You say you want a revolution? Well, it will all get underway at 8pm on Thursday, October 2 when revolutionary music on revolutionary radio comes to Columbus. "Yesterday's Top Secrets" is a show I'll be hosting that will combine songs from the Sixties (oldies that aren't old, because they haven't been played to death on other stations) with later music that was inspired by the fun and the freedom of the Sixties (alternative music that was simply a pleasant alternative to all of the disco that surrounded it when it first came out). Special weekly "Featured Artist" pairings will include The Beatles and Buzzcocks, The Rolling Stones and The Ramones, The Beach Boys and Big Dipper, Jefferson Airplane and Joy Division, and Creedence Clearwater Revival and The Cramps. The hour-long show will air on WCRS-FM (98.3/102.1) on Thursday and Friday nights at 8, and for those seeking assistance in picking up the station's signal, reception tips are provided through its website at www.wcrsfm.org.
I was deeply involved with Columbus' music scene during the 1980s when I published over one hundred issues of my fanzine, The Offense, and promoted over fifty concerts featuring bands such as the Pixies, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, and the Cocteau Twins. It was the rock and roll music of the '60s that I grew up with, however, and so I'm excited about being given the opportunity to expand my horizons and present to our town a show that will shine a long-overdue spotlight not on the best-known songs of the '60s, '70s, and '80s, but rather on some of the best.
I was deeply involved with Columbus' music scene during the 1980s when I published over one hundred issues of my fanzine, The Offense, and promoted over fifty concerts featuring bands such as the Pixies, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, and the Cocteau Twins. It was the rock and roll music of the '60s that I grew up with, however, and so I'm excited about being given the opportunity to expand my horizons and present to our town a show that will shine a long-overdue spotlight not on the best-known songs of the '60s, '70s, and '80s, but rather on some of the best.