Roger Scott
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Roger Scott (October 23, 1943 - October 31, 1989) was a respected British radio disc jockey. He was best known for presenting an afternoon radio show on London's Capital Radio from 1973 until 1988.
Born in London in 1943, Roger Scott developed an early love of the rock and roll music being created at the end of the 1950s and early 1960s. As a teenager, he began playing records out the window of his suburban London home and watching the reaction of passers-by to the music.
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[edit] Early career
After a brief time as a merchant seaman, Scott found his way to the United States and joined the radio station WPTR in Albany, New York in 1966. Scott's job, based on his British accent, was to be 'friend of the Beatles', and Scott learned the craft of disc jockey, working with Boom Boom Brannigan and other legendary names at the station. Eight months later he left WPTR to become the evening presenter at the Montreal station 1470 CFOX. From 1967 to 1971 he became legendary at the station for his on-air antics and for his passionate love of music. Notable during this time was his participation in Give Peace a Chance, recorded by John Lennon with Yoko Ono during their "Bed-in" for peace at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal.
Anticipating the introduction of commercial radio in the United Kingdom, Scott returned there in 1971, only to find the introduction was not as advanced as he had anticipated. In the interim, he worked at the biscuit factory radio station UBN, an internal radio station broadcasting music to United Biscuits employees. Around this time, he briefly appeared on BBC Radio 1 as a temporary disc jockey for which, anticipating a future in commercial radio, he used the pseudonym 'Bob Baker'.
[edit] Capital Radio
Commercial radio was finally authorized at the end of 1972, and in 1973 he joined the original on-air line-up of London's Capital Radio. Scott's afternoon drive-time shows became immensely popular with Londoners, generating such landmark features as the 'Three O'Clock Thrill' and the daily 'Hitline', together with the jingle 'Grab a little piece of heaven'. In 1976 his regular Friday rush-hour oldies show "Cruising" acquired a cult following, largely owing to his introduction of obscure rock-a-billy records to his London audience for the first time.
Scott disdained the standardised playlists, market and audience research and other techniques introduced by the commercial stations in the 1980s.
[edit] Radio 1
In June 1988, after fifteen years with Capital, he moved to commercial-free BBC Radio 1. There, he reached a national audience for the first time, presenting a Saturday afternoon show and a late night Sunday show. The Saturday show featured interviews with many artists, and during this time Scott interviewed Dion DiMucci, Jackson Browne, Don Henley and many others. The Sunday shows were more eclectic, featuring 1950's rock'n'roll, soul, classic rock and more contemporary music.
Roger Scott died in 1989, at the age of 46, after a brief battle with cancer.