Showing posts with label Oldies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oldies. Show all posts

Friday, January 24, 2025

Oldies DJs *final

 Side A



I became well aware of Oldies, and their DJs, during my years at Theisen Junior High. My friend Willy and I carpooled to school. All 4 of our parents took turns getting us to and from Theisen, but Willy and I agree that we best remember the car rides with my dad from decades ago. The day after I lost my dad, Willy invited me over to his house to mourn and praise the man. We concluded that our parents must have divided the carpool as evenly as they could, but we mostly just remembered my dad driving us. Bill and his trusty Oldies station, 103.9 FM, left imprints on our minds. 


When he picked us up, Willy and I could sense if my dad was in a foul mood. Sometimes he was cranky after eight hours of patrolling the streets of Fondy. Lack of feeling in his “hello” greeting was a dead giveaway. But if he seemed able to tolerate life, and, by extension, us, then we might comment on the Oldies tunes. Sorta Beavis and Butt-Head style. Dad would put up with our sarcasm. 


He might even hint at a smile if we heard a Beach Boys song. We’d hear something like “Surfin’ USA.” Half-shivering in our coats, we gazed out the car windows at front lawns covered in a foot of snow, icicles hanging from houses. The band sang the praises of California, which seemed like another planet. The joke did not escape us, in Wisconsin, in January. I spotted a dog getting coaxed against its will to go outside to pee in the frigid cold. 


“Well, this song sure makes me want to go surfing,” I said. 


“We should scope out Lake Winnebago,” Willy said. 


“Might have some gnarly waves. Might be… frozen.” 


“Fifty-fifty chance.” 


“Don’t forget your sunblock, boys,” Dad chimed in.


Sometimes we actually shut up and appreciated the likes of “Please Mr. Postman,” “Earth Angel,” “Runaround Sue” or “Twist and Shout.” Once in a while, Willy and I were willing to give an Oldie a chance, but Dad was not.  


A novelty song like “Monster Mash” would make him wince. A dud on 103.9 led him to  turn down the volume a few notches, from a reasonable volume to scarcely audible. I might offer a meek protest. 


“But Dad, c’mon, it’s almost Halloween.” 


He’d wrinkle his nose as if whiffing a fart. He’d explain his opinion in a single word. 


“Dumb,” he said, shaking his head. 


I never saw him dress up for Halloween. Dad didn’t suffer fools like Boris Pickett and the Crypt-Kickers. Oddities like “Monster Mash” and “Bird Is the Word” damn near got muted. But no matter how awful the Oldie was to Bill, he’d never change the station, because finding something better was against the odds.


He had no interest in the alternatives on the dial. To paraphrase him, he wasn’t about to gamble on the pop station with its Michael Jordan—er, Jackson. He wanted no part of Stone Temple… Whatevers on the Rockin’ Apple. Line dance anthems on the country station made him uncomfortable, and for that I’m grateful. 


One Oldie he could stand, surprisingly, was “Rubber Ball” by Bobby Vee. I’ll never get why that song had the edge over “Monster Mash” or “Bird Is the Word.” But as the school year went on, we heard it a lot on the drive home. “Rubber Ball” was a go-to gem to the Oldies DJ in that late afternoon sweet spot. 


For starters, Willy and I geeked out reciting the chorus: “I’m like a… Rubber Ball, I come bouncin’ back to you-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh.” 


By the spring, we were getting deeper into the lyrics. At one point, the lady backup singers mention: “She calls you by some other guy’s name.” Why would we want to cheer for this bozo? We found it easy to roast this Bobby Vee character. 


“I like how this guy keeps trying to get back with his ex-girlfriend, by pointing out the fact that he is annoying,” I said. 


“Desperate too,” Willy said. 


“Yeah. Selling points.” 


I mention these wonderful memories to add more perspective. I’ve matured just a wee bit since I wrote side B in my early 20s. Back in the day, I portrayed the Oldies DJ in a way that was quite cynical and harsh. Now I find myself identifying a little bit with the stereotype who fell short of his lofty dreams and had to settle for less. Don’t get me wrong: I finally like my job. I’m a good reading tutor and assistant teacher, and that’s how I pay my bills. But if I got the fantastical offer of writing and recording stories as my full-time job, I’d probably put in my notice at the school. 


Plus, I can recall showing side B to my friend Wes, whose dad was an Oldies DJ, a job I obliterated. And to sprinkle salt in that wound, I also vilified Phish, my friend’s favorite band. I didn’t even give him fair warning before I handed him the 2 pages stapled together. How insensitive was that? What a passive-aggressive asshole. 


So, I’m sorry, Wes. Looking back, I understand why you didn’t laugh and just gave me a simple “Fuck you.” Now I see your point. But I still gotta have my jokes. 


I’m finally at peace with this story. Some of the sentences I scribble down just before I go to bed turn out to be nonsense, but here goes nothing. I’m just a swimming Pisces getting older. I see that karma drives time that moves in a circle, and sometimes I swim back into my own shit. 


Side B


 Herman’s Hermits: Teen Heartthrobs or Nightmare Fuel?

Baby boomers like to criticize millennials for our short attention spans, but have you ever listened to an oldies station that plays the a-sides from the mid-50s through the end of Beatlemania? These pieces of music are short. They last about two-and-a-half minutes, on average. Many track lengths are much shorter.  


The nasal-voiced DJs talk over the start of the song. They have no qualms with drowning a good opening riff. They yammer over the first 15 seconds, shutting up only once the vocals begin. Then some preening geek with a sucked-helium falsetto rhymes “do” with “you” for 90 seconds before the DJ interrupts him again.


“Okay, we get the picture. Driving T-Birds and going steady with a swell gal—very nice.” Cue a new song. “Now here's a hit from that same year from Rich Doodleberry and the Underlings called 'Driving in My GTO with My Sweetheart.' It's 50 degrees and partly sunny with a 40 percent chance of evening showers, the barometer is right around 30, the dew point has something to do with humidity, clouds are pretty, this booth is awful-drafty, I can complain but no one listens, I see a penny on the floor and now I've got to zip it because the vocals start in half a second!”


God help you if you hear a surfer rock instrumental on an oldies station, since the Oldies DJ is likely to talk over the entire song with an exhaustive tale about his days working as a roadie for the Mamas and the Papas.


The truth is that Boomers have the shortest attention spans of any demographic group on the radio dial, and the Oldies DJs cater to this. To prove my point, any time you hear the Doors’ “Light My Fire” on an Oldies station, the psychedelic jam is cut, which shaves four minutes from the version you hear on the album and classic rock stations. The DJs at classic rock stations are only ten years younger than their Oldies counterparts, but the difference in taste is significant. Classic Rock DJs prefer the full-length versions of tunes such as “Light My Fire” and “In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida” since they allow more time to gawk at the lines in their left palm that look like the Star Trek symbol when they cross their eyes just right. Live long and prosper, Classic Rock DJ. You know that I would be a liar if I was to say to you: “You couldn’t get much higher.”


Say what you will about Phish, but there’s been a lot of demand for a worse version of the Grateful Dead. And hey, at least their stoner followers have the attention spans to withstand a 20-minute solo by Trey. And once it’s finished, it’s the damnedest thing, they nudge their buddy and say wistfully, “Dude, don’t you wish that solo would’ve lasted even LONGER?” And their buddy agrees whole-heartedly: “Totally. A 20-minute guitar solo only whets my appetite; it’s like a wedding night hand job. I wish Trey would have soloed through Monday morning so I could have an excuse for missing my drug test at Piggly Wiggly.”


Whenever a rare, eight-minute epic like “American Pie” plays, I picture the Oldies DJ getting anxious. He’s cooped up in his tiny booth. Fixating on the clock, heart racing at 130 beats per minute, his loafers matching that tempo against the booth’s square white tiles. He’s got a squirt of blood trickling down his chin because he’s been chomping on his lower lip with abandonment for the past six minutes and the damn song is still playing. Then, bursting with a fit of impatience, he stops the record and gripes into the microphone, “OK, was that eleventh verse really necessary? For God’s sake, Buddy Holly’s been dead for forty years. Aren’t you over it yet, you nostalgic sissy? I want to hear myself talk!”


You see, those Oldies DJs have a God complex. They spent their youth idolizing the head-bopping hip cats on The Ed Sullivan Show. Decades later, after their rickety bass has been pawned off to buy a hemorrhoid pillow, after their dreams of stardom have fizzled, they become jaded and bitter. When they’re confined in that ever-shrinking booth, listening to the bubbly tunes of Herman’s Hermits, cursing themselves for wearing a condom and failing to knock up Mama Cass when they had the chance, Oldies DJs may suddenly go power tripping on their former heroes.


With a devilish smirk, the Oldies DJ thinks, “The play button allows me to give life to these pricks, and if I choose to make that life fade into premature silence, then so be it. Herman’s Hermits, who were once so proud and getting laid all the time, are now toiling at the mercy of me: The Oldies DJ. BWAH-HA-HA-HA! I am omnipotent!”


After cutting off “I’m into Something Good” before the one-minute mark, the Oldies DJ makes a snotty announcement. 


“Four measures of that garbage ought to hold you over. That was Herman’s Hermits, and they’ll be appearing at a county fair near you this summer—as long as the stage has a wheelchair ramp. Since we’ve got some time to kill before I play the next record, let me tell you guys about all the tail I chased at my 35-year school reunion in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin this past weekend...”


Many times the Oldies DJ has considered barricading himself inside his booth, quickly nailing boards against the door, maybe even toting a flare gun “just in case.” And as the station manager pounds desperately on the door, the Oldies DJ grabs the microphone and hushes the last half of “Like a Rolling Stone.”


 “It’s my turn to talk, old man. The following people can burn in hell for all I care. I’ll do this alphabetically since it might take awhile...”


Saturday, June 5, 2010

Oldies Deejays Have A.D.D.


^ Herman's Hermits ^
Originally published in the Advance-Titan, "Oldies Deejays" was written before I gained a begrudged fondness for Oldies Stations, which is fortunate, because otherwise this column wouldn't be so pithy and scathing.

Baby boomers often criticize my generation for our short attention spans, but have you ever listened to an oldies station that plays the a-sides from the mid-50s through the tapering of Beatlemania? The nasal-voiced deejays yammer over the opening 15 seconds of every song, shutting up only once the vocals begin. Then some preening tool with a sucked-helium falsetto rhymes “do” with “you” for 90 seconds before said yammering deejay interrupts him mid-chorus.

“Okay, we get the picture. Driving T-Birds and going steady with a swell girl—very nice.” Cue a new song. “Now here's a hit from that same year from Richie Doodleberry and the Nameless Subordinates called 'Driving in My GTO with My Sweetheart.' It's 50 degrees and partly sunny with a 40 percent chance of evening showers, the barometer is right around 30, the dew point has something to do with humidity, clouds are pretty, this booth is awful drafty, I see a penny on the floor and now I've got to zip it because the vocals start in half a second!”

God help you if you hear a surfer rock instrumental on an oldies station, since the Oldies Deejay is likely to drown out the entire song with an exhaustive anecdote about his days working as a roadie for the Mamas and the Papas.

The truth is that Baby Boomers have the shortest attention spans of any demographic group on the radio dial, and the Oldies Deejays adhere to their like-minded brethren. To prove my point, any time you hear the Doors’ “Light My Fire” on an Oldies station, the psychedelic jam is omitted, which shaves four minutes from the version you hear on the album and classic rock stations. The deejays at classic rock stations are only ten years younger than their oldies counterparts, but the difference in taste is substantial. Classic Rock Deejays prefer the full-length versions of tunes such as “Light My Fire” and even “In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida” since they allow more time to gawk at the lines in their left palm that totally shape a Star Trek symbol when they cross their eyes just right. Live long and prosper, Classic Rock Deejay. You know that I would be a liar if I was to say to you: “You couldn’t get much higher.”




***

Curtain closed. You can purchase a copy of the book that features the rest of this essay by following the link offered below.

www.xlibris.com/NickOlig.html

Friday, March 26, 2010

The Music Our Parents Fell in Love to




“It's fascinating and stupid to watch adults destroy things on purpose.” --Chuck Klosterman

The following is a copy of a status update I posted on Facebook a couple months ago:
“(Nick Olig) declared 'Damn, it feels good to be a gangster' as he destroyed his tape deck 'Office Space ' style but now the CD player his friend generously installed in his Honda Accord isn't working and he realizes that God is punishing him for declaring himself a gangster (which he's obviously not) by forcing him to listen to the likes of REO Speedwagon and Styx.”

That's the truth. Only, instead of using a baseball bat to smash an antiquated and faltering piece of machinery like Michael Bolton did, I was swinging a sledgehammer. The CD player that my friend Max had installed functioned exceptionally, without a hitch, for about 10 minutes, until the machine refused to eject the CD, a copy of the Raconteurs' “Consolers of the Lonely.” I enjoy a good 70% of this album, but still, the thought of listening to it on an interminable loop was unbearable. And so later on I pried this disc out of the CD player with the aid of tweezers. The advice that my friend Matt gave me afterwards—as a perturbed vessel of common sense—was this: Electronics and tweezers don't mix. This axiom should be obvious to anyone who isn't a dipshit, and I knew it beforehand, but I had developed such a neurotic grudge against the electronics in question that I had become like a darkly obsessed protagonist from an Edgar Allan Poe story. The unrelenting drum beat from “Consolers of the Lonely” was the heart that pulsated loudly beneath the floorboards of my mind.

Removing the CD was a resolute and precise procedure that mirrored several failed attempts playing the board game Operation. The CD was not easy to extract. The alignment inside the CD player must have been jarred askew by the repeated yanks I exerted on the disc. And so after “Consolers of the Lonely” was tugged free, no more CDs would fit into the narrow slit of the Alpine. The dreadful ordeal was like offering a spoonful of mushed carrots to a fussy infant—or worse, actually: it was like offering that same spoonful to a fussy infant with its jaw wired shut.

And so my efforts to modernize and upgrade technologically backfired. Regression was the ultimate result when I felt like a destructive gangster because I had watched a great satirical comedy over a dozen times in college and therefore felt inspired to bash in my tape deck with a sledgehammer. Indeed, it was a fascinating and stupid gesture. I felt a begrudged and ambivalent fondness for the tape deck (even though it would only function two-thirds of the time) and yet I destroyed it because it caused me a black eye as an owner of dowdy and outdated things. Even so, I think I was justified in the undertone of contempt I felt for my tape deck. If your aim is to avoid the radio at all cost because you're finicky about music (like me), the tape deck ranks two slots below the CD player and the Ipod. I own a CD player, but not an I-pod, and the CD player is not fit for trips in a car. It seemed like an easy decision, to extend that hand one rung higher on the latter of technological advancement.

But the whole thing backfired, as I've told you, and now I've moved one slot below the tape deck to the radio. Not only on a scale of technological advancement, but also on a scale of complacency with music—the latter of which is far more important—the radio is inferior to the tape deck. I am now 275% more likely to crash my car into a jungle gym or a hot dog stand because I'm constantly fussing with the radio dial in a state of perpetual discontent. With only the radio to listen to on journeys across town to the library or Taco Bell, my last words are increasingly likely to be, “Def Leppard AGAIN?! Are you fucking kidding me?”


***

Read the rest, along with 39 other comedic essays, by ordering a copy of "There Will be Blog."

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