I was born in Muskogee, Oklahoma. That's what they
tell me, I really don't remember. I grew up in
a small town about 20 miles away from Muskogee,
called Haskell small town-2,000 people on a good
day. My life was changed forever on Christmas
Day 1955, when I got a small trap drum set, and
my first record player.
"Sixteen Tons" was the hit of the day,
and I played that purple-labeled 45 until the
grooves turned white. Went through three copies
of "Rock Around The Clock" (still my
favorite song-but I'm always looking for another!)
and did I drive my parents crazy with Little Richard!
Used to sit and watch the dot over the i on those
Specialty records go 'round and 'round as I played
them on my turntable-did that for hours-no wonder
I'm just a little different.
I loved music from the get go-all kinds. Mom
was a member of the Columbia Record Club, so she'd
order Broadway show tunes albums, my sister Nancy
likes easy listening stuff, and was I ever surprised
when my Dad came home one day with a couple of
45's and a Bing Crosby 10"LP for me. And
there was my cousin Billie Bess who had all the
45's of the day - Gene Vincent's "Race With
The Devil" among them, and the Nessers who
lived a block away filled in what my cousin didn't
have. I hadn't even hit double digits, and I had
more music than I could absorb. But I did. Every
single note of it.
My first "collection" was a stack of
78's from Old Man Essex's trading post in town.
I loaded up an old radio in my radio flyer, marched
downtown, and swapped the radio for the stack
of 78's he had. Tons of stuff - Ray Noble, Tommy
Dorsey, Vaughn Monroe, Caruso, Harry Lauder, Gene
Krupa - I was all over the road musically. And
I wasn't even 10 yet!
I got a guitar when I was 12, which coincided
with the folk craze, so it was Kingston Trio,
Peter, Paul & Mary, and The New Christy Minstrels.
Then the Beach Boys, Beatles, and everything that
was played on Top 40 radio: KAKC from Tulsa during
the day, and WLS/Chicago at night, with all the
local Chicago hits. Sometimes I'd search out Wolfman
Jack from XERB or Lou Kirby from WNOE in New Orleans,
or some unknown DJ on WOKJ in Jackson, Mississippi.
I loved it all! Even loved it when mom brought
home Van Cliburn performing Tchaikovsky's First
Piano Concerto. My grandmother Goddard had Tennessee
Ernie Ford's "Spirituals" album, so
that was a big influence too.
When I was 16 years old I got tired of sacking
groceries, so I got a job at the radio station
in Muskogee hey, you could do that in those days!
And free records! Not the stuff you heard on the
radio, but all the stuff you NEVER heard on the
radio - stiffs that never got any airplay - except
on my own turntable.
After graduating form high school, I attended
Oklahoma State University where I worked on both
campus stations, and at WKY in Oklahoma City -
all three stations at the same time! Talk about
having to keep your call letters straight. I worked
at a record store (my only working experience
at a record store) one year, and Chuck (don't
remember his last name - but God bless him) turned
me onto a lot of music, the best of which was
Eric Anderson and his album "Blue River".
Graduating from Oklahoma State University (10
years before Garth - though I'm sure I played
in my college band at a lot of places HE would
play in a decade later!)
I got a job in Dallas, where I met another huge
influence - Bud Buschardt. I remember meeting
him at WFAA and he asked me if I wanted to see
what 5,000 records looked like - sure, I said.
It was there I discovered a record collector.
They were all in specially built shelves, in green
sleeves - all arranged chronologically - and Bud
had a $50 yellow paperback book by some guy named
Joel Whitburn. I was hooked. No more hodge podge,
I got my organized! And in 1976, I though it might
be fun to collect every chart record for the bi-centennial.
But did I stop there? Nope, I kept going, through
the early 90s, and went back to pick up all the
chart records that dated back to the first Hot
100 chart in 1955.
And during the course of my radio career, I've
had the opportunity to collect a lot of memorabilia
and interview a lot of people. Lots of rare tapes,
too but what to do with all this stuff?! Over
90,000 records, not to mention CD's, and miles
and miles and miles of taped interviews and studio
outtakes. Seems a shame just to organize it, categorize
it, put it on a shelf, and forget about it. Thanks
to Goddard's Gold and The 70s With Steve Goddard, I can share my lifetime of
collecting with you. You don't need to search
it out, clean it up, organize it, categorize it,
and build shelves for it, you just need to listen.
That's a pretty good deal!
(Editor's Note - Steve fails to mention that
in addition to his enormous record collection
and intense passion for music, what makes Goddard's Gold and The 70s With Steve Goddard so special is that he is one of the BEST
on-air personalities in the business!)