In 2016, he was awarded a bronze plaque on Philadelphia Music Alliance's Walk of Fame on the Avenue of the Arts. "You guys go home! Why might that be? Since I turned 65, he reports with a tone more of irony than self-pity, its been one thing after another. It was always in the back of my mind, like a latent dream, that maybe one day, Id get into radio.. I leaned on them when I got into radio until I got my own sea legs and could navigate on my own.. Perkins wandered into the station at WGPR-FM and got a position as on-air DJ and Announcer. The South Philadelphia native has been one of the greatest voices of the citys airwaves since 1969, when he joined R&B station WDAS in an influential news and editorial position after working in Detroit radio for five years. Previously, Bob was a Board Member at Jazz Bridge and also held positions at Data Site, Unisys, WDAS Fm. Targa Resources 20 years . You should hear this guy.. A lot of people, at least in my experience as an artist, associate this music with their grandparents' music or their parents' music. Box 18869, Philadelphia, PA 19119 - Phone (215) 848-7864 - Fax (215) 848-7893 I did what I could, he said, because I didnt know a thing about writing editorials. Perkins, a longtime jazz DJ, will continue hosting his weekly "Sunday Jazz Brunch show. Juneteenth 2022: Honoring Radio Personality Bob Perkins and Celebrating the Life & Legacy of W. Cody Anderson Temple University Libraries Join the Charles L. Blockson Afro-American Collection and the Office of Community Affairs and Engagement for a day of celebration and remembrance. In addition to his radio duties, Perkins has written jazz columns for multiple publications over the years and has hosted concerts at jazz clubs and festivals. I wondered to myself, could I get hired for two jobs in one day?, I went upstairs in the building where the radio station was located and I met the general manager, Perkins continued. He went on to work for WDAS and while in Philadelphia, [2] in 1997, he joined WRTI-FM Temple University Radio. This was in the mid-1920s., My father was kind of a genius in handling his radio, Perkins continued. Mr. Perkins owns 88,692 shares of Targa Resources stock worth more than $6,747,687 as of February 16th. Temple Now: How do you choose the music that you play? I did a good music program over there for twenty years. ABOVE PHOTO: The Legendary BP with the GM (Photo courtesy of WRTI-FM). Bob Perkin's, a legendary DJ at the radio station WRTI,. BP brought the GM back for the first time in more than four months his longest absence from the Philadelphia airwaves in 50 years on a Thursday night in December, followed a few days later by his Sunday show at 9 a.m. What he will bring to the microphone in a neat control room on Cecil B. Moore Boulevard just west of Broad Street is something his colleague Bob Craig describes as a style that is very, very warm and very personal and very loose. On the set of his jazz cable TV show at the old Greater Media Cable in South Philly in the early '90s with guest vocalist Paula Johns. BP with Dave Brubeck in 1983 - backstage at the Academy of Music. A stroke survivor from three years ago, Perkins is still kicking and hes still ticking, playing some of the best jazz music you ever want to hear on WRTI-FM. "[4] He is also an accomplished radio news journalist and a First Call Master of Ceremonies for regional jazz music events. BP's last WRTI weeknight shift is on Thursday, June 30th from 6 to 9 PM. In turn, news reporters from WDAS would report via radio, in Detroit, about what was happening of importance in the city of Philadelphia., The management team at WDAS liked my work very much, and one day they asked me the question, Do you want to come home and work in Philadelphia radio? Fifty-seven years after his voice first graced the airwaves, Perkins, best-known for his weeknight jazz show at WRTI, is entering semi-retirement after 25 years at the station. That when I first became aware of who he was, said Larry McKenna, the tenor saxophonist who is one of the deans of Phillys jazz scene. Am I going to capture their imagination today? Here's a great in-depth article about Bob from the Chestnut Hill Local. My mom would let me stay up on the weekends and sometimes we would pick up stations in other states. Experience Board Chair Orennia 2021 - Present 2 years. Perkins spoke about the evolution of radio. The station, run by Temple University, plays classical music during the day and transforms in the evenings into one the countrys premier jazz music broadcasters. I went to a radio school through my father. Im the only one thats doing this thing on regular radio and I enjoy very much what Im doing, and the feedback that I get from people who enjoy it. Dave and Bob share the same birthday! Read More. Philadelphia,PA19122 USA. ", BP going one on one with the audience shows a very strong kinship, said Craig, himself a 40-year veteran of local radio. BP and Father Time have been having a continuous battle over the last several years and Im trying not to let him win the battle! My father must have been listening to radio from the very start. Hes one of the last purveyors of our actual history. Longtime jazz radio host Bob Perkins will retire from full-time hosting on WRTI-FM/Philadelphia in June, the public radio station of Temple University in Philadelphia announced Tuesday. You can touch a button and get any answer to any question that you have. And in 2007, he was honored with a proclamation for his outstanding contributions to Philadelphia's jazz community by Mayor John Street, Philadelphia City Council, and the House of Representatives in Harrisburg. 1101 W. Montgomery Avenue How does it connect with them in a way other things dont? Things change, he said, but there's always someone that's going to keep us on the right track., We're not a fatherless community. Electronics and technology are magnificent. After a longtime gig at WHYY, he joined WRTI in 1997. A mainstay of the jazz music and radio community, Perkins has been on-air at WRTI since 1997, helping to establish the station as one of the countrys leading jazz music broadcasters. They were a great family of jazz artists. He got his first job in radio during a trip to visit his two brothers in Detroit in 1964. Everything is so fast nowadays. Not really fair to the jazz side, IMO, since most people sleep 8 hours of that half, but if you hook yourself up through the website, you can get streaming of whatever . I stayed there for about a year and a half, but I was hungry to do news in radio, so I needed to move on. Saxophonist Larry McKenna has been listening to him for 40 years. It's kind of an honor when you are played on his program., For Lovett Hines, Artistic Director and Founder of the Music Education Program of the Philadelphia Clef Club of Jazz & Performing Arts, BP represents a sense of history. This job and that job until I really found my niche in radio and I just happened to walk into a radio station one day and they happened to need someone. IE 11 is not supported. Scroll down to see recent playlists. I looked around, and I found a station that wanted a newsman. TN: Have you made any changes to your playlist, in light of whats happening? At the same time, I started writing for the Philadelphia New Observer newspaper owned by Hugo Warren. Particularly for older listeners, he gives them the comfort of something familiar, and makes them remember that this music that he's playing was the soundtrack to a lot of their lives. The music Perkins plays can summon Proustian recollections of a first kiss, a dance at the Savoy Ballroom or a joyful reunion after a long absence. Not doing anything heroic. Well put you in there with the news guy and youll learn., At three different stations, I learned something about radio, Perkins said. When WHYY dropped its music programming to concentrate on news and information, Perkins moved uptown. In celebration of Women's History Month, we're shining a spotlight on the female hosts of WRTI. His show will come to an end June 30, but he says this wont be the last his fans hear from him. Managing Editor Teresa A. Emerson - [emailprotected] Later, in the mid-80s, Perkins hosted a WDAS-AM jazz show that mixed in Frank Sinatra and Peggy Lee with jazz artists like Miles Davis and John Coltrane. His older brother had introduced him to the music of Duke Ellington, which sparked a lifelong love of big band and jazz music. PublishedDecember 6, 2013 at 5:49 AM EST. Which is a hard thing to do. TN: Whats the response been to your show recently? Perkins has received dozens of awards and honors recognizing his outstanding career and contributions to Philadelphia jazz, including being honored with a bronze plaque in the Philadelphia Music Walk of Fame on the citys Avenue of the Arts in 2016. Perkins has been ill and off the air for a few months but will make his return in the first week of January. Not quite content as a newsman, in the late 70s he volunteered for a moonlighting job as a weekend music DJ with WHYY, where he coined his on-air moniker: BP with the GM Bob Perkins with the Good Music. A young BP with his brother Joe. Lance Venta is Owner and Publisher of RadioInsight.com. He began his career at WGPR Detroit. He is a jazz program host and DJ for WRTI. Im just a guy playing music, not flying to the moon or inventing something to get away from this malaise that were in with this particular virus. We love your GM("Good Music")and you! In 1969, his hometown of Philadelphia beckoned him back with a gig at rhythm-and-blues station WDAS, where he worked for the next 19 years. Beginning in June, he will end the weekday program and continue with the Sunday broadcast on, Fans mourn death of legendary Philly radio host Sid Mark, Questlove, The Balvenie award first scholarship for PhD in Creativity at University of the Arts, Philadelphia Film Society to host series of family-friendly movie screenings, Eagles name Alex Tanney QB coach, plus other coaching staff updates, The food you eat impacts the health of your eyes, Construction of Penn's Landing park over I-95 finally approved to begin, PennDOT says, Joanna McClinton becomes first woman elected as speaker of Pa. House, Rocco's Italian Sausage, a cult favorite at Home Depot stores in Philly, to expand in Bucks County, Low-calorie sweetener tied to higher risk of heart attack and stroke, study finds. Perkins sat and listened and learned his lessons and developed a calling. We would listen to WAR in Detroit, which is 500 miles away. His show appeals to me in that way. Thats our savior, man.. When Bob Perkins was growing up at 19th and Gerritt Streets in South Philadelphia during the Great Depression, his father, Deforrest, was stricken by arthritis at age 39 and could no longer work at his job as a freight elevator operator. In 1977, Perkins, 88, started up a side gig with a public radio Saturday night jazz show at 90.9 WHYY-FM the station where he coined his BP with the GM moniker. Radio has changed dramatically over the years, [particularly] with all the new technology, he said. Ive got high mileage on my odometer, Perkins wrote. But you try to always put that best music forward. Our beloved BP with the GMBob Perkins with the Good Musicis turning off his mic on weeknights starting on June 30th after a long and storied career. A Philadelphia man has become an institution by keeping the sounds of Philly and American Jazz alive for decades. And you had to visualize this man who could make himself invisible. TN: When you had your stroke, did the way people reacted to you being off the air take you by surprise? He has been with the station since 1997. Ive been in radio for quite some time. I remember saying, I dont know how to write editorials. LeBaron Taylor said [to me], You take the job and if you mess up, well get somebody else. I did that for 13 years pretty good. That was 25 years ago.. Ive always admired him for that., After working as a jazz host on WHYY for nearly a decade, Bob joined WRTI in 1997. Classical 6am-6pm, and Jazz 6pm-6am. Beginning in June, he will end the weekday program and continue with the Sunday broadcast on90.1 FM. Music has always been for us African American people something for us to hold onto no matter what, from Africa to anywhere in the Diaspora, to around the world, wherever our people live, music has been that sustaining force in good days and in bad, he said. Thursday marks the end of an era at 90.1 WRTI-FM, with longtime jazz DJ Bob Perkins signing off from his final weeknight shift after 25 years at the station. We had great announcers back then. - regular airs Philadelphia Youth. I look forward to the opportunity to pick up the mic at WRTI on Sundays to continue to serve all the listeners with finely-tuned ears who have said that Ive helped keep jazz music alive in Philadelphia, and beyond.. Change has come to radio, music, listeners, and listening habits. New Temple Press book celebrates Philadelphias Italian legacy, Hundreds of Temple community members gather to celebrate the life of Sergeant Christopher Fitzgerald with his family, Temples Lenfest Center increases job opportunities for the North Philadelphia community, Globally connected campus: A presidential visit to Temple Rome, Whats the best way for an athlete to build their brand? Also known as "BP with the GM," (translation: "Bob Perkins with the Good Music"), Mr. Perkins has been in the broadcasting industry for more than five decades as an on-air host, and is now commonly referred to as a Philadelphia jazz radio legend. Joe Blocks parents were fans of WRTI and the pianist grew up listening to BP, becoming a fan himself. BP talks about Charlie Parker back in 2020 with WRTI's Susan Lewis: His presence is felt throughout the city. Eventually, Perkins moved to Detroit at the suggestion of his older brothers who already lived there, having moved from Philly after World War II, he said. Temple Now:The official source for Temple news.Copyright 2015, Temple University. If I was lucky enough to get a radio gig in the boonies without any experience, Id be lucky, I was told. Meaning "Bob Perkins with the good music. Classical music and jazz public media. It seems like our attention spans are so divided in this new age of technology. In addition to his job as jazz host, BP writes numerous columns and commentaries on jazz for local publications in Philadelphia. Bob Perkins at home at WRTI-FM studios. Music. I was a war baby. People call me and tell me, I didnt like jazz till you played it, Perkins told The Inquirer in 2016. Music, said BP about the GM. People say, You ought to give it up, man, go retire somewhere. Why? Jazz radio host and South Philadelphia native Bob Perkins, a mainstay on Temple University's public WRTI-FM station, plans to significantly scale back his hours this summer. He credits his love for radio to his father who repaired radios as a hobby when he was young. We have a father right now and that's Bob Perkins.. King agrees. WRTI's legendary jazz host, Bob Perkins, is surrounded by his cd collection of jazz recordings in his home in Wyncote in 2019. Radio was saturated into me like a sponge thats put in water, Perkins said. I was out for almost four months. We would listen to radio from sun-up, through the night, and into the next morning.. His fathers illness is what really led to radio becoming an important part of the Perkins household. He is a part of that time when jazz was juke joints and Friday night fish fries.