Matt Knight said:As I am not the program director, it is not my decision as to the shows that are put on the station so I can not answer your question directly.
Fair enough. I guess pulling the plug was Terrie's call, but there needs to be more new music and something to spice up evenings and weekends at G Rock. So, you guys have officially added Puddle Of Mudd's new single right out of the box. Let me ask this - why are Puddle Of Mudd acceptable for immediate airplay on G Rock? Aren't they no different from Creed and Nickelback ... maybe even worse being that they were assembled by their record label much like a boy band? "Control" and "Away From Me" have moronic frat boy lyrics just like Nickelback's "Animals", and "Blurry" is every bit as sappy and soccer mom-friendly as "Far Away". Everything else they have done sounds just like these songs, along with brain-dead lyrics and lots of Pro Tools. Do you really want to play this band? Or am I asking the wrong person this question?
Ike Hull said:I agree with a lot of Soulcrusher's points, even if he is a little long-winded. (Although I don't want to encourage him to thump a deceased equus.) Also, this thread has gotten me to check out 106.3 for the first time in years, although I can only receive it clearly in my car, and not in my apartment, since I live in Newark. I had forgotten about the station until I started reading this thread. I usually just listen to WFMU, WKCR, and other such non-comms. And I dislike Neanderthal rock like Puddle of Mudd or Linkin Park.
And they should really be playing Arcade Fire. I mean, jeez, they sell a ton of records and their sound is very accessible and catchy.
However, I don't think that 106.3 necessarily needs to play harder-edged stuff like Tool or Rage Against the Machine. In the old days B.N. (Before Nirvana), heritage commercial alt stations like WHFS in Maryland didn't play a lot of hard alt rock like that, at least not as far as I can remember. Circa 1989-1990, I heard stuff like New Order, Suzanne Vega, Depeche Mode, Basehead, Robyn Hitchcock, Blondie, the Smiths, P.J. Harvey, Lloyd Cole, Buffalo Tom, Lemonheads, and so on. A modernized version of that with artists like the Eels, Magnetic Fields, Fountains of Wayne, Elf Power, Spoon, and so on, could work to attract both male and female listeners.
And hey Soulcrusher, if you ever listen to Internet radio, check out WOXY.com. That's a pretty ideal alt station if you ask me. They have a really nice-sounding AAC+ stream (playable with Winamp, VLC, and various other free players). The station is like the Michael Myers of Internet radio stations (well, except that it doesn't kill people). It just keeps rising from the dead.
I mostly propose some harder rock to keep a good balance, since G Rock plays more of the very soft rock (i.e. Plain White T's, Coldplay, Fuel and Staind power ballads, etc.) than your average Alternative. It also wouldn't be a bad idea because a lot of it does well on the charts. Ideally, I would like to see G Rock with the FM 106.3 sound and modern acts that would blend in well with that station's spirit, like Bloc Party, Arcade Fire, Kings Of Leon, Arctic Monkeys and others. I won't hold my breath waiting for it.
Speaking of Arcade Fire - #2 on the Billboard 200, with around 100,000 sold in the first week alone. What is G Rock waiting for? Do you really want to play a generic, critically-reviled band on their last legs like Puddle Of Mudd over a highly respected band that has a long and prosperous career ahead of them?
WOXY keeps rising from the ashes - first the FM signal disappears, then the web broadcast ends, but it's back once again. This has always been an excellent station, one that I wish would set an example for Alternative stations around the country. It's been a while, so I'll have to check them out. Thanks for the heads up.