Gold Star Oldies Radio Studios in OKC

February 17 2026

 Presidential-All -era Birthday Day Celebration

Black History Month  

A Brief History of Black Heritage Month

Black Heritage Month traces its origins to the early 20th century, when historian Dr. Carter G. Woodson recognized that the achievements of Black Americans were largely ignored in mainstream history. In 1915, Woodson founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (later ASALH) to promote the study of Black history and culture.

In 1926, Woodson and ASALH launched Negro History Week, choosing the second week of February to align with the birthdays of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln, two figures deeply connected to Black freedom and civil rights.

Check Out the Station Directors they have been Updated

 DOT Records

DOT RECORDS — THE TRUE ORIGINS (1950–1953)

Dot Records didn’t start as a national pop label. It began as a tiny Gallatin, Tennessee operation founded by:

🎙️ Randy Wood

  • A radio engineer and record-store owner

  • Ran the “Record Shop” in Gallatin

  • Took listener requests from WLAC’s 50,000‑watt nighttime R&B broadcasts

  • Noticed that many of the songs listeners wanted were not available on records

So he did what any great early‑50s entrepreneur did: He started a label to fill the gaps.

 

THE EARLY DOT SOUND (1950–1953)

Dot’s first years were not Pat Boone, Gale Storm, or the big pop hits. The early catalog is a mix of:

1. Southern gospel

  • The LeFevres

  • The Statesmen Quartet

  • The Oak Ridge Quartet (pre–Oak Ridge Boys)

2. Hillbilly & country boogie

  • Billy Vaughn (before he became Dot’s arranger)

  • Jimmie & Johnny

  • The Willis Brothers

3. Regional R&B and teen novelties

This is the part you’ll appreciate most — Dot issued local Tennessee and Kentucky R&B that bigger labels ignored.

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Legends Remembered & Celebrated — Sunrise Concerts and Tributes

Birthdays Singers and Song Writers 

1933 - Bobby Lewis

American rock and roll and rhythm and blues singer Bobby Lewis, known for his 1961 US No.1 single 'Tossin' and Turnin'. Lewis died on 28 April 2020, aged 95, after contracting pneumonia.

1941 - Gene Pitney

Gene Pitney, singer, who had the 1962 US No.4 single 'Only Love Can Break A Heart'. Also scored the 1967 solo UK No.5 & 1989 UK No.1 single with Marc Almond 'Something's Gotten Hold Of My Heart', plus over 15 other US & UK Top 40 hits. Pitney was found dead aged 65 in his bed in a Cardiff hotel on 5th April 2006. The American singer was on a UK tour and had shown no signs of illness.

Early Beatles News

 

1967 - The Beatles

The Beatles started recording a new John Lennon song 'Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite' at Abbey Road studios, London. John's lyrics for the song came almost entirely from an antique poster advertising a circus performance scheduled to take place in Rochdale, Lancashire, in February 1843. John had purchased the poster in Sevenoaks on January 31 while The Beatles were on location for the filming of the 'Strawberry Fields Forever' promotional film.

 

 

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Music News For The Week 

 


February 14, 1847 — A saxophone school is created in Paris, France at the military band school Gymnase Musical one year after the instrument's Belgian inventor, Adolfe Sax, patents the instrument. For decades, the sax is limited mostly to military bands and classical orchestras, mainly in Europe, until American vaudeville, ragtime, and jazz expand the demand for it in the early 20th century.

February 15, 1961 — Jackie Wilson is shot in his New York apartment by either a zealous female fan or a jilted girlfriend (reports differ). He survives, but loses a kidney.
                            1969 — Hairstylist Vickie Jones is arrested for impersonating Aretha Franklin at a club in Fort Myers, Florida. Asked to sing in the courtroom, the Virginia native sounds so much like the Queen of Soul that the judge spares her because the audience couldn't tell the difference.

February 16, 1963 — The Beatles top the British rock charts for the first time with "Please, Please Me," their second record.

February 17, 1955 — Little Richard sends an audition tape to Specialty Records in Los Angeles "wrapped in a piece of paper looking as though someone had eaten off it," according to a label producer. Later in the year, the Macon, Georgia native would blaze a rock 'n' roll path on the label singing "Tutti Frutti."


February 18, 1940 — Rudy Wiedoeft, the dynamic early 20th century saxophonist most responsible for popularizing the instrument in pop and jazz, dies at age 47 in Queens, New York. Before him, as noted above, the sax had been played primarily in military bands, but he is one of the first musicians to blow it for popular entertainment.







February 19, 1878
 — Inventor Thomas Edison patents the phonograph.







 

                             1952 — Seventeen-year-old Gene Vincent of Norfolk, Virginia enters the U.S. Navy under his real name, Vincent Eugene Craddock.

                             1956 — The Five Satins record the doo wop classic "In The Still Of The Nite" in the basement of Saint Bernadette Church in New Haven, Connecticut.
                             1958 — Carl Perkins leaves the small Sun Records in Memphis to join the major New York label Columbia as its first rockabilly artist. He has no hits there. In fact,  he has had none since his second Sun release, "Blue Suede Shoes" in 1955, became the first record to appear simultaneously on the pop, R&B, and country music charts (reaching #1 or #2 on all three), but he is a major influence on the Beatles and other rockers and is inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.
                            1958 — The Miracles' first single, "Got A Job," is issued by End Records on Smokey Robinson's 18th birthday. It's an answer to the Silhouettes' #1 hit, "Get A Job," but it does not chart.
                             1981 — ABKCO Music, owner of the publishing rights to the 1963 Chiffons hit "He's So Fine," is awarded $587,000 from George Harrison, who had been found guilty five years earlier of subconsciously plagiarizing the song in his 1969 composition "My Sweet Lord," which he said he had written in praise of the Hindu god Krishna.


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)
calendar.songfacts.com
onthisday.com/music

 

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