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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
FM: A Book For Progressive Rock Music and Radio Lovers, October 2, 2001
Richard Neers book FM: The Rise and Fall of Rock Radio is a book I would recommend to anyone who has an interest in New York City's WNEW-FM and Progressive Rock Radio in general. Its a big picture story, not a discussion of minutia. If youre looking for a compendium of who worked when at WNEW-FM then this isnt the place to find it. Instead, Neers purpose is to paint a picture of what he believes built WNEW-FM, what sustained it and what ultimately destroyed it. It is a book about the forest, not a book about the trees in it.It basically has three parts. In the first, Neer talks about getting his first job in commercial radio at WLIR on Long Island, how he became lifelong friends with Michael Harrison (now of Talkers Magazine) and how he fell in love with WNEW-FM just by listening to it. He describes the stations genesis from the remains of WOR-FMs foray into Progressive Radio and how people like Scott Muni, Bill Rosko Mercer, and Allison Steele were visionaries in creating this new format. He acknowledges listening to Top 40 radio as a young child but claims the seed for its destruction was clear by 1965. He admires people like Dan Ingram and Cousin Brucie but theyre not his heroes. People like Scott Muni are. Neer very accurately describes the musical artistry of Progressive Radio as well as the circumstances that allowed that artistry to prosper. Stations like WNEW-FM came to be in an era of political unrest (the Vietnam War) where young people were looking for an alternative to anything establishment and the decidedly leftward politics of most everyone doing Progressive Radio further endeared it to its audience. That combined with FMs infancy and the need for corporate broadcasting to find alternative formats for a slice of radio spectrum it had little use for, allowed the inmates to take over the asylum (so to speak). Neer argues that was a good thing because it allowed an art form to grow under circumstances where its founders had the freedom to make something special without worrying about real world issues of running a business to make a profit. At the same time, Neer doesnt have rose-colored glasses on. For example, the book is very blunt in its description of how drugs played a big part in the lives of many (not all) of those doing Progressive Radio. He does not celebrate that. Instead he notes the influence of it and also points out how destructive it could be to many of those in the business. The second part of the book describes what life at WNEW-FM was like in the seventies when the station reached its peak influence. Neer writes about the concerts, the promotions, the personalities and the perks of that era. He enthusiastically describes the experience of working with virtually no format demands and how great it was to be able to play pretty much whatever you wanted to as a disk jockey. He discusses the stewardship of Scott Muni with humor but also with admiration. Neer speaks of his time as WNEW-FMs program director and the difficult time he had trying to steer the station toward economic reality as FM grew. He acknowledges that no longer could the station function without some kind of format. But he claims that even his most minimal efforts to focus the station were met with resistance. He writes of the difficulty he had in trying to rein in friends who now suspected him of betraying them to upper management and how that foreshadowed what would follow as outsiders came in to manage the station. The last part of the book describes WNEW-FMs eventual downfall. Neer goes through a long list of program directors and general managers who came and went and their influence (or lack of it) as the station struggled to find its way in the new and more competive world of FM radio in the 80's and 90's. The strength of this book is Richard Neers true passion for what he loved about Progressive Rock Radio. At the end of the book you truly feel sad that its gone. The weakness is perspective. For all that was good about this kind of radio, the reality is that it existed in a vacuum of economic reality. Neer alludes to that but I dont think he truly puts it into context. For all its success as artistry, it was a failure in appealing to a mass audience. Those who loved it really did have a home -- but there were too few of them. There are a couple of minor factual errors concerning WNEW-FM's chief competitor, WPLJ, but the negatives are minor if youre reading the book to get a feel for how it felt to get a job and then work at WNEW-FM. Whether youre a fan of this kind of radio or not, you come away with an understanding of what made it great to those who loved and worked in it. You also get a feel for what brought it down and how the station might have succeeded into the future had it been more willing to reinvent itself. This is not a book for those looking for radio trivia. Its a book for those looking for some insight and understanding of the big picture of what made WNEW-FM work -- and then what made it fail.
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