the United States for the first time, being welcomed with extreme media coverage and already rampant Beatlemania. The demands on their time never let up from the moment they set down at John F. Kennedy International Airport, greeted by 5,000 screaming fans, until their return home on February 21. Reporters, photographers, radio stations, and TV news crews follow their every move. Added to this was the film crew accompanying The Beatles to shoot a documentary of their first American visit. The results of the documentary filming was a UK broadcast on February 12 titled, "Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! The Beatles in New York" and a US broadcast on February 13 called, "The Beatles in America" (the US broadcast was presented by actress Carol Burnett as part of a weekly documentary series called "The Entertainers").
The Beatles Arrive in New York
Over the next few days, The Beatles give extensive interviews to disc jockey Murray the K and Ed Rudy. The Beatles' US merchandising company, Seltaeb, is inundated with requests for licenses to market Beatles merchandise. It was also the day that Baskin-Robbins introduced "Beatle-Nut" ice cream. The Beatles entourage included record producer, Phil Spector, a hearty contingent of press, and for the first time in public, Cynthia Lennon. They are wisked through immigration into a chaotic press conference: a reporter asks, "Aren't you embarrassed by all this lunacy?" John Lennon says, "No. It's crazy." When asked what he thinks of Beethoven, Lennon says, "He's crazy. Especially the poems. Lovely writer." Their off-the-cuff wit wows the hard-nosed American media...and the world will never be the same.
They gave their first live US television performance two days later on The Ed Sullivan Show, watched by approximately 74 million viewers—over 40 percent of the American population. The next morning one newspaper wrote that The Beatles "could not carry a tune across the Atlantic", but a day later their first US concert saw Beatlemania erupt at Washington Coliseum.
Ed Sullivan Show (February 9, 1964)
The band appeared on the weekly Ed Sullivan Show a second time, before returning to the UK on 22 February. If The Beatles expected to be able to rest upon returning to England, they were wrong. Arriving at London Airport in the morning, they hold a press conference, which is broadcast in the middle of a popular sports television show, "Grandstand." Pathe News covered The Beatles return to England and made a documentary film out of the footage for distribution to theaters. There was plenty of radio coverage, too. The Beatles gave a phone interview to Brian Mathew for the program "Saturday Club." That interview was followed by a song request dedicated to George Harrison for his upcoming birthday; it was sent in by his mother (and the song was Shop Around).
During the week of 4 April, The Beatles held twelve positions on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, including the top five. That same week, a third American LP joined the two already in circulation; all three reached the first or second spot on the US album chart. The band's popularity generated unprecedented interest in British music, and a number of other UK acts subsequently made their own American debuts, successfully touring over the next three years in what was termed the British Invasion. The Beatles' hairstyle, unusually long for the era and still mocked by many adults, was widely adopted and became an emblem of the burgeoning youth culture.
SHOP: The Beatles Boutique at Tower
ON THIS DATE (February 2, 1973) The Midnight Special makes it series debut.
The Midnight Special is an American musical variety series that aired during the 1970s and early 1980s, created and produced by Burt Sugarman and airing on NBC. The Midnight Special was noted for featuring musical acts performing live, which was unique since most television appearances during the era showed performers lip-synching to prerecorded music. The series also occasionally aired vintage footage of older acts (such as Bill Haley & His Comets).
First Show line-up
Host: Helen Reddy
--Helen Reddy (host) - "I Am Woman," "Peaceful" & "Come On John"
--Ed McMahon (walk-on cameo) - wishes the show sucess
--Ike and Tina Turner Revue- "I Can't Turn You Loose" & "With a Little Help from My Friends"
--George Carlin (comedian) - stand-up comedy monologue
--Curtis Mayfield - "Superfly"
--Don McLean - "Dreidel" & "If We Try"
--Rare Earth - "We're Gonna Have a Good Time" & "I Just Want to Celebrate"
--Kenny Rankin - "Comin' Down"
--The Byrds - "Mr. Tambourine Man" & "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star"
--The Impressions - "Preacher Man"
--Helen Reddy, Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions - "Amen"
First Show line-up
Host: Helen Reddy
--Helen Reddy (host) - "I Am Woman," "Peaceful" & "Come On John"
--Ed McMahon (walk-on cameo) - wishes the show sucess
--Ike and Tina Turner Revue- "I Can't Turn You Loose" & "With a Little Help from My Friends"
--George Carlin (comedian) - stand-up comedy monologue
--Curtis Mayfield - "Superfly"
--Don McLean - "Dreidel" & "If We Try"
--Rare Earth - "We're Gonna Have a Good Time" & "I Just Want to Celebrate"
--Kenny Rankin - "Comin' Down"
--The Byrds - "Mr. Tambourine Man" & "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star"
--The Impressions - "Preacher Man"
--Helen Reddy, Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions - "Amen"
List of guests appearing on The Midnight Special
1972 (pilot)
First aired: 8/19/1972
- Andy Kaufman
- Argent- "Hold Your Head Up" & "Tragedy"
- John Denver (guest host) - "Take Me Home Country Roads" & "Goodbye Again"
- Cass Elliot - "Leaving on a Jet Plane" duet w/John Denver
- Harry Chapin - "Taxi"
- David Clayton-Thomas (singer from Blood, Sweat & Tears) - "Yesterday's Music" & "Nobody Calls Me Prophet"
- The Everly Brothers - "All I Have to Do Is Dream" & "Stories We Could Tell"
- The Isley Brothers - "Pop That Thang"
- Helen Reddy - "I Don't Know How to Love Him"
- Linda Ronstadt - "Long, Long Time" & "The Fast One"
- War - "Slippin' into Darkness"
1973
- Al Green (guest host)
- Albert Hammond
- Albert King
- Alvin Lee & Mylon LeFevre
- Anne Murray (guest host) - "Danny's Song"
- Aretha Franklin
- The Association
- Barbara Fairchild
- Badfinger
- The Bee Gees (guest hosts)
- Ben E. King
- Bill Cosby (guest host)
- Billy Paul
- Billy Preston - "Will It Go Round in Circles"
- Black Oak Arkansas
- Blood, Sweat & Tears
- Bloodstone
- Bo Diddley
- Bobby Day
- Bobby Darin
- Bobby Womack
- Bonnie Bramlett
- Brewer & Shipley
- Bud Brisbois
- Buddy Miles
- The Byrds
- Canned Heat
- Carol Burnett
- Charlie Rich
- Chi Coltrane
- Chubby Checker (guest host)
- The Coasters
- Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen
- The Committee
- Conway Twitty
- Country Joe McDonald
- The Crusaders
- Curtis Mayfield (guest host)
- Danny & the Juniors
- David Bowie - "Space Oddity"
- David Brenner
- Del Shannon
- The Del-Vikings
- Dionne Warwick (guest host)
- Dobie Gray
- Doc Severinsen (guest host)
- The Doobie Brothers
- Don Gibson
- Don McLean
- The Doobie Brothers - "Listen to the Music"
- Doug Kershaw
- Dr. John
- Earl Scruggs
- Edgar Winter Group - "Frankenstein"
- Edward Bear
- Edwin Hawkins Singers
- Electric Light Orchestra
- Eric Weissberg
- Fanny[disambiguation needed]
- Foghat
- Freddy Cannon
- Gary Mule Deer
- Genesis - "Watcher of the Skies", & "The Musical Box"
- George Burns
- George Carlin
- George Jones
- Gladys Knight & the Pips (guest hosts) - "Neither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye)"
- The Grass Roots
- Gunhill Road
- Harry Chapin (guest host)
- Helen Reddy (guest host) - "Delta Dawn"
- Henry Mancini
- The Hollies
- Honey Cone
- Hoyt Axton
- The Incredible String Band
- Ike & Tina Turner
- The Impressions
- Jack Burns and Avery Schreiber (guest hosts)
- Jerry Butler
- Jerry Lee Lewis (guest host)
- Jim Croce (guest host) - "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown"
- Jim Weatherly
- Jimmie Spheeris
- Jimmy Clanton
- Joan Baez (guest host)
- Joan Rivers
- Joe Walsh
- John Kay
- John Stewart
- Johnny Rivers (guest host)
- Johnny Mathis
- Johnny Nash (guest host) - "I Can See Clearly Now"
- Johnny Paycheck
- Johnny Rodriguez
- Johnny Winter
- Jonathan Winters
- Jose Feliciano (guest host)
- Kenny Rankin
- Kenny Rogers and The First Edition
- King Crimson - "Larks' Tongues In Aspic Part 2" & "Easy Money"
- King Harvest
- Kris Kristofferson
- Lakshmi Shankar
- Leo Kottke
- Leroy Hutson
- Little Anthony & The Imperials
- Linda Ronstadt - "Long, Long Time"
- Livingston Taylor
- Lloyd Price
- Loggins & Messina - "Your Mama Don't Dance"
- Lou Rawls (guest host)
- Loretta Lynn (guest host)
- Mac Davis (guest host)
- Marty Robbins (guest host)
- Malo
- Melissa Manchester
- Merrilee Rush
- Mimi Fariña
- The Miracles
- Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
- The O'Jays
- Paul Anka (guest host)
- Paul Williams[1] (guest host)
- Rare Earth
- The Penguins
- Ramblin' Jack Elliott
- The Raspberries
- Ravi Shankar
- Ray Charles (guest host)
- Richard Pryor (guest host)
- Rita Coolidge
- Robert Klein
- Ronnie Dyson
- Savoy Brown
- Seals & Crofts - "Summer Breeze"
- The Searchers
- Sha Na Na
- Shawn Phillips
- The Shirelles
- Skeeter Davis
- Skylark
- The Skyliners
- Slade
- Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee
- The Spinners
- Smokey Robinson (guest host)
- The Staple Singers
- The Statler Brothers
- Steely Dan - "Reelin' In The Years"
- Steve Goodman
- Steve Martin
- Steve Miller Band
- Stories
- The Stylistics
- Tanya Tucker
- Taj Mahal
- Tammy Wynette
- Timmy Thomas
- Todd Rundgren - "Think of Me"
- Tom T. Hall
- Tower of Power
- T.Rex - "Get It On"
- War - "The Cisco Kid"
- Waylon Jennings
- Wilson Pickett
- Wishbone Ash
- Vicki Lawrence
1974
- Aerosmith - "Train Kept A-Rollin'"
- Ann Peebles
- Barry White - "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe"
- Bill Withers - "Ain't No Sunshine"
- Brownsville Station
- David Essex - "Rock On"
- Eddie Kendricks
- Edwin Starr
- El Chicano
- Genesis
- Gladys Knight & B.B. King - "The Thrill is Gone"
- Golden Earring - "Radar Love"
- Gordon Lightfoot - "Sundown"
- Humble Pie - "Oh La-De-Da" and "30 Days in the Hole"
- Ike & Tina Turner - "Proud Mary"
- James Brown - "The Payback"
- Jo Jo Gunne
- Jobriath
- Leo Sayer
- Lynn Anderson
- Maria Muldaur - "Midnight at the Oasis"
- Marvin Gaye - "Let's Get It On"
- Montrose - "Rock the Nation" and "Space Station #5"
- Neil Sedaka - "Laughter in the Rain"
- The New York Dolls
- The O'Jays - "Love Train"
- Phil Ochs and Jim Glover - "The Power and the Glory" and "Changes"
- Redbone - "Come and Get Your Love"
- Sly & the Family Stone - "Everybody is a Star"
- Todd Rundgren - "Couldn't I Just Tell You?" & "A Dream Goes On Forever"
1975
- ABBA - "SOS" and "I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do"
- PFM - "Celebration" and "Alta Loma Nine Till Five"'
- The Bee Gees - "Nights on Broadway"
- Fleetwood Mac - "Rhiannon"
- Earth Wind and Fire - "Shining Star"
- KISS - "Black Diamond"
- KC and the Sunshine Band - "That's the Way (I Like It)"
- Labelle - "Lady Marmalade"
- Rod Stewart - "You Wear It Well"
- Peter Frampton - "Show Me the Way"
- Helen Reddy - "I Am Woman"
- Olivia Newton John - "Have You Ever Been Mellow"
- Ohio Players - "Love Rollercoaster"
- Barry Manilow - "Could It Be Magic?"
- Minnie Riperton - "Lovin' You"
- Orleans - "Dance with Me"
- Natalie Cole - "This Will Be (An Everlasting Love)"
- Glen Campbell - "Rhinestone Cowboy"
- Aretha Franklin and Ray Charles - "It Takes Two to Tango"
- Electric Light Orchestra (guest hosts) - "In the Hall of the Mountain King", "Great Balls of Fire", "Can't Get It Out of My Head", "Orange Blossom Special", "Laredo Tornado", "Flight of the Bumble Bee" & "Roll Over Beethoven"
- Todd Rundgren - "Real Man", "Freedom Fighters" & "Seven Rays"
- Roxy Music - "Out Of The Blue", "The Thrill Of It All", "A Really Good Time" (aired 05/09/1975, synched to the studio tracks from the Country Life album with live vocals from Bryan Ferry and John Wetton)
1976
- Aretha Franklin - "Respect
- Electric Light Orchestra - "Evil Woman", "Nightrider" & "Strange Magic"
- Elton John - "Your Song"
- Gary Wright - "Dream Weaver", "Love Is Alive"
- Fleetwood Mac - "Over My Head", "Rhiannon", "World Turning"
- Spinners - "The Rubberband Man"
- Heart - "Magic Man" "Crazy On You", "Dreamboat Annie"
- Hot Chocolate - "You Sexy Thing
- Wild Cherry - "Play That Funky Music"
- Starbuck - "Moonlight Feels Right"
- George Benson - "This Masquerade"
- Michael Murphey - "Wildfire"
- Diana Ross - "Love Hangover
- Eric Carmen - "All By Myself"
- Tom Jones - "Delilah
- Donna Summer - "Love to Love You Baby"
- England Dan and John Ford Coley - "I'd Really Love to See You Tonight"
- Janis Ian - "At Seventeen"
- Ray Charles - "Georgia on My Mind"
- Walter Murphy and The Big Apple Band - "A Fifth of Beethoven"
1977
- Andy Gibb - "I Just Want To Be Your Everything"
- Andy Kaufman - "I Trusted You"
- Bonnie Raitt - "Runaway"
- Electric Light Orchestra - "Do Ya"
- Little Feat - "Dixie Chicken"
- Weather Report - "Birdland"
- Bread - "Make It With You"
- Dave Mason - "We Just Disagree"
- Electric Light Orchestra (hosts) - "Rockaria!", "Livin' Thing", "Do Ya", "Telephone Line" & "Livin' Thing (reprise)"
- The Emotions - "Best Of My Love"
- James Brown - "Get Up Offa That Thing"
- Johnny Rivers - "Slow Dancin'"
- Leo Sayer - "You Make Me Feel Like Dancing"
- Lou Rawls - "You'll Never Find Another Love Like Mine"
- Manfred Mann's Earth Band - "Blinded by the Light"
- Marilyn McCoo & Billy Davis, Jr. - "You Don't Have To Be A Star (To Be In My Show)"
- Marvin Gaye - "What's Going On"
- Player
- Sanford-Townsend Band - "Smoke from a Distant Fire"
- Thelma Houston - "Don't Leave Me This Way"
- Van Morrison - "Domino"
1978
- AC/DC - "Sin City"
- Aerosmith - "Come Together"
- Ambrosia - "How Much I Feel"
- The Cars - "Just What I Needed"
- Cheap Trick - "Surrender"
- Chic - "Le Freak"
- Chuck Mangione - "Feels So Good"
- Dan Hill - "Sometimes When We Touch"
- Eddie Money - "Baby Hold On," "Two Tickets to Paradise"
- Exile - "Kiss You All Over"
- Four Tops - "Ain't No Woman (Like The One I've Got)"
- Hall & Oates - "Rich Girl"
- Nick Lowe- "So It Goes"
- Player
- REO Speedwagon - "Roll With The Changes"
- Rick James - "You and I" & "Mary Jane"
- Robert Palmer - "Every Kinda People"
- Ronnie Montrose - Town Without Pity & "My Little Mystery
- Starland Vocal Band - "Afternoon Delight"
- Ted Nugent - "Cat Scratch Fever", "Need You Bad", "Free For All" (Hosted this Show)
- Todd Rundgren - "Can We Still Be Friends" & "Bread" (with the Hello People)
- Todd Rundgren's Utopia - (guest host) "Real Man", "You Cried Wolf", "Love in Action", "Sometimes I Don't Know What to Feel" & "Just One Victory"
- Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - "American Girl," "I Need to Know"
- The Trammps - "Disco Inferno"
- Yvonne Elliman - "If I Can't Have You"
1979
- Alice Cooper - "Billion Dollar Babies"
- Amii Stewart - "Knock on Wood"
- The Babys - "Everytime I Think of You"
- The Beach Boys - "Good Vibrations"
- Blondie - "One Way or Another," "Dreaming," "Heart of Glass"
- The Cars - "Let's Go," "Just What I Needed," "Dangerous Type"
- The Charlie Daniels Band - "The Devil Went Down to Georgia"
- Commodores - "Three Times a Lady"
- Crystal Gayle - "Cry Me a River"
- Dolly Parton - "I Will Always Love You"
- Gloria Gaynor - "I Will Survive," "Never Can Say Good-bye"
- Grace Jones - "Below the Belt"
- Journey - "Lovin', Touchin'. Squeezin'," "Wheel in the Sky," "City of Angels"
- Minnie Riperton - "Lovin' You" (memorial replay of her 1975 appearance)
- Nick Gilder - "Hot Child in the City"
- Peaches & Herb - "Reunited"
- The Pointer Sisters - "Fire"
- Rick James - "You and I"
- Rupert Holmes - "Escape (The Pina Colada Song)"
- The Three Degrees - "Giving Up Giving In & The Runner"
- The Jacksons - "Shake Your Body Down To The Ground"
1980
- Eddie Rabbit - "Drivin' My Life Away"
- Frankie Valli & The Commodores - "Grease"
- Olivia Newton-John - "Magic"
- REO Speedwagon - "Keep On Loving You"
- Roy Orbison - (Host, Season 8, Episode 25) "Oh Pretty Woman", "Only the Lonely", "Crying", "Running Scared", "Hound Dog Man", "Blue Bayou" & "The Eyes of Texas"
- Hall & Oates - "Kiss on My List"
- America - "Sister Golden Hair"
1981
- Andy Kaufman
- Freddie Cannon - "Tallahassee Lassie"
- Slim Whitman - "I Remember You"
- Tony Clifton
- 707 - "Tonite's Your Night"
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