Obituary: Rosalie Trombley – radio hitmaker (82)

As music director for CKLW-AM in Windsor, Ontario, she furthered the careers of Alice Cooper, Bob Seger, the Temptations in Detroit and beyond.

Photo: Rosalie Trombley of the radio station CKLW in an undated photo. Ed Haun/Detroit Free Press

17 December 2021 | ย Neil Genzlinger | The New York Times

Whatever story you have about the high point of your junior high school years, Tim Trombley has a better one. The rocker Alice Cooper once picked him up at his school in a limousine to take him to lunch.

That was one of the perks of having Rosalie Trombley for a mother.

From 1967 into the early 1980s, Ms. Trombley was the music director for CKLW-AM, a radio station based in Windsor, Ontario, with a signal so powerful that it was heard in dozens of states in the U.S., dominating the markets of Detroit and other Midwestern cities in the days before the emergence of FM. A 1971 headline in The Detroit Free Press called her โ€œThe Most Powerful Lady in Pop Music,โ€ because her tastes went a long way toward determining what was played on the station, which in turn went a long way toward determining what was played in the rest of North America.

Sometimes, Mr. Trombley related in a phone interview, his mother would bring demo records home, and he would be allowed to play them. She noticed that he was playing one quite a lot: Mr. Cooperโ€™s โ€œIโ€™m Eighteen.โ€

โ€œShe made it known to the label, to Warner Bros., โ€˜Tim has been playing this song over and over,โ€™โ€ Mr. Trombley said, and she slipped it into CKLWโ€™s rotation. In late 1970 it became Mr. Cooperโ€™s breakout hit. And so Mr. Cooper, a Detroit native, took young Tim to lunch one day as a thank-you.

โ€œI knew that mom had a really cool job,โ€ Mr. Trombley said.

Ms. Trombley died on Nov. 23 at a long-term care center in Leamington, Ontario, where she had been living for some time. She was 82. Mr. Trombley said the cause was complications of Alzheimerโ€™s disease.

Ms. Trombley seemed an unlikely starmaker. She was a single mother of three when she started at CKLW as a part-time switchboard operator. The Free Press once wrote that she โ€œlooks like Doris Dayโ€™s next-door neighbor.โ€ But she was, as newspapers often described her, โ€œthe lady with the golden earโ€ who, with her no-nonsense demeanor, could hold her own in the male-dominated music business of the day.

The list of stars who owed her a debt of gratitude was long.

โ€œYouโ€™d come in in the morning,โ€ Keith Radford, a former newsman at the station, said in an interview for a video series produced by Radio Trailblazers, an organization promoting women in Canadian radio, โ€œand thereโ€™d be big bouquets of flowers at the front desk, from Elton John or the Rolling Stones.โ€

Ms. Trombley would hold court on Thursdays for record promoters who hoped to get their new songs onto CKLWโ€™s โ€œBig 30โ€ playlist.

โ€œIf they wanted the record really bad, they would bring the act with them,โ€ Johnny Williams, a former D.J., said in the video. โ€œSo it wasnโ€™t unusual every Thursday to see the Four Tops, the Temptations, Gladys Knight, Stevie Wonder, Sammy Davis Jr.โ€

One artist who made such a pilgrimage was Tony Orlando, who in the video recalled that Ms. Trombley had heard him out that day and offered him an invitation.

โ€œRosalie said, โ€˜Iโ€™ll tell you what: If your next record comes within the ballpark of a commercial record, a playable Top 40 record, because you took the time to come here โ€” but only if it has the goods โ€” Iโ€™ll give it consideration big time,โ€™โ€ he said. โ€œAnd that next record was โ€˜Yellow Ribbonโ€™โ€ โ€” that is, Tony Orlando and Dawnโ€™s โ€œTie a Yellow Ribbon โ€™Round the Ole Oak Tree,โ€ the top-selling record of 1973. โ€œAnd she was the first to put it on the air.โ€

Ms. Trombley with the singer-songwriter Bob Seger holding gold record plaques for his 1978 album, “Stranger in Town.” “Seger never had any problem getting on CKLW,” she said.
Ms. Trombley with the singer-songwriter Bob Seger holding gold record plaques for his 1978 album, โ€œStranger in Town.โ€ โ€œSeger never had any problem getting on CKLW,โ€ she said.Credit…ย Detroit Free Press

Rosalie Helen Gillan was born on Sept. 18, 1939, in Leamington. Her father, Shell, was a general foreman at the Ford Motor Company of Canada, and her mother, Katherine (Piper) Gillan, was a switchboard operator.

After graduating from high school, she worked at Bell Canada for a time. She married Clayton Trombley in 1958. She took the switchboard job at CKLW in late 1962, working in that capacity for several years and, as The Vancouver Sun put it in a 1973 article about her, โ€œinadvertently picking up the politics of the music business simply by learning to handle sometimes troublesome record-promotion people who arrived at the station to ply their wares.โ€

Around 1968, Ms. Trombley and her husband separated (they later divorced), and at about the same time she was offered the chance to take over for the stationโ€™s record librarian, who was going on maternity leave. The stationโ€™s program director soon took note of her ear for hits and made her music director, a job she held, Tim Trombley said, until she was laid off in the early 1980s in a downsizing effort.

Ms. Trombley didnโ€™t rely only on her own tastes; she would call R&B stations in the area to see what they were playing, which led her to give CKLWโ€™s 50,000 watts of exposure to Black artists. She similarly boosted the careers of Canadian artists like Gordon Lightfoot and the Guess Who, as well as a number of Detroit-area stars, including Bob Seger.

โ€œSeger never had any problem getting on CKLW,โ€ she told The Detroit Free Press in 2004 when Mr. Seger was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. โ€œLook at the songs. Listen to the lyrics. Iโ€™m a lyric freak. When someone is saying something in a song, I canโ€™t be the only person interested in it.โ€

Well, Mr. Seger almost never had any problem getting on the station. Some of his new material came her way in the early 1970s, and she panned it. He sat down and wrote a song about her called โ€œRosalieโ€ โ€” a tribute to her importance, but with a sly, reproving undercurrent that they both laughed about later.

โ€œHe was pissed off when he wrote that song about me,โ€ she said. โ€œHe told me!โ€

Payola โ€” offering payoffs to get a song played โ€” was part of the radio business during Ms. Trombleyโ€™s reign, and her son said it was common knowledge in the industry that she was a single mother, so some promoters would make it subtly known to her that there was money available.

โ€œShe made it less subtly known,โ€ he said, โ€œthat if they wanted to continue to meet with her every week, that was not something that was going to get their record on the radio.โ€

She had her musical favorites, especially Neil Diamond. But that didnโ€™t necessarily win him radio time.

โ€œIโ€™m not playing his current release,โ€ she told The Sun in 1973, tactfully not naming it, โ€œbecause it looks like a midchart record, and I wonโ€™t go with it when I know out front that itโ€™s only midchart.โ€

In addition to her son Tim, she is survived by another son, Todd; a daughter, Diane Lauzon; and a grandson.

In 2016 Ms. Trombley receivedย a special Juno Award, the Canadian equivalent of a Grammy. Radio Trailblazers has an annual award recognizing women who have โ€œblazed new trails in radio.โ€ She received the first, in 2005, and it is now called simplyย the Rosalie Award.

Rosalie Trombleyย ย 
ED HAUN, DETROIT FREE PRESS



BRIAN MCCOLLUMย ย ย |ย Detroit Free Press

Rosalie Trombley, the golden-eared tastemaker who became one of North Americaโ€™s most powerful radio programmers, died Tuesday of complications from Alzheimerโ€™s disease, her family said. She was 82.

As music director at Windsorโ€™s 50,000-watt CKLW-AM across the Detroit River, the unassuming Ontario native was a music-industry force starting in the late ’60s โ€” breaking hits, playing musical kingmaker and turning the station into an influential continental player.

“Rosalie was an icon, a trailblazer and our friend,” Bob Seger said in a statement. “Through her hard work and incredible instincts, she achieved a rare level of influence and power in music. When she got behind your record, other stations would follow suit. She was literally a gatekeeper to national success and we were so fortunate to have her support, especially on many of our early records. She was an integral part of our journey and we are eternally grateful. We will miss her.”

Born in Leamington, Ontario, Rosalie Trombley moved back to the town about five years ago and was in an assisted living facility there at the time of her death.

โ€œShe just had this innate sense for what artists, what songs, could have mass appeal,โ€ said her son Tim Trombley. โ€œThe power of AM radio back then was really immeasurable. It was a pretty special time.โ€

Trombleyโ€™s adventurous song picks โ€” from rock to R&B โ€” were boosted by the broad reach of CKLW, a station heard across Canada and nearly two dozen U.S. states at night. Other radio programmers came to follow her lead.

โ€œIt was nothing to pick up the phone and hear ‘Hi, this is Bob Smith from Idaho, and Iโ€™m getting all kinds of calls at my radio station for this record theyโ€™re hearing on your radio station. Tell me about โ€œThese Eyesโ€ by the Guess Who,โ€™โ€ she recounted to the Free Press in 2003. โ€œIt was like, โ€˜Wow.โ€™ โ€

Trombley โ€” โ€œthe most powerful woman in popdom,โ€ as the Free Press described her in 1971 โ€” gave many mainstream radio listeners their first taste of music from Bob Seger, Alice Cooper, Funkadelic and other Detroit-related acts. And she helped introduce American audiences to burgeoning Canadian artists, including the Guess Who, Gordon Lightfoot, Bachman Turner-Overdrive and Paul Anka.

โ€œI just believe that Detroit had real good ears, the listeners, when it came to the music they heard on the radio,โ€ she said in 2003. โ€œThe records, the way they would break, the way they would sell.โ€

Having arrived in Windsor in 1963, Trombley started at CKLW with a part-time job as a weekend switchboard operator. Eventually, she took a role in the stationโ€™s record library, and by 1967 was music director.

During a global rock-music revolution, she was a conduit to AM radio and the Top 40 airwaves. And despite CKLWโ€™s Canadian home base, the station was regarded in the industry as a Detroit outlet.

โ€œBasically, (Detroit) was becoming known as testing the true rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll records,โ€ Trombley said.

She also took cues from Black radio in Detroit, helping break artists such as the Oโ€™Jays and the Foundations to pop audiences. In 1971, she was among the first programmers who helped make a hit out of Marvin Gayeโ€™s โ€œWhatโ€™s Going On,โ€ a record initially resisted by Motown chief Berry Gordy.

In 1974, when she heard Detroit R&B station WJLB spinning an Elton John album cut, Trombley added the track to CKLWโ€™s rotation. โ€œBennie and the Jetsโ€ instantly ignited the stationโ€™s request lines, and Johnโ€™s record label was soon convinced to release it as his next single.

โ€œA week later, Elton called her from England and wanted to know the whole story,โ€ Tim Trombley said.

Trombleyโ€™s veto power was as important as her thumbs-up, and that make-or-break influence was immortalized by Seger in the vaguely sardonic 1973 tribute โ€œRosalieโ€: โ€œShe’s got the plastic / It comes from all the corners of the world / So fantastic / She’s everybody’s favorite little record girl.โ€

But Trombley, who once called herself โ€œa lyric freak,โ€ was a bona fide Seger fan, embracing his music for the CKLW airwaves.

โ€œIt didnโ€™t matter what it was by Bob,โ€ she said. โ€œHe didnโ€™t miss too often.โ€

Seger and Trombley ultimately forged a friendship, often meeting up at Windsorโ€™s Hacienda restaurant to talk music. Their connection, she said, came from their similar, low-key personalities.

โ€œI always felt comfortable around an artist that I could trust, that would respect the privacy I kept in my private life,โ€ she said.

Trombleyโ€™s knack for selecting hits was part intuition, part people skills, part dedicated research. She forged tight relationships with record-shop operators in Detroit, both white and Black, keeping an ear to the ground for new records with bubbling sales.

โ€œIf I picked music just to suit my taste, I wouldnโ€™t have my job,โ€ she said in 1971. โ€œI lean heavily toward soul music. I find it hard personally to be critical of any Diana Ross record, for instance.โ€

In a rollicking record and radio universe with its share of sketchy characters, Trombley prided herself on her clean way of doing business.

โ€œThe record promoters and record companies know better than to offer me payola,โ€ she told the Free Press in โ€™71. โ€œThey also know not to offer me a joint. Iโ€™m too square, too straight for that sort of thing.โ€

Jo-Jo Shutty MacGregor, who was hired at CKLW in 1975 to become the first female helicopter traffic reporter in North America, called Trombley an important mentor whose power as a woman in a male-dominated industry commanded respect.

“Wasnโ€™t it amazing that an amazing 50,000-watt powerhouse like CKLW would choose a female to head that music department? MacGregor said. “It really says a lot.

“What a wonderful spirit she was. Nobody has made a mark like she has.”

Trombley loved Detroit and spent much time in the city, visiting clubs such as the Grande Ballroom to catch rock and soul performers.

โ€œIf the latest R&B act coming up was playing, sheโ€™d go over,โ€ said Tim Trombley. โ€œShe was accepted with open arms by the Black music community.โ€

Tim Trombley said Wednesday that his motherโ€™s open music sensibility helped create a special time on the airwaves.

โ€œIt was just magical, the way it was programmed,โ€ he said. โ€œAll this diverse repertoire somehow worked on this one radio station.โ€

Trombleyโ€™s CKLW reign from 1967 to 1984 was followed by stints at Detroitโ€™s WLTI-FM and Toronto oldies station CKEY. She ultimately returned to Windsor and worked in the marketing department at the now-Caesars Windsor before retiring in 2008.

Son Tim Trombley said his motherโ€™s proudest work was her family. She was a single mom raising two sons and a daughter.

โ€œShe loved her job, but did what she could to raise her three kids,โ€ Tim Trombley said. โ€œShe had this cool job and this great influence, but in her mind, that was secondary to raising us.โ€

Trombley is survived by her son Tim Trombley and his wife, Renee Trombley; son Todd Trombley; daughter Diane Lauzon and her husband, David Lauzon; and grandson Bobby Lauzon.

A private service will be held for family members and friends.

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