|
DUNCAN JOHNSON |
|
![]() |
Duncan Johnson was born in Toronto, Canada, on August 17, 1938. After a number of brief but varied jobs Duncan, in 1960, joined a small radio station in Swift Currents, Saskatchewan. He explains: “I was hitch-hiking around Canada at the time. In fact I had a go at most things - the most strenuous was that of a logger out in the bush on Vancouver Island. I wanted to work behind a microphone and I met this guy who was an oil magnate and operated a radio station in Lethbridge, Alberta. I asked him for a job and he refused, but he did inform me that in Swift Currents there was a radio station which would employ anybody … and they gave me a job!” There he learned the basics of broadcasting, but only stayed with them for six months, before getting the job he originally wanted on CJOC in Lethbridge. He stayed with them for 18 months. He sent a tape of one of his shows to a former colleague who had moved to a station in Bermuda, which resulted in Duncan being offered a job there and eighteen months in the sun! |
| In August
1963 he and two other jocks crossed the Atlantic to Britain, having heard
that commercial radio was big in London. However, when they arrived –
there was no work – infact there was no commercial radio! He compèred
some gigs, including an early Rolling Stones tour, and did voice-over work
until he saw a newspaper article about the impending arrival of a new
radio station. That was of course, Radio London. Duncan tracked it down
and by February 1965 had became Big L’s eighth DJ. He mainly covered for
whichever presenter was on shore-leave but, when the broadcasting hours
were extended to 2 am, he presented a late night, middle-of-the-road/easy
listening/big band show London After
Midnight. Duncan left Radio London in the summer of 1966 to join UKGM,
which was set to become Britain’s Better Music Station offering a
middle-of-the-road sound and was to be beamed from one of the war time
defence forts in the Thames estuary. However, tragic circumstances
prevented UKGM from going on air – and Duncan was out of work. “I then
went in for modeling and recorded a few radio and TV commercials. I did
some work for the old BBC Light Programme. Together with a friend, I set
up a photographic studio (which carried on into the 70s & included
working with David Bowie & Jethro Tull). In 1967, when
Radio One launched, Duncan was included on the list of original presenters
and hosted the ‘Midday Spin’ (Noon to 1 p.m.) show. However, that show,
was initially only used to try
out potential presenters and it had a different host every day of the
week. Duncan presented the Tuesday edition. After about the fourth week,
it was announced that he would be taken off the show because he didn't
have the bright upbeat image that Radio One was looking for. He was the
first DJ to be weeded-out in this way, and the story made the news. Duncan
had however already “told a lady in the contracts department I could not
afford to work for £28 a programme and she replied, "'celebrity
broadcasters' are expected to get the majority of their income from other
than BBC sources". In 1968 he married an English girl, Lynne Grout in the ‘rag
trade’, so was well-off for clothes (they divorced in 1988 & between
1977 & 1984 they ran a clothing business in Epsom). In 1968 he also made a record,
“The Big Architect”, which was not a hit but did have the distinction
of being voted one of the “World's Worst Records” by listeners to
Kenny Everett’s Capital Radio programme. In 1970 another opportunity to
return to radio came up with the launch of Radio Northsea International..
As Duncan explains: “Rodney Collins who worked for the Record Mirror at
the time, who I had met during my days of Radio London said to me one day
"you should go out and work on Radio Northsea. I can fix you up with
it, I've been in contact with the bloke". I said, "I'm not too
sure about that" and he said "well come out there with me
because I'm going out". We meet Roger Day at Gatwick and we flew over
to Holland. We arrived in Scheveningen, stayed overnight in a hotel
because it was too stormy to get out to this boat. Then the Swiss man in
charge of it said "well you're not staying in the hotel another night
because I'm not paying for you to stay there so you're getting on the
boat". So we had a twelve hour journey across the North Sea. Rodney
Collins turned absolutely green and said "I can't take any more"
and he let go and I grabbed hold of him by the “scruff of the neck”
and held him on the boat because he would have slipped off otherwise.
After that when it calmed down a bit I fell asleep, rolled up somewhere in
a corner. We had twelve hours of that and I thought "this must be
absolute madness. Duncan however, stayed with RNI for six weeks and
describes his time with the station as “an adventure, but difficult for
a 6’ 3” fella to fit into a 6’ 0” bunk.” Following editorial
work for ‘Record Mirror’ and some sports work on BBC Radio London, in
August 1971, he joined EMI. Officially he was label manager for RAK and
Purple records, but he was also supposed to look out for new talent and
although claims he wasn’t very good at it, quotes one success – the
Simon Park Orchestra and the Van der Valk TV theme ‘Eye Level’. He
says: "No-one wanted the record. It was my secretary Barbara who
finally convinced me it would sell. She said her mother fell in love
with the music. She was proved right. It sold a million copies. Sadly, I
was not on commission". In
September 1973, Duncan joined Radio Luxembourg as Production Manager and subsequently
moved to Capital in Easter 1976, staying there for 8 years before in
October 1984 joined Invicta Radio. He quit Invicta in 1988 and moved to
Kent and but is now financial controller for an
advertising agency. |
|
|
As a supplement to Duncan Johnson’s ‘bio’, I’m including the schedule for Radio One for Tuesday November 21, 1967, which I found on the ‘net’. Duncan is on at 1 pm. It makes fascinating reading, especially the ‘Jimmy Young Show’, where the presenter ‘sings songs’ (horror – imagine that today?). Also, Radio One didn’t start until 7 a.m. and from 7.45 p.m. to 10.00 p.m. the station linked up with Radio 2. A far cry from ‘The Essential Selection’ of drum and bass they play now! All
this was because, as Paul ‘The big, bald bopper’ Graham regularly
reminds us, Radio One could only play a certain amount of ‘record
time’ each day – and the remainder had to be filled with interviews,
features, DJs singing or even having hits of the day played by various BBC
orchestras! (still perhaps that’s preferable to drum & bass – am I
showing/feeling my age?) However,
it is a reminder of how far radio has progressed and what a debt we owe
those pioneers! |
|
|
BBC RADIO 1; TUESDAY 21 NOVEMBER 1967 |
|
|
5.33 am 7.00 am 8.32 am 9.55 am 10.00 am |
Breakfast
Special with Ray Moore (as Radio 2)
Tony Blackburn with a Daily Disc Delivery David Hamilton with Family Choice Crack the Clue The Jimmy Young Show .A good morning mixture in which he plays discs, greets guests, sings songs, phones people. |
|
12.00 noon 1.00 pm 1.55 pm 2.00 pm 4.31 pm 5.25 pm 5.33 pm 7.30 pm 7.45 pm 10.00 pm 12.00 Midnight 12.05am Night Ride with Jon Curle 2.00am-2.02 News summary |
Duncan
Johnson with Midday Spin
Keith Fordyce invites you to 'Pop Inn' Crack the Clue Pete Brady Ed Stewart with What's New Crack the Clue The David Symonds Show Radio's Number One Pop Party News Time as Radio 2 Late Night Extra with Bob Holness Midnight Newsroom |