Tony Santiago said:
JerseyDude said:
Would be nice if FreeForm WFMU 91.1 FM here in Jersey City would play Dance music on Saturdays. Pulse 87.7 has such a BAD SIGNAL.
Tony Santiago, have you tried to contact PD/MD Brian Turner about this?
I can try! Give me a number
This is hilarious to me, although articulating why it's hilarious is difficult. I'll just say that I doubt WFMU's overall listenership has a taste for much mainstream current dance music. FMU is free-form, yet it all fits together in a strange way. It almost has a single unified station-wide character.
FMU DJs are volunteers. Also, the station's transmitter is actually in the Oranges. You probably can't get it in most of Jersey City any better than Pulse 87.7. Some JC/Hoboken listeners use the FMU webcast instead.
Its existing Saturday shows are already pretty successful and I'd say they fill a niche. Lots of niches. Michael Shelley plays lesser-known '60s and '70s pop and classic country (often with hilarious lyrics) and other such stuff, and interviews musicians of yesteryear. (He jokingly declares all of the songs to be #1 hits.) Rex plays... ummm... I don't know how to describe Rex's show. Suggestive garage R&B from the '40s through the '70s? I don't really dig Rex's show, but you can't deny that he's got serious style on the mic. (His day job is behind the scenes at WNYC, I think.) Terre T. plays all sorts of garage rock, DIY, punk, post-punk, etc. She might've played the Yeah Yeah Yeahs before anybody else. All of these shows segue together better than you might expect. Transpacific Sound Paradise with Rob Weisberg is a long-running, well-respected, smart, well-researched world music show, which often plays actual indigenous-sounding stuff, not just "AAA-style" world music that's remixed into oblivion and whitewashed for the western masses.
It's a seriously weird station and I love it but I don't know how dance music fits in. But if you want to hear some classic and underground hip-hop then check out Put the Needle on the Record with Billy Jam on Friday afternoons, or Coffee Break for Heroes and Villains on Wednesday nights.
Occasionally fill-in DJ Monica L. (formerly of Tommy Boy, I think) will appear and play a lot of forgotten classic disco and old-school stuff, but with unpredictable or avant-garde sounds sometimes mixed in, or who-knows-what else. Free-form forever! On Tuesday nights from 11 to 2, DJ Small Change plays some things you might classify as dance music, but it's very free-form and you don't really know what you'll hear next. Lounge, soul, funk, jazz, a little punk....