Thursday, January 1, 2015

A Celebration of the Existence, Memory, and Enduring Influence of Jake Einstein's WHFS 102.3

First post on my First Blog -- and I've got major Blank Screen Syndrome. The interest that brings me here is radio. From my youngest days I enjoyed listening to it. I liked it much better than TV. The screen images are very confining to the imagination. Yet even as radio frees my eyes to look elsewhere, its words and music paint images in the theatre of my mind, much more vivid than any TV screen could render. 

As a freshman at the College of William & Mary, I became involved in its radio station, WCWM, in the fall of 1974. When I arrived, its 77-watt monophonic signal covered the campus and some of the surrounding city of Williamsburg. Three years later it was a 1.6KW stereo beacon of progressive free-form music, reaching into western Newport News. The station, and the experience of building and running it, launched several of my cohort into careers in Tidewater, Virginia broadcasting.

And it profoundly affected my life in ways that, forty years later, I am still just now coming to understand. I signed up my first week on campus. I went through training and earned a "prime time" rating in one semester (many took two or more). I spent two summers in Williamsburg, working for minimum wage in lousy summer jobs and committing many hours of my personal time to the station and its construction efforts. The first summer we built out the studios with new or refurbished equipment to ready it for stereophonic operation. That fall and winter we collaborated to put a construction permit application before the FCC to increase our on-air power. When the permit was issued in the spring, we celebrated and made our plans to carry out the construction that summer.

Along the way I had come to "own" the midnight to 3AM time spot on Friday Nights. There is no better time than that to be on the air in a college town. And the unique energy of a radio station -- unlike that of any other workplace -- crept into my being and is still with me to this day. As we finished out the transmitter and antenna installation, we began taking full advantage of the FCC's test period. From midnight to 6AM a station either licensed or under construction permit can go on the air at full power for equipment testing. The other engineer and I would take turns, together with two other volunteers, to run the station every night, putting things through their paces and. as it turned out, building our audience in the community. Our license came through just in time for us to be fully operational before school started in the fall of 1976. And when the fall Arbitron ratings survey results were published, we did well enough to make other area stations take notice. Two local "Album-Oriented Rock" (AOR) stations, WNOR FM99 and WMYK 93.7 (K-94) edged noticeably in a more progressive direction. They also hired several of our best as they graduated that spring.

And the inspirational force behind the creative energy was WHFS 102.3 FM. Many of us, myself included, would come "home" on breaks and listen to 'HFS -- and then return to practice the craft we heard there on WCWM's air. My life felt complete in a way it has yet to feel again since those days. And, as it turned out, those days were way too short. For my heavy involvement with the station and its engineering development had both sapped my academic performance and also exposed the mismatch between myself and a liberal arts education.  So I left and took my First-Class (General) Radiotelephone license out into the world of small-town radio.

That was a far cry from the college radio experience. It took me about two years to figure out that small-market radio was a dead end. So I moved to Northern Virginia, one of the best places in the world for a young adult to start a career. I looked for work in a number of professions, capitalizing on my engineering talent and problem-seeking mentality. One of the want ads I responded to was with WHFS 102.3. I actually interviewed with Jake Einstein himself. His first question to me: "As an engineer would you say you are more of a text-booker or a shirt-sleever. I answered to being mainly a shirt-sleever, preferring short sleeves that don't need to be rolled up. He liked that answer and offered me the job on the spot. He took me around and introduced me to, among other people, Weasel.

The problem was that it was only part-time, and I needed something full-time, so I passed on it and went into Information Technology instead. I returned to school, earned a Master's Degree in Electrical Engineering, and developed an expertise in Data Warehousing/Business Intelligence system design and construction.

But I also became disconnected from radio. Information Technology is good work, and it pays the bills. But even at its best it has nowhere near the vibrant energy of a radio station. To this day I miss that energy. I sometimes wonder how things could have gone if I had taken that job at WHFS and settled in Bethesda rather than Northern Virginia. Two paths diverged in a wood, and I did not take the road less traveled, and I wonder what a difference it would have made if I had taken if instead.

--jkw

6 comments:

  1. Just think, if you had taken that WHFS part time job, you may have eventually been brought on Full-time...then, like you say...who knows where it may have lead...anyways, a great write up and an awesome start to your new blog! Thanks again for all your hard work!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Greetings: My name is Mike and I run a DC-based reggae, roots and culture blog at midnightraverblog.com. I am interested in finding any reggae-related WHFS stuff from late 1970s-1983. I already have some stuff which I am willing to share. Peter Tosh live performance in-studio 1979, and just last week was given a cassette tape by Dr. Dread of his first reggae show broadcast 'Night of the Living Dread". Some other stuff too, live DC performances by Tosh and more. Please email me at midnightraverblog@gmail.com so we can discuss. THX!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi J! I stumbled on your blog a few days ago and absolutely love it! I'm trying to download some of the Top 99 countdowns, but Zippyfile isn't cooperating. They still stream from the Zippyfile site (which makes me think they're still hosted there), but the Download Now link doesn't direct anywhere. I'm sorry for the public ask, but I'm wondering if your files are housed anywhere else, and what might be the best way to download them?

    Thank You,
    Brendan

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I had difficulty when using IE - I kept getting directed to download an update software from a sketchy site of some sort. Try using Mozilla.

      Delete
  4. Afternoon J, was listening to KEXP.org streaming this morning and a request came in from a Nebraskan who was lamenting the loss of WHFS back in the mid-90s - noting how KEXP's morning show had the same spirit (DJ run, non-corporate) that was the heart of HFS in the 90s.
    That made me think "hey, WHFS - I loved that station!" and so a google search for recordings of WHFS brought me here - yay!
    I'd love to know if you have the archive of the mp3s anywhere they can be accessed - seems Zippyfile is no longer hosting those files.
    All in all it's a nice moment to recall the joy that a Top 11 at 11 show (11 CDs in a leathery sack!) with Aq (sp?) being moderately abusive to the poor grammar of the 9th caller.
    So thanks for crafting this blog, I'm glad you took the time to do so.
    Ciao,
    from the Bull City, Durhamtown

    Scott
    +++
    Scott Wallace
    || scott@mt90.com ||

    ReplyDelete
  5. Greetings J, What's more appropriate than listening to the Top 99.1 of 1991 as go through 30 year old documents? It's a nice reminder of pre-grunge rock.

    ReplyDelete