TUNEDEX MEMORIES is ON THE AIR at SongsYouShouldHaveHeard.com

Archive for January, 2008

WE’RE BROADCASTING

Posted by Chuck Benjamin on January 28, 2008

We’re ON THE AIR If you’d like to listen, simply go to songsyoushouldhaveheard.com. Click on the jukebox at the top of the page and you’ll be taken to LoudCity our streaming host provider. Once there, click on “Tune In” and a player will appear in the upper right corner of the screen, along with choices for you to use your own player if you wish. Within 10 seconds or so, you should be listening to the “Honor Roll of Hits”…

If our website is down (it DOES happen occasionally) you can still listen by going directly to LoudCity at: http://community.loudcity.com/stations/tunedex-memories

If LoudCity is down, there is NOTHING we can do. They receive our broadcast and stream it to you. We chose them for their reliability, so hopefully outages will be both rare and short.

The station software “crashes” now and then, mostly from .mp3 file corruption. When this happens and I’m not around to monitor the server, NOTHING will happen until I find the problem and re-start the program.

Please be aware of how complex the process is to deliver music to you and be patient. If I leave my home for any reason, I may not be aware that the station is even down. Once I am made aware of the outage, I still need to get access to a computer. If physical intervention is required to get the server back up, nothing will happen until I return.

I’ll be adding songs to the play list weekly, and you’ll soon be experiencing a bit more nostalgia. All our efforts are aimed at “taking you back” to a time in your life when you didn’t have a care in the world.

Tell us what you think – send all comments to chuck@songsyoushouldhaveheard.com.

Chuck Benjamin


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Tom Dawes (1943-2007)

Posted by Chuck Benjamin on January 18, 2008

Tom Dawes met Don Danneman at Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania. They soon formed a band with Marty Fried and Earle Pickens called the Rhondells. A local attorney, Nat Weiss heard them and got Columbia records to check them out. Before they knewTom Dawes Co-Founder of The Cyrcle what was happening, they were signed to a contract by Beatles manager Brian Epstein. Not surprisingly, the newly named group (purportedly by John Lennon) opened for the Beatles on their ‘66 tour.

They had immediate success with “Red Rubber Ball” written by Paul Simon and Bruce Woodley of the Seekers. They hit the charts six times, but by the early 70’s the magic was gone. Tom turned to writing jingles and delivered one that made him a icon in the world of commercials. He wrote the “Plop-Plop Fizz-Fizz” ditty for Alka Seltzer. He met his wife Ginny Redington Dawes at a commercial writing competition. They would go on to collaborate on many writing projects.

Tom suffered a stroke from after carotid artery surgery and passed away on October 13, 2007. In additon to his wife Ginny, Tom is survived by his sister, Robin Ducey. We’ve always been big fans of the Cyrkle so you’ll find all their charted songs in our play list “the Honor Roll of Hits”.  Check us out here:  TUNEDEX MEMORIES

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Radio then and now…

Posted by Chuck Benjamin on January 5, 2008

I accept the fact the the world around me has changed. I also accept the fact that I cannot go back to the world I remember from my school days. I refuse however to forget where I came from. I will always embrace the innocence I experienced as a young man. All of the guys, Frank, Steve and Kenny enjoy as I do, the thrill of finding those great songs that we never heard. Songs with voices, lyrics and arrangements that were every bit as good as the radio hits we ran to the record shop to buy. When I created my first show, “The Innocent Age”, I dubbed these “songs you should have heard”.

The enormity of the creativity and talent from that time is simply overwhelming. I grew up in Cleveland, Ohio and had the benefit of MANY wonderful radio stations with expansive play lists. Our station is named Tunedex Memories, in honor of my favorite station, WHK. I recently added a video to the blog of “Please Don’t Talk To The Lifeguard” by Laurel Lee from Australia. I actually prefer this version to the one that charted Nationally by Diane Ray. But of course, everyone in Cleveland remembers that song hitting number ONE on the WHK Fabulous Fifty Tunedex by local TV personality Andrea Carroll. Since her version did NOT hit the Hot 100 or even “bubble under” many of you reading this have probably never heard her version. But back then in Cleveland, thanks to WHK, it was a HUGE hit. That was the power local radio once had.

Steve Petryszyn hosted Record Conventions in Cleveland for over twenty years, and I was privileged to play music for him for 13 of those years. When I would play songs like “Flying Blue Angels” by George, Johnny & the Pilots, people at the front of the stage would be singing along. This song Bubbled Under the Hot 100 in 1961, which once again means many of you aren’t even familiar with this song. But locally, it was a WHK “Pick Hit Of The Week” which meant local listeners went to local record stores looking for this relatively obscure Coed 45. That was part of the fun local radio created.

While a great chunk of America was caught up in the phenomenon that was American Bandstand, I was not. I was usually playing baseball or basketball at the school yard with the radio playing in the background. The TV show “American Dreams” implied that most kids in America ran home from school to turn on the TV, but not me. I got my music from my radio.

Our station presentation is meant to convey the many feelings we experienced growing up with our radios. While I still catch many Indians games on the radio, I haven’t been able to listen seriously for over thirty years. Between the blow-hard talk shows and payola-esqe play lists, radio simply ignores the music I identify with. Many of these songs were based on relationships, so some take you back to wonderful times, and others may be tinged with a bit of regret. Some remind you of friends that we have already lost, and others will prompt you to call friends you have lost touch with. This music was our part of the evolution of Rock and Roll and I still love it. While Rock and Roll has continued to evolve since then, and the music of today might not be our first choice, think about this. When our kids talk about music today, we probably sound just like our parents did when we begging them to buy us those precious 45’s and albums. That uncontrollable urge to buy them came from hearing them on the radio.

My kids are NOT strangers to music. They each have developed their own taste and whether it’s .mp3’s loaded on an Ipod, or CD’s they defend their music with the same energy that I defend mine. But NONE of them listen to the radio. There are new Hot 100 entries this year from the Chipmunk Movie. My children grew up with the Chipmunks in the 80’s and now my grandsons are listening to “The Chipmunk Song” just like I did, back in 1958. But the fascination of hearing it on the radio, and the excitement of seeing that 45 in the record shop is something my kids and grandkids will never experience. That innocence died with us.

I’ve done a lot of moving throughout my life. Four years in the Air Force, apartments, houses, condos… and one of the items that has stayed with me since High School is my transistor radio. It’s truly sad that I haven’t had any reason to turn it on for over half of my life. There’s been a large void in my life and I’m guessing in yours as well. All of us who share music with you through Tunedex Memories are happy to take you back to a time in your life when you didn’t have a care in the world.

Lose stress, three minutes at a time – simply click here: Tunedex Memories

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