Gold Star Oldies USA,  Pop and Country News (On This Day)

Now you can hear the Dave Edwards Show on Gold Star Oldies USA " That Seventies Sound" Tuesday Morning May 12th  9:00 AM  and every Tuesday. Repeat Tuesday Evening 8:00 PM

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May 16 2026

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The history of  Sam Phillips before Memphis Recording Services

What Sam Phillips Did Before Memphis Recording Service

⭐ Early Radio Career (1940s)

Before he ever cut a record or opened a studio, Sam Phillips worked in radio broadcasting and engineering, which shaped his entire approach to sound and recording.

Key points from his pre‑studio years:

  • He originally hoped to study law, but financial hardship during the Great Depression forced him into the workforce early.

  • He entered radio in Alabama, taking his first disc‑jockey job in Muscle Shoals.

  • By 1945, he had moved to Memphis and was working at WREC, one of the city’s major stations.

  • At WREC, he gained experience as both an announcer and radio engineer, developing the technical skills and ear for sound that later defined Sun Records.

This period is crucial: Phillips learned microphone technique, signal flow, acoustics, and how to

work with live performers—skills he later used to capture the raw, emotional sound of early blues and rock ’n’ roll.

🎙️ Transition Toward Recording

While still at WREC, Phillips began to see the limitations of mainstream radio, which rarely showcased the Black blues and R&B artists he admired. This frustration pushed him toward creating a space where anyone with talent could be recorded.

By 1950, he left WREC and opened the Memphis Recording Service at 706 Union Avenue—initially recording artists for labels like Modern and Chess before founding Sun Records in 1952.

Before purchasing (and founding) the Memphis Recording Service, Sam Phillips was:

  • A radio announcer

  • A radio engineer

  • A DJ in Muscle Shoals

  • A staff member at WREC Memphis

  • A young man deeply influenced by Southern blues and gospel

Those radio years were the foundation for everything he later built—Sun Records, Elvis, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, and the birth of rock ’n’ roll.

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1966 - Beach Boys

The Beach Boys released the classic album Pet Sounds widely ranked as one of the most influential records ever released and has been ranked at No.1 in several music magazines lists of greatest albums of all time, including New Musical Express, The Times and Mojo Magazine. In 2003, it was ranked No.2 in Rolling Stone 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list, (The Beatles Sgt. Pepper's came first).

May 16, 1966 — Capitol Records releases the Beach Boys' landmark album Pet Sounds, produced with great ingenuity by 23-year-old Brian Wilson. Standout tracks include "Wouldn't It Be Nice" and "God Only Knows." Rolling Stone says the album took more 10 than months to produce at a then unheard of cost of $70,000, making it one of the most expensive albums ever recorded at that time. However, Capitol executives are horrified because it is a departure from the group's surfing sound. They soon try to bury it and recoup their sizable investment with a Best of the Beach Boys album, which quickly goes gold while Pet Sounds sales are meager.


May 17, 1952
 — 19-year-old Lloyd Price's first single, "Lawdy Miss Clawdy,” debuts on Billboard's R&B chart, staying for 26 weeks, seven of them at #1. Rock historians consider the smash record as one that hooked white youth and anticipated rock 'n' roll.


              1965 — The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation ends its two-year investigation into the Kingsmen's 1963 hit record "Louie Louie," determining that the largely indecipherable lyrics were not clear enough to make a determination whether or not they were obscene.
 
May 20, 1954 — "Rock Around The Clock" by Bill Haley and His Comets is released for the first time, but as the "B" side to "Thirteen Women." It stalls on the charts, but becomes a huge hit a year later when it is used in the movie Blackboard Jungle and is widely considered to be the one record, more than any other, that boosted rock 'n' roll into the pop mainstream.


                 1960 — Legendary New York rock 'n' roll disc jockey Alan Freed is indicted for taking payola, namely $30,650 from six record companies to spin their discs on the air. In 1962, he pleads guilty to two counts of commercial bribery, receives a suspended sentence and $300 fine, and loses his job at powerhouse WABC Radio. He leaves New York for radio jobs in Florida and California, but works only sporadically, and in 1965 dies in Palms Springs at age 43 of complications of alcoholism. Freed's ashes are interred under a jukebox-shaped headstone (right) in Cleveland, Ohio — the city where he first found fame in the early 1950s spinning increasingly popular rhythm and blues records.




Sources:
Eight Days a Week (Ron Smith)
On This Day in Black Music History (Jay Warner)

Chronology of American Popular Music, 1900-2000 (Frank Hoffman)

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