Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

KPBS Midday Edition

At 93, This California DJ Is Still Connecting Loved Ones On the Air

Art Laboe on the air at KPMO in 1945.
Courtesy Art Laboe
Art Laboe on the air at KPMO in 1945.
At 93, This California DJ Is Still Connecting Loved Ones On the Air
GUEST: Sasha Khokha, host, California Report Magazine Art Laboe, DJ, The Art Laboe Connection on KDAY Subscribe to the Midday Edition podcast on iTunes, Google Play or your favorite podcatcher.

In honor in honor of Valentine's Day tomorrow we bring you the story of California deejay art LeBeau. Art is 93 stands just over 5 feet tall and sends kisses through his microphone. He claims to have invented the on air dedication where lovers send songs to each other over the airwaves. Reporter Sasha Kolko visits art in his Palm Springs studio which he calls the love zone. Oh yeah you've got a big one. Here's a big one. He's been on the air since 1943 and he was one of the first deejays to play rock and roll on the West Coast. He trademarked the term oldies but goodies. Here we go Earth Angel. Going out to Libya from Mr. Rubin I love you so much handsome kisses and you're my earth angel. I'm. Smooth Operator we're in the love zone. Welcome to the love zone the love zone is a tiny studio in Palm Springs where I'm watching him broadcast sound meters flicker and phone lines light up as callers vie to get in the queue to make a dedication at ninety three art still pumps out an oldies show six days a week non-stop from 7:00 p.m. to midnight after three quarters of a century on the air he's still as smooth as ever. Let me tell you something. There's a lot of smooth operators in this part of our program. A lot of love in the air that's for sure. Hertz spent his career here in California broadcasting from San Francisco in the 1940s and from Los Angeles for many decades after Santa Monica boss radio for Southern California. I'll be back right after the big story with the art live O K. Day parade of stars. But these days tens of thousands of listeners stream his show online or tune in on more than a dozen radio stations across California. He gets thousands of letters from listeners in principle. Many of those calling in are the partners and lovers of people who are incarcerated. You got the Ares Lobo connection. That's me. Who is this. Brogdon what I just saw my Rosie calls in every single night with a message to her husband's scrappy. He's serving a life sentence without parole in Kern Valley State Prison in Delano for the next year and a half. He's in solitary confinement and can't talk to her on the phone. Say something during stop you got your mail and love you so nice gym friendly. Everything that only highlights for you. How many chimneys ring from the spot. Love you. When I was beautiful and scrappy sends in dedications too. Sometimes he dedicates the same song back to his wife. Well here's one that's let's add this one in there really great song called Fire and Desire by Rick James and Teena Marie to my wife Rosie Morales from your husband's scrappy says thank you for always loving me you're my everything. I love you. And here are some kisses and here's fire and desire. Yeah firing desire and that one of our special fun because my husband sang that to me all the time I desire his love and he's a fire to my life. I always say when you love something you don't give up on that love. And. What I love about our label is just that he's able to communicate to our loved ones when we're not able to physically or on the phone. He's there for us when we can't be there for them. He brings that spark into a relationship. He's an amazing deejay. Like I I would listen to him until my last breath. There every night. Man and wife doing it to each other. You know dedications. It's just kind of like. You know conjugal but not conjugal. They get the smooch from your lips. Yeah I guess I don't know. I kiss a lot of their. Some nice girls that way they call in and. Want to know what time I got out there and stuff like that. No I don't listen to such a bad business because I was a little scrawny wasn't the bigger man. The women go for it in closed school. Did you ever meet your sweethearts through this dedication lots of them. But but I'm not married at present but wives are still friendly. That's good. I think that's a big thing. I'm single. I pay no alimony. Before art Lobo fell in love with his wives or with love songs. He fell in love with radio and I was hooked on radio since I was 8. 8 years old. And there were no television or anything. And my sister sent us a radio or was this box came and it popped. As a teenager. Art moved from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles to live with his older sister. And he started a ham radio station in his bedroom closet. You could hear it for about 10 blocks from my house but it wasn't just his neighbors listening. One day two federal agents came to talk to him about his illegal broadcasting tower that simply shut it down right away. We're going to drive by here tomorrow. If your antennas down. Why then you you you've got to press any charges because they've got a big kick out of the fact that there was this dumb kid know not so dumb. But at that age doing this music on the. Radio. When art turned 18 he walked into radio station KXAN in San Francisco and asked for a job. He had a radio operators license but no experience and a last name the station manager thought sounded too ethnic for the airwaves in 1943. So Art annoying the son of Armenian immigrants took the name of the station's receptionist and he became art Lobo but his music and his fans have never been whitewashed. He's beloved by African-American and Latino next listeners across the West. Hot Rods and low riders booming his tunes from their tricked out cars. He built his fan base in the 1950s and 60s when he did something considered radical back then bringing people together for public rock n roll dance parties that were racially integrated and open to all ages. They were held in El Monte a suburb of Los Angeles. Well those of you from Southern California all will never forget the song I'm going to play next Frank Zappa wrote a song called Memories of El Monte with one of the members of his crew. RAY COLLINS They're both gone now but I hope they're smiling wherever they are. And we're gonna play that song that Mom will remember and that'll remember and and Uncle Lewis will remember it's called Memories of El Monte. I'm. Thinking about you. Know. We ones need Andy Sam I do. It brings back those memories. Art Lobo produced several landmark albums out of those concerts celebrating the way music brought multiracial audiences together. And I'm happy that it's everybody you come to one of our concerts you'll see a mixture a complete mixture of what we have in L.A.. Hearts still doing live shows with bands wearing a bedazzled track suit and a sparkly bow. He's got several planned this month for Valentine's Day in places like Anaheim San Diego and Phoenix. That's on top of broadcasting six nights a week. This tiny 93 year old with a big heart hasn't gotten tired of playing matchmaker. Every night. I'm not a player that old timer you're looking for and I'm gonna play the one by the skylines which happens to be my favorite song. We're also gonna send this one out to husband Christian Hernandez at Patch hippie from Joanna Iola and Joanna sends you lots of kisses. Christian plays this song by the Skylanders since I don't have to. See. But what is it about love songs. You know what the lyrics like that that's that speak to you I mean you spend hours and hours every day playing these songs that are about the heart that are about love. Well. Love is a powerful powerful medicine. And whether you're falling in love or out of love you know. So we we. Put our stamp on it. People pick the music on the heart the bow connection. And you get to get a peek into their lives too because you're hearing them make a dedication make a love song somebody is like an on air Valentine. Bond. And also a dedication to you mom proxy from your son chai and the boys. George my though. Vince running bear and Hawaiian says Mom you have a heart of gold. You got so much to love and love in you that your love could light up a small country close your eyes. Now think back to the good old days of early rock and roll sincerely by the moon glows. With nearly Lamo says he knows people his age always sings but he is nostalgic for the old days. A time when people used to have a little more kindness for each other. People are people and all there still have the same basic wants and. Everyone is capable of. Love and affection. And if they could just have more of it for each other. So here's tart Lobo disc jockey of love as he starts his seventy sixth year on the airwaves. That was the California reports Sasha coca reporting.

I never knew who Art Laboe was, or what he meant to so many Californians, until I moved to Fresno, and started dating someone who grew up on Laboe's music. We would drive on country roads lined with orange groves and tune into Laboe's Sunday radio show, where people from all over the state would send in lovey-dovey dedications to each other. And then there was Laboe's signature on-air smooch into the microphone.

My now-husband Karl was a low-rider growing up, cruising in his Nissan mini-truck with tinted windows, custom-painted graphics on the side and a booming stereo. He would blast Laboe's show, which played songs by artists like Rick James, Teena Marie, Tierra and the Temptations — from the 12-inch woofers, while waxing his car and cleaning the custom spoke wheels with a toothbrush.

By the time I met Karl, he had moved away from the low-rider lifestyle, but not Art Laboe, or the love songs. He's one of generations of Californians — especially Chicanos and Latinx folks — who've grown up on Laboe's music, first listening as their grandparents did.

Advertisement
Art Laboe developed a  radio persona that was daring and rebellious for its time. Here he is broadcasting from the Palm Springs studios of KCMJ while getting a haircut in 1946.
Courtesy Art Laboe
Art Laboe developed a radio persona that was daring and rebellious for its time. Here he is broadcasting from the Palm Springs studios of KCMJ while getting a haircut in 1946.

After all, Laboe has been spinning oldies and love songs since 1943. He coined the term “oldies but goodies” and was one of the first DJs on the West Coast to play rock 'n' roll.

He still takes to the airwaves from a Palm Springs studio six nights a week from 7 p.m. to midnight, hosting The Art Laboe Connection — a show broadcast on more than a dozen stations across California.

Laboe spends hours every day playing songs that are about the heart.

“Love is a powerful medicine, whether you’re falling in love, or out of love,” he said.

Connecting loved ones, in and out of prison

Advertisement

These days, many of those calling in with regular dedications have loved ones in prison.

"He's just an amazing DJ. I would listen to him until my last breath," said longtime listener Rosie Morales, of Sylmar.

She calls in every single day with a dedication to her husband Scrappy, who's serving a life sentence in Kern Valley State Prison in Delano. She can't call her husband directly right now, because he's in solitary confinement. But she can hear Laboe smooch kisses sent by her husband into his microphone.

"He's able to communicate to our loved ones when we can't," Morales said. "He brings that spark into relationships."

“They’re there, man and wife, every night, man and wife, doing it to each other, dedications," Laboe laughs. "Conjugal, but not conjugal."

Some prisoners send in a week's worth of dedications to their spouses or lovers, with a different love song for each day of the week.

Art Laboe, who has been spinning love songs for 75 years, pictured in this undated photo.
Bryan Mendez/KQED
Art Laboe, who has been spinning love songs for 75 years, pictured in this undated photo.

"Art’s so concerned about the prisoners, because for every person that's inside there can be 10 or 20 family members on the outside affected by that person being in jail," said his longtime audio engineer, Joanna Morones, who answers phones to take dedications.

"He really caters to that family dynamic, you know, and connecting them. We're told every night, ‘I can't go visit him. I won't be able to go see him for two weeks, but I can talk to him on the radio.’ The guys in prison sit there and wait to hear their wives’ voice on the radio," Morones said.

Getting his start — thanks to the WWII draft

Laboe's obsession with radio started when he was eight years old, when his sister sent his parents what he called "this box that talked." He set up a ham radio station in his bedroom at age 14, broadcasting to his neighbors.

When he was 18, he walked into radio station KSAN in San Francisco and asked for a job.

He had no real experience, and he hadn’t yet honed his rich baritone. But he did have one thing: a radio operator’s license.

The station had lost its engineers to the draft — this was World War II. The manager offered him a job on the spot. As long as he changed his last name, which the manager thought sounded "too ethnic" for the airwaves in 1943.

So Art Egnoian — the son of Armenian immigrants — took the name of the station’s receptionist and became Art Laboe.

Laboe claims to have invented the on-air dedication, where listeners write or call in to send music and love notes to each other on air. Here he is reading dedications with Eddie Rodriguez at radio station KPMO in Pomona in 1945.
Courtesy Art Laboe
Laboe claims to have invented the on-air dedication, where listeners write or call in to send music and love notes to each other on air. Here he is reading dedications with Eddie Rodriguez at radio station KPMO in Pomona in 1945.

But his music, and his fan base, have never been whitewashed. Laboe has built a huge fan base, starting with the teenagers who attended his live concerts or dances back in the 1950s. He made a name for himself hosting rock 'n' roll concerts in the Los Angeles suburb of El Monte, pioneering racially integrated, all-ages dance parties with live bands.

"I can do some nice talking in Armenian. But I can do almost that good in Spanish, too," Laboe smiles. "I’m happy that [our concerts and shows appeal to] everybody. If you come to one of our concerts, you’ll see a mixture, a complete mixture of what we have in California."

Art Laboe is pictured trying to get a lion to roar into a microphone in this undated photo.
Courtesy Art Laboe
Art Laboe is pictured trying to get a lion to roar into a microphone in this undated photo.

At 93, Laboe is still hosting live shows across California and the west, wearing his signature bedazzled track suit and a sparkly bowler hat.

Laboe said he knows people his age always say this kind of thing, but he is nostalgic for the old days — a time when people used to have a little more kindness for each other.

“It would be good if we had a little bit more of what we used to have in the world," Laboe said. "Nevertheless, people are people and they still have the same basic wants and needs. Everyone is capable of love and affection, if they could just have a little bit more of it for each other."