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Friday, January 30, 2009

G-Aid vs. Altrok Radio: It's A Funny Thing...

[Program note: Altrok's Daily Retro is on today from 11:30am to 1:30pm Eastern - you'll like it.]

Last Saturday, I launched the "Altrok's G-Aid" web radio station, figuring it'd be nice to give the displaced listeners of G-Rock Radio a place to call their own. The idea was to play, as closely as possible, exactly what G-Rock Radio was playing at the moment its plug was pulled.

Meanwhile, since a sizeable bunch of folks already tune in to Altrok Radio regularly, I figured I'd keep that running, and take the hit on listenership as people inevitably gravitated to the more mainstream service.

Well, it's a funny thing - it appears that G-Aid has been sampled an awful lot, but that Altrok Radio's listenership is growing.

I can leap to a few conclusions, I suppose, but really, I just like that people are listening. Hit those links at the top of the page to cast your vote, so to speak.

Monday, January 26, 2009

G-Rock Radio is dead. Long Live Altrok's G-Aid!

And so, here's the teaser, hereafter known as Altrok's G-Aid (longtime fans will see what I did there.) It's totally bereft of identifiers and things that say we are who we are; it's simply a loop of the kind of music G-Rock was playing when it disappeared.

So it's up to you now. I'tll only take up to 10 listeners at a time, but if those get completely maxed out, I'll start bumping up the number (that costs money, but it'll be worth it.) If nobody shows up, well...perhaps Press Broadcasting made the right decision. (I'm depending on you to prove that's not true.)

I'll spend the next week growing the library and researching where it should go from here. If things look good by next Saturday, I"ll grow it further. My goal is 2000 listener hours, so you're really going to have to nail up those connections - if it's full, make sure you remember to come back later (and while you're waiting, tune in to Altrok Radio or Altrok Radio SD for a glimpse of the bleeding edge of Alternative Rock.)

So, in short, it's up to you now. Press Broadcasting may not be able to service the "niche" that represents Alternative Radio, but we can, and you can help. Don't let the crowd gathering in Neptune today down.

Altrok Radio Music Update #223

Our G-Rock substitute, Altrok's G-Aid, has started the long path toward viability - go to the yellow player in the middle of the page and check it out. Right now it's just a 3-1/2 hour list of the kind of music G-Rock was playing when its plug was pulled, but with your help, it'll grow. Just keep tuning in - if we hit 1000 hours by Saturday, we'll build it some more.

Meanwhile, we're still focused on our primary reason for being; new music and alternative classics. Here's the particulars:

Firstly, the important stuff:

Altrok Radio is at http://www.altrokradio.com

Please remember to tune in whenever you can - every hour you listen turns into more visibility for the station; we show up higher in search listings, and such like that. And if you'd like to help us keep the stream running, check out the advertisers if they appeal to you; your interest actually helps fund us.

And in the interest of keeping you interested...we've got songs to let you know about.

This week, our Grinders (the stuff we play heavily) include music from:

- Lykke Li
- Gaslight Anthem
- The Soft Pack
- The Good Natured
- George Pringle
- Leaving L.A.

Plus we've got newly-added music:

- Lily Allen - The Fear
- Asteroids Galaxy Tour - Around The Bend
- BlowUpDollz - Tell Me Today
- The Decemberists - The Rake's Song
- Eagles Of Death Metal - Wannabe In LA
- Metric - Help I'm Alive
- Mighty Fairly - Falling To Pieces
- Morrissey - I'm Throwing My Arms Around Paris
- The Phantom Band - Folk Song Oblivion
- The Prodigy - Omen
- Ra Ra Riot - Each Year
- The Race UK - I Get It Wrong
- Say Hi - November Was White, December Was Grey
- School Of Seven Bells - My Cabal (Robin Guthrie Mix)
- U2 - Get On Your Boots
- Steve Wynn - Manhattan Fault Line

Our Newly-Added Classics:

- The Church - Tantalized
- Lloyd Cole - Rattlesnakes
- Marshall Crenshaw - Someday Someway
- Front 242 - Headhunter V1.0
- Tommy Keene - Listen To Me
- R.E.M. - Pretty Persuasion
- Seedling - Get You 'Cause I Can
- The The - Infected
- XTC - This Is Pop


And don't forget the R/SYN Underground night, every Saturday at the Corner Tavern in New Brunswick, where Drew and IronMike keep you dancing with the most advanced playlist this side of the Atlantic (and where, occasionally, yours truly might show up and spin a coupla tracks...ya never know.)

And DEFINITELY don't forget the Melody Bar Reunion, on Saturday, February 21. There's still a little time left to get in on a $99 room at the Hyatt Regency in New Brunswick, too, so don't delay...

Friday, January 23, 2009

G-Rock Radio's Final Hour

Wish I'd thought of it earlier, but here it is: the playlist for G-Rock Radio's final hour. Any significance associated with the songs they played is strictly up to you (I think):
Human - The Killers
I'll Stick Around - Foo Fighters
Intergalactic - The Beastie Boys
Big Casino - Jimmy Eat World
Magick - Ryan Adams & The Cardinals
Message in A Bottle - The Police
Lost! - Coldplay
What I've Done - Linkin Park
Handlebars - Flobots
Novocaine For The Soul - The Eels
Rock 'N' Roll Star - Oasis
Propane Nightmares - Pendulum
Edie (Ciao Baby) - The Cult
...and the final song before they put on Ne-Yo's "Miss Independent" at noon:
Le Disko - Shiny Toy Guns
Just a touch bitter at the end - and who could blame them.

Retro At 11:30...Still Working...

I'm calling in what I can to try to make a G-Rock substitute work...working, working, working...

In the meantime, do check out our Retro block starting at 11:30am Eastern, and hosted by yours-truly - we've got classics from Dramarama, Peter Schilling, All, Love & Rockets, Peter Murphy...and sunken treasure from Yaz, The Woodentops, The Go-Betweens, China Crisis and Siouxsie & The Banshees...just click the middle of the Live365 widget thingy over there on the right (which you can embed into your own web page, if you'd like - how cool's that?)

(You're gonna be listening, right?)

And then, of course, in the real world there'll be the little shindig happening tomorrow at Noon...

(You're gonna be there, right?)

And, of course, the Melody Bar Reunion is up on February 21 in New Brunswick, with rooms available at the Hyatt for $99 if you mention the Melody Bar Reunion...

(You're gonna be there, right?)

Not to seem needy, or anything.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

G-Rock Update: Lots Of Jobs All Of A Sudden

It wasn't just Matt Knight getting a gig, apparently.

According to FMQB.com, despite the recent changes in 106.3/106.5's format...
PD Terri Carr will stay aboard with the new format, along with morning co-host Erin Vogt, afternoon jock Matt Knight and night host Scott Lowe. MD/morning co-host Matt Murray has exited.
Now I'm always one for a good conspiracy theory, and I've got one for this: picture an overheard conversation in a Press Communications boardroom - if you must connect voices to the dilaogue, think Burns and Smithers...
"Hmm, I hadn't counted on the natives getting so restless - it's just a stupid radio station. Whatever shall we do? Those visigoths plan to show up with their torches and pitchforks on Saturday afternoon, and I wouldn't want our lunchroom's fine china damaged."

"What if we keep most of the familiar jocks on payroll?"

"That's a stupid idea. We're cutting costs here, not running a job placement agency."

"My abject apologies, sir."

"I'll deal with your punishment later. But first, we need a plan...I've got it!
We'll keep most of the familiar jocks on payroll! That way, we won't lose them to our competitors - especially those upstarts on the Internet. Plus, we'll defuse the protest - they wouldn't want to cause their beloved jocks any career-limiting harm, would they? Then we can unload them later, when nobody's looking."

"Genius, sir!"

"Of course it is. Now sing the 'My Boss Is Amazing" song. And dance for me."
I hope I'm wrong...that last little bit is just twisted.

Next Stop: Acceptance

We're talking stages of grief here. Radio companies have a hard time looking past their balance sheet, and we know that, but it still smarts whenever it affects us. (If you look back into our archives, we were just about as busted up over WCBS-FM changing to Jack, so we're at least consistent.)

Long story short: G-Rock Radio's owners did what they did, they're chasing dollar signs, and that's their right as station owners. G-Rock Radio's gone, end of story. Time to move on.

The last time 106.3 jumped the shark, I took matters into my own hands and created Altrok Radio. (After all, being a former FM106.3 jock and all-around pack-rat, I had the library, and it's only gotten bigger.) Here's what's happening at altrokradio.com now.

- Altrok Radio continues its celebration of the kind of radio FM106.3 did before it became G-Rock Radio. From classic U2 to Dramarama to The Rave-Ups to The Smiths to The Cure to The Colorblind James Experience, and keeping up to date with Franz Ferdinand, Kaiser Chiefs, Modest Mouse, LCD Soundsystem, Dan Le Sac vs. Scroobius Pip and ... um ...Morrissey, U2 and The Cure (funny, that.) Remember to go to AltrokRadio.com to listen anytime to the new eight hour playlist we put up here every day, or tune in to our FM Showcase on the radio, at 90.5 The Night on Friday nights at 10pm.

- Altrok's Daily Retro is two hours of classic tracks from 11:30am to 1:30pm Eastern - if we (and I do mean "we") played it in the 80's, it's on. It's a wide range of the stuff that freaked out the mundanes. (And for those who hung out at the Green Parrot or the Melody Bar, there's a Melody Bar Reunion coming up on February 21 at the New Brunswick Elks. You're gonna want to be there.)

- Still assembling: the Alt GRok. (Yeah, I know. Got a better name? Let me know.) It should start on Saturday at about noon, if everything gets arranged on our hard disk juuuust right. It might be bumpy for a while, and require some tweaking here or there, but we should be able to fulfill the musical experience you're missing (after all, we were generally playing it about six to nine months before you heard it on G-Rock. Eh, it's just the nature of the business, though we *were* the first people in the US to play The Ting Tings...)

So that's all that's happening at altrokradio.com; you can tune in there if you're near a computer, or if you've got a phone running Windows Mobile and an unlimited data plan, we can come along with you, too (and soon, that'll go for your iPhone, too.)

All that said, we're happy to hear that Matt Knight and other staffers at G-Rock seem to be getting picked up to staff the new station - we're not likely to listen much (so, yeah, protest all you want) but in this industry, it's good to just have a job.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

G-Rock Update: Matt Knight Gets A Gig

Good news for Matt Knight - he's just announced that he's been rehired for afternoon drive at Hit106. In this economy, that's good (and not something I could ever pull off convincingly.) He kind of passes from the Altrok commentary scope with this - at least until Hit106 starts playing MGMT - but he's got a gig, and that's good.

(Now, as for this G Rock replacement project I'm rumored to be doing...it's sounding less and less like it'll actually involve anyone from G Rock. Hmm...)

Labels: , ,

Melody Reunion: A Month to Go, Start Stretching Now

There's only a month to go until the 2009 Melody Reunion Party at the Elk's in New Brunswick. I am very excited about getting the old gang back together, and I expect and even bigger crowd than last year.

Make sure you start limbering up now, so you don't pull anything during the event. If you haven't been out dancing in a decade or so, you'll be glad you did. If you haven't been to one of the first two events, you will find that the level of energy and the intensity of the dancing has not diminished over twenty years. And my boots can still hurt alot if you aren't agile enough to get out of the way...

As most of you are now aware, G106.3, the pretty good alt rock station that had risen from the ashes of FM106.3 has been executed and is now a satellite fed top 40 station. Now I have eight top 40 stations to choose from, thank goodness.

All former G106.3 jocks and staff are welcome to the reunion, regardless of age. So if you know any of them and can pass them the word, tell them we would love to have them at our event. I'll make sure Big John knows ahead of time to let G106.3 refugees in.

As for photos, it's getting time to send me any and all old Melody photos from 1992 and before right now. I will add them to the already significant slide show we put on at the event. Just email them to sbiceptz@verizon.net and they will be in the show.

If anyone has or knows of any video or film shot in the Melody from before 1993, that would really be a special treat. During my years there I witnessed several people recording video and filming. Please track down that film!

To all the guest DJ's and you know who you are, start thinking about your play lists. Keep in mind the music must be authentic Melody music from the begining up to 1992, not just music from that time. And we want to make sure we don't just keep playing the same hits from the previous events. I recommend you contact Sean Carolan, he has the playlists from both of the last two events.

I am putting together my "must play for Stiffy" list of ten tracks, and I've come up with a few new ones that have been overlooked in the first two reunions. Of course there will be a few core songs that will likely be played at every event, but that's OK too. You can be sure I'll have U.G.L.Y by PWEI and Fuck Everyone by Everlast played at every event forever, because they are two of my all time favorite Melody songs, and they are so much fun to dance to.

And remember, the Hyatt has rooms reserved for us at 99$, so why not crash there instead of driving home? I bet there will be an after party again like last year. Just call the Hyatt in New Brunswick and ask for the Melody Reunion rate.

Stiffy

Altrok's Daily Retro: Today At 11:30am!

Folks,

So, jumping into the gap left by the loss of G Rock Radio, we've added a feature we think you'll like:

Altrok's Daily Retro

Two hours of retro tracks from the Altrok Radio archive, aided and abetted by Sean Carolan's annotations.

It happens every weekday from 11:30am to 1:30pm Eastern.

Want to make a request? Hit the feedback link at altrokradio.com...

(and remember to show your love to our advertisers by checking them out - they help keep us alive.)

-Sean
(Running Altrok Radio as fast as he can...)

Altrok Radio Music Update #222

We've spent a lot of time keeping up with the demise of G Rock Radio (there's much more at altrokradio.com if you're reading this via email) but we've also got to keep focused on our primary reason for being; new music and alternative classics. Here's the particulars:

Altrok Radio is at http://www.altrokradio.com

Please remember to tune in whenever you can - every hour you listen turns into more visibility for the station; we show up higher in search listings, and such like that. And if you'd like to help us keep the stream running, check out the advertisers if they appeal to you; your interest actually helps fund us.

And in the interest of keeping you interested...we've got songs to let you know about.

This week, our Grinders (the stuff we play heavily) include music from:

- School Of Seven Bells
- Fight Like Apes
- The Cure
- Love Is All
- The Hundred In The Hands
- White Lies

Plus we've got newly-added music:

- The Airborne Toxic Event - Sometime Around Midnight
- Detachments - Fear No Fear
- The Good Natured - Warriors
- HTRK - Ha!
- I (heart) Hiroshima - Surgery
- Its A Buffalo - Marbles
- Japanese Motors - Regrets A Paradise
- Little Comets - One Night In October
- Monsters Are Waiting - I Wanna Be Adored
- Skint and Demoralised - The Thrill Of Thirty Seconds
- The Soft Pack - Nightlife
- Vivian Girls - Where Do You Run To
- Wintersleep - Archaeologists
- The Wonder Stuff - Ten Trenches Deep

Our Newly-Added Classics:

- Devo - (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
- Thomas Dolby - Flying North (High Altitude Extended Play)
- Stephen 'Tin Tin' Duffy - Kiss Me
- Icehouse - We Can Get Together
- The Jam - Absolute Beginners
- Killing Joke - Love Like Blood (Gestalt Mix)
- New Musik - Sanctuary
- Sonic Youth - 100%
- U2 - Stories For Boys


And don't forget the R/SYN Underground night, every Saturday at the Corner Tavern in New Brunswick, where Drew and IronMike keep you dancing with the most advanced playlist this side of the Atlantic (and where, occasionally, yours truly might show up and spin a coupla tracks...ya never know.)

Plus: the Melody Bar Reunion at the New Brunswick Elks, Saturday, February 21. Book a room at the Hyatt Regency for only $99 that night, and get your Mel on. (Melon?)

- Sean Carolan
Altrok Radio
On your computer now at http://www.altrokradio.com
On the radio Fridays at 10pm, at 90.5 The Night

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Poisoning The Well

Short term gain, long term harm. Here's a note I received from Mary Ellen earlier, regarding G-Rock Radio's abrupt departure:

I am a 90.5 The Night member, and fan of the Friday night Altrok show. I am a 44 year old mom who still listens to regular FM radio in my car, and I was a fairly regular G-Rock listener. I was a long time listener to the original WHTG in the days of Rich Robinson, Matt Pinfield, Rob Acampora, et al. G-rock was still a disappointment when compared with the orginal, but it finally had some excellent programs, including Michele Amabile's Sat. AM Breakfast Club, the Retro Request, and the Punkyard. They had some great in studio sessions too. My son tuned in 106.3 last night in our kitchen and we nearly choked. What a rotten thing to do the airstaff. They deserved better. So did the fans.


Most corporations, and certainly media corporations, abhor messy sendoffs; they much prefer that when they stop having to depend on people, that those people evaporate (which is among the corporate tendencies that have caused some corporations to be labeled as sociopathic.) Commercial radio, in particular, has been slow to realize that their treatment of their listenership, both in terms of the programming of their stations and in the termination of their programming, now can cause their listeners to leave the market entirely.

Back in 2000, I predicted that radio's worst enemy would be a ubiquitous portable digital music player of sufficient capacity that was set to "shuffle play" - that was before the noun changed from "portable digital music player" to "iPod". The fact of the market here in 2009 is that there are even more alternatives than that. Jilted DJs and their fans blog like crazy, and the more tenacious ones can set up alternate means to get to their listeners - and a dependable podcast gets them front-and-center placement on that much-feared iPod. Technology continues to democratize peoples' ability to not only get their message out, but to package it in a way that's indistinguishable from the high-gloss production values we're used to hearing from radio.

Simply put, bitter listeners find someplace else to go, and bitter professionals will find another way to reach them. The biggest beneficiary of G Rock's shutdown may well be the Apple Store in Freehold Raceway Mall.

For A Rather Vibrant G-Rock Discussion...

...try this post at The Audio Perv - lots of commenting going on (not unlike the old Save106.3.com site back in 2000 whose owner got spooked and pulled it from the web. Let's see 'em try those sorts of shenanigans with Google...)

Challenging A Radio Station's License: Is It Time?

With the shuttering of central New Jersey's G-Rock Radio in favor of a canned satellite-fed hit radio format, I got to musing about the nature of broadcasting in general - and at the fact that, in general, broadcasters these days no longer want to actually broadcast. The perfect arrangement seems to be:

  1. Get a broadcasting license and a transmitting tower
  2. Find something to broadcast over it that costs as little as possible
  3. Profit!

There are two things in that arrangement that used to be far more at odds: the license, and the driving down of costs.

Firstly, the license: why is there one? A little history is necessary - in the early days of radio, anyone who wanted to put up a tower, could. This created a crowded radio dial that carried no guarantees that the guy putting up the new tower in your city wouldn't try to jam the frequency of your own signal and put you out of business. Rules were necessary, and the Federal Radio Commission (eventually the FCC) was created to identify and enforce those rules.

Those rules were pretty strict. If you owned an AM and an FM station in the same city, for instance, you could only air the same thing on both at the same time for a small portion of the day. Also, an identifiable portion of your broadcast day was required to be devoted to news and public affairs. Why? Because the terms of your license demanded that you broadcast to your listeners, not in spite of them.

Your listenership was smaller, too, by design, because you couldn't own more that five stations on any individual broadcast band (AM, FM or TV). That meant networks couldn't buy their way to superiority (though the same rule was used as a cudgel to defeat some; see the DuMont Television Network for an example.) You had to program what other stations wanted to rebroadcast in order to have a successful network, and at the time, it had to be fairly popular, because it cost a lot of money to broadcast programs that originated elsewhere.

But, as the folks who ran media companies lobbied that they'd be making so much more money if it weren't for all these darned rules, government slowly granted their wishes. Meanwhile, transmission costs got lower and lower, so that rebroadcasting from afar became the dirt-cheap option.

Ultimately, in 1996, the broadcasters got their wish - they could own as many stations as they liked. A company that couldn't own more than five FM stations, period, could suddenly own five in a single city. And if you wanted to gut your staff in one city and have a different staff in another city run the station (and several others,) no problem.

And so we come to the gutted remains of G-Rock Radio, now trading as "Hits 106".

Ultimately, I can't say that I can fault them for the format itself; people like Contemporary Hit Radio (called CHR in industry parlance), even a soulless automaton like this. Besides, I've got my own format to push.

Sure, I whined in the early days of Press's ownership of the 106.3 license...I'm a former FM106.3 staffer (that's 1985-1992 for you young'uns,) and for the majority of 106.3MHz's time as "G", I liked the format a whole lot less. It took me a while to settle to the opinion that, as a business, they're free to do what businesses do. Still, a license challenge threat would have indeed been silly, because they were at least fulfilling their mandate as a licensee - in fact, for a while, as badly as they were doing everything else, that was the thing they did best. As long as they were fulfilling the terms of their license, they could broadcast chronic flatulence in eight-part harmony and I'd have nothing to argue there.

I do mind, however, that they've got a tower in my area and it's no longer serving me, as a member of this community. Not the "alternative-rock-listening" community, the community. The format change, in this case, is just a nice catalyst for what really should be all-out rage at broadcasters who do this sort of thing in general.

For instance, earlier this winter, there was a massive blackout in most of Monmouth County, NJ (or, as I like to call it, "home".) It took me a while to find a station that was covering it, and the first one I found that mentioned it on air was NJ 101.5 - albeit with tongue firmly in cheek except for the newsbreaks. Which we then sat there in the dark and listened to until the lights came on, so good on them. G-Rock at least spent some time discussing it the next morning - which is good, because the transformer blowout that triggered the blackout was damn near in their backyard. Now there's zero likelihood of even that level of public service and, if station owners think they can continue to get away with this kind of stewardship, it'll only get worse.

I'd have more respect for it if it were the exact same format as it now is, but with local jocks. (Not much more respect, but it wouldn't warrant banging the drums for a license challenge.)

But they can't do that, can they? They can't afford the staff.

To my mind, that ought to be the rule - if you can't do radio 90% locally, you shouldn't be allowed to do it, no matter what inflated price you paid for the license. Sure, it's a business, and profits are paramount - but (again, to my mind) they should be secondary to the public trust. That's why there's such a thing as a "license" in the first place.

If the public trust can't be satisfied profitably by one company, their license should be forfeited to someone who's willing to try.

Altrok's Daily Retro - Starting Today

If you're missing G-Rock Radio's retro programming (or WLIR, or Indie103.1 for that matter) tune in today and every weekday from 11:30am to 1:30pm eastern for Altrok's Daily Retro, showcasing classic Modern Rock that refuses to be silenced.

'Cause we're through being cool.

Monday, January 19, 2009

G(oodbye) Rock Radio

You were probably as surprised as I was - not to mention, I suspect, as the actual air staff - that G Rock Radio 106.3/106.5 here in central New Jersey called it quits this afternoon at roughly noon, give or take. (It being a holiday, I didn't notice until I wound up on a family excursion at about 5pm.) In its place, you can hear the Hits Now satellite format, bringing you a steady diet of all the songs you would have heard on this past Sunday's American Top 40, while trying its darndest to sound as though it's a local station and, of course, failing miserably.

Before descending into schadenfreude and snark, however, congratulations are in order for the departing airstaff and leadership. While I may have disagreed with some (perhaps even the majority) of their choices in new music, they had finally succeeded in putting together a listenable alternative rock station that took occasional chances, and had really rediscovered the roots of the format. They may, in fact, have been the second best commercial alternative rock station in the country, after Indie 103.1 which, interestingly enough, also called it quits this past week.

These are likely not isolated circumstances. The contraction of the economy was bound to have repercussions in commercial broadcasting, whose actual listener reach is never as demonstrably large as it claims to be, and whose ratings are generally determined, especially in smaller markets, as much by luck as by actual listenership. Alternative rock is a tough sell in good times; in times like these, it's much, much worse; ad buys in a market generally contract down to only the top few stations, and if that's not you, you lose, no matter what format you're running.

It remains to be seen whether "satellite hits" can pay the bills any better, though at the very least there'll be no concern with making payroll; there's no longer anyone to pay. Lower ratings may still ensure survival for the owner, but that's a moot point right now - as an alternative radio listener, they're no longer interested in me, nor I in them. They can't fire me, I quit.

Of course, given that I started my own web radio station, I quit a long time ago.

So, where can you go now? I humbly offer my own take on modern rock radio here at altrokradio.com, of course, but as you probably know, I'm not the only game in town. There's 90.5 The Night (which I run for two hours a week on Friday nights, but whose range of rock offerings at all other hours is unparalleled on the local level, and quite possibly on the national level.) There's 101.9 WRXP, trying to make that wide range work on commercial radio, and featuring fellow WHTG alumni Matt Pinfield and Brian Phillips. And on the web, there's WOXY.com, still managing to survive even after it's second near-death experience...KEXP out of the Pacific northwest...and XFM still plugging away in London after shuttering its Manchester and Glasgow outlets, not to mention BBC Radio 1 after 7PM (GMT on the web, Eastern on XM) and BBC 6 Music.

Every single one of these outlets is struggling (though current events certainly have removed my previously debilitating concerns over Altrok Radio becoming irrelevant. That's the funny thing about running your own radio station; disillusionment is probably more of a threat than a lack of income.) The commercial outlets are competing for a slice of a shrinking advertising pie, the non-commercial ones need to convince their contributors that they remain indispensable, and the quasi-public ones (I'm looking at you, BBC) need to continue to remember the reason they were created in the first place.

So, ultimately, it's just not a good time to be a radio station - or any form of media, for that matter - in general. In particular, the bubble of the early 2000s that caused station prices to inflate hysterically has resulted in debt service that will either be served, or be defaulted upon. And when the latter starts happening, there'll be a lot of signals going for pretty cheap prices...possibly within the reach of the next set of visionaries who can not only run a radio station, but who are personally invested in what it's playing.

(Though not necessarily on your radio. For instance, very soon you'll see me and my ilk, the webcasters, available on the portable Internet device of your choice; watch for an announcement regarding hearing us on your iPhone or iPod Touch soon. No wonder terrestrial radio is drying up, because a perfect storm may be on the way...)

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Altrok Radio Music Update #221

Firstly, the important stuff:

Altrok Radio is at http://www.altrokradio.com

Please remember to tune in whenever you can - every hour you listen turns into more visibility for the station; we show up higher in search listings, and such like that. And if you'd like to help us keep the stream running, check out the advertisers if they appeal to you; your interest actually helps fund us.

And in the interest of keeping you interested...we've got songs to let you know about.

This week, our Grinders (the stuff we play heavily) include music from:

- Fujiya & Miyagi
- Love Is All
- Project Jenny, Project Jan
- Flashguns
- Titus Andronicus
- Hot Chip

Plus we've got newly-added music:

- Brakes - Crystal Tunings
- Darker My Love - Two Ways Out
- Destroyer - Dark Leaves Form A Thread
- Detachments - Messages
- The Do - On My Shoulders
- Fight Like Apes - Tie Me Up With Jackets
- Gaslight Anthem - Miles Davis & The Cool
- The Hold Steady - Stay Positive
- The Hundred In The Hands - Dressed In Dresden
- Japanese Motors - Single Fins & Safety Pins
- Leaving L.A. - Wait Til The Morning
- Los - Bababa
- Noisettes - Wild Young Hearts
- Jack Penate - Tonight's Today
- The Shaky Hands - A New Parade
- The View - 5 Rebeccas

Our Newly-Added Classics:

- 7 Seconds - Strength
- Chapterhouse - Pearl
- Echo & The Bunnymen - Gods Will Be Gods
- Fischer Z - So Long
- Joy Division - Leaders of Men (Dan Le Sac RFL 2002 Mix)
- Siouxsie And The Banshees - Hong Kong Garden
- Stiff Little Fingers - Nobody's Hero
- The Stone Roses - Waterfall
- T.Rex - Bang A Gong


And don't forget the R/SYN Underground night, every Saturday at the Corner Tavern in New Brunswick, where Drew and IronMike keep you dancing with the most advanced playlist this side of the Atlantic (and where, occasionally, yours truly might show up and spin a coupla tracks...ya never know.)

Plus, mark it - the Melody Old-School Reunion, Saturday, Feb. 21 at the Elks in New Brunswick.

- Sean Carolan
Altrok Radio
On your computer now at http://www.altrokradio.com
On the radio Fridays at 10pm, at 90.5 The Night

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Friday: Jeff Raspe's 20th Anniversary Party

The Saint Presents....

Jeff Raspe's 20th Anniversary Party
20 years on Jersey Shore radio!

Friday January 16 2009
18+, 8pm, $12 adv/$15 door

*Steve Wynn & The Miracle 3*
*Willie Nile*
- with special guests -
The Milwaukees (acoustic)
Laura Warshauer

The Saint
601 Main St, Asbury Park
thesaintnj. com

http://www.myspace.com/stevewynnthemiracle3
http://www.myspace.com/willienile
http://www.myspace.com/themilwaukees
http://www.myspace.com/laurawarshauer

Hyatt Rooms Available for the Melody Reunion!

Folks,

Don't forget to book your Hyatt room for the Melody Reunion on Saturday February 21st. The rate is 99$ for our event. The Hyatt in New Brunswick can be reached at 1-732-873-1234. When you call mention you are with the Melody reunion event to get the rate.

Don't wait forever, our rate is only guaranteed until January 29th. So book it now and assure that you'll have a local place to crash after our party.

See you then,

Stiffy

Monday, January 05, 2009

Melody Reunion Update: Hyatt Rooms Now Available!

It appears that some of you didn't write down the date of the Melody Reunion from one of the earlier emails. The event is February 21st, 2009 at the Elk's Club in downtown New Brunswick. Doors open at 7 pm and we party until 1 am. It is free to attend and proceeds from the bar go to the Elk's charities. Age limit is 36 and up, enforced at the door by Big John. But all spouses/partners are welcome regardless of age. So if you are dating a twenty year old, they get in. If you are a polygamist, pick your favorite, because only one gets in.

The new news is that once again the Hyatt Regency in downtown New Brunswick has agreed to give our reunion attendees a special rate of 99$ for the night of the 21st. They have blocked off a number of rooms, so you can all crash together on the same floor. Call the Hyatt and ask for the Melody Reunion special room rate. You can find the number on their website, I don't have it in front of me right now.

So here's what to do. Walk to the event after booking a comfy room at the Hyatt. Have a few drinks, dance it off, then have a few more. At one, walk happy and sweaty back to the Hyatt knowing that all that drinking went for a good cause. That's the grown up way to have a good time.

See you all in February.

Stiffy

Altrok Radio Music Update #220

Firstly, the important stuff:

Altrok Radio is at http://www.altrokradio.com

Please remember to tune in whenever you can - every hour you listen turns into more visibility for the station; we show up higher in search listings, and such like that. And if you'd like to help us keep the stream running, check out the advertisers if they appeal to you; your interest actually helps fund us.

And in the interest of keeping you interested...we've got songs to let you know about.

This week, our Grinders (the stuff we play heavily) include music from:

- Flashguns
- The Black Ghosts
- Franz Ferdinand
- School Of Seven Bells
- Sarah Donner
- Twisted Wheel

Plus we've got newly-added music:

- Bubblegum Lemonade - I'll Never Be Yours
- Matthew Caws - One Small Achievement
- Club Silencio - timBalada
- The Cure - Hungry Ghost
- Fleet Foxes - Ragged Wood
- Fujiya & Miyagi - Sore Thumb
- Hot Chip - Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa (with Peter Gabriel)
- In Endeavors - You've Got Your Friends, I've Got Mine
- Johnny Foreigner - Champagne Girls I Have Known
- Lykke Li - I'm Good, I'm Gone
- Longwave - Secrets Are Sinister
- Love Is All - Rumours
- Anya Marina - Move You
- George Pringle - LCD I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down
- The Voyage - Kitten In The Snow

Our Newly-Added Classics:

- Aztec Camera - Jump [Loaded Version]
- Elvis Costello - Moods For Moderns
- John Foxx - Endlessly
- The Icicle Works - Understanding Jane
- James - Sit Down
- The Nails - 88 Lines About 44 Women
- Iggy Pop - Candy (with Kate Pierson)
- Simple Minds - Waterfront
- Soft Cell - Bedsitter

And don't forget the R/SYN Underground night, every Saturday at the Corner Tavern in New Brunswick, where Drew and IronMike keep you dancing with the most advanced playlist this side of the Atlantic (and where, occasionally, yours truly might show up and spin a coupla tracks...ya never know.)

- Sean Carolan
Altrok Radio
On your computer now at http://www.altrokradio.com
On the radio Fridays at 10pm, at 90.5 The Night

 
Please Look At Our Advertisers (Or The Website Gets It)
Congratulations, you've found the hidden text.
 
Welcome to Altrok.com, also available at AltrokRadio.com and AltrockRadio.com. Here's where the remaining listeners of several fine radio stations have retreated, regrouped, and built a replacement strong enough to stand on its own. It builds on the independent legacy of New Jersey's FM106.3, New York's WPIX and WLIR, Oklahoma's 105.3 The Spy, the pre-buyout mindset of KROQ, WBCN and WHFS and of every other alternative station that was destroyed at a moment's notice - not because they weren't making money, but because there was bigger money to be found elsewhere.
 
We've stood by as truly independent alternative rock radio died. Sure, something called "alternative" took its place, but we know for sure that anything that "tests well" with soccer moms just ain't alternative. (Even if some of us happen to be soccer moms.) So we've taken matters into our own hands.
 
This really is independent alternative rock radio, visible here at Altrok.com and audible at our web radio station. It has the classic music that fired our passions back in the day - or that we maybe only heard about from our elders - but it's mostly made of the new music that does precisely the same for us now. We're paying attention to scenes all over the world, watching the energy build, and waiting to see what it creates. Wherever it happens, we'll make sure you can hear about it here. We've been slowly building all this since 2001, and now that you've noticed us, we're glad you're here.
 
Of course, it's only here because you want it to be here, and it can only stay if you help it along - especially by checking out our advertisers (they support us) and by listening (the more that listen, the more visible we are.) Please use the "feedback" link above to let us know whether it works for you, and what you want it to be as the future unfolds. (And if you need help hearing it, let us know that, too.)