Goosemaster
Lifer
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: buck
I feel sorry for the kids who have to listen to the shit on the radio today.
kids today don't listen to the radio
the wat-now?
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: buck
I feel sorry for the kids who have to listen to the shit on the radio today.
kids today don't listen to the radio
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: buck
I feel sorry for the kids who have to listen to the shit on the radio today.
kids today don't listen to the radio
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: buck
I feel sorry for the kids who have to listen to the shit on the radio today.
kids today don't listen to the radio
I haven't listened to an AM/FM radio for more than 30 minutes total in the past 3 years.
Programming
WFMU's programming ranges from flat-out uncategorizable strangeness to rock and roll, lots of "alternative", psychedelia, experimental, obscure 50s-60s blues, unpopular jazz, R&B, soul, reggae, garage rock, hot-rod music, 78's, 8-tracks, twee, indie pop, schlock-a-billy, hip-hop, electronica, hand-cranked wax cylinders, punk rock, exotica, downtown art music, radio improvisation, cooking instructions, Old Noise, classic radio airchecks, found sound, comedy, call-in shows, anti-fascist lectures, off-kilter kids' music, interviews with obscure radio personalities, interviews with notable science-world luminaries, spoken word mish-mashes, Andrew Lloyd Webber soundtracks in languages other than English, Gospel and Country and western music. The station also hosts a "Listener Hour" every Saturday morning, where any WFMU listener can try their hand at DJ'ing live on the air.
WFMU was named "Best Radio Station in the Country" by Rolling Stone magazine for four consecutive years (1991-1994), and has also been dubbed the best radio station in either NYC or the US by The Village Voice, New York Press, and CMJ, among others. The station also won three awards ("Best Specialty Programming", "Most Eclectic Programming", and "Music Director Most Likely To Never Sell Out") at the 2006 CMJ College Radio Awards.
A New York Times Magazine feature article called WFMU "a station whose name has become like a secret handshake among a certain tastemaking cognoscenti", and cites Velvet Underground founder Lou Reed, The Simpsons creator Matt Groening, filmmaker Jim Jarmusch and playwright Eric Bogosian as avowed fans of the station.
Other notable fans and supporters of WFMU include Neutral Milk Hotel frontman Jeff Mangum, Kurt Cobain[4], screenwriter/director Ethan Coen, MAKE magazine editor-in-chief and Boing Boing co-founder Mark Frauenfelder, Led Zeppelin lead singer Robert Plant, musician Suzanne Vega, artist Cindy Sherman, indie rock superstar Ted Leo, Sonic Youth guitarists Lee Ranaldo[5] and Thurston Moore, comic book artist and writer Evan Dorkin, film director, producer and actor Kevin Smith, musician Moby, The Cars vocalist/record producer Ric Ocasek, musician Max Tundra, television talk-show host Conan O'Brien and Blixa Bargeld, singer of the German Band Einstürzende Neubauten.[6]
Originally posted by: Kelvrick
Originally posted by: Champ
no one plays good music anymore...Franz Ferdinand, The Bravery, Wolfmother
The alternative station in Sacramento got axes a few weeks ago. Now, it is another "90's top hits" station.
Originally posted by: JM Aggie08
Avenged Sevenfold - Self Titled, 2007.
Originally posted by: ironwing
Originally posted by: CKent
Originally posted by: buck
I feel sorry for the kids who have to listen to the shit on the radio today.
Is anything I listed getting airtime? I haven't listened to the radio in about a decade, I'd have no idea if it was 😕
There is the problem. New music doesn't get airtime because so many stations just replay Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, and The Eagles over and over and over.
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: buck
I feel sorry for the kids who have to listen to the shit on the radio today.
kids today don't listen to the radio
I haven't listened to an AM/FM radio for more than 30 minutes total in the past 3 years.
Without NPR I would never listen to the radio.