Showing posts with label arkansas music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arkansas music. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Plastic Magic podcast #400

Hey Hey!!! it's podcast # 400 (if you are still trying to find #'s 397 & 399, the podcast run shut down and all was lost) so let's celebrate with: ATOMIC ROOSTER (1971), THE SUNPOWER BAND (1977), WAILING WALL (1970), BUTTERFIELD BLUES BAND (1969), MARIANI (1970), ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND (1970), STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK (1969), THE WHO (1967), and as if that weren't enough, we listened to another super rare lp from Arkansas, this time from right here in Fayetteville!! COTTON (1980) Enjoy it all right here on this FREE download: podcast # 400

Plastic Magic podcast # 396 July 5th, 2016

Well, it has taken me till my last day of vacation to finally sit down and catch up this blog. Really folks, this is not what I intend for this site, really. I meant to get everything up to date on the first day of vacation.. anyway..

So here we go with the first one: MISTY HUSH REVIVAL (1972), KALEIDOSCOPE (1967), CHRYSALIS (1967), T. REX (1976), GONG (1973), GRATEFUL DEAD (1968), CAPTAIN BEYOND (1972), THE SAVAGE SONS OF YAHOWHA (1974), THE TRAVEL AGENCY (1968), SNAKEGRINDER AND THE SHREADED FIELDMICE (1977) and as if that were not enough we also listened to some rare rare LPs from Arkansas legends: SPOONFED (1983 FROM LITTLE ROCK), THE LEDGE ROCK AFFAIR (1973 FROM HOT SPRINGS) and WASHBOARD LEO (1984 FROM EUREKA SPRINGS)... sorry for the wait.. enjoy your FREE download here: podcast # 396

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Plastic Magic Winter Solstice Special podcast # 340 The White Album Project

Friends, it is with great pride that I present this show to you. Every winter about this time we (me) like to devote a whole episode of Plastic Magic to showcase Arkansas music. This time around we have a well rehearsed and well performed one time project called The White Album Project. This is of course a cover of The Beatles' White Album of 1968, a universally known classic. This was recorded at Juanita's in Little Rock Arkansas on March 13, 1991, May 23, 1991 & Jan 8, 1992 and the finished disc put together from compiling the best of the 3 shows. The cast of all star Little Rock musicians include: LEE TOMBOULIAN, MARC TURNER, BETTY ELKINS, BONNIE TURNER, MIKE THOMAS, ROSS HURLEY and  JASON ADAMS. Enjoy: podcast 340

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Plastic Magic podcast #'s 282 & 281

Hey friends and neighbors! Sorry I'm so behind in posting this shows. But I hope it's worth the wait.

First, the most recent: aired Aug.25 on KXUA, WBCQ and GRITS: THE STRANGELOVES (1965), MOTHERLODE (1969), FEAR ITSELF (1968), FOOD (1968), PORT AUTHORITY (1971), STEELEYE SPAN (1971), THE WEST COAST POP ART EXPERIEMNTAL BAND (1967), BLACKWELL (1970), AMON DUUL II (1972), THE FANTASTIC ZOO (1966), THE EQYPTIANS (1967), SOFT MACHINE (1969), OMNIBUS (1970), ANDWELLA (1970) and much more download here: podcast # 282
Second, the former, a very special show aired on Aug. 18 on KXUA with co-host DJ EJ showcasing music from the compilation CD I put together with Eric's help of local Arkansas groups from the 90's. On this you will hear the bands (and stories) featured on the Art Amiss Natural State Nineties compilation CD, but not the same music. So this podcast serves an alternative listening experience. Bands feat on this podcast episode include: COSMIC GIGGLE FACTORY, GRASS, SHINDIG SHOP, DALI AUTOMATIC, OEDIPUS CAT PHARM, BABY SELF HATE and more. Download here: podcast # 281
 

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Art Amiss to release ‘Natural State Nineties’ Arkansas rock music compilation (copied from Fayetteville Flyer)

Art Amiss to release ‘Natural State Nineties’ Arkansas rock music compilation
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A new compilation featuring 11 tracks by Arkansas rock ‘n’ roll bands from the early 1990s is set to be released online next week.
The compilation is being released by local artist organization, Art Amiss, in association with KXUA 88.3 FM and the Plastic Magic radio show. The record was assembled from the personal collection of Plastic Magic host Phillip Eubanks.
Bands on the compilation include Cosmic Giggle Factory, Dali Automatic, Oedipus Cat Pharm, 2 Much TV, The Delta Angels, Baby Self-Hate, Grass, Shindig Shop, Blue Boy Orlis and the Stompers, Tissue Culture, and The Pranks.
The album will be released at 5 p.m. Monday, Aug. 19 at arkansas-music.bandcamp.com.
Listening is free, but a $5 donation gets you a full download of the album, along with a 17-page booklet featuring band lineups, original release dates and recording details, along with scans of original album artwork, photos and flyers.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Plastic Magic podcast #271 June 2, 2013

Hey everybody out there in podcast land!! Sorry I'm so late in posting this one but here it is: JD BLACKFOOT (1970), THE BEAU BRUMMELS (1965), THE FUGS (1968), SPOOKY TOOTH (1970), THE OHIO PLAYERS (1973), FLO AND EDDIE (1972), HP LOVECRAFT (1968), STEPHEN AND THE FARM BAND (1973), THE TURTLES (1969), MARY BUTTERWORTH (1969) It's Psychedelic Baby,
SUTHERLAND BROTHERS AND QUIVER (1975), CLEAR LIGHT (1967), ZACKERY THAKS (1968), SHINDING SHOP (1993), BLUE BOY ORLIS AND THE STOMPERS (1992).This show was originally broadcast over KXUA 88.3FM and WBCQ 5110KHz and now avail to you thru free podcast download here: podcast #271

Monday, April 22, 2013

Plastic Magic podcast #266 April 7, 2013

Hey everybody out there in podcast land!! Yes, I am a little late in posting this show but your gonna like it so much I just know you'll forgive me. On this one we listened to some old and new stuff by: THE STAMPEDERS (1973), TY SEGALL BAND (2012), ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA (1972), CREAM (1968), DONAVAN (1968), BLUES IMAGE (1969), BLOODROCK (1971),
KYUSS (1994) and even some local music from Arkansas both old and new: BABY SELF HATE (HS 1993), PERPETUAL WEREWOLF (FAY2013), DALI AUTOMATIC (FAY1993), THE GREAT SCOTTS (FAY2012) and much more. download iT ch'ErE:
podcast #266

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Plastic Magic podcast #256 and #257 from New Year's Eve's Eve 2012

Hey everybody, Happy New Year! On this night which was new year's eve's eve, Dec. 30th, 2012, for those taking notes, I broadcasted and podcasted two shows, well three if you count the "mystery hour" which was The Firesign Theater....

The first was a plan 'ol episode of Plastic Magic, which was broadcast over both KXUA 88.3FM and WBCQ 5110KHz shortwave 7PM-9.30PM EST and went a little something like this: C.A. QUINTET (1969), BLUES IMAGE (1969), TRAPEZE (1970), THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND (1972), CATAPILLA (1972), TEN YEARS AFTER (1970), THE ANIMALS (1968), FEVER TREE (1970), GRATEFUL DEAD (1966), CAPTAIN BEYOND (1973), THE ULTIMATE SPINACH (1967), AUDIENCE (1971),  and much more. Download it here: podcast#256

(artwork "promul i daeormes" by Wayne Neblett...green photo by Ron Sitton)For the later half of the night, 9.30PM-1AM, I did a feature show featuring some incredible music from some old friends. Stories both from me and an over the phone chat with drummer Jonathan Taylor. This is very rare, mostly home recorded blues, jazz and rock and roll from Arkansas. Some of the recordings on this podcast maybe so rare that the band are the only ones who have another copy of it! Musicians you will here on this are: JEFF DAVIS, JONATHAN TAYLOR, MARK JONES, SCOTT PINNEY, PHILLIP CAFFEY, CHUCK BROUILLETTE, RONNIE ROUSE, JASON ABLES, CLARE STARR, JEFF GRAY, JOEL LINN, MATT DICKSON, PAUL BURNHAM, KEEFE JACKSON, PHILLIP EUBANKS (yeah, that's me), NANCY WARREN, CAROL REED, KENNY WOODALL, JAMES "RED" HUTSELL, RON SITTON, WAYNE PASCAL and a few more named in the broadcast. Bands and "projects" heard here: GRASS, GRASSMUSIC FOR THE ERA, promul i daeormes, BEN.BEN, BAR B Q BLUES BAND, SHUFFLE BAND and so on. Download it here: podcast #257 The History of Grass

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

my radio hero Clyde Clifford, Beaker Street and the history of KAAY 1090AM

KAAY: The Mighty 1090 Gave Arkansas to North America


KAAY: The Mighty 1090 Gave Arkansas to North America For a few magic years, for music fans throughout a figure-eight centered in Little Rock and stretching from Canada to Cuba, one radio station was king of the nighttime airwaves: KAAY-AM, The Mighty 1090.
Launched in July 1962, KAAY was the state’s only 50,000-watt station.
“KAAY was an unusual radio station,” said station announcer and engineer Clyde Clifford. KAAY — with Clifford, station manager Pat Walsh and a host of others — is credited with hipping many an ear beyond the state’s borders to the new sounds of the ’60s.
“It was a powerhouse station in a smaller market … We literally got bushel baskets of [fan] mail,” said Clifford, who was host of the station’s groundbreaking progressive-rock Sunday night program “Beaker Street.”
By the time KAAY arrived, radio had already faced down the threat of that upstart broadcast medium, television. But the parents of many of those Beaker Street fans could remember a day when broadcast was strictly an agricultural word to describe the scattering of seed.
It is difficult to imagine the sense of wonder Arkansawyers had in hearing their first radio broadcasts. In an era when cell phones also take snapshots for us, the very extent of current technology seems to make us increasingly hard to impress, much less amaze.
The state’s own broadcasting history can be traced to 1922, when commercial licenses — which then had to be renewed every three months — were granted to stations WOK in Pine Bluff and WSV in Little Rock.
The elite with radio receivers prior to this time could sometimes pick up out-of-state stations, but broadcasting was still very much an emerging field. Few had sets; fewer still had stations.
But through the years, the radio craze spread. Entrepreneurs started stations across Arkansas. Station KTHS (“Kum To Hot Springs”) set up in the rebuilt Arlington Hotel in late 1924. In August 1928, KTHS officially notified Arkansas Sen. Joe T. Robinson of his nomination for Democratic vice-presidential candidate.
The Hot Springs station also was the launching pad of comedic radio stars Lum and Abner and country music’s first female million-seller, Patsy “I Want to Be a Cowboy’s Sweetheart” Montana of Jessieville, among many others. KTHS was additionally a stated inspiration for songwriter Henry Glover, the Hot Springs-born producer and musician who wrote “Drown in My Own Tears,” “Peppermint Twist” and more. KUOA in Fayetteville broadcast President Roosevelt’s June 10, 1936, address in Little Rock commemorating the state’s centennial.
In the Arkansas Delta, a young J.R. Cash — later Johnny — was first heard on the airwaves on Blytheville’s KLCN. Stations like West Memphis’s KWEM and Helena’s KFFA with its “King Biscuit Time” began bringing live blues music into households in the 1940s. As a boy, Levon Helm of nearby Turkey Scratch witnessed several episodes of “King Biscuit Time” live in the KFFA studios with legendary blues vocalist and harmonica player Sonny Boy Williamson.
“That was about as good as it got,” Helm said of the sessions.
Helm later performed in The Band, which helped Bob Dylan “go electric” in the mid-1960s before releasing its own acclaimed rock albums.
For those living in rural or isolated areas, radio has a special appeal. In sparsely populated Arkansas, radio connected listeners to the rest of the world — and their own communities — in ways the telegraph and the newspaper could not.
In 1974, the only history of Arkansas broadcasting was published, “Arkansas Airwaves,” by Walnut Ridge-born radio man Ray Poindexter. The Poindexter Committee, named in Ray’s honor, was organized in 2003 by the University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Mass Media to extend Poindexter’s work in better documenting the history of Arkansas electronic media.
A Young Upstart
Following World War II, both interest in and demand for radio continued to rise. More than 90 percent of American homes had radios by the late 1940s, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
On July 2, 1952, radio station KNBY broadcast an exclusive — a speech at the Newport Airport by President Truman, who was in the state to dedicate the Bull Shoals and Norfork dams.
A new medium rising in Arkansas at about the same time would soon make such exclusivity by radio a thing of the past.
KRTV, the state’s first UHF television station, made its debut in Little Rock on April 5, 1953. It would later be home to the popular children’s program “Betty’s Little Rascals” and be sold a year later to KATV. KATV, Channel 7, Little Rock’s ABC affiliate, recently celebrated 50 years on the air.
KATV was the state’s first VHF television station, making its debut in Pine Bluff in December 1953 — a few months after the debut of KRTV. A few months after this, KARK, located at 10th and Spring streets, became the first VHF television station licensed for Little Rock — and as the area’s NBC affiliate, KARK is also still extant in the city. Sister radio station KARK was located in the same building in an early display of media synergy; many radio station owners fought — and feared — the new technology.
Conventional wisdom at that time was that television would make radio obsolete. While television would eventually supplant radio as the appliance around which families would gather for news and entertainment in their homes, automobiles — another emerging American obsession — helped keep radio vital.
Things were changing in the world of broadcasting, but that was the nature of its short history. KVLC in Little Rock is considered the first radio station in Arkansas to regularly play the new craze, rock ‘n’ roll. In 1957, Little Rock’s 2-year-old KTHV, Channel 11, began airing the teenage dance program “Steve’s Show,” with host Steve Stephens, which was popular beyond expectation.
In May 1957, KASU became the state’s first educational radio station on the air. Located on the campus of Arkansas State College in Jonesboro, KASU reflected the eventual name of Arkansas State University a decade before it became a university. (Arizona State College had already claimed the KASC call letters. Arizona tried to trade call letters with KASU when it became a university in 1958, but it was rebuffed.) Today, KASU is a 100,000-watt National Public Radio affiliate.
In December 1966, KETS in Little Rock became the state’s first educational television station. Programming initially ran Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-8 p.m., all black and white. Color didn’t hit the KETS airwaves until 1972, but the future Arkansas Educational Television Network would soon cover the state.
Training Ground
The first radio station in the state geared exclusively to all-black programming and audiences, KOKY, made its debut in October 1956. The call letters still exist today, and the station remains true to its original audience, now termed “urban.” Al Bell learned to jock at the original KOKY with studios near Little Rock Central High School at 1604 W. 14th St.
Bell later recalled that black and white students alike would gather at the KOKY studios to dance and socialize before school — even during the September 1957 apex of the desegregation “crisis.” He continued jocking and went on to work as a student-teacher in Dr. Martin Luther King’s Southern Christian Leadership Council and later became head of Stax Records in Memphis. Bell said the integrated scene at KOKY “had subconsciously influenced me.”
Stations in Little Rock saw their first real tastes of a worldwide local story in the Central High School situation; in many ways it could be seen as local media’s coming of age, in addition to the broader social coming of age.
Although some station owners resisted the initial introduction of television, radio stations were usually the first places talent was found for fledgling TV operations. Things are slightly more specialized these days, but most universities combine the radio and TV disciplines — disciplines still relatively new to the academic world.
For example, Gary Weir, later KATV’s Bozo the Clown and now the host of horseracing programs from Oaklawn Park, was first a disc jockey. So was Lloyd Denney, who played Captain Kark of “Captain Kark and the Three Stooges” on KARK, Channel 4, from 1960-67.
In the mornings, Denney was an announcer on KARK radio. In the afternoons, Denney would don what he termed a “deputy sheriff” costume and host the TV show. There was little training for being on-camera talent then, but drama and speech training in high school and college meant “playing a character wasn’t a stretch,” Denney said.
Incongruously enough, Denney, as Captain Kark, would give safety tips to his young viewers between rebroadcast shorts of the hardcore slapstick of the Three Stooges whacking themselves senseless. “My safety tips would be short, and then back to the Stooges,” he said. Captain Kark also made plenty of public appearances wherever large groups of children could be found.
“I was on [radio] for a year in Fort Smith,” Denny says, “and from 1951 to 1955, I was in radio in Forrest City. I moved to Little Rock in 1955 to work for KARK-TV and radio.” Denney said he “thought at that time that radio would fade into the background. It didn’t.”
Without the luxury of videotape, Denney was also responsible for doing live commercials for sponsors, selling things like yo-yos, cupcakes and children’s vitamins. “National advertisers placed pressure to do local commercials with local personalities,” he explained.
Although he maintains his seven-year turn as the good Captain Kark was his “only claim to fame,” Denney can still be heard on the air after more than a half-century, doing gospel on KGHT-AM, 880, in Little Rock.
“I still love it,” he said while running a board shift on KGHT. “Give me 20 more years.”
The Mighty 1090
In Arkansas and the nation, the most marked changes in broadcasting’s accelerated evolution to today are arguably the trends away from local ownership and local programming toward media conglomerates and network fare. The number of all types of stations has increased dramatically while the number of owners has dwindled.
With the advent of the home computer and new ways to spread new musical sounds — like MP3s and subscription-only satellite radio — broadcasters are facing another issue: shrinking and segmented audiences.
But the audience was enormous back in 1966, when Clyde Clifford got the job of hosting KAAY’s “Beaker Street” because the Federal Communications Commission required an engineer to be on duty at the transmitter.
“I was out there at the transmitter anyway,” he said.
The eerie background music of “Beaker Street” was used to mask the hum of the machinery since the show didn’t broadcast from a conventional studio.
“We wanted it to sound really trippy,” Clifford said.
Despite being in the center of the country, as far away from the recording centers of the East and West Coasts as it was possible to be, KAAY was bringing groundbreaking music to the heartland.
“I knew there was a lot of stuff we were doing that no one else was doing — that we were ‘out there,’” Clifford said of KAAY. “We were rocking, but we weren’t really a rock station. Some country would slip in, some soul would slip in, even some jazz would slip in. Nothing extreme, but not a strict format. We even aired farm markets.”
The advent of FM radio saw improved sound and steady — although less far-reaching — signals. Rock-formatted stations migrated to FM, a change Clifford calls “hard to explain. There was just change in the air at that time. It was like the change from spring to summer — you didn’t really notice.”
Clifford himself moved to FM in 1974 — to Little Rock’s KLAZ, 98.5 — and “Beaker Street” was abandoned.
The legend of KAAY and the prog-rock show only increased as KAAY finally “went pure religious” in the 1980s. There was a celebratory last day of broadcasting in the original format with original staff, culminating with the return of Clifford to do a final broadcast of “Beaker Street” on KAAY.
“I thought that was the last radio I’d ever do,” Clifford said.
Improbably, in the late 1980s, “Beaker Street” was resurrected on FM and again on Sunday nights. Now, Little Rock’s classic rock stalwart Magic 105 has aired Clifford’s “Beaker Street” longer than the original lasted on KAAY.
A block of religious programming airing earlier on Sundays helped pay for the airtime of “Beaker Street” on KAAY during the hippie prog-rock show’s initial run. Meanwhile, “the Mighty 1090” itself has exclusively broadcast Christian sermons since the 1980s. KAAY still carries on in its storied call letter form — and its storied power.
“It was a great time to be in radio,” Clifford said of KAAY’s heyday. “It was a great time to be in Little Rock.”
(Stephen Koch first deejayed at KWAK in Stuttgart as a teenager. Koch currently hosts the award-winning weekly radio segment “Arkansongs,” heard Fridays in Little Rock at 6:40 a.m. and 6:20 p.m. on National Public Radio affiliate KUAR-FM, 89.)

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Plastic Magic podcast #108 October 9, 2011

Back from a two week hiatus with a stack of beat-up-as-hell soul and blues 45's! With Yer Uncle Butch co-hosting with me, Filthy Phil, here is the way it went down sunday October 9th as broadcast over KXUA 88.3fm Fayetteville, AR and WBCQ 5110kc shortwave Monticello, Maine: THE CHERRY PEOPLE, BILL DEAL and the RHONDELS, THE APPLEJACKS, THE IMPRESSIONS, JERRY WASHINGTON, THE GOODEES, EARNEST JACKSON, RUFUS THOMAS, HAROLD DORMAN, THE DELFONICS, DETROIT EMERALDS, ALBERT KING, LITTLE JOHNNY TAYLOR, THE BAR KAYS, JOHN LEE HOOKER, DENISE LASALLE and much more including some real Arkansas 60's garage rock from THE ROMANS and some special Razorback novilty tunes from CECIL BUFFALO and the PROPHETS and LEFTY FLOYD!!! downLoAD Here: podcast #108

Monday, January 3, 2011

Plastic Magic "Winter Solstice" Show

This is the 3rd annual Winter Solstice show broadcast over air on KXUA Dec. 26th, 2010 featuring local (and this time regional) groups from the 1990's. It is my pleasure to present to you: MULEHEAD, THE COSMIC GIGGLE FACTORY, PUNKINHEAD, SHINDIG SHOP, BILLY GOAT, JUPITER HOLLOW, TOAST, MEDICINE SHOW, THE PRANKS and for the grand finale, the full live recording of a one time tribute concert to Frank Zappa not long after his passing away in 1994. This concert featured Little Rock musicians from various groups, called the PHI ZAPPA KRAPPA PROJECT and was recorded at Juanita's on April 17th, 1994. All of these recordings come from my personal tape collection and some were recorded by me, with no other copies made! DOWNLOAD: podcast# 087

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Punkinhead live!

On tonight's show, I played a vintage recording of the legendary Fayetteville Arkansas high energy party band PUNKINHEAD. This recording is from a live show at River City in Fayetteville on August 1st, 1992. Punkinhead will be performing a weekend of re-union  live shows on Halloween weekend. They will be at Sticky Fingers (www.stickyfingerz.com) in Little Rock on Oct. 29th and here in Fayetteville at George's Majestic Lounge (www.georgesmajesticlounge.com)  on Oct. 30th. Hope you enjoy this great lost recording! Punkinhead Aug. 1st, 1992 on Plastic Magic

Sunday, August 8, 2010

podcast # 72 "The 80's Show" and tribute to Windy Austin


Hey everybody out there in podcast land! Well me and some old dear buddies of mine (Nate Higgins and Butch Taylor) had been planning to do an 80's show sometime to spotlight some bands that are kind of hard to fit in during a "normal" Plastic Magic show. So here it is: podcast # 72 "the 80's show" you'll hear things such as: THE CURE, THE CULT, ELVIS COSTELLO, CHEAP TRICK, THE CRAMPS, DEAD KENNEDYS, BUTTHOLE SURFERS, DURAN DURAN, TALKING HEADS, DEVO, X, JANE'S ADDICTION, THE PIXIES and NRBQ...we even went as far as playing some old "hair band" faves like: RATT and MOTLEY CRUE! At the end we played a tribute to the late WINDY AUSTIN who died this morning. WINDY AUSTIN fronted some legendary groups in Fayetteville Arkansas like RODEO, ZORRO AND THE BLUE FOOTBALLS and  WINDY AUSTIN'S HOT HOUSE TOMATO BOYS. This podcast is 3 hours (meant to half it but forgot to) and in the last hour of the show we played the whole LP of ZORRO AND THE BLUE FOOTBALLS.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

NOIR 33 photography exhibit and CD release party for Wade Ogle Jan. 21st 2010 at The Dickson Theater

 A multi media event! Well let's see...for those who don't know who Wade Ogle is....Wade was at one time front man, guitar player and lead singer for Fayetteville, AR legends THE FAITH HEALERS who later changed there name to DALI AUTOMATIC. This was from around late 80's till about 1994 or so. Later Wade had a group called HONEY DIED and even later a group called DELTA SPACEMEN....and friends I've been there to see em all! It may also be noted that Wade ran the late JR's Lightbulb Club (R.I.P.) for a while and was responsible for booking some great great bands there. Wade has recently been back at it making new recordings for us to enjoy! And so on Thursday January 21st. 2010 at JR's Dickson St. Theater Wade Ogle and new band the Sea Shall Save Them will have a CD release party for their new CD!
 but that's not all, kids!
Also, there will  be a photography display on the big screen by NOIR 33 PHOTOGRAPHY. So what is NOIR33? NOIR 33 Photography is John Moore's work. John Moore has been documenting beautifully on what he calls "junk cameras" scenes from underground bands of the area, and other random portraits of locals and beyond in black and white 35mm film. John is also well known for poster and album artwork for bands in the area as well as national acts under the moniker ENKI3D. This event starting at 7pm should not be missed as John may not do this again for a while! John Moore is currently working in motion picture also done on vintage super 8 film.
Also to finish off the evening you will hear the exciting psedo-hillbilly sounds of the fantastic POPE COUNTY BOOTLEGGERS. You may want to get there early to mingle and find a good spot to be, it's a big place but there is expected to be a big attendance!

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Punkinhead from 1992(?)

hey peps, I'm having a little trouble getting the podcast posted from tonight's show. Maybe because the file is very large (was a 4 hour show) . But if you come here expecting to download the "solstice" show because you heard me say a few hours ago that it would be up by now, I'm sorry "we are having teachnical difficulties" as they say. So please check back later. If you'd like to email me a comment or would like me to let you know when this is availible email: plasticmagic883@yahoo.com In the mean time here is a video of  Punkinhead in which we heard tonight

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

upcoming Solstice show


Hey hey everybody, for those who missed my wed. feature show I did on Christmas eve last year, this year I'm doing it again but 2 hours longer! That's right a 4 hour show on local Arkansas bands from the 1990's. This is something I plan to do every year I'm on the radio here around Christmas time. On this show I plan to play a few studio recordings of  DALI AUTOMATIC (also known as The Faith Healers), THE COSMIC GIGGLE FACTORY, and whole live bootleg set from PUNKINHEAD from the legendary River City club in Fayetteville from 1992. These recordings are very rare and hard to find now a days, I bought them in the club as this was going on back in the day. For those who didn't get to see these bands then are in for a treat as we really had something special to be proud of back then (not that we don't now, but hey...) The show will run from 4pm-8pm (CST). And I will have my buddy Nate Higgins co-host for added insight and commentary. If you miss it on air don't worry it will be availible for podcast download after the show. Hope you tune in SUNDAY DECEMBER 20TH!