The
Soft Rock Hits thread reminded me of this thread.
My family lived on the northern tip of Hawai'i Island ("The Big Island") and the mountains prevented us from being able to tune in to the radio stations that broadcast from Hilo and/or Kona. Strangely enough, we were able to tune in to the radio stations and tv stations broadcasting from Honolulu. There were a bunch of them, with all kinds of programming, including a couple of radio stations that broadcast exclusively in Japanese.
My parents both had to leave early in the morning for work so my siblings and I had to get ourselves ready for school. I remember sitting in the kitchen eating breakfast, with the morning sun shining in through the window over the sink, and listening to KPOI, KORL and later KKUA (the "new station"). We had an aqua-colored AM radio that sat on the counter; it had circular dials and was hard to tune and the sound would get crackly every once in a while.
We mostly listened to "rock & roll," but that term encompassed so many different types of music in those days. All the bands of the British Invasion and their North American counterparts; Motown, R&B, pop. Then, later in the 60s and 70s, bands like Blood, Sweat & Tears; Chicago; Tower of Power; War; Earth, Wind & Fire. Also, Dionne Warwick when she sang all those Bacharach/David songs; Aretha Franklin; Gladys Knight & the Pips. Sometimes, if a song got popular enough, it got played on the "rock" stations. "Strangers in the Night" by Frank Sinatra comes to mind; also "Somethin' Stupid", the song he did with his daughter Nancy. Plus "MacArthur Park" by Richard Harris; "Love is Blue" by Paul Mauriat.
Wow, great memories! I remember being completely transfixed whenever "
One Fine Morning" by
Lighthouse was played on the radio:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvVN_KRriTM . As others have said, a much simpler time. The future seemed to hold so much promise, then, and it seemed that there were no limits to what could be possible.