Denny Somach

Denny Somach is an American businessman, author, and Grammy-award winning radio producer.[1][2] He is the founder of Denny Somach Productions, an independent production company that produces syndicated and network programming.

Biography

Somach attended Moravian College in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree. After graduating in 1975, Somach became an announcer at WSAN, a progressive rock station in nearby Allentown.[3] He later worked at WYSP-FM in Philadelphia as an announcer and programmer before launching his own independent production company, Denny Somach Productions (DSP), in 1981. Among the syndicated and network radio programming produced by DSP are a number of successful productions, including The Classics, a widely syndicated weekly retrospective show that was originated in 1999 as The Rock of the Century; Legends of Rock; Live From the Hard Rock Cafe and Rolling Stone Magazine's Continuous History of Rock and Roll.[3]

Somach has been a consultant or director for several cable networks, including MTV, Cable Music Channel, the Comedy Channel and The Fine Living Network. He produced The News That Rocked '81, the first outside program broadcast on MTV. He is the co-creator of Friday Night Videos on NBC and was also a consultant for XM Satellite Radio and a contributor to Comcast Network. Among his television production credits are Evening/PM Magazine; Solid Gold Rock 'n Roll the first 30-minute music infomercial; and Sixty Greatest Hits of the Sixties, the first long form record collection infomercial featuring a package developed by a major record label. The infomercials featured Wolfman Jack and Davy Jones, respectively. Somach has also produced records and videos for artists such as Johnny Winter, Todd Rundgren, Alan Parsons, and Barbara Mandrell. He served as executive producer for Eric Johnson's album Ah Via Musicom, featuring the Grammy award winning song "Cliffs of Dover".

In addition to producing, Somach hosted the show Hot Spots, a weekly concert series he developed for USA Network. He has authored two books on the Beatles: Ticket to Ride (1989) and Meet the Beatles...Again (1995). His latest book, Get the Led Out-How Led Zeppelin Became the Biggest Band in the World," was published on November 6, 2012.[4] An updated version was published in April 2014. Somach currently writes and produces "Carol Miller's Get the Led Out," which airs on over 100 radio stations.

gollark: There's a UBPorts GSI.
gollark: Oh, a decent amount, they can use the APIs.
gollark: VoLTE does *not*, and neither does FM radio for some reason, but basically everything else works fine on sane devices.
gollark: With Treble, your phone vendor provides a vendor image on one partition containing something or other, and that provides a bunch of APIs to Android, and thus you can flash a generic system image onto any supported device and basically everything works.
gollark: Well, yours is old, although I think it has good custom ROM availability.

References

  1. "Led Zeppelin's `Stairway' Might Lead to a Lawsuit". Bloomberg.com. Retrieved 2015-12-08.
  2. "Sailor still floating on ad-lib kiss - Houston Business Journal". Houston Business Journal. Retrieved 2015-12-08.
  3. Logue, Timothy (January 13, 2013). "Weekend: Delco man pens the real story behind Led Zeppelin's rise". Daily Times News. Retrieved 2018-06-05.
  4. "New Led Zeppelin Book, 'Get the Led Out,' to Be Published November 6". Guitar World. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
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