Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Does Anybody REALLY Listen to "The Radio" Any More?

That's right; "the radio;" when I was a kid (A. T. or ante televisio), "the radio" was a thing--a box, sometimes small, sometimes big enough to be part of the living room decor--and what you were able to listen to was worth paying attention to.

I've been cruising the blogosphere looking for stories about what role radio plays in our lives today. It's pretty depressing out there--concepts like "drive-time radio," those dismal broadcasts that try to perk up unhappy drivers with colorless commodified music-by-the-yard and mindless chatter, between bulletins about the latest traffic snarls and fender-benders--and commercials, commercials, COMMERCIALS!!! (On "commodity music," this poor schlumpf takes a long, long time to conclude that the answer to "free music" is...commercials! Arrrgggh!!)

This low-grade moronic programming tells us a lot about how much of radio isn't worth anybody's time. And of course so-called "talk radio" is so uniformly bad-nasty I don't have anything printable to say about that crud. Every once in a while, though, I run across an item that captures the magic of what radio can still mean--to the person behind the mike and to her listeners, as they still make a magic connection through a microphone, a transmitter (or webcast), and a loudspeaker or a set of ear-buds. Alas, like the Alabama blogger's eulogy for his personal radio hero Bert Bank (and Major Bank was quite a guy!!) these stories are often about the "used-to bees," which my granny kept reminding me "aren't flying any more." And the writer has moved on into TV--he gives the weather reports on a network TV station in Birmingham Alabama now. A big step down from those magic nights on WTBC that he writes about on his blog!!

The reason for this long lead-in is to remind you that radio worth listening to is alive and well out there--and now thanks to the World Wide Web, you don't need to be concerned becausf it's a 250-watt AM station--you can listen anywhere, any time, and "the radio" can be your laptop, your iTunes player or other MP3-ready portable device.

For my money (literally and figuratively), KCSM Jazz 91 is THE premier radio station worth listening to today. And we should really all pay at least a small admission fee to keep hearing their incomparable jazz collection played just for us.

KCSM needs our financial support to keep that web stream of great jazz flowing all over the world. So--take a few minutes now to "turn your dial" to KCSM.org--listen, enjoy, and then pay your admission to this Great Jazz Music Hall of the World!! Thanks--you'll get your money's worth, I gare-ON-tee!!

1 comment:

  1. I was a bit unclear about what I meant about the "connection" that live broadcasting enables. The guy from Tuscaloosa played what HE liked on WTBC--and that's the key. If he liked it, people who like it too will listen and love it. That's what happens all the time for jazz lovers who listen to KCSM--their announcers are playing the music they love and it shows!!

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