Showing posts with label public enemy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public enemy. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Record Store Day 2014: DJ Set
Here's the first hour of the set I DJ'd at In Your Ear Records for Record Store Day. Unfortunately, if you wanted to hear the part where I played the Fat Boys you had to have been there. Let that be a lesson to you.
Labels:
ABC,
archie bell,
david bowie,
fugazi,
joboxers,
milky edwards,
newcleus,
OFF!,
paul mccartney,
pointer sisters,
public enemy,
record store day 2014,
talking heads,
the clash,
william onyeabor,
wynder k. frog
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
College Radio Show: WDCV 88.3 FM, Summer 1990
Here's another of my college radio shows from 1990. This one is kind of weird. First of all, I must be the only DJ ever to follow Public Enemy's "Brothers Gonna Work It Out" with The Young Fresh Fellows' "Taco Wagon." I have no idea what I was thinking there.
At the time the station had hip-hop shows and it had college rock shows, but there was zero overlap between them. I viewed it as a kind of musical apartheid. I felt that the best hip-hop ought to be getting airplay outside of the ghetto of "urban" shows. While my attempt at musical integration was a good idea in theory, following Public Enemy with the Young Fresh Fellows just shows how hard it was to successfully pull it off in practice. It also arguably smacks of tokenism. I was trying anyway.
Another odd thing about this tape is that in over 50 minutes I did not speak once. I guess I was ignoring the "When You Play It, Say It" stickers record labels were slapping on their promos back then.
All that said, there is some good music here, including a track from Kirk Kelly that I had recorded live in the studio earlier in the year. Other artists featured include: ALL, The Jack Rubies, Thee Hypnotics, Iggy Pop, The Pretenders, King Missile, Sonic Youth, Game Theory, Christmas, The Walkabouts and Beat Happening. Lots of good music, but it doesn't fit together very well.
I recorded over side two of this cassette, so I hate to think how embarrassing that side must have been.
At the time the station had hip-hop shows and it had college rock shows, but there was zero overlap between them. I viewed it as a kind of musical apartheid. I felt that the best hip-hop ought to be getting airplay outside of the ghetto of "urban" shows. While my attempt at musical integration was a good idea in theory, following Public Enemy with the Young Fresh Fellows just shows how hard it was to successfully pull it off in practice. It also arguably smacks of tokenism. I was trying anyway.
Another odd thing about this tape is that in over 50 minutes I did not speak once. I guess I was ignoring the "When You Play It, Say It" stickers record labels were slapping on their promos back then.
All that said, there is some good music here, including a track from Kirk Kelly that I had recorded live in the studio earlier in the year. Other artists featured include: ALL, The Jack Rubies, Thee Hypnotics, Iggy Pop, The Pretenders, King Missile, Sonic Youth, Game Theory, Christmas, The Walkabouts and Beat Happening. Lots of good music, but it doesn't fit together very well.
I recorded over side two of this cassette, so I hate to think how embarrassing that side must have been.
Labels:
ALL,
beat happening,
christmas,
college radio,
game theory,
Iggy Pop,
King Missile,
kirk kelly,
public enemy,
sonic youth,
The Pretenders,
The Walkabouts,
Thee Hypnotics,
wdcv,
young fresh fellows
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