NOVEMBER 29th
New DMCA Rules for Internet Radio Stations. JukeBox of Hits has reached our monthly TLH Total Listening Hours, we had a overload of new listeners on Thanksgiving Eve and Thanksgiving Day. The station will go back on the air Dec. 1 2025, 8:00 AM and off 10:00 PM New DMCA rules so we won't go over our TLH for the month
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WE ARE NOW ON THE LARGES ONLINE MUSIC AND NEWS PLATFORM (TUNE-IN ON LINE) Copy and Paste and search Jukebox of Hits
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On This Day Beatle News
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1967 - The Beatles
The Beatles recorded their last fan club record as a group; 'Christmas Time Is Here Again!' The Beatles' Christmas records were spoken and musical messages from the group that were posted out on flexi disc at Christmas time to members of their official fan-clubs in the United Kingdom and the United States.
Segment Features
Segment Features
Music News For The Week
November 28, 1960 — Elvis Presley's revival of "Are You Lonesome Tonight?" — written by vaudevillians Roy Turk and Lou Handman in 1926 and an Al Jolson hit the following year — reaches #1 in the U.S. for the first of six weeks. It had topped the U.K. Singles Chart earlier in the month. Presley's manager, Col. Tom Parker, who normally didn't become involved in music selection, had suggested the tune because it was a favorite of his wife.
November 29, 1979 — Rockabilly singer Ray Smith, whose fortunes soared with his smash hit "Rockin' Little Angel" in 1959, commits suicide by gun at age 45. According to his Rockabilly Hall of Fame profile, "there were to be no more hits and he was quickly forgotten. He still kept his datebook full of gigs, though, and got many good spots in Las Vegas and Canada. This work was steady enough to keep him afloat for the remainder of his life, but he brought that to a premature end in 1979."
2001 — Former Beatle George Harrison ("My Sweet Lord," 1970) dies of cancer at age 58 at Paul McCartney's Los Angeles home. His final hours are spent with his wife, son, and Indian sitarist Ravi Shankar at his side.November 30, 1956 — The Jive Bombers record their immortal version of "Bad Boy" (#36 pop, #7 R&B), based on the 1936 composition “Brown Gal” by Louis Armstrong’s second wife, Lilian. It is an update of their 1952 version and becomes their first hit, ending a 30-year drought for lead vocalist Clarence Palmer, who had been performing since the 1920s.December 1, 1957 — Buddy Holly and the Crickets, Sam Cooke, and the Rays all perform for the first time on U.S national television when they appear on the popular Ed Sullivan Show over CBS-TV.
1958 — Rickey Nelson (right) becomes the first rock 'n' roller to appear on the cover of Life magazine, the first major publication to use the phrase "teen idol" to describe its cover subject. His single earlier that summer, "Poor Little Fool," was the first #1 hit on newly-minted Billboard Hot 100 chart.
December 2, 1961 — The Beach Boys' debut single, "Surfin'," gets its first airplay on KFWB Radio in Los Angeles. Issued by the small independent label Candix, it peaks at only 75 on Billboard's Hot 100 chart in early 1962, but after Capitol Records signs them, they reach #14 that summer with "Surfin' Safari."
1961 — The Beatles meet future manager Brian Epstein for the first time at his Liverpool record store. They reconvene again that evening to discuss Epstein's management of the group.
1968 — Elvis Presley's comeback TV special airs on NBC, returning him to live performance and revitalizing his career after a seven year hiatus to concentrate on movie acting.
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
Legacy and Lore
Spinning Those Records
Vault Vinyl and Stories behind the songs
Reet Pettie Jackie Wilson
Reet Petite
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Release: August 1957, Jackie Wilson’s first solo hit after leaving The Dominoes.
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Songwriters: Berry Gordy, Billy Davis (aka Tyran Carlo), and Gwen Gordy Fuqua.
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Impact: The royalties from “Reet Petite” gave Gordy the financial foundation to launch Motown Records.
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Legacy: Though initially a modest success, it became a surprise UK Christmas #1 in 1986, nearly 30 years after its release, thanks to a claymation-style music video used in a beer commercial.
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Style: A lively R&B track subtitled “The Sweetest Girl in Town”, showcasing Wilson’s dynamic vocals and stage charisma.
Connection Between Them
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“Reet Petite” was Berry Gordy’s breakthrough as a songwriter, and its success directly financed the birth of Motown.
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Jackie Wilson’s performance of the song gave Gordy credibility in the music industry, proving he could write hits.
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Without “Reet Petite,” Gordy might never have had the resources to build Motown, meaning the careers of countless legendary artists could have unfolded very differently.
In short: Reet Petite was the spark, and Berry Gordy turned that spark into the Motown empire. Together, they represent the starting point of one of the most influential chapters in American music history.
Would you like me to trace how Gordy’s songwriting style in Reet Petite evolved into the polished “Motown Sound” of the 1960s? That connection is fascinating
Visual Archive
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