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Archive for June, 2010

Friday was payday for me, so it was off to Ditch to pick up a couple long players they had set aside.

I am slowly but surely collecting The Replacements discography as best I can, so I grabbed Hootenanny. As I have blogged before, I love the Meat Puppets so their important record II was on the shopping list.

My wife Coral, she had a mad lust to hear the ‘An Innocent Man’ album cut “Christie Lee” so we also got our hands on that record as well. I hope you enjoy listening to some selections off this week’s stack of wax.

Thank you for taking the time to listen to music.

Click to stream>> Playing 33s: his name was always Joe to me

***

DJ Notes

01) Billy Joel – “Uptown Girl”
02) Billy Joel – “Christie Lee”
03) The Replacements – “Color Me Impressed”
04) The Replacements – “Within Your Reach”
05) Meat Puppets – “Plateau”
06) Meat Puppets – “Aurora Borealis”

All the records I played on this mix are from 1983!  Whoa… the year Coral was born.

An Innocent Man is Billy Joel’s tribute to the music of his youth.  You’ll hear elements of doo-wop, motown, and Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons.

The set begins with “Uptown Girl,” Joel’s first UK #1 hit and a song he wrote about about his soon-to-be wife, Christie Brinkley.

Growing up, Coral had the cassette for this record and she is very familiar with all the songs.  She had a desire to hear the album cut “Christie Lee” (also a song named after his wife).

oddly, on iTunes you can buy greatest hits compilations of Billy Joel’s music, but not any albums?  weird, he’s like the opposite of Pink Floyd.

I am slowly collecting all the Replacements LPs I can get my hands on. Hootenanny is the Replacements 2nd full long player (on the podcast I incorrectly called it their first… but their first was Sorry Ma, forgot to take out the trash).

I kept it pretty safe with my selections off this record playing two of the generally more recognized songs.

“Within Your Reach” was include don the soundtrack for the most excellent film, Say Anything…

“I don’t want to sell anything, buy anything, or process anything as a career. I don’t want to sell anything bought or processed, or buy anything sold or processed, or process anything sold, bought, or processed, or repair anything sold, bought, or processed. You know, as a career, I don’t want to do that.” – Lloyd Dobbler you know what’s up.

I finish this little set with a record I just had to own, Meat Puppets II.

I’ve blogged about my obsession with these guys before.  Not not going to pretend that playing vinyl records is “better” than my iTunes or laptop… but I do find a certain satisfaction to listening to the original format when I am trying to transport myself back to this distant times and places.  This is how the kids in 1983 experienced these songs…. errr II came out in 1984…

Go with yourself.

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I bought a domain name for my DJ /Music Consultation business yesterday. Spin The Black Disc dot com.

Right now it just forwards to this blog but I think one day I’ll create a page just for the domain to highlight and develop my professional music business separate from this here blog.

The title is a play on the Pearl Jam song, “Spin The Black Circle.”  Rad song, about playing records.  I flipped it up a bit so that way when you search for it, I hopefully will become the the number one ‘Spin the Black Disc’ on the net and not get lost in endless pages of Pearl Jam lyrics and youtube videos. (and with disc, the dot com was available!)

My logo branding concept is taking shape.  I’ll be using the colours and style of Australian Highway signs because… I have an odd fascination with the city of Perth and I like them.

Rozie said she’d give me a crash course on photoshop so I can try to manipulate my own logo.  Fun!

… coming soon! Actual business cards.

Go with yourself.

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thank you Tyson for the picture: http://www.flickr.com/photos/tysonelder/

Vancouver’s Mother Mother came to the Capital City for a pair of Zone shows yesterday and Tuesday.  Like any quality rockers, they were sure to visit The Zone Afternoon Show… our time together was recorded and now it is time for sharing.

Interview >> Mother Mother

Ryan Guldemond and I briefly chatted about their work on some new music and a follow up to 2008’s O My Heart.  Then, they played a couple songs, both their radio hits, “O My Heart” and “Body of Years.”

***

Next up, it was time for Tom and Zach of Terminal City progressive rockers, The Zolas!  I like the Zolas because Zach listens to my radio show and I’m easy like that.

Interview >> The Zolas
Read >> The Zolas in Monday Magazine

Go with yourself.

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The pride of Newmarket, Ontario… Tokyo Police Club have a brand spanking new album out today called Champ.

Yesterday on the ZAS I had the chance to talk with Graham Wright, TPC’s keyboardist about their radio song “Wait Up (Boots of Danger)”

SWA?  Boots of Danger what does that even mean?  lets find out.

Interview>> Graham Wright on The Zone Afternoon Show
MP3>> Tokyo Police Club “Wait Up (Boots of Danger)”
MP3>> Tokyo Police Club “Wait Up (Boots of Danger) [Dom Remix]”

Go with yourself.

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God bless my wife Coral.  She knows I love warm beverages and hot chili spices… so it only made sense for her pick up a tin of Cocoa Camino’s Chili and Spice Hot Chocolate.  Mmmm, its a warm and spicy treat.  You take a sip of the heat, then your whole mouth and throat gets coated in a chocolaty warmth.

Now I feel ready to blog about my favourite topic.  me.

***

Mitch over at the Radio Industry blog is chronicalling his journey to FM super-star.  Good for him.  He asked me to tell my story of how I came to be telling knock-knock jokes between Our Lady Peace songs.

Two things about being a radio DJ:

01) Its not impossible to be a radio presenter
02) It is almost impossible to become a radio presenter

I’ll talk about two events that got me to where I am right now.  I’d like to tell you that I overcame great odds with a winning attitude and super-duper work ethic, but the reality is, I had a bunch of great friends and mentors that helped all along the journey.  then a big ole pile of luck.

Story one will take us back to the halcyon days of the summer of 1998.

I graduated high school in Coquitlam in 1998.  After school most all my friends had some sort of post-secondary eduction plans.  A few would travel, some would work.  I didn’t really have anything on the go.  I lived in my parents basement.  I ate too many mushrooms and I worked at a Subway making sandwiches or in the Real Canadian Superstore stocking tampons and baby food (fore-shadowing my eventual future of being married with child… huh).

One day I was at a house party and some of the people there were friends with my buddies Dave King and Mike, both a year my senior.  All these guys had just completed year one of University.  We’re having pints and bull-shitting and one of the guys, James Thompson, talks about his radio show on college station CJSF up at Simon Fraser University.

Now I had always loved radio and rock and roll but I never really thought just anyone could be on the radio, so when James said he had a show I begged him to let me come and co-host with him some time.  he said no.

One day I borrowed Mom and Dad’s car and trekked up the mountain to SFU to meet with the program director to see about getting a show.  The programmer took one look at my snot-nosed surburban Nickelback loving ass and said…. no.

Defeated, I did what any self respecting man would do… I whined to my friends one evening.  My buddy Paul brought up that UBC also had a station (and its WAY better than SFU!) and that being a student, he could get a show and I could co-host with him.

I rode 13 buses and there I was, in the UBC Student Union Building at the doors of CiTR 101.9. I loved CiTR. I became a volunteer and paul and I spent all our extra time playing in the studio doing fake radio shows, doing odd jobs, listening to records and learning the board.  I lived and breathed community radio.  There was a board in the lobby that had a list of show types the radio station needed filling.  If you did a format off the wall, they would fast track getting your show on the air.  Paul and I chose “Canadian Content” which we thought would be a fun catch all and applied for a slot.

They gave us Tuesday mornings at 5AM-8AM.  We called our program The Morning After and in early December of 1998 I was on the radio.

***

Me and Paul, circa 2005 (maybe 2006)

I’ll skip a bunch of good times (including how my folks pushed me to do radio professionally, how I got into BCIT and then kicked out then back in) and get to the juice.  Spring 2003.  I went back to BCIT to finish my diploma and its practicum time.

When you take radio broadcasting at BCIT, you have to do a one month gulag at some corporation to get your diploma.  At the time I was very happy living in East Vancouver with my lady friend and working at the Westin Bayshore and Starbucks.  This practicum was a bit of an inconvenience but I was really jazzed to have school done and at the time I worked so much I had a little saved up.  A month I could do.

I sent letters to a bunch of radio stations I felt I had a shot at.  A rock station in Regina and Kamloops.  My friend worked at a new modern rocker in Victoria so I sent a letter there.  I ran into my old boss, Tim, from CFUN (that shit between 1998 and 2003 I skipped… yeah working at CFUN was in there) on Commercial Drive one day.  He was working at what was a talk radio station in Vancouver on 730AM.  He said I could do my practicum there if I wanted.  And on a lark I sent a letter to KPOI in Honolulu.

Two radio stations got back to me.  KPOI and The Zone @ 91-3 in Victoria.  I had to make a choice.  My Mom encouraged me to go to KPOI and live in Hawaii for a month as kind of a holiday/work thing.  Then come back to Vancouver and work in tourism as I was doing.  But part of me was thinking that I could go to Victoria, have fun with my buddy Scott Kirkwood and maybe, maybe actually get a job.  I could live with my uncle and spend what money I had left on a week in Vegas.

On my first day I reported for duty and the receptionist had me sit in the lobby.  The program director could not see me right away.  Some stuff had happened and everyone was worked up.  After what felt like a few hours, a hurried Al Ford called me into his office.  He was very sorry, but my practicum would have to be pretty basic.  His morning show guy, Layne Mitchel (Sonic Edmonton), had just up and quit and Al would have to fill in on mornings.  He would have no time to baby sit me during the day, but he said I could hang out with my buddy Scott on the evening show and he’d make sure he’d sign any papers that needed signing to make sure I pass.  Lame, kinda.  But also fun because now I didn’t have to do any work.

The Vancouver Canucks making the playoffs in 2003 helped my career too.  My buddy Scott Kirkwood is a hockey guy and wanted to watch hockey, so he said… why don’t you do my show?  uh… sure.  And I did the evening show.

Al called me into his office a couple weeks into the practicum.  I thought I was in trouble because I wasn’t supposed to be on the air.  He said that he’d heard my show, it sounded good and that I could do swing.  Oddly enough, Scott got promoted too.  Al ended up bumping the afternoon drive guy (Paul Brown, The Bear Edmonton) to mornings, Sara P to Afternoons, Scott to days and I got the evening show. Score.

They paid me the colossal sum of $1,400/month which was way less than I earned at the Westin.  I thanked them for that!  Called the Westin, told ’em I wasn’t coming back and I’ve been on The Zone since.

Go with yourself.

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Bike to Work Week has been great so far.  Not that it is much different than any other week for me since I’ve bought my road bike… but still.

The best ride was Tuesday Night in the rain after my show filling in for Pol Plastino (on assignment to the Sasquatch Festival… full report at 11).

The city at night is a wonderful place for a biker.  Calm, cool and easy.

***

Last night, after the radio program… I raced down Quadra, then View to Hermann’s Jazz Club.  This fine basement suite of a drinkhole has been a part of Victoria since 1986, but it was first time there.  My brother’s boss at the cabinet factory fancies himself a Jazz-player and so we braved the keyboard solos and pencil mustachios for some of the jazz music.

I arrived early and so the bar was not serving.  I could hear the bartender and another employee sitting behind me going off on patrons and all the dumb shit we apparently do there.  I wanted a beer so bad, but it seems asking for service form the bar is on their list of things that would make me a “dumbass” or a “fucking dumbass.”  So I just sat thirsty and cowardly watching hockey till the lady hopped behind the bar.

Then, sure enough she was actually pretty pleasant.

I didn’t stay all too long, but a handful of beers, conversation with my brother and his newly minted wife and his boss’ jazz music was a good time.  I’d drink there again.

***

Here is a cool story that caught my attention (and fired up my imagination) this week.  A steampunk band from the UK is releasing their new single “That’s What I Call Steampunk – Volume 1” on wax cylinder! The first commercial cylinder nearly 100 years.

What is a wax cylinder? Well we’d need to travel back to the oldenest of days.  Way back when Thomas Edison first invented the idea of recorded sound.

The phonograph is what your 1903 hipster great great grandfather was jamming out some Vaudeville outfit  you’ve never heard on; while he scoffed at your more pedestrian collection of Sir Wilfred Laurier speeches.

The band’s song is pretty terrible (like any musical group that claims to be steampunk), but the gimmick is pretty cool.  Their 20 British Pound single comes with plans to make your own phonograph.   The plans are what is of interest to me.  Wouldn’t that be a fun DIY project?

Go with yourself.

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Yeah its getting a little out of hand.  I bought another record yesterday.  The Replacement’s Tim.

I have been on such a retro rock kick lately and part of it has to do with two things.

01) Coral renovated our living room which makes it so much more fun to just sit in.

02) I have a record player that works.  Since Russ cleaned my amp and Boitano hooked me up with one of his old Numark turntables… I’ve been enjoying rocking my music collection again.  I find that, like MP3, convenience wins.  If it is easy to listen, I will.

Coral and I will be sharing our collection in public on June 14th at Smiths.  On Monday nights Fatso and Yeti host an all vinyl night and I asked to have a go… they said yes!  So mark that date on your calendar.

This Replacements record is so great.  The Replacements are an old alternative rock band from Minneapolis.  I love listening to their music.  It is like a time machine that takes you back to the gritty side of town in the 80s.  To be young and a skid.  It makes me feel like old Meat Puppets.

I’ve read as much as I can find right now on the Replacements but wonder if there is a biography?  I sit and dream when I listen to Tim and think about their lives and what was going and who all the characters were to inspire these songs.  I want to know who Paul Westerberg (lead singer/songwriter) was kissing on the bus?  I want to know which bar he was a regular at and which friend got sent away by the police?

Their previous album, Let it Be, has even more heart breaking songs.  Who did he miss so much while on tour?  What did she do to make him so unsatisfied? was it even a she?  or life in general?

Lots of questions. I need to win the lotto max so I can finance the movie.

Go with yourself.

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