“Prolix Logorrhoea, and how!”

Saturday, October 31, 2009

The Horrific End... For Now!

Pulling out all the stops for the last installment of our Spook-Tacular series this month, I joined forces with Ricardo Wang of What's This Called? to bring you two hours of insanity to kick-start your Halloween Party Plans tonight. Ob-soive:

Episode 045: How's It Named? Two-Hour Halloween Spook-Tacular! Part I
Episode 045: How's It Named? Two-Hour Halloween Spook-Tacular! Part II
(Featuring scary selections from the collections of Austin Rich & Ricardo Wang.)

Playlist & Footnotes.

This has been a wonderful Holiday Season, and I really enjoyed getting back into the Halloween saddle. I'm not sure what's on the docket for next week, but stay tuned! As the weather changes, and the year grinds to a close, I'll be doing my best to bring you everything musical you need to cope. Pleasant Nightmares!

See you in seven.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Halloween Requests

Last chance to submit your Halloween Music requests for my two-hour special on Saturday. Hopefully you've caught the last four weeks of Halloween shenanigans, and this week is the last time I'll be busting out the rattling chains and creeky doors for at least a year. Until then, comment, e-mail, or otherwise communicate to me your favorite spooky tunes that you would like to hear this weekend, and I will do my best to make them a part of the show.

Scary Monsters! Spooky Chord Progressions! What more could you ask for?

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Things I Learned In College #12

Write in you books. Underline passages. Write in the margins. Take notes... and save them! And do not sell back your books. Ever!

Nearly four years ago I was assigned a reading by Flaubert for a class I took, featuring a lot of different fiction from different eras and countries. Now I've been assigned the same story again. In an attempt to reduce the amount of work I have to do, I decided to try and dig up my notes from that class, along with the text, to see if I could avoid unnecessary work.

Having spent a full 20 minutes digging through all the notes I've saved since I started taking classes at PSU, I have concluded that any random system of filing is probably more efficient than anything I've come up with in the last four years. I did manage to locate the book, however, only to discover that during all 23 pages of it, I failed to make any impression on text in any way. It looks virtually unread, and I would even be hard pressed to prove that I owned the book, save for the fact that it is in my house.

I am of the opinion that you should respect your books, as they are not only extremely important, but can offer you solace and comfort in ways that few other pieces of media can. However, I finally came around to the idea of writing in my books over the last couple of years. This behavior, in my experience, is an entirely polarizing one; either you already write in your books and think it's acceptable, or you are horrified by the thought that someone does this, and begin to rethink your opinions with regards to whom you will now lend your books to. I have never met anyone who didn't respond enthusiastically in one direction or the other, and it generally tips off an intense discussion of right and wrong.

I used to think that you should never write in a book, even if you owned it. But as I've had to do more and more research, and read more and more books, I've found that it isn't exactly easy to synthesize the text you've just read into a useful form entirely from memory. In fact, I would say it is now impossible for me to do that. This was hard for me to come to grips with, and the solution was right in front of me: underline, highlight, and write in the margins as you read. It hardly takes any time, has actually improved my retention and comprehension, saves a lot of work down the road when it comes to writing papers, and creates an intellectual dialog between you and the author that will baffle anyone else who reads your copy of that book. (Try it! It's fun!)

Of course, in some cases, this lesson is too little, too late. Much of what I have read in my lifetime has remained unmarked, and as I continue my education (wherever it may lead), I will probably have to re-read texts that I failed to interact with in the past. Well, at least I finally figured it out.

However, if the thought of writing in a book is still too weird and upsetting, there is an alternative: post-it notes. I started using them for my comics when I couldn't actually bring myself to mark them up, and have actually been surprised at how many comments I have to make about them as I'm reading, and how much better I remember the stories.

Yes, I just admitted to writing in my own books, and taking notes on the comics I read. Let the comment-battle royale commence.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Easy Like Cheesey

Two hours of corny music! Plus partial-musical accompaniment... on an instrument, no less! And spook-tacular news concerning next week's show! Can you believe all the exclamation points?! Ob-soive:

11 AM: Retrocast of "Halloween Cheese" (10/11/06)
(Featuring some cheesy, seasonally appropriate songs that everyone knows and loves.)

Playlist & Footnotes

01 PM: Episode 044: Fromage de l'Halloween
(Featuring even more of the same, and then some, from a October 25th, 2006 show.)

Playlist & Footnotes
(2009)
Playlist & Footnotes (2006)

Plus:

Night of the Living Tongue on What's This Called?, LIVE!

Playlist & Footnotes

While I did not run live sound for this appearance by Night of the Living Tongue, I did perform as part of the show, playing the ukulele my mom gave me, and later, playing a Dead Air Fresheners CD case for percussion. Night of the Living Tongue was a show that used to appear on KBOO, that took an improvised form while it was on the air, hosted and run by Jennifer Robin, a current collaborator of the aforementioned Dead Air Fresheners. This one is full of spoken word and noise, so don't say I didn't warn you.

However, I am saying: you should listen to it.

Next week: well, the big day is finally here, and in celebration of the finest holiday of the year, I'm doing a two-hour broadcast entitled Soul-A-Ween! Prepare yourself for two hours of Halloween music that has never before appeared on my show, with a decidedly soul-infused sound. This is what it's all been building up to, so you really don't want to miss this one. I promise.

See ya in seven.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Lost In The Punk-In Patch

With only a spare few weeks left until Halloween Proper, I continue my holiday-season retrocasts with a fantastic episode from 2006, featuring a wonderful assortment of Creepy Monster Punk Songs, guaranteed to put you in the right mood for rampaging at night and stirring up trouble. Ob-soive:

Episode 043: 10/18/06 Retrocast: "Lost In The Punk-In Patch"
(Featuring all your favorite Halloween classics, from Dead Moon to The Dream Syndicate)

Playlist & Footnotes (2009)
Playlist & Footnotes (2006)

And, in honor of this classic show, at 11 AM I also retrocasted an episode from earlier this year, when I was only slightly younger, slightly more naive, and had slightly more time on my hands. Here goes:

Retrocast of Episode 009: The Grumpy Punk
(Songs like they used ta make - and a handful merely in the spirit - for a full hour.)

Playlist & Footnotes

I hope as many of you as possible will be out at the Scion Garage Fest today, to enjoy some of the local Portland weather, and soak in the rock. I'll be back next week with Fromage de la Halloween. See ya in seven.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

It Came From Outer Space!

Halloween draws closer and closer each and every day, and if there's one thing I love more than Halloween and Halloween Music, it's Halloween Music (and radio) with a Sci-Fi bent. With that in mind, I tried to bring you three hours of creepy, Halloween-infused Sci-Fi radio, with an additional self-reflexive hour to kick-start the extravaganza. What would Blasphuphmus Radio's Halloween Spook-tacular be without a little Outer Space Shenanigans? Ob-soive:

10 AM: Sound Salvation Snippets
(Replaying random selections from Episode 029: A Sound Salvation (Radio About Radio))

11 AM: Retrocast of Episode 018: When The Flying Saucers Attack!
(Replaying the entire episode from May 2nd of this year.)

Playlist & Footnotes

12 PM: Episode 041: Recreating "The Outer Limits"
(Where I do an audio-recreation of a lost episode of Blasphuphmus Radio from August 1st, 2007.)

Playlist & Footnotes (2009)
Playlist & Footnotes (2007)

01 PM: Episode 042: The War Of The Worlds
(Where I rebroadcast the Mutual Network's classic October 30th, 1938 episode of The Mercury Theater on The Air featuring Orsen Welles!)

(Note: If you were listening to the show live on the FM or AM signal, there was a complete technical meltdown during the 1 PM hour, and I couldn't actually bring you The War Of The Worlds. Consequently, the above link is to an internet-only feature.)

Halloween is just starting to take off, and stay tuned next week for one of my favorite Halloween Theme Shows: Lost In The Punk-In Patch!

See ya in seven.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Unscheduled Radio Appearance Last Night

I have a long-standing relationship with Ranger Mike of the signal-to-noise ratio program on KPSU, and I always love running sound for his show. Despite this being a last-minute sound request, I was totally stoked to come in and run sound for a local rock band, Silversafe, who did their first ever acoustic performance on our humble radio station. Here's the low-down:

signal-to-noise ratio w/ Silversafe, LIVE!
(Featuring a liver performance by local Portland rock group, Silversafe.)

The show featured several songs from their new EP (Automatic Heart), and three acoustic renditions throughout the hour. I thought I did a pretty decent mix on this one, and as usual, everyone's sense of humor was in top gear.

Stay tuned for a special two-hour show this Saturday as I cover for What's This Called? as I continue to ease into the holiday season. Until then...

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Classics From The Crypt!

October is finally here, and that means I can finally stop resisting the urge to listen to Halloween Music all day long. As I build up to the big day, I decided to bring you a retrocast of one of my favorite Halloween shows from years past, a show from 2006 that was everything a Halloween-themed Radio Show should be. Ob-soive:

Episode 040: 10/04/06 Retrocast: "Classics From The Crypt"
(Featuring vintage Halloween Music, presented as a vintage radio broadcast recording.)

Playlist & Footnotes. (2009 Version)
Playlist & Footnotes. (2006 Version)

BUT THAT'S NOT ALL! This week, Ricardo Wang and I switched time slots so he could bring you a live performance by local experimental rockers, New Red Sun! (I keep thinking of Superman Comics when I hear that name.) Of course, I ran the sound for it, and have to say, this performance is a must-listen!

New Red Sun on What's This Called?
(Featuring a live performance by, you guessed it, New Red Sun.)

Playlist & Footnotes.

AND AND AND! On October 1st, KPSU celebrated it's official 15 Year Anniversary at 5 PM. As a long-time volunteer of KPSU who was present for the 10 Year Anniversary, I felt it was really important to do something special this time. Myself and DJ Victrola arranged for a slew of KPSU volunteers to say the Legal ID in unison, to commemorate this momentous occasion. This was a pretty awesome event, and you can listen to it now on the KPSU archive!

KPSU's 15th Anniversary Broadcast!
(Scan forward to about 4 minutes & 50 seconds to hear it.)

That's it for this week. Stay tuned for more Halloween Mayhem, more Live Performances, and more KPSU news you can use.

See ya in seven.