News, Notes & Spins – April 1, 2011

Welcome to April.  I hope the spring flowers, budding leaves, and greening pastures bring warmth into our spirits and smiles to our hearts.  We lost two long time radio friends in March, and almost lost a third who I found out about as I was writing this column today.  Also in March, KRFC FM in Fort Collins hired and named their first ever program director, and hired a new executive director.

A quick note too about the reporting network and how the spin charts are put together:  Not all of the stations I pull info from are represented individually below.  I also keep tabs on shows like Radio 1190’s Local Shakedown, KTCL’s Locals Only99.5 the Mountain’s Homegrown Show, and the Colorado Wave; as well as stations like KSJD (Cortez), KOTO (Telluride), KUNC (Greeley), and others that air only a couple of titles, and therefore don’t post enough for me to list individual listings.  All of those stations and shows spins do get accounted for in the TOP 40 chart for the month.

RIP: Kyle Dyas, age 42, died from suicide after walking off the 42nd story of the Spires building in downtown Denver.  Kyle was the music director at KUNC since 2002, and a long standing member of Open Stage Theater.  MORE

RIP: Bob Terrill, age 65, died from complications arising from H1N1.  Bob came to Fort Collins in 1977.  He held positions as music director and operations manager for KCSU and as media librarian at the Loveland Public Library.  MORE

Best wishes to liberal talk radio personality Jay Marvin (age 58), who is recovering from a suicide attempt.  According to his wife, in the linked to article, “He was so depressed because of his chronic pain and no longer being able to work, he took at least 170 1mg Xanax.”  MORE

Congratulations to legendary Colorado radio format pioneer John Hayes (KTCL, KCUV, KJAC) for landing the gig as the first ever program director for Fort Collins based KRFC.

RADIO STATION SPOTLIGHT – KMSA Grand Junction:  KMSA is a student run radio station in Grand Junction. Entering its 35th year of operation, KMSA is proud to provide the Grand Valley, Colorado, and the world with Alternative music. www.kmsa913.com!

I was updating my list of Colorado public and college radio stations recently and found a new website and some pretty cool things going on in Grand Junction at KMSA — so I reached out and contacted the folks there about what they’ve got going on and what kind of Colorado music they like to air.  Turns out they’re way into Colorado electronic stuff.  I’ll be looking forward to finding out who they like as time goes on, but I did get this from KMSA Ops Mngr Kyle Cooper:

“We encourage our DJ’s to play anything but the ‘norm.’ norm being anything Top 40ish. Shows range from Pop-punk with artists like The Cab, A Day To Remember, Four Year Strong. Acoustic stuff like City and Colour and Matt Costa or Iron and Wine. Thursday is our official Hip-Hop day we have 3 or 4 killer DJ’s who play newer stuff to old school and R&B late at night. Through out the week we have multiple electronic and Dub-step DJ’s play some shows…many on Friday before “The Metal Authority” takes over Friday Night to Saturday night. We have multiple shows that play your indie rock and smaller artists.”

Go take a peek at what college radio looks like in Grand Junction when you get a chance and make sure, if your music fits what they’re doing, that you get them your stuff, punk, metal, rap, indie/alternative …

That’s it for news and notes this month.  Here are the spins for March.

TOP 40 ALBUM SPINS – MARCH 2011
(88 titles reported / 258 titles listed)
(LM) TM
(D=Debut)
(NC=not charted prev. month)

(1) 1.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers (Anti) indie/alternative
(2) 2.  Elephant Revival – Break in the Clouds (self) folk
(9) 3.  Mollie O’Brien & Rich Moore – Saints & Sinners (Remington Road Records) folk, americana
(7) 4.  Halden Wofford & the Hi-Beams – Sinners and Saints (self) country, americana
(3) 5.  Tennis – Cape Dory – (Fat Possum) pop, indie/alternative
(4) 6.  Big Head Todd & the Monsters – Big Head Blues Club: 100 Years of Robert Johnson (RYKO) blues
(D) 7.  Slim Cessna’s Auto Club – Unentitled (Alternative Tentacles) indie/alternative
(17) 8.  Grant Gordy – Grant Gordy (self) neo-acoustic, new grass
(20) 8.  Paper Bird – When the River Took Flight (self) folk, americana
(8) 9.  Carmen Sandim Sextet – Brand New (self) jazz
(21) 10.  Blue Canyon Boys – Mountain Bound (self) bluegrass
(27) 10.  Fred Hess Big Band – Into the Open (Alison Records) jazz
(13) 11.  Bonnie & the Clydes – Bonnie & the Clydes (self) country, americana
(NC) 12.  Musketeer Gripweed – Dyin’ Day (self) rock, jamband
(NC) 13.  Stray Grass – Written in the Stars (self) newgrass, jam
(27) 14.  Lawn Chair Kings – Lawn Chair Kings II (self) rock, alt-country
(NC) 15.  Big Head Todd & the Monsters – Rocksteady (BIG) rock, adult alternative
(NC) 16.  Danielle Ate the Sandwich – Two Bedroom Apartment (self) folk, pop, modern
(5) 17.  John-Alex Mason – Jook Joint Thunderclap (Naked Jaybird) blues
(NC) 17.  Lonesome Traveler – Looking for A Way (self) bluegrass
(12) 17.  Peter Sommer – Tremolo Canteen (Dazzle Jazz) jazz
(NC) 17.  Romano Paoletti – Story of a Lifetime (self) americana, country
(19) 17.  Whiskey Blanket – No Object (self) hip-hop
(32) 18.  Bobby Walker – Way Back When (BWM) blues, r&b
(29) 18.  John Common & Blinding Flashes of Light – Beautiful Empty (Free School) rock, adult
(18) 19.  Royal Peeps – Alessia’s Walk (Contra Basso Music) funk, soul
(D) 19.  the Whiskey Bottles – Ain’t No Crime (The Whiskey Bottles) rock, alt-country
(6) 20.  Kenny Perkins – Wild Frontier (self) rock, adult alternative
(NC) 21.  Colcannon – Three Days in May (Oxford Road) Celtic
(28) 21.  Nathaniel Rateliff – In Memory of Loss (Rounder Records) folk
(NC) 21.  Runaway Express – Howlin At the Moon (Raven Records) folk, country, bluegrass
(18) 22.  Andrew Vogt – Cats Afoot (self) jazz
(NC) 22.  Apples In Stereo – Travellers in Space and Time (Yep Roc) indie/alternative
(31) 22.  Boulder Acoustic Society – Champion of Disaster (self) rock, folk-rock
(NC) 22.  Chuck Pyle – The Spaces In Between (Zen Cowboy) folk
(24) 22.  Great American Taxi – Reckless Habits (Thirty Tigers) americana, roots rock
(NC) 22.  Otis Taylor – Clovis People, Vol. 3 (Telarc) blues, trance blues
(NC) 23.  Mohammed Alidu & The Bizung Family – Land of Fire (Black Eye Watching) world, African, pop
(NC) 24.  Fierce Bad Rabbit – Spools of Thread (self) rock, alternative
(NC) 24.  The Heyday – Till We See the Sun (self) rock, alternative
(25) 24.  Pretty Lights – Making Up a Changing Mind (self) electronic, dance

DROPPED OUT OF TOP 40 SPINS – March 2011
(10) Broken Everlys – Stoned In Juarez
(11) Churchill – Happy/Sad
(14)  the Big Motif – Does It Weigh Heavy
(15)  Adam Bodine Trio – Blue Mud
(16)  Katey Laurel – From Here
(17)  Ego vs. Id – Taste
(22)  Joe Johnson – A Time to Dance
(23)  Juno What?! – Shameless
(24)  Bob Rea – Ragged Choir
(24)  Mandy Harvey – After You’ve Gone
(26)  Fox Street Allstars – Welcome To Mighty Pleasin’
(27)  Brad Goode – Tight Like This
(28)  Jeff Finlin – The Tao of Motor Oil
(31)  Selasee – African Gate

KAFM (Grand Junction)
1.  The Whiskey Bottles – Ain’t No Crime
2.  Elephant Revival – Break In the Clouds
3.  Megan Burtt – It Ain’t Love
4.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers
5.  Runaway Express – Yeah, Buddy! Anniversary Edition
5.  Stray Grass – Written in the Stars
5.  Whiskey Blanket – No Object

KBUT (Crested Butte)
1.  Big Head Todd & the Monsters – Big Head Blues Club: 100 Years of Robert Johnson
1.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers
1.  Lawn Chair Kings – Lawn Chair Kings II
2.  Elephant Revival – Break in the Clouds
2.  Grass It Up – Day After Yesterday
2.  Tennis – Cape Dory
3.  Halden Wofford & the Hi-Beams – Sinners and Saints
3.  Juno What?! – Shameless
3.  Kort McCumber – Ain’t the Same as Before
3.  Lonesome Traveler – Looking for A Way
3.  Mollie O’Brien & Rich Moore – Saints & Sinners
3.  Pretty Lights – Making Up a Changing Mind
3.  Slim Cessna’s Auto Club – Unentitled
3.  Waiting On Trial – W.O.T.

KCSU (Fort Collins)
1.  Cotton Keys – Sweatshop Sounds
1.  Black Apples – Black Apples
1.  Maxwell Hughes – Express
1.  Wire Faces – Diamonds and Gold
2.  10-4 Eleanor – Too Bad
2.  The Epilogues – The Beautiful, the Terrifying
2.  Common Anomaly – Iridium
3.  AM Pleasure Assassins- AM Pleasure Assassins

KDNK (Carbondale)
1.  Big Head Todd & the Monsters – Big Head Blues Club: 100 Years of Robert Johnson
1.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers
2.  Bobby Walker – Way Back When
2.  Carmen Sandim Sextet – Brand New
2.  Dustin Edge – Calm [ep]
2.  Elephant Revival – Break in the Clouds
2.  Halden Wofford & the Hi-Beams – Sinners and Saints
2.  John Common & Blinding Flashes of Light – Beautiful Empty
2.  Musketeer Gripweed – Dyin’ Day

KGNU (Boulder)
1.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers
2.  Mollie O’Brien & Rich Moore – Saints & Sinners
3.  Elephant Revival – Break in the Clouds
4.  Tennis – Cape Dory
3.  Blue Canyon Boys – Mountain Bound
3.  Great American Taxi – Reckless Habits
3.  Pete Kartsounes – The Only Way I Know
4.  Romano Paoletti – Story of a Lifetime

KOTO (Telluride)
1.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers
1.  Elephant Revival – Break in the Clouds
2.  Apples In Stereo – Travellers in Space and Time
3.  Big Head Todd & the Monsters – Rocksteady
3.  Otis Taylor – Clovis People, Vol. 3

KRFC (Fort Collins)
1.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers
2.  Bonnie & the Clydes – Bonnie & the Clydes
3.  Mollie O’Brien & Rich Moore – Saints & Sinners
4.  Big Head Todd & the Monsters – Big Head Blues Club: 100 Years of Robert Johnson
4.  Halden Wofford & the Hi-Beams – Sinners and Saints
5.  Mohammed Alidu & The Bizung Family – Land of Fire
6.  Danielle Ate the Sandwich – Two Bedroom Apartment
6.  Fierce Bad Rabbit – Spools of Thread
6.  John-Alex Mason – Jook Joint Thunderclap
6.  Musketeer Gripweed – Dyin’ Day
6.  Slim Cessna’s Auto Club – Unentitled
7.  Clarke Wright – Fiddleride

KRCC (Colorado Springs)
1.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers
2.  Joe Johnson – A Time to Dance
3.  Big Head Todd and the Monsters – Big Head Blues Club: 100 Years of Robert Johnson
4.  John-Alex Mason – Jook Joint Thunderclap
5.  Elephant Revival – Break in the Clouds
6.  Tennis – Cape Dory

KUVO (Denver)
1.  Fred Hess Big Band – Into the Open
2.  Brad Goode – Tight Like This
3.  Carmen Sandim Sextet – Brand New
4.  Andrew Vogt – Cats Afoot
5.  Peter Sommer – Tremolo Canteen
6.  Greg Harris Vibe Quintet – Glass Gold
6.  The Lynn Baker Quartet – Azure Intention
6.  Dominant 7 & the Jazz Arts Messengers – 14 Channels

KVNF (Paonia)
1.  Grant Gordy – Grant Gordy
2.  Halden Wofford & the Hi-Beams – Sinners and Saints
2.  Paper Bird – When the River Took Flight
2.  Whiskey Blanket – No Object
3.  Elephant Revival – Break in the Clouds
3.  Otis Taylor – Clovis People, Vol. 3
3.  Stray Grass – Written in the Stars
4.  Chuck Pyle – The Spaces In Between
4.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers
4.  Tennis – Cape Dory

The Colorado Sound
1. The Broken Everlys – Stoned In Juarez
1.  Ego vs. Id – Taste
1.  Slim Cessna’s Auto Club – Unentitled
2.  Bonnie & the Clydes – Bonnie & the Clydes
2.  Carmen Sandim Sextet –      Brand New
2.  David James Band – Street Performer
2.  Kenny Perkins – Wild Frontier
3.  the Big Motif – Does It Weigh Heavy
3.  DeVotchKa – 100 Lovers
3.  Halden Wofford & the Hi-Beams – Sinners and Saints
3.  John Mieras – Painted Glass
3.  Katey Laurel – From Here
3.  Peter Sommer – Tremolo Canteen

Coloradoans charting nationally

Big Head Todd & the Monsters and the Monsters … and John-Alex Mason continue to find international chart success on the Roots Music Blues chart … coming in at #7 and 11 respectively.

Bob Rea‘s (Durango) Ragged Choir also continues to chart well, coming in at #42 on the Roots Country chart

Cahalen Morrison & Eli West … and Mollie O’Brien & Rich Moore both hold down great positions on the Roots Folk chart

On the TRUE COUNTRY side of things, Halden Wofford & the Hi Beams and Bonnie & the Clydes both post impressive chart positions ….

In the Jazz world, the Carmen Sandim Sextet locks down the #3 slot, while 2 titles on the Colorado based Capri jazz label also appear in the top 40

Public Media – To Fund Or Not to Fund

What was it, really?  The perception of bias, real or imagined, or a desire to get rid of NPR, or a pragmatic desire to cut spending – and the CPB got in the path?

All of the above…. and then some.

It is VERY likely that we will lose most, if not all, federal funding in the next two years.  Every sign points in that direction.  That means a rewrite of what public radio is, and how it’s funded.  If in the next few years conservatives have their way, the non-comm band (estabished in 1941) will be opened up to all interests, and the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, which established public funding via the CPB, will be seen as irrelevant and unnecessary.

The intent of federally-funded public broadcasting in the Public Broadcasting Act was to make “telecommications services available to all citizens of the United States.” (47 U.S.C. 396).  Today, over 99% of Americans own a TV and over 95% have access to the Internet.  The core argument is that the Corporation’s mission of ensuring universal access has been fulfilled and the government-funded broadcasting is completely unnecessary.  H.R. 5538 would amend the Communications Act of 1934 to eliminate federal funding for the CPB.  President Obama’s own bipartisan debt commission proposed ending subsidies to public broadcasting.

There is a strong argument to be made that if public radio and TV offers programming people want, it can get sponsors like everyone else and stand on its own.  The base sentiment is that there is absolutely no reason that the taxpayers should be subsidizing media, unless they choose to do so through their own private donations.

The future of public mass-media companies will be based not on the technologies we have in existence today, but rather on evolving convergent  technologies.  What really is public media? Don’t blogs and facebook and twitter and things unseen represent that which the government first envisioned in making “telecommications services available to all citizens of the United States?”

Funding for public mass-media, one that is free of direct governmental and/or commercial influence, will likely include advertising, sponsorship and direct public subsidies — although the uses that may be made of the latter will likely need to be restricted in order to reduce the risk of this subsidy being abused to influence programming.

The recent developments concerning NPR have only exacerbated the problem.