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Re: Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco
- 07/07/12 Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco - posted by Paul Judge - Samland1<at>mcn.org
- 07/08/12 Re: Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco - posted by Tim Dineen
- 07/08/12 Re: Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco - posted by jb
- 07/08/12 Re: Portrait: My Enchanted City - posted by P.S. Perris
- 07/08/12 Re: Portrait: My Enchanted City - posted by jb
- 07/08/12 Re: Portrait: My Enchanted City - posted by P.S. Perris
- 07/08/12 Re: Portrait: My Enchanted City - posted by jb
- 07/10/12 Re: Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco - posted by KevB
- 07/12/12 Re: Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco - posted by W.M.
- 07/18/12 Re: Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco - posted by jb
- 07/18/12 Re: Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco - posted by Paul Judge
- 07/19/12 Re: Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco - posted by myron tessler
Re: Audio & musical state of mind from 1950’s San Francisco
07/18/12
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posted by jb
Formidable challenge W.M. but you did make me recall my first transistor radio purchased in ~1959 after returning home from a summer in Boyes Springs where they were all the rage. Mine was blue and white with an antenna and single ear phone and cost ~$14 at U.S.E. It was by birthday present and passport to waves of music and worlds of conversation all channeled through the palm of my hand. It seems these were what put Made in Japan in the mindset of America and stirred controversy at the time, just half generation past WW-II. Between rock-N-roll, space-age tech and Japanese imports, surely the world, or what little I knew of it then, was shaking at its very foundations. Yes, those radios were revolutionary in so many ways, now that I think back and what came out of them still shapes our world today.
Given the personal choices and privacy current portable listening devices provide, I wonder if radio stations still serve to bond kids together and deliver any message of importance to today's youth as it did in the 50's through 70's? Personally, all I listen to now is KPIG and KGO.
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