Remembering Tommy Jett and the healing power of rock n’ roll

SAD UPDATE: Tommy Jett has died at the age of 77.  He had been frail in recent years due to illness, but still quite active.  Until the end, he enjoyed being with his family, friends, and fans.  

A few years back, I began collecting airchecks from the early days of local radio.  Most of them eventually made it to my YouTube channel.  I asked Tommy if he had any old tapes, and he told me had some reel-to-reel tapes in his garage.  I told him I’d be glad to digitalize them so we could hear his great shows from 40-50 years ago.  When I would ask him about the tapes in the summer, he told me it was too hot in his garage.  In the winter, he said it was too cold.  Eventually, it was just right, and he brought me dozens of old reel-to-reel tapes.  Some of them were no longer playable.  Thankfully, a few of them would still play, and those are the ones I have spotlighted online.  You can hear some excerpts in the links below.

I was so fortunate that the “Jett I grew up with” became my friend. Nobody in the history of radio, loved his listeners more than Tommy. He felt blessed that God gave him the talent to entertain us. He was genuinely humbled when grown men and women would tearfully tell him what he had meant to them. His voice lives on in our hearts. Thanks for the smiles, TJ.

Funeral arrangements can be found by clicking here.

A GoFundMe account has been set up to help his family with funeral expenses.  Please click here.

Tommy Jett, surrounded by radio friends at his Hall of Fame induction, May 4, 2013

Tommy Jett, surrounded by radio friends at his Hall of Fame induction, May 4, 2013

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On May 4, 2013, a silver-haired man with a ring on every finger stepped up to the podium at the Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame banquet. The newly inducted deejay thanked his family, his listeners, his God, and his “close personal friends.” Thankfully, he didn’t name each of them because it would have taken all night. In a career now spanning 54 years, 75-year-old Tommy Jett has amassed a following like few others. Starting at WFLI (AM 1070) in Chattanooga, Tommy had provided the soundtrack to the Baby Boomer generation. In 2015 “TJ the DJ” celebrated the publication of his biography, an event he never thought he would see.

David Carroll and Tommy Jett at John Ross House in Rossville, July 25, 2015

David Carroll and Tommy Jett at John Ross House in Rossville, July 25, 2015

On April 18, 2012, the longtime diabetic lost consciousness while driving along a rural north Georgia road. His car went airborne, flipping a half-dozen times before landing in a ditch. Emergency workers spent the next four hours removing Tommy from the wreckage, using the “Jaws of Life.” Walker County Deputy Bruce Coker led the rescue effort. “I thought there was no way we could get him out alive,” Coker said later.

Yet within days, Tommy was holding court in his hospital room, recovering from neck surgery. He was determined to attend his annual Entertainers Reunion, scheduled in May. As Tommy said, “If I’m above ground, I’ll be there.” He made that date, and even emceed the Riverbend Festival in June. But he was looking more gaunt by the day, losing weight rapidly. The once robust rock-and-roller had lost his appetite.

It all came to a head in late June. His wife Charlene, who had tried mightily to get him to eat, called 911. He had lapsed into a coma. He was rushed to a Chattanooga hospital, and friends started spreading the word: this didn’t look good.

On Sunday, July 1st, the phone calls went out. “If you want to see Tommy Jett alive, you’d better hurry.” He was being kept alive on a respirator, and doctors told Charlene the bad news: “He will never get better.” That afternoon, she told friends she was beginning to accept the inevitable. By morning, family members were called in to say goodbye. Funeral arrangements were made, a church was chosen, pallbearers were notified.

What happened next has yet to be explained, scientifically anyway. Some longtime radio friends hatched an idea. Yes, Tommy was lying in a hospital bed, lifeless. But what did Tommy enjoy more than anything else? Being on the radio, playing the hits. So the radio guys got a boombox, loaded in some CD recordings of Tommy’s WFLI “Night Train” shows from the 1960s, and cranked it up at the head of Tommy’s bed. When one disc ran out, a new one was put in. Elvis, the Supremes, the Beatles, all introduced by Tommy’s familiar “Hey Now” greeting. Just as it had aired on transistor radios fifty years earlier.

Monday morning arrived, and to everyone’s surprise, doctors did not “pull the plug.” They told the family that Tommy had shown slight signs of improvement. Tommy was still in a deep sleep, as the music played on. “Come on and be my little good luck charm,” Elvis crooned. Tommy’s lively voice would interrupt between songs: “Nineteen minutes after midnight, you’re movin’ and grooving, with Super-Jett, your ever-lovin’ leader!”

The next day, Tommy began to move his fingers just a bit. By Wednesday, he was blinking his eyes. Later that day his eyes began following the movements of his grandchildren in the hospital room. Message received: Tommy wasn’t ready to “check out” just yet.

Tommy with two of his granddaughters, July 6, 2012

Tommy with two of his granddaughters, July 6, 2012

By Friday, five days after his pals came by to say goodbye, they witnessed what can only be described as a miracle. There was Tommy, now able to speak, laugh, and express his thanks. Did he hear the music during his deep sleep? No one, not even Tommy can be sure. But it certainly didn’t hurt. And if anyone wants to attach a little healing power to the sounds of rock and roll, so be it. His wife Charlene said, “When the #1 doctor, God stepped in and said it is not time yet, Tommy woke up. We give much credit to the doctors, but Tommy and I know the real reason he is here is God.”

Tommy can’t hide a smile when it’s suggested that maybe rock and roll had something to do with his amazing recovery. “There’s nothing like music,” he says. “It’s been a big part of my whole life.” As for me, I’m telling my family to keep some Tommy Jett CDs handy. If I’m ever the subject of those serious hospital conversations, crank up “TJ the DJ” for me. That’ll make me want to stick around a while longer too.

1967 WFLI survey featuring TJ (courtesy Charles Moore)

Johnny Eagle, Tommy Jett and Ralph Vaughn at book signing, Jan. 10, 2015

Johnny Eagle, Tommy Jett and Ralph Vaughn at book signing, Jan. 10, 2015

 

About David Carroll

David Carroll is a longtime Chattanooga radio and TV broadcaster, and has anchored the evening news on WRCB-TV since 1987. He is the author of "Chattanooga Radio & Television" published by Arcadia.

10 thoughts on “Remembering Tommy Jett and the healing power of rock n’ roll

  1. Ed

    Tommy was a very good friend of our band, The Ascots, especially in the 60’s when we were getting started. He opened up and introduced us at many venues and made us some better than we probably really were, which really made us try better. Love this guy and have since he began in Chattanooga. Love you guy.
    Regards
    Ed Holland

    Reply
  2. Dale Carroll

    Great report! I’ve shared Davids story of Tommy Jett with friends and relatives of Tommy in Smithville, Tennessee where many of them reside. I never knew Tommy Jett, but he must have been loved by many people.

    Reply
  3. Pingback: Tommy Jett 1940-2018 - David Carroll's Chattanooga Radio and TV

  4. James rogers

    I grew up listening to Tommy Jett. He was already a legend by the time my career introduced us to each other. I never dreamed we’d become “close personal friends” , but we did. I am so grateful for that, in later years we never parted company without saying “ I love you man”. Hey Tommy, I always will.

    Reply
  5. Deborah Poteet-Johnson

    We love Tommy, Charlene, and all the family. Although we are all sorry for the family’s loss–and for our own loss–we look forward to being reunited again in Heaven with Tommy, Dad, Jackie, and so many whom we miss. May the LORD bless Tommy’s family and his memory with the sound bytes that we still have.

    Reply
  6. Tina Phillips Miolen

    My story is on Charlene’s side. Charlene and I were working together when she first met Tommy. She didn’t say right off who he was. This was around 1980. She finally came forward and told me who he was and I said “no way”. But sure enough it was the one and only Tommy Jet. This woman fell in love with him and you would have never known that there was anyone else in the world except for Tommy and her children. My prayers are for her and their children. I know she will miss her silly record spinning husband but there has never been a greater love than what the two of them shared. One thing is for sure, there are a large group of people that grew up listening to him will never forget “Jet Fly”….

    Reply
  7. Jerry Lingerfelt

    Sorry to hear of TJ’s passing. I know for sure that he is in a better place. H was a good man. I call myself one of his close personal friends, along with thousands of others. He truly loved being a “top jock” and as you stated was in love with all his many fans. He was one of the lucky ones who found his true calling at a young age. He will be missed by all his family, which includes his many listeners.

    Reply
  8. Cherie Childs

    I met Tommy Jet long ago when I was 11 or 12 at a March of Dimes Telethon at Dalton High School.I was there singing with my family.He was there with another DJ.I got his autograph and he was so sweet to me.He was a very polite and sweet man.He will be greatly missed.
    But know he is now walking on streets of gold.Go with God TJ

    Reply
  9. Rebecca DeBord

    Tommy was a friend to many musicians in the area. As a child, I would listen to his show with my transistor radio under my pillow. We became friends as adults. I was honored to serve on two Reunion Committees-Sugar’s and the Read House. He was a true Southern Gentleman.

    Reply

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