How's it sit? Pretty cunning, don'tchya think?

Jayne ,'The Message'


Buffista Music III: The Search for Bach  

There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.


sumi - Oct 04, 2005 5:43:58 am PDT #744 of 10003
Art Crawl!!!

Bwah!


Hayden - Oct 04, 2005 5:46:44 am PDT #745 of 10003
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

Tom wins!

Here's a link for jazzbos: Forty lives in the bebop business: mental health in a group of eminent jazz musicians, GEOFFREY I. WILLS, PhD.


Lyra Jane - Oct 04, 2005 6:22:46 am PDT #746 of 10003
Up with the sun

Are you people listening to Nellie McKay? She's so kickass.

She's another artist I missed the boat on, I'm afraid -- her CD did nothing for me. I mean, I admire the cleverness of her lyrics, but that doesn't make me want to listen to her.

(I think she's just not noisy enough for me.)

I think it means the soundtrack from Garden State.

Nah, that would be too edgy for them. More like the soundtrack to Singles.

And I think I'm one of the only ones here who listens to music on the radio, because (as I have said before) I have the attention span of a chipmunk and get easily bored by NPR, and am too lazy to make a different mix CD every week.


dw - Oct 04, 2005 9:27:08 am PDT #747 of 10003
Silence means security silence means approval

What does "adult alternative" mean?

Wikipedia comes through! [link]

Adult album alternative (also Adult Alternative, AAA or Triple-A) is a radio format which has a broader, more diverse playlist than most formats and tends to appeal more to adults than to teenagers. Less played tracks are also common. Musical selection tends to be on the fringe of mainstream popular music and rock music as well as many other music genres such as alternative rock, alternative country, jazz, folk music, world music and blues. The musical selections tend to shy away from hard rock and rap music.

So, it's music for the 25-49 white yuppie crowd. Lots of singer-songwriter and vocal types in the mix, so Ani and Norah dance in harmony. You can see why Nellie McKay would fit well on a station like this and the Fiery Furnaces wouldn't.

The first successful station with this format was KBCO in Boulder, and KFOG in San Fran is built on the KBCO template. Unfortunately, KBCO was gobbled up by ClearChannel a number of years ago (it originally was a local operation) and quickly descended into a self-parody of white yuppie music, pushing some really bad sincere-white-guy-with-guitar crap.

WXPN is different from KBCO in that it remains a public station and has a pretty diverse playlist (though light-years from WFMU's eccentricities, much less KEXP's breadth). It still skews older -- average listener, IIRC, is 40.


Alicia K - Oct 04, 2005 5:43:44 pm PDT #748 of 10003
Uncertainty could be our guiding light.

Just a pop in to squee over two things:

1. U2 will be on Conan O'Brien Thursday night ... for the FULL HOUR!

2. Monday night, I will be in New York City. At Madison Square Garden. Seeing U2!!!

:does happy dance until feet fall off:


Gandalfe - Oct 04, 2005 6:12:47 pm PDT #749 of 10003
The generation that could change the world is still looking for its car keys.

The Clash to reunite with the Rancid lead singer standing in for Joe Strummer?

NONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


DavidS - Oct 04, 2005 6:27:05 pm PDT #750 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

The Clash to reunite with the Rancid lead singer standing in for Joe Strummer?

First Ian Astbury and The Doors, now this.

I guess The Ramones could reunite with Slash on Guitar and Axl on lead vocals and Duff on bass.


lisah - Oct 05, 2005 10:18:51 am PDT #751 of 10003
Punishingly Intricate

Hey, is there a really exhaustive music history website? Like if I wanted to find out all the songs that Johnny Cash wrote, is there a place that is easily searchable that would have that information?


Hayden - Oct 05, 2005 10:19:34 am PDT #752 of 10003
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

Other than Allmusic? Probably not.


lisah - Oct 05, 2005 10:22:18 am PDT #753 of 10003
Punishingly Intricate

Other than Allmusic? Probably not

Allmusic is the one I was thinking of but I couldn't remember the name and had removed it from my bookmarks because it doesn't really work with the old OS and browser I have to use here at work. I'll have to remember to look it up at home on shinier computer.

thanks!