Radio station WLS was a leading music tastemaker during the 1960s and 1970s. During night-time hours, its AM signal could be received clearly from Canada to northern Mexico. In addition to a brief history of the station, this volume compiles the weekly Top 40 chart listing distributed free at record retailer outlets and via mail . Like the other radio charts titles, my goal was to provide a convenient chronological compilation of weekly surveys with corrections of the considerable errors found in both the original sources and in translation to online sites. These radio charts - which exist in the public domain - can be found in a multitude of sources, including original published sheets distributed via retail outlets, mail inquiries, etc., notation of on-air broadcasts, back issues of area newspapers and music trade periodicals, specialized reference books, and websites interested in historical documentation, most notably, Oldiesloon, musicradio77, and ARSA. I employed multiple sources in the compilation of each radio chart volume in order to provide the most accurate data possible.
Pages
294
Format
Paperback
Release
March 28, 2015
ISBN 13
9781511498616
WLS Weekly Charts: The Seventies - Volume I: 1970-1974
Radio station WLS was a leading music tastemaker during the 1960s and 1970s. During night-time hours, its AM signal could be received clearly from Canada to northern Mexico. In addition to a brief history of the station, this volume compiles the weekly Top 40 chart listing distributed free at record retailer outlets and via mail . Like the other radio charts titles, my goal was to provide a convenient chronological compilation of weekly surveys with corrections of the considerable errors found in both the original sources and in translation to online sites. These radio charts - which exist in the public domain - can be found in a multitude of sources, including original published sheets distributed via retail outlets, mail inquiries, etc., notation of on-air broadcasts, back issues of area newspapers and music trade periodicals, specialized reference books, and websites interested in historical documentation, most notably, Oldiesloon, musicradio77, and ARSA. I employed multiple sources in the compilation of each radio chart volume in order to provide the most accurate data possible.