(1888PressRelease)
April 09, 2008 - Recently we had an interview with Kipp Kelly from WABC RADIO NEWYORK. The radio DJ used act as a portal for the listener to discover new music.
The DJ was somebody who was passionate about music and willingly to take risks with the kind of sounds that they would play. Listeners would gravitate to the show because it was a way to become informed about what was happening out there in the musical landscape.
Radio would provide a listener with both the surprise of hearing the familiar (I love this song) and something new. DJ's had a great knowledge of music and felt a responsibility to share that knowledge with the listener.
"The DJ I believe that most exemplified this attitude was the late John Peel. Mr. Peel had possibly one of the most receptive attitudes towards new sounds in the music industry" says Kipp. "His ear was constantly to the underground. He played Kraut rock and dub reggae in the early seventies, when no one was familiar with those styles. He embraced the punk movement right from the beginning. He was even open to playing the early grind core bands such as Napalm Death, Extreme Noise Terror and Doom. He would never dismiss a band because of the genre they were associated with. Mr. Peel loved music that was passionate. I also personally have a great love for Mr. Peel because he championed my favorite band of all time: The Fall."
Kipp Kelly continues, "Outside of College radio, every time I listen to the FM dial, I hear the same formulaic sounds. The latest "alternative" band who sounds like the same batch of Pearl Jam clones or Green Day clones or Smashing Pumpkins clones that have permeated the airwaves for the last fifteen years. I'm not quite sure what aspect of this music makes it "alternative". I think the majority of it sounds so similar that it all seems to blur together like the hum of a radiator. I find it depressing that Nickleback is the soundtrack for the current generation.
Then there are the classic rock stations. Don't get me wrong. Floyd, Zeppelin, Sabbath and Hendrix are my gods, but I hear the same songs day in and day out. And they wouldn't dare play groundbreaking artists from that era like Can, The Stooges, Captain Beefheart, Rocky Erikson or The Silver Apples. You can't even hear any Frank Zappa. And god help me if I ever start listening to adult contemporary. Pass me the Celine Dion and the Prozac. And unfortunately, we don't hear many political messages from the world of hip-hop anymore (at least on contemporary radio). No Public Enemy or KRS-1. Just lyrics about making money, treating women badly and the glorification of Gangsta culture.
I Kipp Kelly and very Thankful for internet radio! Finally there are options out there for the true music fan! Due to sites like TUN3R, I can listen to a whole variety of music genres. I can flip back and forth between Techno, bluegrass, death metal, free jazz, Goth, punk and
numerous other sounds. And I'm rarely interrupted by ads or mainstream DJ's with their patronizing marketing voices. I can just listen to the music. I always have believed that radio should be this way.
I never could accept the mediocre and passionless sounds that fill the mainstream charts were what the masses really wanted. I also like the fact that many of the stations don't confine themselves to one genre of music. I have never met anybody who ever just liked one form of music."