Did you know that ARCA is 35 this month? That’s right, 35! Back, way back, in 1980, Fred Dahlke made a
decision to start an organization for music lovers and collectors. There was no such organization in the state
of Alabama. The seeds were actually sewn
as much as five years earlier. Fred had
talked with other music collectors off and on.
One, in particular, was from Florida.
Fred ran into him at a thrift store looking through records. The man told Fred that there was a music club
in Florida that held record shows and such.
Fred was intrigued to say the least, so after a while, he decided to
form the Alabama Record Collectors Association.
The beginnings were small. With
six others meeting in Fred’s living room, they formulated the plans of what
ARCA would be.
ARCA then worked out a deal where UAB would provide a room
for the monthly meetings, so beginning in March, the group left the coziness of
Fred’s living room to go to the UAB campus.
During this same period, Fred had also been in negotiations
with Program Director, Tom Reynolds, at WAPI about doing a weekly show to play
the GOOD older music that we all grew up with.
He also reasoned that it would be a very good way to promote ARCA. WAPI agreed to try a one-hour show beginning
in March, 1980. The show was called,
“Original Gold Wax.” Response was so
great that, not only did WAPI continue the show, but they expanded it to two
hours. Fred remembers driving one day
and hearing a promo on the radio announcing his three hour show. Fred was thrilled, but also taken aback,
because this was the first time he had heard of his show going to three
hours. By the way, Neil Evans had heard
the show and joined ARCA the second month.
He would also join Fred on the radio show, so it became a two-man show.
The radio show certainly did help boost ARCA’s membership
which exploded after the show began. A
few of those original members are still members today.
In the spring of 1982, ARCA decided to sponsor Birmingham’s
very first Record Show. It was held at
the now-gone Parliament House on 20th Street. Fred recalls how nervous he was on the way to
the show on that first day, wondering if anyone would show up. As he approached the building, he was simply
amazed at what he saw. There was a line
of people from inside the building, spilling out the front door and down the
walkway. The attendance at that show
was over 1200.
The Record Show continued to grow and stayed at the
Parliament House for two or three years, then moved to the F.O.P. Lodge on
Greensprings Ave. where it remained for many years. After brief stints at the Cascade Plunge and
the BJCC, the show is now at its current home, the Bessemer Civic Center, where
it has been for several years.
Although now gone, ARCA chapters would spring up in
Huntsville and Montgomery.
Members have come and gone, but the core principles of why
ARCA was started remains. It is to help
preserve recorded music and to give people a place to go to talk with others
who share this love of music with regular meetings, to give them a place to go
and expand their own collections be-it large or small with the CD & Record
Show, plus just make new friends with people of similar interests and have fun
events like the picnic, Christmas party and occasional field trips.
You don’t have to subscribe to one particular genre of
music. Music is music, whether it’s
Country, Jazz, Classical, Blues, New Age or Rock, nor is the age of the music
important. I grew up with 60’s rock, but
also love Big Band music of the 30s and 40s, Southern Gospel music and music of
today as well as all of the other genres listed.
At this month's meeting, we will celebrate 35 years. Come join us. Guests are always welcome!