Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts

January 11, 2016

Bowie... ........................................ ...Waiting For The Man (BBC Radio 1972)


This Spiders from Mars version of Waiting for the Man might just surpass the original for me. 

I've had this outstanding tape labelled "Ziggy 1 / Ziggy 2" since I dubbed it from a cassette belonging to my late friend Markus around 1995 when we lived in a shared flat in San Francisco. I just finally bothered to look it up and found out it's of BBC Radio recordings, 1971-73.

June 10, 2012

Frack Rock! ...Barclay Records.... ................... Eastern PA 1961-69

The Royal Cavaliers
These two comps from the coal region are appropriately fractured at the magic year, 1966, when sonic forces converged and, for me, the best music of that decade bubbled to the surface. Kids could buy cheap Silvertone or Harmony electric guitars at the department store and start a band in their parents' garage in a newly buit subdivision. Buddy Holly, the twist, surf music, and the British invasion showed they didn't need professional songwriters or string arrangements to have a hit song. They could cover one, or write their own, and the local AM station would pipe the record over a 500-mile radius and make it a regional hit. Radio deejays sponsored dances in high school gyms that your band could play at. 1966, the drug culture was just catching on and psychedelia was emerging, but hadn't gotten too stupid, and probably hadn't reached Orwigsburg yet anyway. And with a little sinister fuzztone and organ, the kids didn't necessarily have to do drugs to sound like they did.

Clay Barclay ran one of those hometown record producer/engineer/publisher all-in-one operations that did so much to drive the vast body of American music that flew under the radar. He apparently even ran WKBA as a 10-watt pirate radio station out of his parent's house! The Eastern PA comps pull together a great snapshot of that place and time. These are my favorite tracks, but you can still buy the full CDs at the BOMP Store.

Eastern PA Rock 1961-1965
The Mistics WKBA countdown Orwigsburg radio
The Triumphs - Triumph's Theme 
The Triumphs - Don't Ask Me Why Buddy Holly lives!
The Jaguars - Unfair to Me
Chuck Barr and the Playboys - Twist With Me Check out all the local high school shout-outs.
Chuck Barr and the Playboys - Espaniel Bob Wills meets The Ventures at Taco Bell
Chuck Barr and the Playboys - Sky Blue Pink
The Mistics - WKBA jingle
The Ramrods - War Party
The Ramrods - Blue Steel David Lynch meets Waikiki Beach in coal country?

Eastern PA Rock 1966 - 1969
The Sidewinders - Not Again A nasty girl-cruncher along the lines of The Rats' Revenge
The Lords - Sweet Words A little calypso for the frat boys
The Newluvs - Be My Girl A cool organ-cruncher
The Royal Cavaliers - I'll Try Again Super primitive adolescents
Pat Farrell and the Believers - Bad Woman With a fuzz bass from the 80s-goth/psych time machine
The Ethics - A Letter to Kathy Last song at the Minersville High School dance


Clay Barclay is still recording bands at Cyberacoustics Laboratory in Louisville, Kentucky. Check out the Barclay Sound Wagon!

April 9, 2012

i92 - Rock of the 80's


It wasn't my imagination. There really was, for a few months when I was 14, a commercial radio station that played new wave pop during the day, and punk rock music late at night once-a-week. What was the name of that show? ...Dead Kennedys, Black Flag, Sex Pistols.... I remember sneaking my radio to bed and listening to it next to my pillow. This was around the same time as that seminal Black Flag/Meat Puppets show in Harrisburg. I think I first heard about it from those nighttime DJs and it looks like we might have Rodney on the ROQ to thank for that:
...When WCAU FM debuted their "Hot Hits" format in 1981, they grabbed most of the teen audience from WIFI. In response, WIFI briefly attempted an adult contemporary format in 1982 but it failed almost immediately due to stiff competition and a diluted audience.... In early 1983, the station called in consultant Rick Carroll who had transformed Los Angeles' KROQ into a Southern California ratings success. With much fanfare and press coverage, Carroll attempted to replicate his "Rock of the 80's" New Wave format in Philadelphia by dramatically changing the station's sound and bringing in DJs such as Mel Toxic and Lee Paris. The station was referred to as "i92."... - Philly Radio Archives 

If you're still in the Philly area, the traffic report will sound familiar:


And it looks like this guy from Pensauken was pretty excited about that station too. Settle in for a little DaveTV:


"The Rock" was gone in less than 6-months. It turned into WXTU, country radio, where it remains to this day.