Miami Herald (Sunday)

Sound engineer played role in the glory days of radio

- BY RICK KOGAN Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO

Many years ago, sitting in his office high atop the Wrigley Building, Mike King was telling me about the many people he had worked with in his long career as a sound engineer – a starstudde­d crowd that included Jonathan Winters, Burgess Meredith, Bob Newhart, Ellen Barkin, Dionne Warwick, Ella Fitzgerald, Bob Hope and, of all people, Richard Nixon.

There were dozens more, because for decades King was one of the most successful, prolific and admired sound engineers in history.

John Michael King died Jan. 16 at a nursing facility in DeKalb, Illinois. He was 85 years old.

“I was there every day,” said his wife, Susan, the mother of two of his seven daughters. “We would talk and remember, and he delighted all the nurses and staff up until the very last day. He was charming until the end.”

His death made me recall that long ago day in his office and his story of “Chickenman.”

For those of a certain age, this character is firmly embedded in memory. To the accompanim­ent of “He’s everywhere! He’s everywhere!” the character was a daily radio serial born on WCFL-AM’s Jim Runyon show in 1966, a clever satirical spoof of the then-popular “Batman” TV show.

It was created and voiced by Dick Orkin, the station’s production director, and was so popular that it was eventually syndicated and twice revived after its initial run. There were 273 original episodes, some of which have been played on NPR’s “This American Life,” and many of which can still be heard on various stations internatio­nally.

King said proudly, with a twinkle in his eyes at the realizatio­n that this might be the hallmark of his considerab­le profession­al legacy, “I did most of the engineerin­g for ‘Chickenman,’ and I can listen to each episode today and know exactly what I was doing at that time.”

He closed his eyes and after a quiet moment said, “Sound doesn’t just have the ability to set an image. It can take you back in time.”

King was the son of Alice and Albert “Bud” King, born in 1936 and raised in Navarre, Ohio, and could remember the exact moment he fell in love with radio.

It happened when he was directing a high school play – the name lost to history – and visited a local radio station seeking sound effects equipment to embellish the show.

He was, he said, “I was in awe of the equipment and what it was able to do.” And it was there he found a career, starting to work for that station while still in high school and after a few years moving to a radio station in Cleveland where he worked as engineer for one its top DJs.

He was married by then to his first wife, Mary, and the couple and their four daughters – Debbie, Kathy, Margie and Michelle – moved from Cleveland to Chicago, where another daughter, Melissa, was born and he worked for

WCFL, which was then engaged in a heated rock ‘n’ roll radio war with WLS.

Those were exciting and freewheeli­ng days. But eventually, as King said, “because I was 40 and getting tired of working for people who looked and acted like they were 16,” he became a commercial production engineer, working for Joy Recording, and began creating sound for radio and TV commercial­s. From there he went to Universal Recording and its newly opened studios in the Prudential Building. In 1975, he became among the first hires at the then new Chicago Recording Company, running its postproduc­tion studio.

In 1988, King opened Audio Recording Unlimited. It began modestly, with two studios on one floor of the Wrigley Building, in a space that had previously been used as a storage area. He had three employees.

In time his operation grew to occupy parts of five floors, and he had a dozen or so full-time employees. The company made thousands of commercial­s for radio and television, for movies and corporatio­ns. It housed a library of some 300,000 musical themes and something in the neighborho­od of 100,000 sound effects.

It was a wonderful space, with glorious views of the city and river below.

“I owe all this to radio,” he said, looking out over the city and river.

 ?? RICHARD DREW AP ?? Cuban-born artist Carmen Herrera is interviewe­d in her New York studio on May 29, 2015. Artist Antonio Bechara told the New York Times that Herrera died at her Manhattan home on Feb. 12. She was 106.
RICHARD DREW AP Cuban-born artist Carmen Herrera is interviewe­d in her New York studio on May 29, 2015. Artist Antonio Bechara told the New York Times that Herrera died at her Manhattan home on Feb. 12. She was 106.
 ?? CHARLES OSGOOD Chicago Tribune/TNS file, 2007 ?? Mike King was the founder and owner of Audio Recording Unlimited in Chicago. King died Jan. 16 at 85.
CHARLES OSGOOD Chicago Tribune/TNS file, 2007 Mike King was the founder and owner of Audio Recording Unlimited in Chicago. King died Jan. 16 at 85.

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