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About Mark Manning

For 19 years Mark Manning has served as Coordinator of the KCK Organic Teaching Gardens, an Initiative of The University of Kansas School of Medicine, Office of Cultural Enhancement and Diversity, Health Careers Pathways Program, K-12. Each year Mark works with 1000 to 2000 students, between K through 8th grades, with organic, "raised bed" gardens built directly on the school grounds of three Middle Schools and four Elementary Schools in the inner city of the Kansas City, Kansas school district. Mark conducts over 440 workshops annually in classrooms at these schools. He started the project under the guidance of Marcia Pomeroy, in 1999, after working in a literacy program. The KCK Organic Teaching Gardens has been financially supported through grants from The Kauffman Foundation, and The University of Kansas Medical Center. The project has been recognized locally and nationally by The National Gardening Association, The Kansas City Star, The Kansas City Community Gardens, The Green Bliss Festival, The Urban Farm & Garden Tour, and on the PBS television program America's Harvest. Mark learned about gardening from his grandmother Edna Jacobsen on the family's McCool Junction, Nebraska farm. His grandmother raised a huge garden, chickens, sheep and cattle. She preserved apples, wild berry jams, and beets and virtually everything she grew was canned for consumption in winter months. Edna raised seven children with no running water and as a child lived in a sod house. His passion for the school gardening program has been fueled by the fact that he doesn't see the lessons he learned from his grandmother passed down to kids today. Kids need to know where their food comes from, especially with the rise of diabetes, and over weight Americans. We can all learn from our gardens how to treat ourselves and the world better.

WMM Playlist from June 12, 2024

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

WMM Serves Music of Boulevardia + Chris Haghirian + Krystle Warren

  1. “Main Title Instrumental – It’s Showtime Folks”
    from: Orig. Motion Picture Soundtrack All That Jazz / Casablanca / December 20, 1979
  1. Friendly Thieves – “Get it Yourself”
    from: “Get it Yourself” – Single / Friendly Thieves / June 7, 2024
    [New single from five-piece alt-funk band, Friendly Thieves who are: Sam Wells on lead vocals, Jamae Breeze on lead guitar, Sam Millard on bass, John Goss on drums, and Ben Baker on saxophone. // Friendly Thieves released their debut album Til Death on October 31, 2023. // From Michelle Bacon’s piece in http://www.bridge909.org: Friendly Thieves describes themselves as if “Alabama Shakes and Young The Giant had a Vulfpeck-inspired love child,” and well, that’s pretty spot on. Their single captures that intersection of vibrant indie-rock energy and exceptional musicianship, with an intriguing funk aroma. // The bands show at ULAH is their only KC show so far this year before the ban sets off on tour to Austin, Chicago, Denver, and Nashville. // Sam Wells released her debut EP, FOR THE DEFLATED on French Exit Records on December 31, 2020. Sam Wells is a Kansas City, based singer songwriter who has shared stages with Betsy Phillips, Kelly Hunt, Andrew Ryan, The Zack Pietrini Band, and The Phantastics. She was featured as a composer and performer in the Kansas City Repertory Theater production of “Ghost Light” performed on the lawn of The Nelson Atkin Museum of Art in October, 2020. Sam has also performed in Troostival (2020), Kansas City Porchfest (2019) and Jamdemic. In 2019, Wells released her debut single “Lesson Learned.” In early 2020 Wells released her second single “Sugar” producer and engineered by Riley Corbin at the Lawrence Kansas Public Library recording studio. It was only a decade ago, Sam Wells sat in her bedroom learning the Corrine Bailey Ray classic “Put Your Records On”. This was all it took to ignite a lifetime love affair with music. With her smooth and sultry voice and the warm tones of a baritone ukulele, she shares stories of love, loss and everything in between. Originally from Phoenix, Arizona, Sam Wells has lived in Lawrence, but now calls KC home. Sam Wells also contributed to The Black Lives Matter Compilation from French Exit Records that featured tracks from 22 acts from the area, and was released on July 6, 2020. Sam contributed the song, “Dear Black People”. On WMM we featured tracks from: Blackstarkids, Daniel Gum, Crystal Rose, UpKeep, Bream, Heavy Surface, Palace Intrigue, Self Harmony, and Sam Wells. All proceeds donated to One Struggle KC’s Liberation Fund, a Black-led coalition of KC activists seeking to connect the struggles of oppressed communities, locally & globally. French Exit Records launched in 2018, and is an independent music label based out of Kansas City, Missouri founded by Brad Girard. French Exit Records has released albums for No Magic and Raymond, and has organized live events. ]

[Friendly Thieves play at Boulevardia Friday, June 14, at 5:05 on the Visit Missouri Stage.]

10:04 – Intro / Interview with Chris Haghirian

Thanks for tuning into WMM on 90.1 FM KKFI. I’m Mark Manning. Today on WMM we are serving up music from the 9th annual Boulevardia Festival including: The Roseline, Kemet Coleman, Friendly Thieves, Supermassive Black Holes,Laura Noble, Bears and Company, Flight Attendant, Milky Chance, Kate Cosentino, Good Morning Kevin featuring Mura Masa & Big Freedia, Back Alley Brass Band, Paul Cauthen, Stik Figa, Thundercat, Ultimate Fakebook, and Krystle Warren!

At 11:00 am, Krystle Warren joins us for our second hour. Krystle Warren will perform LIVE from the 90.1 FM Studios. Krystle Warren is one of our most played artists and most frequent guests. Now based in France, Krystle Warren is back in Kansas City to play Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15 at 8:45pm on the Elevate Stage, at Crown Center. Krystle Warren will also play the Percheron Rooftop Series tomorrow night on Thursday, Jun 13, 2024, at 7:00 PM on the rooftop of the Crossroads Hotel.

Joining us for the entire show is our special guest, Chris Haghirian host & Producer of Eight One Sixty, heard Tuesday nights at 6:00 PM, on 90.9 The Bridge. Chris worked for The Kansas City Star for over 20 years. Chris studied Journalism / Advertising at The University of Kansas. Chris also studied Photography at Kansas City Art Institute. Chris works for Spray KC. Chris organizes multiple concert series throughout the metro, and music stages for Plaza Art Fair, Innovation Fest, and The Middle of The Map Fest.

Chris Haghirian joins us to share details about Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, & Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Boulevard, with over 70 national, regional & local acts, 23 DJs, 5 music stages, with nearly 50 Brewing Companies, dozens and dozens of Restaurants & Food Trucks, Multiple merchants in the Makers Market, plus a Skating Party, The Silent Disco, and various VIP Experiences.

Boulevardia has become one of the city’s largest showcases of local music with over 60 local performers included in this year’s lineup. Musical performances cross over genres and showcase the rich talent KC has to offer. The 2-day street festival is near the intersection of Pershing & Grand Boulevard, encompassing Crown Center & Washington Square Park. The event features a craft beer & food sampling experience & music, all in a unique urban setting. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com

Chris Haghirian thanks for being with us on WMM

Bnoulevardia – Friday, June 14

VISIT MISSOURI STAGE
5:05pm – Friendly Thieves
6:25pm – Pom Pom Squad
7:50pm – Hanson
9:30pm – Milky Chance

ELEVATE STAGE
5:00pm – Bobby Watson
6:15pm – Laura Noble
7:30pm – Jass
8:45pm – Bears and Company
10:00pm – Ha Ha Tonka

PROPAGANDA3 PARK STAGE
4:20pm – Dames of The Dead
5:30pm – Infinity
6:40pm – WEDA Skirts
7:50pm – Flat Susan
9:00pm – The Roseline
10:10pm – Starhaven Rounders

HOLLADAY HILL STAGE
5:45pm – Lava Dreams
7:00pm – Kadesh Flow
8:15pm – LYXE
9:30pm – Flight Attendant

MONSTER ENERGY SILENT DISCO
5:00pm – Zimmerman
5:00pm – Sana
5:00pm – DJ EJ
7:00pm – Twinnflame
7:00pm – Dewey
7:00pm – SHEPPA
7:00pm – Jingram
7:00pm – DJ ON10
9:00pm – DJ P (Daniel James Phillips)
9:00pm – Dom Chronicles
9:00pm – DJ Joe & Ice Kole

10:09

  1. Laura Noble – “Touch The Sky”
    from: “Touch The Sky” – Single / Noble Nation Records / March 22, 2020
    [Kansas City based Dominican Republic singer Laura Noble has had the opportunity to perform cover and original songs in major cities including Queens & Manhattan, NY, Minneapolis, MN, Denver, CO, Fort Myers, FL, Denver, CO, Atlanta, GA, Baltimore, MD and others. She’s been performing with live bands for 10+ years at festivals, high budget weddings, and corporate events. She has done the National Anthem and God Bless America at major sporting games and events like the KC Royals, Sporting KC and MMA fight tournaments..]

[Laura Noble plays Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, at 6:15 PM on Elevate Stage]

  1. Bears And Company – “After The Quake”
    from: South of The Mountain / Bears and Company / April 28, 2013
    [Bears and Company were formed in June 2011. Bears and Company is a progressive/indie rock band out of Kansas City, Missouri. Each member comes from different musical backgrounds and collectively they craft a unique taste for those with open mouths. They are a band that share a story worth listening to, and paint a constant raging tone to illustrate such. This quintuplet is a band that gets in your face and will have you screaming every word in company. They create sound for honest connection, and work restlessly to break any and all resistance. The Bears started when songwriters, Alexander McClain (Guitar/Vocals) and Logan Tyler (Vocals/Bass) got together in the winter of their first and last year of college and began working on the songs and ideas of Bears and Company. Not long after McClain’s long time friend and past bandmate, Allan Latini (Drums) joined the band out of great desire to be a part of a hard hitting project. As a Trio the band played multiple shows, wrote, and recorded an unreleased E.P. and in time decided that it was time to step up their song direction and guitar section. Zach Knoll (Guitar) became the missing piece of the puzzle after a couple sessions. Charisma came completely natural for the four piece and things took off immediately. They began writing their debut full length record, South of the Mountain, in the fall of 2011 and returned to the studio to record with producer Aaron Crawford (The Beautiful Bodies, We Are Voices, Flee the Seen, Now Now Sleepyhead) in the fall of 2012.]

[BEARS AND COMPANY play Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, at 8:45 PM on Elevate Stage]

  1. The Roseline – “Aloneness”
    from: Keystone of the Heart / RPH Records / February 2, 2024
    [Keystone of the Heart is the eighth album from the Lawrence, Kansas based band. The Roseline features: Colin Halliburton on lead vocals, Bradley McKellip on guitar, Heidi Gluck on Keyboards & backing vocals, Colin Jones on bass, Jim Piller on drums, and Chase Horseman on Mellotron. Engineered, produced, and mixed by Joel Nanos at Element Recording Studios in Kansas City, KS Mastered by Carl Saff at Saff Mastering in Chicago, IL. // Keystone of the Heart, is arguably their most distilled, elegant, and emotionally resonant album of their career. Halliburton describes it as “a protest record which protests the dissolution of a marriage, the slog of existence in late stage capitalism, and grotesque hatred and violence.” While this certainly sounds clunky and heavy-handed, Halliburton knows when to inject some levity and humor. Songs which appear dour and grim in the early verses always seem to find some hope and light by their end. Keystone of the Heart offers pure aural aloe for troubled times. // The Roseline played an Album Release Show at The Bottleneck con February 2, 2024 with Suzannah Johannes and Empty Moon. The band will be traveling back to Scandinavia in March.// The Roseline’s 7th album CONSTANCY was released November 5, 2021, was #1 on WMM’s 120 Best Recordings of 2021. // The Roseline are a Lawrence, KS, based alt-country, Americana, rock band, formed by Colin Halliburton with friends in 2005. The Roseline released their 6th album GOOD / GRIEF on April 3, 2020. The Roseline released BLOOD on September 29, 2017; and TOWNIE on June 19, 2015. The band has toured the US and parts of Europe. Halliburton has completed two European solo tours thus far, taking him through Poland, Germany, Belgium, and The Netherlands. // . The Roseline founder and principal songwriter, Colin Halliburton, began the project as an acoustic folk trio. It has since evolved into the five-piece heartland rock band of its current form. // Kind foreign press and high charting on the Euro Americana Chart (“Lust for Luster,” “Blood,” “GOOD/GRIEF” and “Constancy” all charted in the top 10) led to a deal in the Benelux with Dutch label King Forward Records. The band also released “Vast as Sky” in 2012 with the Bay Area label Ninth Street Opus (home to Sarah Lee Guthrie and Carrie Rodriguez). Aside from those, the project has largely been a truly DIY, independent venture. // The Roseline has had the good fortune of landing placements in indie movies and major network television shows such as ABC’s “Nashville” and “Resurrection,” as well as USA’s “Queen of the South,” Netflix’s “Virgin River” and MTV’s “Teen Mom.” The band’s work has been featured on NPR, “Pop Matters,” “American Songwriter,” “The Bluegrass Situation” and “No Depression,” among others. Colin Halliburton joined us on WMM on March 25, 2020. More info at: https://roselinemusic.com/%5D

[The Roseline play Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, at 9:00 PM on Propaganda 3 Park Stage.]

  1. Flight Attendant – “Therapy Couch (Radio Edit)”
    from: “Therapy Couch (Radio Edit)” / Flight Attendant / June 23, 2023
    [“Flight Attendant delivers an experience,” – Rolling Stone Magazine. Flight Attendant belongs to that breed of rock bands made in Nashville, USA; where their sound is nothing less than a sonic unicorn. Blending sounds of grunge with power-pop hooks, viola and light synth textures, they have begun to create a hypnotic sound and energy all of their own. Glide Magazine says that Lead Singer Karalyne, “Commands your attention like Freddie Mercury working the crowd in an arena.” Flight Attendant band has been compared to Haim and Fleetwood Mac, or as TurnuptheVolume puts it, “Think Warpaint having a dance with Best Coast,” – This “Nashville based eclectic-indie band….is ready for take off”, Velvet Thunder]

[Flight Attendant play Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, at 9:30 PM on Holladay Hill Stage.]

. Milky Chance – “Living in a Haze (feat. The Beaches) (clean edit)”
from: “Living in a Haze (feat. The Beaches)”- Single / Muggelig Records GnbH / Mar. 29, 2024
[They won’t tell you this, but Milky Chance — the unassuming German duo of childhood friends Clemens Rehbein and Phillipp Dausch — are one of the biggest bands in the world. As they get ready to share the idiosyncratic and inventive pop songs that populate their new album Living In A Haze, they proudly boast over 10 million monthly Spotify listeners, an enviable touring resume (including festivals like Coachella, Reading & Leeds, and Lollapalooza), an upcoming schedule of 2023 dates that represent their biggest headline shows of their career, and a global audience stretching from the US and Mexico to the EU, Australia, and beyond. Over the course of their decade-plus as a band, they’ve proven themselves to be an elusive entity: the rare organism that has evolved to survive and thrive in an increasingly precarious music industry. In an era where there’s no shortage of hucksters offering shaky advice to burgeoning musicians, Milky Chance are resistant to offering any kind of careerist insight on longevity. Instead, Rehbein offers a more straightforward philosophical suggestion: “The best thing we ever did for ourselves, artistically, was maintain a real sense of naivety. Maybe it’s because we met so young but playing music together feels just like that: Playing. Whatever we’re doing, we try to let a childlike intuition, serendipity, and sense of discovery lead the way.” Right as the band started, their runaway hit “Stolen Dance” — which just surpassed over 1 billion streams on Spotify — gifted Rehbein and Dausch with a platform far beyond what the duo could have imagined when they first recorded the track on a minimal home setup. But that kind of success breeds pressure from all sorts of stakeholders to recreate a once-in-a-lifetime moment. Not that Milky Chance let that get to them. “While we were vaguely aware that there were expectations to follow-up the success of that first album,” says Dausch, “we were largely able to ignore it. Probably because we were so young and things like playing festivals or going into the studio were still so new and exciting. Most of the other noise passed us by.” While they’re justifiably proud of their studio work following “Stolen Dance” — their 2014 debut Sadnecessary broke them as a global streaming and touring act, while 2017’s Blossom and 2019’s Mind The Moon found them building outwards from an established identity and taking advantage of new resources to collaborate with heroes like Jack Johnson and Ladysmith Black Mambazo — their recent decision to go independent has given Milky Chance a new lease on life. They’ve been able to experiment with their release approach, sharing two versions of their travel-inspired Trip Tapes, official collections of remixes, demos, and covers that originally featured as part of the soundtrack to their viral Road Tripping Radio series. They’ve also been able to further promote ecological sustainability, whether through their Milky Change initiative, which plants trees to offset the carbon footprint of touring, or through implementing more sustainable practices into how they source their merch. However, their new sense of freedom is best exemplified by the freewheeling exploratory verve that runs through Living In A Haze. For some acts, being unleashed artistically might mean endless run-times, dense noise collages, or a more hostile approach to their audience. But Milky Chance’s version of experimentalism is writing the tightest, most groove-forward pop song imaginable — and then going back and distorting each sound into its wildest, most unrecognizable iteration. Take album opener and lead single “Living In A Haze,” an economical haymaker of a track: Its “don’t bore us get to the chorus” structure unfolds with an enigmatic but intuitive logic, going from elegiac triplet guitar figure to a tight, post-Strokes rhythmic feel that provides the ideal musical metaphor to accompany Rehbein’s dreamy delivery. “I wish I was a disco boy,” he sings as the song’s tension finally uncoils with a percussive momentum that beckons listeners to join in. “I should be dancing the pain away.” Milky Chance have gotten so good at recording breezy off-kilter pop songs that, like two basketball players dramatically upping the stakes in a game of HORSE, they are now challenging themselves to do it in as bizarre a way as possible. On Living In A Haze, it sounds better than anything they’ve ever done. Operating from an eclectic moodboard of influences — which, in brief, includes: reggae-pop alchemists like Bob Marley, The Police, and Sublime; a vast array of global pop icons including Burna Boy, Stromae, and Rosalía; the emotive deep house of Fred again…; and the moody, neon-streaked Euphoria soundtrack — Milky Chance pack every song on Living In A Haze with delectable noises and the freight train hooks that have become their signature. Afrobeat rhythms power both “Flicker In The Dark” and “Feeling For You” — on the first providing a canvas on which to liberally splatter earthy acoustic textures and a cartoonishly colorful guitar solo, on the second lending a swiveling counterpoint to Rehbein’s narcotized vocal. The impish and irresistible “Colorado” — which makes a reprise here after a 2021 single release — is a labyrinth of twisting guitar riffs, echoing vocal ad-libs, and funhouse synth fanfares that still demands repeat listens. And “Better Off” is 80s pastiche constructed with both reverence and glee, its goth bassline and new wave keyboards showing that Milky Chance learned all the right lessons when they covered The Weeknd and Soft Cell as part of their Trip Tape series. Recorded at Jazzanova Recording Studios in Berlin with an array of collaborators — including production help from DECCO, Jonas Holle, Tobias Kuhn, Dennis Neuer, and guests including Malian artist Fatoumata Diawara and Canadian singer Charlotte Cardin — Living In A Haze ultimately works because it applies the band’s endless musical curiosity to the propulsive logic of the best club music. “In order to really connect with an audience, particularly in a live setting, music needs a sense of physicality and movement,“ says Rehbein. Milky Chance find unique ways to put this edict into practice, whether it’s the seamless synthesis of Laurel Canyon-steeped folk pop and deep house on “Synchronize” or the refreshingly subtle contours of “Like A Clown’s” poolside filter disco. On “History Of Yesterday,” they marry a UKG shuffle with sunny atmospherics and cascades of reverberating piano that culminate in perhaps the band’s breeziest chorus to date. However, all the studio ingenuity in the world doesn’t take you very far if it’s used on a lackluster song. Luckily, Living In The Haze provides an abundance of proof that Milky Chance are dedicated to mastering their songcraft. Want a compact pop gem packed with yearning and melodic sophistication? They’ve got “Purple Tiger” and its delightful call-and-response chorus. What about a singalong-igniting, lighters-aloft love song? They’ve got the undeniable strummer “Favorite Song.” What about something ambitious that points to heretofore unseen artistic avenues for the band’s future? There’s the sparse, delicately unfolding album closer “Frequency Of Love,” whose sub-bass textures and auto-tune choirs end things with an emotional flourish and teases the promise of Milky Chance songs to come. There’s a creative restlessness that permeates Living In A Haze. Milky Chance seem eager to avoid repeating themselves, lest they become stuck in their ways and lose the joyous spark that drew them together as teenaged music students. Over the past decade, that intrepid spirit has served Milky Chance well. Living In A Haze is not the culmination or endpoint of the band’s musical journey, but another chapter in it — one that vibrates with possibility and passion. It’s a thrilling juncture for band and listener alike.

[Milky Chance play Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, at 9:30 PM on the Visit Missouri Stage.]

10:28 – Underwriting

Thanks for tuning into WMM on 90.1 FM KKFI. I’m Mark Manning. Today on WMM we are serving up music from the 9th annual Boulevardia Festival.

Chris Haghirian joins us to share details about Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, & Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Boulevard, with over 70 national, regional & local acts, 23 DJs, 5 music stages, with nearly 50 Brewing Companies, dozens and dozens of Restaurants & Food Trucks, Multiple merchants in the Makers Market, plus a Skating Party, The Silent Disco, and various VIP Experiences.

Boulevardia has become one of the city’s largest showcases of local music with over 60 local performers included in this year’s lineup. Musical performances cross over several genres and showcase the rich talent KC has to offer. The two-day urban street festival is near the intersection of Pershing and Grand Boulevard, encompassing Crown Center and Washington Square Park. The event features a craft beer and food sampling experience and music, as well as interactive activities, entertainment, and shopping, all in a unique urban setting. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com

Chris Haghirian thanks for being with us on WMM

Boulevard – Saturday, June 15

VISIT MISSOURI STAGE
1:05pm – Selekto Show
2:25pm – The Phantatics
3:45pm – Kate Cosentino
5:05pm – Post Sex Nachos
6:25pm – Big Freedia
7:25pm – Sass-A-Brass
8:05pm – Paul Cauthen
9:45pm – Thundercat

ELEVATE STAGE
1:15pm – Tiki Brawlers
2:30pm – Danny Santell
3:45pm – Stranded In The City
5:00pm – Zee Underscore
6:15pm – The Whips
7:30pm – Black Alley Brass Band
8:45pm – Krystle Warren
10:00pm Ultimate Fakebook

PROPAGANDA3 PARK STAGE
2:00pm – Supermassive Black Holes
3:10pm – The Swallowtails
4:20pm – The Cowardly Lions
5:30pm – Kirstie Lynn & Galen Clark
6:40pm – Marty Bush
7:50pm – The MGDs
9:00pm – OLE 60
10:10pm – The Burney Sisters

HOLLADAY HILL STAGE
2:00pm – Jamogi
3:15pm – Asia Tsion
4:30pm – IVORY BLUE
5:45pm – Love, Mae C.
7:00pm – Broderick Jones
8:15pm – Stik Figa
8:15pm – Leonard Dstroy
9:30pm – Mary and The Matrix

MONSTER ENERGY SILENT DISCO
1:00pm – BLVDIA Skate Party
3:00pm – SIRQUEEN
3:00pm – Kay Fan
3:00pm – DJ Missy E
3:00pm – DJ Diehard
5:00pm – DJ MOHEAT
5:00pm – TIBERIAS
5:00pm – Yung Maple
7:00pm – DJ EJ
7:00pm – DJ ON10
7:00pm – DJ Dawna
7:00pm – Lana Luxx
9:00pm – DJ Joe & Ice Kole
9:00pm – ASSJAMZ
9:00pm – DJ NE$$

10:34

  1. Supermassive Black Holes – “Wiser”
    from: Stop Safely Now / Supermassive Black Holes / October 27, 2023
    [Recorded, engineered, mixed & mastered by Duane Trower at Weights & Measures Soundlab. Supermassive Black Holes are: Alexis Barclay on bass guitar & vocals; John Johnson on electric, acoustic guitar, synthesizer, kazoo & vocals; Matt Davis on drums, piano & vocals; and Chad Brothers on electric & acoustic guitar & vocals. Song written by Chad Brothers. Supermassive Black Holes were formed in 2010 during the legendary Monday jam nights at Crosstown Station. Supermassive Black Holes are a genre-bending psychedelic rock band from KC known for their mesmerizing live performances. Fresh off the release of their new album “Stop Safely Now”, these musical stalwarts are eager to share their latest songs and sounds with lovers of psychedelic and progressive rock music. Their unique chemistry, honed over 13 years of collaboration, pushes the boundaries of sonic expression, creating a listening experience that captivates audiences. They’ve been described as a stoner rock lounge act or punk rock jam band. Their musical style is rich with electric guitar, rock-steady bass and powerful drums, and draws comparisons to bands like My Morning Jacket, Ween, Guided by Voices, and The Stone Roses. ]

[Supermassive Black Holes play Boulevardia, Sat, June 15, 2:00 PM on Propaganda 3 Park Stage.]

  1. Kemet Coleman – “Android (feat. FlareThaRebel & Kadesh Flow)”
    from: “Android (feat. FlareThaRebel & Kadesh Flow)”– Single / Kemet Creative / April 26, 2024
    [Kemet Coleman is a Kansas City based musicians and is a member of the Hip-Hop duo COA (Center of Attention) and is the lead singer of the Funk/Rap/Soul band The Phantastics. Kemet is also a core element of The Marcus Lewis Big Band for Brass & Boujee. Kemet is a two time Pitch Music Award nominee for “Best Hip-Hop Act.” Kemet is known for his unprecedented collaborations with UMKC, KC Streetcar and The Kansas City Royals. He is also highly regarded for his impresario role within the Sly James for Mayor Campaign in the 2010-2011 where he created the first ever KC mayoral candidate rap song. A UMKC alumnus, Kemet, created “Gold and Blue” for UMKC’s sports teams, which has garnered thousands of plays on YouTube and has been featured on prime-time television commercials for the university. In 2020 Coleman contributed his song, “The Virus” to the compilation, Kansas City Syzygy, music created by over 25 KC-based musicians in the middle of the map of a pandemic. All proceeds donated to KC Tenants, a local nonprofit organized to ensure that everyone has a safe, accessible, affordable home. Kemet Coleman released, BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL on Aug. 1, 2020. Kenet Coleman released the single “Eyes On The Sr\treet” on May 21, 2021.] [The Phantastics released their single “All That Fine”on May 6, 2022. The Pjhantastics are an 8 member band from KC formed in December of 2010. Kemet the Phantom on lead vocals; Leigh Gibbs on lead vocals; JJ Cantrell on lead guitar & vocals; Danny Florez on electric bass; Ashley Thompson on drums, DJ Mitchell on saxophone; Ryan Jamaal Davis on Trombone and rap vocals; Austin Quick on keyboards. The Phantastics specialize in genre-blending dance floor activators. In 2015, the music group was crowned “Kansas City’s best party band” by the KC Star. Musicianship and diversity are at the core of their success. Rock, Rap, Dance, Funk, Jazz & Soul are all incorporated into their music. “The band that can do it all”, according to I Heart Local Music, has shared the stage with some of music’s most legendary acts including George Clinton and the Parliament Funkadelic. On Oct. 18, 2019 The Phantastics released LIVE AT THE PLAZA ART FAIR. On Aug. 24, 2018 The Phantastics released the EP, LIFE OF THE PARTY. On Dec. 14, 2013 The Phantastics released their debut album THE CLOSER. Info at: http://www.thephantastics.com]

[The Phantastics play Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15, 2:25 PM on the Visit Missouri Stage.]

  1. Kate Cosentino – “Swim”
    from: “Swim” – Single / Kate Cosentino / February 3, 2024
    [One oif six new singles Kate Cosentino has released so far this year. Kare Costentino Well-versed in the art of puns and guitar-shredding, Kate Cosentino’s music is something of jazzy sleekness atop the lyrical precision of witty slam poetry. Whether you saw her rock the stage as a part of Niall Horan’s team for Season 23 of The Voice or saw one of her many goofy social media posts, Cosentino’s fun-loving personality, unique sense of style, and witty songwriting shine through in everything she does everything she does.]

[Kate Cosentino plays Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15, 3:45 PM on the Visit Missouri Stage.]

  1. Good Morning Kevin – “Wiggle it (feat. Mura Masa & Bid Freedia)”
    from: “Wiggle it (feat. Mura Masa & Bid Freedia)” / Good Morning Kevin / February 2, 2024
    [New Short Form Series ‘Good Morning Kevin’ Launched on Social Media by ex-Pixar Animator, Andrew Gordon and his new company The Other Studio. Created by Pixar veteran Andrew Gordon, he rewrites the social media script with new characters destined for the big screen. Gordon is renowned for animated personalities like Monsters Inc.‘s Mike Wazowski, moving forward with Good Morning Kevin. His latest venture embraces social media with an animated bear that is launched into outer space by Pete Plainer, the CEO of Kadabra and forced to create viral content through interactive missions. // Big Freedia released the album Central City on June 23, 2023. Raised on Josephine Street in uptown New Orleans, Big Freedia, born Freddie Ross, was raised by his mother, a hairdresser, and stepfather, a truck driver for Coca-Cola. When Freddie was 15, the family moved to a more upscale neighborhood in New Orleans. Freddie—along with his brother Adam and sister Crystal Ross—were immersed in music at home by their mother, who often sang along to her Gladys Knight and Patty LaBelle records around the house. But it was the Baptist church choir where a young Freddie flourished. ”My mother made sure I never missed practice,” recalls Freedia. It’s no wonder that by the time he was 18, Freedia moved from member to director of the choir. Big Freedia is known as the Queen of Bounce, at the forefront of the Bounce rap movement (a subgenre of hip-hop born out of New Orleans and known for its call and response style and lightening speed booty-shaking dance). Though gay and proud, Big Freedia asserts that her (Freedia is a he but uses the feminine pronoun for her stage persona) sexuality has little to do with her music and rejects the term Sissy Bounce (the queer brand of Bounce). “All Bounce is Bounce,” he insists. “There’s no need to separate it out. All types of people—gay, straight, rich, poor, black, white come to my shows. People just wanna get out and shake their azzzz and have a good time!” And therein lies the beauty of Big Freedia: She can rock a pair of dangling gold earrings and light up a blunt and chop it up with the hardest rapper around. She’s not a gay artist, but rather an artist who happens to be gay. Big Freedia has gone from a local New Orleans phenomenon to a national one after appearing on the HBO series ‘Treme’ [as herself] and in 2010, she released her debut EP on Scion A/V Presents: Big Freedia, produced by NOLA producer BlaqNmilD. The EP featured notables “Excuse” and “Almost Famous; other fan-favorites include “Gin in my System” “Azz Everwhere” and “Y’all Get Back Now.” Shefollowed that up by releasing “Nah Who Mad” and “Booty Whop,” and she was featured on Spank Rock’s “Everything is Boring and Everyone is a Fucking Liar” LP, on the track “Nasty.” She was also featured on “Peanut Butter” with RuPaul. Freedia made her network television network debut on Jimmy Kimmel Live! She appeared on “Last Call with Carson Daly,” FADERTV, PITCHFORK TV and has been lauded in press outlets such as The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Fader, RollingStone.com, SPIN, OffBeat, Chicago Tribune.]

[Big Freedia plays Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15, at 6:25 PM on the Visit Missouri Stage.]

  1. Back Alley Brass Band – “Second Line”
    from: Last Chance To Dance – EP / Back Alley Brass Band / April 19, 2024
    [The Back Alley Brass Band released their debut full-length studio album Back Alley Brass Band on March 25, 2022. The Back Alley Brass Band is a Kansas City take on a funky brass band. The 10-piece band is a hard hitting music power house that starts a party wherever they play. 
Trumpets: Justin Crossman, Tom Lawlor Saxes: Eric Rothmier, Alex Toepfer Bones: Matt Hubbell, Matt Fillingham, Chacko Finn Sousa: Patrick Yeh Drums: Daniel McDill Aux Percussion: Jeremey ReynoldsMore information at: http://www.backalleybrass.com ]

[The Back Alley Brass Band plays Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15, at 7:30 PM on the Elevate Stage.]

  1. Paul Cauthen – “25 Tequilas”
    from: “25 Tequilas” – Single / Velvet Rose Records / September 15, 2023
    [Paul Cauthen is a true force of nature. His ability to captivate audiences with his soulful sound and larger-than-life personality has become lore amongst those that have witnessed it. Also doesn’t hurt to have a generational set of pipes to top it all off. Hailing from East Texas, Cauthen embodies the spirit of the Lone Star State, earning a reputation for doing things his own way. Born into a family of preachers, Cauthen’s upbringing heavily influences his deep-rooted connection to music. With a voice that resonates with raw emotion, he aims to transport listeners, inviting them on a journey through love, heartbreak, and the pursuit of personal freedom. Cauthen’s journey has been one of resilience, perseverance and sheer independence. Turning down major label deals at various points in his career, Cauthen has valued forging his own path and betting on himself over all else. With multiple releases this year including the genre bending Hometeam and raucous Wild Man, Cauthen has continued to explore new sonic territory fearlessly, while unapologetically defying expectations and creating music that resists categorization. As he embarks on the This Road I’m On Tour, his biggest headline tour to date, Cauthen brings his long time live band, the Hot Grease Fire, and a collection of hits and new tracks begging to be played for his hungry audiences. He also brings his trademark dance moves, so make sure you’re ready to get down if you come to a Paul Cauthen show.]

[Paul Cauthen plays Boulevardia Saturday, June 15, at 8:05 on the Visit Missouri Stage.]

  1. Stik Figa – “uknowhut (ft. The Expert & Blu) (radio edit)”
    from: “uknowhut” – Single / Rucksack Records / April 12, 2023
    [ On October 6, 2023 Stik Figa released “Say Dat!” as the lead single from the upcoming project with Leonard Dstroy with songs written by Stik Figa. and produced by Leonard Dstroy. // on August 25, 2023 Stik Figa released the 5-track EP THE FORGOTTEN. // On March 15, 2024 Stik Figa released to 7-track EP, SOIL SONGS.// Stik Figa is rapper from Topeka, KS who cut his teeth on the Kansas City rap scene for close to a decade. Making a name for himself as a charismatic performer and premier lyricist in the region, releasing 9 solo albums and multiple collaborations // Later partnering with notable independent hip-hop label Mello Music Group releasing collaboration with L’Orange, “The City Under the City” and straight forward hip-hop album Central Standard Time. More info at: http://www.stikfiga785.bandcamp.com]

[Stik Figa plays Boulevardia Saturday, June 15, at 8:15 on the Holladay Hill Stage.]

11:00 – Station ID

  1. Krystle Warren – “Born In The Fall”
    from: A Time to Keep Love Songs EP / Parlour Door Music / August 12, 2011
    [Originally from KC, Krystle learned to play the guitar by listening to Rubber Soul & Revolver from The Beatles. Krystle graduated from Paseo Arts Academy in 2001 and began her musical career in collaborating with area jazz and pop musicians. After living in San Francisco and NYC, Krystle was signed to a French label, Because Music, and moved to Paris to release “Circles” in 2009. Krystle played French and British television programs, including Later with Jools Holland, garnering critical acclaim and traveling all over the world with Rufus Wainwright, Nick Cave, Norah Jones, and Joan As Police Woman. Krystle created, Parlour Door Music, to release “Love Songs: A Time You May Embrace” a recording from a 13-day session in Brooklyn, where she recorded 24 songs live with 28 musicians including her band, The Faculty, alongside choirs, horn and string sections.]

[Krystle Warren plays Percheron Rooftop Series on Thursday, Jun 13, 2024, at 7:00 PM.]

[Krystle Warren plays Boulevardia, Sat, June 15 at 8:45pm on the Elevate Stage, at Crown Center.]

11:03 – Interview with Krystle Warren (and Chris Haghirian)

Thanks for tuning into WMM on 90.1 FM KKFI. I’m Mark Manning. Today on WMM we are serving up music from the 9th annual Boulevardia Festival.

Chris Haghirian is with us to share details about Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, & Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center and Washington Square, with over 70 national, regional & local acts, 23 DJs, 5 music stages.

Chris Haghirian, thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

And we are so excited to welcome back to the show, KC born and internationally known singer songwriter Krystle Warren who is back in KC from her home in France. Krystle is one of our most played artists of all time on the radio show. Krystle is also one of our most frequent guests.

Krystle Warren began performing in her native KC at the age of 16. Krystle graduated from Paseo Arts Academy and in 2001 began her musical career collaborating with area jazz and pop musicians. After moving to New York City in 2003 she started busking on the streets and later formed her regular band, The Faculty. After an independent EP DIARY, recorded late night at Electric Lady Studio, Krystle Warren and The Faculty recorded their debut album CIRCLES. Because Music bought CIRCLES and Krystle was signed to the Paris based music label who sent her a one-way ticket. Krystle Warren & The Faculty released the album CIRCLES in 2009. Their epic sophomore release, LOVE SONGS… followed in 2011, and contained twenty-four songs about love and was recorded in New York City over the span of two weeks, with close to thirty musicians. Around this time, Krystle joined forces with one of her musical idols, Rufus Wainwright, on his world tour as opener and bandmate. Krystle Warren then released her solo album THREE THE HARD WAY, in 2017 where Krystle played every instrument. On May 31, 2019 Krystle Warren & The Faculty released heir single “Rising” written especially for Ava DuVernay’s critically acclaimed television mini series WHEN THEY SEE US. When her band’s full length album was put on hold, Krystle released the 4-song EP THE CREW on September 15, 2020. Krustle released the single “Macca” on May 22, 2023, and the single “La Dolce Vita” on March 1, 2024. Her band The Faculty is getting set to release their album, EXTENDED PLAY.

Krystle Warren plays Percheron Rooftop Series on Thursday, Jun 13, 2024, at 7:00 PM. Krystle Warren plays Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15 at 8:45pm on the Elevate Stage, at Crown Center. Krystle will be sharing glimpses of Extended Play, Krystle Warren & The Faculty’s upcoming album release. More info at: http://www.krystlewarren.com

Krystle Warren, thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

Joining Krystle is Jean Fabien Dijoud also known as “Jeff.”

Welcome home!

Last Summer, Krystle Warren & Solomon Dorsey headlined the KC Folk Fest 2023 on Saturday, May 20, in Washington Square Park, Kansas City, MO.

Krystle has brought along her friend Jeff from France

Earlier this year Krystle Warren & The Faculty released the 6:16 minute single “LA DOLCE VITA” on March 1, 2024.

Krystle Warren’s song, “Macca” was recorded on the heels of sessions for the band’s upcoming full length album EXTENDED PLAY.

Krystle says that the song, “became equal parts: a love letter to (Paul McCartney) and a note of encouragement to me. Which is a wonderful thing if you think about it.”

Following their double album LOVE SONGS (2012) “Macca” was recorded on the heels of sessions for the band’s upcoming full length album EXTENDED PLAY.”Macca” arrived unexpectedly.

“A Pal contacted me to help work on the music for an advertisement he was piecing together. My job was to find a melody and put words to it, so I set up my mic and started trying out ideas. And then POW! ‘ ‘Hang then upon the moon…’ – it sounded so distinctly Paul. Immediately I worried that the client would accept my buddy’s submission; thankfully, they didn’t.”

The “Paul” Krystle is referring to is Paul McCartney.

“He is such a huge inspiration for me. As a songwriter – my love of melody, the little quirks that come out lyrically – that’s all thanks to him. And singing that chorus — it evoked for me those gorgeous ballads he composed in the 80s – ‘Wanderlust,” ‘Tug of War’…There’s a bit of Wings there as well, I think, with a nod to ‘I’m Carrying.’

“What’s wild to me is that, though I decided. ‘This is for Paul,’ it became equal parts: a love letter to him, and a note of encouragement to me. Which is a wonderful thing when you think about it: Paul’s music so often encourages us to keep going, keep trying, and in using his language (so to speak), unwittingly, he was giving me strength.”

11:13

  1. Krystle Warren (on vocals) & Jean Fabien Dijoud (on guitar) – “Macca” (LIVE)
    [The single “Macca” was released on May 22, 2023.]

Krystle Warren plays Percheron Rooftop Series on Thursday, Jun 13, 2024, at 7:00 PM.

Krystle Warren plays Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15 at 8:45pm on the Elevate Stage, at Crown Center.

Krystle Warren, thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

Also with us Chris Haghirian joins us to share details about Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, & Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Boulevard, with over 70 national, regional & local acts, 23 DJs, 5 music stages.

Chris Haghirian, thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

Krystle Warren & The Faculty Discography

Krystle Warren & The Faculty has released the EP “Diary” on May 1, 2007

Krystle Warren released “The Up Series – EP” on November 10, 2008

Krystle Warren releases the 13-song Album CIRCLES on March 13, 2009

Krystle Warren & The Faculty released “A Time To Keep – Love Songs EP”, Aug. 12, 2011

Krystle Warren & The Faculty released the double album 24-song “Love Songs” released on vinyl in Europe on April 9, 2012 as “Love Songs: A Time to Embrace,” and “Love Songs: A Time to Refrain from Embracing. ” And released on separate digital and CD albums in the United States as: “Love Songs: A Time to Embrace,” on March 13, 2012 and “Love Songs: A Time to Refrain from Embracing” on February 27, 2015

Krystle Warren released the album THREE THE HARDWAY on August 18, 2017

Krystle Warren & The Faculty released the single “Rising” on May 31, 2019

Krystle Warren & The Crew released the 4-song EP, THE CREW on September 15, 2020

Krystle Warren & The Faculty released the single “Macca”on May 22, 2023

Krystle Warren & The Faculty released the single “LA DOLCE VITA” on March 1, 2024

More info at: http://www.krystlewarren.com

From Diary EP to Extended Play A Truncated History of Krystle Warren & The Faculty
From http://www.krystalwarren.com written by Phil Anderson:

Krystle Krystle Warren met Solomon Dorsey some weekend at a high school debate competition in KC. After she had trounced Solomon’s debate partner, the two ended up in an open classroom where they began playing music—Krystle had brought her guitar and was practicing chords, and Solomon, then an accomplished violinist, cellist, bassist, and singer likely had some sort of instrument on him, and even if he didn’t he had his voice.

Due to some specific details we’re not going to get into, Krystle was already living on her own; she was eighteen and he was seventeen. But she had a friend who had an apartment near hers, and this friend was having a party. “Wanna go?” she asked Solomon. And, as Solomon puts it, he has seen or spoken to Krystle every single day of his life since.

So when Solomon decided to attend the jazz program at New School in New York, he asked Krystle, “Wanna go?” And a few months after he moved, Krystle showed up. On her first night in the city, Solomon introduced her to Zach Djanikian, a saxophonist he’d become fast friends with at school. They lived in the same dorm, and Zach and Solomon took Krystle to a practice room in the basement and the three of them played musical games. According to Zach, “We’d sing as many melodies as we could over four open strings of the upright bass, plucked successively. ‘Norwegian Wood’ and the theme to ​Family Matters​ were a couple favorites.”

This led to busking as a trio, and each of them was hustling for gigs. An Italian restaurant that featured live music gave Krystle a regular night, and she often had Solomon and Zach play with her. Zach’s friend from Philadelphia, Ben Kane, would come to these nights, and he brought Mike Riddleberger.

In Philly, Zach was in a band called The Brakes, and Ben Kane was producing an album for Zach’s band in a windowless apartment that he shared with Riddleberger. Kane and Riddleberger had become friends a year earlier at NYU, bonding over their love of D’Angelo’s album ​Voodoo​. Riddleberger says that even though he saw Krystle perform, he didn’t speak to her until after she saw him play with his band, Quintus. Zach had brought her, and she approached him after the show to play in a band she was starting.

The Faculty was formed with Krystle, Solomon, Zach, Riddleberger, and Dave Moore, a keyboardist from Kansas who was at New School, too. While the four boys had classes and gigs, Krystle floated around New York and made a lot of friends. She busked and wrote songs, and, with the help of her band members and Ben Kane, who had an internship at ElectricLady Studios and was sneaking them in at odd hours, Krystle turned those songs into an EP called DIARY.

And it was a diary. The songs were about her daily experiences in this new place and with these new people. “I’ve Seen Days” has a title that implies a reflection, but it’s about how the world is new to her, how she’s “a frightened child” in a new city. “The New Astrologer” is about a new and exciting love, one that remains a good friend of hers. “A Song For Holly” is a letter to family explaining her new quotidien life (“your big sister / out in New York on some subway / your big sister, out trying to get paid”). And “Central Park” is a document of a night she had in Central Park with Zach and his boyfriend (now husband) Jesse, and how she is coming to embrace this new city, these new people, and this new chapter of her life.

If DIARY, the Faculty’s first recordings, is Krystle’s “Songs of Innocence,” then EXTENDED PLAY, the Faculty’s latest, is Krystle’s “Songs of Experience.”

Diary led to CIRCLES, which Ben Kane co-produced with Voodoo engineer Russell “The Dragon” Elevado. Circles was bought by Because Music in France, and Krystle had her next move. She stayed in France even when her relationship with Because ended because she found Vanessa, and Vanessa was worth staying in France for. But Krystle still recorded ​LOVE SONGS in New York, a double album that invokes a Blakean duality with its two subtitles, “A Time to Refrain from Embracing” and “A Time You May Embrace.” LOVE SONGS was produced with most of the Faculty (Zach was on tour with Amos Lee) and a slew of guest musicians in Brian Bender’s Brooklyn studio. Bender’s assistant, Jonathan Anderson, would later go on to replace Dave Moore on keys in the Faculty.

The Faculty has always been a tenuous project for everyone involved because of the distance and the schedules. While everyone remains close friends, the band members are spread across the globe. Krystle in France. Riddleberger in NYC and Zach in Woodstock. Solomon and Jonathan in LA. And then they are all working musicians, touring, recording, and collaborating with an impressive list of artists. Musicians like: D’Angelo, Hercules and Love Affair, Donald Fagen and the Nightfliers, Joan As Policewoman, Jose James, Emily King, Janet Jackson, Ron Sexsmith, The Dixie Chicks, Amy Helm, Stevie Wonder, Taylor Swift, Rufus Wainwright, Kylie Minogue, Sara Bareilles, Natalie Merchant, Kesha, Bleachers, Emylou Harris, Amos Lee, Lana Del Rey, Broken Social Scene, Teddy Thompson, Lakecia Benjamin, Jenny Lewis, that’s less than the half of it.

So they have been busy, and they have gained a lot of experience since the days of sneaking into ElectricLady late night or playing for meager pay and free wine at an East Village Italian resto. And while DIARY and CIRCLES and LOVE SONGS were recorded with everyone in the same room (THREE THE HARDWAY was just Krystle & Kane together), EXTENDED PLAY was recorded disparately and assembled together by the steady hands and ears of Kane and Krystle. There is distance between the musicians in the recording process, but there is still a close emotional connection that can be heard in these songs.

And Krystle is writing with a close emotional connection to the distant past. The songs that make up Extended Play are songs of experience—the lyrics reflect on a crush from high school, a departed musical hero, and others who live in memory. There is nostalgia in ​EXTENDED PLAY and a forlornness. These songs are filled with references, musical and otherwise, to those who have inspired Krystle over the years, from Les Mis​ (specifically the song adopted by ACT UP) to Gregory Djanikian, Zach’s poet father, and Audre Lord.

Krystle describes “When I Look Back,” the last song of ​Extended Play​, as “an apology to my teenage self.” Seventeen years ago she was writing songs about what happened day-of because being young is about immediacy and living in the present tense. Now the songs are about years past because life slows down, and we are allowed the time to “look back.”

But as Krystle sings in “Rising,” “Future lingers while past is present.” She’s writing about the past because we are all our collected histories—or as she puts it in “When I Look Back”: “there’s still something of her that stays.” The future, of course, still lingers, always there waiting for us, for the next move. The album ends with a recording of Audre Lorde’s gravelly voice. She says,

“I’m going on to something else, the shape of which I have no idea. ‘Only thing I know, is it’s going to be quite different. What I leave behind has a life of its own. I’ve said this about poetry… Well in a sense, I’m saying it about the very artifact of who I have been.”

Krystle Warren & The Faculty still have more to come. They have built seventeen years of memories, experiences, recordings, and shows, and with the release of ​Extended Play​, they continue to show a commitment to growing as musicians together, even if apart.

Written by Phil Anderson

Krystle Warren and 90.1 FM KKFI

Krystle Warren has been a LIVE guest on Wednesday MidDay Medley 18 times.

Mark first interviewed Krystle Warren for The Tenth Voice, back 2002. Mark first interviewed Krystle Warren for The Tenth Voice, back 2002. Mark waited several hours, during a winter snow storm, at a huge party, where Krystle played with her band including her longtime friend Solomon Dorsey on bass, in a packed, smoke filled apartment near Community Christian Church across the hall from where Solomon lived, to be given a 2 song demo CD, that contained Krystle’s first recorded music, including a song called “Chanel #5.” Krystle has since gone on to be known all over the world, but still maintains contact with her hometown of Kansas City.

Krystle was on WMM on June 29, 2016 as “Guest Producer” to share inspirations for her new record, THREE THE HARD WAY playing early gospel recordings, that crossed over into Jazz from: Pharoah Sanders, Edwin Hawkins, and The Swan Silvertones. Krystle’s critically acclaimed album, Three The Hard Way was #1 on WMM’s 117 Best Recordings of 2017. Wednesday MidDay Medley was the first to play tracks from Krystle’s album, before it was released. Krystle came on the show months before the release, to share music that was the inspiration for the recording. Released on Parlour Door Music, on August 18, 2017 and Produced by Krystle Warren and Ben Kane. Recorded, engineered, and mixed by Ben Kane. Written & performed by Krystle Warren. Mixed at The Garden, Brooklyn. Mastered & cut by Alex DeTurk at Masterdisk. In 2015 in Krystle Warren premiered new songs from this album at the Middle of the Map Fest in a packed room at Californos in Westport and later at The Polsky Theatre for the Performing Arts Series of Johnsons County Community College. For this record Krystle decided to play every instrument and vocals & back up vocals, “playing bass, drums, lap steel, piano, guitar, and vocals directly to analog tape. She and Ben Kane recorded in Villetaneuse, France, a small town on the outskirts of Paris in a vintage 70s era studio that offered just the right, rich sound to suggest the musical foundation for the record, and to do justice to the duo’s carefully balanced arrangements.” On the Wednesday MidDay Medley radio show in 2016 Krystle shared inspirations for this record, early gospel recordings, that crossed over into Jazz from: Pharoah Sanders, Edwin Hawkins, and The Swan Silvertones.
Krystle was on the show on Oct. 16, 2019 with Brad Cox when she was in KC to present LoveSongs with Owen/Cox Dance Group at Oct 19 & 20, 2019 at Polsky Theatre at JCCC.

We talked with Krystle on September 23, 2020 about The Crew EP where Krystle and friends recorded unique versions of four classic songs with the hope of encouraging the rallying cries of the moment: the movement of the people. Warren embarked on the project after her newest album, with her band The Faculty, was stalled due to COVID-19

On May 24, 2023 Krystle Warren was our Guest Producer playing music that inspired the single, “Macca” from Krystle Warren & The Faculty. Krystle will played tracks from Paul McCartney, Chet Atkins, and Stevie Wonder..

11:26

  1. Krystle Warren – “Sunbeams”
    from: A Time to Keep Love Songs EP / Parlour Door Music / August 12, 2011
    [Originally from KC, Krystle learned to play the guitar by listening to Rubber Soul & Revolver from The Beatles. Krystle graduated from Paseo Arts Academy in 2001 and began her musical career in collaborating with area jazz and pop musicians. After living in San Francisco and NYC, Krystle was signed to a French label, Because Music, and moved to Paris to release “Circles” in 2009. Krystle played French and British television programs, including Later with Jools Holland, garnering critical acclaim and traveling all over the world with Rufus Wainwright, Nick Cave, Norah Jones, and Joan As Police Woman. Krystle created, Parlour Door Music, to release “Love Songs: A Time You May Embrace” a recording from a 13-day session in Brooklyn, where she recorded 24 songs live with 28 musicians including her band, The Faculty, alongside choirs, horn and string sections.]

[Krystle Warren plays Percheron Rooftop Series on Thursday, Jun 13, 2024, at 7:00 PM.]
[Krystle Warren plays Boulevardia, Sat, June 15 at 8:45pm on the Elevate Stage, at Crown Center.]

11:30 – Underwriting

11:32 – Interview with Krystle Warren (and Chris Haghirian)

Thanks for tuning into WMM on 90.1 FM KKFI. I’m Mark Manning. Today on WMM we are serving up music from the 9th annual Boulevardia Festival.

Chris Haghirian is with us to share details about Boulevardia, Friday & Saturday, June 14, & 15, with over 70 national, regional & local acts, 23 DJs, 5 music stages.

Chris Haghirian, thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

Also with us is Krystle Warren, in KC from France with Jean Fabien Dijoud aka”Jeff.”

Krystle Warren plays Percheron Rooftop Series on Thursday, Jun 13, 2024, at 7:00 PM.

Krystle Warren plays Boulevardia, Sat June 15 at 8:45pm on the Elevate Stage.

Krystle Warren, thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

Boulevard – Saturday, June 15

VISIT MISSOURI STAGE
1:05pm – Selekto Show
2:25pm – The Phantatics
3:45pm – Kate Cosentino
5:05pm – Post Sex Nachos
6:25pm – Big Freedia
7:25pm – Sass-A-Brass
8:05pm – Paul Cauthen
9:45pm – Thundercat

ELEVATE STAGE
1:15pm – Tiki Brawlers
2:30pm – Danny Santell
3:45pm – Stranded In The City
5:00pm – Zee Underscore
6:15pm – The Whips
7:30pm – Black Alley Brass Band
8:45pm – Krystle Warren
10:00pm Ultimate Fakebook

PROPAGANDA3 PARK STAGE
2:00pm – Supermassive Black Holes
3:10pm – The Swallowtails
4:20pm – The Cowardly Lions
5:30pm – Kirstie Lynn & Galen Clark
6:40pm – Marty Bush
7:50pm – The MGDs
9:00pm – OLE 60
10:10pm – The Burney Sisters

HOLLADAY HILL STAGE
2:00pm – Jamogi
3:15pm – Asia Tsion
4:30pm – IVORY BLUE
5:45pm – Love, Mae C.
7:00pm – Broderick Jones
8:15pm – Stik Figa
8:15pm – Leonard Dstroy
9:30pm – Mary and The Matrix

MONSTER ENERGY SILENT DISCO
1:00pm – BLVDIA Skate Party
3:00pm – SIRQUEEN
3:00pm – Kay Fan
3:00pm – DJ Missy E
3:00pm – DJ Diehard
5:00pm – DJ MOHEAT
5:00pm – TIBERIAS
5:00pm – Yung Maple
7:00pm – DJ EJ
7:00pm – DJ ON10
7:00pm – DJ Dawna
7:00pm – Lana Luxx
9:00pm – DJ Joe & Ice Kole
9:00pm – ASSJAMZ
9:00pm – DJ NE$$

11:41

  1. Thundercat – “Them Changes”
    rom: Drunk / Brainfeeder / February 24, 2017
    [Stephen Lee Bruner (born October 19, 1984), better known by his stage name Thundercat, is an American musician, singer, record producer, and songwriter from Los Angeles. First coming to prominence as a member of crossover thrash band Suicidal Tendencies, he has since released four solo studio albums and is noted for his work with producer Flying Lotus and his appearances on Kendrick Lamar’s 2015 album To Pimp a Butterfly. In 2016, Thundercat won a Grammy for Best Rap/Sung Performance for his work on the track “These Walls” from To Pimp a Butterfly. In 2020, Thundercat released his fourth studio album, It Is What It Is, which earned him a Grammy Award for Best Progressive R&B Album. // Raised in Compton and other parts of Los Angeles, Bruner was born into a family of musicians, including his father Ronald Bruner Sr., a drummer, and his mother Pam, a flautist and percussionist. His father played drums for The Temptations, The Supremes, and Gladys Knight, amongst others. After Bruner Sr. got sober from cocaine, the children would watch him play gigs at the Crenshaw Christian Center. Bruner attended Locke High School, playing in the school’s jazz band. His teacher, Reggie Andrews, produced and co-wrote the Dazz Band’s 1982 single “Let It Whip” and collaborated with Rick James. Andrews re-introduced Bruner to Kamasi Washington; the two had originally met as children, through their fathers’ membership in a gospel fusion band. The reunited duo would sneak into jazz concerts, driving around in a worn-down 1982 Ford Mustang to do so. They would later get to play the same venues as the performers they watched. They also did sessions with Bruner’s cousin Terrace Martin in Washington’s father’s garage during this time. // Bruner began playing the bass at an early age, listening to bass players such as Stanley Clarke and Marcus Miller for inspiration. By the age of 15, he had a minor hit in Germany as a member of the boy band No Curfew. A year later, he joined his brother Ronald Jr. as a member of the Los Angeles crossover thrash band Suicidal Tendencies, replacing former bass player Josh Paul. Bruner’s earliest studio album appearances include playing electric bass on Kamasi Washington’s Live at 5th Street Dick’s and The Proclamation. // Erykah Badu was credited with helping Bruner find his stage presence and identity as Thundercat. Around this time, Bruner would play in live bands for Raphael Saadiq and Snoop Dogg, and both would make quips about his playing style. Bruner credited Flying Lotus with pushing him to start singing and making his own projects. // In 2020, Rolling Stone ranked him as one of the greatest bass players of all time. // In 2004, Bruner collaborated with Kamasi Washington, as well as Cameron Graves and Ronald Jr., under the name The Young Jazz Giants. The group later united with Terrace Martin and five other Los Angeles jazz musicians to form the West Coast Get Down collective, with whom they recorded several albums. // Along with his band duties, Bruner is also a session musician, acclaimed for his work on Erykah Badu’s New Amerykah (2008) and fellow Brainfeeder artist Flying Lotus’ Cosmogramma (2010), Until the Quiet Comes (2012), and You’re Dead! (2014). // Bruner was a major contributor to Kendrick Lamar’s critically acclaimed album To Pimp a Butterfly in 2015, and has been described as being “at the creative epicenter” of the project. Longtime Thundercat collaborators Flying Lotus, Kamasi Washington, and Terrace Martin were also major contributors to the album. // Bruner was a frequent collaborator on Mac Miller’s tracks. On August 6, 2018, Bruner played bass during Miller’s Tiny Desk Concert, during which the two played their collaborative track, “What’s the Use?” In 2022, he collaborated with virtual band Gorillaz on their single “Cracker Island”, the first single and title track for their album of the same name. The song was released on April 30, 2022.]

[Thundercat plays this year’s Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15 at 9:45 PM on the Visit Missouri Stage.]

11:44 – More Interview with Krystle Warren (and Chris Haghirian)

Thanks for tuning into WMM on 90.1 FM KKFI. 
I’m Mark Manning. Today on WMM we are serving up music from the 9th annual Boulevardia Festival.

Chris Haghirian is with us to share details about Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, & Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center and Washington Square, with over 70 national, regional & local acts, 23 DJs, 5 music stages.

Also with us is our friend Krystle Warren, back home in in KC from her home in France with Jean Fabien Dijoud aka Jeff.

Krystle Warren plays Percheron Rooftop Series on Thursday, Jun 13, 2024, at 7:00 PM.

Krystle Warren plays Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15 at 8:45pm on the Elevate Stage, at Crown Center.

Chris Haghirian and Krystle Warren Jean Fabien Dijoudthank you for being or special guests

For WMM, I’m Mark Manning. Thanks for listening!

11:53

19. Ultimate Fakebook – “Tell Me What You Want”
from: This Will Be Laughing Week / Sony Music / July 18, 2000
[If rock and roll is dead, somebody forgot to tell Ultimate Fakebook. Not rap-metal or dance-pop or alt-country, but rock and roll: that musical vehicle for the uniquely American sense of freedom; that now middle-aged but still transcendent form with the power to bring to life a dream, a personality, even an entire world view in the space of a three-minute song. Bill McShane, Eric Melin, and Nick Colby – the three members of Manhattan, KS trio Ultimate Fakebook – remember when music could lift you up rather than just beat you senseless. They grew up in Middle America as fans of musicians who seemed more or less just like them, not polished products of some distant entertainment factory. In their good-natured and unassuming way, Ultimate Fakebook are on a mission: to bring back the warmth, humor, compassion, and exhilarating energy of great rock and roll.]

[Ultimate Fakebook plays Boulevardia on Saturday, June 15, at 10:00 PM on the Elevate Stage]

  1. Noel Coward – “The Party’s Over Now”
    from: Noel Coward in New York / drg / 2003 [orig. 1957]

For WMM, I’m Mark Manning. Thanks for listening!

Next week on Wednesday, June 19 we welcome Tracy McNeil and Dan Parsons of the Australian duo Minor Gold who talk with us Live about their show Wednesday Night, June 19, at 7:00pm at Waldo Pizza, 7433 Broadway, KCMO as part of The Waldo Folk series. // Also next week journalist, club promoter and punk rock band member Aaron Rhodes joins us to share details about his new band and about what is going on at Farewell KC and Howdy, two East KC clubs Aaron helps keep going. // Nicolette Paige joins us to talk about her cooperative Farm, // and Scott Hrabko is back with more music for his new EP series..

THANK YOU to our incredible KKFI Staff; Director of Development & Communications – J Kelly Dougherty, Volunteer Coordinator – Darryl Oliver, Chief Operator – Chad Brothers, KKFI Accounting & Administration – Shaina Littler

This radio station is more than the individual hosts of each individual radio show. Instead it is about a collective spirit of hundreds of hardworking people, unselfishly setting aside ego, to work for the greater good of community building and the gigantic goal of keeping our airwaves free, non-commercial, and open to all! Congratulations and thank you to all programmers & volunteers who went the extra effort to keep our station alive.

Our Script/Playlist is a “cut and paste” of information.
Sources for notes: artist’s websites, bios, wikipedia.org

Wednesday MidDay Medley in on the web:
http://www.kkfi.org,
http://www.WednesdayMidDayMedley.org,
http://www.facebook.com/WednesdayMidDayMedleyon90.1FM
https://www.soundcloud.com/wednesdaymiddaymedley
http://www.bandcamp.com/wednesdaymiddaymedley
http://www.instagram.markthomasmanning

Show #1050

WMM Serves Music of Boulevardia + Chris Haghirian + Krystle Warren

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

WMM Serves Music of Boulevardia + Chris Haghirian + Krystle Warren

WMM spins music of the bands and artists from the 9th annual Boulevardia Beer & Music Festival including: The Roseline, Kemet Coleman, Friendly Thieves, Supermassive Black Holes,Laura Noble, Bears and Company, Flight Attendant, Milky Chance, Kate Cosentino, Good Morning Kevin featuring Mura Masa & Big Freedia, Back Alley Brass Band, Paul Cauthen, Stik Figa, Thundercat, Ultimate Fakebook, and Krystle Warren!

Chris Haghirian joins us to share details about Boulevardia, Friday, June 14, & Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Boulevard, with over 70 national, regional & local acts, 23 DJs, 5 music stages, with nearly 50 Brewing Companies, dozens and dozens of Restaurants & Food Trucks, Multiple merchants in the Makers Market, plus a Skating Party, The Silent Disco, and various VIP Experiences. Boulevardia has become one of the city’s largest showcases of local music with over 60 local performers included in this year’s lineup. Musical performances cross over several genres and showcase the rich talent KC has to offer. The two-day urban street festival is near the intersection of Pershing and Grand Boulevard, encompassing Crown Center and Washington Square Park. The event features a craft beer and food sampling experience and music, as well as interactive activities, entertainment, and shopping, all in a unique urban setting. http://www.boulevardia.com

Chris Haghirian is host & Producer of Eight One Sixty, heard Tuesday nights at 6:00 PM, on 90.9 The Bridge. Chris worked for The Kansas City Star for over 20 years. Chris studied Journalism / Advertising at The University of Kansas. Chris also studied Photography at Kansas City Art Institute. Chris works for Spray KC. Chris organizes multiple concert series throughout the metro, and music stages for The Plaza Art Fair, The Innovation Fest, and The Middle of The Map Fest.

At 11:00 am, Krystle Warren joins us for our second hour. Krystle Warren will perform LIVE from the 90.1 FM Studios. Krystle Warren is one of our most played artists and most frequent guests. Now based in France, Krystle Warren began performing in her native KC at the age of 16. Krystle graduated from Paseo Arts Academy and in 2001 and began her musical career collaborating with area jazz and pop musicians. Krystle Warren & The Faculty released the album CIRCLES in 2009. Their epic sophomore release, LOVE SONGS… followed in 2011, and contained twenty-four songs about love and was recorded in New York City over the span of two weeks, with close to thirty musicians. Around this time, Krystle joined forces with one of her musical idols, Rufus Wainwright, on his world tour as opener and bandmate. Krystle Warren released her solo album THREE THE HARD WAY, in 2017 where Krystle played every instrument. Krystle Warren plays Percheron Rooftop Series on Thursday, Jun 13, 2024, at 7:00 PM. Krystle Warren plays Boulevardia, Saturday, June 15 at 8:45pm on the Elevate Stage, at Crown Center. Krystle will be sharing glimpses of Extended Play, Krystle Warren & The Faculty’s upcoming album release. More info at: http://www.krystlewarren.com

On your local radio dial 90.1 FM or
STREAMING LIVE at: kkfi.org

Show #1050

WMM PLAYLIST from June 5, 2024 – My Queer Life

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, June 5, 2024

The Music of My Queer Life
(Mark Manning’s Birthday Special)

On this day, June 5, I was born, in Geneva, (Nebraska). For this unique and special Wednesday MidDay Medley live radio broadcast, I will share tracks from some of my favorite recordings representing different seasons of my life. The playlist starts when i was 7 years old, in second grade, and discovered my Mom’s old stereo and record collection in our basement. I will share “performance art” and secret pre-lunch confessions of a queer music nerd, who couldn’t wait to move away from the small town where he lived. Life might have been unpredictable, being on the edge of a high wire act, but the music was always there like an invisible net. It was the music that gave meaning, the lyrics that offered a password, and a road map, where none others had existed before. I will spin representative tracks from: The Beatles, The Carpenters, Al Green, The Ramones, David Bowie, Curtis Mayfield, The Velvet Underground, Talking Heads, The Smiths, Patti Smith, LaBelle, Joni Mitchell, Prince, Iris DeMent, The B-52’s, Mavis Staples, The Magnetic Fields, and The Clash.

At 11:00, we’ll talk with Peregrine Honig and Izzy Vivas of the West 18th Street Fashion Show happening Saturday, June 8, at 7:00pm this year’s theme is Summer in Slumberland.

  1. “Main Title Instrumental – It’s Showtime Folks”
    from: Orig. Motion Picture Soundtrack All That Jazz / Casablanca / December 20, 1979
    [WMM’s Adopted Theme Song]
  2. Various Artists – “The Twilight Zone”
    from: All-Time Top 100 TV Themes / TVT / August 23, 2005
  3. Various Artists – “The Dick Van Dyke Show”
    from: All-Time Top 100 TV Themes / TVT / August 23, 2005
  4. Various Artists – “The Mary Tyler Moore Show”
    from: All-Time Top 100 TV Themes / TVT / August 23, 2005

10:03

I’m Mark Manning. 61 years ago, I was born in Geneva, (Nebraska) Today I’ll play my favorite recordings, from different times of my life, starting in 2nd grade when I was seven years old, in our unfinished basement we had an old TV that got one channel, CBS, out of Lincoln, Nebraska. Across the room was an old 1960’s wooden Stereo cabinet. Beside the cabinet was a box with several of my Mom’s albums. I pulled out “Meet The Beatles” put the needle on the groove, and this was this first spin of my life.

  1. The Beatles – “All My Loving” (Mono)
    from: Meet The Beatles / Capitol-EMI / Nov 23,1963
    [Meet the Beatles! is a studio album by the English rock band the Beatles, released as their second album in the United States. It was the group’s first American album to be issued by Capitol Records, on 20 January 1964 in both mono and stereo formats. It topped the popular album chart on 15 February 1964 and remained at number one for eleven weeks before being replaced by The Beatles’ Second Album. The cover featured Robert Freeman’s iconic portrait of the Beatles used in the United Kingdom for With the Beatles, with a blue tint added to the original stark black-and-white photograph. // After EMI’s subsidiary Capitol Records constantly rejected requests by both Brian Epstein and George Martin to release Beatles records in the United States, EMI label head Sir Joseph Lockwood sent a deputy to Los Angeles in November 1963 ordering Capitol Records to commence promoting and releasing Beatles records in the United States. Despite the “first album” claim on the Meet the Beatles! cover, ten days prior to its release, Vee-Jay Records of Chicago beat Capitol to the punch with the release on 10 January 1964 of the Beatles’ American debut album Introducing… The Beatles, which had been delayed for release for various reasons since the previous summer. Perhaps as a result of the Vee-Jay release, Liberty Music Shops advertised in the New York Times of 12 January 1964 that Meet the Beatles! was available for purchase, an ad not authorized by Capitol. // In 2004, the album was released for the first time on compact disc in both stereo and mono as part of The Capitol Albums, Volume 1 box set, containing the original US stereo and mono mixes. In 2014, Meet the Beatles! was reissued on CD, individually and included in the Beatles boxed set The U.S. Albums. Although following the running order for Meet the Beatles!, the mixes featured in this reissue are the UK mono and stereo mixes. // By November 1963, the Beatles had already recorded over 35 songs for EMI’s UK Parlophone label, while Capitol Records in the US planned to release an album and a single, and more at a later date. The US rights to the Beatles’ first 14 tracks were held by Vee Jay Records along with a few others. “She Loves You” had been issued in America on the Swan label and also sold poorly. In Britain, Parlophone was already releasing its second Beatles album With the Beatles and had issued several singles which were not included on any UK albums with the exception of the first two (“Please Please Me”/”Ask Me Why” and “Love Me Do”/”PS I Love You”). While the Beatles’ first two British albums each contained 14 tracks, in the American market albums were typically limited to 12 tracks and it was expected for albums to include the current hit single. // The first three tracks on the album include the December 1963 Capitol single “I Want to Hold Your Hand” along with the record’s B-sides both in the United States, “I Saw Her Standing There,” and in the UK with “This Boy” from the original November 1963 release. Neither “I Want to Hold Your Hand” nor “This Boy” had appeared on album at the time in the UK, while “I Saw Her Standing There” had been the lead-off track to the band’s debut album. The other nine tracks on Meet the Beatles! are duplicated from its nearest UK counterpart album With the Beatles. Those were original Beatles songs and not cover versions of songs done by other artists with the exception of “Till There Was You”. The remaining five tracks from With the Beatles were songs originally recorded by other artists. Capitol determined that for their first album they would only include original and fresh material. There was fear that the remakes would turn Americans off of the Beatles. The other five songs would appear on Capitol’s next American LP, The Beatles’ Second Album, released in April 1964. The songs “I Want to Hold Your Hand” and “This Boy” are in a duo-phonic [fake] stereo, as Capitol had not been provided proper stereo mixes.]

10:06 – “1970’s Cocktail Party” written by Mark Manning

I was seven years old and in second grade.

I had discovered in the basement, next to my mother’s old stereo, several “Long Playing” record albums, Meet The Beatles, The Fifth Dimension, Burt Bacharach, Engelbert Humperdinck, Al Martino, Mac Davis, Cher, and The Carpenters.

I had been forbidden to play Engelbert Humperdinck’s “Please Release Me.” My mother heard me playing it one day and she came running out of the laundry room and said that my father hated that song. The Beatles album was very scratchy sounding. I was obviously the oldest.

Even though we only had one channel on our television in the basement, I had seen The Carpenters performing some of their songs. Karen Carpenter’s clothing reminded me of my mother’s, white crocheted poncho, over a long sleeved, tight white polyester turtleneck, and white corduroy hip huggers. Their album covers seem to tell a story of a really cool family that played musical instruments and sang catchy songs. My favorite was “Close To You” which was also on the Burt Bacharach record, but Karen sang it so much better than Burt. I played that song over and over and over.

Our second grade talent show was coming up. I was determined to sing, “Close To You.” In the talent show, my girlfriend Ann Withee played the piano. She was nervous, and her stubby little fingers were shaking over the keys. Ann’s best friend, Jill McNaught, our PE teacher’s daughter, also performed an incredible gymnastic routine, doing splits, kicks, cartwheels, backflips, and somersaults. I sang “Close To You,” exactly as I had learned it on my mother’s stereo. First place was split, in a three-way tie, between Jill, Ann, and myself. The reward was that we were asked to perform an encore, this time for the third graders. Oh my god, they were so much older, and so much more cynical.

After winning the talent show, my mother would force me to sing “Close To You” to the neighbors, my dad, and many family members. That summer, my older cousins from California were visiting Nebraska. They were more interested in “Meet The Beatles” than The Carpenters record.

Again my mother pushed me to perform my little “Close To You” act for my cousins. She built me up in an introduction that was psychotic and obviously bound to have me pushed off the pedestal. While I sang, my cousins started laughing. They were a tougher audience than the third graders. They asked me why I was mispronouncing all the lyrics. “What? I’m not mispronouncing anything! This is exactly how Karen Carpenter sings this song.” I had memorized the song phonetically, from the stereo, but apparently something didn’t translate from my mother’s old stereo, the Columbia House, Carpenters LP, Karen’s diction, and my second grade hearing and cognitive abilities. I was singing, “Why do birds suddenly afee.” I didn’t know “afee” wasn’t a word. I heard “afee.” I sang “afee.” Oh well, it was back to rehearsals in the basement. One thing was for sure, Bacharach was the man. For the third grade talent show I sang, “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head” with a hand crafted microphone made from a can on a stick.

It was 1971. It was a crazy time in America. My mother was obsessed with her ranch style house that the construction company my father worked for had built. Past our backyard was a cornfield. Every year a new row of houses was built, until soon you could hardly see that cornfield anymore. Out of the kitchen window, past the gas grill and row of bushes, rows and rows of cornfields were replaced by rows and rows of split level houses, in three styles, intermingled, repeating, reflecting, and echoing.

Our house was always buzzing. My ears were always hearing everything. Bed time was eight o’clock. In our house, with its prefabricated quality, you could hear almost everything through those walls, if you listened carefully. I remember hearing one afternoon, that my aunt was pregnant, “with another man’s baby.”

One Friday night, my mother and father were hosting a ’70s Cocktail Party. I could smell all the cigarette smoke sneaking under the crack, between my bedroom door and multi colored striped carpet. I listened as they finished their games of pitch, and my mother burnt eggs and bacon to feed the drunken guests before they made their way home.

Almost all of the cocktail party guests had exited, except Jerry and his wife. Jerry was in the concrete business like my father, and often competed with my father for bids on jobs. That’s not all they competed for. I remember sneaking out into the hallway leading to the kitchen, to see Jerry sitting at our dining room table. His body was waving back and forth. He seemed unbalanced. His eyes seemed to have trouble focusing. He had a very interesting smile across his smooth tanned face. I thought he was handsome. Whatever he had been drinking he definitely seemed unguarded. Jerry said to my father. “You know Tom, I haven’t had a chance to dance with your wife. The night is almost over, and I haven’t had the opportunity to dance with your wife.” He was charming too.

Jerry’s wife seemed to disappear from my view, or from the picture in my mind. I heard a body moving and I quickly slipped back into my room. My father, also very very drunk, went into his bedroom to take off his pants. As I listened in my room everything became terribly quiet. I couldn’t hear anything and my 8-year old mind ran through all of the possibilities of what could be going on out there, in the rest of our house, outside my fake wood bedroom door.

Then it suddenly hit me. I realized something horrible was about to happen. I slipped out of my room and saw my father in his white cotton briefs, creeping down the hallway, into the kitchen, and then down the squeaky stairs to the basement. I followed.

A lot of the party had taken place down there, in the basement, around my father’s hand crafted dark brown Formica topped bar, surrounded by wood paneled walls, displaying his many rifles on gun racks.

I moved slowly, a step or two behind my drunk father. He didn’t see me. He seemed nervous and excited. He was breathing heavy and smoking a cigarette. Moving down the steps, I heard it. With each step down the music became louder. It was, The Carpenters…My Carpenters. They were singing “Side A.” The side that starts with “We’ve Only Just Begun” and ends with “Close To You” and some wacky Richard arrangements in between.

From around my father’s brief covered ass I saw Jerry “slow dancing” with my mother. They were really close together, pressing their bodies together, they were feeling each other. Richard sang “oooh…oooh.” Karen sang “ahhhh, ah ah ah ah.” Their hands were together, near their faces, that were close together. Jerry’s other hand was somewhere else. His eyes were closed, so were my mother’s. She was smiling and happy. I remember how content she seemed in that moment. She was in love.

Then my mom opened her eyes, at first slowly, and then quickly, as they became very wide. Jerry and my mother quickly disengaged. My father noticed me watching and grabbed me by the arm and pulled me out from behind him. My father growled at my mother, “Look at what you are doing! And in front of your own son!” Jerry’s wife suddenly appeared, as my parents began to yell and fight. My father backed my mother up against the brick wall. Jerry’s wife kept saying, “Honey, It’s time to go.”

Jerry kept saying, “I can’t let him hurt her. Tom, don’t you hurt her. Patty, are you okay?” My father disappeared with my mother into a room in the basement. Jerry’s wife pulled her drunk husband up the stairs and to the drive way where she pushed him in their car and drove him off. There was a lot of yelling and screaming and crashing and banging. My father came storming out of the room and then I saw my mother emerge. She was crying. Her mascara was running. Her head was in her hands. Her nose was bleeding.

She sat on the sofa crying as my little sisters came downstairs and sat beside her. They were bawling like little lambs for their mother. My father came back downstairs. He was pacing back and forth in drunken anger confusion.

The record had ended and the needle was going round and round the spinning A & M label. The soundtrack changed. I felt so old. I was eight years old, and The Carpenters music never felt the same to me, ever, ever again.

  1. The Carpenters – “(They Long To Be) Close To You”
    from: Close To You / A&M / August 19, 1971
    “(They Long to Be) Close to You” is a song written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David with sections of the early version written by Cathy Steeves. The best-known version is that recorded by American duo The Carpenters for their second studio album Close to You (1970) and produced by Jack Daugherty. Released on May 14, 1970, the single topped both the US Billboard Hot 100 and Adult Contemporary charts. It also reached the top of the Canadian and Australian charts and peaked at number six on the charts of both the UK and Ireland. The record was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in August 1970. // The song was first recorded by Richard Chamberlain and released as a single in 1963 as “They Long to Be Close to You”. However, while the single’s other side, “Blue Guitar”, became a hit, “They Long to Be Close to You” did not. The tune was also recorded as a demo by Dionne Warwick in 1963, was re-recorded with a Burt Bacharach arrangement for her album Make Way for Dionne Warwick (1964), and was released as the B-side of her 1965 single “Here I Am”. Dusty Springfield recorded the song in August 1964, but her version was not released commercially until it appeared on her album Where Am I Going? (1967). Bacharach released his own version in 1971. But the version recorded by Carpenters with instrumental backing by L.A. studio musicians from the Wrecking Crew, which became a hit in 1970, was the most successful. // Karen and Richard Carpenter recorded the most successful version of the song. // In 1970, “(They Long to Be) Close to You” was released by the Carpenters on their album Close to You (1970) and became their breakthrough hit. The song stayed at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks and eleven weeks in the Top 10. “(They Long to Be) Close to You” was named Billboard’s Song of the Summer for 1970. // Bacharach and David gave Herb Alpert the song after he scored a number one hit in 1968 with “This Guy’s in Love with You”, which the duo had also written. Alpert recorded the song, but he was displeased with the recording and did not release it. After the Carpenters achieved their first chart success with “Ticket to Ride” in 1969, Alpert convinced them to record their version of the song, believing it was well-suited for them. // Carpenter and Alpert collaborated on the song, and the finished product was a 4-minute, 36-second long song. When A&M Records decided to remove the extended coda and release it as a 3-minute, 40-second long single in May 1970, it became A&M’s biggest hit since Alpert’s “This Guy’s in Love with You” from 1968. Billboard ranked it as the number two song for 1970. // “(They Long to Be) Close to You” earned the Carpenters a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Performance by a Duo, Group or Chorus in 1971. It became the first of three Grammy Awards they would win during their careers. The song was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on August 12, 1970. Reaching number six on the UK Singles Chart in 1970, in a UK television special on ITV in 2016 it was voted fourth in “The Nation’s Favourite Carpenters Song”. // Richard had originally written the flugelhorn solo part for Herb Alpert but when he was unavailable at the time of recording, Chuck Findley was hired in his stead. Richard later commented: “Chuck didn’t play it that way at first, but I worked with him and he nailed it. A lot of people thought it was Herb – Bacharach thought so, too. But it’s the way Findley is playing it.” // The arrangement was completely different from the version Bacharach cut with Richard Chamberlain, with one exception. When Richard Carpenter asked Bacharach for permission (as a courtesy) to redo the song, Bacharach requested that he keep the two “quintuplets” (five note groupings” (piano ornaments) at the end of the first bridge. Bacharach recalled his initial reaction on hearing the finished product: “Man, this is just great! I completely blew it with Richard Chamberlain but now someone else has come along and made a record so much better than mine.” // The song plays a key part throughout the animated television show The Simpsons, being used prominently during emotional moments between Homer and Marge Simpson over the course of the series. It is first used in the second season episode “The Way We Was”, a flashback episode detailing how the couple met; Homer is first shown listening to the song in the car, and it later plays when he sees Marge for the first time in high school detention, and throughout the rest of the episode. It is also the tune of the doorbell that won’t stop in the episode Maximum Homerdrive. It later features in The Simpsons Movie (2007), as Homer tearfully watches a videotape left behind by Marge in Alaska containing the couple’s first dance to the song, and subsequently collapses onto a broken heart-shaped iceberg in anguish. // Karen Carpenter on lead and backing vocals; Richard Carpenter on backing vocals, piano, Wurlitzer electronic piano, harpsichord, orchestration; Joe Osborn on bass; Hal Blaine on drums, Chuck Findley on trumpet, Bob Messenger on flute.]

Mark: I grew up in a small town in Nebraska. The idea of “diversity’ in this town was: are you Irish or Swedish? The radio was very white. Soul music and R&B wasn’t played on the radio. When I was 11 my parents got a divorce and we moved to the “other side of town.” My mom got a job working at the Women’s Prison. Since mom was a new employee, she had to work all of the holidays, but she was allowed to bring her kids to work on those days, so I spent Easter, Mother’s Day, 4th of July, at the prison. It was there that I heard Al Green “Let’s Stay Together” for the first time. The women were playing albums on portable stereo turntables. The best music in the town… was at the prison.

  1. Al Green – “Lets Stay Together”
    from: Lets Stay Together / Hi Records / Jan. 31, 1972
    [“Let’s Stay Together” is a song by American singer Al Green from his 1972 album of the same name. It was produced and recorded by Willie Mitchell, and mixed by Mitchell and Terry Manning. Released as a single in 1971, “Let’s Stay Together” reached number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, and remained on the chart for 16 weeks and also topped Billboard’s R&B chart for nine weeks. Billboard ranked it as the number 11 song of 1972. It was ranked the 60th greatest song of all time by Rolling Stone magazine on their 2004 list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, and has been covered by numerous other performers, most notably Tina Turner. // It was selected by the Library of Congress as a 2010 addition to the National Recording Registry, which selects recordings annually that are “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”. The song went on to claim the number 1 position on the Billboard Year-End chart as an R&B song for 1972. In 1999, the 1971 recording on Hi Records by Al Green was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. // Albert Leornes Greene (born April 13, 1946), known professionally as Al Green, is an American singer, songwriter, pastor and record producer best known for recording a series of soul hit singles in the early 1970s, including “Take Me to the River”, “Tired of Being Alone”, “I’m Still in Love with You”, “Love and Happiness”, and his signature song, “Let’s Stay Together”. After his girlfriend died by suicide, Green became an ordained pastor and turned to gospel music. He later returned to secular music. // Green was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995. He was referred to on the museum’s site as being “one of the most gifted purveyors of soul music”. He has also been referred to as “The Last of the Great Soul Singers”. Green is the winner of 11 Grammy Awards, including the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. He has also received the BMI Icon award and is a Kennedy Center Honors recipient. He was included in the Rolling Stone list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time, ranking at No. 65, as well as its list of the 200 Greatest Singers of All Time, at No. 10.]

Mark: In my tween years my mother’s record collection was changing, her second husband Al drove a van, with a CB Radio, and listened to 8-track tapes. My mom was in the RCA Music Club where they would automatically send you the “new release,” if you didn’t send back the card. That’s how my mom ended up with the soundtrack to “Superfly” from Curtis Mayfield on 8-track. The movie never played our town. But the soundtrack tells the story, and we hear in the bridge, the amazing Curtis singing, “Trying to get over” “Trying to get over,” it’s the theme we hear in so many of Curtis Mayfield’s incredible recordings.

Mark: Thanks for tuning into WMM. I’m Mark Manning. 61 years ago, on this date, I was born in Geneva, (Nebraska) Today I’m playing from some of my favorite recordings, from different times of my life. In 1980, in high school journalism class, working on the year-book staff, we listened to this debut record, of a new band from Athens, Georgia. We listened on a small portable stereo, checked out from the media department, much like the ones that the women in prison were playing. The record’s label said “play loud,” so we did.

  1. The B-52’s – “52 Girls”
    from: The B-52’s / Warner Brothers / July 6, 1979
    [Kate Pierson on vocals, organ, keyboard bass, additional guitar; Fred Schneider on vocals, cowbell, walkie-talkie, toy piano (track 3), keyboard bass (track 7); Keith Strickland on drums, percussion, Claire sounds; Cindy Wilson on vocals, bongos, tambourine, additional guitar; Ricky Wilson on guitars, smoke alarm. // The B-52’s is the debut album by American New wave band the B-52’s. The kitschy lyrics and mood, and the hook-laden harmonies helped establish a fanbase for the band, who went on to release several chart-topping singles. The album cover was designed by Tony Wright (credited as Sue Ab Surd). /// The B-52’s peaked at number 59 on the Billboard 200, and “Rock Lobster” reached number 56 on the Billboard Hot 100. In 2003, the television network VH1 named The B-52’s the 99th greatest album of all time. Shortly before his death, John Lennon said he enjoyed the album. In his 1995 book, The Alternative Music Almanac, Alan Cross placed the album ninth on the list of the “10 Classic Alternative Albums”. In 2020, The B-52’s was ranked number 198 on Rolling Stone magazine’s list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. // Critical reception for The B-52’s was generally favorable; critics praised the album’s kitschy lyrics and party atmosphere. In his “Consumer Guide” column for The Village Voice, music critic Robert Christgau remarked on his fondness “for the pop junk they recycle—with love and panache,” while also noting that he was “more delighted with their rhythms, which show off their Georgia roots by adapting the innovations of early funk (a decade late, just like the Stones and Chicago blues) to an endlessly danceable forcebeat format.” // In a retrospective review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic wrote: “Unabashed kitsch mavens at a time when their peers were either vulgar or stylish, the Athens quintet celebrated all the silliest aspects of pre-Beatles pop culture – bad hairdos, sci-fi nightmares, dance crazes, pastels, and anything else that sprung into their minds – to a skewed fusion of pop, surf, avant-garde, amateurish punk, and white funk.” Rolling Stone writer Pat Blashill concluded that “On The B-52’s, the best little dance band from Athens proved that rock & roll still matters if it’s about sex and hair and moving your body. Even if you have to shake-bake shake-bake it like a Shy Tuna.” Slant Magazine’s Sal Cinquemani stated that “(l)ike any over-the-top act, the B-52’s wears thin, but the band successfully positioned themselves as pop-culture icons—not unlike the musical antiquities they emulated.” The B-52’s was included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. In 2003, Rolling Stone ranked The B-52’s number 152 on its list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, maintaining the ranking in a 2012 update of the list and dropping it to number 198 in a 2020 update.]

Mark: The 1970s came to an amazing ending. The decade of Love, and new found sexual freedom was about to be trampled and burned by Ronald Reagan and the Moral Majority. Hippies were getting their hair cut short and going to work for Wall Street. It was time for a new government that would truly uphold the values of the rich and greedy, it was time to tax the poor, start a racist war on drugs, build bigger prisons and cut funding for public schools. While sports loving baseball fans were burning all the disco albums a new music was forming, and new invasion of British bands was about to be unleashed and an new term of music was created. Seymour Stein of Sire records signed a bunch of bands he “discovered” at the famed New York dive bar, CBGBs. “Punk” wouldn’t sell, so he renamed the music “New Wave”, especially for his new band, and their almost perfect debut album 77, that came out in 1977 but it took some of us until 1981 to discover it. Their music has been therapy to me, both physically and psychologically. I love all of their recordings, but 77 is special. They were fresh young art students fearlessly being a band.

  1. Talking Heads – “Uh-Oh, Love Comes To Town”
    from: 77 / Sire / September 16, 1977
    [Talking Heads: 77 is the debut studio album by American rock band Talking Heads. It was recorded in April 1977 at New York’s Sundragon Studios and released on September 16 of that year by Sire Records. The single “Psycho Killer” reached number 92 on the Billboard Hot 100. // From the group’s earliest days as a trio in 1975, Talking Heads were approached by several record labels for a potential album deal. The first person to approach the band was Mark Spector for Columbia Records, who saw Talking Heads perform at CBGB and invited them to record a demo album. Next would come Mathew Kaufman for Beserkley Records. Kaufman brought the trio to K&K Studios in Great Neck, Long Island, to record a three-song, 16-track demo tape containing “Artists Only”, “Psycho Killer” and “First Week, Last Week”. Kaufman was pleased with the results, but the band felt that they would need to improve drastically before re-entering a recording studio. The group also sent the Columbia demo to Arista Records, but when drummer Chris Frantz called Bob Feilden about it a few weeks later, he claimed the tape was lost. // In November 1975, Seymour Stein, cofounder of Sire Records, had heard Talking Heads open for the Ramones. He liked the song “Love → Building on Fire”, and the next day, offered a record deal, but the group was still unsure about their studio abilities, and wanted a second guitarist as well as a keyboard player to help improve their sound. They agreed to let him know when they felt more confident. // A month later, Lou Reed, who had seen a few Talking Heads shows at CBGB, invited the trio to his New York apartment, where he began to critique the group’s act, telling them to slow down “Tentative Decisions”, which had originally been fast and bass-heavy. Reed also suggested to David Byrne that he never wear short sleeves on stage, in order to hide his hairy arms. Over breakfast at a local restaurant, Reed expressed a desire to produce the group’s first album and wanted to introduce them to his manager, Jonny Podell. That same day Podell called the trio to meet at his office, where he immediately offered them a recording contract. // To assist with the contracting, the group sought out assistance from lawyer Peter Parcher, a friend of Frantz’s father. The next day, the trio visited Parcher’s office, where Parcher asked his partner Alan Shulman to look over the contract. Shulman told the group not to sign the deal, or else Reed and Podell would own full rights to the album and collect all profit. Talking Heads declined the deal, but maintained a respectful relationship with Reed. // Around August 1976, Chris Frantz was given the number of Jerry Harrison by former Modern Lovers bass player Ernie Brooks. Brooks assured Frantz that Harrison was not only a great keyboard player, but was a great guitarist too, two things the band were seeking out. When Frantz called Harrison, he was still feeling burnt out from the demise of the original Modern Lovers and had just enrolled at a Harvard Graduate School, and was unsure about joining a new band. But after discovering that several labels were interested in signing the group, he agreed to hear them play live. Frantz booked a concert local to Harrison in Cambridge, Massachusetts. When the group began to perform, they found Harrison nowhere in sight, but eventually saw him mid-set, seriously observing the band, and appearing displeased. After the show, Frantz asked Harrison what he had thought. Harrison did not answer until the next day, saying he was not impressed by the show, but was intrigued. He said he would like to jam in New York but stipulated that he would not officially join until they had secured a recording deal. // During late September the group began to consider Sire Records again, and asked advice from Danny Fields, the Ramones’ manager. Fields praised Sire despite them having the normal flaws of a record label. On November 1 the trio met with Seymour Stein again at Shulman’s office, and signed a recording deal with Sire, with an advance allowing the trio to make music their full-time career. // Sessions started at Sundragon Recording Studios in late 1976, where the group recorded the track “New Feeling” and the single, “Love → Building on Fire”. Jerry Harrison was not present at these sessions, as he had not yet been informed that the group had received a record deal. These sessions were produced by Tony Bongiovi and Tom Erdelyi. After hearing of the recording session, Harrison was eager to join, and in January 1977, the trio went to his apartment in Ipswich to teach him their songs and play a few shows in the area. // In April, sessions for the album proper began in earnest at Sundragon Studios, with the group finally a foursome. Tony Bongiovi and Lance Quinn acted as co-producers on these sessions, with Ed Stasium as engineer. Frantz claims that Stasium did most of the work on the album, while Bongiovi took phone calls, read magazines, or talked about airplanes. Bongiovi was dissatisfied with the group’s performances, often asking for seven or eight takes of a song, even after the best take had already been recorded. The group felt that Bongiovi was condescending, and that he was trying to make them sound like a different band. He was also repeatedly rude to bassist Tina Weymouth.[citation needed] Stasium and Quinn were full of encouragement for the group. // The first song to have vocals recorded was “Psycho Killer”. Allegedly, during recording of this track, Bongiovi went into the studio kitchen and gave Byrne a knife, telling him to get into character when singing. Byrne simply responded with “No, that’s not going to work” and the band took a break. During the break Byrne confessed that he felt uncomfortable singing with Bongiovi watching, and asked Stasium to remove him. Stasium suggested evasion, recording when Bongiovi was not around, before he arrived, or after he left. Bongiovi allegedly never noticed they were doing this, being more concerned with the building of Power Station Studios. // The group wanted the album to “Convey a modern message about the importance of taking charge of your own life”, whilst still being fun to listen to. // Within two weeks the basic tracks were down, but still needed overdubs. Sessions were halted when Ken Kushnick, Sire’s European representative, offered them a chance to tour Europe with the Ramones in order to promote their “Love → Building on Fire” single. // While on tour the group continued to develop their sound, and on May 14, performed at The Rock Garden in Covent Garden, London, where John Cale, Brian Eno and Chris Thomas saw them. Linda Stein, the Ramones’ co-manager, brought Cale, Eno and Thomas backstage after the concert where they all shook hands. Thomas allegedly heard Cale say to Eno “They’re mine, you bugger!” All members of Talking Heads already knew Cale fairly well, as he had produced Jerry Harrison in 1972 for The Modern Lovers (1976), and was a regular at CBGBs throughout the original trio’s growth. // After the meeting they all went to The Speak Club to drink and discuss. Thomas declined the opportunity to replace Bongiovi as producer for the remaining album sessions.[15] When the group returned to the US on June 7, they booked a four-day recording session at ODO Studios in New York to record vocals and overdubs, as well as to mix the album. The album was finished. // The album was released by Sire Records in the UK and US and Philips Records throughout continental Europe. // In 2005, it was remastered and re-released by Warner Music Group on their Warner Bros./Sire Records/Rhino Records labels in DualDisc format with five bonus tracks on the CD side (see track listing below). The DVD-Audio side includes both stereo and 5.1 surround high resolution (96 kHz/24bit) mixes, as well as a Dolby Digital version and videos of the band performing “Pulled Up” and “I Feel It in My Heart”. In Europe, it was released as a CD+DVDA two-disc set, rather than a single DualDisc. The reissue was produced by Andy Zax with Talking Heads.]

Mark: The Summer after my Sophomore year in high School, I was given a crash course in Sex Drugs and Rock and Roll. I remember the second time I tried marijuana. My first thought was, “they are all liars.” How could something that felt this good be so very bad? Like my secret about being gay, I knew I had to keep this a big secret, because it was definitely illegal, in 1979, in York, Nebraska, where you could get pulled over for driving drunk, but for certain you would go to jail for possession of the evil weed.

  1. The Ramones – “I Wanna Be Sedated”
    from: Road To Ruin / Sire / September 22, 1978
    [Originally released on the band’s fourth studio album, Road to Ruin (1978), in September 1978. The B-side of the UK single “She’s the One” was released on September 21, 1978. The song was later released as a single in the Netherlands in 1979, and in the U.S. in 1980 by RSO Records from the Times Square soundtrack album. It has since remained one of the band’s best known songs. // “I Wanna Be Sedated” was written by Joey Ramone. In an interview about the song, Joey explains the chorus: “It’s a road song. I wrote it in 1977, through the 78′. Well, Danny Fields was our first manager and he would work us to death. We would be on the road 360 days a year, and we went over to England, and we were there at Christmas time, and in Christmas time, London shuts down. There’s nothing to do, nowhere to go. Here we were in London for the first time in our lives, and me and Dee Dee Ramone were sharing a room in the hotel, and we were watching The Guns of Navarone. So there was nothing to do, I mean, here we are in London finally, and this is what we are doing, watching American movies in the hotel room.” // “I Wanna Be Sedated” was # 145 on the Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. Marky Ramone is the drummer on this track. // In 1999, National Public Radio included the song in the “NPR 100”, in which NPR’s music editors sought to compile the one hundred most important American musical works of the 20th century. // Kelefa Sanneh said of the song, “I loved it because it seemed like the beginning of a tradition, pointing away from all the conventional thing a rock ‘n’ roll band might do, and pointing toward anything and everything else.” // According to Alice Cooper, Joey Ramone acknowledged the similarity to Cooper’s earlier 1972 song “Elected,” explaining that the Ramones listened to a lot of Alice Cooper.]

Mark: Prince released his 4th album, CONTROVERSY on October 14, 1981. This album came out during my freshman year in college, and I was in awe. CONTROVERSY followed Prince’s 1980 release, DIRTY MIND (one of my favorites). Both of these daring, and amazing, and genius albums helped kick open the closet doors, of young little Queer kids in “small town” Nebraska, like me. Prince was so very bold and courageous in his lyrics, “I just can’t believe, All the things people say, controversy. Am I black or white? Am I straight or gay? Controversy.” His music was always so good. His early albums were so important to me, making me a life long fan. Prince was universal. He was so damn good, and ultimately, he just didn’t give a damn, about all of those homophobic racists. Prince did so much, to help liberate us lovers, from the poisonous, Republican, “family values” bed death, of bloated and drunk sexist and hypocritical patriarchy gone so wrong.

  1. Prince – “Controversy (Single Version)”
    from: Controversy / Warner Brothers / October 14, 1981
    Controversy is the fourth studio album by the American singer-songwriter and musician Prince, released on October 14, 1981, by Warner Bros. Records. It was produced by Prince, written (with the exception of one track) by him, and he also performed most of the instruments on its recording. // Controversy reached number three on the Billboard R&B Albums chart and was certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). It was voted the eighth best album of the year in the 1981 Pazz & Jop, an annual critics poll run by The Village Voice. // This was the first of his albums to associate Prince with the color purple as well as the first to use sensational spelling in his song titles. // Controversy opens with the title track, which raises questions that were being asked about Prince at the time, including his race and sexuality. The song “flirts with blasphemy” by including a chant of The Lord’s Prayer. “Do Me, Baby” is an “extended bump-n-grind” ballad with explicitly sexual lyrics, and “Ronnie, Talk to Russia” is a politically charged plea to President Ronald Reagan. “Private Joy” is a bouncy bubblegum pop-funk tune, “showing off Prince’s lighter side”, followed by “Annie Christian”, which lists historical events such as the murder of African-American children in Atlanta and the death of John Lennon. The album’s final song, “Jack U Off”, is a synthesized rockabilly-style track. // In a contemporary review for Rolling Stone, music critic Stephen Holden wrote that “Prince’s first three records were so erotically self-absorbed that they suggested the reveries of a licentious young libertine. On Controversy, that libertine proclaims unfettered sexuality as the fundamental condition of a new, more loving society than the bellicose, overtechnologized America of Ronald Reagan.” He went on to say, “Despite all the contradictions and hyperbole in Prince’s playboy philosophy, I still find his message refreshingly relevant.” // Robert Christgau was less enthusiastic in a generally favorable review for The Village Voice, in which he wrote that its “socially conscious songs are catchy enough, but they spring from the mind of a rather confused young fellow, and while his politics get better when he sticks to his favorite subject, which is s-e-x, nothing here is as far-out and on-the-money as ‘Head’ or ‘Sister’ or the magnificent ‘When You Were Mine.'” // According to Blender’s Keith Harris, Controversy is “Prince’s first attempt to get you to love him for his mind, not just his body”, as it “refines the propulsive funk of previous albums and adds treatises on religion, work, nuclear war and Abscam.” Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic remarked that it “continues in the same vein of new wave-tinged funk on Dirty Mind, emphasizing Prince’s fascination with synthesizers and synthesizing disparate pop music genres”. // Controversy was voted the eighth best album of the year in the 1981 Pazz & Jop, an annual critics’ poll run by The Village Voice.]

Mark: One summer morning, in 1982, in her apartment, in Crete, (Nebraska) my friend BJ, woke me up, with the song, “Young Americans,” and it changed my life. I know I had heard Bowie before, but on that day, I really heard Bowie. It was the summer that I “came out,” and I went in search of Bowie. I found, Scary Monsters and Super Creeps, and Lodger, and Heroes, and Low, and then going backwards, I made it my mission to gather together every Bowie I could find. Bowie was my estranged, space alien, androgynous angel, actually helping me find myself, giving me courage in my “coming out.” I learned that reinvention could prevent insanity. In my Bowie search, I discovered “Hunky Dory,” recorded in 1971, just after his trip to NYC to promote The Man Who Sold The World and meet Andy Warhol, and the Factory, and the place where The Velvet Underground were formed.

  1. David Bowie – “Andy Warhol”
    from: Hunky Dory / RCA / December 17, 1971
    [“Kooks” is a song written by David Bowie, which appears on his 1971 album Hunky Dory. Bowie wrote this song to his newborn son Duncan Jones. The song was a pastiche of early 1970s Neil Young because Bowie was listening to a Neil Young record at home on 30 May 1971 when he got the news of the arrival of his son. British indie band The Kooks named themselves after the song. Hunky Dory is the fourth studio album by the English musician David Bowie, released on December 17, 1971 by RCA Records. It was his first release through RCA, which would be his label for the next decade. Hunky Dory has been described by AllMusic’s Stephen Thomas Erlewine as having “a kaleidoscopic array of pop styles, tied together only by Bowie’s sense of vision: a sweeping, cinematic mélange of high and low art, ambiguous sexuality, kitsch, and class”. The album has received critical acclaim since its release, and is regarded as one of Bowie’s best works. Time chose it as part of their “100 best albums of all time” list in January 2010, with journalist Josh Tyrangiel praising Bowie’s “earthbound ambition to be a boho poet with prodigal style”. The style of the album cover, designed by George Underwood, was influenced by a Marlene Dietrich photo book that Bowie took with him to the photo shoot. With new bass player Trevor Bolder replacing Tony Visconti, Hunky Dory was the first production featuring all the members of the band that would become known the following year as Ziggy Stardust’s Spiders From Mars. Also debuting with Bowie, in Visconti’s place as producer, was another key contributor to the Ziggy phase, Ken Scott. The album’s sleeve would bear the credit “Produced by Ken Scott (assisted by the actor)”. The “actor” was Bowie himself, whose “pet conceit”, in the words of NME critics Roy Carr and Charles Shaar Murray, was “to think of himself as an actor”.]

Mark: I knew I was gay when I was 5, but I kept it a secret. My first year in college I fell in love with a girl, but after 9 months I ended our relationship. I felt I was lying. That summer I started to “come out,” at least to myself, and then, in my second year in college, I sort of fell in love with my friend B.J.’s lesbian girlfriend Dani. She had moved into our dorm after a few dates with BJ. One night after a trip to KC, Dani and I ran across campus to Baba Rama’s room at Smith Hall. He had friends visiting, but we put on the cassette, “Combat Rock” by The Clash, and the three of us just started dancing. A straight guy, a lesbian girl, and a gay guy. I was 19, and trying to figure everything out. It was confusing. Thankfully The Clash provided the perfect soundtrack.

  1. The Clash – “Should I Stay Or Should I Go”
    from: Combat Rock / Sony / May 14, 1982
    [Combat Rock is the fifth studio album by the English rock band the Clash, released on May 14, 1982 through CBS Records. In the United Kingdom, the album charted at number 2, spending 23 weeks in the UK charts and peaked at number 7 in the United States, spending 61 weeks on the chart. The album was propelled by drummer Topper Headon’s “Rock the Casbah” which became a staple on the newly launched MTV. Combat Rock continued the influence of funk and reggae like previous Clash albums, but also featured a more radio-friendly sound which alienated Clash fans. While the recording process went smoothly, the producing process of the album was tiring and full of infighting between Mick Jones and Joe Strummer. Headon’s heroin addiction grew worse and he slowly became distant from the band while Strummer and bassist Paul Simonon reinstated Bernie Rhodes as manager, a move unwelcomed by Jones. The band had disagreed on the creative process of the album and called in Glyn Johns to produce the more radio-friendly sound of Combat Rock. Lyrically, Combat Rock focuses on the Vietnam War, postcolonialism, the decline of American society, and authoritarianism. // Combat Rock is the group’s best-selling album, being certified double platinum in the United States and reaching number 2 in the U.K. Reception to the album believed the band had reached its peak maturity with Combat Rock, as the album’s sound was less anarchic but still as political as previous albums. It contains two of the Clash’s signature songs, the singles “Rock the Casbah” and “Should I Stay or Should I Go”. “Rock the Casbah” became highly successful in the United States and proved to be the band’s anticipated U.S breakthrough. “Should I Stay or Should I Go” was not as successful until being re-released in 1991 and topping the charts in their native United Kingdom. Combat Rock is the last Clash album featuring the classic lineup of the Clash. Topper Headon (due to his heroin addiction) was fired days before the release of Combat Rock and Mick Jones was fired after the end of the Combat Rock tour in 1983. Combat Rock would be succeeded by the Clash’s last album, Cut the Crap, recorded and released without Mick Jones or Topper Headon in 1985. // Following the triple-album Sandinista! (1980), singer/guitarist Joe Strummer felt the group was “drifting” creatively. Bassist Paul Simonon agreed with Strummer’s dissatisfaction towards the “boring” professionalism of the Clash’s then-managers Blackhill Enterprises. Strummer and Simonon convinced their bandmates to reinstate the band’s original manager Bernie Rhodes in February 1981, in an attempt to restore the “chaos” and “anarchic energy” of the Clash’s early days. This decision was not welcomed by guitarist Mick Jones, who was becoming progressively estranged from his bandmates. // During this period, drummer Topper Headon escalated his intake of heroin and cocaine. His occasional drug usage had now become a habit that was costing him £100 per day and undermining his health. This drug addiction would be the factor that would later push his bandmates to fire him from the Clash, following the release of Combat Rock. // The album had the working title Rat Patrol from Fort Bragg during the recording and mixing stages. After early recording sessions in London, the group relocated to New York for recording sessions at Electric Lady Studios in November and December 1981. Electric Lady was where the band had recorded its previous album Sandinista! In 1980. // While recording the album in New York, Mick Jones lived with his then-girlfriend Ellen Foley. Joe Strummer, Paul Simonon and Topper Headon stayed at the Iroquois Hotel on West 44th Street, a building famed for being the home of actor James Dean for two years during the early 1950s. // After finishing the New York recording sessions in December 1981, the band returned to London for most of January 1982. Between January and March, the Clash embarked on a six-week tour of Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Thailand. During this tour, the album’s cover photograph was shot by Pennie Smith in Thailand in March 1982. // Following the gruelling Far East tour, the Clash returned to London in March 1982 to listen to the music that they had recorded in New York three months earlier. They had recorded 18 songs, enough material to possibly release as double-album. Having previously released the double-LP London Calling (1979) and the triple-LP Sandinista! (1980), the group considered whether they should again release a multi-LP collection. // The band debated how many songs their new album should contain, and how long the songs’ mixes should be. Mick Jones argued in favour of a double-album with lengthier, dancier mixes. The other band members argued in favour of a single album with shorter song mixes. This internal wrangling created tension within the band, particularly with Jones, who had mixed the first version. // Manager Bernie Rhodes suggested that producer/engineer Glyn Johns be hired to remix the album. This editing took place in Johns’ garden studio in Warnford, Hampshire (not at Wessex Studios, as is stated by some sources). // Johns, accompanied by Strummer and Jones edited Combat Rock down from a 77-minute double album down to a 46-minute single LP. This was achieved by trimming the length of individual songs, such as by removing instrumental intros and codas from songs like “Rock the Casbah” and “Overpowered by Funk”. Additionally, the trio decided to omit several songs entirely, dropping the final track count to 12. During these remixing sessions, Strummer and Jones also re-recorded their vocals for the songs “Should I Stay or Should I Go” and “Know Your Rights” and remixed the songs with A recurring motif of the album is the impact and aftermath of the Vietnam War. “Straight to Hell” describes the children fathered by American soldiers to Vietnamese mothers and then abandoned, while “Sean Flynn” describes the capture of photojournalist Sean Flynn, who was the son of actor Errol Flynn. Sean Flynn disappeared (and was presumably killed) in 1970 after being captured by the Vietcong in Cambodia. // Biographer Pat Gilbert describes many songs from Combat Rock as having a “trippy, foreboding feel”, saturated in a “colonial melancholia and sadness” reflecting the Vietnam WarThe band was inspired by Francis Ford Coppola’s 1979 film about the Vietnam War, Apocalypse Now, and had previously released the song “Charlie Don’t Surf” on Sandinista!, which referenced the film. Strummer later stated that he became “obsessed” with the film. // Other Combat Rock songs, if not directly about the Vietnam War and U.S. foreign policy, depict American society in moral decline.”Inoculated City” satires the Nuremberg defense plea by soldiers on trial who’ve committed war crimes. The original version of this song included an unauthorized audio clip from a TV commercial for 2000 Flushes, a toilet bowl cleaner. The maker of this product threatened a lawsuit, forcing the group to edit the track, though the longer version was restored on later copies. “Red Angel Dragnet” was inspired by the January 1982 shooting death of Frank Melvin, a New York member of the Guardian Angels.[The song quotes Martin Scorsese’s 1976 movie Taxi Driver, with Clash associate Kosmo Vinyl recording several lines of dialogue imitating the voice of main character Travis Bickle. Bickle sports a mohawk in the latter part of Taxi Driver, this was a hairstyle adopted by Joe Strummer during the Combat Rock concert tour. // The song “Ghetto Defendant” features Beat poet Allen Ginsberg, who performed the song on stage with the band during the New York shows on their tour in support of the album. Ginsberg had researched punk music, and included phrases like “do the worm” and “slam dance” in his lyrics. At the end of the song he can be heard reciting the Heart Sutra, a popular Buddhist mantra. // The song “Know Your Rights” starts off with: “This is a public service announcement…with guitar!” The musical style of the song was described as being one of the “more punk” songs on the album, reflecting the open and clear lyrics of the song. The lyrics represent the fraudulent rights for the lower and less respected class, with a nefarious civil servant naming three rights, with each right having an exception to benefit the rich or being skewed against the lower class. // Music for “Rock the Casbah” was written by the band’s drummer Topper Headon, based on a piano part that he had been toying with.[ Finding himself in the studio without his three bandmates, Headon progressively taped the drum, piano and bass parts, recording the bulk of the song’s musical instrumentation himself. The other Clash members were impressed with Headon’s recording, stating that they felt the musical track was essentially complete. However, Strummer was not satisfied with the page of suggested lyrics that Headon gave him. Before hearing Headon’s music, Strummer had already come up with the phrases “rock the casbah” and “you’ll have to let that raga drop” as lyrical ideas that he was considering for future songs. After hearing Headon’s music, Strummer went into the studio’s toilets and wrote lyrics to match the song’s melody. // Following along the same note as Sandinista!, Combat Rock’s catalogue number “FMLN2” is the abbreviation for the El Salvador political party Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional or FMLN. // Lead single “Know Your Rights” was released on April 23, 1982, and reached number 43 on the U.K. singles chart.Combat Rock was released on May 14, 1982 and reached number 2 on the U.K. album charts, kept off the top spot by Paul McCartney’s Tug of War. In the United States, Combat Rock reached number 7 on the album charts, selling in excess of one million copies. Combat Rock was the band’s most successful album in the United States. However, in the U.K, Combat Rock was tied with the 1978 album Give ‘Em Enough Rope for the highest charting album for the band in their native U.K. // “Rock the Casbah”, which was composed by drummer Topper Headon, reached number 8 on the U.S. singles chart. The single was accompanied by a distinctive video directed by Don Letts that aired frequently on the then-fledgling television channel MTV. Headon, despite composing the song, was not in the music video after being replaced by Terry Chimes for his raging heroin addiction.

Mark: Baba Rama, was two years older than me in college, he was always luring me into new situations, and possible danger. He had a reputation. He introduced me to Patti Smith’s album “Wave” the same night he bought thai stick from several international students. From that day forward, I would always love Patti Smith. All of her recordings are pieces of art. Her authentic rock and roll voice has passed from underground poet to best selling author. Her debut album was produced by John Cale, and I think this song is perfect.

  1. Patti Smith – “Free Money”
    from: Horses / Arista Records / November, 1975
    [Horses is the debut studio album by American musician Patti Smith. It was released by Arista Records on November 10, 1975. A fixture of the mid-1970s underground rock music scene in New York City, Smith signed to Arista in 1975 and recorded Horses with her band at Electric Lady Studios in August and September of that year. She enlisted former Velvet Underground member John Cale to produce the album. // The music on Horses was informed by the minimalist aesthetic of the punk rock genre, then in its formative years. Smith and her band composed the album’s songs using simple chord progressions, while also breaking from punk tradition in their propensity for improvisation and embrace of ideas from avant-garde and other musical styles. Smith’s lyrics on Horses were alternately rooted in her own personal experiences, particularly with her family, and in more fantastical imagery. The album also features adaptations of the rock standards “Gloria” and “Land of a Thousand Dances”. // At the time of its release, Horses experienced modest commercial success and placed in the top 50 of the American Billboard 200 albums chart, while being widely acclaimed by music critics. Recognized as a seminal recording in the history of punk and later rock movements, Horses has frequently appeared in professional lists of the greatest albums of all time. In 2009, it was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation into the National Recording Registry as a “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” work. // Through frequent live performances over the previous year, by 1975 Patti Smith and her band had established themselves as a popular act within the New York City underground rock music scene. Further increasing their popularity was their highly attended two-month residency at the New York City club CBGB with the band Television early that year. The hype surrounding the residency brought Smith to the attention of music industry executive Clive Davis, who was scouting for talent to sign to his recently launched label Arista Records. After being impressed by one of her live performances at CBGB, Davis offered Smith a seven-album recording deal with Arista, and she signed to the label in April 1975. // Smith’s vision for her debut album was, in her words, “to make a record that would make a certain type of person not feel alone. People who were like me, different … I wasn’t targeting the whole world. I wasn’t trying to make a hit record.” The title Horses reflected Smith’s desire for a rejuvenation of rock music, which she found had grown “calm” in reaction to the social turmoil of the 1960s and the deaths of numerous prominent rock musicians. She elaborated: “Psychologically, somewhere in our hearts, we were all screwed up because those people died … We all had to pull ourselves together. To me, that’s why our record’s called Horses. We had to pull the reins on ourselves to recharge ourselves … We’ve gotten ourselves back together. It’s time to let the horses loose again. We’re ready to start moving again.” // Arista arranged for Smith to begin recording Horses in August 1975. Smith initially suggested that the album should be produced by Tom Dowd. Plans were made to book studio time with Dowd at Criteria in Miami, but these were complicated by his relationship with rival label Atlantic Records. Smith had a change of heart, and instead set out to enlist Welsh musician John Cale, formerly of the Velvet Underground, to produce Horses, for she was impressed by the raw sound of his solo albums, such as 1974’s Fear. Cale, who had previously seen Smith perform live and was acquainted with her bassist Ivan Král, accepted. // Horses was recorded at Electric Lady Studios in New York City, with Smith retaining the same backing band with whom she performed live—Jay Dee Daugherty on drums, Lenny Kaye on guitar, Ivan Král on bass guitar, and Richard Sohl on keyboards. Cale recalled that the band initially “sounded awful” and played out of tune due to their use of damaged instruments, forcing him to procure the band new instruments before work on the album began. The differences between the work ethics of Cale, who was an experienced recording artist, and of Smith, who at this point was primarily a live performer, became apparent early on in recording, and were a source of tension between the two artists, who frequently argued in the studio. // A notecard with handwriting // Guest musicians on Horses were Allen Lanier of Blue Öyster Cult and Tom Verlaine of Television. Cale had wished to augment the band’s playing on certain songs with strings, but Smith vehemently opposed this idea. Lanier, who was Smith’s boyfriend at the time, did not get along with Cale, nor—particularly so—with Verlaine. This tension culminated with Lanier and Verlaine getting into a physical altercation during the final recording session, held on September 18. // By the end of recording, and for some years immediately following the album’s release, Smith was quick to downplay Cale’s contributions and suggested that she and her band had ignored his suggestions entirely. In a 1976 interview with Rolling Stone, Smith described her experience: “My picking John was about as arbitrary as picking Rimbaud. I saw the cover of Illuminations with Rimbaud’s face, y’know, he looked so cool, just like Bob Dylan. So Rimbaud became my favorite poet. I looked at the cover of Fear and I said, ‘Now there’s a set of cheekbones.’ In my mind I picked him because his records sounded good. But I hired the wrong guy. All I was really looking for was a technical person. Instead, I got a total maniac artist. I went to pick out an expensive watercolor painting and instead I got a mirror. It was really like A Season in Hell, for both of us. But inspiration doesn’t always have to be someone sending me half a dozen American Beauty roses. There’s a lotta inspiration going on between the murderer and the victim. And he had me so nuts I wound up doing this nine-minute cut that transcended anything I ever did before. // Cale said in 1996 that Smith initially struck him as “someone with an incredibly volatile mouth who could handle any situation”, and that as producer on Horses he wanted to capture the energy of her live performances, noting that there “was a lot of power in Patti’s use of language, in the way images collided with one another.” He described their working relationship during recording as “confrontational and a lot like an immutable force meeting an immovable object.” Smith would later attribute much of the tension between herself and Cale to her inexperience with formal studio recording, recalling that she was “very, very suspicious, very guarded and hard to work with” and “made it difficult for him to do some of the things he had to do.” She expressed gratitude for Cale’s persistence in working with her and her band, and found that his production on Horses made the most out of their “adolescent and honest flaws”.]

11:03 – Station ID

Mark: Thanks for tuning into WMM. I’m Mark Manning. We will continue with our special Birthday show featuring some of my favorite recordings, from different times of my life.
But first we take a break to welcome special guest Peregrine Honig and Izzy Vivas of The West 18th Street Fashion Show happening Saturday, June 8, at 7:00pm this year’s theme is Summer in Slumberland.

11:03 – Interview with Peregrine Honig & Izzy Vivas

Peregrine Honig was born in San Francisco, and moved to Kansas City, at 17 to attend the Kansas City Art Institute. At age 22, Honig was the youngest living artist to have work acquired by the Whitney Museum of Art’s permanent collection. Peregrine appeared on season one of Bravo television’s artist reality show, Work of Art: The Next Great Artist, which aired in the summer of 2010. She owns a lingerie and swimwear boutique, Birdies, which opened in 2003, in the Crossroads. From 2017 to 2024 Peregrine managing the Greenwood Social Hall where she has presented concerts from Calvin Arsenia, Krystle Warren, Bach Aria Soloists. Peregrine is also a founder of The West 18th Street Fashion Show

Izzy Vivas, brings a wealth of experience to her role Artistic Director of the West 18th Street Fashion Show. With a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA), Bachelor of Arts (BA), and Social Practice Minor, from the Kansas City Art Institute.Izzy has honed her skills in curating immersive art experiences and pushing creative boundaries. Izzy also serves as the Art Director at the Zhou B Art Center. She has worked at the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art, Doo Good KC, and is a visionary behind the West 18th Street Fashion Show, Izzy leads the creative direction of this iconic event, uniting designers, artists, and performers to showcase cutting-edge designs and celebrate Kansas City’s cultural richness. Izzy’s expertise lies in her ability to merge art and fashion seamlessly, provoking thought and inspiring change through her innovative storytelling and visionary leadership.

Artist Peregrine Honig and Izzy Vivas join us to discuss The West 18th Street Fashion Show happening this Saturday, June 8, at 7:30pm at 116 W 18th Street, KCMO. This year’s theme is Summer in Slumberland. More info at: https://west18thstreetfashionshow.com

Peregrine Honig and Izzy Vivas thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

The West 18th Street Fashion Show paves a path for designers to debut their work to a national audience. The show has won 14 international awards including The Harlem Film Festival and collections from our show have been featured in Italian Vogue, Women’s Wear Daily and The New York Times. A perennial “Best Of” in The Kansas City Star, The Pitch, Kansas City Spaces, and KC Studio, The West 18th Street Fashion Show takes a village and has built decades of opportunity for regional artists to attend and be included in Paris and New York Fashion Week, win scholarships and be selected for educational and grant awards. The West 18th Street fashion is committed to sustaining the arts community by providing opportunities and resources for emerging and established creatives

The West 18th Street Fashion Show – June 8th at Dusk! – Location: 116 W 18th Street

Front Row Seating: $100 (VIP Ticket Includes Front Row Seating
Admission into our Patron Party at the Baur
Free Admission into our Slumber-After-Party at No Vacancy)
General Admission Seating: $40 (Second and Third Row Seating
+$20 After-Slumber-Party Add on!
Standing Room: Free

As Artistic Director (January 2023- Present) Izzy Vivas oversees all aspects of a large scale show by managing various sectors of production such as Musical Production, Staging, Marketing, Sales, and Budgets. Building community relationships with sponsors and brand ambassadors. Conceptualizes the show’s theme to build cultural relevance by creating engaging and interactive forms of visual and musical entertainment.

As Creative Director (June 2020- December 2022) Izzyu Assisted in conceptualizing themes for upcoming shows by collaborating with the Artistic Director for copy to be published and distributed —Assists with the show’s branding, artistic vision and distribution of media. Honors heritage of fashion show by conducting an archive and developing a digital presence for 23 years of history. Developing sales strategies for Ticket Sales by working with Marketing and P.R. team.

As Coordinating Producer (January 2017 – June 2020 Izzy oversaw the construction of “swag bags”, keeping inventory of merchandise, handling ticketing, managing the overall scheduling, proctoring audiences, setting up media area / VIP area, curating a select list of vendors for the day of show

Izzy served as Liaison between the film / production crew and the designers / models, regulating a film schedule. Handling contracts, Non-Disclosure Agreements, Liquor / Food Handling licenses, editing film applications, assistance with post production paperwork, generating a mailing list Collaborating with the Public Relations Committee to generate content for social media while aiding in the needs for Media Events / Orientation

The West 18th Fashion Show was started in 2020. The show involves a huge staff of artists, designers, musicians, photographers, models

This year’s theme is Summer in Slumberland

Peregrine Honig was born in San Francisco, CA, attended The Ruth Asawa School of the Arts, receiving her Bachelor of Fine Arts from The Kansas City Art Institute in 2020. Honig’s work is included in the permanent collections of the Albright Knox, Buffalo, NY; Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.; the Milwaukee Art Museum; the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington D.C.; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut.

Honig has had solo exhibitions at Dwight Hackett Projects in Santa Fe, Geschiedle Gallery in Chicago, Haw Contemporary and shows with the Blue Gallery in Kansas City. Her work has been included in numerous group exhibitions, including The Dianne and Sandy Besser Collection ( San Francisco de Young Museum of Art ); The Random and the Ordered: New Prints (International Print Center, New York); Comic Release: Negotiating Identity for A New Generation (Regina Gouger Miller Gallery, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh); and The Perception of Appearance: A Decade of Contemporary American Figure Drawing (Frye Art Museum, Seattle).

Peregrine is a recipient of the Art Omi International Artists’ Residency, the Guanlan China Printmaking Residency, Projecto Argentina, the Charlotte Street Fund, The Seeley Foundation, Inspiration Grant and was honored with The 2019 Urban Hero Award. She has been produced and published by Landfall Press since 1998. Honig has been been The Artistic Director of The West Eighteenth Street Fashion Show since 2000 and co owner of Birdies since 2003. She directed and curated Fahrenheit Gallery from 1997 to 2007 and founded Greenwood Social Hall in 2017, a curated concert space that hosts international shows and regional artists. Info at http://www.peregrinehonig.com

Peregrine Honig and Izzy Vivas thanks for being with us on WMM

The West 18th Street Fashion Show happening this Saturday, June 8, at 7:30pm at 116 W 18th Street, KCMO. This year’s theme is Summer in Slumberland. Info at: west18thstreetfashionshow.com

11:16

Mark: Thanks for tuning into WMM. I’m Mark Manning. We now continue with our special Birthday Show featuring favorite recordings, from different times of my life. 1984, was my own personal “Year of Hell.” I was 22. It was my Senior year in college. I was taking 23 credits in my 1st semester and 21 credits in my 2nd semester. It was the same year my theatre director decided to “put the moves on me.” Most days during my first semester I remember his constant attention, his desire to be with me physically. I remember receiving personal invitations to his apartment for meetings. I remember pushing his body off of mine in his office. I went from denial to rebellion, in a 9-month ark, and left me empty, and estranged, and throwing my Doane Theatre Award across the lobby into a brick wall. The Smiths helped me feel less alone. Morrissey was the voice of The Smiths with a poetic rebellion of the ruling class. Johnny Marr was the heart of The Smiths, sending out chords of love in celebration of every great guitarist he had learned from and emulated. The Smiths were my soundtrack.

  1. The Smiths – “This Charming Man”
    from: The Smiths / Sire / February 20, 1984
    [The Smiths is the debut studio album by English rock band the Smiths, released on 20 February 1984 by Rough Trade Records. After the original production by Troy Tate was felt to be inadequate, John Porter re-recorded the album in London, Manchester and Stockport during breaks in the band’s UK tour during September 1983. // The album was well received by critics and listeners, and reached number two on the UK Albums Chart, staying on the chart for 33 weeks. It established the Smiths as a prominent band in the 1980s music scene in the United Kingdom. The album also became an international success, peaking at number 45 in the European Albums Chart, remaining in the chart for 21 weeks. After its exit of the European chart, it then re-entered in the Hot 100 Albums from September for another run of three weeks. // After signing with independent record label Rough Trade, the Smiths began preparations to record their first album in mid 1983. Due to the suggestion of Rough Trade head Geoff Travis, the band selected Troy Tate (former guitarist of the Teardrop Explodes) as producer for sessions at Elephant studios in Wapping, London. During the following month the group recorded fourteen songs. // Guitarist Johnny Marr would later write in his autobiography that he “liked Troy…Troy’s vision was to capture the way the band sounded live. He thought it was important that the record represented the way we were in the clubs and was an authentic document. He worked pretty tirelessly to get passion from a performance and was very nurturing with me…” However, the sessions would also prove to be arduous due to an ongoing heatwave in London. The Smiths were recording in a hot basement studio at Elephant, and according to Marr, not only was the heat uncomfortable but it made it difficult to keep their instruments in tune. // While recording a BBC session for Dave Jensen in August 1983, The Smiths met producer John Porter, who was working in one of the studios. Travis, harbouring reservations about the group’s session with Troy Tate, gave Porter a cassette of the sessions beforehand in the hopes that he could remix them. Porter told Travis that the sessions were “out of tune and out of time”. Feeling the Tate sessions were unsalvageable, Porter offered to re-record the album himself. Despite praising the work with Tate, only a week prior, to the press by stating “we’ve done everything exactly right and it’ll show”, Smiths singer Morrissey accepted (as did Travis), while Marr hesitantly agreed. Marr would later claim in his autobiography that when the band heard the finished work done under Tate, Morrissey didn’t like the album and the others weren’t entirely happy with the results either. “I could hear myself that the mixes sounded underproduced and were not the finished article that we needed as our introduction to the world,” Marr wrote. “Why it was deemed necessary to scrap the album entirely rather than just mix it again I didn’t know, but I wasn’t going to make too much of it…it was a document of how the band really were at that point though…”. // The Smiths began work with Porter in September 1983. Due to tour commitments, the group had to make the record in a piecemeal fashion. Marr later recalled that “working with John immediately got us results…he and I formed a musical and personal relationship that was inspiring…he nurtured not just me but all the band”. Recording started at London’s Matrix Studios, with the majority of the work undertaken during a week’s stay at Pluto, just outside Manchester. A final overdub session was performed at Eden Studios in London that November. After listening to a finished mix of the album the following month, Morrissey told Porter and Travis that the album “wasn’t good enough”. However, the singer said that due to the album’s cost of £6,000, “[they said] it has to be released, there’s no going back”. // The Smiths were an English rock band formed in Manchester in 1982, composed of Morrissey (vocals), Johnny Marr (guitar), Andy Rourke (bass) and Mike Joyce (drums). Morrissey and Marr formed the songwriting partnership. The Smiths are regarded as one of the most important acts to emerge from 1980s British independent music. // The Smiths signed to the independent label Rough Trade Records in 1983 and released their first album, The Smiths, in 1984. Their focus on a guitar, bass and drum sound, fusing 1960s rock and post-punk, was a rejection of the synth-pop sound predominant at the time. Several Smiths singles reached the top 20 of the UK Singles Chart, and all their studio albums reached the top five of the UK Albums Chart, including the number-one album Meat Is Murder (1985). From that time, they bolstered their sound with the use of keyboards while retaining the guitar as the lead instrument. They achieved mainstream success in Europe with The Queen Is Dead (1986) and Strangeways, Here We Come (1987), which both entered the top 20 of the European Albums Chart. In 1986, the band briefly became a five-piece with the addition of guitarist Craig Gannon. // Internal tensions led to the Smiths’ breakup in 1987, followed by public lawsuits over royalties. The members each said that the band would never reunite and refused all offers to do so. All of the four original principal members of the band had Irish parentage. This Irish heritage had a significant impact on their music and views.]

Mark: In the mid 1990s my friend Sandra was Manager of The Midland Theater. As a perk she arranged for my friends, to have front row seats, for multiple Patti LaBelle concerts. These shows were very special. The audience was so incredibly mixed, half of the audience was black people dressed like they were going to church the other half were gay dressed like they were going to a nightclub. Multiple brand names of cologne and perfume filled the air. The music and the love of Patti brought us all together. Patti performed all of her usual tricks, giving her eye lashes to someone in the front row; rolling across the stage from one side to the other; kicking her shoes off high into the air; crying; witnessing on stage. // And of course singing, filling the room, with her voice, dropping the mic to the stage floor, to prove she could still be heard even if the electricity went out. Patti represents the history of modern pop music, from her days in The Bluebelles, and The Bluebelles fantastic transformation into LaBelle, a band that reinterpreted many rock classics, and also wrote the majority of their own songs. This song was written by LaBelle member Nona Hendrix and with Sarah Dash and Patti Labelle. each of the three women share vocals and verses.

  1. Labelle – “I Believe I Finally Made it Home”
    from: Something Silver / Warner Archives / Feb. 11, 1997 [orig, from Moon Shadow, 1972]
    [Moon Shadow is the second album by American singing trio Labelle. This release was their second and last album for Warner Bros. Records. The album is notable for their soulful rendition of The Who’s “Won’t Get Fooled Again”, the socially conscious “I Believe That I’ve Finally Made It Home” (a song which members Patti LaBelle, Nona Hendryx and Sarah Dash share lead vocals) and the nine-minute title track in which Patti introduces all the musicians as they do their live solos. This is the first album where member Nona Hendryx begins taking over most of the songwriting. // Labelle was an American funk rock band that originated out of the Blue Belles, a girl group who were a popular vocal group of the 1960s and 1970s. The original group was formed after the disbanding of two rival girl groups in the area around Philadelphia, in Pennsylvania, and Trenton, in New Jersey: the Ordettes and the Del-Capris, forming as a new version of the former group, then later changing their name to the Blue Belles (and further Bluebelles). The founding members were Patti LaBelle (born Patricia Louise Holt), Cindy Birdsong, Nona Hendryx, and Sarah Dash. // As the Bluebelles, and later Patti LaBelle and the Bluebelles, the group found success with ballads in the doo-wop genre: “Down the Aisle (The Wedding Song)”, “You’ll Never Walk Alone”, and “Over the Rainbow”. After Birdsong departed to join The Supremes in 1967, the band, following the advice of Vicki Wickham, changed its look, musical direction, and style to re-form as the progressive soul group Labelle in 1971. Their recordings of that period became cult favorites for dealing with subjects not typically addressed by female black groups. Finally, after adapting glam rock and wearing outlandish space-age and glam costumes, the band found success with the proto-disco smash hit “Lady Marmalade” in 1974, leading to the album Nightbirds achieving gold success. They were the first contemporary pop group and first black pop band to perform at the Metropolitan Opera House. They were also the first black vocal group to appear on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. // Each of the band members later went on to begin solo careers after the end of a tour in 1976, going on to have significant solo success. Nona Hendryx followed an idiosyncratic muse into a solo career that often bordered on the avant-garde; but reaching a new audience with the respected 2017 release “Shine”, by Soul Clap, which was a widely played in clubs in the UK, US clubs and Ibiza while being picked and released by the famous record label Defected RecordsSarah Dash became a celebrated session singer; and Patti LaBelle enjoyed a very successful Grammy-winning career, with several top-20 R&B hits between 1982 and 1997, a number-one pop hit with “On My Own”, and lifetime-achievement awards from the Apollo Theatre, World Music Awards, and BET Awards. // The group reunited for their first new album in 32 years, Back to Now in 2008. They performed together regularly until the death of Dash on September 20, 2021, at the age of 76. // In 1959, a fifteen-year-old teenager, Patricia “Patsy” Holte won her first talent contest in a Philadelphia high school. Following this, she sought to form her own singing group the following year called the Ordettes. Holte formed the group with singers Jean Brown, Yvonne Hogen and Johnnie Dawson. The group gained a local following. Dawson was eventually replaced by Sundray Tucker. By 1961, Jean Brown and Yvonne Hogan had ditched the group to get married and Patti and Sundray carried on as soloists. // Later in 1961, Patti and Sundray’s manager Bernard Montague contacted two singers from the Trenton, New Jersey singing group the Del-Capris, Nona Hendryx and Sarah Dash. Eventually Hendryx and Dash became official replacements for Brown and Hogan as the Ordettes. The group soon began working with musician Morris Bailey. Bailey and Montague’s schedule led to Tucker leaving the group after which another singer, Cindy Birdsong, from Camden New Jersey, joined the group. The grouping of Holte, Dash, Hendryx and Birdsong toured the Chitlin’ Circuit, gaining a following in the eastern U.S. // In 1962, Chicago-based group The Starlets had traveled to Philadelphia to do sessions for producer Bobby Martin and record label owner Harold Robinson, president of Newtown Records. One of the sessions included a cover of the standard, “I Sold My Heart to the Junkman”. At the time of the song’s release, the group had a hit with the song “Better Tell Him No” and were unable to promote the song due to them being signed to another label. The song was credited under the name “The Blue Belles”. The Ordettes auditioned by singing the song. Before hearing the group, Robinson turned them down due to being unimpressed with Patti’s looks but upon hearing her singing, he changed his mind and signed the group to Newtown. // When “I Sold My Heart” became popular, Robinson sent the Ordettes to promote it under the assumed name of the Blue Belles. After a televised performance at American Bandstand featuring the Ordettes, the Starlets’ manager sued Harold Robinson and Bobby Martin. Around the same time, Robinson was also sued for having another group use the name “Blue Belles”. Following the aftermath of the ordeals, Robinson gave Patti Holte a new name, “Patti LaBelle”, and the group’s name was rechristened as Patti LaBelle and The Blue Belles. // Following several releases such as “Academy Award” and “Tear After Tear”, the group recorded their first national hit under their new name in 1963 with the release of the ballad, “Down the Aisle (The Wedding Song)”, first released under Newtown, before it received national distribution from King Records. As a result, the record reached the top 40 on both the pop and R&B charts, formally launching the group to national stardom. Frequent performances at the Apollo Theater helped to give the group the nickname “Sweethearts of the Apollo”. Newtown released two albums on the group before Harold Robinson sold Newtown in 1963. Cameo-Parkway soon signed them and re-released the Newtown single, “You’ll Never Walk Alone”, at the end of the year. The record became another top-40 hit for the group in 1964 and became one of Patti LaBelle’s first signature performances. They later recorded another charted hit with “Danny Boy”. In 1965, the group opened for the Rolling Stones during a lengthy American tour. Shortly afterwards, Atlantic Records signed the act to the label, in hopes of bringing the group mainstream success. Their first Atlantic single, “All or Nothing”, briefly made a dent on the pop charts in 1966. They had a notable entry as background singers of Wilson Pickett’s first major hit, “634-5789 (Soulsville, U.S.A.)”. In 1966, Atlantic released the group’s first studio album, Over the Rainbow, which included “All or Nothing” and the title track, later to be a standard for Patti. Around this time, the group also began touring Europe, mainly in the UK, where they performed on the show, Ready, Steady, Go. During club performances, the group was backed up musically by a pub band called Bluesology, whose pianist was a teenager named Reg Dwight, later known as Elton John. Following the UK tour, the group kept in touch with one of the show’s producers, Vicki Wickham. In early 1967, the group had another charted single with the song “Take Me for a Little While” and released their second Atlantic album, Dreamer. Around this time, Aretha Franklin had signed with Atlantic Records, leading Atlantic to focus its efforts on her rather than on the Blue Belles. That same year, Cindy Birdsong abruptly left the group to join The Supremes, replacing original member Florence Ballard.[6] After completing a tour where Sundray Tucker briefly rejoined the group to fill in for Birdsong, the remaining members carried on as a trio. // As grittier soul and heavy rock dominated much of Atlantic’s time, the group was let go from their contract in 1970. Bernard Montague, who was managing groups such as The Delfonics, also left them, leaving them seeking new managers. After nearly signing a contract with Herb Hamlett and Frankie Crocker, they eventually picked Vicki Wickham to work with them. Wickham later credited Dusty Springfield with convincing her to hire the group to perform on Ready, Steady, Go in London. // Wickham advised the group to move to London and change their entire image and sound, much to the chagrin of Patti LaBelle, who feared the group would alienate their older fans with a new laid back “earthier” look. Wickham also advised them to change their name to simply “Labelle”. Ditching the wigs and dresses, Labelle settled on Afros and jeans. They debuted this new look while backing The Who during a stop in New York. Following this, Labelle signed a contract with Track Records, The Who’s label, which received distribution from Warner Bros. Records. In 1971, the group released their first album, simply titled Labelle, quickly following it up with the 1972 album Moon Shadow. The albums featured the group bringing in gospel soul renditions of rock hits such as “Wild Horses” and “Won’t Get Fooled Again”. While not commercially successful, the albums were critically acclaimed and established the act as a progressive soul unit, recording more daring material such as “Morning Much Better” and “Touch Me All Over”. // In 1971, Labelle were invited to record backing vocals to a covers album being recorded by Laura Nyro. The resulting album, Gonna Take a Miracle, led to the group reaching the charts for the first time[6] and establishing a rapport with Nyro, who later invited them to perform with her at Carnegie Hall. In 1973, they recorded an album for RCA Records titled Pressure Cookin’, featuring a wildly interpretive covers medley of the songs “Something in the Air” and “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised”. It was around this time that Labelle changed up their act again. Under the advice of Larry LeGaspi, the group began performing in space suits, feathers, and studded costumes. // In 1974, Wickham had the group signed to Epic Records where they recorded their breakthrough album, Nightbirds, in New Orleans with producer Allen Toussaint. While Hendryx eventually wrote the majority of the album, Epic released the Kenny Nolan and Bob Crewe composition “Lady Marmalade” as a single in August 1974. The song’s rock-soul mixture helped the song to sell to listeners and by March 1975, the song had become the group’s first number-one single, reaching the top of both the Billboard Hot 100 and the R&B singles chart.It also became an international hit. The album also included the follow-up hit “What Can I Do for You?”. // Nightbirds eventually sold more than one million copies and was certified gold. During the album’s promotion, the group became the first rock group to perform at the Metropolitan Opera House. Wickham billed the October 6, 1974 performance “Wear Something Silver”, to adapt to Labelle’s own silver-colored space outfits, worn by Patti LaBelle. Building on their success, in the spring of 1975, Labelle became the first African-American vocal group to make the cover of Rolling Stone. Later in 1975, the group released a critically acclaimed follow-up, Phoenix.[6] That same year, the group contributed background vocals to several songs on Elton John’s hit album, Rock of the Westies. In 1976, they released their third album for Epic, Chameleon, which included the tracks “Get You Somebody New”, “Isn’t It a Shame” and “Who’s Watching the Watcher”. // Despite critical acclaim for their follow-ups to the Nightbirds album, Phoenix and Chameleon failed to repeat the success of Nightbirds as the group struggled to have another hit. By 1976, tensions had developed within the group, with the act’s three members splintered on its sound and direction. Patti LaBelle had wanted the group to record more soul, Nona Hendryx wanted the group to go further into funk rock, and Sarah Dash wanted to record songs in a more disco direction. // During a show in Baltimore on December 3, 1976, Hendryx wandered off the stage and into the audience at the beginning of “(Can I Speak To You Before You Go To) Hollywood”. Labelle’s stage manager was able to steer Hendryx backstage, but Hendryx locked herself in her dressing room and beat her head against the wall until it began to bleed severely. She was removed from the theater in restraints. // After the incident, LaBelle advised the group to disband, fearing for the other members’ well-being and that the mounting tension could also put an end to their friendship. Hendryx and Dash agreed and the trio formally announced their split at the end of 1976 after fourteen years together. // Following her departure from the Blue Belles, Cindy Birdsong enjoyed success as member of The Supremes, singing on hits such as “Up the Ladder to the Roof”, “Stoned Love”, “Nathan Jones” and “Floy Joy”. Birdsong left the group in 1972 to start a family, returned in 1973, then left again in 1976, and thereafter only recorded sporadically as a solo artist in the 80s, briefly joining The Former Ladies of the Supremes alongside former Supremes members Jean Terrell and Scherrie Payne. // The Labelle song “(Can I Speak to You Before You Go To) Hollywood”, from Pressure Cookin’, was allegedly written by Hendryx as a response to Birdsong’s departure, featuring each member of the group singing verses. Sarah Dash found some solo success after signing with Don Kirshner’s label, with the disco single “Sinner Man”. Dash eventually sang backup for the Rolling Stones and sang for Keith Richards’ spinoff group X-pensive Winos. The more experimental Nona Hendryx has recorded in various genres including hard rock, hip-hop, house and new age, and charting with the singles, “Keep It Confidential” and “Why Should I Cry?” Patti LaBelle became an international solo superstar following Labelle’s breakup, recording crossover hits such as “New Attitude”, “Stir It Up” and “On My Own”, resulting in Grammy wins and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. // In 1991, Patti LaBelle reunited with Nona Hendryx and Sarah Dash on the track, “Release Yourself”, from LaBelle’s Grammy-winning album, Burnin. The trio reunited onstage at the Apollo Theater in 1991 to perform the song on LaBelle’s second concert performance video while promoting the release of Burnin’. In addition to “Release Yourself”, Hendryx and LaBelle composed the gospel-flavored ballad “When You’ve Been Blessed (Feels Like Heaven)”. In 1995, the trio reunited again for the dance single, “Turn it Out”, for the soundtrack to the film, To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar. The song became their first charted hit in nineteen years peaking at number-one on the Billboard dance singles chart. Four years later, the original Blue Belles (including Cindy Birdsong) reunited to receive an award from the R&B Foundation for Lifetime Achievement. In 2006, the trio of LaBelle, Dash and Hendrix briefly came together to record a Hendryx-written track called “Dear Rosa” for the soundtrack to a film called Preaching to the Choir. In 2008, Labelle announced their reunion and released their first studio album in 32 years, the critically acclaimed Back to Now. // That year, the trio went back on tour together which carried through the spring of 2009. In an interview with the Toronto Star, Patti LaBelle explained why she, Dash and Hendryx waited over 32 years to record a full-length album: “You don’t want to half-step something this important….it was about finding the right time and place. We were never ones to do anything on anyone else’s time anyway; we were always unconventional. I still have my glitter boots to prove it.” // The group performed a triumphant show at the Apollo Theatre in New York City on December 19, 2008. They continued to perform with each other sporadically; Dash sang with Patti LaBelle at a LaBelle concert two days before her death on September 20, 2021. // Years after their breakup in 1976, Labelle’s influence has been reflected by groups such as En Vogue, Destiny’s Child and The Pussycat Dolls, who recorded the Labelle hit, “Far As We Felt Like Goin'” from the Phoenix album. Their biggest hit, “Lady Marmalade” continues to be covered, with its successful covers being renditions by All Saints and the Grammy-winning number-one hit collaboration between singers Christina Aguilera, Pink and Mýa and rapper Lil’ Kim in 2001 (recorded for the Moulin Rouge! soundtrack.) The song was also covered by Madchester-era indie group The Happy Mondays, who spliced it with “Kinky Afro”. The group’s 1960s hit, “You’ll Never Walk Alone”, was covered by Sam Harris (who also covered their rendition of “Over the Rainbow”), and sampled by Kanye West in an early version of his song, “Homecoming” (which sampled the group’s “walk on” intro) while their 1970s hit, “Isn’t It a Shame” was sampled by Nelly on his song, “My Place”. Their 1973 song, “Goin’ On a Holiday”, was also sampled in several hip-hop songs (sampling the group’s vocal bridge, “goin’, goin’, goin’, goin’…on…”). // The group has been called pioneers of the disco movement for the proto-disco singles “Lady Marmalade” and “Messin’ With My Mind”. In turn, “Lady Marmalade” has been also called one of the first mainstream disco hits (Jones and Kantonen, 1999). In 2003, “Lady Marmalade” was inducted to the Grammy Hall of Fame. In 2009, their songs “It Took a Long Time” and “System” were featured in Lee Daniels’ film Precious.

Mark: Thanks for tuning into WMM. I’m Mark Manning. 61 years ago, on this date, I was born, so today I’m playing from some of my favorite recordings, from different times of my life. // This is the title song from one of my favorite albums of all time. If you broke up with your lover, you may never hold them again, this record speaks to that part of your heart. In 1988 we were buying all of our favorite albums again, on CD, and hearing Joni digitally through the speakers, it felt like she was singing directly to me. I got to see her live, when she toured with Dylan in 1998. I had front row, center seats, at The United Center in Chicago. I cried through the entire concert as Joni played guitar, with her Jazz Combo, smoking a cigarette, bringing all of her songs alive on stage, it was sacred, like this song…

  1. Joni Mitchell – “Blue”
    from: Blue / Warner / June 22, 1971
    [Blue is the fourth studio album by Canadian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell, released on June 22, 1971, by Reprise Records. Written and produced entirely by Mitchell, it was recorded in 1971 at A&M Studios in Hollywood, California. Created just after her breakup with Graham Nash and during an intense relationship with James Taylor, Blue explores various facets of relationships from love on “A Case of You” to insecurity on “This Flight Tonight”. The songs feature simple accompaniments on piano, guitar and Appalachian dulcimer. The album peaked at number 3 on the UK Albums Chart, number 9 on the Canadian RPM Albums Chart and number 15 on the Billboard 200. // Retrospectively, Blue has been widely regarded by music critics as one of the greatest albums of all time; the cohesion of Mitchell’s songwriting, compositions and vocals are frequent areas of praise. In January 2000, The New York Times chose Blue as one of the 25 albums that represented “turning points and pinnacles in 20th-century popular music”. In 2020, Blue was rated the third greatest album of all time in Rolling Stone’s list of the “500 Greatest Albums of All Time”, the highest entry by a female artist. It was also voted number 24 in the third edition of Colin Larkin’s All Time Top 1000 Albums (2000). In July 2017, Blue was chosen by NPR as the greatest album of all time made by a woman. // Despite the success of her first three albums and songs like “Woodstock”, January 1970 saw Mitchell make a decision to break from performing. In early spring 1970, she set off on a vacation around Europe. While on the island of Crete and staying in Matala, she wrote some of the songs that appear on Blue. This journey was the backdrop for the songs “Carey” and “California”—”Carey” was inspired by her relationship with an American named Cary Raditz, who was the “redneck on a Grecian Isle” in “California”. Some of the songs on Blue were inspired by Mitchell’s 1968–1970 relationship with Graham Nash. Their relationship was already troubled when she left for Europe, and it was while she was on Formentera that she sent Nash the telegram that let him know that their relationship was over. The songs “My Old Man” and “River” are thought to be inspired by their relationship. // Another pivotal experience in Mitchell’s life that drove the emergence of the album was her relationship with James Taylor. She had begun an intense relationship with Taylor by the summer of 1970, visiting him on the set of the movie Two-Lane Blacktop, the aura of which is referred to in “This Flight Tonight”. The songs “Blue” and “All I Want” have specific references to her relationship with Taylor, such as a sweater that she knitted for him at the time and his heroin addiction. During the making of Blue in January 1971, they were still very much in love and involved. By March, Taylor’s fame had exploded, causing friction. She was reportedly devastated when he broke off the relationship. // The album was almost released in a somewhat different form. In March 1971, completed masters for the album were ready for production. Originally, there were three old songs that had not found their way onto any of her previous albums. At the last minute, Mitchell decided to remove two of the three so that she could add the new songs “All I Want” and “The Last Time I Saw Richard”. “Little Green”, composed in 1967, was the only old song that remained. The two songs removed were: “Urge for Going” – her first song to achieve commercial success when recorded by country singer George Hamilton IV. It was later released as the B-side of “You Turn Me On, I’m a Radio” and again on her 1996 compilation album, Hits. “Hunter (The Good Samaritan)”, which was released in 2021 on her EP Blue 50 (Demos & Outtakes). In 1979 Mitchell reflected, “The Blue album, there’s hardly a dishonest note in the vocals. At that period of my life, I had no personal defenses. I felt like a cellophane wrapper on a pack of cigarettes. I felt like I had absolutely no secrets from the world and I couldn’t pretend in my life to be strong. Or to be happy. But the advantage of it in the music was that there were no defenses there either.” // Mitchell continued to use alternate tunings on her guitar to allow easier access to augmented chords and notes in unexpected combinations. Due to the stark and bare revelations in the album, when it was first played for Kris Kristofferson he is reported to have commented, “Joni! Keep something to yourself!” // Today, Blue is generally regarded by music critics as one of the greatest albums of all time, with Mitchell’s songwriting and compositions being frequent areas of praise. In January 2000, The New York Times chose Blue as one of the 25 albums that represented “turning points and pinnacles in 20th-century popular music”. // Jason Ankeny of AllMusic describes Blue as “the quintessential confessional singer/songwriter album”. Praising the songs as “raw nerves, tales of love and loss etched with stunning complexity”, Ankeny concludes writing “Unrivaled in its intensity”. The writers of Pitchfork gave the album a perfect 10-out-of-10 rating, calling it “possibly the most gutting break-up album ever made”. // Blue was included in the 2018 edition of Robert Dimery’s book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die and ranked #18 on Apple Music’s 100 Best Albums list in 2024.]

11:30 – Underwriting

Mark: Thanks for tuning into WMM. I’m Mark Manning. 61 years ago, on this date, I was born, so today I’m playing from some of my favorite recordings, from different times of my life. // My friend BJ’s girlfriend in the mid 1990s was in a CD subscription service and was sent the 5 CD, Box Set “Peel Slowly and See,” featuring all of The Velvet Underground’s studio recordings. Before BJ’s girlfriend could send it back, BJ snagged it, and gave it to Caleb and I as a gift. The music filled our house on West 39th Street. Where our first floor was used as an art gallery, a rehearsal space, a place for Scorpio parties, Jen’s Seder. The Velvet Underground were the house band for Andy Warhol’s Factory. When I imagine The Factory, in my mind I hear this amazing song.

  1. The Velvet Underground – “Venus In Furs”
    from: The Velvet Underground & Nico / Verve / March 12, 1967
    [The Velvet Underground & Nico is the debut album by The Velvet Underground, with the first professional line-up of the Velvet Underground: Lou Reed, John Cale, Sterling Morrison and Maureen Tucker. German singer Nico was also featured, having occasionally performed lead vocals for the band. This resulted of the instigation of their mentor and manager, Andy Warhol, and his collaborator, Paul Morrissey. Nico sang lead on three of the album’s tracks—”Femme Fatale”, “All Tomorrow’s Parties” and “I’ll Be Your Mirror”—and back-up on “Sunday Morning”. In 1966, as the album was being recorded, this was also the line-up for their live performances as a part of Warhol’s Exploding Plastic Inevitable. Though the record was a commercial failure upon release and was almost entirely ignored by contemporary critics, The Velvet Underground & Nico is now widely recognized as one of the greatest and most influential albums in the history of popular music. In 1982, musician Brian Eno famously stated that while the album initially only sold approximately 30,000 copies, “everyone who bought one of those 30,000 copies started a band.” In 2003, it ranked 13th on Rolling Stone magazine’s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. It was added to the 2006 National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress. Many subgenres of rock music and forms of alternative music were significantly informed by the album.]

Mark: In the late 1990s I found myself working at The Midland Theatre, my friend Julie Broski brought “The Charm of the Highway Strip” into the office to play, and I was hooked. I quickly began searching for all of the recordings of The Magnetic Fields. Then the band released the acclaimed, “69 Loves Songs.” Recently, Lisa and I were talking about how we love these recordings and how our favorite song changes from time to time. This is my current favorite, of “69 Love Songs,” from one of my favorite bands: The Magnetic Fields.

  1. The Magnetic Fields – “Papa Was A Rodeo”
    from: 69 Love Songs / Merge Records / June 8, 1999
    [69 Love Songs is the sixth studio album by American indie pop band the Magnetic Fields, released on September 7, 1999, by Merge Records. As its title indicates, 69 Love Songs is a three-volume concept album composed of 69 love songs, all written by Magnetic Fields frontman Stephin Merritt. // The album was originally conceived as a music revue. Stephin Merritt was sitting in a gay piano bar in Manhattan, listening to the pianist’s interpretations of Stephen Sondheim songs, when he decided he ought to get into theatre music because he felt he had an aptitude for it. “I decided I’d write one hundred love songs as a way of introducing myself to the world. Then I realized how long that would be. So I settled on sixty-nine. I’d have a theatrical revue with four drag queens. And whoever the audience liked best at the end of the night would get paid.” He also found inspiration in Charles Ives’ 114 Songs, about which he had read earlier in the day: “songs of all kinds, and what a monument it was, and I thought, well, I could do something like that.” // Band member Claudia Gonson has claimed that Merritt wrote most of the songs hanging around in bars in New York City. // On seven occasions (five in the United States and two in London over four consecutive nights) the Magnetic Fields performed all 69 love songs, in order, over two nights. Several of the lavish orchestrations are more simply arranged when performed live, due to limited performers and/or equipment. // Merritt has said “69 Love Songs is not remotely an album about love. It’s an album about love songs, which are very far away from anything to do with love.” The album features songs in many different genres, including country, synth pop, free jazz, and mournful love ballads. All the songs deal with love in one form or another, but often in an ironic or off-beat fashion, such as the track “Yeah! Oh, Yeah!” which tells the story of a husband murdering his wife. The songs of 69 Love Songs features lyrics exploring heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual relationships. // The album was initially released in the United States by Merge on September 7, 1999, as a box set with Merritt interview booklet with Daniel Handler, and as three separate individual volumes—catalogue numbers MRG166 (Vol. 1), MRG167 (Vol. 2), MRG168 (Vol. 3), and MRG169 (box set). On May 29, 2000, the album was released by Circus (CIR CD003) in Europe and Australia without the booklet insert. It was reissued in the United Kingdom through Domino as REWIGCD18. // On April 20, 2010, Merge released a limited edition 6×10″ vinyl version limited to 1000 copies. // 69 Love Songs received widespread acclaim from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 88, indicating “universal acclaim”. Betty Clarke of The Guardian hailed it as “an album of such tenderness, humour and bloody-minded diversity, it’ll have you throwing away your preconceptions and wondering how you ever survived a broken heart without it.” Douglas Wolk of Spin called the album Stephin Merritt’s “masterwork” and stated that “pop hasn’t seen a lyricist of Merritt’s kind and caliber since Cole Porter”, praising his unique takes on standard love song clichés. Nick Mirov of Pitchfork wrote that Merritt “has proven himself as an exceptional songwriter, making quantum leaps in quality as well as quantity on 69 Love Songs.” Robert Christgau, writing in The Village Voice, stated that despite his personal dislike of cynicism and reluctance to “link it to creative exuberance”, the album’s “cavalcade of witty ditties—one-dimensional by design, intellectual when it feels like it, addicted to cheap rhymes, cheaper tunes, and token arrangements, sung by nonentities whose vocal disabilities keep their fondness for pop theoretical—upends my preconceptions the way high art’s sposed to.” // 69 Love Songs was voted second place in The Village Voice’s annual Pazz & Jop critics’ poll for 1999, behind Moby’s Play. The poll’s creator Robert Christgau ranked it as the best album of the year on his “Dean’s List”. In 2012, it was ranked at number 465 in Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. It was ranked at number 406 in the 2020 edition of the list. The following year, NME placed it at number 213 on their own list of all-time greatest albums. The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.]

Mark: I was able to sit in the front row of the Kauffman Center to witness the living legend, Mavis Staples. She came up through gospel music, and then secular R&B, when Pops decided to broaden their audience. When you hear The Staple Singers you feel their struggle for equality through beautiful melody. Mavis has brought her voice & spirit to collaborations with The Band, Prince, Dylan. Her collaboration with Ry Cooder, “Down In Mississippi” was a musical masterpiece, of first-hand, civil rights history, in song. She followed that up with a collaboration with Jeff Tweedy, who wrote this perfect song, for Mavis to sing.

  1. Mavis Staples – “You Are Not Alone”
    from: You Are Not Alone / Anti / Sept. 10, 2010
    [Produced & written by Jeff Tweedy of Wilco][You Are Not Alone is the eighth studio album by American gospel and soul singer Mavis Staples, released September 14, 2010 on ANTI- Records. It won the Grammy Award for Best Americana Album at the 53rd annual Grammy Awards. // Mavis Staples (born July 10, 1939) is an American rhythm and blues and gospel singer and civil rights activist. She rose to fame as a member of her family’s band The Staple Singers, of which she is the last surviving member. During her time in the group, she recorded the hit singles “I’ll Take You There” and “Let’s Do It Again”. In 1969, Staples released her self-titled debut solo album. // Staples continued to release solo albums throughout the following decades and collaborated with artists such as Aretha Franklin, Prince, Arcade Fire, Nona Hendryx, Ry Cooder, and David Byrne. Her eighth studio album You Are Not Alone (2010), earned critical acclaim, and became her first album as a soloist to reach number one on a Billboard chart, peaking atop the Top Gospel Albums chart. It also earned Staples her first Grammy Award win. Following this, she released the albums One True Vine (2013), Livin’ on a High Note (2016), If All I Was Was Black (2017), and We Get By (2019); she is also featured on the single “Nina Cried Power” by Hozier. // Staples is the recipient of the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, and has won three Grammy Awards, including one for Album of the Year as a featured artist on We Are by Jon Batiste.[6] Named one of the ‘100 Greatest Singers of all Time’ by Rolling Stone in 2008; Staples was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1999, and in the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2018, as a member of The Staple Singers. Additionally, she was made a Kennedy Center Honoree in 2016. The following year, she was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame as a soloist. In 2019, she received the inaugural Rock Hall Honors Award from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as a soloist. // Staples was born in Chicago, Illinois, on July 10, 1939. She began her career with her family group in 1950. Initially singing locally at churches and appearing on a weekly radio show, the Staples scored a hit in 1956 with “Uncloudy Day” for the Vee-Jay label. When Mavis graduated from what is now Paul Robeson High School in 1957, The Staple Singers took their music on the road. Led by family patriarch Roebuck “Pops” Staples on guitar and including the voices of Mavis and her siblings Cleotha, Yvonne, and Pervis, the Staples were called “God’s Greatest Hitmakers”. // With Mavis’ voice and Pops’ songs, singing, and guitar playing, the Staples evolved from enormously popular gospel singers (with recordings on United and Riverside as well as Vee-Jay) to become the most spectacular and influential spirituality-based group in America. By the mid-1960s The Staple Singers, inspired by Pops’ close friendship with Martin Luther King Jr., became the spiritual and musical voices of the civil rights movement. They covered contemporary pop hits with positive messages, including Bob Dylan’s “A Hard Rain’s a-Gonna Fall” and a version of Stephen Stills’ “For What It’s Worth”. // During a December 20, 2008, appearance on National Public Radio’s news show Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me!, when Staples was asked about her past personal relationship with Dylan, she admitted that they “were good friends, yes indeed” and that he had asked her father for her hand in marriage. // The Staples sang “message” songs like “Long Walk to D.C.” and “When Will We Be Paid?,” bringing their moving and articulate music to a huge number of young people. The group signed to Stax Records in 1968, joining their gospel harmonies and deep faith with musical accompaniment from members of Booker T. and the MGs. The Staple Singers hit the Top 40 eight times between 1971 and 1975, including two No. 1 singles, “I’ll Take You There”, produced by Al Bell and recorded and mixed by Terry Manning, “Let’s Do It Again,” and a No. 2 single “Who Took the Merry Out of Christmas?” // Mavis made her first solo foray while at Epic Records with The Staple Singers, releasing a lone single “Crying in the Chapel” to little fanfare in the late 1960s. The single was finally re-released on the 1994 Sony Music collection Lost Soul. Her first solo album would not come until a 1969 self-titled release for the Stax label. After another Stax release, Only for the Lonely, in 1970, she released a soundtrack album, A Piece of the Action, on Curtis Mayfield’s Curtom label. A 1984 album (also self-titled) preceded two albums under the direction of rock star Prince; 1989’s Time Waits for No One, followed by 1993’s The Voice, which People magazine named one of the Top Ten Albums of 1993. Her 1996 release, Spirituals & Gospels: A Tribute to Mahalia Jackson, was recorded with keyboardist Lucky Peterson. The recording honors Mahalia Jackson, a close family friend and a significant influence on Mavis Staples’s life. // Staples singing during the 2006 NEA National Heritage Fellows concert. // Staples made a major national return with the release of the album Have a Little Faith on Chicago’s Alligator Records, produced by Jim Tullio, in 2004. The album featured spiritual music, some of it semi-acoustic. // In 2004, Staples contributed to a Verve release by legendary jazz-rock guitarist, John Scofield. The album, entitled That’s What I Say, was a tribute to the great Ray Charles and led to a live tour featuring Staples, John Scofield, pianist Gary Versace, drummer Steve Hass, and bassist Rueben Rodriguez. A new album for Anti- Records entitled We’ll Never Turn Back was released on April 24, 2007. The Ry Cooder-produced concept album focuses on gospel songs of the civil rights movement and also included two new original songs by Cooder. // Her voice has been sampled by some of the biggest selling artists, including Salt ‘N’ Pepa, Ice Cube, Ludacris, and Hozier. Staples has recorded with a wide variety of musicians, from her friend, Bob Dylan (with whom she was nominated for a 2004 Grammy Award in the “Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals” category for their duet on “Gonna Change My Way of Thinking”, from the album Gotta Serve Somebody: The Gospel Songs of Bob Dylan) to The Band, Ray Charles, Prince, Nona Hendryx, George Jones, Natalie Merchant, Ann Peebles, and Delbert McClinton. She has provided vocals on current albums by Los Lobos and Dr. John, and she appears on tribute albums to such artists as Johnny Paycheck, Stephen Foster and Bob Dylan. // In 2003, Staples performed in Memphis at the Orpheum Theater alongside a cadre of her fellow former Stax Records stars during “Soul Comes Home,” a concert held in conjunction with the grand opening of the Stax Museum of American Soul Music at the original site of Stax Records, and appears on the CD and DVD that were recorded and filmed during the event. In 2004, she returned as guest artist for the Stax Music Academy’s SNAP! Summer Music Camp and performed again at the Orpheum with 225 of the academy’s students. In June 2007, she again returned to the venue to perform at the Stax 50th Anniversary Concert to Benefit the Stax Museum of American Soul Music, produced by Concord Records, who now owns and has revived the Stax Records label. // In 2009, Staples, along with Patty Griffin and The Tri-City Singers, released a version of the song “Waiting For My Child To Come Home” on the compilation album Oh Happy Day: An All-Star Music Celebration. // On October 30, 2010, Staples performed at the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear alongside singer Jeff Tweedy. In 2011 she was joined on-stage at the Outside Lands Music And Arts Festival by Arcade Fire singer Win Butler. The two performed a version of “The Weight” by The Band. // Staples also performed at the 33rd Kennedy Center Honors, singing in a tribute to honoree Paul McCartney. // Staples headlined on June 10, 2012, at Chicago’s Annual Blues Festival in Grant Park. // On June 27, 2015, Staples performed on the Park Stage of Glastonbury Somerset UK. On October 31, 2015, Staples performed with Joan Osborne in Washington, D.C. at The George Washington // University’s Lisner Auditorium as part of their Solid Soul Tour. // In February 2016, Staples’s album Livin’ on a High Note was released. Produced by M. Ward, the album features songs written specifically for Staples by Nick Cave, Justin Vernon, tUnE-yArds, Neko Case, Aloe Blacc, and others. Discussing the album Staples said: “I’ve been singing my freedom songs and I wanted to stretch out and sing some songs that were new. I told the writers I was looking for some joyful songs. I want to leave something to lift people up; I’m so busy making people cry, not from sadness, but I’m always telling a part of history that brought us down and I’m trying to bring us back up. These songwriters gave me a challenge. They gave me that feeling of, ‘Hey, I can hang! I can still do this!’ There’s a variety, and it makes me feel refreshed and brand new. Just like Benjamin Booker wrote on the opening track, ‘I got friends and I got love around me, I got people, the people who love me.’ I’m living on a high note, I’m above the clouds. I’m just so grateful. I must be the happiest old girl in the world. Yes, indeed.” // In January 2017, Staples was featured as a guest vocalist on “I Give You Power”, a single from Arcade Fire benefiting the American Civil Liberties Union. In February 2017, Staples appeared on NPR’s Wait, Wait … Don’t Tell Me! in the “Not My Job” segment, answering questions about the rock band The Shaggs. In April 2017, “Let Me Out”, a single from the fifth studio album by Gorillaz, Humanz, was released, featuring Staples and rapper Pusha T. // Staples’s sixteenth album If All I Was Was Black was released on November 17, 2017. The record was again produced by Jeff Tweedy and contains all original songs cowritten by Mavis and Tweedy. Following the release, Staples toured with Bob Dylan. She also appeared on the 2017/18 Hootenanny. In 2018, she sang on Hozier’s single “Nina Cried Power”. // In May 2019, Staples celebrated her 80th birthday with a concert at the Apollo Theater, 63 years after first appearing at the theater as a teenager with her family band, the Staple Singers, in 1956. The show, which featured special guest artists, including David Byrne and Norah Jones, is one of a series of collaborative concerts she staged in May to commemorate her 80th birthday. She also performed at the 2019 Glastonbury Festival. // In 2022, Staples released Carry Me Home, a collaboration with Levon Helm, recorded at Helm’s Midnight Ramble in 2011.]

Mark: I met Iris DeMent when I was working at Kinkos at 39th & Rainbow in 1992. Iris came in to copy her press clippings, she was in the process of releasing her debut album. I wasn’t familiar with her music until I saw her on Late Night with Conan O’Brien in 1994, where she performed her song “My Life.” I was blown away. I had video taped the show and I remember replaying that song for anyone that came to visit. I ran into Iris at Classic Cup in Westport. I was sort of star stuck, but she approached me and asked, “How do I Know You?” Our friendship continued because we shared a mutual friend named Anne Winter, who arranged for Iris play a Big Bang Buffet in 1999. Iris also did a benefit for Friends of Community Radio in 2002, and KKFI in 2004. I love Iris! This is one of her first songs.

  1. Iris DeMent – “Let The Mystery Be”
    from: Infamous Angel / Warner Brothers / 1992 / 1993
    [Debut studio album of singer-songwriter Iris DeMent. It was released by Warner Bros. Records in 1992. In 1995, her song “Our Town” was played in the closing moments of the last episode for the CBS TV series Northern Exposure.. “Let the Mystery Be” became the theme song for the 2nd season of The Leftovers. // Iris DeMent’s first three releases, all on Warner Brothers records, were critically acclaimed. She received two Grammy nominations during this time, in the “Folk Music” category. Meanwhile country radio completely overlooked her original songs, and her amazing voice, that has been compared to Loretta Lynn and Tammy Wynette. For Iris’ 1992 debut album, Infamous Angel, John Prine wrote the liner notes: “One night after receiving a copy of “Let the Mystery Be,” I was listening to the tape while frying a dozen or so pork chops in a skillet. Well Iris DeMent starts singing about “Mama’s Opry,” and being the sentimental fellow I am, I got a lump in my throat and a tear fell from my eyes into the hot oil. Well the oil popped out and burnt my arm as if the pork chops were trying to say, “Shut up, or I’ll really give you something to cry about.” Of course, pork chops can’t talk. But Iris DeMent’s songs can. They talk about isolated memories of life, love and living. And Iris has a voice I like a whole lot, like one you’ve heard before— but not really. So listen to this music, this Iris DeMent. It’s good for you. And if pork chops could talk, they’d probably learn how to sing one of her songs. Then we’d all have something to cry about.” – John Prine, Songwriter, musician & president Oh Boy! Records]

Mark: We end with one of our most played artists on WMM who has been a guest on our show nearly 20 times. Krystle Warren plays The Percheron on the rooftop of the Crossroads Hotel, Thursday, July 13, at 8:00pm and Boulevard on Saturday, June 15 at 8:45pm on the Elevate Stage at Crown Center.

  1. Krystle Warren & The Faculty – “Forever is a Long Time”
    from: Love Songs- A Time to Refrain from Embracing (Love Songs: A Time You May Embrace) / Parlour Door Music / April 9, 2012 UK]
    [Originally from KC, Krystle learned to play the guitar by listening to Rubber Soul & Revolver from The Beatles. Krystle graduated from Paseo Arts Academy in 2001 and began her musical career in collaborating with area jazz and pop musicians. After living in San Francisco and NYC, Krystle was signed to a French label, Because Music, and moved to Paris to release “Circles” in 2009. Krystle played French and British television programs, including Later with Jools Holland, garnering critical acclaim and traveling all over the world with Rufus Wainwright, Nick Cave, Norah Jones, and Joan As Police Woman. Krystle created, Parlour Door Music, to release “Love Songs: A Time You May Embrace” a recording from a 13-day session in Brooklyn, where she recorded 24 songs live with 28 musicians including her band, The Faculty, alongside choirs, horn and string sections. Owen/Cox Dance Group created a live dance performance of singer/songwriter Krystle Warren’s acclaimed double album, “Love Songs” Saturday, October 19 – 20, 2019, at The Polsky Theatre at Carlsen Center at Johnson County Community College, 12345 College Blvd, OPKS. // Krystle Warren began her musical career in KC in 2001 collaborating with area jazz and pop musicians. After living in San Francisco and NYC, Krystle was signed to a French label – Because Music, and moved to Paris to release “Circles” in 2009. Krystle played “Later with Jools Holland,” garnering critical acclaim and traveling all over the world with Rufus Wainwright, Nick Cave, Norah Jones, and Joan As Police Woman. Krystle created, Parlour Door Music to release her double album: “Love Songs,” from a 13-day session in Brooklyn, where she recorded 24 songs live with 28 musicians including her band, The Faculty. Krystle released, Three The Hard Way co-producing by Ben Kane (D’Angelo). was #1 on WMM’s 117 Best Recordings of 2017.]
  1. The Magnetic Fields – “BBC Radiophonic Workshop”
    from: Holiday / Merge / 1994
  1. Jim The Blind Guy- “Hello This Is The Villa Incognito”
    from: Mark’s private collection of recordings
  1. Various Artists – “Looney Tunes”
    from: All-Time Top 100 TV Themes / TVT / August 23, 2005
  1. Noel Coward – “The Party’s Over Now”
    from: Noel Coward in New York / drg / 2003 [orig. 1957]

For WMM, I’m Mark Manning. Thanks for listening!

Next week on Wednesday, June 12 we welcome Chris Haghirian who joins us for the entire show to share music and information about The Boulevardia Festival happening Friday, June 14 and Saturday, June 15 at Crown Center. Also joining is next week is our friend Krystle Warren who will play Percheron Rooftop Series, on top of the Crossroads Hotel, June 13, at 8:00pm, and Krystle Warren and The Faculty also play Boulevardia, June 15 at Crown Center. Next week on WMM Krystle will play live in our 90.1 FM Studios.

THANK YOU to our incredible KKFI Staff; Director of Development & Communications – J Kelly Dougherty, Volunteer Coordinator – Darryl Oliver, Chief Operator – Chad Brothers, KKFI Accounting & Administration – Shaina Littler

This radio station is more than the individual hosts of each individual radio show. Instead it is about a collective spirit of hundreds of hardworking people, unselfishly setting aside ego, to work for the greater good of community building and the gigantic goal of keeping our airwaves free, non-commercial, and open to all! Congratulations and thank you to all programmers & volunteers who went the extra effort to keep our station alive.

Our Script/Playlist is a “cut and paste” of information.
Sources for notes: artist’s websites, bios, wikipedia.org

Wednesday MidDay Medley in on the web:
http://www.kkfi.org,
http://www.WednesdayMidDayMedley.org,
http://www.facebook.com/WednesdayMidDayMedleyon90.1FM
https://www.soundcloud.com/wednesdaymiddaymedley
http://www.bandcamp.com/wednesdaymiddaymedley
http://www.instagram.markthomasmanning

Show #1049

The Music of My Queer Life

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, June 5, 2024

The Music of My Queer Life
(Mark Manning’s Birthday Special)

On this day, June 5, 1963, Mark Manning was born, in Geneva, (Nebraska). For this unique and special Wednesday MidDay Medley live radio broadcast, Mark will share tracks from some of his favorite recordings representing different seasons of his life. The playlist starts when Mark was 7 years old, in second grade, and he discovered his Mom’s old stereo and record collection in their basement. Tune in to hear radio “performance art” and secret pre-lunch confessions of a queer music nerd, who couldn’t wait to move away from the small town where he lived. Hear representative tracks from Mark’s collection of vinyl, 8-tracks, cassettes, digital, and now vinyl again. Life might have been unpredictable, being on the edge of a high wire act, but the music was always there like an invisible net. It was the music that gave meaning, the lyrics that offered a password, and a road map, where none others had existed before.

Mark will spin influential recordings from: The Beatles, The Carpenters, Al Green, Curtis Mayfield, The B-52’s, Prince, The Ramones, David Bowie, The Velvet Underground, Talking Heads, The Smiths, The Clash, Patti Smith, LaBelle, Joni Mitchell, Iris DeMent, Mavis Staples, The Magnetic Fields, and Krystle Warren.

At 11:00, Mark talks with Peregrine Honig and Izzy Vivas about The West 18th Street Fashion Show happening Saturday, June 8, at 7:30pm at 116 W 18th Street, KCMO. This year’s theme is Summer in Slumberland. More Information at: west18thstreetfashionshow.com

On your local radio dial 90.1 FM or
STREAMING LIVE at: kkfi.org

Show #1049

WMM Playlist from May 29, 2024

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

WMM is Spinning Records With Marion Merritt

Today, we welcome back to the show, Marion Merritt as our special “Guest Producer” to share sonic discoveries and information from her musically-encyclopedic-brain. Marion Merritt has an empathic ability to know what music you’re seeking. She’s our most frequent contributor to WMM She grew up in Los Angeles and St. Louis and went to college in Columbia, MO. She studied art & musical engineering, and is a avid lover of classic films. She saw Talking Heads on their 1st tour at One Block West in 1978. For 20 years she’s been sharing her sonic discoveries and information from her musically-encyclopedic brain. Marion also writes about new releases as a contributor The Pitch. With partner Ann Stewart, Marion is the proprietor of Records With Merritt, a minority owned business at 1614 Westport Rd. in KC. More info at: http://www.recordswithmerritt.com.

Marion will spin tracks from: Ana Frango Elétrico, Shabaka with Moses Sumney, Shabaka with Floating Points & Laraaji, Phosphorescent, DIIV, Isobel Campbell, Beth Gibbons, Kamasi Washington, Fay Victor & Herbie Nichols, Gloria Coleman Quartet with Pola Roberts, Leyla McCalla, Valerie June, Swamp Dogg, Kleenex, Lucy Rose, Ghost Funk Orchestra, Mdou Moctar, and The Lostines. 

Marion Merritt welcome back to Wednesday MidDay Medley

  1. “Main Title Instrumental – It’s Showtime Folks”
    from: Orig. Motion Picture Soundtrack All That Jazz / Casablanca / December 20, 1979
    [WMM’s Adopted Theme Song]
  1. Dimitri From Paris – “Prologue”
    from: Sacrebleu / Yellow Productions – Atlantic / June 11, 1996
    [Debut studio albumm from Dimitri from Paris was born Dimitrios Yerasimos, on October 27, 1963. He is a French music producer and DJ of Greek descent. His musical influences are rooted in 1970s funk and disco sounds that spawned contemporary house music, as well as original soundtracks from 1950s and 1960s movies such as Breakfast at Tiffany’s, La Dolce Vita and The Party, which were sampled in his album Sacrebleu. Dimitri fused these sounds with electro and block party hip hop he discovered in the 1980s. // Contrary to his musical pseudonym, Dimitri was born not in Paris but born in Peckham, South London, to Rûm parents (Greeks of Turkey), Dimitri grew up in France where he discovered DJing at home, using whatever he could find to “cut and paste” samples from disco hits or in to montages heard on the radio, blending them together to make tapes. This early experimentation helped him launch his DJ career. // He started out by DJing at the French station Radio 7, before moving on to Skyrock and finally to Radio NRJ, Europe’s largest FM radio network, in 1986. There, he introduced the first ever house music show to be broadcast in France, while simultaneously producing under the direction of sound designer Michel Gaubert, runway soundtracks for fashion houses such as Chanel, Jean-Paul Gaultier, Hermès and Yves Saint-Laurent. He also released two solo EPs from 1993 to 1994 and contributed to the Yellow Productions compilation La Yellow 357. // In 1996, Dimitri gained worldwide recognition with the release of his first full album, Sacrebleu, released on Yellow Productions. A blend of diverse influences including jazz, original film soundtracks, samba, and organic house, Sacrebleu sold 300,000 copies worldwide and was named Album of the Year by UK’s Mixmag magazine. // In 2000, Dimitri followed Sacrebleu up with A Night at the Playboy Mansion (Virgin) and Disco Forever (BBE), followed by My Salsoul in 2001, After the Playboy Mansion in 2002. In 2003, Cruising Attitude was released, to be closely followed by his first outing on UK’s premier dance music label Defected: Dimitri from Paris In the House. // He has followed a somewhat glamorous musical path by recording soundtracks and advertising campaigns for fashion houses Chanel, Jean-Paul Gautier and Yves Saint Laurent and remixing hundreds of artists as diverse as Björk, The Cardigans, James Brown, Michael Jackson, New Order and Quincy Jones. He also did the music for the anime Tsukuyomi: Moon Phase and mixed the soundtrack for the French luxury dessin animé Jet Groove produced by Method Films. // 2005 saw Dimitri go back to his Funk and Disco roots, with Japanese hip hop producer and über collector DJ Muro for Super Disco Friends a double CD mixdown. In 2006 he offered his House of Love outing to Valentine’s Day’s lovers. Later on Dimitri produced Los Amigos Invisibles “Super Pop Venezuela” album which grabbed a nomination for a Grammy Award. // 2007 saw the release of the Cocktail Disco project with longtime partner BBE, a handful of disco classics remixes and other surprises down the line. // 2009 saw the release of the Night Dubbin’, a post-disco R&B compilation remix album.]
  1. Ana Frango Elétrico – “Electric Fish”  
    from: Me Chama De Gato Que Eu Sou Sua / RISCO – Mr Bongo / Oct. 20, 2023 [2024 on vinyl]
    [Ana Frango Elétrico is the most effervescent and innovative voice to surge up from Brazil’s new wave. Already with two critically acclaimed albums and a swathe of award-winning production turns under their belt, Ana will present their most confident and accomplished work to date on October 20th: Me Chama De Gato Que Eu Sou Sua / Call Me They That I’m Yours. Gesturing to a tradition of Brazilian boogie music, but bouncing with modern pop ebullience, the album sees the Rio artist evolve from a captivating upstart into a surefooted scene leader in full stride. // At just 25, the prolific artist and producer has already garnered worldwide admirers. Ana’s sophomore Little Electric Chicken Heart was nominated at the 2020 Latin Grammys, and found support in the shape of Gilles Peterson and The Needle Drop – as well as from major global media. Since then, standalone singles “Mama Planta Baby” and “Mulher Homem Bicho” have received the WME ‘Best Music Producer’ Award, recognising Ana’s deep passion for music production – a passion which has led to collaborations with nascent Brazilian stars Dora Morelenbaum, Illy and Sophia Chablau. Most recently, Ana was hailed for their co-production of Bala Desejo’s 2022 Latin Grammy-winning album Sim Sim Sim. // With a string of celebrated collaborations and productions added to their CV since Little Electric Chicken Heart, it is unsurprising that Me Chama De Gato Que Eu Sou Sua finds Ana at their most assured and full-voiced. A fresh swagger – first teased on 2020’s disco stomper “Mulher Homem Bicho” – is immediately present. Album opener “Electric Fish”, with Nile Rodgers bass and shimmering backing vocals, sets a buoyant tone. “Boy of Stranger Things” is its bombastic counterpart. It’s the grooviest Ana has ever sounded. And the most brazen. Lyrically, where Ana was once oblique on personal matters, they are now forthright – lucidly exploring their gender identity, citing accessible cultural reference points (from Stranger Things to Camel Blue cigarettes), and often singing in English. “I’m the boy of the Stranger Things/ I’m not the girl that you think”, they proclaim over funk organ and syncopated percussion. Both sonics and sentiment are rooted in disco – certainly the expansive arrangements and unabashed grooviness; but also Ana taps into disco’s history as music of queer expression. // “I started this album in 2021 with the intention of showing, in means of sound, understandings and feelings about queer love, subjectively exposing myself,” the non-binary artist states – before qualifying that though “feeling was its driving force, the album is really about musical production.” // It is this counterpoint – between “exposing” oneself, and honing a distinctive “production” value – that makes for their most clear and cohesive album to date. Like many of the greats, Ana has that ineffable gift of sounding like themselves regardless of the genre they are exploring. Their distinctive conversational voice is more present in the mix than before – and thematic throughlines of identity, sex and relationships invites you to listen closely – becoming their confidante as they lead you restlessly from genre to genre. // “There’s so many references to different decades,” Ana explains. “Seventies drums with eighties processing … Going back, getting beyond … Testing the limits of organic sounds”. Characteristically playful, on Me Chama, Ana takes vivid and rewarding detours through funk-inflected R&B (“Dela”) and art pop (“Dr. Sabe Tudo”). “Nuvem Vermelha” is a cinematic chanson with lush strings that recalls Arthur Verocai. Then, “Coisa Maluca” loafs with the indie insouciance of Canadian slacker Mac Demarco. Later, “Let’s Go Before Again”, is a full-on drum machine workout evocative of Stereolab. “Even if people don’t find my own references here, they’ll find theirs,” observes Ana. “Maybe that’s this record’s biggest goal.”]
  1. Shabaka – “I’ll Do Whatever You Want [feat. Floating Points & Laraaji]”
    from: Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace / Impulse Records / April 12, 2024
    [Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace is the solo debut studio album of London jazz musician Shabaka Hutchings, working under the name Shabaka. The album was preceded by two singles, “End of Innocence” and “I’ll Do Whatever You Want”. // The album follows Hutchings’s hiatus from the saxophone and the end of his bands Sons of Kemet and the Comet Is Coming, and sees him focusing on different types of flutes, including the shakuhachi and the svirel, as well as the clarinet. // The album was recorded in Van Gelder Studio in 2022. Hutchings shared producing duties with Dilip Harris, and brought in a long list of collaborators including his own father Anum Iyapo, André 3000, Laraaji, and Floating Points. Musically, it focuses on jazz and new age music. Critical reception for the album was positive, highlighting the boldness of Hutchings’s shift in style. // On January 1, 2023, Hutchings announced his intention to take an indefinite hiatus from playing the saxophone, explaining later in the year that his enthusiasm for the instrument had waned after years of intense touring. This also coincided with the end of his two bands, Sons of Kemet and the Comet Is Coming. Hutchings’s last live saxophone performance was on 7 December 2023, where he played John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London. // Hutchings’s new musical interests lied primarily with the flute and similar instruments, having started with them in 2019 after acquiring his first shakuhachi. Subsequent instruments Hutchings picked up include Mayan Teotihuacan drone flutes, Brazilian pifanos, Native American flutes, Slavic svirels, and South American quenas. The move coincided with an increase in attention on jazz flute following the release of André 3000’s 2023 album New Blue Sun, on which Hutchings contributed shakuhachi to one track. // Hutchings announced the album on 28 February 2024, set for a release on April 12, by Impulse! Records. On the same day, he released its lead single, “End of Innocence”, along with a music video directed by Phoebe Boswell. “End of Innocence” sees Hutchings playing the clarinet, with a band consisting of pianist Jason Moran, drummer Nasheet Waits, and percussionist Carlos Niño. // The second single, “I’ll Do Whatever You Want”, was released on March 21. Hutchings cowrote the song with Laraaji and Floating Points. It features Hutchings on shakuhachi, André 3000 on drone flute, Laraaji’s wordless vocals, Floating Points on Rhodes Chroma synthesizer and vibraphone, Esperanza Spalding and Tom Herbert on bass, Dave Okumu on guitar, Marcus Gilmore on drums, and Niño on percussion. Hutchings said the song is “about surrender and the intimate space we go to within the grasp of possession.” Other musicians on the record include Moses Sumney, Brandee Younger, Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, Saul Williams, Lianne La Havas, and Elucid. // Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace is Hutchings’s solo debut studio album, following his 2022 solo EP Afrikan Culture, which also centered Hutchings’s woodwind play. The titles of both releases are connected; in Hutchings’s words, they’re mean to be read as “Afrikan Culture, comma, Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace”, with his next album being “the next sentence in a long form poem that encapsulates, hopefully, all the solo records of my career.” The song names on the album were extracted from a poem written for the album.]
  1. Shabaka – “Insecurities (feat. Moses Sumney)” 
    from: Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace / Impulse Records / April 12, 2024
    [Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace is the solo debut studio album of London jazz musician Shabaka Hutchings, working under the name Shabaka. The album was preceded by two singles, “End of Innocence” and “I’ll Do Whatever You Want”. // The album follows Hutchings’s hiatus from the saxophone and the end of his bands Sons of Kemet and the Comet Is Coming, and sees him focusing on different types of flutes, including the shakuhachi and the svirel, as well as the clarinet. // The album was recorded in Van Gelder Studio in 2022. Hutchings shared producing duties with Dilip Harris, and brought in a long list of collaborators including his own father Anum Iyapo, André 3000, Laraaji, and Floating Points. Musically, it focuses on jazz and new age music. Critical reception for the album was positive, highlighting the boldness of Hutchings’s shift in style.]
  1. Phosphorescent – “Revelator”
    from: Revelator / Verve Records / January 24, 2024
    [Matthew Houck, f is Phosphorescent. The Alabama native, now resides in Brooklyn has delivered 5 albums as Phosphorescent since his 2003 debut. Houck has a highly distinctive artistic voice, but also a refreshing, rolled-sleeves approach to his expression, and if he had his way, he’d have twice as many albums under his belt by now. // Matthew Houck on Voices, Guitars, Percussion; Jo Schornikow on Synths; Scott Stapleton on Synth, Piano; Jack Lawrence: Bass, Synthbass, Theravox; Noah Denney on Percussion; Ethan Ballinger on Guitar; Jim White on Drum Kit; Bobby Hawk on Strings, and Ricky Ray Jackson on Guitar, Pedal Steel]
  1. DIIV – “Brown Paper Bag”
    from: Frog in Boiling Water/ Fantasy Records / May 24, 2024 
    [Frog In Boiling Water, produced by Chris Coady, was a four-year process that nearly broke the band before the album was completed. With an aim to push their sound, make a record that challenged them, and treat the band as a democracy for the first time, DIIV began an ambitious journey, both individually and collectively. This journey left their relationships with one another fraying, with the many complex dynamics of family, friendship and finances entangled, coupled with suspicions, resentments, bruised egos and anxious questions. They ultimately found their way through, and the result is 10 songs that mine a new lyrical and musical depth, those two halves mirroring one another inside a reflective and immersive whole. It is a mesmeric testament to enduring, to envisioning anything else on the other side while you remain here, in the slowly heating water of right now. // Frog in Boiling Water, both the title and the themes of the record, reference “The Boiling Frog” in Daniel Quinn’s The Story of B. The band explains, “If you drop a frog in a pot of boiling water, it will of course frantically try to clamber out. But if you place it gently in a pot of tepid water and turn the heat on low, the frog will sink into a tranquil stupor, exactly like one of us in a hot bath, and before long, with a smile on its face, it will unresistingly allow itself to be boiled to death.” // “We understand the metaphor to be one about a slow, sick, and overwhelmingly banal collapse of society under end-stage capitalism, the brutal realities we’ve maybe come to accept as normal. That’s the boiling water and we are the frogs. The album is more or less a collection of snapshots from various angles of our modern condition which we think highlights what this collapse looks like and, more particularly, what it feels like.” ]

10:31 – Underwriting

8. Isobel Campbell – “Dopamine”
from: Bow to Love / Cooking Vinyl / June 14, 2024
[Isobel Campbell was born April 27, 1976. She is a Scottish singer, songwriter and cellist. She rose to prominence at age nineteen as a member of the indie pop band Belle & Sebastian, but left the group to pursue a solo career, first as The Gentle Waves, and later under her own name. She later collaborated with singer Mark Lanegan on three albums. Her latest studio album, There Is No Other, was released in 2020. // Campbell’s music has been described as either indie pop, chamber pop or singer-songwriter. Regardless of genre, Campbell makes gentle and sombre music, often using classical instruments. // From 1996–2002 Isobel Campbell oplayed with Belle & Sebastian. // Belle & Sebastian was formed in 1996 by Stuart Murdoch and Stuart David; Campbell had met Murdoch at a New Year’s Eve party at age nineteen, and then participated in a recording session with Murdoch and David sponsored by Stow College’s Music Business Administration curriculum. They named themselves Belle & Sebastian after a children’s book of the same name.[1] Murdoch was the lead singer on the first two albums, with Campbell playing cello, percussion and singing backing vocals. A classically trained cellist, Campbell also played keyboards. She also took lead vocals on a few songs from the band, and co-wrote their top-20 UK single “Legal Man”. // Their follow-up was The Boy with the Arab Strap which contained the track “Is It Wicked Not to Care?” where for the first time Campbell sang lead vocals. The band’s next album was Fold Your Hands Child, You Walk Like a Peasant. The album introduced many stylistic changes, such as a larger string section and more of the members singing lead vocals; Campbell sings on “Family Tree”, and performs a duet with Stevie Jackson on “Beyond the Sunrise”. // Most of 2002 was spent on touring and recording a soundtrack album, Storytelling (for Storytelling by Todd Solondz). Campbell left the band in spring of 2002, in the middle of their North American tour.]

  1. Beth Gibbons – “Floating On A Moment”
    from: Lives Outgrown / Domino / April 14, 2024
    [Lives Outgrown is the debut solo studio album by English musician Beth Gibbons, released on 17 May 2024 through Domino Recording Company. The album was produced by Gibbons, James Ford and Lee Harris. It was preceded by the singles “Floating on a Moment”, “Reaching Out” and “Lost Changes”. // Gibbons wrote the album over a decade, with topics including “motherhood, anxiety, menopause, and mortality”. Gibbons said that the album was directly influenced by the deaths of family and friends over the preceding several years and she “realised what life was like with no hope” // eth Gibbons (born 4 January 1965) is an English singer-songwriter, best known as the lead singer and lyricist for the band Portishead, who have released three albums. She released an album with Rustin Man, Out of Season, in 2002, and a recording of Górecki’s Symphony No. 3 with the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra in 2019. She released a solo album in 2024 titled Lives Outgrown. // Gibbons was born in Exeter, Devon, England and raised on a farm with three sisters. Her parents divorced when she was young. She attended St Katherine’s School in Pill, Somerset, in North Somerset. // At 22, she moved to Bath, then Bristol to pursue her singing career, where she met Geoff Barrow, her future collaborator in Portishead, on an Enterprise Allowance course in 1991. // With Adrian Utley, Gibbons and Barrow released the first Portishead album Dummy in 1994 and have produced two other studio albums, a live album, and various singles in the years since. // She has also collaborated on a separate project with former Talk Talk bassist Paul Webb (Rustin Man). Before she joined Geoff Barrow in Portishead, she had auditioned for the singer’s slot in .O.rang, the group formed by Webb after Talk Talk’s late-Eighties departure from EMI, but Portishead’s sudden success pre-empted matters. In October 2002, they released the album Out of Season in the United Kingdom under the name Beth Gibbons and Rustin Man. The album peaked at number 28 in the UK Albums Chart. It was released in the United States a year later: while touring in North America, Variety favourably described her performance with Rustin as “Billie Holiday fronting Siouxsie and the Banshees”. // In June 2013, Gibbons announced plans for a new solo album with Domino Records. She contributed vocals to a cover of the song “Black Sabbath” with the British metal band Gonga, released on April 24, 2014. // In 2018, Gibbons contributed vocal performances, along with Elizabeth Fraser of the Cocteau Twins, to the Spill Festival held in Ipswich in an audio installation entitled ‘Clarion Calls’, which uses the voices of 100 women to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I. // In 2014, Gibbons performed Symphony No. 3 by Henryk Górecki with the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Krzysztof Penderecki. Gibbons sang in Polish. The performance was released in 2019; reviewing the album for Pitchfork, Jayson Greene wrote: “Part of the tension comes from hearing her untrained voice scale these rocky heights. Her vibrato, tight and trilling and barely controlled, sounds an awful lot like someone fighting off a panic attack. This would get her dismissed from a traditional opera audition, probably, but it is magnificently effective at sending raw shudders through what can be a pretty well-worn work.” In 2022, Gibbons featured on the track “Mother I Sober” from Kendrick Lamar’s album Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers. For her collaboration in the album she received a nomination for Album of the Year at the 65th Annual Grammy Awards as a featured artist and songwriter. On February 7, 2024, Gibbons announced the release of her first solo studio album in over 20 years. The album, titled Lives Outgrown, was released May 17, 2024. It was announced alongside a single titled “Floating on a Moment”, with its second single “Reaching Out” being released later that year on 10 April. // She has cited Nina Simone, Bono of U2 for his performance on The Joshua Tree, Otis Redding and Jimmy Cliff as musical inspirations. She has covered Janis Joplin songs and enjoys the music of Janis Ian.]
  1. Kamasi Washington – “Interstellar Peace (The Last Stance)”
    from: Fearless Movement / Young Records / May 3, 2024
    [Kamasi was born in LA California, on February 2, 1981 to musical parents and educators, and was raised in Inglewood, California. He is an American jazz saxophonist, composer, producer, and bandleader. Washington is known mainly for playing tenor saxophone. He is a graduate of the Academy of Music of Alexander Hamilton High School in Beverlywood, Los Angeles. Washington next enrolled in UCLA’s Department of Ethnomusicology, where he began playing with faculty members such as Kenny Burrell, Billy Higgins and band leader/trumpeter Gerald Wilson. Washington features in the album Young Jazz Giants in 2004. He has played along with a diverse group of musicians including Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Horace Tapscott, Gerald Wilson, Lauryn Hill, Nas, Snoop Dogg, George Duke, Chaka Khan, Flying Lotus, Thundercat, Mike Muir, Francisco Aguabella, the Pan Afrikaan People’s Orchestra and Raphael Saadiq. Washington ventured into big band music when he joined the Gerald Wilson Orchestra for their 2006 album In My Time. Washington played saxophone on Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly. His debut solo recording, The Epic, was released in May 2015 to critical acclaim. His second studio album, Heaven and Earth, was released in June 2018, with a companion EP titled The Choice released a week later. // Turning his attention to dance for his latest album, Fearless Movement out this May on Young, Kamasi Washington resumes his ongoing study of music as a means of connection. His 2015 album The Epic, as well as 2018’s Heaven and Earth were received by critics and audiences as a reimagination of modern jazz showcasing Washington’s larger-than-lift compositions full of celestial grandeur and his distinct blend of jazz, Latin, funk, classical, hip-hop and soul. Fearless Movement, however, offers something different: terrestrial rhythms and collaborations from rappers, musical icons and even Washington’s own daughter. Features include: Thundercat, Taj Austin, Ras Austin, Patrice Quinn, DJ Battlecat, Brandon Coleman, D-Smoke, George Clinton, Bj the Chicago Kid, Andre 300]
  1. Kamasi Washington – “The Visionary (feat. Terrace Martin)”
    from: Fearless Movement / Young Records / May 3, 2024
    [Kamasi Washington was born in LA, California, on February 2, 1981 to musical parents and educators, and was raised in Inglewood, California. He is a jazz saxophonist, composer, producer, and bandleader. Washington is known mainly for playing tenor saxophone. He is a graduate of the Academy of Music of Alexander Hamilton High School in Beverlywood, LA. Washington next enrolled in UCLA’s Department of Ethnomusicology, where he began playing with faculty members such as Kenny Burrell, Billy Higgins and band leader/trumpeter Gerald Wilson. Washington features in the album Young Jazz Giants in 2004. He has played along with a diverse group of musicians including Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Horace Tapscott, Gerald Wilson, Lauryn Hill, Nas, Snoop Dogg, George Duke, Chaka Khan, Flying Lotus, Thundercat, Mike Muir, Francisco Aguabella, the Pan Afrikaan People’s Orchestra and Raphael Saadiq. Washington ventured into big band music when he joined the Gerald Wilson Orchestra for their 2006 album In My Time. companion EP titled The Choice released a week later.]

10:57 – Station ID

  1. Fay Victor & Herbie Nichols SUNG – “Life Is Funny That Way”
    from: Life Is Funny That Way / Tao Forms / April 5, 2024
    [= Herbie Nichols SUNG = Fay Victor on voice, lyrics, arrangements, bandleader; Michaël Attias on alto & baritone saxophones; Anthony Coleman on piano; Ratzo Harris on bass; and Tom Rainey on drums. // Life Is Funny That Way is the major new work from acclaimed and singular singer-soundartist-lyricist-bandleader Fay Victor. It is both a loving celebration and thorough reconsideration of jazz composer Herbie Nichols’ rich legacy & a powerful work of art from a formidably talented and forthright black woman. This landmark work is also the first time that a full program of lyrics have been written & recorded for Nichols’ compositions. Victor’s innovative arrangements are brought to vibrant life by Herbie Nichols SUNG, a dedicated and profoundly gifted quintet of veteran jazz performers. // Nearly 30 years ago while living in the Netherlands, Victor discovered and was captivated by Nichols’ music in the collection of her future husband. She first began to explore the concept of singing this tremendous work with Dutch pianist Misha Mengelberg and then together with trombonist and one-time Nichols collaborator Roswell Rudd. // It was in 2013 that Fay Victor formed the Herbie Nichols SUNG project with American players and began to present it regularly in NYC, adding to a European trio version that had already toured the continent. This deep and extensive artistic journey which Victor embarked on, alongside leading other acclaimed bands and recording projects of all- original material, led to the involvement of the TAO Forms label. Its creative director drummer Whit Dickey not only shared a great appreciation of Nichols’ singular work as a composer, but was also a long-time fan of the exceptionally gifted Victor. // Recalling her first experience of hearing Nichols’ music, Victor says, “I put the record on and it sounded very strange to me. But then I heard “House Party Starting”. That was the one, that just sent something through my soul. I was blown away by that composition, and decided then and there that I want to learn this, I want to be able to sing this. And at that moment, I couldn’t. There was definitely some technical work I needed to do. It was great to have that challenge, and I was determined.” [ “Tonight” is Victor’s ultimate realization. } // A decade later and clearly ready, Life Is Funny That Way was recorded with the long-devoted veterans of Herbie Nichols SUNG: Michaël Attias (alto & baritone saxophones), Anthony Coleman (piano), Ratzo Harris (bass), and relatively new addition Tom Rainey (drums). A tremendous group to be sure; united by their mutual love of both Nichols’ writing and Victor’s estimable artistry. // She and her band’s work was exquisitely captured & mixed by engineer Andy Taub at his Brooklyn Recording studio. // The source material comes from Nichols’ Blue Note sessions of 1955-56, plus three compositions not recorded in his lifetime. // The album’s material is wide-ranging in mood, from the puckish opening title track and abstracted “The Culprit Is You” (both with the full band) to the dark voice-alto-bass explorations of “Bright Butterfly” and a ghostly voice-alto-piano reworking of “The Spinning Song”, aptly titled “Descent Into Madness”. // “Shuffle Montgomery” has Victor scatting ebulliently over the full band with Attias on baritone, while “Twelve Bars”, another tune unrecorded by Nichols, is a feature for the piano trio. // In addition to fêting Nichols, Victor takes the opportunity to celebrate the person who gave him his greatest exposure. Billie Holiday was the first to write lyrics for one of his tunes, “Serenade”, making it one of her signature works: “Lady Sings The Blues”. As Victor explains, “I chose to include this song because I think about the audience a lot. If anybody knows Nichols at all, they know this song. But the other thing is that when Billie sang his song, she didn’t sing his bridge. So I wanted to sing the lyrics with his bridge. That was important to me. I wanted people to know what the complete composition sounded like. Those are great lyrics Billie Holiday wrote and it’s also an homage to her because sometimes I feel that she doesn’t get her full due in terms of how incredible a musician she was, how visionary she was.” // All compositions by Herbie Nichols. // All lyrics & arrangements by Fay Victor. // Recorded & Mixed by Andy Taub at Brooklyn Recording. // Mastered by Paul Wickliffe at Skyline Underground. // Produced by Fay Victor.]
  1. Gloria Coleman Quartet – “Que Baby (feat. Pola Roberts)” 
    from: Soul Sisters / Impulse / May 21, 1963 [Reissued on 2024 Verve]    
    [Soul Sisters is an album by American jazz organist Gloria Coleman featuring Pola Roberts recorded in 1963 for the Impulse! label. The Allmusic review by Brandon Burke awarded the album 3 stars, stating “One probably doesn’t hear the name Gloria Coleman thrown around quite as often as other organists of the day. Similarly, the Impulse! label wasn’t particularly known as a home for organ combos, but perhaps that’s what makes this title the underappreciated gem that it is”. Recorded at Rudy Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on May 21, 1963, with Gloria Coleman on organ, Leo Wright on alto saxophone, Grant Green on guitar, and Pola Roberts on drums. // Gloria Coleman was an American musician. Coleman played bass, piano then organ. As a jazz organist she released two albums. The first, Soul Sisters by the Gloria Coleman Quartet, was for the Impulse! Records label. It featured drummer Pola Roberts, Leo Wright and Grant Green. It was produced by Bob Thiele. The second album featured Ray Copeland, Dick Griffith, James Anderson, Earl Dunbar and Charlie Davis. Coleman wrote many songs for Bobbi Humphrey and Ernestine Anderson, among others. Coleman married saxophonist George Coleman. The couple had two children and divorced. She died on February 18, 2010.]
  1. Leyla McCalla – “Scaled To Survive”
    from: Sun Without The Heat / Anti – Records / April 12, 2024
    [Leyla McCalla on vocals, cello, banjo, guitars; Shawn Myers on percussion, drums; Nahum Zdybel on guitars; Pete Olynciw on electric bass, piano; Maryam Qudus on synthesizers, organs, backing vocals; Louis Michot on fiddle on “Tower”. Recorded and Produced by Maryam Qudus at Dockside Studios, June 20-29, 2023. Assisted by Justin Tocket. Mixed by Maryam Qudus at Best House. Mastered by Heba Kadry, NYC. All songs written by Leyla McCalla (Makala Music (BMI)) except “Love We Had” music by Ali Mohammed Birra, arrangement and lyrics by Leyla McCalla (Makala Music (BMI)) // On May 6, 2022 Leyla McCalla released Breaking the Thermometer on Anti- Records. // Leyla Sarah McCalla was born October 3, 1985. She is a classical and folk musician. She has been a cellist with the Grammy-winning string band Carolina Chocolate Drops but left that group to focus on her solo career. Both of McCalla’s parents were born in Haiti. Her father Jocelyn McCalla was the Executive Director of the New York-based National Coalition for Haitian Rights from 1988 to 2006 and is credited as translator on Vari-Colored Songs. Her mother Régine Dupuy arrived in the United States at age 5, is the daughter of Ben Dupuy who ran Haiti Progrès, a New York based Haitian socialist newspaper. McCalla’s mother went on to found Dwa Fanm, an anti-domestic violence human rights organization. McCalla was born in New York City and raised in New Jersey. She lived in Accra, Ghana for two years as a teen. After a year at Smith College, she transferred to New York University to study cello performance and chamber music. She then moved to New Orleans where she played music on the streets. We first played Leyla McCalla in 2016 the same year we saw her live at Folk Alliance International and the same year she released her critically acclaimed album Vari-Colored Songs on Music Maker Recordings on February 4, 2014. The album is a tribute to Langston Hughes which includes adaptations of his poems, Haitian folk songs sung in Haitian Creole and original compositions. McCalla says the first song she wrote for the album was Heart of Gold because it provided “a window into Hughes’ thinking”.McCalla chose to dedicate this work to Hughes because she says “reading his work made me want to be an artist.” McCalla started working on the album 5 years prior to its release. Commentators have noted the influence of Louisiana musical traditions such as old Cajun fiddle melodies and trad-jazz banjo on the album. Members of the Carolina Chocolate Drops appear on the album. Along with her solo work Leyla McCalla was part of Songs of Our Native Daughters is the debut Americana/folk album by four North American singer-songwriters collaborating as Our Native Daughters. The group includes Rhiannon Giddens, Amythyst Kiah, Leyla McCalla, and Allison Russell. The album was released on the Smithsonian Folkways label in early 2019. Songs of Our Native Daughters addresses American historical issues that have influenced the identity of black women, including slavery, racism, and sexism. The album features 13 songs, 11 of them written by the group’s members. It also includes a cover of a 1970s Bob Marley classic and a song that draws its lyrics from two poems.]
  1. Leyla McCalla – “Small Towns (Are Smaller for Girls)”
    from: My Black Country: The Songs of Alice Randall / Oh Boy Records / April 12, 2024
    [Collaborative album celebrates the Black female experience in Country & Folk music with additional contributions from Adia Victoria, Rhiannon Giddens, Saaneah Jamison, Miko Marks, Leyla McCalla, Rissi Palmer, Allison Russell, SistaStrings, Sunny War & Alice’s daughter Caroline Randall Williams, Re-recording the greatest songs from New York Times bestselling novelist, award-winning songwriter & educator Alice Randall’s catalog. Produced by Ebonie Smith (Hamilton, Cardi B’s Invasion of Privacy, Janelle Monae’s Dirty Computer, Sturgill Simpson’s A Sailor’s Guide to Earth, founder & president of Gender Amplified) // Companion album to Alice Randall’s new book: My Black Country: A Journey through Country Music’s Black Past, Present and Future.]
  1. Valerie June —“Big Dream”
    from: My Black Country: The Songs of Alice Randall / Oh Boy Records / April 12, 2024
    [“Growing up, we all have dreams and wishes. Alice Randall’s lyrics capture the magic of our personal dreams. In the simplest way, she invites listeners to remember the power of collective dreaming. If God can be a woman in a patriarchal society, then there are no limits to what can be achieved. Balance is restored through the sacred art of dreaming, and each dream big or small helps to shape our world. I am a dreamer. Everyone on this record is a dreamer. Together we are breaking boundaries just as so many who’ve come before have done for us.” – Valerie June // On March 12, 2021 Valerie June released her 5th full length album The Moon And Stars on June Tunes – Concord records, co-produced by Jack Splash and Valerie June. // Valerie June Hockett was born January 10, 1982), known as Valerie June, is an American singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist from Memphis, Tennessee, United States. Her sound encompasses a mixture of folk, blues, gospel, soul, country, Appalachian and bluegrass. She is signed to Concord Music Group worldwide. // Born in Jackson, Tennessee on January 10, 1982, June is the oldest of five children. As a child growing up in Humboldt, June was exposed to gospel music at her local church and R&B and soul music via her father, Emerson Hockett. As a teenager, her first job was with her father, owner of Hockett Construction in West Tennessee, and a part-time promoter for gospel singers and Prince, K-Ci & JoJo, and Bobby Womack. She helped by hanging posters in town. Her father died in late 2016. // June relocated to Memphis in 2000 and began recording and performing at the age of 19, initially with her then-husband Michael Joyner, in the duo Bella Sun. After her marriage ended, she began working as a solo artist, combining blues, gospel and Appalachian folk in a style that she describes as “organic moonshine roots music”, and learning guitar, banjo, and lap-steel guitar. She became associated with the Memphis-based Broken String Collective. // In 2009 she was a featured artist on MTV’s online series $5 Cover (following the lives of Memphis musicians attempting to make ends meet), and in 2010 she recorded the EP Valerie June and the Tennessee Express, a collaboration with Old Crow Medicine Show. // In 2011 she was honored by the Memphis and Shelby County Music Commission at the Emissaries of Memphis Music event. She raised funds to record an album with producer Craig Street via Kickstarter.com, raising $15,000 in 60 days. Later that year she relocated from Memphis to Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Shortly after, record producer Kevin Augunas introduced June to Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys, which led to the recording of June’s album Pushin’ Against a Stone in July 2011, which was co-written and produced by Dan Auerbach and Kevin Augunas. // In 2012, June performed with producer John Forté on a collaboration called Water Suites (on the hip-hop-blues song “Give Me Water”), and with Meshell Ndegeocello on the song “Be My Husband”. She contributed The Wandering’s 2012 album Go on Now, You Can’t Stay Here: Mississippi Folk Music Volume III. In 2012 she performed in the UK for the first time, playing at Bestival and appearing on Later… with Jools Holland. // She has received substantial radio play in Europe on BBC Radio 6, including a feature on Cerys on 6 with Cerys Matthews. Mary Anne Hobbs of XFM has said of June: “This woman has already touched my heart, she really, really has.” // In February 2013, June was invited to support Jake Bugg on the UK leg of his tour. In March 2013, June performed two nights at South By Southwest. The first performance was on March 14 as part of the Heartbreaker Banquet. On March 16, June performed again, this time as part of The Revival Tour. Rolling Stone June’s second album, The Order of Time one of the 50 Best Albums of 2017, citing “her handsomely idiosyncratic brand of Americana, steeped deep in electric blues and old-time folk, gilded in country twang and gospel yearning….a blend of spacey hippie soul, blues and folk with June’s pinched, modern-Appalachian voice at the center”. In a 2017 interview, Bob Dylan was asked what artists he listened to and respected; June was among the artists he mentioned in reply.More info at: http://www.valeriejune.com]
  1. Swamp Dogg – “Mess Under That Dress”
    from: Blackgrass: From West Virginia to 125th St. / Oh Boy Records / May 31, 2024
    [Blackgrass: From West Virginia to 125th St, his first record with Oh Boy Records that will be released on May 31. The effervescent new single which was first released in 1967 by Inez and Charlie Foxx and re-envisioned here, arrives with an official music video featuring Swamp and Lewis recording the track at Nashville’s Sound Emporium. // Last month, the feature-length documentary Swamp Dogg Gets His Pool Painted premiered at SXSW and received raves from The Austin Chronicle and The Hollywood Reporter who called it, “a documentary that draws its voice and aesthetic from the spirit of its subject, resulting in a tight 97 minutes that feel organic and satisfying and, as befits that subject, appealingly odd.” Rolling Stone also included Swamp Dogg’s official showcase in their Best of SXSW roundup proclaiming, “Swamp Dogg sounded bold and robust, his vigor encouraging his band to ratchet up the energy… every musician on stage was locked into an undeniable groove.” // Produced by Ryan Olson (Poliça, Gayngs) and recorded with an all-star band including Noam Pikelny, Sierra Hull, Jerry Douglas, Chris Scruggs, Billy Contreras, and Kenny Vaughan, the 12-song collection is a riotous blend of past and present, mixing the sacred and the profane in typical Swamp Dogg fashion as it blurs the lines between folk, roots, country, blues, and soul. Special guests like Margo Price, Vernon Reid, Jenny Lewis, Justin Vernon, and The Cactus Blossoms all add to the excitement, but it’s ultimately the 81-year-old Swamp Dogg’s delivery—sly and playful and full of genuine joy and ache—that steals the show. // “Believe it or not, I didn’t do anything but sing these songs the way I would have sung them if it was an R&B album. That’s just the way the music comes out of me, and it would have been unholy for me to try and imitate anybody else,” explains Swamp Dogg about the making of the album. “Black music has had so many different labels put on it over the years that sometimes I’m onstage and I don’t know what the hell it is that I’m singing,” Swamp Dogg says with a laugh. “The only thing I know how to do is be myself.” // “Swamp Dogg is one of my favorite humans on the planet… How to classify him I just don’t know. He’s a soul artist, a psychedelic artist, a protest singer, he’s a man for all seasons.” – Ann Powers // Jerry Williams Jr. was born July 12, 1942. He is generally credited under the pseudonym Swamp Dogg after 1970, is an American soul and R&B singer, musician, songwriter and record producer. Williams has been described as “one of the great cult figures of 20th century American music.” // After recording as Little Jerry and Little Jerry Williams in the 1950s and 1960s, he reinvented himself as Swamp Dogg, releasing a series of satirical, offbeat, and eccentric recordings, as well as continuing to write and produce for other musicians. He debuted his new sound on the Total Destruction To Your Mind album in 1970. In the 1980s, he helped to develop Alonzo Williams’ World Class Wreckin’ CRU, which produced Dr. Dre among others. He continues to make music, releasing Love, Loss & Autotune on Joyful Noise Recordings in 2018,[3][4] and Sorry You Couldn’t Make It in 202. // Williams was born in Portsmouth, Virginia. He made his first recording, “HTD Blues (Hardsick Troublesome Downout Blues)”, for the Mechanic record label in 1954, when he was aged 12, with his parents and uncle and backing musicians, and was regularly hired to play private parties. From 1960, he released occasional singles for a variety of labels, including the self-written “I’m The Lover Man” in 1964, which was first issued on the Southern Sound label and was then picked up by the larger Loma label, almost breaking into the national Billboard Hot 100. He also wrote successfully for other musicians, including “Big Party” for Barbara and the Browns. // As Little Jerry Williams, he had his first national chart success in 1966, when “Baby You’re My Everything”, which he co-wrote and produced, was released on the Calla label and rose to #32 on the R&B chart, again just missing the Hot 100. He released several more singles on Calla through to 1967, by now credited simply as Jerry Williams, but with little commercial success, although some of his records such as “If You Ask Me (Because I Love You)” later became staples of the Northern Soul movement in the UK. // By late 1967 he started working in A&R and other duties for the Musicor label in New York. In 1968 he co-wrote, with Charlie Foxx, Gene Pitney’s up-tempo hit, “She’s a Heartbreaker”, which Williams also claimed to have produced, saying: “I produced the motherfuck out of it… [and] Charlie Foxx put me down on the label as “vocal arranger.” What the fuck is that? When they took out full-page ads in Billboard and Cashbox, there was a picture of Charlie on one side and a picture of Gene Pitney on the other and no mention of me.” // Later in 1968 Williams began working as a producer at Atlantic Records with Jerry Wexler and Phil Walden, on artists including Patti LaBelle & the Blue Belles, though he found the administration frustrating.[5] He established a songwriting partnership with Gary Anderson, who performed as Gary U.S. Bonds, and the pair wrote the R&B chart hits “To the Other Woman (I’m the Other Woman)” by Doris Duke, and “She Didn’t Know (She Kept on Talking)” by Dee Dee Warwick. He also recorded a single, “I Got What It Takes”, in a duo with Brooks O’Dell, and released two singles under his own name on the Cotillion label, a subsidiary of Atlantic. // Swamp Dogg Williams later wrote:I became Swamp Dogg in 1970 in order to have an alter-ego and someone to occupy the body while the search party was out looking for Jerry Williams, who was mentally missing in action due to certain pressures, mal-treatments and failure to get paid royalties on over fifty single records…. Most all of the tracks included were recorded in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, and Macon, Georgia, which brings me to how the name Swamp Dogg came about. Jerry Wexler, Atlantic Records v.p. and producer/innovator second to none, was recording in the newly discovered mecca of funk Muscle Shoals, Alabama. He coined the term “Swamp Music” for this awesome funk predominately played by all white musicians accompanying the R’n’B institutions e.g., Wilson Pickett, Aretha Franklin, King Curtis… I was also using the same “swamp” players. I was tired of being a jukebox, singing all of the hits by Chuck Jackson, Ben E. King, etc., and being an R’n’B second banana. I couldn’t dance as good as Joe Tex, wasn’t pretty like Tommy Hunt, couldn’t compare vocally to Jackie Wilson and I didn’t have the sex appeal of Daffy Duck. I wanted to sing about everything and anything and not be pigeonholed by the industry. So I came up with the name Dogg because a dog can do anything, and anything a dog does never comes as a real surprise; if he sleeps on the sofa, shits on the rug, pisses on the drapes, chews up your slippers, humps your mother-in-law’s leg, jumps on your new clothes and licks your face, he’s never gotten out of character. You understand what he did, you curse while making allowances for him but your love for him never diminishes. Commencing in 1970, I sung about sex, niggers, love, rednecks, war, peace, dead flies, home wreckers, Sly Stone, my daughters, politics, revolution and blood transfusions (just to name a few), and never got out of character. Recording in Alabama and sincerely singing/writing about items that interested me, gave birth to the name Swamp Dogg. // Having adopted his moniker before Snoop Dogg was born he has claimed to be “the original D-O double G.” // In 1970 he emerged in his new Swamp Dogg persona, with two singles on Wally Roker’s Canyon label, “Mama’s Baby, Daddy’s Maybe”, again co-written with Bonds, and “Synthetic World”. He also produced the first Swamp Dogg album, Total Destruction to Your Mind. The album sleeve showed Williams sitting in his underwear on a pile of garbage. Williams’ new direction apparently followed an LSD trip, and was inspired by the radical politics of the time and by Frank Zappa’s use of satire, while showing his own expertise in, and commitment to, deep soul and R&B music. According to Allmusic: “In sheer musical terms, Swamp Dogg is pure Southern soul, anchored on tight grooves and accentuated by horns, but the Dogg is as much about message as music…” Although not a commercial success at the time, Swamp Dogg started to develop a cult following and eventually the album sold enough to achieve gold record status. Record critic Robert Christgau wrote that “Soul-seekers like myself are moderately mad for the obscure” album and has called it “legendary”. It was reissued in 2013 by Alive Naturalsound Records. // Around the same time, one of the songs Williams had co-written with Gary Bonds, “She’s All I Got”, became a top-ten R&B hit for Freddie North, and was recorded with even greater success by country star Johnny Paycheck, whose version reached #2 on the country music chart in late 1971.[7] In a later interview on NPR’s Studio 360, Williams stated he was raised on country music: “Black music didn’t start ’til 10 at night until 4 in the morning and I was in bed by then… If you strip my tracks, take away all the horns and guitar licks, what you have is a country song.” However, he also continued to write and produce deep soul songs for other musicians, including Z. Z. Hill and Irma Thomas. In 1971 in collaboration with co-producer and writer the legendary George Semper he released “Monster Walk Pt. 1 and 2” by the Rhythm ‘N’ Blues Classical Funk Band on Mankind Records label. Produced for Jerry Williams Productions, Inc.and in spite of modest sales the record once again demonstrated his entrepreneurial skill as an artist. // As Swamp Dogg, he was signed by Elektra Records for his second album, Rat On! in 1971. The sleeve showed him on the back of a giant white rat, and has frequently been ranked as one of the worst album covers of all time. Sales were relatively poor, and he joined Jane Fonda’s anti-Vietnam War Free the Army tour. His next albums Cuffed, Collared and Tagged (1972) and Gag a Maggott (recorded at the TK Studio in 1973) were released on smaller labels, though his 1974 album, Have You Heard This Story??, was issued by Island Records. In 1977 he had another minor R&B hit with “My Heart Just Can’t Stop Dancing”, credited to Swamp Dogg & the Riders of the New Funk. He continued to release albums through the 1970s and into the mid-1980s as Swamp Dogg, on various small independent labels and in a variety of styles including disco and country and maintained a healthy cult following. He also set up his own publishing and recording company, Swamp Dogg Entertainment Group (SDEG). // In 1999, “Slow Slow Disco” was sampled by Kid Rock on the track “I Got One for Ya”, sparking a revival of interest in Swamp Dogg, who began performing live gigs for the first time. Several other of his recordings were sampled, and in 2009 he released two new albums, Give Em as Little as You Can…As Often as You Have To…Or…A Tribute to Rock N Roll, and An Awful Christmas and a Lousy New Year. He also released some further singles, and a compilation album of the best of his work as both Little Jerry Williams and Swamp Dogg, It’s All Good, was released in 2009. Most of his early Swamp Dogg albums have also been reissued on CD. // Swamp Dogg released a full-length album of new songs in 2014, The White Man Made Me Do It, which Williams described as being a sort of sequel to Total Destruction To Your Mind. Shortly thereafter, Swamp Dogg teamed up with Ryan Olson from Poliça to produce the tracks for his 2018 album Love, Loss & Autotune, Justin Vernon (aka Bon Iver) fine-tuning the vocal tracks. The song also features instrumentation by Guitar Shorty. The music video for “I’ll Pretend” premiered at NPR and was later featured at Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, Spin and elsewhere. Swamp Dogg described the song as a character study about “a guy sitting in a restaurant by himself losing his fucking mind because he’s hoping his woman is gonna walk by, but she’s at a Ramada Inn somewhere fucking somebody else to death.” // In 2020, he released the album Sorry You Couldn’t Make It, a country-styled record recorded in Nashville with producer Ryan Olson and musicians including Justin Vernon, John Prine, and Jenny Lewis. More info at: http://www.theswampdogg.com]

18. Kleenex / LiLiPut – “Ain’t you”
from: First Songs / 2024 Kill Rock Stars 
[Kleenex/LiLiPUT (also referred to as LiLiPUT and First Songs) is a compilation album by Swiss punk rock band LiLiPUT. Released by Off Course Records in 1993, the album compiles the band’s entire recorded output, from their first recordings under the name Kleenex to their later material after changing their name to LiLiPUT. // also referred to as First Songs”, a 2LP set of 24 recordings. “First Songs” combines all the pre-1982 material, all 3 Kleenex singles, the first 2 LiLiPUT 7″’s and all the originally unreleased material prior to LiLiPUT’s debut LP. All 46 songs from the “LiLiPUT” release. // “You can’t dispute LiLiPUT’s status as pioneers of feminist art-punk. Along with fellow travelers like the Slits and the Raincoats, this (mostly) female Swiss group took advantage of punk’s anything-goes attitude and created jittery, spirited pop that was both in step with the times and completely singular. The early material is a riot of exuberant energy, taking stylistic cues from peers like Gang of Four and Wire– propulsive bass, skittering pop rhythms, slashing guitars– and adding distinctive overlapping vocal patterns, which are sung, shrieked, and hiccuped in three languages and made- up dadaistic slang. More than 20 years on, it still sounds fresh.” – Lisa Gidley.]

  1. Kleenex / LiLiPut – “Nice”
    from: First Songs / 2024 Kill Rock Stars 
    [Kleenex/LiLiPUT (also referred to as LiLiPUT and First Songs) is a compilation album by Swiss punk rock band LiLiPUT. Released by Off Course Records in 1993, the album compiles the band’s entire recorded output, from their first recordings under the name Kleenex to their later material after changing their name to LiLiPUT. // also referred to as First Songs”, a 2LP set of 24 recordings. “First Songs” combines all the pre-1982 material, all 3 Kleenex singles, the first 2 LiLiPUT 7″’s and all the originally unreleased material prior to LiLiPUT’s debut LP. All 46 songs from the “LiLiPUT” release. // “You can’t dispute LiLiPUT’s status as pioneers of feminist art-punk. Along with fellow travelers like the Slits and the Raincoats, this (mostly) female Swiss group took advantage of punk’s anything-goes attitude and created jittery, spirited pop that was both in step with the times and completely singular. The early material is a riot of exuberant energy, taking stylistic cues from peers like Gang of Four and Wire– propulsive bass, skittering pop rhythms, slashing guitars– and adding distinctive overlapping vocal patterns, which are sung, shrieked, and hiccuped in three languages and made- up dadaistic slang. More than 20 years on, it still sounds fresh.” – Lisa Gidley.]

11:30:30 – Underwriting

  1. Lucy Rose – “Light As Grass”
    from: This Ain’t The Way You Go Out / Communion / April 19, 2024
    [This Ain’t the Way You Go Out is the fifth studio album by English singer-songwriter Lucy Rose, released through Communion Records on 19 April 2024. // The album was written following Rose’s first pregnancy, after which she developed pregnancy-associated osteoporosis and broke eight vertebrae in her back. It was recorded over two days with Rose’s backing band and the producer Kwes. In comparison to Rose’s previous music, This Ain’t the Way You Go Out has been noted as more “energetic and joyful”. // Lucy Rose Parton[1] (born 20 June 1989) is an English singer-songwriter. Her career as a musician began in 2012 with her first studio album Like I Used To and she has released five more since, the latest of which, This Ain’t The Way You Go Out, was released in April 2024. She founded her own record label, Real Kind Records, in January 2020; the record label is a partnership with the UK record label, Communion. // Born in Camberley, Surrey, England, Rose’s musical origins began with her playing drums in her school orchestra; her songwriting started with her writing tunes on her family home’s piano. She is the youngest of three sisters. She later bought a guitar from a shop she passed on the way to school, taught herself and began writing material at around the age of sixteen.[citation needed] Rose never played her material for anyone until she left home after completing her A-levels. // At eighteen, she moved to London; instead of taking her place at University College London to study geography, she began experimenting and performing with other musicians. It was at this time when she met Jack Steadman, the frontman of Bombay Bicycle Club. After becoming friends, Steadman asked if she would like to perform vocals on a song he had written and was recording. The acoustic album Flaws came out with Steadman on lead vocals, and Rose performing backing vocals, most notably on the title track “Flaws”, as well as others on the album. She went on to perform some backing vocal duties on Bombay Bicycle Club’s third album, A Different Kind of Fix, and features in their fourth, So Long, See You Tomorrow. Rose also performs some backing vocal duties on the track This Sullen Welsh Heart by the Manic Street Preachers on their album Rewind the Film. In 2018 she provided backing vocals for Paul Weller’s fourteenth studio album True Meanings, and appeared on stage with him in 2019 for his Royal Festival Hall concert, Other Aspects. // A fan of tea, Rose began selling her own blend named “Builder Grey” (two part English Breakfast and one part Earl Grey) at her shows as a substitute for merchandise or CDs.]
  1. Lucy Rose – “This Ain’t The Way You Go Out”
    from: This Ain’t The Way You Go Out / Communion / April 19, 2024
  1. Ghost Funk Orchestra – “To The Moon!”
    from: A Trip To The Moon / Colemine Records / February 23, 2024
    [Coming off the heels of 2022’s A New Kind of Love, A Trip To The Moon sees GFO diving even deeper in the worlds of film music, exotica, and psychedelic surf rock. The aim is to create a layered and collaged listening experience with more elements than you could possibly pick out in a single listen. The guitars are fuzzy and flooded with spring reverb, and the horns are arranged in a studio big band fashion. It’s full of big compositions with garage rock attitude. Influences range everywhere from Eddie Palmieri and Esquivel to The Lively Ones, Dusty Springfield, and War. The tracks are tied together by real recorded transmissions from the Apollo moon missions. The concept for the album is a story about a woman stranded on earth by her cosmonaut partner, left to ponder his whereabouts and whether or not he’ll make it back from the cosmos alive. // Ghost Funk Orchestra is the brainchild of composer/multi-instrumentalist Seth Applebaum. What started as a one-man recording project has now evolved into a powerhouse live band. It’s a sonic kaleidoscope that defies genre specification, but draws heavy influence from the worlds of soul, psych rock, salsa, and beyond. Their unique blend of genres has attracted praise from the likes of NPR, Bandcamp, KUTX, Brooklyn Vegan, Earmilk, and more. Over the years they’ve had the honor of sharing the stage with the likes of Os Mutantes, Grace Potter, Marco Benevento, La Luz, Monophonics, The Nude Party, and The Jack Moves, as well as playing such legendary festivals as Montreal Jazz, Treefort, Telluride Jazz, Otis Mountain Get Down, and BRIC’s NYC Winter Jazz. Local NY blog Post-Trash described their sound as a ‘psych odyssey of traditional sounds delivered in a non-traditional fashion.’ Bandcamp’s Editorial Director J. Edward Keyes praised the band’s ability to ‘leave no funk-adjacent genre unexplored.’ Experimentation is the key, and unpredictability is what has been attracting folks from all corners of the globe to see what GFO pulls off next…]
  1. Mdou Moctar – “Imouhar ”
    from: Funeral for Justice / Matador / May 3, 2024
    [‘Funeral For Justice’ is the new album by Mdou Moctar. Recorded at the close of two years spent touring the globe following the release of 2021 breakout ‘Afrique Victime,’ it captures the Nigerien quartet in ferocious form. The music is louder, faster, and more wild. The guitar solos are feedback-scorched and the lyrics are passionately political. Nothing is held back or toned down. // Mdou Moctar immediately stands out as one of the most innovative artists in contemporary Saharan music. His unconventional interpretations of Tuareg guitar and have pushed him to the forefront of a crowded scene. Mdou shreds with a relentless and frenetic energy that puts his contemporaries to shame. More info at: http://www.mdoumoctar.com]
  1. The Lostines – “A Tear”
    from: Meet the Lostines/ 2024 Gar Hole Records / April 26, 2024
    [Camille Wind Weatherford on vocals, guitar; Casey Jane Reece-Kaigler on vocals, guitar, percussion; Ross Farbe on acoustic guitar, electric guitar, 12 string acoustic guitar, bass, drums, percussion; Sam Doores om drums, percussion, organ, rhodes, baritone guitar, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, piano, harmonies; Howe Pearson on bass, drums, guitar, tubular bells, harmonies; Gina Leslie on bass, harmonies; James Wallace – rhodes, piano, organ, guitar, synth, omnichord. // All songs written by The Lostines. // Co-produced by Ross Farbe, Sam Doores, and The Lostines. Recorded and mixed by Ross Farbe. Mastered by Timothy Stollenwerk at Stereophonic Mastering. Recorded in New Orleans, Louisiana at The Tigermen Den and Deslonde Studios. Fiddles recorded at Valcour Records in Eunice, Louisiana. Photography by Horatio Baltz. Album art by Adam Zeek. Special thanks to Baby Stingray & Ernest. // Guest musicians and friends in order of appearance: Kelli Jones on fiddle on After Party, Southwest Texas; Joel Savoy on fiddle on After Party, Southwest Texas; John James on lap steel on After Party; Jordan Odom on guitar on Come Back To My Arms; Casey McAllister on keys on Southwest Texas; Peter J. Bowling on viola on Frankie & Eva, Last Night; Thomas Bowling on violin on Frankie & Eva, Last Night; Sam Hollier on cello on Frankie & Eva, Last Night; Sam Gelband on vocals on Last Night. // Although recorded in the band’s hometown of New Orleans, Meet The Lostines — the full-length debut from songwriters Casey Jane Reece-Kaigler and Camille Wind Weatherford — is an album that charts its own geography. This is where the swampland meets the sock hop. Where golden-age rock & roll crosses paths with old-school country. Where timeless American roots music drops its anchor and climbs skyward, finding some balance between the earthy and the otherworldly. // At the center of that sound are the entwined voices of Casey Jane and Camille, two longtime friends whose songs explore the uncharted territory between genres. There’s rarely a melody on Meet The Lostines that the two don’t sing together, stacking their voices into lush harmonies that recall the girl groups of the 1960s. Don’t mistake Meet The Lostines for a retro project, though. It’s a modern album that exists out of time, filled with songs about heartbreak, old relationships, new beginnings, and vulnerability. // “Our songwriting process is like a therapy session,” says Camille. “We’ll show our ideas to each other, work out our harmonies, and then bring the song to our band so they can add their influences, too. When it comes to creating the full sound of the Lostines, the band — and New Orleans as a whole — has a huge influence on that.” // Before relocating to New Orleans as young adults, Camille and Casey Jane were both raised by musical families in the Pacific Northwest. “My parents taught me to play guitar, and I grew up going to fiddle camps, too,” says Casey Jane, an Oregon native whose vocal harmonies can be heard on albums across the New Orleans americana-verse. Meanwhile, Camille grew up in Portland, where her mother regularly attended a weekly jam session with several family friends. Camille began playing guitar as a teenager and eventually headed to New Orleans, meeting up with artists like Sam Doores, Riley Downing, and Pat Reedy along the way. // “New Orleans was a magnet for both of us,” says Casey Jane. As new residents of the city, the two musicians crossed paths at a campfire hosted by a mutual friend. A spark was lit as soon as they sang together, with their voices meshing together seamlessly. Inspired, they formed their own band — one that would salute their adopted hometown of New Orleans, but also reach far beyond the city’s borders for inspiration — and got to work, unveiling their sound with EPs like The Lostines and Heart of Night before turning a new page with Meet the Lostines. // Meet the Lostines is more than a full-length introduction. It’s an invitation to enter the Lostines’ world: a place where baritone guitars are coated in spring reverb, where orchestral strings swoon and sway, where Cajun fiddle solos share the spotlight with Theremin and upright piano. Many of these songs take place at night, and Meet the Lostines unfolds like a soundtrack to the wee small hours. “After the Party” takes the listener for a midnight walk along the levy overlooking the Mississippi River and the Industrial Canal, with fiddle and pedal steel guitar providing the soundtrack. “Neon Lights” looks back at an overnight drive from Los Angeles to Denver, with a bouncing chorus that’s every bit as luminous as the title suggests. “Full Moon Night” twinkles like a sky full of stars, rooted in a storyline about desire, longing, and the lure of a past relationship. // With contributions from some of New Orleans’ brightest lights, including Sam Doores (The Deslondes), Ross Farbe (Videoage), Howe Pearson and Gina Leslie (too many to count), Meet the Lostines is also the work of a community. Skyway Man camped out at the recording studio for a week, playing multiple instruments on multiple songs. K.C. Jones and Joel Savoy contributed dueling Cajun fiddles to “Southwest Texas” and “After the Party.” Jordan Odom played electric guitar on “Come Back To My Arms,” Casey McAllister played keys on “Southwest Texas,” and Ross pulled double-duty as the album’s lead guitarist and engineer in addition to mixing and co-producing the record with Sam and The Lostines. Casey Jane and Camille may have been the captains, but this was a team effort. // “We are fortunate to be surrounded by friends who are incredible musicians and songwriters, and we all influence one another,” says Casey Jane. “A lot of our bandmates are in our friends’ bands, as well, and there’s something that feels very cohesive about that, because there’s so much collaboration.” Collaboration. That’s the glue that holds Meet The Lostines together. It’s an album that bridges the gaps between genres, created by two songwriters who’re happy to build their own world. ]
  1. Noel Coward – “The Party’s Over Now”
    from: Noel Coward in New York / drg / 2003 [orig. 1957]

Marion Merritt thank you for being out Guest Producer on WMM

Marion Merritt is founder of Records With Merritt, a small, independent, minority owned business, at 1614 Westport Rd., in KCMO. More info at: http://www.recordswithmerritt.com

Next week on Wednesday, June 5, is my birthday! For this special Wednesday MidDay Medley live radio broadcast, I will share tracks from some of my favorite recordings representing different seasons of my life. I will spin influential recordings from: The Beatles, The Carpenters, Al Green, Curtis Mayfield, The B-52’s, Prince, The Ramones, David Bowie, The Velvet Underground, Talking Heads, The Smiths, The Clash, Patti Smith, LaBelle, Joni Mitchell, Iris DeMent, Mavis Staples, The Magnetic Fields, and Krystle Warren. // At 11:00, Peregrine Honig and Izzy Vivas will share details about The West 18th Street Fashion Show happening Saturday, June 8, at 7:30pm at 116 W 18th Street, KCMO. This year’s theme is Summer in Slumberland. More Information at: west18thstreetfashionshow.com

THANK YOU to our incredible KKFI Staff; Director of Development & Communications – J Kelly Dougherty, Volunteer Coordinator – Darryl Oliver, Chief Operator – Chad Brothers, KKFI Accounting & Administration – Shaina Littler

This radio station is more than the individual hosts of each individual radio show. Instead it is about a collective spirit of hundreds of hardworking people, unselfishly setting aside ego, to work for the greater good of community building and the gigantic goal of keeping our airwaves free, non-commercial, and open to all! Congratulations and thank you to all programmers & volunteers who went the extra effort to keep our station alive.

Our Script/Playlist is a “cut and paste” of information.
Sources for notes: artist’s websites, bios, wikipedia.org

Wednesday MidDay Medley in on the web:
http://www.kkfi.org,
http://www.WednesdayMidDayMedley.org,
http://www.facebook.com/WednesdayMidDayMedleyon90.1FM
https://www.soundcloud.com/wednesdaymiddaymedley
http://www.bandcamp.com/wednesdaymiddaymedley
http://www.instagram.markthomasmanning

Show #1048

WMM is Spinning Records With Marion Merritt

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

WMM is Spinning Records With Marion Merritt

Mark welcomes Marion Merritt, of Records With Merritt, who joins us as “Guest Producer” to share sonic discoveries and information from her musically-encyclopedic-brain. Marion Merritt has an empathic ability to know what music you’re seeking. For 20 years Marion has been serving as co-producer of our show. She’s our most frequent contributor to WMM. Marion grew up in Los Angeles and St. Louis and went to college in Columbia, MO. She studied art & musical engineering, and is a avid lover of classic films. She saw Talking Heads on their 1st tour at One Block West in 1978. Marion also writes about new releases as a contributor to The Pitch. With partner Ann Stewart, Marion is the proprietor of Records With Merritt, a minority owned business at 1614 Westport Rd. in Kansas City, Missouri. More info at: http://www.recordswithmerritt.com.

Marion will spin tracks from: Ana Frango Elétrico, Shabaka with Moses Sumney, Shabaka with Floating Points & Laraaji, Hermanos Gutiérrez, Phosphorescent, DIIV, Isobel Campbell, Beth Gibbons, Kamasi Washington, Fay Victor & Herbie Nichols, Gloria Coleman Quartet with Pola Roberts, Leyla McCalla, Valerie June, Swamp Dogg, Kleenex, Lucy Rose, Ghost Funk Orchestra, Mdou Moctar, and The Lostines.   

On your local radio dial 90.1 FM or
STREAMING LIVE at: kkfi.org

Show #1048

WMM Playlist from May 22, 2024

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Betse & Clarke + Danny Santell + The Swallowtails + Erin Keller & Golden Spirit Children’s Choirs

  1. “Main Title Instrumental – It’s Showtime Folks”
    from: Orig. Motion Picture Soundtrack All That Jazz / Casablanca / December 20, 1979
    [WMM’s Adopted Theme Song]
  1. The Freedom Affair – “If You Don’t Want Me”
    from: “If You Don’t Want Me” – Single / Sunflower Soul Records / May 15, 2024
    [The Freedom Affair is a 9 piece soul juggernaut from Kansas City, MO. The band formed in 2017 with a vision to write original soul music inspired by the traditions of the genre’s past with a universal message looking toward the future. Their new single “If You Don’t Want Me” features: Shon Ruffin on vocals, Seyko Groves on vocals, Paula Saunders on vocals, Cole Bales on guitar, Branden Moser on guitar, Chris Hazelton on bass, Dave Brick on drums, Pete Carroll on trumpet, Brett Jackson on tenor Sax, Pat Conway on congas, and Nick Howell on tambourine. Written, Recorded & Mixed by Chris Hazelton. Mastered by JJ Golden // With their debut album FREEDOM IS LOVE, The Freedom Affair has received critical acclaim and have established themselves as a force in the soul music scene across the states and abroad. Keep your eyes and ears open for their songs and album art featured in the series Bel-Air, an Apple commercial, a Netflix series, etc… This band is just getting started. // The Freedom Affair’s live shows have proven to be soul-stirring, transformative events moving audiences both physically and emotionally to joy. // The Freedom Affair released their debut album Freedom Is Love on September 25, 2020. from The album explores themes of love, heartache, empowerment, and togetherness through a varying landscape of hard-hitting funk, luscious soul, and everything in between. The album was recorded and produced by Chris Hazelton, utilizing the best of vintage and new recording techno-logies to create an authentic experience, befitting of a soul record that would have been relevant 50 years ago as much as it will be 50 years from now. For the debut record The Freedom Affair was: Misha Roberts on vocals; Paula Saunders on vocals; Seyko Groves on vocals; Cole Bales on guitar, sitar (Track 3); Branden Moser on guitar; Chris Hazelton on bass guitar, organ (Tracks 1, 2, 9, & 10), Tambourine (Track 1), Glockenspiel (Track 3), & Chimes (Track 4); Dave Brick on drums; Pete Carroll on trumpet; Brett Jackson on tenor sax, baritone sax (Tracks 1 & 5), & tambourine (Tracks 5, 6, & 8). Additional Musicians: Pat Conway on Congas (Tracks 1, 3, & 6), Alyssa Bell on viola (Tracks 3, 4, & 7), Elizabeth Codd on violin (Tracks 3 & 4), Matt Bennett on violin (Tracks 3 & 7), John Wickersham on timpani (Track 4), Pamela Baskin-Watson on piano (Track 10), Nick Howell on tambourine (Track 10), The Freedom Family Choir (Track 10): Misha Roberts, Erica Hazelton, Seyko Groves, Paula Saunders, Jordyn Saunders, Cole Bales, and Chris Hazelton. All Horn & String Arrangements by Chris Hazelton except: “Heartaches Don’t Come Easy” and “Give A Little Love” by Pete Carroll & Brett Jackson “Don’t Shoot” by Chris Hazelton & Allyssa Bell. Produced, Recorded, & Mixed by Chris Hazelton. Assistant Produced by Dave Brick. Rhythm Section on Track 10 recorded by Chad Meise. Mastered by JJ Golden. Cover Artwork by Matthew “Mo” Manley. Front cover photograph of civil rights protesters in Kansas City, MO (April 9th, 1968). The Freedom Affair and their track “Rise Up” were selected to be part of Colemine Records 3xLP box set, “Soul Slabs Vol. 2” a Record Store Day Exclusive, released April 13, 2019. Colemine writes: “The Freedom Affair is a freight train of KC soul! Dirty, funky drums, gritty horns, and the combined vocals of Misha Roberts, Seyko Groves, and Paula Saunders to put this band over the top. Politically charged soul music for the dancefloor!”]

[The Freedom Affair play The Smoky Hill River Festival, Friday, June 14, and June 15, 2024 at Oakdale Park in Salina, Kansas with Monophonics and more.]

  1. Ivory Blue – “Bad Dreams”
    from: “Bad Dreams” – Single / IVORY BLUE / June 7, 2024
    [IVORY BLUE released the single “Batter Up” on April 22, 2024. IVORY BLUE released the single “Flashback” on March 15, 2023 // IVORY BLUE released the single “Howl” on February 16, 2024. // IVORY BLUE released their second full length album, STARLIT LOVE CHILD, on November 17, 2023. The 10-track album was in the top five of Wednesday MidDay Medley’s 120 Best Recordings of 2023, and in the “Best of” lists at 90.9 The Bridge and other radio stations around the world. For STARLIT LOVE CHILD, IVORY BLUE served as songwriter, producer, and vocalist. // On October 27, 2023 IVORY BLUE released the sIngle “Ghost of Life.” This single followed IVORY’s previous releases,”In A World Like This” from September 22, 2023, ”The Best of Life” from August 4, 2023 and “Control” from May 26, 2023. IVORY released the single “All Outta Love” on February 24, 2023. IVORY BLUE released their full length debut album COMPOUND LOVE on February 25, 2022. COMPOUND LOVE was in the Top Ten of WMM’s 120 Best recordings of 2022. For COMPOUND LOVE, IVORY BLUE served as songwriter, producer, vocalist and played all instruments with the exception of: Lester Estelle on drums, Klaartje Van Lue on piano, Craig Kew on bass, Lennon Bone on drums, and Marco Pascolini on pedal steel guitar. Nick Poortman served in mixing, with Kurt Festge who also served in mixing & Mastering. IVORY BLUE’s debut EP, Ready Get Set was released in June 2015. While the EP helped spread the word and give IVORY BLUE attention from regional radio and TV stations, a big break would come in 2017. In 2017 Ivory was among 1800 artists/bands that competed in neXt2Rock. Ivory won local & regional challenges and advanced to nationals in Los Angeles to win the top prize. // IVORY BLUE has played Crossroads Music Festival, The Middle of the Map Festival, The Westport Roots Festival, the KCPT Screening of “Real Boy” at The Kansas City Public Library, and Kauffman Stadium. // Ivory Blue was born in 1986 in Peoria Illinois, as Devin James Miclettet. Ivory’s birth mother put them up for adoption at the age of four. Ivory speaks about how it was difficult to find trust in people offering their home to someone denied it for so long, Ivory lived with eight different families, before running away at 15. // Ivory has talked with us about how in their life they have turned to music to express pain. Ivory spent most of their childhood looking for a family. In 2010 Klaartje Van Lue saw Ivory performing in a YouTube video and contacted them, flying Ivory to Kansas City, and adopting Ivory into the Van Lue family. During the past 10 years Ivory came out as “Non-Binary Transgender”. // As a multi-instrumentalist, Ivory began refining their performance style, using digital looping pedals to stack harmonies and guitar parts live on stage, giving their solo shows the feel of a full band. In 2011, Ivory settled in Kansas City, MO and quickly began attracting an intense regional following for their strong vocals and incisive, deeply personal lyrics. // By 2013, IVORY BLUE was playing regularly in and around Kansas City and the first EP ‘Ready Get Set’ was released. in 2015. IVORY BLUE released the video of “Family Table” directed by Mikal Shapiro, on August 21, 2021 and the audio track was released on September 7, 2021. IVORY BLUE released the single “Good Changes” on Oct 26, 2021. Ivory Blue released the singles: “Heavy,” “Bad Weather,” “It Must Have Been Me,” “Compound Love,” and “The Start” on December 14, 2021. IVORY BLUE released their debut album COMPOUND LOVE on February 25, 2022. IVORY BLUE released the single “Red Light” on July 29, 2022. IVORY BLUE released the single “Starlit Love Child” on October 28, 2022. IVORY BLUE released the single “All Outta Love” on February 24, 2023. More info at: https://ivorybluemusic.com%5D

[IVORY BLUE plays Art On The Side Festival, 118 N Main Street, LIBERTY, MO on June 1, 2024]

[IVORY BLUE plays Arts In The Park Festival, 1002 Clark Ferguson Dr, NKC, MO, June 7, 2024.]

[IVORY BLUE plays Boulevardia, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO on Saturday, June 15, 2024.]

[IVORY BLUE travels to Europe, June 16 – June 30 and has a sold-out show in Belgium on June 21.]

  1. Lava Dreams – “Driver”
    from: “Driver” – Single / Lava Dreams / May 24th, 2024
    [Lava Dreams releases their first new music of the year – a single titled “DRIVER.” The alternative pop anthem – produced by Spencer Hoad and written by Lava Dreams – brandishes hard-hitting drums, funky bass lines, and powerful vocals. Fans are being encouraged to pre-save the song on their preferred streaming platform, and the pre-save link can be found at LavaDreamsMusic.com. That same day of May 24th, Lava Dreams is giving a show at miniBar to celebrate the release – complete with performances from them and their band, as well as: Moon 17, Malek Azrael & the Vibes, and Danny Santell. Well-loved Kansas City emcee Flare tha Rebel will host the event, which is 21 and up. Tickets can be purchased through MiniBarKC.com or at the door, night-of. Doors open at 7 and music starts at 8:00pm.]

[Lava Dreams plays Minibar, Fri, May 24 at 8:00 pm w/ Danny Santell, Malek Azrael & The Vibes.]

  1. The Swallowtails – “Cocoon”
    from: LUCKY PENNY EP / The Swallowtails / February 20, 2024
    [The independent acoustic band, experimenting in the rock/pop genres while performing on what are traditionally folk/classical instruments, enter a new era having produced the entirety of this project themselves, with the songwriting matter touching on life’s big changes, challenges, and the realizations that time will heal. // “Since becoming a duo, it was time for us to reinvent our sound again. The songwriting on this EP is split between Rachel and myself, and this is Rachel’s debut release as a writer and singer. We spent all of January 2024 finishing the arrangements, recording and mixing the mini-record. It was a much needed release of energy for both of us, and we are definitely looking forward to adding these songs into our live sets and performing new material.”– Miki P, songwriter, singer and musician in The Swallowtails. // Est. in 2018, The Swallowtails are a Kansas City based musical duo comprised of musicians Miki P on guitar/vocals and Rachel Lovelace on bassoon/vocals. Their vision is to write honest, heartfelt songs that feel like you’re coming home to an old friend. As recording and performance artists, they have been showcased throughout Kansas City, performing at the Folly Theatre, Boulevardia Music Festival, The Kansas City Public Library as part of the 2023 Art in the Loop: Celebrate project, and most recently at Green Guitar Folk House opening for The Wildwoods. Their songwriting was awarded Best Song by a KC Band in 2023 by the Pitch Magazine for their tune “Take it Slow.” // Live video’s will be released on The Swallowtails YouTube page in support of the EP, the live session was filmed at West Bottoms Whiskey Co. // Swallowtails will be featuring the new EP at the Folk Alliance International Conference February 21st-25th. Both Miki & Rachel have earned scholarships to attend the conference. // Swallowtails embark on their 4th year entering NPR’s Tiny Desk Contest featuring a song off the EP, called “I’m on Fire” posted to NPR’s official contest site. // The Swallowtails have recently been approved as part of KCAIC Touring Artists Roster, through the Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission. // On May 22, 2023 The Swallowtails released their 7-track EP THE WORLD STILL SPINS from Rachel Lovelace on bassoon, Adee Dancy on cello & vocals, and Miki P on guitar & lead vocals. Miki P is a self-taught musician/multi-instrumentalist & songwriter driving the Swallowtails into a creative collaboration like any other. Miki P was born in Kansas City, KS. Miki P started playing guitar in middle school. She taught herself to play the drums, while listening to Mitch Mitchell, Keith Moon and Ringo Starr. Miki P performed “She Loves You” at her 7th grade talent show. In 9th grade she joined a teen-band called American Slim as drummer & vocalist, and she wrote songs for their full-length album Irreplaceable released in 2017, followed by a single “Queen of Hearts” released April 11, 2018. American Slim played Middle of the Map Fest, Crossroads Music Fest, Kauffman Stadium, Arrowhead Stadium, and The Nelson Atkins Museum of Art before officially ending in 2018. At 21, Miki P began work on her debut solo-record, DOME OF SWALLOWS, that was released August 2, 2018. She then formed Miki P and the Swallowtails who released their first EP, Swallowtail in 2019, In 2021 Miki P released the 6-song EP, DON’T LOSE HOPE, created in covid isolation, in Miki P’s home space. Sitting & working from Miki’s computer, she composed and recorded 80% of the EP, working through the music like a journal entry, creating each song from her internal hurricane of emotions. All songs written, recorded, played, & mixed by Miki P. Recorded & Mixed with Emma Klien & Jake Hilger. Mastered by Joel Nanos. Miki P released her single “Your Love” on June 24, 2022. Miki P’s released the single “Peter Parker!” on March 18, 2022. // More info at: http://www.mikipmusic.com]

[The Swallowtails play Manor Fest 6 on Friday, May 24, at 6:30 PM at Flagship Books, 600 Ohio Ave., KCK in Strawberry Hill with Grady Philip Drugg, and Dalima Kapten]

[The Swallowtails play Boulevardia, on Sat, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO.]

[The Swallowtails play Lemonade Park, 1628 Wyoming Street, KCMO on Saturday, June 29 at 7:00pm with West End Junction, and Kirstie Lynn & Galen Clark.]

10:17 – Interview with The Swallowtails

Miki P was born in Kansas City, KS. And started playing guitar in middle school. She taught herself to play the drums, while listening to Mitch Mitchell, Keith Moon and Ringo Starr. In 9th grade she joined a teen-band called American Slim as drummer & vocalist, and she wrote songs for their full-length album Irreplaceable released in 2017, followed by a single “Queen of Hearts” released April 11, 2018. // At 21, Miki P began work on her debut solo-record, DOME OF SWALLOWS, that was released August 2, 2018. She then formed Miki P and the Swallowtails who released their first EP, Swallowtail in 2019.

Rachel Lovelace attended the Douglas Anderson School of the Arts and moved from Jacksonville Florida to Kansas City in 2015 to study at UMKC and UMKC Conservatory of Music in Jazz Studies/Performance. Rachel has worked at Kansas City Young Audiences, loves rock climbing, has a dog named Peanut. and has been a part of the Swallowtails from the beginning.

The Swallowtails, just recently released their new EP, LUCKY PENNY on Feb. 20, 2024.

The Swallowtails play Manor Fest 6 on Friday, May 24, at 6:30 PM at Flagship Books, 600 Ohio Ave., KCK in Strawberry Hill with Grady Philip Drugg, and Dalima Kapten.

The Swallowtails play Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Boulevard, KCMO.

The Swallowtails play Lemonade Park, 1628 Wyoming Street, KCMO on Saturday, June 29 at 7:00pm with West End Junction, and Kirstie Lynn & Galen Clark.

Miki P. and Rachel Lovelace, Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley.

Formed in 2018, The Swallowtails are a KC based musical duo comprised of musicians Miki P on guitar & vocals and Rachel Lovelace on bassoon & vocals.

“Since becoming a duo, it was time for us to reinvent our sound again. The songwriting on this EP is split between Rachel and myself, and this is Rachel’s debut release as a writer and singer.

We spent all of January 2024 finishing the arrangements, recording and mixing the mini-record. It was a much needed release of energy for both of us, and we are definitely looking forward to adding these songs into our live sets and performing new material.” – Miki P, songwriter, singer and musician in The Swallowtails.

10:22

6. The Swallowtails – “Who’s Gonna Be There” (LIVE) 
 originally released: “Who’s Gonna Be There” – Single / The Swallowtails / March 20, 2023

10:17 – More Interview with The Swallowtails

Miki P. and Rachel Lovelace, Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley.

Shows:
The Swallowtails play Manor Fest 6 on Friday, May 24, at 6:30 PM at Flagship Books, 600 Ohio Ave., KCK in Strawberry Hill with Grady Philip Drugg, and Dalima Kapten.

The Swallowtails play Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center.

The Swallowtails play Lemonade Park, 1628 Wyoming Street, KCMO on Saturday, June 29 at 7:00pm with West End Junction, and Kirstie Lynn & Galen Clark.

More Bio:
Est. in 2018, The Swallowtails are a Kansas City based musical duo comprised of musicians Miki P on guitar/vocals and Rachel Lovelace on bassoon/vocals. Their vision is to write honest, heartfelt songs that feel like you’re coming home to an old friend. As recording and performance artists, they have been showcased throughout Kansas City, performing at the Folly Theatre, Boulevardia Music Festival, The Kansas City Public Library as part of the 2023 Art in the Loop: Celebrate project, and most recently at Green Guitar Folk House opening for The Wildwoods. Their songwriting was awarded Best Song by a KC Band in 2023 by the Pitch Magazine for their tune “Take it Slow.” // Live video’s will be released on The Swallowtails YouTube page in support of the EP, the live session was filmed at West Bottoms Whiskey Co. //

Swallowtails featured their new EP at the Folk Alliance International Conference February 21st-25th. Both Miki & Rachel have earned scholarships to attend the conference. /

Swallowtails embarked on their 4th year entering NPR’s Tiny Desk Contest featuring a song off the EP, called “I’m on Fire” posted to NPR’s official contest site.

The Swallowtails have recently been approved as part of KCAIC Touring Artists Roster, through the Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission.

On May 22, 2023 The Swallowtails released their 7-track EP THE WORLD STILL SPINS was recorded, mixed, & mastered at Element Recording Studio by Joel Nanos, with Miki P on drums, guitars, & vocals; Adee Dancy on cello & vocals; Rachel Lovelace on bassoon; with John O’Keefe on bass. Each member is an integral part of the Kansas City music scene, writing, arranging, performing, and collaborating original music for their own groups and several other projects in the metro.

On March 30, 2022, The Swallowtails released the single, “Who’s Gonna Be There”.

Miki P is a self-taught musician/multi-instrumentalist & songwriter driving the Swallowtails into a creative collaboration like any other. Miki P was born in Kansas City, KS. Miki P started playing guitar in middle school. She taught herself to play the drums, while listening to Mitch Mitchell, Keith Moon and Ringo Starr. Miki P performed “She Loves You” at her 7th grade talent show. In 9th grade she joined a teen-band called American Slim as drummer & vocalist, and she wrote songs for their full-length album Irreplaceable released in 2017, followed by a single “Queen of Hearts” released April 11, 2018. // At 21, Miki P began work on her debut solo-record, DOME OF SWALLOWS, that was released August 2, 2018. She then formed Miki P and the Swallowtails who released their first EP, Swallowtail in 2019, In 2021 Miki P released the 6-song EP, DON’T LOSE HOPE, created in covid isolation, in Miki P’s home space. Sitting & working from Miki’s computer, she composed and recorded 80% of the EP, working through the music like a journal entry, creating each song from her internal hurricane of emotions. All songs written, recorded, played, & mixed by Miki P. Recorded & Mixed with Emma Klien & Jake Hilger. Mastered by Joel Nanos. Miki P released her single “Your Love” on June 24, 2022. Miki P’s released the single “Peter Parker!” on March 18, 2022. An inspired musician, Miki has a rare capability to not only be able to share her life experiences and lessons learned through her voice & lyrics, but also through every instrument she performs on. Always a student, she both performs and records on guitar, drums, percussion, piano, bass and ukulele. Miki P is a songwriter with a unique ability to command any room she performs in. A natural talent paired alongside a drive to connect with others, Miki is a touring musician carrying on elements of rock & pop. Settled with a message resonating loud and clear to people from all walks of life through her imaginative, fun, and confessionally honest songwriting, Miki sings of love in all its forms.// More info at: http://www.mikipmusic.com]

Miki P, and Rachel Lovelace, Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley.

The Swallowtails play Manor Fest 6 on Friday, May 24, at 6:30 PM at Flagship Books, 600 Ohio Ave., KCK in Strawberry Hill with Grady Philip Drugg, and Dalima Kapten.

The Swallowtails play Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Boulevard, KCMO.

The Swallowtails play Lemonade Park, 1628 Wyoming Street, KCMO on Saturday, June 29 at 7:00pm with West End Junction, and Kirstie Lynn & Galen Clark.

More info at: http://www.the swallowtails.com

10:30 – Underwriting

  1. Joni Mitchell – “God Must Be A Boogie Man”
    from: Mingus / Asylum / June 13, 1979
    [Mingus is the tenth studio album by Canadian musician Joni Mitchell. It was released on June 13, 1979, and was her last studio album for Asylum Records. The album is a collaboration between Mitchell and Charles Mingus. It was recorded in the months before and after Mingus’ death in January 1979 and is wholly dedicated to him. The album is one of Mitchell’s most experimental and jazz-centric works. Mingus originally wrote six compositions (entitled “Joni I-VI”) for Mitchell to write lyrics for; three of these pieces were included on the album. Two other tracks written exclusively by Mitchell are included, alongside a new version of Mingus’ standard “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat”, featuring lyrics written by Mitchell. In addition to these, five spoken word tracks (denoted as “raps”) are dispersed throughout the album. // Mitchell is backed on the album by Jaco Pastorius (who had also contributed to Mitchell’s two previous albums) on fretless bass, Wayne Shorter on saxophone, Herbie Hancock on electric piano, Peter Erskine on drums and Don Alias on percussion. Mingus received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics and peaked at number 17 in the US. “The Dry Cleaner from Des Moines” was released as a single to promote the album, but did not chart. Mitchell would tour to promote the album through 1979–80; performances from these concerts would be documented on the live album Shadows and Light // Joni Mitchell wrote: “The real difficulty for me [in writing this song – Ed] was that the only thing I can believe is what happened to me firsthand, what I see and feel with my own eyes. I had a block for three months. It’s hard for me to take someone else story and tell only his story in a song. Charlie [Mingus – Ed] assailed me with historical information about Lester Young [in whose memory “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat” was written – Ed] and his family background, concerning his early playing days. He used to tap dance in his family band with his father and mother. He was married to a white woman, traveling through the South in a time when that was just taboo. So I had all these details, but I still couldn’t, with any conscience, simply write a historical song. The something very magical happened. One night Don Alias and I were on the subway, and we got off, I don’t know why, two stops early. We came up into this cloud of steam coming out of a New York manhole. Two blocks ahead of us, under these orangeish New York lights we see a crowd gathered. So we head toward the crowd. It’s a group of black men surrounding two small black boys. It’s about midnight, and the two boys are dancing this very robotlike mime dance. Immediately I’m thinking about Lester Young. They were dancing under one of those cloth awnings that goes out to the curb of a bar. I look up – and the name of the bar is the Pork Pie Hat and there were big blown up pictures of Lester Young all around the place. It was wild. So that became the last verse of the song. In my mind, that filled in a piece of the puzzle. I had the past and the present, and the two boys represented the future. To me the song then had a life of its own.”]

[Erin Keller presents The Golden Spirit Fundraising Event, a performance of critically acclaimed Joni Mitchell album “Mingus,” with Patrick Ketter on saxophone, Angela Ward on keyboards, Adam Schlozman on guitar, Matt Leifer on drums, and Forest Stewart on bass, on Saturday, May 25, at 7:00pm, at Unity Temple on the Plaza, 707 West 47th, St., KCMO. Info at: http://www.eventbrite.com/…/golden-spirit-fundraising…%5D

10:37 – Interview with Erin Keller

Erin Keller has performed in the Grammy Award–winning KC Chorale for 16 years, KC Civic Opera, New Ear, OwenCox Dance Group, all the while doing solo & collaborative projects with top musicians. Seven years ago, Erin was diagnosed with Stage 4 colon cancer. She has been on chemo since her diagnosis, constantly fighting all the symptoms that come with being on chemo. On January 26, 2024 Erin released her new recording, SONGS FOR TIMES LIKE THESE, with the James Ward Band. Recently Erin Keller announced the creation of a new nonprofit, Golden Spirit Children’s Choirs, a new after-school program for children in KCMO Public Schools that focuses on social emotional, music, and poetry learning objectives. You can learn more at: http://www.goldenspiritsings.org. Erin Keller presents The Golden Spirit Fundraising Event, a performance of critically acclaimed Joni Mitchell album “Mingus,” with Patrick Ketter on saxophone, Angela Ward on keyboards, Adam Schlozman on guitar, Matt Leifer on drums, and Forest Stewart on bass, on Saturday, May 25, at 7:00pm, at Unity Temple on the Plaza, 707 West 47th, St., KCMO. Info at: http://www.eventbrite.com/…/golden-spirit-fundraising…

Erin Keller thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

We just heard, “God Must Be A Boogie Man” from Joni Mitchell’s tenth studio album MINGUS released June 13, 1979. MIGUS is a collaboration between Mitchell and Charles Mingus. It was recorded in the months before and after Mingus’ death in January 1979 and is wholly dedicated to him. The album is one of Mitchell’s most experimental and jazz-centric works. Mingus originally wrote six compositions (entitled “Joni I-VI”) for Mitchell to write lyrics for; three of these pieces were included on the album.

Mitchell is backed on the album by Jaco Pastorius (who had also contributed to Mitchell’s two previous albums) on fretless bass, Wayne Shorter on saxophone, Herbie Hancock on electric piano, Peter Erskine on drums and Don Alias on percussion.

Erin Keller presents The Golden Spirit Fundraising Event, a performance of critically acclaimed Joni Mitchell album “Mingus,” with Patrick Ketter on saxophone, Angela Ward on keyboards, Adam Schlozman on guitar, Matt Leifer on drums, and Forest Stewart on bass, on Saturday, May 25, at 7:00pm, at Unity Temple on the Plaza, 707 West 47th, St., KCMO. Info at: http://www.eventbrite.com/…/golden-spirit-fundraising…


Recently Erin Keller announced the creation of a new nonprofit, Golden Spirit Children’s Choirs, a new after-school program for children in KCMO Public Schools that focuses on social emotional, music, and poetry learning objectives. You can learn more at: http://www.goldenspiritsings.org.

Erin Keller has performed in the Grammy Award–winning KC Chorale for 16 years, KC Civic Opera, New Ear, OwenCox Dance Group, the band Blackout Gorgeous, the folk/free improvisational ensemble, Prometheus Io, a West African High Life Ensemble, and the Balkan brass band, Gora Gora Orkestar, all the while doing solo & collaborative projects performing jazz standards & improvisation works with top musicians in KC & Denver. Erin’s voice is born out of an uncommon musical perspective, with a huge range of not only pitch, but also in execution of style and expression. Six and a half years ago, Erin was diagnosed with Stage 4 colon cancer. She has been on chemo since her diagnosis, constantly fighting all the symptoms that come with being on chemo. During the Covid pandemic, Erin worked to create safe outdoor concerts for local performers & audiences. Since then, she has worked on multiple music projects including the upcoming release of her new recording, SONGS FOR TIMES LIKE THESE, with the James Ward Band doing original songs written & produced by Erin Keller and recorded by Chad Meise. Erin Keller & the James Ward Band played an Album Release Dinner Matinee Show, Friday, January 26, 2024, at 6:00pm, at The Ship, 1221 Union Avenue, KCMO.

Songs For Times Like These features Erin Keller on vocals, with the James Ward Band

James Ward on electric bass,
Jaylen Ward on drums & cymbals,
Angela Ward on keyboard,

Along with Chad Meise on electric guitar.
Recorded & mixed by Chad Meise. Mastered by Collin Jordan.
Artwork by David Ford. Photos & Graphics by Kayla Haskins.

Erin Keller & the James Ward Band play an Album Release Dinner Matinee, Fri, Jan. 26, at 6:00pm, at The Ship, 1221 Union Avenue, KCMO. More info at: http://www.theshipkc.com

Erin Keller and The JWB latest album “Songs for Times Like These” is political, funny, groovy, and thought-provoking. If you feel like the world is making you crazy, you might feel very seen and heard at this show! The songs are about humanity coming together in unity and love to make the world a better place. The JWB featuring James, Angela, and Jaylen Ward always lay down a funky groove you can dance and/or relax to. It will be a very special night!

How do you choose the songs for the record?

Six and a half years ago, Erin was diagnosed with Stage 4 colon cancer. She has been on chemo since her diagnosis, constantly fighting all the symptoms that come with being on chemo.

During the Covid pandemic, Erin worked to create safe outdoor concerts for local performers & audiences. Erin organizing shows for Raj Ma Hall and World Culture KC, a COVID SAFE outdoor series featuring world class musicians from right here in KC.

More Bio:

Kansas City based vocalist Erin Keller is originally from Waukee, Iowa. She was born in August, in 1980. Erin has been singing on a professional level for 30 years. Erin sang with the internationally competitive Des Moines Children’s Choir for 5 years, and 3 years in All-State choir in high school, which helped her earn a voice performance degree from the Conservatory of Music at the University of Missouri in Kansas City, in 2002.

UMKC Conservatory of Music brought Erin to Kansas City, where she made friends and built collaborations with KC Civic Opera, KC Choral, Own Cox Dance Ensemble…

…but then Erin decided to get her Masters Degree and she left KC for Boulder, Colorado The University of Colorado and then later Denver where she worked in public schools.

After Colorado, Erin returned to KC. Erin performs with the Grammy-Award winning Kansas City Chorale. Erin has also worked as a featured soloist with Owen Cox Dance Ensemble, New Ear, KC jazz musicians, the big band at University of Colorado, a West African Highlife Ensemble, the Balkan brass band Gora Gora Orkestar.

Erin also has experience writing her own music, singing in rock, folk, and free improv settings and she more recently earned a Master’s in Music Education from the University of Colorado at Boulder. In Colorado she worked for two years in public schools teaching music and moved back to KC to continue her career as musician and educator.

In April 2016 Erin released her solo album, “Distracted,” and has been playing live shows while also being upfront and honest about her recent cancer diagnosis where she has received multiple rounds of chemo treatments.

Distracted was also recorded with Chad Meise.

Immediately after the album was released Erin was diagnosed with liver cancer and began treatments, while going through a divorce, and moving to a new home.

Erin Keller thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

Erin Keller presents The Golden Spirit Fundraising Event, a performance of critically acclaimed Joni Mitchell album “Mingus,” with Patrick Ketter on saxophone, Angela Ward on keyboards, Adam Schlozman on guitar, Matt Leifer on drums, and Forest Stewart on bass, on Saturday, May 25, at 7:00pm, at Unity Temple on the Plaza, 707 West 47th, St., KCMO. Info at: http://www.eventbrite.com/…/golden-spirit-fundraising…

10:50

  1. Erin Keller & The James Ward Band – “You Can Feel It In The Air”
    from: Songs For Times Like These / Erin Keller / January 26, 2024
    [Erin Keller on vocals, James Ward on electric bass, Jaylen Ward on drums & cymbals, Angela Ward on keyboard, Chad Meise on electric guitar. Recorded & mixed by Chad Meise. Mastered by Collin Jordan. Artwork by David Ford. Photos & Graphic design by Kayla Haskins. // On May 9, 2016 Erin Keller released her debut solo album, DISTRACTED. // Erin Keller is originally from Waukee, Iowa. She was born in 1980. Erin has been singing on a professional level for 30 years. Erin sang with the internationally competitive Des Moines Children’s Choir for 5 years, and 3 years in All-State choir in high school, which helped her earn a voice performance degree from the Conservatory of Music at the University of Missouri in Kansas City, in 2002. Erin peforms with the Grammy-Award winning Kansas City Chorale. Erin has also worked as a featured soloist with Owen Cox Dance Ensemble, New Ear, KC jazz musicians, the big band at University of Colorado, a West African Highlife Ensemble, the Balkan brass band Gora Gora Orkestar. Erin also has experience writing her own music, singing in rock, folk, and free improv settings and she more recently earned a Master’s in Music Education from the University of Colorado at Boulder. In Colorado she worked for two years in public schools teaching music and moved back to KC to continue her career as musician and educator.]

[Erin Keller presents The Golden Spirit Fundraising Event, a performance of critically acclaimed Joni Mitchell album “Mingus,” with Patrick Ketter on saxophone, Angela Ward on keyboards, Adam Schlozman on guitar, Matt Leifer on drums, and Forest Stewart on bass, Saturday, May 25, at 7:00pm, at Unity Temple on the Plaza, 707 W. 47th, KCMO. http://www.eventbrite.com/…/golden-spirit-fundraising…%5D

  1. Charlie Parr – “Little Sun”
    from: Little Sun / Smithsonian Folkways / March 22, 2024
    [The eighteenth album from prolific Minnesota-based singer, songwriter and guitarist Charlie Parr. Of the new track “Boombox,” Parr reflects, “In this neighborhood, music is eternal and transcendent and surrounds us at all times, whether we’re listening or not. And it affects each of us differently, and that’s a gift. Listening to music can be interactive, even if you’re alone. I want to listen intentionally.” // Notably Parr’s first ever album to not be recorded entirely live, Little Sun was produced by close friend and collaborator Tucker Martine (Sufjan Stevens, The Decemberists, My Morning Jacket) in Portland, OR during the worst snowstorm the city had seen in decades. Across these eight tracks, Parr offers a clarifying work that reflects on the world and people around him. In addition to Parr (vocals, guitar, harmonica), the album features highly acclaimed guitarist Marisa Anderson as well as background vocals from Anna Tivel along with Andrew Borger (drums, percussion), Asher Fulero (piano, Hammond, keys) and Victor Krummenacher (electric bass, upright bass, bass VI). // Reflecting on the project, Parr shares, “Up until this very album, my recordings have always been done live, with few if any overdubs and nearly always the first take—leave all the mistakes, missed lyrics, extraneous noise, and whatever else might happen there for the ages. Most records have been recorded in roughly the time that it took to play the songs. And that’s been fine, actually. Here’s a new way for me, though: here’s an album that was recorded live but in collaboration with producer Tucker Martine, who’s become a friend and trusted musical ally. You’ll hear what happened, so I don’t need to describe it to you, but I’m very grateful for the opportunity to work with this very talented group of musicians.” // Charlie Parr has been on the road supporting his new album song March 2 and has already play over 35 shows in 35 cities]

[Charlie Parr plays recordBar, 1520 Grand Blvd, KCMO, on Saturday, May 25 at 7:00 pm with Betse & Clarke opening. More info at: http://www.therecordbar.com]

11:00 – Station ID

  1. Betse Ellis – “Don’t You Want To Go
    from: Don’t You Want To Go / Free Dirt / April 21, 2009
    [Producer, and arranged by Betse Ellis. Recorded & Mixed by, Producer – Mike West. // Originally from Fayetteville, Arkansas, Betse Ellis is one of the founding members of one of Kansas City’s treasured bands The Wilders, an acoustic honky-tonk band, that toured nationally and internationally for 15 years, and released 10 albums. In 2011 the band ended. // Renowned fiddler Betse Ellis, a founding member of “hillbilly riot” band The Wilders, is sure to impress you with her musical versatility on her debut solo album, Don’t You Want to Go. Her unique approach to American traditional music is presented in a host of different musical styles, ranging from stunning tributes to Ozark elders in fiddle tunes and song (“Bear Creek Sally Goodin’”), electrifying vocals on blues standards (“Looking the World Over”), original high energy old-time fiddle tunes (“Run!”), and epic, lushly orchestrated original songs with string sections arranged and performed by Ellis herself (“Another Night Gone,” “Don’t You Want to Go”). In the move from band member to band leader, Ellis confirms that she is indeed one of the most multi-talented musicians on the old-time & alt.country music scenes. // One if the side projects of The Wilders was a band called The Whittlers, made of up of Phil Wade and Tom Livesay who recorded 4 full-length albums from 2000 to 2004 while they worked together at the Kansas City Art Institute. The Whitlers were the first to record the song “Another Night Gone,” written by Betse Ellis, and released on their final album, “Nobody’s Happy” from 2004, with Tom on vocals, Ike Sheldon on piano, Phil Wade on guitar. The track was recorded as a surprise for Betse.]

[Betse & Clarke play recordBar, 1520 Grand Blvd, KCMO, on Saturday, May 25 at 7:00 pm opening for Charlie Parr. More info at: http://www.betseandclarke.com]

11:04 – Interview with Betse Ellis & Clarke Wyatt

There is hardly anything more iconic in American Folk music than the fiddle and banjo. A sharp contrast in sound, construction and heritage, yet these two instruments seem like the perfect pair. This is where Betse Ellis and Clarke Wyatt began their musical story.

This duo from the heartland (Kansas City, Missouri) has its roots in Ozark old time music, honoring traditional songs and tunes that resonate with human experience. However, if you ever saw or listened to The Wilders, then you know that Betse is also a force to be reckoned with, stomping her boots and pushing her fiddle beyond old country into the realms of punk, honky tonk, and beyond. Her singing has power, from hollering to pathos as called for by the song.

Clarke meets her out there in the void, beyond musical boundaries and categories with a background in jazz piano, guitar, bass, drums, and banjo. It’s rare to find a duo that you can take with you to meet your grandmother Sunday morning at church after staying up all night with them Saturday night getting rowdy on the other side of town. Betse Ellis and Clarke fit that bill.

A new chapter in their musical exploration is emerging, featuring Clarke on electric guitar, and Betse taking the fiddle to new sonic scenes. More emphasis on original material and improvisational routes invites you to come along on a new adventure.
Betse & Clarke play recordBar, 1520 Grand Blvd, KCMO, on Saturday, May 25 at 7:00 pm opening for Charlie Parr. More info at: http://www.betseandclarke.com

Betse Ellis and Clarke Wyatt thanks for being with us in WMM

We just heard, “Don’t You Want to Go” from album of same title, Betse’s first solo album, available everywhere.

New direction in our music

Personal history with Charlie Parr (Betse toured with him twice and we have both spent time with him since then)

History with KKFI

BETSE & CLARKE’S VERY BRIEF BIO:

Their music is familiar… and totally different; a fiddle and banjo duo with a sense of adventure. Old time music and song celebrated alongside inventive new compositions: a passion for the depth of tradition and a look to new creative paths.

LONGER BIO:

Regular folks, exceptional music: This duo from the heartland (Kansas City, Missouri) has its roots in Ozark old time music, honoring traditional songs and tunes that resonate with human experience.

For each concert setting, Betse & Clarke take an audience on a musical field trip. Betse Ellis plays powerful and beautiful old time fiddle tunes, sings traditional Ozark songs, and shares her own songs with themes relating to human experience. Expect her to tell some stories along the way, featuring personal moments with her fiddle mentor Violet Hensley. Long known for her energetic style in her former band The Wilders, Betse’s earned a level of maturity while maintaining her contagious enthusiasm. Clarke Wyatt is an engaging finger-style banjo player, drawing inspiration from great traditional and inventive banjoists of earlier decades such as Mike Seeger and John Hartford. His guitar style is rooted in old time traditions, with sparks of ingenuity inspired by the likes of Norman Blake. The combination of deep reverence for tradition and commitment to creativity makes this duo a captivating act to witness. They are dedicated instructors as well as performers and enjoy teaching at camps and workshops as well as private instruction. While tradition is important to Betse & Clarke, they are musical innovators and are inspired to make music beyond the old time genre. Over the last year, Clarke has developed a compelling electric guitar technique and is working on a series featuring his drum kit practice with a variety of talented electric guitarists. Betse is working on free improvisation and new compositions on her fiddle, sometimes on an electric five-string.

Together since 2014, this musical couple has traveled across the United States, Canada, Ireland, Northern Ireland, and Scotland.

Performance Highlights: Grand Targhee Bluegrass Festival ~ Walnut Valley Music Festival ~ John Hartford Memorial Festival ~ Portland Old Time Music Gathering ~ Ozark Folk Center ~ Guinness International Bluegrass Festival (Co. Waterford, Ireland) ~ Bluegrass Music Festival at Ulster American Folk Park, Co. Tyrone, Northern Ireland) ~ Moniaive Michaelmas Bluegrass Festival (Dumfries, Scotland) ~ House concert tours for Home Routes (Canada) ~ Folk Alliance International Conference (as official showcase artists and music camp teaching staff)

Farewell Trion from Winter, which you also have

11:13

  1. Betse & Clarke – “Farewell Trion”
    from: Winter / Betse & Clarke / June 4, 2020
    [A collection of songs and tunes, including original compositions, traditional songs and fiddle tunes, and modern songs re-envisioned. This recording was compiled during winter 2020, with a feeling of introspection. Songs under copyright were properly licensed for this digital release. Regular folks, exceptional music: This duo from the heartland (Kansas City, Missouri) has its roots in Ozark old time music, honoring traditional songs and tunes that resonate with human experience. New compositions add compelling elements to their musical tapestry. Follow up to the duo’s 2017 release, Tunes We Like released only in analog on cassette. Betse & Clarke are a traditional and future folk duo with Betse Ellis on fiddles, violins, viola & vocals and Clarke Wyatt on banjos, guitar, cello, multi-instruments. Betse & Clarke have played and toured around the world. Individually their musical roots go deep in the KC music scene. Clarke Wyatt is a founding member of Mr. Marco’s V7, and Betse Ellis is a founding member of The Wilders. Last year Betse & Clarke released ”River Still Rise,” originals and reworked traditional compositions presented “to be enjoyed as a musical adventure, much like the river exploration of the famous duo Lewis & Clark, an inspiration for the band”]

[Betse & Clarke play recordBar, 1520 Grand Blvd, KCMO, on Saturday, May 25 at 7:00 pm opening for Charlie Parr. More info at: http://www.betseandclarke.com]

11:16 – More Interview with Betse & Clarke

We are talking with Betse Ellis and Clarke Wyatt

Betse Ellis. Originally from Fayetteville, Arkansas, Betse received her Bachelors of Arts in Music and a Bachelors of Arts in English, from the University of Missouri – Kansas City. She has been playing the Violin for over 40 years, with over 20 years playing fiddle and also working as a teacher of music. Betse was a founding member of the acclaimed internationally known band, The Wilders. Betse has released two solo records, and records and performs with the band Little Miss Dynamite, and The Starhaven Rounders and with her husband, multi-instrumentalist Clarke Wyatt, as Betse & Clarke.

Clarke Wyatt is a multi-instrumentalist, composer, producer, recording & video engineer. Clark was born in Texarkana Texas and raised in East Texas, and KCMO. Clarke began music studies at age 5. Clarke studied at Goddard College. He teaches private banjo, piano, and music theory lessons. Clarke performs in the duo Betse & Clarke w/ Betse Ellis.
Notable past performances include Grand Targhee Bluegrass Festival, Augusta Heritage Center, John Hartford Memorial Festival, Walnut Valley Festival, Portland Old Time Gathering, St. Joseph Symphony Orchestra (banjo with a symphony), official show-case artist at Folk Alliance International 2015 & 2017, Ozark Folk Center w/ Betse & Clarke and Violet Hensley.

Betse Ellis and Clarke Wyatt thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley.

Little Miss Dynamite is a 4 piece string band w/ Beth Watts Nelson on lead vocals & banjo, Betse Ellis (of The Wilders, Betse & Clarke) on fiddle, Brandon Day (of The Matchsellers) on bass, & Caleb Gardner (of Konza Swamp) on mandolin, guitar & vocals. releasing a debut 6-song EP of original music featuring stringed instruments & vocal harmony titled “Grow Up” Engineered & Mixed by Clarke Wyatt, Gnomes and Goats Studio.

CLARKESINSPACE is an ongoing project by Clarke Wyatt: multi-instrumentalist, composer, producer, recording and video engineer. Clarke is a lifelong creator of original music. He has written string quartets, original compositions and songs, studio project parts and production, and video creations. And that’s just the start. His latest project in the works is called “Guitar Party”, where he plays drum kit with electric guitarists (sometimes switching places if the guitarist is also a drummer). It’s the beginning of a video series, first created for youtube, with options for multiple media.

Betse Ellis and Clarke Wyatt thanks for being with us in WMM

Betse & Clarke play recordBar, 1520 Grand Blvd, KCMO, on Saturday, May 25 at 7:00 pm opening for Charlie Parr. More info at: http://www.betseandclarke.com

11:25

  1. Clarke Wyatt – “Green Eyes”
    from: CLARKES IN SPACE / Clarke Wyatt / March 19, 2024
    [CLARKESINSPACE is an ongoing project by Clarke Wyatt: multi-instrumentalist, composer, producer, recording and video engineer. Clarke is a lifelong creator of original music. He has written string quartets, original compositions and songs, studio project parts and production, and video creations. And that’s just the start. His latest project in the works is called “Guitar Party”, where he plays drum kit with electric guitarists (sometimes switching places if the guitarist is also a drummer). It’s the beginning of a video series, first created for youtube, with options for multiple media.

[Betse & Clarke play recordBar, 1520 Grand Blvd, KCMO, on Saturday, May 25 at 7:00 pm opening for Charlie Parr. More info at: http://www.betseandclarke.com]

11:29 – Underwriting

  1. Danny Santell – “Song About Girls”
    from: “Song About Girls” – Single / Danny Santell / May 24, 2024
    [Danny Santell is a musician, songwriter & record producer based in Kansas City. Originally from The Bronx NYC now living on The Paseo, Danny Santell began his introduction into the music industry at the age of 19, signing to Universal Records (A&M Octone Records.) He has toured across the US and Canada with the likes of Paramore, Switchfoot, Linkin Park, & shared festival stages with Jay-Z and Stevie Wonder with his band Paper Tongues. His most recent project DON’T SEND ME FLOWERS was released February 1, 2024 and blends Latin fusion hip-hop beats with rock ‘n’ roll guitars, and that sweet KC soulful speakeasy vibe that you’ll only find at 4:00 am on 18th & Vine.]

[Danny Santell plays Minibar, Friday, May 24 at 8:00 pm w/ Lava Dreams, Malek Azrael & The Vibes. ]

[Danny Santell plays Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com]

11:34 – Interview with Danny Santell

Danny Santell is a musician, songwriter & record producer based in Kansas City. Originally from The Bronx NYC now living on The Paseo, Danny Santell began his introduction into the music industry at the age of 19, signing to Universal Records (A&M Octone Records.) He has toured across the US and Canada with the likes of Paramore, Switchfoot, Linkin Park, & shared festival stages with Jay-Z and Stevie Wonder with his band Paper Tongues. His most recent project DON’T SEND ME FLOWERS was released February 1, 2024 and blends Latin fusion hip-hop beats with rock ‘n’ roll guitars, and that sweet KC soulful speakeasy vibe that you’ll only find at 4:00 am on 18th & Vine.

Danny Santell plays Minibar, Fri, May 24 at 8:pm w/ Lava Dreams, Malek Azrael & The Vibes.

Danny Santell plays Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com

Danny Santell , Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

We just heard your new single “Song About Girls” coming out this Friday, May 24.

Originally from The Bronx NYC now living on The Paseo. Danny Santell began his introduction into the music industry at the age of 19, signing to Universal Records (A&M Octone Records.)

11:41

  1. Danny Santell – “Don’t Send Me Flowers”
    from: Don’t Send Me Flowers / Danny Santell / April 19, 2024
    [All songs were written by Danny Santell in Kansas City Missouri, except “Feel The Vibe” Produced and Written by Marz Ferrer & Gabriel Ramirez, Mixed and Mastered by Manny Vs Wrld Ferrer. // Danny Santell is a musician, songwriter & record producer based in Kansas City. Originally from The Bronx NYC now living on The Paseo, Danny Santell began his introduction into the music industry at the age of 19, signing to Universal Records (A&M Octone Records.) He has toured across the US and Canada with the likes of Paramore, Switchfoot, Linkin Park, & shared festival stages with Jay-Z and Stevie Wonder with his band Paper Tongues. His most recent project DON’T SEND ME FLOWERS was released February 1, 2024 and blends Latin fusion hip-hop beats with rock ‘n’ roll guitars, and that sweet KC soulful speakeasy vibe that you’ll only find at 4:00 am on 18th & Vine.]

[Danny Santell plays Minibar, Friday, May 24 at 8:00 pm w/ Lava Dreams, Malek Azrael & The Vibes. ]

[Danny Santell plays Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com]

11:45 – More Interview with Danny Santell

Danny Santell is a musician, songwriter & record producer based in Kansas City. Originally from The Bronx NYC now living on The Paseo, Danny Santell began his introduction into the music industry at the age of 19, signing to Universal Records (A&M Octone Records.) He has toured across the US and Canada with the likes of Paramore, Switchfoot, Linkin Park, & shared festival stages with Jay-Z and Stevie Wonder with his band Paper Tongues. His most recent project DON’T SEND ME FLOWERS was released February 1, 2024 and blends Latin fusion hip-hop beats with rock ‘n’ roll guitars, and that sweet KC soulful speakeasy vibe that you’ll only find at 4:00 am on 18th & Vine.

Danny Santell plays Minibar, Fri, May 24 at 8:pm w/ Lava Dreams, Malek Azrael & The Vibes.

Danny Santell plays Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com

Danny Santell , Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

He has toured across the US and Canada with the likes of Paramore, Switchfoot, Linkin Park, & shared festival stages with Jay-Z and Stevie Wonder with his band Paper Tongues.

11:47 – Danny Santell plays LIVE in our 90.1 FM Studios.

  1. Danny Santell – “we up next kid”
    [Danny Santell is a musician, songwriter & record producer based in Kansas City. Originally from The Bronx NYC now living on The Paseo, Danny Santell began his introduction into the music industry at the age of 19, signing to Universal Records (A&M Octone Records.) He has toured across the US and Canada with the likes of Paramore, Switchfoot, Linkin Park, & shared festival stages with Jay-Z and Stevie Wonder with his band Paper Tongues. His most recent project DON’T SEND ME FLOWERS was released February 1, 2024 and blends Latin fusion hip-hop beats with rock ‘n’ roll guitars, and that sweet KC soulful speakeasy vibe that you’ll only find at 4:00 am on 18th & Vine.]

[Danny Santell plays Minibar, Friday, May 24 at 8:00 pm w/ Lava Dreams, Malek Azrael & The Vibes. ]

[Danny Santell plays Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com]

1:51 – More Interview with Danny Santell

Danny Santell is a musician, songwriter & record producer based in Kansas City. Originally from The Bronx NYC now living on The Paseo, Danny Santell began his introduction into the music industry at the age of 19, signing to Universal Records (A&M Octone Records.) He has toured across the US and Canada with the likes of Paramore, Switchfoot, Linkin Park, & shared festival stages with Jay-Z and Stevie Wonder with his band Paper Tongues. His most recent project DON’T SEND ME FLOWERS was released February 1, 2024 and blends Latin fusion hip-hop beats with rock ‘n’ roll guitars, and that sweet KC soulful speakeasy vibe that you’ll only find at 4:00 am on 18th & Vine.

Danny Santell plays Minibar, Friday, May 24 at 8:00 pm with Lava Dreams, Malek Azrael & The Vibes.

Danny Santell plays Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com

Danny Santell , Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

Hailing from Bronx NYC. Danny began his introduction into the music industry at the age of 19, signing to Universal Records (AM Octone Records) with his band Paper Tongues. Daniel has worked with producers such as Brian West, Mark Endert, and Randy Jackson. Today Daniel is producing music for artist locally in the Kansas City & surrounding areas. Danny produces a wide range of music from Hip Hop, Pop to Rock & Roll.

Danny writes, “I began to write this song last year when I wasn’t inspired to be myself and pick up a guitar anymore. I felt I was at my lowest. Now, this music is my therapy. I can truly say I’m a human who has his ups and downs just like everybody else.”

Paper Tongues is an American alternative rock band from Charlotte, North Carolina. The band included Aswan North on lead vocals, guitarists Devin Forbes and Joey Signa, keyboardists Clayton Simon and Cody Blackler, bassist Danny Santell, and drummer Jordan Hardee –Their sound was described as fusing rock n’ roll melodies with beats, and elements of sound. With the lineup established, the band decamped to California and began recording music alongside an eclectic set of producers. In 2009, the band worked with producers like John Fields (Jimmy Eat World), Brian West (Nelly Furtado), Billy Hume (David Banner), and Mark Endert (Maroon 5) while creating their debut EP, Ride to California, which appeared // Their debut album was released on March 30, 2010. // The group formed in 2007 in Charlotte, North Carolina, when a few musicians with very different musical backgrounds met in Charlotte and ultimately decided to form a band. Including originally, Luke Hill a drummer from Fort Worth, TX who helped popularize the band locally with his passionate playing style. After meeting producer Brian West, and being invited to Los Angeles to work with him, Paper Tongues front-man Aswan North had a chance encounter with legendary musician-producer Randy Jackson in an L.A. restaurant, Jackson soon became the manager of the band. // Paper Tongues has toured with bands such as Jet, Switchfoot, Our Lady Peace, Flyleaf, Linkin Park, etc., as well as co-headlined their own tour with the Neon Trees, Civil Twilight, & the Crash Kings. Paper Tongues has also opened a Vegas show for Cage the Elephant & Muse. They have also appeared on George Lopez’s Lopez Tonight and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. // Their song “Get Higher” is featured on the 2012 season of Fox Television’s hit show, “American Idol” // Their song “Soul” is featured on Halogen TV’s Fall 2010 promo video. On Saturday February 12, 2011 they served as the headliners for WFLZ’s popular “Meet Ball” concert in Tampa, FL. // They opened for Linkin Park during the A Thousand Suns Tour for their shows in Dallas, Houston, and Phoenix.

Danny Santell, Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

Danny Santell plays Minibar, Friday, May 24 at 8:00 pm with Lava Dreams, Malek Azrael & The Vibes.

Danny Santell plays Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com https://www.dannysantell.com

Danny’s wife a Hayley is the founder of MADI Apparel and Slow Motion Goods at 1659 Summit Street, Kansas City, MO. More info at: http://www.slowmotiongoods.com

11:57:26

  1. Noel Coward – “The Party’s Over Now”
    from: Noel Coward in New York / drg / 2003 [orig. 1957]

Next week on Wednesday, May 29 we welcome back our WMM Co-Producer Marion Merritt of Records With Merritt who will share her latest sonic discoveries and information from her musically encyclopedic brain.

THANK YOU to our incredible KKFI Staff; Director of Development & Communications – J Kelly Dougherty, Volunteer Coordinator – Darryl Oliver, Chief Operator – Chad Brothers, KKFI Accounting & Administration – Shaina Littler.

This radio station is more than the individual hosts of each individual radio show. Instead it is about a collective spirit of hundreds of hardworking people, unselfishly setting aside ego, to work for the greater good of community building and the gigantic goal of keeping our airwaves free, non-commercial, and open to all! Congratulations and thank you to all programmers & volunteers who went the extra effort to keep our station alive.

Our Script/Playlist is a “cut and paste” of information.
Sources for notes: artist’s websites, bios, wikipedia.org

Wednesday MidDay Medley in on the web:
http://www.kkfi.org,

http://www.WednesdayMidDayMedley.org,

http://www.facebook.com/WednesdayMidDayMedleyon90.1FM

https://www.soundcloud.com/wednesdaymiddaymedley

http://www.bandcamp.com/wednesdaymiddaymedley

http://www.instagram.markthomasmanning

Show #1047

WMM presents: Betse & Clarke + Danny Santell + The Swallowtails + Erin Keller

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Betse & Clarke + Danny Santell + The Swallowtails + Erin Keller & Golden Spirit Children’s Choirs

Mark spins more New & MidCoastal Releases from: The Freedom Affair, IVORY BLUE, Lava Dreams, The Swallowtails, Erin Keller & The James Ward Band, Betse Ellis, Betse & Clarke, Clarke Wyatt, Danny Santell, Joni Mitchell, and Charlie Parr.

At 10:10 we talk with Miki P and Rachel Lovelace of The Swallowtails, who released their new EP LUCKY PENNY on February 20, 2024. Formed in 2018, The Swallowtails are a Kansas City based musical duo comprised of musicians Miki P on guitar & vocals and Rachel Lovelace on bassoon & vocals. “Since becoming a duo, it was time for us to reinvent our sound again. The songwriting on this EP is split between Rachel and myself, and this is Rachel’s debut release as a writer and singer. We spent all of January 2024 finishing the arrangements, recording and mixing the mini-record. It was a much needed release of energy for both of us, and we are definitely looking forward to adding these songs into our live sets and performing new material.” The Swallowtails play Manor Fest 6 on Friday, May 24, at 6:30 PM at Flagship Books, 600 Ohio Ave., KCK in Strawberry Hill with Grady Philip Drugg, and Dalima Kapten. The Swallowtails play Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Boulevard, KCMO. The Swallowtails play Lemonade Park, 1628 Wyoming Street, KCMO on Saturday, June 29 at 7:00pm with West End Junction, and Kirstie Lynn & Galen Clark. More info at: http://www.mikipmusic.com

At 10:30 we talk with Erin Keller who has performed in the Grammy Award–winning KC Chorale for 16 years, KC Civic Opera, New Ear, OwenCox Dance Group, all the while doing solo & collaborative projects with top musicians. Seven years ago, Erin was diagnosed with Stage 4 colon cancer. She has been on chemo since her diagnosis, constantly fighting all the symptoms that come with being on chemo. On January 26, 2024 Erin released her new recording, SONGS FOR TIMES LIKE THESE, with the James Ward Band. Recently Erin Keller announced the creation of a new nonprofit, Golden Spirit Children’s Choirs, a new after-school program for children in KCMO Public Schools that focuses on social emotional, music, and poetry learning objectives. You can learn more at: http://www.goldenspiritsings.org. Erin Keller presents The Golden Spirit Fundraising Event, a performance of critically acclaimed Joni Mitchell album “Mingus,” with Patrick Ketter on saxophone, Angela Ward on keyboards, Adam Schlozman on guitar, Matt Leifer on drums, and Forest Stewart on bass, on Saturday, May 25, at 7:00pm, at Unity Temple on the Plaza, 707 West 47th, St., KCMO. Info at: http://www.eventbrite.com/…/golden-spirit-fundraising…

At 11:00 Mark welcomes Betse Ellis & Clarke Wyatt. This duo has its roots in Ozark old time music, honoring traditional songs and tunes that resonate with human experience. However, if you ever saw or listened to The Wilders, then you know that Betse is also a force to be reckoned with, stomping her boots and pushing her fiddle beyond old country into the realms of punk, honky tonk, and beyond. Her singing has power, from hollering to pathos as called for by the song. Clarke meets her out there in the void, beyond musical boundaries and categories with a background in jazz piano, guitar, bass, drums, and banjo. It’s rare to find a duo that you can take with you to meet your grandmother Sunday morning at church after staying up all night with them Saturday night getting rowdy on the other side of town. Betse Ellis and Clarke fit that bill. A new chapter in their musical exploration is emerging, featuring Clarke on electric guitar, and Betse taking the fiddle to new sonic scenes. More emphasis on original material and improvisational routes invites you to come along on a new adventure. Betse & Clarke play recordBar, 1520 Grand Blvd, KCMO, on Saturday, May 25 at 7:00 pm opening for Charlie Parr. More info at: http://www.betseandclarke.com

At 11:30 Mark talks with Danny Santell, musician, songwriter & record producer based in Kansas City. Originally from The Bronx NYC now living on The Paseo, Danny Santell began his introduction into the music industry at the age of 19, signing to Universal Records (A&M Octone Records.) He has toured across the US and Canada with the likes of Paramore, Switchfoot, Linkin Park, & shared festival stages with Jay-Z and Stevie Wonder with his band Paper Tongues. His most recent project DON’T SEND ME FLOWERS was released February 1, 2024 and blends Latin fusion hip-hop beats with rock ‘n’ roll guitars, and that sweet KC soulful speakeasy vibe that you’ll only find at 4:00 am on 18th & Vine. Danny and partner, Unlimited C, will perform LIVE on our 90.1 FM Studios. Danny Santell plays Minibar, Friday, May 24 at 8:00 pm with Lava Dreams, Malek Azrael & The Vibes. Danny Santell plays Boulevardia, on Saturday, June 15, at Crown Center, 2396 Grand Blvd, KCMO. More info at: http://www.boulevardia.com

On your local radio dial 90.1 FM or
STREAMING LIVE at: kkfi.org

Show #1047

WMM’s 20th Anniversary Show w/ Calvin Arsenia, Julia Othmer, IVORY BLUE, Kasey Rausch, & Stephonne. Plus, Marion Merritt, Maria Vasquez Boyd, Nico Gray, & Necia Gamby

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

WMM’s 20th Anniversary Show w/ Calvin Arsenia, Julia Othmer, IVORY BLUE, Kasey Rausch, & Stephonne. Plus, Marion Merritt, Maria Vasquez Boyd, Nico Gray, & Necia Gamby.

WMM Celebrates our 20th Anniversary with Live Performances from: Calvin Arsenia, Julia Othmer, IVORY BLUE, Kasey Rausch, and Stephonne. Plus we welcome special guests from our WMM “Radio Family”: Marion Merritt, Maria Vasquez Boyd, Nico Gray, and Necia Gamby. WMM launched our very first show on Wednesday May 12, 2004. In these 1046 weeks, 2092 hours of shows, 30,000 hours of preparation, over 2900 Interviews, 2500 guests, 20,000 songs, from thousands of musical artists, we have made it our mission to jump over musical genres, play with themes, diversity, equality, free speech, and connect artists and venues and listeners and communities. Wednesday MidDay Medley has proudly endeavored to help tell the story of our growing Kansas City area music community, “The Midcoast Sound.”

  1. “It’s Showtime Folks”
    from: Orig. Motion Picture Soundtrack All That Jazz / Casablanca / Dec. 20, 1979
    [WMM theme]
  1. Sufjan Stevens – “Inaugural Pop Music For Jane Margaret Byrne”
    from: The Avalanche: Outtakes And Extras From The Illinois Album / Asthmatic Kitty / July 11, 2006
    [A press release on the Asthmatic Kitty website reported that the Illinois album was supposed to be a double record (with somewhere near 50 songs), but the idea was eventually scrapped. After the success of the album, Stevens returned to his analog 8-track recorder in late 2005 and began the process of finishing 21 of the previously abandoned songs, which would eventually become The Avalanche. Stevens has stated during interviews that although he doesn’t like The Avalanche as much as Illinois, he felt it was important to release the songs in light of the success of his most recent album. He has also said that he decided to release the album in order to buy time until his next “The 50 States” project,” release.]

10:02

Thanks for tuning into Wednesday MidDay Medley. I’m Mark Manning. Today we celebrate Wednesday MidDay Medley’s 20th Anniversary! with LIVE performances in our 90.1 FM Studios from some of our most favorite musical guests: Calvin Arsenia, Julia Othmer, IVORY BLUE, Stephonne, and Kasey Rausch! Plus we welcome our WMM Radio Family: Marion Merritt, Maria Vasquez Boyd, Nico Gray, and Necia Gamby.

Today’s show is a celebration of 1046 weeks, 2092 hours of radio, 30,000 hours of preparation, over 2900 Interviews, 2500 guests, and over 20,000 songs, from thousands of musical artists. We have made it our mission to mix musical genres, playing with themes, diversity, equality, free speech, connecting artists and venues and listeners and communities. Wednesday MidDay Medley has proudly endeavored to help tell the story of our growing Kansas City area music scene, “The Midcoast Sound.”

We’ve happily presented new formats in radio, with our popular, “A Story In A Song” series, and our special shows featuring: Apocalypse Meow, The Crossroads Music Fest, Folk Alliance International, The Outer Reaches Festival, Manor Fest, Boulevardia. KC Fringe Festival, Owen Cox Dance Group, Bach Aria Soloists, KC Pride Fest, and our annual tribute shows to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., David Bowie, Iris Dement, Pioneers of Punk, Visual Art, The Spoken Word, Gay Pride, Civil Rights, Black Lives Matter and our interviews with Tommy Ramone, Iris Dement, Laurie Anderson, Lily Tomlin. Plus, our annual 4-week special: the 120 Best Recordings of the Year.

I am inspired by the women who created radio on 90.1 FM long before me: my friend April Fletcher who plays bass professionally in Los Angeles, and hosted Mix Well Before Serving on 90.1 in 1988 on KKFI’s first year of broadcast, and last year returned after 35 years, to host and produce WMM. And my friend Anne Winter, who left us in 2009, and reminded us how we’re all connected. Anne was the proprietor of Recycled Sounds just down the street from us on Main. Anne helped to build KKFI from the very beginning and hosted the first ever Punk Rock Show on the radio called “Little Orphan Annie.” Anne helped start The KC Free Speech Coalition and the annual Culture Under Fire. At Anne’s funeral I realized that I was connected to hundreds of other people who Anne had touched with her gentle, wise, guidance and had nudged into taking a job, going out on a stage, organizing an event, doing a radio show. We were all connected, she had loved us all and supported us, and some of us made a pact to do just a little bit of what Anne did, if we all did a little we could continue her work to help build our community, that is how I keep Anne alive in my heart. And through collaboration, and shining a light, like Abigail Hope Henderson, who we lost in 2013, but not before she ignited a movement to create the Midwest Music Foundation supporting heath care needs and mental health care for the music community. I’m inspired by theses women, my sisters. I am inspired by the diverse, intelligent, motivated, listeners, looking for place on the dial, where they can connect to the stories & music & voice of our community.

Today we celebrate the native flower spirit of community radio, free form radio, radio that tells the story of the people who live here, the artists, the workers, the writers, the teachers, the performers. We celebrate 1000 weeks of WMM, the show that has brought us together, at this time, on this frequency, on these 90.1 FM community airwaves. Thanks for listening.

10:05 – Calvin Arsenia Interview

Calvin Arsenia released his newest 14 track album Paradise to fans on June 23, 2023. His most biographical album yet, with songs about Black Lives Matter, racism, being on probation, gay love and collaborations with Cheery, Kadesh Flow & Jametatone. Calvin Arsenia is one of our most frequent guests, who first appeared on WMM on July 25, 2012. KC Magazine has hailed Calvin as “equal parts opera, symphony, musical theatre, rock show, all built around its creator, a charismatic 6-foot-7-inch harpist with a 3 and ½ octave range, natural stage command and knack for gilding gold and painting lilies.” Born in Orlando, Florida, Calvin’s creative journey began when he moved to Olathe, Kansas, teaching himself guitar, piano, banjo. He learned the harp, at the age of 20. His passion for stretching the boundaries saw him transform after a trip to Edinburgh, Scotland’s Fringe Festival early in his career. An Edinburgh church offering him a role as musical liaison between the church and the city that would change his life. Calvin released the albums: Cantaloupe in 2018, with a sold out gigantic spectacle at The Gem Theatre on Saturday, September 15, 2018. He then released, L.A. Sessions in 2019, and the EP HONEY DEW, and the EP Goddess with Quixotic, the Holiday album, ALL IS CALM. In 2020 Calvin collaborated on the Soundtrack to “Summer in Hindsight,” a feature-length film created by The West 18th Street Fashion Show where Calvin also starred as an actor. Calvin is also the published author of EVERY GOOD BOY DOES FINE, a collection of Poetry & Prose published on October 5, 2021, by Andrews McMeel Universal. More info at: http://www.calvinarsenia.com

Calvin Arsenia thank you for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley.

10:12

  1. Calvin Arsenia – “Back To You” (LIVE)
    Also available on L.A. Sessions / Center Cut Records / September 20, 2019

10:16 – More Calvin Arsenia Interview

Calvin Arsenia one of our most frequent guests, who has been on our show, 23 times.

Calvin was voted KC’s Best Musician in The Pitch 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023. He has been featured in Billboard, NPR.org. Calvin is the recipient of the Charlotte Street Foundation 2022 Generative Performing Artist Awards along with The Black Creatures. Calvin Arsenia is a multi-instrumentalist, a renaissance man, model, actor, designer, artist, writer, teacher, friend, inspiration… Calvin shared his journey openly with his fans. His journey to find himself as a working artist, musician, coming out as Queer Artist, coming-out as Black, finding love, understanding his spirituality and the redefinition of beliefs.

Calvin transformed after living in Edinburgh, Scotland. An Edinburgh church offered him a role as musical liaison between the church and the city that would change his life. Two years and 300 shows later, Calvin returned to KC reborn as a humanistic songwriter / performer where at 24 he released his EP, Moments, in 2014, his EP Prose in 2015, and his Folk Alliance exclusive EP Catastrophe in 2016. On February 14, 2017 Calvin released his full length debut, Catastrophe, with a live show at recordBar in November 2016, involving 50 people: dancers, stilt walkers. After signing to Center Cut Records, Calvin released the albums: Cantaloupe in 2018, with a sold out show at The Gem Theatre on September 15, 2018. He then released, L.A. Sessions in 2019, the EP HONEY DEW, the EP Goddess with Quixotic, and the Holiday album, ALL IS CALM. In 2020 Calvin collaborated with Mike Dillon on the Soundtrack to “Summer in Hindsight,” a feature-length film created by The West 18th Street Fashion Show that starred Calvin as an actor. Calvin is also the co-creator of the podcast “We Were Christian Kids” created with childhood friend Justin Randall who is a stand up comedian working in New York City and now Los Angeles.

Calvin Arsenia thank you for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley.

[Calvin Arsenia plays plays Manor Fest 6, on Friday, May 31, at 9:00pm at Greenwood Social Club, 1759 Belleview Ave, 2nd Floor, KCMO with Fritz Hutchison, and Julia Haile.]

10:21

  1. Dimitri From Paris – “Prologue”
    from: Sacrebleu / Yellow Productions – Atlantic / June 11, 1996
    [Debut studio album. Dimitri from Paris was born Dimitrios Yerasimos, on Oct. 27, 1963. He is a French music producer and DJ of Greek descent. His musical influences are rooted in 1970s funk & disco sounds that spawned contemporary house music, as well as original soundtracks from 1950s & 1960s movies such as Breakfast at Tiffany’s, La Dolce Vita and The Party, which were sampled in his album Sacrebleu.]

10:22 – Interview with Marion Merritt

Today we celebrate WMM’s 20th Anniversary. 20 years of playing music that is just not really played on the radio enough, sometimes ever, and most of the time we were the first to ever play it. From the beginning we always wanted someone from a Record Store to be on the show, because record stores are like “community centers” for people who love music.

Marion Merritt has an empathic ability to know what music you’re seeking. She’s our most frequent contributor to WMM She grew up in Los Angeles and St. Louis and went to college in Columbia, MO. She studied art & musical engineering, and is a avid lover of classic films. She saw Talking Heads on their 1st tour at One Block West in 1978. For 20 years she’s been sharing her sonic discoveries and information from her musically-encyclopedic brain. Marion also writes about new releases as a contributor The Pitch. With partner Ann Stewart, Marion is the proprietor of Records With Merritt, a minority owned business at 1614 Westport Rd. in KC. Info at: http://www.recordwithmerritt.com

Marion Merritt, Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

10:29 – Underwriting

10:31 – Interview with Julia Othmer

Today we celebrate WMM’s 20th Anniversary. We celebrate a radio show that endeavors to tell the story of the incredible musical and arts community of this Missouri river valley stretching across wheat fields to places like Topeka, on a good day, and Peculiar, and Tonganoxie and Platte City.

Julia Othmer grew up in Kansas City and is a graduate of Park Hill High School and studied at Columbia University in New York City. The child of European refugees, she draws from a broad and richly cultured palette of experience to create her intensely human yet otherworldly songs. Julia Othmer released her 2nd album “Sound,” on April 12, 2019, produced with James Lundie. She had been introduced to his music production and fell so deeply in love with his sonic architecture, she transported to the UK, and refused to leave until he listened to her songs. James married Julia in January of 2016, during the completion of the record. Julia Othmer & James Lunde released Seeds (Vol. 1) on November 13, 2020, and SEEDS VOLUME 2 on March 20, 2022 containing live songs selected from her 30-day Songs of September Project, where Julia performed a different live cover and broadcast the performance throughout the month on streaming platforms to inspire people to vote. In 2021 Julia and James relocated to Kansas City and recently unveiled their newest creation, THE FORCEFIELDS featuring, reimagined vintage synthesizers, video projections, one of a kind instruments. Their debut EP, BRIDGE, will be released in 2024.

10:38

  1. Julia Othmer – “Whether” (LIVE)
    Also available on: Sound / Fricken Awesome Records / April 12, 2019

10:42 – More Interview with Julia Othmer

Julia Othmer‘s piano-driven performances are a mesmerizing and superconscious fusion of raw power, vocal artistry and joy. Julia moved to LA in 2006 to record her 1st album, OASIS MOTEL. Julia Othmer released “Sound,” on April 12, 2019, her second album, produced with James Lundie. Julia Othmer & James T. Lunde released Seeds (Vol. 1) on November 13, 2020. “Seeds” was Julia Othmer’s 3rd full length album and contained 10 live songs selected from her 30-day Songs of September Project, where Julia performed a different live cover of her favorite songs and broadcast the performance throughout the streaming social media platforms to inspire people to register and vote on November 3. From those songs Julia’s fans democratically selected their favorite tracks to be released together on “Seeds.” In March 20, 2022 Julia Othmer released SEEDS VOLUME 2, her 4th album of live recordings from her 30-day “Songs of September Project”, where Julia covered songs of protest & hope, to inspire people to vote in 2020.

In 2021 Julia and her husband James relocated to Kansas City. Julia Othmer & James T Lundie recently unveiled their newest creation, a new expanding sonic and visual aesthetic called THE FORCEFIELDS. Their sound is evolving into what is described as Annie Lennox hosting a full moon party with The Beach Boys and Portishead gathered round the fire. Their studio recordings feature James’ unique sonic tools, reimagined vintage synthesizers, audio gear and rebuilt, one-of-a-kind instruments, heard nowhere else in the world. Their debut EP, BRIDGE, to be released in 2024, is a sonic bridge between their previous work together and this new trajectory. Reinterpreting and distilling the essence of two of Julia’s previous songs, BRIDGE is a rhythmic, multi-layered and richly textured exploration of letting go and positive self realization.

10:47

  1. Les Petits Minous – “À la claire fontaine”
    from: À la claire fontaine – Single / Musicreche / September 25, 2008

10:48 – Interview with Maria Vasquez Boyd

Today we celebrate WMM’s 20th Anniversary on 90.1 FM KKFI Kansas City Community Radio. A radio show that gave birth to another radio show called ARTSPEAK Radio hosted by a woman who has sparkles that surround her because she is so very special.

Maria Vasquez Boyd, is a mother, grandmother, friend, writer, artist, published poet, teacher, trailblazer, daredevil, traveler, lover, angel, radio show host & producer. Maria is a founding member of the Latino Writers Collective. She is a graduate of the Kansas City Art Institute, where she has also taught in the Design/Illustration Department and for the Nelson Atkins Museum. Maria has served as the gallery coordinator for the Guadalupe Center and The Writers Place. She is a contributing Artist at Mattie Rhodes. Maria is host & producer of ARTSPEAK Radio, celebrating 11 Years on the air Wednesdays at 9:00am, on KKFI. Maria Vasquez Boyd is the author of THE WEIGHT OF RECOGNITION her newest book of poetry published by Spartan Press in September 2022. Maria’s art work is currently showing at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in an exhibit titled: A LAYERED PRESENCE featuring incredible new works from many Kansas City based Latinx artists.

Maria Vasquez Boyd, Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

10:55 – Interview with IVORY BLUE

Today we celebrate WMM’s 20th Anniversary on community radio, fradio that tells the story of people who live here, people who make music. The story of our area musical community is the story of a giant tree with many branches, and roots the go very deep.

IVORY BLUE released her 2nd full length album, STARLIT LOVE CHILD, on Nov. 17, 2023, It was in the top 5 of WMM’s 120 Best Recordings of 2023. A free-spirited musician, IVORY BLUE has become an expressive multi-genre artist whose music is passionate rock, with a dash of pop hooks & a healthy dose of swagger. At the age of four, IVORY’s birth mother put her up for adoption. IVORY lived with eight different “foster parent” families, before running away at 15. Ivory turned to music to express her pain and personal story. In 2010 Klaartje Van Lue saw IVORY performing in a YouTube video. The Van Lue family adopted IVORY into their family. As a multi-instrumentalist, IVORY refining her style, using digital looping pedals to stack harmonies, giving tsolo shows the feel of a full band.

Ivory Blue thanks for being with us on WMM.

11:02 – Station ID

  1. IVORY BLUE – “Elite Dreamland” (Live)
    also available on: COMPOUND LOVE / IVORY BLUE / February 25, 2022

11:06 – More Interview with IVORY BLUE

IVORY BLUE was born in 1986 in Peoria Illinois, as Devin James Miclettet. At the age of four, IVORY’s birth mother put them up for adoption. Ivory speaks about how it was difficult to find trust in people offering their home to someone denied it for so long. IVORY lived with eight different “foster parent” families, before running away at 15. Ivory turned to music to express their pain and personal story. In 2010 Klaartje Van Lue saw IVORY performing in a YouTube video, captured from an open mike performance. Klaartje had moved to the United States from Belgium to marry her husband and then raise her son and daughter. Klaartje, a pianist and working mom, felt a connection, musically and maternally, sent a plane ticket for IVORY to fly to KC. The Van Lue’s adopted IVORY into their family. 10 years ago IVORY came out as “Transgender” helping to educate and to clear the pathway for a growing number of trans, queer, & non-binary musical artists who are part of KC’s diverse and collaborative music community.

IVORY BLUE released their full-length debut album COMPOUND LOVE on February 25, 2022. COMPOUND LOVE was in the Top Ten of WMM’s 120 Best Recordings of 2022. IVORY BLUE released the video of their song, “Family Table” directed by Mikal Shapiro, on August 21, 2021. IVORY BLUE’s debut EP, READY GET SET was released in June 2015. While the EP helped spread the word and give IVORY BLUE attention from regional radio and TV stations, a big break would come in 2017 when IVORY was among 1800 artists/bands that competed in neXt2Rock. IVORY won local & regional challenges and advanced to nationals in Los Angeles, California to win the top prize.

IVORY BLUE has played Boulevardia, Kauffman Stadium, Crossroads Music Festival, The Middle of the Map Festival, The Westport Roots Festival, Apocalypse Meow, the KCPT Screening of “Real Boy” at The KC Public Library, The Viper Room (L.A.), ULAH with You Found Music, Arts In The Park, The Englewood Arts Center, MiniBar, recordBar, Lemonade Park, Davy’s Uptown Ramblers Club, Records With Merritt, The Tank Room, and many others. More info at: https://linktr.ee/ivorybluemusic

Ivory Blue thanks for being with us on WMM.

11:10

  1. Wagon Christ – “Rennie Codgers”
    from: Tomorrow / Ninja Records / March 29, 2011

11:11 – interview with Nico Gray

Today we celebrate the 20th Anniversary of WMM. Radio that tells the story of people who make music, who sing & play songs, who organize concerts & festivals in a metro region of 2 million people. Today we celebrate our little ole radio show that has brought us together,

Nico Gray is host and producer of Radio Nicopisa on Wednesdays, 12:00 Noon to 2:00pm on 90.1 FM KKFI. Nico contributed to Wednesday MidDay Medley for over 10 years, helping with shows about Glam Rock, David Bowie, and our Fund Drive Shows, and serving as Guest Producer for 12 different shows. In 2022 Nico own radio show, “Radio Nicopisa” was launched in the over night hours. Nico Gray is also a writer, performance artist, and has worked as an actor with Kansas City Repertory Theatre, Gorilla Theatre, 8th St. Cafe Theatre, Actor’s Craft, and Big Bang Buffet. He appeared in HBO film “Truman” and in the Robert Altman film, “Kansas City.” Nico was also in an early short film of John McGrath‘s that had a small role played by Emmy Award Winner Jason Sudeikis. Nico is currently a marketing & advertising consultant with Union Station.

Nico Gray, Thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

11:18

  1. The Country Duo – “Goodwill”
    from: Little Lagoon Sessions / The Country Duo / TBA 2024
    [Recorded in Gulf Shores Alabama with former Head Engineer of Sun Studio, Curry Weber. // The Country Duo is Kansas City’s Kasey Rausch and Marco Pascolini. Armed with acoustic and electric guitars, a pedal steel, and a passion for good ol’ country music, you’ll hear them play Rausch’s original tunes as well as the classics from Patsy to Merle, Gram to Emmylou. After just a year of working together as a duo, 2016 found the two playing in Nashville at the Station Inn, recording at the legendary Sun Studio in Memphis, TN as well as being invited by Sun Studio to film the PBS Sun Studio Sessions. The episode will air on PBS stations across the country beginning Spring 2017, but look for the first audio recordings to be released by Winter 2016. // Kasey Rausch is a 5th generation musician, songwriter and co-producer of River Trade Radio on KKFI 90.1FM. Her family and musical roots can be found in Parkville, Kansas City, the Missouri Ozarks, Winfield, Kansas (home of the legendary Walnut Valley Festival), and deep Southeast Texas. Rausch’s third album Guitar in Hand (MudStomp Records 2014) debuted at #3 on the Roots Music Reporting charts and was voted one of the top three albums of the year by readers of The Pitch, KC’s weekly entertainment guide. She was named 2013’s Female Performer of the Year by The Farmer’s Turnpike on KMXN 92.9 FM, sharing the stage with Joe Ely, Peter Rowan, Grammy Winner Roland White, Kris Delmhorst, Jack Williams and many more. // Marco Pascolini is the stuff of guitar legends. For more than twenty years he has forged his path as one of the most well-respected musicians in Kansas City. Recognized as one of the region’s most influential musicians, his talent across a multitude of instruments has been acknowledged in numerous music media including The Kansas City Star and The Pitch, among others. Be it an electric guitar or a pedal steel in his hands, you’ll find him touring with Kasey Rausch’s Country Duo or on stage in his home town with Mr. Marco’s V7, The Naughty Pines or songwriter extraordinaire Scott Hrabko.  

11:22 – Interview with Kasey Rausch

Kasey Rausch is a 5th generation songwriter & musician who began performing at age 15. Two days after graduating from high school, she moved from Texas back to her hometown of Kansas City to live alongside her extended family while pursuing music. With pedal steel & guitar master Marco Pascolini, Kasey performs as The Country Duo. Kasey plays locally with classic country honky tonk band The Naughty Pines. She has shared the stage with Joe Ely, Dale Watson, Peter Rowan, Roland White, Kris Delmhorst, Jack Williams and many more. As Kasey Rausch turns 50 this year, she’s reflecting on her career and her upcoming album as half of The Country Duo with Marco Pascolini. The Little Lagoon Sessions album was recorded with former Sun Studio head engineer Curry Weber in Gulf Shores, Alabama. This is the fifth time the duo has worked with Weber on various projects, including their 2017 album Live at Sun Studio. More info at: http://www.kaseyrausch.com

Kasey Rausch thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

11:26

  1. Kasey Rausch – “The Color and The Hue” (LIVE)
    from: Little Lagoon Sessions / The Country Duo / TBA 2024

10:30 – More Interview with Kasey Rausch

Kasey Rausch was one of the very first LIVE musical guests we had on WMM. If you look at our very first playlist from May 14, 2004 you’ll see a diverse mix, and equality between women and men, however there as hardly any “local” music. As I was learning how to do this radio show, it was the Kansas City and Lawrence area musicians who came on the show and taught me about the music community. Robert Moore’s Oxblood Records compilation First Blood became a road map. Midwest Music Foundation and Abigail Henderson shined the light. The Death of Anne Winter reminded us how close we actually are and how much we need each other. Social media and Facebook became the inter-office memo of the area music community. The birth of festivals: Crossroads Music Fest, Middle of the Map Fest, and Folk Alliance International Conference, the development of more studios and record labels, and the re-birth of record stores.

Kasey Rausch is co-creator River Trade Radio on 90.1FM on Sundays 9:00 to 11:00.

Rausch’s third album, Guitar in Hand was released on MudStomp Records in 2014, and debuted at #3 on the Roots Music Reporting charts and was voted one of the top three albums of the year by readers of The Pitch. She was named 2016 Best of the Northland Artist, 2013’s Female Performer of the Year by The Farmer’s Turnpike on KMXN 92.9 FM and is a four-time Pitch Music Award Nominee.

As Kasey Rausch turns 50 this year, she’s reflecting on her career and her upcoming album as half of The Country Duo with Marco Pascolini. The Little Lagoon Sessions album was recorded with former Sun Studio head engineer Curry Weber in Gulf Shores, Alabama. This is the fifth time the duo has worked with Weber on various projects, including their 2017 album Live at Sun Studio. More information at: http://www.kaseyrausch.com

Kasey Rausch thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

11:34 – Underwriting

11:35 – Interview with Stephonne

Today we celebrate WMM’s 20th Anniversary on community radio, freeform radio, radio that tells the story of people who live here, artists, writers, teachers. Today we celebrate 1046 weeks of WMM, the show that has brought us together, at this time, on this frequency.

Stephonne describes himself as the lovechild of Prince & Billie Holiday. He grew up in KCK and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Music from Benedictine College, and Masters in Entertainment Business from Full Sail University. Singer, songwriter, actor, model, artist – Stephonne Singleton keeps very busy, organizing Tribute Shows, working as a Resident Artist at Charlottee Street studios, playing Music Festivals, Lemonade Park, Lawrence Pride, Manor Records, Midwest Music Foundation, The AIDS Service Foundation of KC, InterUrban ArtHouse, The Black Box, The Folly Theatre, collaborating with The Black Creatures, Calvin Arsenia, Miki P, Jass, Eboni Fondren, putting out EPs, and singles. Stephonne released his EP SIS: Side B on June 24, 2022 it was in the TOP TEN of WMM’s 120 Best Recordings of 2022. Stephonne was a featured performer at the 23rd Annual West 18th Street Fashion Show on Friday, June 2, 2023.

Stephonne thanks for being with us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

11:42

  1. Stephonne – “Highlander” with Chad Brothers on guitar
    Also available on SIS: Side B [EP] / Glory Blue Music / June 24, 2022

11:45 – More Interview with Stephonne

Stephonne is a Board Member for Kansas City Folk Festival, this Saturday, May 18, at 12:00pm, at Washington Square Park, 100 E Pershing Rd, KCMO. This free, all-day city festival celebrates the music & arts of our neighborhoods, with song, poetry, dance, storytelling, art, demos, workshops, food trucks, and craft market. // KC Folk Fest features: ARQuesta del SolSoul, Madisen Ward, Love, Mae C., Jass, Weda Skirts, Sally and the Hurts, Rural Grit Happy Hour, No Divide KC Artist Showcase, Mariachi Estrella KC, HSN Youth Songwriter Contest Winners, poets Mary Silwance, C. Woods, Sheri “Purpose” Hall, a demo by Break Free KC Hip Hop School, and dance by Shashwat Chaurasia. // No Divide KC Folk Fest Stage – From 1-2pm! Featuring: Liney Blu (singer/songwriter), Waleska Barroeta (poet), Jocelyn Nixon (singer/songwriter)

KC Folk Fest is a community-led nonprofit organization that is free thanks to the support of Folk Alliance International, Missouri Arts Council, Neighborhood Tourism & Development Fund, & donors. Info at: http://www.kansascityfolkfestival.org

Stephonne thanks for being with us on WMM.

11:49 – Interview with Necia Gamby

Necia Gamby has been called “the Oracle of 39th Street” by Kansas City musician Calvin Arsenia. Necia currently serves on the Board of Directors of KC Folk Fest. She has served on the board of directors of the Volker Neighborhood Association and was vice president of the board of the MidCoast Radio Project. Necia is a massage practitioner in private practice and owner of Heartland Massage and Bodywork Center. She has been in practice 40 years. She uses Swedish (classical) massage technique. Over the years she has studied and practiced Hatha Yoga and is currently studying TaiChi. She founded and directed the Heartland School of Massage from 1988-1996. She has studied and incorporated Shiatsu, trigger point technique, lomi-lomi and a host of other philosophies and techniques into her massage style. Necia was an instructor for Johnson County Community College’s Certified Massage Program for 6 years. She taught Basic Swedish technique and Business Practices. Necia is the daughter of Sandra Brown a Kansas City Jazz pianist, and the mother Jamal Gamby a graphic artist and MC Joe Good for the acclaimed KC based hiphop duo SoundsGood with Miles Bonny. More info at: http://www.heartlandmassges.com

Necia Gamby, thanks for being us on Wednesday MidDay Medley

11:57

  1. The Magnetic Fields – “BBC Radiophonic Workshop”
    from: Holiday / Merge / 1994
  1. Jim The Blind Guy- “Hello This Is The Villa Incognito”
    from: Mark’s private recordings
  1. Noel Coward – “The Party’s Over Now”
    from: Noel Coward in New York / drg / 2003 [orig. 1957]

Next week on May 22 on Wednesday MidDay Medley we welcome: Erin Keller, Betse & Clarke, Danny Santell and Lava Dreams .

THANK YOU to our incredible KKFI Staff; Director of Development & Communications – J Kelly Dougherty, Volunteer Coordinator – Darryl Oliver, Chief Operator – Chad Brothers.

This radio station is more than the individual hosts of each individual radio show. Instead it is about a collective spirit of hundreds of hardworking people, unselfishly setting aside ego, to work for the greater good of community building and the gigantic goal of keeping our airwaves free, non-commercial, and open to all! Congratulations and thank you to all programmers & volunteers who went the extra effort to keep our station alive.

Our Script/Playlist is a “cut and paste” of information.
Sources for notes: artist’s websites, bios, wikipedia.org

Wednesday MidDay Medley in on the web:
http://www.kkfi.org,
http://www.WednesdayMidDayMedley.org,
http://www.facebook.com/WednesdayMidDayMedleyon90.1FM

Show #1046

WMM’s 20th Anniversary w/ Calvin Arsenia, Julia Othmer, IVORY BLUE, Stephonne, Kasey Rausch, Marion Merritt, Maria Vasquez Boyd, Nico Gray, & Necia Gamby

Wednesday MidDay Medley
Produced and Hosted by Mark Manning
90.1 FM KKFI – Kansas City Community Radio
TEN to NOON Wednesdays – Streaming at KKFI.org

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

WMM’s 20th Anniversary Show w/ Calvin Arsenia, Julia Othmer, IVORY BLUE, Kasey Rausch, & Stephonne. Plus, Marion Merritt, Maria Vasquez Boyd, Nico Gray, & Necia Gamby.

WMM Celebrates our 20th Anniversary with Live Performances from: Calvin Arsenia, Julia Othmer, IVORY BLUE, Kasey Rausch, and Stephonne. Plus we welcome special guests from our WMM “Radio Family”: Marion Merritt, Maria Vasquez Boyd, Nico Gray, and Necia Gamby. WMM launched our very first show on Wednesday May 12, 2004. In these 1046 weeks, 2092 hours of shows, 30,000 hours of preparation, over 2900 Interviews, 2500 guests, 20,000 songs, from thousands of musical artists, we have made it our mission to jump over musical genres, play with themes, diversity, equality, free speech, and connect artists and venues and listeners and communities. Wednesday MidDay Medley has proudly endeavored to help tell the story of our growing Kansas City area music community, “The Midcoast Sound.”

Calvin Arsenia released his newest 14 track album Paradise to fans on June 23, 2023. His most biographical album yet, with songs about Black Lives Matter, racism, being on probation, gay love and collaborations with Cheery, Kadesh Flow & Jametatone. Calvin Arsenia is one of our most frequent guests, who first appeared on WMM on July 25, 2012. KC Magazine has hailed Calvin as “equal parts opera, symphony, musical theatre, rock show, all built around its creator, a charismatic 6-foot-7-inch harpist with a 3 and ½ octave range, natural stage command and knack for gilding gold and painting lilies.” Born in Orlando, Florida, Calvin’s creative journey began when he moved to Olathe, Kansas, teaching himself the guitar, piano, banjo. He learned his signature instrument, the harp, at the age of 20. His passion for stretching the boundaries of musical expression saw him transform a trip to Edinburgh, Scotland’s Fringe Festival early in his career into a life-changing music mission, with an Edinburgh church offering him a role as musical liaison between the church and the city that would change his life. Calvin released the albums: Cantaloupe in 2018, with a sold out gigantic spectacle at The Gem Theatre on Saturday, September 15, 2018. He then released, L.A. Sessions in 2019, and the EP HONEY DEW, and the EP Goddess with Quixotic, the Holiday album, ALL IS CALM. In 2020 Calvin collaborated on the Soundtrack to “Summer in Hindsight,” a feature-length film created by The West 18th Street Fashion Show where Calvin also starred as an actor. Calvin is also the published author of EVERY GOOD BOY DOES FINE, a collection of Poetry & Prose published on October 5, 2021, by Andrews McMeel Universal. More info at: http://www.calvinarsenia.com

Marion Merritt is our most frequent contributor to WMM, she grew up in Los Angeles, and St. Louis. She went to college in Columbia, Missouri. She studied art and musical engineering, and is a avid lover of classic films and punk rock music. For 20 years now she has been sharing her musical discoveries and information from her musically-encyclopedic brain on Wednesday MidDay Medley. With her partner Ann Stewart, Marion is the proprietor of Records With Merritt, a minority owned business at 1614 Westport Rd. in Kansas City. Marion is also a contributor The Pitch where she writes about new releases. More information at: http://www.recordwithmerritt.com

Julia Othmer grew up in Kansas City and is a graduate of Park Hill High School and studied at Columbia University in New York City. The child of European refugees, she draws from a broad and richly cultured palette of experience to create her intensely human yet otherworldly songs. Julia Othmer released her 2nd album “Sound,” on April 12, 2019, produced with James Lundie. She had been introduced to his music production and fell so deeply in love with his sonic architecture, she transported to the UK, and refused to leave until he listened to her songs. James married Julia in January of 2016, during the completion of the record. Julia Othmer & James Lunde released Seeds (Vol. 1) on November 13, 2020, and SEEDS VOLUME 2 on March 20, 2022 containing live songs selected from her 30-day Songs of September Project, where Julia performed a different live cover and broadcast the performance throughout the month on streaming platforms to inspire people to vote. In 2021 Julia and James relocated to Kansas City and recently unveiled their newest creation, THE FORCEFIELDS featuring, reimagined vintage synthesizers, video projections, one of a kind instruments. Their debut EP, BRIDGE, will be released in 2024.

Maria Vasquez Boyd, is a mother, grandmother, friend, writer, artist, published poet, teacher, trailblazer, daredevil, traveler, lover, angel, radio show host & producer. Maria is a founding member of the Latino Writers Collective. She is a graduate of the Kansas City Art Institute, where she has also taught in the Design/Illustration Department and for for the Nelson Atkins Museum. Maria has served as the gallery coordinator for the Guadalupe Center and The Writers Place. She is a contributing Artist at Mattie Rhodes. Maria is host and producer of ARTSPEAK Radio, celebrating 11 Years on the air every Wednesday at 9:00am, on KKFI. Maria Vasquez Boyd is the author of THE WEIGHT OF RECOGNITION her newest book of poetry published by Spartan Press in September 2022. Maria’s art work is currently showing at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in an exhibit titled: A LAYERED PRESENCE featuring incredible new works from many Kansas City based Latinx artists.

IVORY BLUE released her second full length album, STARLIT LOVE CHILD, on November 17, 2023, It was in the top 5 of Wednesday MidDay Medley’s 120 Best Recordings of 2023. A free-spirited musician, IVORY BLUE has become an expressive multi-genre artist whose music is passionate rock, with a dash of pop hooks & a healthy dose of swagger. At the age of four, IVORY’s birth mother put her up for adoption. IVORY lived with eight different “foster parent” families, before running away at 15. Ivory turned to music to express her pain and personal story. In 2010 Klaartje Van Lue saw IVORY performing in a YouTube video. The Van Lue family adopted IVORY into their family. As a multi-instrumentalist, IVORY began refining their performance style, using digital looping pedals to stack harmonies and guitar parts live on stage, giving their solo shows the feel of a full band. More info at: https://linktr.ee/ivorybluemusic

Nico Gray is host and producer of Radio Nicopisa on Wednesdays, 12:00 Noon to 2:00pm on 90.1 FM KKFI. Nico contributed to Wednesday MidDay Medley for over 10 years, helping with shows about Glam Rock, David Bowie, and Fund Drive, and serving as Guest Producer for 12 different shows. In 2022 Nico own radio show, “Radio Nicopisa” was launched in the over night hours. Nico Gray is also a writer, performance artist, and has worked as an actor with Kansas City Repertory Theatre, Gorilla Theatre, 8th St. Cafe Theatre, Actor’s Craft, and Big Bang Buffet. He appeared in HBO film “Truman” and in the Robert Altman film, “Kansas City.” Nico was also in an early short film of John McGraths that had a small role played by Emmy Award Winner Jason Sudeikis. Nico is currently a marketing & advertising consultant with Union Station

Kasey Rausch is a 5th generation songwriter & musician who began performing at age 15. Two days after graduating from high school, she moved from Texas back to her hometown of Kansas City to live alongside her extended family while pursuing music. With pedal steel & guitar master Marco Pascolini, Kasey performs as The Country Duo. Kasey plays locally with classic country honky tonk band The Naughty Pines. She has shared the stage with Joe Ely, Dale Watson, Peter Rowan, Roland White, Kris Delmhorst, Jack Williams and many more. As Kasey Rausch turns 50 this year, she’s reflecting on her career and her upcoming album as half of The Country Duo with Marco Pascolini. The Little Lagoon Sessions album was recorded with former Sun Studio head engineer Curry Weber in Gulf Shores, Alabama. This is the fifth time the duo has worked with Weber on various projects, including their 2017 album Live at Sun Studio. More information at: http://www.kaseyrausch.com

Stephonne describes himself as the lovechild of Prince & Billie Holiday. He grew up in KCK and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Music from Benedictine College, and Masters in Entertainment Business from Full Sail University. Singer, songwriter, actor, model, artist – Stephonne Singleton keeps very busy, organizing Tribute Shows, working as a Resident Artist at Charlottee Street studios, playing Music Festivals, Lemonade Park, Lawrence Pride, Manor Records, Midwest Music Foundation, The AIDS Service Foundation of KC, InterUrban ArtHouse, The Black Box, The Folly Theatre, collaborating with The Black Creatures, Calvin Arsenia, Miki P, Jass, Eboni Fondren, putting out EPs, and singles. Stephonne released his EP SIS: Side B on June 24, 2022 it was in the TOP TEN of WMM’s 120 Best Recordings of 2022. Stephonne was a featured performer at the 23rd Annual West 18th Street Fashion Show on Friday, June 2, 2023.

Necia Gamby has been called “the Oracle of 39th Street” by Kansas City musician Calvin Arsenia. Necia currently serves on the Board of Directors of KC Folk Fest. She has served on the board of directors of the Volker Neighborhood Association and was vice president of the board of the MidCoast Radio Project. Necia is a massage practitioner in private practice and owner of Heartland Massage and Bodywork Center. She has been in practice 40 years. She uses Swedish (classical) massage technique. Over the years she has studied and practiced Hatha Yoga and is currently studying TaiChi. She founded and directed the Heartland School of Massage from 1988-1996. She has studied and incorporated Shiatsu, trigger point technique, lomi-lomi and a host of other philosophies and techniques into her massage style. Necia was an instructor for Johnson County Community College’s Certified Massage Program for 6 years. She taught Basic Swedish technique and Business Practices. Necia is the daughter of Sandra Brown a Kansas City Jazz pianist, and the mother Jamal Gamby a graphic artist and MC Joe Good for the acclaimed KC based hiphop duo SoundsGood with Miles Bonny. More info at: http://www.heartlandmassges.com

Show #1046