Back in the
50’s, Tom Perryman, who was working for the Louisiana Hayride would get KWKH
announcer Jim Reeves his first gigs as a professional singer. Later, Perryman became Reeves manager and
they would own a radio station in Texas.
Tom also worked with Bob Neal, a promoter who was a DJ like himself out
of Memphis that booked Elvis. I met them
both for the first time backstage, as they were talking to a guy called,
Colonel Tom Parker, and you sure know the rest of that story. Perryman, who is 87 years old, is also in the
DJ Hall of Fame, still works on the radio AND manages Jim Reeves
Enterprises! He’s just received the
“Texas Pioneer Broadcaster of 2013 award.
Congrats…good
friend. Nice to talk to you, see you
soon. Another
great DJ Hall of Famer, Terry Buford just got back in touch with me. How ironic Terry and I work together at the
‘Radio Ranch,’ KFDI in Wichita, Kansas in the 90’s. He played a part in the history of famous
singer I never knew about until recently.
On my trips
to KWKH in Shreveport, Louisiana in the fifties, a small rhythm and blues radio
station caught my ear. KCIJ or K-JOE
radio as it was called. There I met a
young DJ who blew me away. He called
himself, ‘Daddy-O-Hot Rod,’ whose real name was Tommy Sands.
Only a couple of years older than me Tommy
was another kind of radio DJ hero, a white guy doing a mish-mash of
Rock-A-Billy, Country and R and B on the radio.
Tommy Sands |
Back then sitting in the control room listening to ’Daddy-O’ do his
bopping-n-popping’ gig on the microphone was so different than the KWKH
DJ’s. Many times after his shift, we’d
hang-out at a small Chinese restaurant and talk about the future. Neither Tommy nor I knew it at the time, but
he was about ready to hitch a rocket ride to stardom.
He’d played
the Louisiana Hayride; though I’d never heard or saw him sing there. Still, at one performance his singing
abilities and good looks would catch the eye of Colonel Tom Parker. He would sign him and in short time Tommy’s
appearance as an ‘Elvis-type’ singer on the Kraft Television Theater’s
production of “The Singin’ Idol” would bring him national fame. On that TV show he would introduce a song
called, “Teen-age Crush.” Capitol
records would later record it and it would climb to the top of the charts. Tommy Sands would be one of the first real
teen idols that many others like, Fabian, Paul Anka, Dion and others would
follow.
Later, in
1962 I’d reconnect with Tommy when I was working LA radio. He’d become a Hollywood actor and been in a
couple of movies. He even offered me a
chance to get a bit part in a movie he was working on called, “The Longest
Day.” (Boy, did I miss the boat on that one!) At the time, Tommy was married to Frank
Sinatra’s little girl, Nancy. I recall
we all went to the Whiskey-A-Go-Go one night together, and
Nancy Sinatra |
Tommy was invited to
sing on stage with Johnny Rivers. Today, Tommy
lives in Hawaii where he owned his own night club and a clothing store.
By the way,
I haven’t forgotten DJ Terry Burford. It
was he that would replace Tommy Sands on KCIJ radio! Amazing Terry never told me that story! You know, it is truly ‘remarkable’ that
Terry, Tom Perryman and I continue to be DJ’s on the air TODAY!
Oddly
enough, K-JOE radio was owned at the time by promoter I mentioned in an earlier
blog, Bob Neal. He was the first country DJ from in Memphis and it came back like
thunder when I realized it was Bob I met at KCIJ radio in the days of Tommy
Sands! He even looked like the ‘Big
Bopper.’ (All these years I thought Neal
was ‘The Big Bopper’!) His connection to
Elvis came while he was a DJ at KMPS. It
was Sam Philips, owner of Sun Records who first recorded Elvis that asked Bob
to book Elvis on some tours. That led to
the Louisiana Hayride. Later, Bob became
Elvis’ first manager. Bob Neal was
inducted into the Country DJ and Radio Hall of Fame in 1984, years before
me. Later, he would move to Nashville
and have one of the largest talent booking agencies in Country Music.
Wolfman Jack
even worked at KCIJ and WSM radio at one time, but…I’ll spin his story on the
turntable trail at a later point.
- Dave Donahue