- Gene Nobles
Gene Nobles (August 3, 1913,
Hot Springs, Arkansas – September 21, 1989,Nashville, Tennessee ) was an American radiodisc jockey who attained fame on Nashville radio stationWLAC from the 1940s through the 1970s by playingrhythm and blues music.Nobles was a former carnival barker, bingo dealer, and announcer on several small
Southern radio stations. He became the firstEuro-American disc jockey on radio to play popularAfrican-American music regularly. He started this practice before earlyrock-and-roll jockeys such asAlan Freed and before his fellow WLAC announcers "John R. " Richbourg,Bill "Hoss" Allen , andHerman Grizzard . The four WLAC announcers produced evening and late-night shows featuring R&B,soul music , andgospel music . They attracted an audience of African-Americans and Euro-American teenagers well into the early 1970s.Nobles is credited with introducing artists such as
Chuck Berry ,Fats Domino , andLittle Richard , to a wider audience. Before Nobles' breakthrough programming, R&B artists were heard usually by African-Americans only, who attended their performances at nightclubs on the so-called "Chitlin Circuit " and purchased their records in black-owned stores. Some conservative whites (especially segregationists) opposed the broadcast of such music, but many others purchased the R&B records and danced to them.According to a book by Wes Smith, "The Pied Pipers of Rock 'n' Roll: Radio Deejays of the 50s and 60s" (Longstreet Press, 1989), Nobles had a reputation for gambling at horse tracks and drinking while on air. Neither of these vices appeared to cause him trouble with station management. In the early 1960s, Nobles drew complaints by listeners and FCC officials over a suggestive reference made while he read a commercial for White Rose Petroleum Jelly. Nobles regularly used
double entendres between the records he played to accentuate his ironic, sarcastic sense of humor.Nobles battled
arthritis most of his adult life. When he had to take time off, Bill "Hoss" Allen often filled in for him. By the mid-1960s, Nobles, like the other disc jockeys, began to tape his programs to air in the evening time slots. He continued to do this until his retirement, which varying sources have placed between 1972 and 1974.Nobles had a long association with
Randy Wood , founder ofDot Records , and Randy's Record Shop in nearbyGallatin, Tennessee . Wood later relocated toLos Angeles . Wood sponsored Nobles' program for many years.Famous Phrases
Nobles developed
slang phrases which he used frequently. Some of the more famous included:"Jerks/fillies" --boys/girls.
"From the heart of my bottom"--a suggestive inversion of the traditional testimony to sincerity.
"That's G-A-double L-A-T-I-N, folks"--spelling the name of the town where Randy's Record Shop was located in TennesseeExternal links
* [http://www.yodaslair.com/dumboozle/wlac/wlacdex.html WLAC Radio: The Unofficial Webpage] - station history
* [http://www.cruisinthe60s.com/wlac.htm airchecks]
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