Most of the surfaces in the radio station, not counting the DJs and turntables, are plastered with yellow-on-black KTRU bumper stickers. In some cases, students have cut up the stickers and rearranged the letters into the same timeless obscenities we scrawled on the walls of the radio station at my state university half a century ago. My youngest son, a junior at Rice, hosts a weekly one-hour show and I joined him on Monday. The studio walls are lined with thousands of LPs and CDs. Many of the former are originals from the sixties and seventies, and the album covers are falling apart.
Our jointly
selected play list included Johnny Otis, Muddy Waters, New Riders of the Purple
Sage, Talking Heads, Charlie Parker, King Creole, the Standells, The Smiths
and Sonny Rollins – typical college eclecticism. I felt at home. I’ve known the
romance of radio since I was a kid listening to short wave, AM and FM late at
night in bed. If a station’s signal drifted, I knew to trust the fickle atmosphere
and not mess with the dial. No art form has ever seemed so intimate since,
which makes today’s radio so disappointing. I even listened to early talk radio
in Cleveland, shows hosted by guys I felt were smart, friendly neighbors, Bill Randle
and Alan Douglas, among others.
Plenty of
musicians have written songs about radio, including one we played on Monday:
Van Morrison’s “Caravan.” My favorite is Donald Fagen’s “The Nightfly,” about a
late-night disc jockey playing “jazz and conversation,” from the 1982 album of
the same title. A sample of the lyrics:
“I'm Lester
the Nightfly
Hello, Baton
Rouge.
Won’t you
turn your radio down,
Respect the
seven-second delay we use.
So you say
there’s a race
Of men in
the trees.
You’re for
tough legislation.
Thanks for
calling,
I wait all night for calls like these.”
2 comments:
Did you listen to the Perlich Project on WCLV?
I should try harder to resist writing this kind of comment, but I noticed a typo in your list of bands.
It's New Riders of he Purple Sage (not Stage), which sounds like typical nonsense from that era, but the name has a mildly interesting history that dates back to a novel by Zane Gray.
In the early 1970s, I saw the band a couple of times and enjoyed the show. Nice to know that the music is still on the radio in Houston.
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