John Gilliland
John Gilliland | |
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![]() "John Gilliland at KSFO, c. 1971" Courtesy of The John Gilliland Collection.
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Birth name | John Sanford Gilliland, Jr. |
Born | Quanah, Texas |
October 18, 1935
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Quanah, Texas |
Show | The Pop Chronicles |
Station(s) | KRLA 1110 |
Show | The Credibility Gap |
Station(s) | KSFO |
Website | John Gilliland's Pop Chronicles |
John Sanford Gilliland, Jr. (October 18, 1935 – July 27, 1998) was an American radio broadcaster and documentarian best known for the Pop Chronicles music documentaries and as one of the original members of The Credibility Gap. He was born and died in his hometown of Quanah, Texas. He worked for a number of radio stations in Texas and California including KOGO in San Diego (1961–1965), KRLA 1110 in Los Angeles (1965–1970), and KSFO (AM) in San Francisco (1971–1978).
Contents
Career
Texas radio
His radio career began in 1952 with KOLJ in his native Quanah, Texas.[1] While attending Texas Christian University, he worked as a disc jockey at KCUL in Fort Worth. His shows were The House of Wax and The Man on the Beat. From 1959-1961 he worked for KLIF in Dallas.[2] He also worked at KILT in Houston.[3]
California radio
At the news department of KOGO in San Diego, Gilliland used the pseudonyms of John Land and Johnny Land.[2]
In 1965, Gilliland came to the news department of KRLA radio in Los Angeles County,[4] where he became one of the original members of The Credibility Gap which mixed topical humor along with their news broadcasts. Fellow founding member Richard Beebe said of him that
Even though John was an integral part of the "Gap," working on the Pop Chronicles was always number one for him. It seemed like he was always working on it. John was a very talented guy and a lot of fun.[5]
Gilliland researched this radio documentary, The Pop Chronicles, for over two years prior to its broadcast.[4] It covered popular music of the 1950s and 1960s, was originally broadcast on KRLA 1110, later broadcast on many other stations,[6][7] and now can be heard online.[8]
Starting in 1971, at KSFO in San Francisco, he hosted weeknights 7pm-midnight.[9] His shows included rebroadcasts of his Pop Chronicles, an old-time radio hour, Mystery Theater, The Comedy Hour, and The Great LPs. While working there he also produced and broadcast, beginning in 1972,[6] The Pop Chronicles 40’s, about the popular music of the 1940s.[10] He was succeeded in his on-air time slot at KSFO by Jerry Gordon.[11]
Retirement
Gilland left KSFO in 1978 and returned to his native Texas.[2] He edited and in 1994 published Pop Chronicles: the 40's as a four-cassette audiobook,[12][13] which was rereleased later as The Big Band Chronicles.[14][15] During his retirement he did some work for KREB in Houston and KXIC in Quanah. He died in 1998. In 2003, Gilliland's sister donated the Pop Chronicles tapes to the University of North Texas Music Library where they form The John Gilliland Collection.[3]
Discography
- 1968: An Album of Political Pornography, with Lew Irwin and The Credibility Gap (Blue Thumb)[16]
- 1994: Pop Chronicles the 40's: The Lively Story of Pop Music in the 40's (Mind's Eye) ISBN 978-1-55935-147-8. OCLC 31611854.[12]
References
Online sources
- The Pop Chronicles (audio) from the University of North Texas Music Library
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- Los Angeles Radio People, G
- Obituary from laradio.com
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- The Man on the Beat: John Gilliland and The Pop Chronicles, 2008 Association for Recorded Sound Collections conference presentation by Andrew Justice and Jonathan Thorn (audio).
Print sources
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (The pages in this book are not numbered, but Gilliland's essay is located between the E and F entries.)
- Vernon, Sondra Stewart. "Music plays on for longtime broadcaster: Semiretired disc jockey boasts collection that documents the history of popular records." The Dallas Morning News. July 14, 1988[1]
Notes
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- Pages with reference errors
- 1935 births
- 1998 deaths
- 20th-century American musicians
- American DJs
- American radio personalities
- People from Quanah, Texas
- Radio personalities from Los Angeles, California
- Radio personalities from San Diego, California
- Radio personalities from San Francisco, California
- Radio personalities from Texas
- Texas Christian University alumni