The early
days of radio had a profound influence on musicians and listeners
in the Northwest Piedmont. Three particularly influential early
radio stations in the region were WPAQ out of Mount Airy in Surry
County and WSJS and WAAA out of Winston-Salem.
WPAQ
WPAQ broadcast its first show on 740 AM from its studios
in Mount Airy on February 2, 1948. Its signal reached listeners
in surrounding North Carolina counties, such as Yadkin and Stokes,
as well as nearby Virginia counties, such as Carroll and Grayson.
In 1954, at 10,000 watts, WPAQ became the most powerful AM station
in the Northwest Piedmont.26 From the station's first day on the
air, WPAQ's founder and owner Ralph Epperson was committed to having
his station reflect the musical and cultural values of the residents
of the station's listening area.27
During the '40s and '50s, as today, WPAQ featured a variety of
music styles indigenous to the region, including old-time stringband,
bluegrass, and traditional gospel music. Gospel music was commonly
heard on air, with live performances by local and touring groups,
including African American ensembles such as the Silvertone Harmonizers.28
Live performances by local stringband musicians were particularly
popular on the station, as the area was filled with talented old-time
stringband musicians and fiddlers' contests and square dances were
still plentiful in the region.29
Live broadcasts were common on WPAQ during this era when most radio
stations were turning more and more programming over to recorded
music. According to music historian, National Public Radio newscaster,
and former WPAQ news director Paul Brown, "In the station's
early days, as much as half of WPAQ's daily music programming was
live, featuring local and professional talent in Studio A and Studio
B."30
WPAQ's weekly live radio show, the Merry-Go-Round, began in 1948
and featured local and touring talent. The show, still going strong
today, is part of the living history of American radio. According
to folklorist Fred C. Fussell,

"Over the years a host of regional and national music legends,
including Tommy Jarrell, Benton Flippen, The Carter Family, Mac
Wiseman, Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs, and Bill and Charlie Monroe,
have gathered before the microphones for the Saturday morning broadcast.
The program's popularity and proven devotion to regional music has
resulted in WPAQ's Merry-Go-Round's becoming the third-longest-running
live radio show in the nation.31

The Round Peak community of northwest Surry County was home to
some of the local musicians who occasionally performed live on WPAQ
during the early years.32 Some Round Peak musicians who
performed during the '40s and '50s included members of the old-time
stringband, the Camp Creek Boys: Fred Cockerham, Ernest East, Paul
Sutphin, and Verlen Clifton.33 In the late 60s, the intense,
hard-driving, Round Peak-style of old-time stringband music would
attract national and international attention to Surry County, and
the Camp Creek Boys would become legendary among old-time stringband
fans.
Probably the name that would become the most associated with old-time
stringband music worldwide would be that of another Round Peak musician,
fiddler Tommy Jarrell. Paul Brown explains why Jarrell and other
Round Peak musicians were not heard regularly on WPAQ in the early
days:

"...stories told by musicians and others indicate that
the Round Peak sound may have been considered, even in 1948, a bit
old fashioned...for air on a frequent basis. It was only during
the 1980s, when Tommy and Benny Jarrell, Earnest East, Benton Flippen,
Kyle Creed and Fred Cockerham had produced recordings with full
band accompaniment, that the music of Round Peak was commonly heard
on WPAQ's weekday programs."34

This was after Jarrell and others were discovered during the national
folk revival of the 1960s and '70s. During this period, folk music
enthusiasts traveled to the Blue Ridge region from all over the
country and the world in order to meet the local musicians and find
the source of the popular folksongs of the day, as well as to learn
how to play old-time stringband music from the masters.35
WPAQ's commitment from 1948 forward to keeping the area's
indigenous musical culture and performers at the center of its programming
has made a lasting impact on the station's listening area.
WPAQ has played a significant role in keeping traditional Blue Ridge
mountain music alive in and around Surry County and has helped inspire
young local musicians to learn to play the music of their parents
and grandparents. It is not surprising that the enduring popularity
and perpetuation of traditional old-time stringband, bluegrass,
and gospel music in the region is often attributed in no small part
to WPAQ's ongoing fifty-year presence on the airwaves.
WSJS and WAAA
Almost two decades before WPAQ hit the airwaves, the first radio
station in the Northwest Piedmont, WSJS out of Winston-Salem, began
in 1930. At 600AM on the dial, WSJS is still on-air today, though
in a different format from its early days.
Considering the region's religious nature, it is not surprising
that WSJS's first day on the air offered religious programming.
WSJS began broadcasting on Good Friday of 1930:

"A religious program was the first to be broadcast. The Right
Reverend Edward Ronthaler, bishop of the Moravian Church, offered
the prayer of dedication and the choir of St. Paul's Episcopal Church
provided appropriate music."36

Beginning in the '20s, southern old-time stringband or "hillbilly"
music as it was called was very popular, and barn dance programs
sprung up across the country. WSJS was certainly no exception. As
did many early radio stations around the south, WSJS featured touring,
as well as readily available and inexpensive local entertainment.
According to Worth Bacon, an early news broadcaster for WSJS:

"Hillbilly bands were favorites in the early days of WSJS.
They came by the dozen to the news room and waited
their turn on the air. Frequently they went to an adjoining
room... and tuned their guitars, banjos or vocal chords,
sending forth echoes which were almost deafening to
editors and reporters who worked nearby."37

The broadcast schedules of the station's first few months
confirm the popularity of string bands. Musicians came from all
over the Northwest Piedmont to play on the radio—groups such
as the Mocksville String Band, the Walkertown Merrymakers, the Stokes
Mountaineers, the Thomasville Jack Rabbits, the Cooleemee String
Band, the Stanleyville String Band, and the Lexington String Band.
WSJS succeeded in this format and attracted a large number of both
European and African American listeners. Early country music programming
on WSJS was a normal part of many African American families'
routines, growing up to the sounds of Grandpa Jones, Red Foley and
Roy Acuff.
In the earliest days of radio broadcasting, the airwaves of the
Northwest Piedmont were not open to local African American artists
and their newly emerging sounds. E. E. Tanner's gospel program
on WAIR began in 1937, seven years after WSJS began broadcasting.
It was not until the 1940s that the African American gospel ensemble,
the Camp Meeting Choir, could be heard on WSJS.38 According to veteran
Winston-Salem radio announcer Al Martin, the "Godfather of
Gospel",

"Back when I started, there was no chance
for blacks to get on the radio except Amos and Andy,
and they weren't even really black...
Because of that, I got my start in radio late.
I was thirty-nine when I started in radio."39

Al Martin's first Winston-Salem radio opportunity
appeared at WAAA, the first station in North Carolina to be formatted
to the interests of the African American community. The station
began broadcasting on October 29, 1950 in its studios on the corner
of Liberty Street and Third Street "in the heart of a booming
black district downtown."40
Popular announcers on WAAA during the station's early years included
Larry Williams, Fred "Steady Freddie" Allen, Robert "Bobcat" Roundtree,
and Oscar "Daddy-Oh" Alexander, whose legendary "Daddy-Oh on the
Patio" show aired from Ray's Roadside Drive-In.41 For
half a century, WAAA has reflected the musical tastes and community
values of many African Americans in and around Winston-Salem, serving
as a source of entertainment, information, and inspiration. |