Showing posts with label playlist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label playlist. Show all posts

Friday, July 30, 2010

New Campus and Community Radio Policy in Canada


Last week the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission issued a revised policy for campus and community radio stations. One big change is that they have decided to no longer have separate regulatory policies for campus and community radio. Additionally, in the past distinctions were made between various types of community radio stations and between campus stations. These sub-categories (type A and type B for community radio and campus instructional and campus-community for college radio) are also being eliminated:

"The Commission will not licence campus instructional stations in the future and will instead licence all such stations as campus stations in accordance with this policy. All campus radio stations provide training to volunteers. The Commission notes the specific role that stations currently licensed as campus instructional play in training broadcasters who will work for commercial radio stations. The Commission encourages these stations to pursue this goal within the new campus station framework, or through alternative means of broadcasting (e.g. the Internet, closed circuit or carrier current). At their next licence renewal, existing campus instructional stations will have the opportunity to request conditions of licence specific to their circumstances within the campus radio licensing structure."

Other tidbits from this policy include the fact that the Commission doesn't license elementary and high school-based AM and FM radio stations. The policy did state, however, that community radio stations could be housed on their campuses. In their determination they stated:

"The Commission is not convinced that a station associated with a high school or elementary school could provide consistent high quality programming as required under the Act, especially in the summer months when school is not in session. The Commission further notes that the number of frequencies available for radio stations is limited in many markets. The Commission therefore considers that broadcasting by high school or elementary school students would be more appropriate using the Internet."

An interesting part of Canadian broadcast policy is that it requires a certain percentage of "spoken word" programming every week. In the past, campus radio stations were asked to devote 25% of their weekly broadcast hours to spoken word programming. The new policy acknowledges the challenges that stations faced meeting that requirement and has reduced it to 15% of weekly broadcast hours for both campus and community radio stations. Additionally, this spoken word programming must be locally produced.

One of the most confusing aspects of the Canadian policy to me is that they place minimum requirements on the percentages of various categories of music that are played on campus and community radio stations. In order to promote diverse sounds and showcase Canadian artists, stations are required to adhere to a number of genre-based minimums. Categories explained in the policy include popular music ("category 2"), specialty music ("category 3"), pop/rock/dance ("sub-category 21") and experimental music ("sub-category 36").

I'd be curious to hear how radio stations in Canada keep track of all of the genres and sub-genres and ensure that they are meeting the minimum requirements. This is a very different system from the United States, in which radio stations are given much more control over the music that is played over their airwaves. As we've seen in the U.S., commercial stations in particular have been increasingly shortening their playlists and radio has become less and less diverse. To some extent college stations have also followed this model, using it as an assumed pathway to more listeners and a more standardized sound.

If you work in Canadian campus radio, I'd love to hear more from you about the CRTC's policies and if you think they make for better, more diverse stations.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Are MySpace Playlists as Edgy as College Radio?

Record Library at KALX

How many things can take the place of college radio (which still exists!)?

The New York Observer article, "MySpace Music Will Make Stars out of Little People," recaps a recent presentation by MySpace Music President Courtney Holt at the New Music Seminar (I had no idea this conference from days of yore had been resurrected). According to the piece:

"[Holt] plans to take advantage of MySpace Music's edge over Apple's iTunes and Amazon: social media metrics and user-generated content. Mr. Holt plans to make the site a data goldmine for figuring out what's going to be the next big thing in pop music--helpful not only to artists and users, but producers and agents, too. They'll publish trends, track influencers and create lists of top-played and playlisted content of not only major bands and artists but also of all the independent work on millions of MySpace artist pages."


Additionally, Holt explains the benefits of the MySpace community in terms of helping to expose indie and obscure music acts. Along with that, he actually extols the benefits of college radio's more diverse music offerings, comparing what one hears on college radio to the user-created MySpace playlists:

"He added that there aren't as many 'loud media outlets,' like radio, that are willing to take chances on new artists. 'Despite the fact that I think the iPod shuffle has changed the minds of the consumer, most radio stations don't have permission, outside of maybe college radio stations, to play Miles Davis and Bad Brains back to back. You just don't hear that,' he said. 'And yet if you look at the types of playlists that people are creating on our platforms, they are that. You get randomness, you get obscure, you get songs that come from different places and it doesn't feel like a sonic trainwreck, like things just bombarding you. People, they want that randomness, and that notion that they're in control of their programming.'"


He makes a really interesting point here that when creating their own online playlists, music lovers will play unknown artists and mix genres and styles of music in much the same way that a college radio DJ might.

So maybe MySpace Music can be the new college radio.

I'm intrigued to see where they take things. But, of course, I remain loyal to the massive libraries of physical music at college radio stations. I enjoy ceding control to the DJ (when I'm not on the air myself!) and allowing myself to discover new sounds. Discovery. That's what listening to radio is about for me.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

San Francisco Music Directors Talk Shop

Music at KUSF

Today's San Francisco Chronicle features a story, "How Radio Stations Tune in Hit Songs," which includes interviews with Music Directors from three different San Francisco radio stations. They discuss how they determine what music gets added to each station and also offered up their choices for some of the best new bands. I was happy to see that a college radio MD from KUSF was included in the mix.

When asked how songs get on the air at the station, one of KUSF's Music Directors (and one of my favorite DJ's there-DJ Schmeejay!) Howard Ryan said:

"We're a free-form radio station, so a DJ can actually play just about any song that fits into their show-stream and KUSF's aesthetic. That being said, the records we add to rotation are generally ones that aren't getting play elsewhere, have serious artistic integrity or are just fun as hell. I roughly preview at least 25-30 records each week - sometimes my ears hurt at the end of the day."

In contrast to this, the commercial station representatives from Live 105 (MD Aaron Axelsen) and Wild 94.9/Star 101.3 (MD Travis X. Loughran) indicate that what gets added to their stations has more to do with what they perceive listeners want. According to Loughran,

"Listener feedback is what ultimately determines when a record gets on the air and also determines when it's time for a record to come off."

Aaron Axelsen (center) Moderates Panel at Industry Noise in March 2009


Live 105's Axelsen states,

"What gets on the air simply comes down to new music that my program director, Dave Numme, and I feel best represents Live 105 and will resonate and react the most with our listeners. It's a combination of playing new music from the modern rock juggernauts, combined with new releases from passion bands and embracing the best of the new emerging acts."


Yet, what this article doesn't reveal, is that commercial stations are also dealing with pressure from the music industry, mandates from their corporate bosses, and are working with a very small playlist in comparison to college stations. Although Music Directors in commercial radio may have some opportunities to add new music or underground acts, there's very little room in the schedule for this kind of music and it typically gets tested out on a specialty show before being introducted to regular rotation.

To learn more about KUSF's music policies, see my interview with another of their Music Directors, Irwin Swirnoff. Additionally, Aaron Axelsen talked more about Live 105's audience during Noise Pop's Industry Noise conference this year. During a panel there he admitted that he's programming for a mass audience, so it can be tricky introducing new artists.

P.S. After writing this I ran across Brad Kava's SF Radio Examiner post about Live 105's new experiment with a company called Jelli. Starting this past Sunday, those who tune in to the station on Sunday nights from 10 to Midnight will apparently be hearing "100% Listener-Controlled Radio." Hmmm. Kava applauds the effort, but is skeptical, arguing that college radio is really where it's at. He says,

"When you have people voting for music they like you get American Idol, not interesting new music tentacles.

If you want radio that really reflects a community, check out college stations such as KALX and KSJS, where the DJs actually talk to listeners old school style on the phone and play requests."


I totally agree....plus based on what I saw of Jelli, the voting is taking place amongst the already narrow playlists of Live 105. You can vote to hear more Minutemen, Melvins, Throwing Muses, Johnny Cash, Miles Davis, and Pixies (go do it!) and less Nine Inch Nails, Ace of Base and Concrete Blonde, but I doubt they'll be offering up the range that you'd get on college radio.

Monday, April 13, 2009

College Radio and Twitter

I signed up with Twitter (@SpinningIndie) nearly a year ago, but am only just starting to do any sort of posting on it. Clearly it's becoming mainstream (the recent multi-page feature in Star magazine about celebrities on Twitter was kind of a clue) and is no doubt the next Facebook.

I'm curious how radio stations are using Twitter, so I've started to follow a bunch of them. Now, I'm not savvy enough to figure out how to filter all the posts, but one of my first reactions is that I'm not super interested in getting updates on every single song played on a particular station. I think if that's a station's sole purpose in using Twitter, it's kind of a missed opportunity.

Several stations that I follow have separate accounts for station updates (contests, events, promotions, random thoughts, etc.) and for playlists (KEXP Playlist, XPN Playlist). That seems like a great way to do it. If you're desperate for real-time playlist information, then Twitter can be a nice tool for that. In fact, some of these stations may not have any other methods for reporting that information. For example, satellite station Sirius XMU sends out tweets for the songs they play, which is useful since their website doesn't offer archived playlists.

However, if you're someone like me who is interested in updates from lots and lots of stations, then bits of news get hopelessly lost amid the pages and pages of real-time playlist tweets.

I'm sure there's a way for me to filter through all of this in a better way (any suggestions?), but I'm probably not alone in this frustration as a relative newcomer to the whole Twitter scene.

So, as I venture into my investigation of college radio stations on Twitter, I'm curious about a few things:

1) Does your station use Twitter?
2) How often does your station post and who does the posting?
3) Do you follow stations on Twitter?
4) Do you want to see tweets relaying real-time playlists?
5) Which college radio stations are worth following on Twitter


Here are some college radio tweets that express the range of uses of Twitter:

@KZSC: Looks like our site and phones are down due to hooligans in San Jose. We're still broadcasting on 88.1fm though! Listen in!

@WREK: Our programming formula: integral(0, 'Merzbow', ((sqrt(good)/'non-FCC conent')*NOISE), dWRAS/dDaveFM)

@WTUL: http://twitpic.com/24exm - Sunday rises as DJ Bear enters her 18th hour on the air during Hour 42 of the 2009 WTUL Rock On Survival Mara ...

@WXUT: next big thing in music (a college radio prediction): http://tinyurl.com/5m9tct

@KJHK: Get at @thegirlgray for requests for her 8-10 p.m. show. What do you want to hear?!

@WRFL: so very excited for Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti / Vivian Girls tonight @ Al's Bar (corner of 6th & Limestone). All Ages. $5. Doors @ 8:30.

Monday, October 6, 2008

WXVU Playlist from Oct 5 XMU "Student Exchange"

Villanova University station WXVU-FM made their first appearance on XMU's college radio-friendly "Student Exchange Program" yesterday. WXVU was around for years as an on-campus carrier current radio station, but in 1991 they were granted permission by the FCC to broadcast over 89.1 FM. They share their FM frequency with another college radio station (Cabrini College's WYBF) on the Philadelphia Main Line, so they only broadcast to FM listeners a few days a week. Both stations, however, can be hear 24/7 via their Internet feeds.

The next two weeks of "Student Exchange" (Sundays at 1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern) will feature repeats of previous broadcasts by Emerson College station WERS (on Oct. 12) and Chico State station KCSC (on Oct. 19).


WXVU (Villanova University)
Student Exchange Program Playlist
10/05/08

Kings of Leon - Sex On Fire - Only By The Night
Ra Ra Riot - Oh, La - The Rhumb Line
Wolf Parade - Call It A Ritual - At Mount Zoomer
Miniature Tigers - Cannibal Queen - Tell It To The Volcano
Paper Rival - Keep Us In - Dialog

Jukebox the Ghost - Good Day - Let Live And Let Ghost
Noah and the Whale - 5 Years Time - Peaceful The World Lays Me Down
Faded Paper Figures - Logos - Dynamo
Black Kids - Look At Me (When I Rock Wichoo) - Partie Traumatic
TV on the Radio - Golden Age - Dear Science

Death Cab for Cutie - Long Division - Narrow Stairs
Lykke Li - Dance, Dance, Dance - Youth Novels
Paper Route - We Are All Forgotten - We Are All Forgotten
The Faint - Machine In The Ghost - Fasciinatiion
Architecture in Helsinki - Like It Or Not - Like It Or Not

CSS - Move - Donkey
Oxford Collapse - Featherbeds - Bits
The Fashion - Dead Boys - The Fashion
Maps & Atlases - Witch - You And Me And The Mountain
Devin Lima - Rocky Road - Mozart Popart

Harlem Shakes - Old Flames - Burning Birthdays
The Walkmen - Four Provinces - Fleet Foxes
Fleet Foxes - He Doesn't Know Why - You & Me
Band Marino - Chasing Rainbows - The Sea And The Beast
Delta Spirit - People C'mon - Ode To Sunshine

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

mtvU College Radio Channel Features Rotating Trio of Campus Stations

Well, clearly I'm not the target market for this, since I'm only now discovering that mtvU (the on-campus TV network and website) has been featuring and streaming selections from a variety of different college radio stations for 3 years!

According to mtvU's description of mtvU College Radio ("somewhere under the radar"):

"Think of mtvU College Radio as the strainer that separates the delicious noodles from that dirty Ramen water. It's a place where the best new music from the underground (and not so underground) is served up hot by three of the country's top college stations. None of that top 40 filler. Not only will it hip you up and keep you happy, it'll microwave your popcorn. Let's go."

Currently the featured stations in the "Enjoy the Summer" edition are KCSU-FM (Colorado State University), Radio X-FM (Nova Southeastern University, Ft. Lauderdale, FL), and WMUC-FM (University of Maryland, College Park, MD). The mtvU website includes descriptions of each station, along with some "tops" lists of favorite tracks, albums, etc.

There's also a streaming station on the website called mtvU College Radio. You can jump from track to track and I didn't hear any DJ commentary, so it would seem that perhaps the 3 selected stations have a hand in contributing tracks to the playlist, but that their stations are not actually streamed on the website.

The college radio feature on mtvU began in the summer of 2005, when mtvU started to promote a collection of college radio stations on their website. According to a 2005 article in the Drexel student newspaper, The Triangle:


"The inspiration for streaming excellent college radio stations came from MTVU's desire to increase the value of the relationship that it has with its affiliate colleges, according to Senior Director of Marketing for MTVU Lori Raimondo. 'We are all about college and we are a music network, so it just made perfect sense to partner with college radio stations,' said Raimondo."


The September 2005 article discussed Drexel University station WKDU's appearance on MTVu:


"WKDU is among the second group of radio stations recognized by MTVU. The practice of streaming college radio stations began early this summer. Every month, a new group of stations will be available at the MTVU Web site.

Radio stations must meet certain criteria in order to be under consideration for the nationwide exposure that this recognition grants. First, the college that the station serves must be affiliated with MTVU. The station must also be programmed by students for a predominate student audience. Out of that pool of possible stations, MTVU selects a few of the best.

'Our whole goal is to serve [the] college audience,' Raimondo said. MTVU hopes to provide a local feel and to present students with music that might be popular locally but relatively unknown elsewhere. 'This is a way to provide students with another way to hear music being played at colleges other than their own.'"


It's hard to tell how this whole program has evolved and how often the list of stations changes. On mtvU you can go back in time a bit to see the most recent stations that have been featured (by the way, many are also nominees for this year's mtvU College Radio Woodie Award). The stations below are grouped by the edition that they appeared on, although I'm not sure when each edition was featured.

mtvU College Radio Featured Stations:

Fourth Edition: Knoxville (and elsewhere) Rocks!

WUTK-FM (University of Tennessee-Knoxville, TN)
WSOU-FM (Seton Hall University, South Orange, NJ)
KCOU-FM (University of Missouri-Columbia, MO)

Fifth Edition: School's Out For Summer

WVPH-FM "The Core" (Rutgers University & Piscataway High School, NJ)
KDWG-FM (University of Montana-Western, Dillon, MT)
WMTS-FM (Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, TN)

Sixth Edition: The Thirteenth Floor Edition
(be sure to view each station's short promo video, where staff members/DJs talk about their shows in this edition)

WCRD-FM (Ball State University, Muncie, IN)
WZND-FM (Illinois State University, Normal, IL)
WPIR (Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY)

Happy New Year! (7th edition?)

WRGP-Radiate FM (Florida International University, Miami, FL)
WSOU-FM (Seton Hall University, South Orange, NJ)
WXYC-FM (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)

Sunday, September 28, 2008

BlazeRadio Playlist from Today's XMU "Student Exchange Program"

Today college radio station WBLZ (aka BlazeRadio) from University of Alabama-Birmingham made its first appearance on satellite radio station XMU. For their stint on the "Student Exchange Program," the Internet-only station dusted off both new hits (Fleet Foxes, Raconteurs) and college radio classics like Dinosaur Jr., Fugazi, Joy Division, Pavement, The Pixies and Sonic Youth. Kudos to them for mixing things up a bit with the old and the new.

According to an article in University of Alabama student newspaper, The Kaleidoscope, the General Manager of BlazeRadio caught a bit of "the Student Exchange Program" one day and then decided to contact them about being on the show. Within a few months, BlazeRadio got their wish, so it certainly sounds like interested stations should contact XMU. You could be next!

BlazeRadio hopes that their satellite radio debut might help to increase student interest and involvement in the station. The article states,

"Raising campus awareness about Blazeradio has been no easy task in the past. The station has previously seen a decline in staff, due to lack of interest in volunteer positions, until now.


'We’re currently working on filling the DJ schedule, and this has been going great. We hope that with our new advertising campaign, the upcoming XMU broadcast and increasing working relationships with all groups on campus, we can increase our listenership and bring Blazeradio into the spotlight as one of the best college Internet radio stations in the nation,' [General Manager Lonnie] Goldberg said."


Coming up next Sunday, October 5, 2008 (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern on XMU channel 43) is another new station for XMU: Villanova University's WXVU-FM.


Blaze Radio (University of Alabama-Birmingham)
"Student Exchange Program" Playlist
09/28/08


The White Stripes - The Hardest Button To Button – Elephant
Dinosaur Jr. – Been There All The Time – Beyond
Sonic Youth – Kool Thing – Goo
LCD Soundsystem – Tribulations – LCD Soundsystem

Civet – Pay Up – Hell Hath No Fury
The Pixies – Head On – Trompe le Monde
My Morning Jacket – Anytime – Okonokos
The Chemical Brothers – In Began In Afrika – Come With Us
Fugazi – Cashout – The Argument

Be Your Own Pet – The Kelly Affair – Get Awkward
Bif Naked – Nothing Else Matters – Superbeautifulmonster
Brazilian Girls – Jique – Talk To la Bomb
Damone – Out Here All Night – Out Here All Night

Joy Division – No Love Lost – Substance
Pavement – Conduit For Sale! – Slanted And Enchanted
Fleet Foxes – Blue Ridge Mountains – Fleet Foxes
Girl In A Coma – In The Background – Both Before I’m Gone

The Raconteurs – Many Shades Of Black – Consolers Of The Lonely
Kerli – Love Is Dead – Love Is Dead
Elbow – Red – Asleep In The Back

The Rolling Stones – Paint It, Black – Live Licks
Shiny Toy Guns – You Are The One – We Are Pilots
Radiohead – Idioteque – I Might Be Wrong: Live Recordings

Friday, September 26, 2008

Radio UTD Playlist for 9.21.08 XMU "Student Exchange Program"

Last Sunday September 21st, Radio UTD out of University of Texas, Dallas had another stint on XMU satellite radio show "The Student Exchange Program." See below for the Internet-only station's playlist. Coming up this Sunday, September 28, 2008 (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern) will be University of Alabama, Birmingham station BLAZE Radio making its first appearance on the show. Alright!

Radio UTD-University of Texas, Dallas
XMU "Student Exchange" Playlist
September 21, 2008

Air France - Collapsing At Your Doorstep - No Way Down
HEALTH - Triceratops (Cfcf Rmx) - HEALTH/DISCO
B-E-A-T-B-O-X - Beatific - Glass Candy
Vega - All Too Vivid (Original Mix) - All Too Vivid
Moby - I Love To Move In Here (Holy Ghost Rmx)

Fight Bite - Widow's Peak - Emerald Eyes
Oneida - Lavender - The Wedding.
The Mae Shi - Young Marks - Hillyh
Abe Vigoda - The Garden - Skeleton
Marius Cultier - Guanavaco - Calypsoul '70 Caribbean Soul & Calypso Crossover 1969-1979

Okkervil River - Westfall - Dont Fall In Love With Everyone You See
Deer Tick - Standing At The Threshold - War Elephant
Department of Eagles - Too Little Too Late - No One Does It Like You
Fleet Foxes - White Winter Hymnal - Fleet Foxes
Sunset - The World Is Awaiting - The Glowing City

Why? - Sanddollars - Sanddollars
Bound Stems - Cloak Of Blue Sky - The Family Afloat
Tapes 'n Tapes - Insistor - The Loon
Shugo Tokumaru - Parachute - Exit

Mighty Mighty - Law - NME C86 Comp
Port Obrien - I Woke Up Today - All We Could Do Was Sing
Bodies Of Water - Under The Pines - A Certain Feeling

Dirty Projectors - Naked We Made It - The Glad Fact
Animal Collective - Winter Wonder Land - Strawberry Jam
Karl Blau - Make Love That Lasts - Natures Got Away

Parenthetical Girls - Windmills Of Your Mind - Entanglements

Monday, September 15, 2008

SCAD Radio Playlist from Yesterday's XMU Show

I'm thrilled to see that college radio-loving satellite station XMU is beginning the fall semester with some new blood on its weekly "Student Exchange Program."

Yesterday's show featured the Internet-only station SCAD Radio from Savannah College of Art and Design (Savannah, Georgia). The station has been broadcasting online since January 2002. According to their website, "SCAD Radio is dedicated to offering music and programming not heard on other Savannah radio stations, with particular emphasis on music performed by SCAD students and other local artists."

To learn more about SCAD Radio, be sure to read the lengthy September 2007 interviews with their Student Media Advisor and General Manager (at the time) on Connect Savannah.

Coming up next Sunday, September 21, 2008 (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern) on XMU's "Student Exchange" will be frequent contributor Radio UTD from University of Texas, Dallas.


SCAD Radio (Savannah College of Art and Design)
XMU "Student Exchange Program" Playlist
Air Date: 09-14-08

James Pants - We're Through- Welcome
Ponytail - Small Wevs - Ice Cream Spiritual
Bonjour's Parties - Magpie Will Peck A Hole In My Plaster Cast - Pigments Drift Down To The Brook
The Walkmen - Seven Years Of Holidays (For Stretch) - You & Me

Stereolab - Self Portrait With "Electric Brain" - Chemical Chords
The Silent Years - Ropes - The Globe
Tiny Specks Of Many Things - Electrocution - The Choir Invisible
Chad VanGaalen - Cries Of The Dead - Soft Airplane
System And Station - Out On The Wall - A Nation Of Actors

Ratatat - Falcon Jab - LP3
Takka Takka - Everybody Say - Migration
Horse Feathers - Working Poor - House With No Name
The Floorboards - The Proverbial Handouts - The Floorboards EP
Mad Gregs - Old Man -Big Nun
SBACH - Track 07 - SBACH

Sebastian Tellier - Kilometer - Sexuality
Experimental Dental School - Microscope Lab Voices - Jane Doe Loves Me
Alias - Resurgam- Resurgam
The Notwist - Alphabet - The Devil, You + Me
Aux Arc - Put It On Your Pancakes - Aux Arc Is Marshall Trotter
Pattern Is Movement - Peach Trees - All Together

Calexico - Two Silver Trees - Carried To Dust
A Night In The Box - Le Me Know - Write A Letter
Forward Russia - Spring Is A Condition
Hercules And Love Affair - Hercules Theme - Hercules And Love Affair
The New Up - Top Of The Stairs - Broken Machine
Jeremy Jay - Alpha Rhythm - Alpha Rhythm

Monday, September 8, 2008

WERS Playlist from Yesterday's XMU "Student Exchange"


Yesterday (September 7, 2008) Music Director John Parsons of Emerson College (Boston, MA) radio station WERS-FM appeared on the XMU "Student Exchange Program," presenting some of their station's favorite tracks.

Now that the summer has drawn to a close, XMU will be featuring some new college radio stations in the coming weeks. I'm excited to hear what the Savannah College of Art and Design station SCAD Radio will be sharing during their stint this Sunday, September 14th (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern).

If your station wants to broadcast your good taste to the rest of the country on satellite radio, email studentexchange@xmradio.com to get the scoop on how you can be on XMU's Student Exchange Program.

WERS - EMERSON COLLEGE
Student Exchange Program Playlist
AIR DATE: 09.07.2008


Eli 'Paperboy' Reed & The True Loves - Take My Love With You - Roll With You
The Walkmen - Four Provinces - You & Me
Sam Phillips - Little Plastic Life -Don't Do Anything
Okkervil River - Starry Stairs - The Stand-Ins

Hayes Carll - I Got A Gig - Trouble In Mind
Calexico - Writer's Minor Holiday - Carried To Dust
Sonantes - Defenestrando - Sonantes
Raphael Saadiq - 100 Yard Dash - The Way I See It

The Moondoggies - I Want You To Know - Don't Be A Stranger
Stereolab - Three Women - Chemical Chords
Silver Jews - Strange Victory Strange Defeat - Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea
Elvis Costello & The Imposters - Harry Worth - Momofuku

Sigur Ros - Gobbledigook - Med sud i eyrum vid spilum endalaust
Thao with the Get Down Stay Down - Violet - We Brave Bee Stings And All
Dennis Wilson - Pacific Ocean Blue - Pacific Ocean Blue
Neil Halstead - Pain't A Face - Oh! Mighty Engine

Dan Dyer - Love Chain - Dan Dyer
The Cat Empire - Panama - So Many Nights
Nina Simone - Gimme Some - Verve Remixed 4
David Byrne and Brian Eno - Strange Overtones - Everything That Happens Will Happen Today

Peter Moren - Social Competence - The Last Tycoon
Nikka Costa - Can't Please Everybody - Pebble to a Pearl
Ray LaMontagne - You Are The Best Thing - Gossip In The Grain
Ratatat - Black Heroes - LP3

Friday, September 5, 2008

College Radio Field Trip 2 - Cal Poly's KCPR


Over the Labor Day weekend I was finally able to resume my series of field trips to college radio stations around the country, which began in March with my first field trip to WECB (Emerson College).

This time around, I went closer to home, visiting California station KCPR 91.3 FM at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. One of the station General Managers, Brian Hildebrand took time out of a busy day to meet with me and chat about the 40 year old station.

The first thing that struck me was that the station name was emblazoned across the top of the Graphic Arts building where the station was housed. That's some incredible exposure for the station and when I asked Brian about it, he said he had no idea how they got so lucky. The station has had a number of changes recently, not the least of which was a station move/remodel and a change in their transmitter location in order to gain wider coverage. While I visited, they were also gearing up to broadcast their first football game.


When I arrived, DJ "Otto" was in control of the board. As I'd suspected, "Otto" is an automatic DJ used when there isn't a live DJ available to fill an airshift. Cal Poly was still on summer break, thus the presence of Otto on a few slots. While I listened to the station over the weekend, I heard several Otto DJ shifts and the music sounded really good, most likely because KCPR takes a lot of care in choosing the music that is fed into the virtual DJ system. They have a beautiful, brand new board in their on-air studio that's connected to studio automation software called "NexGen Digital," that seems to do a lot of the work when there isn't a live DJ.


It says a lot about the station that even when the board is on Otto-pilot, the station still sounds great and is very listenable. I talked to both Brian and one of the Music Directors (Jack La Porte) about the station's programming philosophy, which leans heavily towards playing underexposed, mostly indie music. As a testament to that, KCPR also has a large vinyl library and regularly adds vinyl to the station (although they don't receive a lot in the mail). Additionally, they have a show called "Vinyl Frontiers," in which DJs go through the station library playing hidden vinyl gems that fit with a particular theme.


Vinyl Being Played during Jack's shift

KCPR features both format and specialty shows. Format DJs are required to play 7 "current" releases per hour, which equates to about 50% current per format show. Additionally, all music played on a format show must be from the station's library. However, specialty show DJs can bring music from home and are not subject to "current" requirements. Format shows are very eclectic, as I got to experience first-hand while observing Music Director Jack's show during my visit.

On the Summer 2008 schedule, some of the specialty shows included "Electronic Immersion," "Soul Patrol," "New Noise," "Slaytanic Carnage" ("the only death metal show on the central coast" and a big hit with the incarcerated residents of the nearby "Men's Colony" according to Brian), "Urban Landscapes" (urban show that's been on for about a decade) and "Psychedelic Gospel." The airstaff includes student, faculty and community member DJs. One of their longtime DJs, Disgusting Old Hippie (aka English Prof. James B. Cushing), has been hosting the acoustic jazz show "Miles Ahead" since 1997. Brian and Jack proudly told me that James was also featured in the film "Decline of Western Civilization."

Brian also talked about a recent article in the campus paper "America's Oldest College Radio DJ?" about KCPR's oldest DJ Charlie B, who hosts "Musica Americana," in which he plays old-time music.

I was intrigued to hear some station lore during my visit too, including tales about Weird Al's stint at the station. To hear more about the Weird Al connection, see some classic photos and read one KCPR alum's account of his time at the station in the 1970s, visit "My College Days at KCPR." There's also a Wiki for KCPR alum and you can find all sorts of goodies there, including pictures of old playlists, program guides, etc.

Paper Playlist

Speaking of playlists, KCPR still uses paper playlists, which surprised me in light of their glamorous new board. The MDs tally up the lists each week in order to compile their charts for CMJ and labels. I remember those days not so fondly.

Thanks again to the staff of KCPR for allowing me to tour their excellent station. I'm always thrilled to learn more about the inner-workings of other college radio stations and it's particularly cool when the station is devoted to underground sounds. I'll be keeping tabs on KCPR and look forward to hearing what they're up to as they celebrate their 40th anniversary this fall.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

XMU Seeking College Radio Stations for "Student Exchange"

While driving around over Labor Day weekend I caught a bit of the XMU "Student Exchange Program" on Sunday, August 31st. It turns out that the show was a repeat of WXCU's (Capital University) July 6, 2008 appearance. My post from July has the complete playlist.

Coming up this Sunday, September 7th (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern) will be Emerson College station WERS.

Also, now's the time to drop a note to XMU if your station is interested in participating in the "Student Exchange Program." Just email studentexchange@xmradio.com to get the scoop.

I'd love to see more stations on their roster and am thrilled to see that in the upcoming weeks there are some new folks joining in. Here's the latest schedule:

XMU Student Exchange - Upcoming College Radio Stations

9/7/08 WERS-FM (Emerson College, Boston, MA)
9/14/08 SCAD Radio (Savannah College of Art and Design, Savannah, GA)
9/21/08 RadioUTD (University of Texas at Dallas, TX)
9/28/08 BLAZE Radio (University of Alabama-Birmingham, AL)
10/5/08 WXVU-FM (Villanova University, PA)

Monday, August 25, 2008

KSLU Playlist from Yesterday's XMU "Student Exchange Program"

(Image from KSLU)

Yesterday (August 24, 2008) on the XMU satellite radio show "Student Exchange," KSLU from Saint Louis University provided the sonic entertainment. They've been a regular on the show and most recently curated the show on July 27th. This coming Sunday, August 31st, WXCU (Capital University) will hit the XMU airwaves again (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern).


KSLU (Saint Louis University)
"Student Exchange Program" playlist
AIR DATE: 08/24/2008

Conor Oberst – Cape Canaveral – Conor Oberst
Amy Millan – Losin You – Honey From The Tombs
Wilco – Nothing’severgonnastandinmyway (Again) – Summerteeth
Broken Social Scene – Looks Just Like The Sun – You Forgot It In People
Spoon – Small Stakes – Kill the Moonlight

The Hold Steady – Constructive Summer – Stay Positive
Cut Copy – Out There On The Ice – In Ghost Colours
Margot & the Nuclear So And So’s – Quiet As A Mouse – The Dust Of Retreat
Hey Rosetta! – New Goodbye – Into Your Lungs
Memphis – Incredibly Drunk On Whiskey – A Little Place In The Wilderness
The Most Serene Republic – Present Of Future End – Population
Arcade Fire – (Antichrist Television Blues) – Neon Bible

Styrofoam – Couches In Alleys – Nothing’s Lost
Yeasayer – 2080 – All Hour Cymbals
Battles – Race In – Mirrored
The Virgins – One Week Of Danger – The Virgins
MGMT – Weekend Wars – Oracular Spectacular
We Are Scientists – After Hours – Brain Thrust Mastery
Black Kids – Hit The Heartbrakes – Partie Traumatic

M83 – Graveyard Girl – Saturdays=Youth
The Magnetic Fields – California Girls – Distortion
Stars – Soft Revolution – Set Yourself On Fire

The Decemberists – July, July! – Castaways and Cutouts
Born Ruffians – Hummingbird – Red, Yellow & Blue
The Wrens – This Boy Is Exhausted – The Meadowlands

Monday, August 11, 2008

WERS Playlist from Yesterday's XMU "Student Exchange Program"


On yesterday's "Student Exchange Program" on satellite station XMU, college radio station WERS-FM (out of Emerson College in Boston) made another appearance.

They played several of the same bands (My Morning Jacket, Fleet Foxes, Black Keys, Raconteurs, DeVotchKa, Jamie Lidell) that they played when they were on the the show earlier this summer, which makes me wonder a bit about how stations select their playlists for XMU. Some stations seem to mix it up quite a bit, choosing artists that aren't played frequently on XMU, whereas others regularly have lists with popular XMU bands.

To get another station's take on the XMU sound, tune in this coming Sunday, August 17th, 2008 (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern) when Chico State station KCSC has another stint on the show.

WERS - Emerson College
"Student Exchange Program" Playlist 8/10/2008


Delta Spirit - Trashcan - Ode to Sunshine
Fleet Foxes - White Winter Hymnal - Fleet Foxes
Duffy - Mercy - Rockverry
Blind Melon - Tumblin Down - For My Friends

Adele - Right As Rain - 19
Beck - Modern Guilt - Modern Guilt
Brazilian Girls - St. Petersburg - New York City
The Black Keys - Psychotic Girl - Attack & Release

Kate Nash - Pumpkin Soup - Made of Bricks
My Morning Jacket - Evil Urges - Evil Urges
Bon Iver - Creature Fear - For Emma, Forever Ago
The Raconteurs - Old Enough - Consolers of the Lonely

Dr. Dog - The Rabbit, The Bat, and The Reindeer - Fate
The Avett Brothers - St. Joseph's - The Gleam II
The Hold Steady - One For The Cutters - Stay Positive
Conor Oberst - Sausalito - Conor Oberst

Nik Freitas - Sun Down - Nik Freitas
DeVotchKa - Transliterator - A Mad and Faithful Telling
Jamie Lidell - Little Bit of Feel Good - Jim
Jesca Hoop - Dreams in the Hollow - Kismet

Cat Power - Aretha, Sing One For Me - Jukebox
Wye Oak - Family Glue - If Children
Joy Division - Love Will Tear Us Apart - Substance

Monday, August 4, 2008

WVAU "Student Exchange" Playlist from Yesterday's Show

WVAU, the Internet and campus station of American University in Washington D.C. made another appearance on the XMU satellite radio show "Student Exchange Program" yesterday. DJ Adam Dexter, who does the "Dexter's Lab" show on Sunday afternoons was the guest DJ and he wrote a bit about the playlist on his website if you need more scoop.

Coming up next Sunday, August 10th (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern) will be Emerson College station WERS (read more about them in my earlier post today).

WVAU (AMERICAN UNIVERSITY, Washington, DC)
XMU "Student Exchange Program" Playlist 8/3/08

Florence & The Machine - Kiss With A Fist – Kiss With A Fist 7”
The Submarines - You, Me, & The Bourgeoisie – Honeysuckle Weeks
LCD Soundsystem – Disco Infiltrator – LCD Soundsystem
Does It Offend You, Yeah? – We Are Rockstars –You Have No Idea What You’re Getting Yourself Into

Passion Pit – Sleepyhead – Chunk of Change
Faded Paper Figures – Metropolis – Dynamo
Rooftop Vigilantes – Oscar Want 7” – N/A Single
Black Lips – Veni Vidi Vici – Good Bad Not Evil
Gotye - Thanks For Your Time – Like Drawing Blood

The Grates – Inside, Outside – Gravity Won’t Get You High
E.S.L. – Prove Me Wrong – Eye Contact
Charades – (Fish and) Ships – The Lydia Albright EP
Neutral Milk Hotel – Two-Headed Boy – In The Aeroplane Over The Sea
Boys Noize - &Down – Oi Oi Oi

Death From Above 1979 – Blood On Our Hands – You’re a Woman, I’m a Machine
Beck – Timebomb – Timebomb (Single)
The Battle Royal – Shook Up – Wake Up, Thunderbabe
Bright Eyes - Classic Cars – Cassadaga
The Morning Benders – Damnit Anna – Talking Through Tin Cans…

Hot Chip – Wrestlers – Made In The Dark
The Touch – Le Night Dominator (Original Version) – The Touch EP
!!! - A New Name – Myth Takes
Ratatat – Mirando – LP3
The Faint – Posed To Death (The Calculators Remix) – Danse Macabre Remixes

Radio Journal Article Analyzes "Alternative" Programming at Boston and NY College Radio Stations

The main impetus behind starting Spinning Indie was that I was becoming increasingly obsessed with college radio after spending a bunch of time researching indie radio for an academic article that I was working on for The Radio Journal: International Studies in Broadcast and Audio Media. My article, which is focused on the role of "indie" at one specific college radio station in the late 1990s, is now officially published and will soon be accessible online in Volume 5.2 of the journal.

In the meantime, I just discovered that the previous issue (Volume 5.1 from 2007) of Radio Journal includes another piece about college radio by Tim Wall called "Finding an alternative: Music programming in US college radio" (note: this link will only work for a short time until the next issue is published online).

According to the abstract for the paper:

"Radio stations based at universities make up only about 11% of all over-the-air stations in the United States of America, but college radio is often presented as offering an alternative in music radio to the for-profit stations that dominate the airwaves. College stations are now seen as a key means of promoting 'indie rock'. This article traces the development of university-based radio stations in the United States, and reports on a five-year study of music programming in three stations based in Boston and New York, to examine their claim to alternativeness. The paper concludes that the stations do use different forms of music programming, that the programming extends well beyond the scope of 'indie rock'..."

In his paper, Wall took an in-depth look at the programming policies of three college radio stations between 2002 and 2007. The stations he examined were Fordham University's WFUV in New York, WERS at Emerson College in Boston, and WZBC from Boston College (alright! This was my favorite station on my trip to Boston in April). Through his research he found that:

"...there is not one type of alternativeness; and the distinctive sense of alternativeness articulated by the jazz, world, indie rock, folk and Americana music played on the college stations was as much rooted in the cultural histories of those musical genres as it was in the way they were programmed and presented."


Here is a bit of a summary of what he found at each college radio station:

WZBC (Boston College)

Wall tells us that WZBC is run by students and has a free-form format. Of note, is that the station has a relationship with public radio, but that this didn't seem to influence the majority of the programming. (When I perused their website, the only public radio indication I saw was that they air the program "Democracy Now")

He says, "In my independent discussions with three station presenters, they each stated that they had a very committed listenership in the Boston area, but they also argued that it was widely perceived that most Boston College students were not interested in the station’s output. In doing so, they constructed parallels between their own personal sense of being outside of mainstream college life with the commitment of a group outside the university and a musical form that they perceived to be 'alternative' and 'underground'."

This comment, that listeners tend to not be students, is something I've heard about many college radio stations. He continues:

"...in our conversations the staff went to particular lengths to distance themselves from the 'college rock' forms of radio they perceived as the norm in college stations...The presenters selected music on a track-by-track basis as the show progressed, usually chosen in response to the record currently playing. Most often these records were from a pile the presenter had pre-selected and brought in from their own collection, but also drew on records from the station’s extensive library..."

WERS (Emerson College)

During Wall's research study, WERS made significant changes to its programming policies. He writes that by the end of 2005 "block programming" was replaced by "strip programming" from 2am to 7pm that was " '...a blend of folk, rock, jazz, world, blues, soul, electronic and reggae’..."

The playlists at WERS are more tightly controlled that at freeform WZBC. Wall writes: "By the end of the five-year period, the station’s daytime programming operated on an entirely centralised playlist, although the presenters of the specialist reggae and hip hop shows had freedom to select their own music."

As I mentioned after my own visit to the radio stations at Emerson College, WERS seems to be more pre-professional than many college stations. He writes: "Rather than a commitment to a particular lifestyle, WERS staff were either interested in a career in broadcasting, or felt that it was an effective way to pursue their interest in particular kinds of music."


WFUV (Fordham University)

Finally, Wall wrote about Fordham public radio station WFUV, which had the least amount of student involvement and was the most tightly controlled, "professional" station of the three.

He writes:

"Station staff spoke quite proudly of the station as an AAA station, and their role in establishing the format within more conventional radio practice. This format – Album Adult Alternative – is relatively new in US radio, although it has antecedents in Adult Oriented Rock (AOR) and Adult Contemporary (AC) formats. As the names suggest all three are aimed at adult (aged 25+) listeners and grew out of FM radio. AAA stations are presented, in the words of station staff, as offering an alternative to the 'rock-clichés and rock-lite formula of AOR', and the 'pop sensibilities of AC', by playing 'music at the margins’'of American rock, with a strong folk/acoustic and world music flavour."

In distinguishing WFUV from WERS and WZBC, Wall writes:

"While staff at WZBC and WERS in 2003 felt that it was important to have music and other programming systems that differed from for-profit stations...WFUV saw these as professional tools...Their professionalism was very important to them, and they used this self-identity to distinguish themselves from other college stations. On the other hand, they associated themselves with the college’s commitment to education as a way of distinguishing their values from those of the stations whose primary objective was profit."

WFUV definitely seems to benefit from having a paid staff and great funding. Wall didn't mention this, but they have a project coming up this fall that is going to provide yet another "alternative." According to their website,

"WFUV (90.7 FM) will launch an alternate channel online...and in HD at 90.7 FM in the New York City area, to include a blend of established and emerging NYC-based indie rock, electronica, world, dance and other musical hybrids, in Fall 2008. The new site is supported in part by The New York State Music Fund, established by the New York State Attorney General at Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors."



In summarizing the whole paper, Tim Wall writes:


"The case studies reveal that there is no one form or expression of alternativeness in American radio...More important than a simplistic sense of 'college music' as alternative rock, it is the themes of progress, cultural uplift and alternative lifestyle that have threaded throughout the development of American education and broadcasting, and they continue to play an important part in the discursive practices of college radio today."



I'm glad to see more academic attention to college radio, which is, indeed an alternative to commercial radio, no matter what form it takes. However, as Wall pointed out, these stations really just scratch the surface in terms of the wide range of programming philosophies and interpretations of "alternative" that can be found at college radio stations in the US.

Monday, July 28, 2008

KSLU Playlist from Yesterday's XMU "Student Exchange"

Image from KSLU Website

St. Louis University radio station KSLU made another appearance on satellite radio station XMU's "Student Exchange Program" yesterday.

Although KSLU is a cable and Internet-only station now, according to its website, "...radio at Saint Louis University began in 1920 with the establishment of the first radio station west of the Mississippi River, WEW. WEW was a faculty-run, religious radio station. Then in 1949 the communications department established KBIL, a student-run station operating as a carrier current facility broadcasting to a small radius around campus...the call letters KSLU were established in 1983..."

Coming up next Sunday, August 3rd (4pm Eastern/1pm Pacific) on XMU's "Student Exchange" will be DJ Adam Dexter from American University station WVAU. If you want a preview of what he'll be playing on the show, take a look at Adam's writeup on Dexter's Lab.

Here's KSLU's playlist from yesterday's show on XMU:


KSLU - Saint Louis University
XMU "Student Exchange Program" Playlist
July 27, 2008

No Age–Ripped Jeans–Nouns
White Denim–Don’t Look That Way At It–Daytrotter Session
The Black Lips–Step Right Up–Good Bad Not Evil
Dark Meat–One More Trip–Universal Indians
Mika Miko–Where The Sidewalk Ends-666
Japanther–See Evil–Skuffed My Huffy
Clinic–The Witch–Do It!
The Pretty Things–Honey I Need–The Pretty Things
Black Mountain–Evil Ways–In The Future
The Blue & The Gray–Don’t Send Me No Flowers–Lost Souls Volume 1
The Black Hollies–Paisley Pattern Ground–Casting Shadows
The Kingsmen–Little Latin Lupe Lu–The Best Of The Kingsmen

The Talking Heads–And She Was–Stop Making Sense
Wolf Parade–California Dreamer–At Mount Zoomer
Pattern Is Movement–Right Away–All Together Now
Asobi Seksu–Pink Cloud Tracing Paper–Citrus
Celebration–Evergreen–The Modern Tribe
French Kicks–Over The World–Swimming
The M’s–Tryin’ To Keep My Feet In–Real Close Ones
Spiritualized–The Waves Crash In–Songs In A & E
Deer Tick–Ashamed–War Elephant

Maps & Atlases–Songs For Ghosts To Haunt To–Tree, Swallows, Houses
Ecstatic Sunchine–Beetle–Freckle Wars
Abe Vigoda–Dead City Waste Wilderness–Skeleton
Born Ruffians–I’m One Of Those Girls–Born Ruffians EP
Envelopes–Smoke In The Desert Eating The Sand Hiding In The Grass–Here Comes The Wind
Les Savy Fav–Hold Onto Your Genre–Inches
Parts & Labor–Fractured Skies–Mapmaker
So Many Dynamos–We Vibrate We Do–Flashlights
Health–Triceratops–Health
Man Man–Easy Eats Or Dirty Doctor Galapagos–Rabbit Habbits
Fire Engines–Meat Whiplash–Hungry Beat
My Morning Jacket–Highly Suspicious–Evil Urges

These are some massive sets of music, with only a few mic breaks. Do you play sets this long without back announcing at your station?

Come to think of it, does set length even matter on satellite radio since the playlist appears on the listener's tuner?

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Classic College Radio Airchecks Unearthed

Like many college radio DJs from another era, I have boxes and boxes of cassette tape airchecks gathering dust and mold. Some day I'll dig them out and decide what to do with them. In the meantime, I just found a few folks who have brought their old cassettes into the digital age so that all can hear that elusive college radio sound.

Thanks to the False 45th blog, I got turned on to The College of Musical Knowledge, where a former college radio DJ at WRUV-FM (University of Vermont) has uploaded many of his radio shows from his 18-year stint at the Burlington, Vermont station. The DJ (now a college professor) includes shows from the 1980s and 1990s and has detailed descriptions of them so that you can pick and choose according to whether or not you want to sample some punk, reggae, Brian Eno, Joy Division, The Residents, an hour of instrumentals, or just an eclectic mix.

If this isn't enough for you, another ex-DJ just posted a 1995 aircheck from a morning show on the Freed-Hardeman University radio station WFHC-91.5 FM (Henderson, Tennessee). You can find it on the RadioInsight aircheck collectors message board (who knew?).

Monday, July 21, 2008

Playlist from Radio UTD's XMU Show Yesterday

Radio UTD (University of Texas-Dallas) made another appearance on the weekly college radio-themed XMU satellite radio show "the Student Exchange Program" yesterday. Their list was full of some great stuff, old and new. I was excited to see that they busted out some classic Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. I think that their earliest stuff is just beautiful (especially "Architecture and Morality") and totally stands the test of time.

Next Sunday, July 27th, KSLU (St. Louis University) will make another appearance on the "The Student Exchange Program" (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern). On to the playlist...

Radio UTD-University of Texas-Dallas
XMU "Student Exchange" Playlist - July 20, 2008

Spiritualized - I Gotta Fire - Songs in A&E
Pop Levi- Never Never Love - Never Never Love [EP]
Hercules & Love Affair - Hercules Theme - Hercules & Love Affair
Halo Benders - Virginia Reel Around the Fountain - The Rebel's Not In
Wolf Parade - California Dreamer - At Mount Zoomer

Abe Vigoda - Dead City/Waste Wilderness - Skeleton
The Cure - Close To Me - The Head on the Door
Gang of Four - Damaged Goods - Entertainment!
The Normal - Warm Leatherette - T.V.O.D./Warm Leatherette 12"
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark - Mysterialities - Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
Section 25 - Inspiration - From the Hip

The Notwist - Alphabet - The Devil, You + Me
Meho Plaza - I Sold My Organs - Meho Plaza
Death Set - Around the World - Worldwide
Joanna Newsom - Clam, Crab, Cockle, Cowrie - Joanna Newsom and the YS Street Band

John Maus - Times is Weird - Love Is Real
Glass Candy - Etheric Device - B/E/A/T/B/O/X
Boom Bip - Coogie Sweater - Sacchrilege EP
Fiery Furnaces - Sweet Spot - EP
Bodies of Water - Under the Pines - A Certain Feeling

Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - (Keep Eye On) Other's Gain - Lie Down in the Light
Eric Chenaux - Love Don't Change - Sloppy Ground
Cat Stevens - First Cut is the Deepest - New Masters
Tape - Beams - Luminarium

Treasure Mammal - Best Friends Forever - You Wish I Was Channeling Your Spirit

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Sunday's Chico State Playlist from XMU Radio Show

Satellite station XMU featured Chico State's radio station KCSC as guest curator of "the Student Exchange Program" this past Sunday, July 13th. Coming up next Sunday, July 20th (1pm Pacific/4pm Eastern) will be another Internet-only station Radio UTD from University of Texas-Dallas.

Here's KCSC's playlist:

KCSC - CHICO STATE
XMU "Student Exchange Show" Playlist 7/13/08


Animal Collective – Water Curses - Water Curses
Chin Chin – Chin Chin – Dontchusee
The Black Keys – Attack and Release – Psychotic Girl
The Chap – Mega Breakfast – Caution Me

Booka Shade – The Sun and the Neon Light - Control Me
Ladytron – Velocifero - I’m Not Scared
Wolf Parade – At Mount Zoomer – Language City

Crystal Castles – Crystal Castles – Vanished
Does it Offend You, Yeah? – You Have No Idea What You Are
Getting Into – Doomed Now
From Bubblegum to Sky – Even the Sunbeams

Kail – Peter Pennyworth
Flying Lotus – Los Angeles – Camel
J*Davey – The Beauty in Distortion/The Land of the Lost -LaLaland
Metaform – Standing on the Shoulders of Giants – Crush

Jamie Lidell - Jim – Another Day
King Khan & the Shrines – The Supreme Genius of King Khan & the Shrines – Took My Lady to Dinner
James Curd – Mark Farina – Morse Code (by Mark Farina)
No Age - Nouns – Eraser

Delicious Vinyl - Rmxxology – Passin’ Me By (Hot Chip remix)
Presto – State of the Art - Part of Greatness ft. CL Smooth
Willie Bobo – Verve Remixed 4 - Evil Ways (remixed by Karriem Riggins)
Gnarls Barkley – The Odd Couple – A Little Better

The Wedding Present – El Rey - Soup
Bonnie "Prince" Billy – Lie Down in the Light – So Everyone
Fleet Foxes – Fleet Foxes – Ragged Wood