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This is a music mix like nothing you’ve even heard (unless you’ve been here before). It’s created by radio professionals who went beyond the “oldies” mentality to provide a blend of the best music from the dawn of rock & roll right though today. You’ll hear greatest hits as well as some gems you might never have heard before from the biggest rock stars of all time.

Give our unique music blend just 60 minutes, we know you’ll be hooked because if you’ve been looking for Rock & Roll Heaven – you’ve found it!

  • This Day in Rock History - Feb. 20th

    1960: Jimi Hendrix performs in public for the first time, playing guitar in a band that was performing in the basement of the Seattle synagogue, Temple De Hirsch.

    He doesn’t even make it through the entire gig, getting fired between sets for “showing off.”

     

     

     

     

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 We're all about the history of rock & roll at BoomtownAmerica.com!

Every week, we present “ROCK REMEMBERED,” a deep dive into the hidden history of rock & roll, the stories behind the artists and songs that changed the world. Join host, “Boomtown Bill” Cross each Wednesday at 7 pm (Eastern) with an encore broadcast on Saturday at noon (Eastern).

Join us this Saturday as we explore "The Rise and Fall of Three Dog Night!"

 

Rock & Roll had only gotten a toe-hold on American television until the debut of Shindig, the first prime-show dedicated solely to rock music and Baby Boomers!

Prior to this, the only time you’d see a rock act in prime time was on The Ed Sullivan Show, but Ed would keep rock quarantined to a single act per show – and always intermingling with opera singers, plate spinners, Borscht Belt comics and singers who appealed to your mom and dad.

Yes, we had American Bandstand, but that aired in the late afternoon along with other “kid shows” like Huckleberry Hound. Shindig was the first time an entire 30-minute block was given over to appealing to the Baby Boom generation on a weekly basis.

Read on to discover more fascinating facts about this ground-breaking TV series!

 

Put together by British entrepreneur, Jack Good and L.A. deejay, Jimmy O’Neill, the show was launched on September 4, 1964. It was an immediate hit. By January, the program expanded to 60 minutes. The show never took a break or aired a rerun. They cranked out 52 editions of the show in that first year!

The style of the show came as close to Top 40 radio as they could get. Songs slammed into each other at a breakneck pace without any announcing in between – the name of each act simply appearing on screen. The end of the show generally featured all the artists from that episode joining together – creating some once-in-a-lifetime pairings (like Sam Cooke and the Everly Brothers as you can see in the picture to the left).

When the second season started in the fall of 1965, they made their first mistake. They broke the show into two editions, running for 30 minutes on Thursday and Saturdays. The big problem was – there were damn few teenagers who were staying home on Saturday nights. That edition of the show had terrible ratings.

Shindig also got almost immediate competition when NBC launched Hullabaloo in January of 1965. 90 minutes of rock music a week proved to be too much of a good thing. Shindig was cancelled in the middle of its second season – ironically replaced with another 2-night-a-week show, Batman! Hullabaloo held out for a few more months but was also cancelled at the end of the 1965-66 television season.

While Shindig featured incredible performances by legendary singers and musicians, the show had only a few “best of” VHS tapes released and, to date, no DVDs – although there are some grainy bootleg sets floating around, if you know where to look.

Here are some more interesting facts about Shindig:

The show simply couldn’t book enough big-name talent each week to fill up each show. Instead, they relied on a stable of “house artists” who contributed to every show by singing covers of other people’s hits. Pulled from the ranks of L.A.’s top session singers and musicians, they included several performers who found fame a little later:

  • The Righteous Brothers
  • Bobby Sherman
  • The Blossoms (whose lead singer was Darlene Love)
  • Leon Russell
  • Glenn Campbell
  • Donna Loren (who went on the be featured in the Beach Party movies)

 

Because rock was so new, while the British Invasion acts were the show's main focus, Shindig featured lots of the Founding Fathers of Rock, even though most were already past their peak in teen appeal. These included:

  • Chuck Berry
  • The Everly Brothers
  • Roy Orbison
  • Del Shannon
  • Neil Sedaka
  • Gene Pitney

There was a pilot episode filmed but never aired that featured Little Richard. Little Richard never appeared on the show was it went to broadcast.

The Shindig Dancers became almost as popular as some of the house singers. Terri Garr and Toni Basil danced in some of the early episodes and one dancer, Carole Shelyne, became extremely popular when she was given a pair of horned rim glasses to wear while performing (she didn't really wear glasses). Her popularity was so great that she recorded a song “The Girl with the Horned Rim Glasses” to capitalize of her noteriety. She went on to a very successful acting career after the show ended, changing her name to Carolyne Barry and including a memorable role on the first Star Trek series.

The show really took off when the Beatles appeared on the 4th episode. Although their manager, Brian Epstein, appeared on Shindig’s competitor, Hullabaloo, the Beatles never did.

We all remember the Stridex pimple cream commercials that Jimmy O’Neill did. What we didn’t know then was that those “typical teenagers” all came from central casting. In fact, a young Tim Matheson (still a few years away from Animal House) was one of the kids who discovered that his pancake make-up would indeed wipe off on the Stridex pad, making it look like it could really do a job on zits!

Because the show ran on ABC, the network used it to try and promote the singing careers of young performers who were appearing on other network shows: like Patty Duke, Paul Petersen and Shelly Fabares.

Especially in its early episodes, the show would often mix in undiluted gospel and country music next to the rock acts.

Turns out the popular confection was invented by two women who worked for the Kellogg’s!

Malitta Jensen and Mildred Day came up with the recipe while working in the Home Economics department of the Battle Creek cereal company in 1939. They originally conceived of the recipe as something they could bake for a fundraiser for their local troop of Campfire Girls. They shared the recipe with their bosses and their bosses shared it with the world, simply hoping to boost sales of the cereal.

That’s the way it went all the way until 1995. By then several manufacturers were already marketing their own pre-made knock-offs of the treats. Not wanting to be left out, Kellogg’s finally began producing their own pre-made Rice Krispies Treats that year.

Here’s a photo of Mildred Day. Alas, we could find no photograph for her co-creator, Malitta Jensen.

BTW – no truth to the rumor that Howdy Doody developed a Treat addiction so bad he sold his left leg for firewood to support his habit.

 

 

There’s nothing you can do to avoid flu season. But there is something you can do to protect yourself from getting the flu. This tip doesn’t involve getting your yearly flu shot (although that’s not a bad idea). But dieticians insist there are certain foods we can eat to help boost our immune system. These include:

Berries – Rich in Vitamin C

Beans – High in zinc

Garlic – A 2020 study revealed that garlic seems to stimulate cells related to immune system function

Nuts and Seeds – High in Vitamin E

Salmon – One of the only foods to contain vitamin D

Sweet Potatoes – A Great source of beta carotene