Rudy Panucci On Pop Culture

Author: Rudy Panucci (Page 98 of 125)

STUFF TO DO To End April

Onced again, sit back and relax as your PopCulteer regales you with suggestions hither and yon.  There’s a ton of STUFF TO DO in Charleston and all over the Mountain State and beyond as we find ourselves rapidly approaching the end of the month of April.

We start with a show for which I don’t have graphics handy, but it sounds really cool.

The West Virginia State University Yellowjacket II Chapter of Groove Phi Groove Social Fellowship, Incorporated will host local musician and member Tajai Holmes for a benefit concert for the CAMC Foundation on SATURDAY, APRIL 29 at 8 PM at Davis Fine Arts Building on the campus of WVSU. Proceeds from the concert will go toward that charity. Tickets will be available at the door for $5. Parental discretion is advised.

Tajai Holmes, known by his stage name Jai’Rahd, is a talented singer, rapper, producer, and songwriter born and raised in Kanawha County, WV. One of his biggest inspirations for singing stems from his uncle, the late Dr. Mark Holmes, a well-known gospel singer in West Virginia. Tajai’s versatility in music allows him to perform in multiple genres including hip-hop, R&B, pop, and trap. Currently, he works as a computer science engineer for Live Nation and is a member of Groove Phi Groove Social Fellowship Incorporated, Yellowjacket II Chapter at West Virginia State University.

Live Music is back at Taylor Books. There is no cover charge, and shows start at 7:30 PM. Friday it’s Matt Mullins. Saturday Andrew Pauley entertains the crowd at Charleston’s beloved Bookstore/Coffee Shop/Art Gallery.

The Empty Glass has some great stuff through the week to tell you about.  Thursday from 5:30 PM to 6:30 PM, Swingstein and Robin play fiddle and piano and sing swing and early jazz standards. Each week they donate their tips to a local nonprofit.  At 6: 30 PM Thursday, The East End Ghouls host a viewing party for Halfway To Halloween. Thursday at 10 PM The Glass hosts a Bluegrass Jam.  Friday Tim Courts plays during happy hour. Sunday sees the return of Empty Glass Got Talent  Next week they’ll have an open mic Monday night, and Songwriter Showcase on Tuesday.

Check last week’s STUFF TO DO for a list of theatre performances that are happening again this weekend. Also, Crumbl Cookie opens in Charleston, near the Aldi at Southgate, this Friday.  CAUSEACON happens Friday through Sunday in Beckley.

Please remember that the pandemic is not over yet. It’s still a going concern. And now there are seasonal allergies, the flu and other ferocious bugs in the mix. Many people who have very good reasons are still wearing masks, and many of us, understandably, are still nervous about being in crowds, masked or not. Be kind and understanding  while you’re out.

If you’re up for going out, here are a few suggestions for the rest of this week, roughly in order.

THEATRE

WEDNESDAY

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Buni Muni, Joe Rian, Sierra Ferrell, Corduroy Brown and More On a New RFC.

We have once again arrived at Tuesday on The AIR  and that means it’s time for a new  Radio Free Charleston. You simply have to point your cursor over and tune in at the website, or you could just stay here, and  listen to the cool embedded player found elsewhere on this page.  This week it’s yet another of our hybrid shows, combinging a new hour with classic episodes from the archives.

In order to hear this show, you simply have to take your cursor over and point it at the website, or you could just stay right here and  listen to the cool embedded player found elsewhere on this page, Either way you get three full hours of Radio Free Charleston loaded with cool new local music and cool new independent music and some really interesting recycled material from 2018.

Our first hour is mostly recently-released music, some of it less than a week old. We open with brand-new music from Huntington’s Buni Muni, and heap on the new local and indie stuff with fresh tracks from Corduroy Brown, Joe Rian, Sierra Ferrell, Nixon Black, Ian Hunter and more.  We also spice things up a bit with music from John Lennon, Ann Magnuson, Payback’s a Bitch, Easy All-Stars and others.

I have to be honest. I’d planned to do a full three-hour show this week, but my prep and recording time got upended by the news that Tucker Carlson was fired from FOX News. My phone started ringing off the hook, and my inbox filled up. When it came time to record the show my throat was raw and my face was contorted into an intense grin. So I just did one new hour, then plundered the RFC Archives.

That means that our second and third hours resurrect two of our one-hour, all-local editions of Radio Free Charleston from the Spring of 2018.  Among thes two gems you’ll find a long-lost live set by Blue Million, recorded about thirty years ago at The Empty Glass.

Again, I warn you that over the course of our three hours we jump around many different musical genre and styles, because RFC is free-format radio, and we sorta do that by definition.

Check out the playlist below to see all the goodies we have in store (live links will take you to the artist’s pages where possible)…

RFC V5 128

hour one
Buni Muni “TAZ-BBY”
Joe Rian “Daddy’s Head Hurts”
Sierra Ferrell “The Sea (Alternate Version)”
Corduroy Brown “Survivor’s Guilt”
John Lennon “Old Dirt Road (rehearsal)”
Tyler Childers “Old Country Church (Jubilee Version)”
Todd Burge with Joseph Hale “Moonshiner”
Peg Bundy “Down”
Dave Strong “I Would”
Nervous Twitch “You Never Let Me Down”
Payback’s a Bitch “Go Johnny”
Nixon Black “Fragile”
Model Citizens “You Are What You Wear”
Easy All-Stars “Moonage Daydream”
Ann Magnuson “I’m A Man”
Ian Hunter “I Hate Hate”

hour two
Holden Caulfield “Open For Business”
Blue Million – Live At The Empty Glass 1993
“Real Life Baby Doll”
“Tangled Up In Blue”
“Barfly”
“What Would It Take”
“Blueberry Jam”
“That Was Then, This Is Now”
“Folsom Prison Blues”
“Flesh Blood and Bones”
Three Bodies “Gardens of Hope”
Go Van Gogh “Shut Up, I Love You”
Two Watts of Power “World”
Whistlepunk “Falling Down”
Raymond Wallace “Shine On Harvest Moon”
Mark Bates and the Vacancies “Spiral Down”
Under the Radar “Mothman”
The Amazing Delores “Rats In My Trailer”

hour three
Sheldon Vance “Play On”
Farnsworth “American Dream”
Byzantine“Purity”
Burt Reynolds Death Metal Experiment “Finding Emo”
Science of the Mind “Taste My Fist”
The Renfields “Mars Attacks”
Under The Radar “Mothman Prophecy #1”
Radio Cult “Man Made Monster”
Linnfinity “Martian’s Bloom”
Hawthorne Heights “Hope”
Stone Ka-Tet “Here It Comes Again”
Stark Raven  “It Never Goes Away”
Wolfgang Parker “Blood Red Water”
Pepper Fandango “Make-out Bandit”
John Radcliff  “Company Song”

You can hear this episode of Radio Free Charleston Tuesday at 10 AM and 10 PM on The AIR, with replays Wednesday at 9 AM,  Thursday at 3 PM, Friday at 9 AM, Saturday at Noon and Midnight,  and  Monday at 11 AM, exclusively on The AIR. Now you can also hear a different episode of RFC every weekday at 5 PM, and we bring you a marathon all night long Saturday night/Sunday morning.

I’m also going to  embed a low-fi, mono version of this show right in this post, right here so you can listen on demand.

 

After RFC, stick around for encores of last week’s episodes of  MIRRORBALL at 1 PM and Curtain Call at 2 PM.

At 3 PM we offer up a couple of early episodes of The Swing Shift. Every week yours truly strives to bring you the best of over 100 years of Swing Music on one of our most-listened-to programs. This week we’re going to encore some of the formative episodes. These two shows orignally aired in 2017.

You can hear The Swing Shift Tuesday at 3 PM, with replays Wednesday at 8 AM, Friday at 10 AM and 8 PM and Saturday afternoon, only on The AIR . You can also hear all-night marathons, seven hours each, starting at Midnight Thursday and Sunday evenings.

Monday Morning Art: Partially Obscured

This week finds your blogger/artist still working with pastel crayons. I’m currently dealing with a weird evolution of my Myasthenia Gravis, where the control of my fingers is not consistent. Pastel crayons are easier for me to handle than a brush, pencil or pen at the moment, so this week I decided to try a bit of a mixed media experiment.

I created a digital abstract piece on the computer, then, with a tremendous reliance on straight-edges, tried to recreate it in pastels on paper for pens. You see the end result above,

It’s abstract, but it means something. It’s up to you to figure out what.

To see it bigger,  try clicking HERE

If you’re curious, the digital version is at the bottom of this post.

Over in radioland, Monday at 2 PM on The AIR, we bring you a classic episode of Psychedelic Shack, and then at 3 PM a classic edition of Herman Linte’s weekly showcase of the Progressive Rock of the past half-century, Prognosis.  You can listen to The AIR at the website, or on the embedded radio player elsewhere on this page.

Psychedelic Shack can be heard every Monday at 2 PM, with replays Tuesday at 9 AM, Wednesday at 10 PM, Friday at 1 PM,  and Saturday at 9 AM. You can hear Prognosis on The AIR Monday at 3 PM, with replays Tuesday at 7 AM, Wednesday at 8 PM, Thursday at Noon, and Saturday at 10 AM. You can hear two classic episodes of the show Sunday at 2 PM.

At 8 PM you can hear an hour of comical songs by Garfunkle and Oates on an encore episode of Comedy Vault.

Tonight at 9 PM the Monday Marathon presents ten hours of New Wave Dance Mixes, as we bring you five episodes of Sydney’s Big Electric Cat made up entirely of 12″ remixes of classic New Wave tunes.

The digital rough draft

Sunday Evening Video: Siouxsie & The Banshees In Concert

This week PopCult brings you Siouxsie & The Banshees, recorded live at Shepherds Bush Empire, London, on July 10 2002. The band sprung forth from Punk Rock fandom, having formed after Siouxsie Sioux and Steve Severin started following the pre-fame Sex Pistols.

Of course, they grew beyond that, with Siousxie becoming one of the most inspirational vocalists of the New Wave era, with a huge international following.

The band broke up in 1999, but reformed for the “The Seven Year Itch” tour in 2002, and that is where this concert comes from. The line-up here is: Bass – Steven Severin, Drums – Budgie, Guitar – Knox Chandler, Vocals – Siouxsie Sioux, plus additional backing vocalists.

The setlist:
1 Pure
2 Jigsaw Feeling
3 Metal Postcard
4 Red Light
5 Happy House
6 Christine
7 Lullaby
8 Lands End
9 Cities In Dust
10 I Could Be Again
11 Icon
12 Night Shift
13 Voodoo Dolly
14 Spellbound
15 Blue Jay Way
16 Monitor
17 Peek-A-Boo

We’re just randomly dropping this here because it’s such a good show. Enjoy!

The RFC Flashback: Episode Twenty-Two

This week we go back to June, 2007 for an early episode of Radio Free Charleston that was just resotred and re-posted three years ago, after being MIA for many years before that. This is another show that had unfortunately been archived at MySpace, before that service self-destructed and deleted all their videos.

“Shark Bopy Shirt”was produced while I was under a great deal of stress. I had recorded the famed reunion of Feast of Stephen the previous month, and mixing the audio and editing video from five cameras was taking longer than anticipated. Much of this was due to the fact that I had begun overseeing the care of my elderly aunt and uncle, and my aunt, Stella Warden, had been diagnosed with quickly-progressing lung cancer right in the middle of production of the FOS reunion special

So I decided that the best way to deal with things was to rush out a stopgap episode of RFC, just in case something forced me to delay the Feast of Stephen special, which was already way behind schedule at this point.

Which was a good move, since what happened was that my aunt’s cancer progressed quickly and took her life about a month after this show premiered. The FOS reunion eventually became episode 23 of RFC, after a gap of over a month between shows.

Which is not meant to demean this episode of the show. It’s a pretty great episode. I had discovered Captain Crash and the Beauty Queen at a new talent showcase at the Labelle Theater (along with InFormation, Jordan Searls and Joe Slack) and rushed them into LiveMix Studio so fast that they hadn’t quite settled on their name yet. In this show they were called “Aurora.” Voices of Anatole were one of the top metal acts in the region, and I was offered the chance to include a music video for them by Screaming Butterfly Entertainment, which is helmed by Holly Siders, who has gone on to produce many great award-winning films and music videos for the likes of Byzantine and other bands and is still creating cool music videos and feature films.

This episode also features No Running, one of Frank Panucci’s most beloved contributions to RFC. We open the show with The No Pants Players Eat A Watermelon, which is either disgusting or erotic, depending on your point of view.

Host segments were shot on the banks of the Kanawha River in Dunbar, just a few blocks from my house, during a rare break of a couple of hours from providing end-of-life care to my aunt. Considering what all was happening at the time, this turned out to be a pretty incredible episode of the show. I was still learning my craft as a guerilla TV producer and host, but I think it came out pretty well, and it’s nice to have it back online. You can read the original production notes HERE.

Post-Disco Revivalism On The AIR

The PopCulteer
April 21, 2023

You’ve worked hard all week and now we reward you with a new episode of MIRRORBALL, on The AIR, bringing joy and dancing to all you Disco fanatics.   The AIR is PopCult‘s sister radio station. You can hear these shows on The AIR website, or just click on the embedded player found elsewhere on this page.

Getting right to that, at 2 PM, Mel Larch uncorks a new MIRRORBALL! The AIR’s showcase of classic Disco music departs from its normal format of presenting Disco-era delights and shines its multi-colored spotlight on three artists who have spent the last four decades keeping Disco alive.

While Disco alledgedly faded from America’s conciousness sometime in the early 1980s, there were–and are–true believers keeping the beat and making sure the dancefloors don’t fall silent. This week Mel pays tribute to three artists who, either through cover songs, or original compositions in the classic Disco style, have kept us shaking our groove things into a new millenium.

Pet Shop boys, Jimmy Somerville and Kylie Minogue have stood strong and proudly defended the Disco Hill, and this week we bring you a Disco salad of all three

Check out the playlist…

MIRRORBALL 073

Pet Shop Boys “Go West”
Kylie Minogue “Fine Wine”
Jimmy Somerville “You Make Me Feel”
Pet Shop Boys “To Step Aside”
Kylie Minogue “Magic”
Pet Shop Boys “Saturday Night Forever”
Kylie Miogue “Real Groove”
Jimmy Somerville “Travesty”
Kylie Minogue “Where Does The DJ Go?”
Pet Shop Boys “Radiophonic”
Jimmy Somerville “Strong Enough”
Kylie Minogue “Dance Floor Darling”
Jimmy Somerville “Never Can Say Goodbye”
Pet Shop Boys “I Don’t Know What You Want, But I Can’t Give It Any More”
Jimmy Somerville & Sarah Jane Morris “Don’t Leave Me This Way”

You can hear MIRRORBALL every Friday at 2 PM, with replays throughout the following week, Saturday at 9 PM, Sunday at 11 PM, Monday at 9 AM and Tuesday at 1 PM.

At 3 PM we bring you an encore of a classic episode of Sydney’s Big Electric Cat from September, 2016.  This was another show where Sydney Fileen educated the masses on the finer points of New Wave history.  Rather than send you to a link, we’ll just re-post the playlist here…

The playlist:

After The Fire  “Der Kommisar”
Dave Edmunds  “I Hear You Knockin’”
Eddie and The Hot Rods  “Teenage Depression”
Dr. Feelgood  “Milk and Alcohol”
Roogalator  “Cinncinnati Fatback”
Flamin’ Groovies  “Slow Death”
Elvis Costello and The Attractions  “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace Love and Understanding”
Ian Dury and The Blockheads  “What A Waste”
The Ramones  “Teenage Lobotomy”
Talking Heads  “Life During Wartime”
The Damned  “New Rose”
Plastic Bertrand  “Ca Plan Por Moi”
Buzzcocks  “Ever Fallen In Love”
Kraftwerk  “Trans Europe Express”
Falco “Der Komissar”
The Dickies  “Pretty Please Me”
Lene Lovich  “Blue”
Joe Jackson  “A Slow Song”
New England  “Walking Wild”
M  “Keep It To Yourself”
Mike Batt with the LSO  “Voices In The Dark”
Men At Work  “Be Good Johnny”
Spoons  “Walk Across The Water”
The Passions  “I’m In Love With A German Film Star”
Sham 69  “The Kids Are United”
Spandau Ballet  “Chant No 1”
Altered Images  “Happy Birthday”
The Smiths  “Please, Please Let Me Go”
Nina Hagen  “TV Glotzer (White Punks On Dope)”
Bill Nelson  “In The Forest of the Storms”

Sydney’s Big Electric Cat is produced at Haversham Recording Institute in London, and can be heard every Friday at 3 PM, with replays Saturday afternoon, Monday at 7 AM, Tuesday at 8 PM, Wednesday at Noon and Thursday at 10 AM, exclusively on The AIR. Two classic episodes can also be heard every Sunday, starting at 10 AM.

And that is this week’s PopCulteer. Check back every day for fresh content because it makes you a smart feller, or something.

STUFF TO DO and Toe & So Long

Good gosh dang, there’s a metric ton of things you can do in and around Charleston and the Mountain State (and beyond) this weekend!  In this week’s edition of STUFF TO DO, we’re going to start off with a very cool comic book that you can Kickstart before we jump into the multitude of cool activities on tap.

Toe & So Long, our Kickstarter recommendation 

With a name like “Toe & So Long,” I’d better start off with the creator’s blurb:

“Toe and So Long” is an oddball/nonhuman sci-ish-fantasy buddy comic series that refuses to scream at you (or not be weird) about indecision, trauma, & addiction. Toe is a big gray guy, and So Long is a cat. I think I’ve cleared things up here for everyone. Oh, you want more? Ok, well, this whole thing got started by Jacob Michael Campbell, who wrote, designed, and is coloring (and will do the lettering) for this comic project. He’s been a professional graphic designer since age 16, as well as a general creative guy. Think music, illustration, and general ideasmithing. Well, Jake’s also got tremors! So he went out to find Alexis Vivasllo, the best comic book artist to translate chicken scratch into pure gold. We hope you’ll support this project and join us for a long time on the Plain of Doors with Toe & So Long!

The Kickstarter page goes on to describe the story…

Toe, a hulking gray humanoid, and So Long, a fluffy black kitty, wander (endlessly) a Plain of Doors that lead to an infinite amount of scenarios for them to experience. It’s a routine that’s left this dynamic duo in an accepting haze. They share many memories from their adventures, but there’s a missing piece to every journey that they’ve always just…ignored. Soon, the pair will find a purpose for their searching impulses, starting a new journey along a path they thought they’d already traveled a dozen times before.

Issue #1 of Toe & So Long is a 34-page romp exploring the routine that the two find themselves in. Magnificent displays of interdimensional power and world-wielding entities abound, but a wash of malaise begs more questions with every otherworldly exhibition. Every answer introduces a new query.

To be honest, they had me at “Plain of Doors.” I love that kind of bizarre existential fantasy. Chances are, if you’re a fan of Adventure Time, The Beatles’ Yellow Submarine, Rick and Morty, Doctor Who, The Forbidden Zone or Grumpy Cat you’ll probably find something to love about Toe & So Long. The book is way past being fully-funded with over a week left to go, and you can get in on the action HERE.

There are a variety of reward options, starting at a mere five bucks for a digital edition, and if you go with a physical copy, stretch goals have already been met that include magnets and stickers. If you want more, you can get additional copies of the comic and sticker plus a bookmark as add-ons.

Check out the video…

And now, onto STUFF TO DO…

A special note: ArtWalk happens again in Charleston Thursday from 5 PM to 8 PM.  This free event is open to the public as art lovers can walk to all the usual suspects and take in the majesty of the art. Some galleries will have music and/or munchies as well. It’s a really cheap way to support the local scene and get out and mingle a bit…if you are so inclined.

Also, Saturday is Record Store Day, and we have graphics for some of the participating stores below.

Live Music is back at Taylor Books. There is no cover charge, and shows start at 7:30 PM. Friday it’s Sean Richardson & Sea Scout. Saturday Neil Curry entertains the crowd at Charleston’s beloved Bookstore/Coffee Shop/Art Gallery.

The Empty Glass has some great stuff through the week to tell you about.  Thursday from 5:30 PM to 7:30 PM, Swingstein and Robin play fiddle and piano and sing swing and early jazz standards. Each week they donate their tips to a local nonprofit.  Later on Thursday, Kenny Booth hosts “Shred Night” so metallically-inclined peoples can come out and jam and not worry about upsetting the folk singers. Next week they’ll have an open mic Monday night, and Songwriter Showcase on Tuesday. Other shows that have graphics are listed among the images below.

Please remember that the pandemic is not over yet. It’s still a going concern. And now there are seasonal allergies, the flu and other ferocious bugs in the mix. Many people who have very good reasons are still wearing masks, and many of us, understandably, are still nervous about being in crowds, masked or not. Be kind and understanding  while you’re out.

If you’re up for going out, here are a few suggestions of art, food, theatre, music and just fun in general for the rest of this week, roughly in order.

LIVE THEATRE

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Wild Beatles Covers and Pharewell To The Phantom On The AIR Wednesday

Wednesday afternoon The AIR brings you a special new episodes of Curtain Call and Beatles Blast.  You can tune in at the website, or if you’re on a laptop or desktop, you could just stay right here and  listen to the convenient embedded radio player lurking elsewhere on this page.

At 2 PM (EDT) Beatles Blast brings you a mixtape of unusual cover versions of Beatles tunes from the Rubber Soul and Revolver albums. I wanted to include a few less traditional and, some would say “bizarre,” versions of these familiar songs, just to keep you on your toes. You’ll hear these beloved songs rendered in Bluegrass, Baroque, Salsa, Jazz, Soul, Alternative Rock, and other wild styles. The end result, hopefully, will be delightfully entertaining.

Check out the playlist…

Beatles Blast 092

Dion “Drive My Car”
Pickin’ On “Norwegian Wood”
Henrique Cazes “You Won’t See Me”
John Bayless “Nowhere Man”
Yonder Mountain String Band “Think For Yourself”
Mindy Smith “The Word”
Rita Lee “Michelle”
Sufjan Stevens “What Goes On”
The Truth “Girl”
The Wallflowers “I’m Looking Through You”
The Valium “In My Life”
Nellie McMkay “If I Needed Someone”
MC Iron “Taxman”
Aretha Franklin “Eleanor Rigby”
The Vines “I’m Only Sleeping”
Bill Ramsey “Yellow Submarine”
Ween “She Said, She Said”
Cilla Black “For No One”
Blue Cartoon “I Want To Tell You”
Perry Ferrell “Got To Get You Into My Life”
Billy Idol “Tomorrow Never Knows”

Beatles Blast can be heard every Wednesday at 2 PM, with replays Thursday at 11 PM, Friday at 1 PM,  and Saturday afternoon.

At 3 PM (EDT) on Curtain Call, Mel Larch presents a bit of a tribute to a show that just ended an historic run on Broadway.

April 16, 2023 saw the final performance of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Phantom of The Opera, after 13, 981 curtain rises and chandelier’s falling. With lyrics by Charles Hart, and a libretto by Richard Stilgoe, Phantom had a record-setting run at the Majestic Theater, where it has been a fixture since it opened on Broadway in January, 1988.

This week fills the hour with performances of some of the songs from Phantom of The Opera from all around the world. Phantom of The Opera is guaranteed to be the longest-running show in Broadway history for at least another nine years.  Its closest competitor, Chicago, still has a few thousand performances to go before they catch up.

Mel begins the show where it all started, with the preview single of the title song performed by Sarah Brightman and Steve Harley, and with additional lyrics by Mike Batt. During the rest of the show you’ll hear performances from the original Broadway cast, the London cast, a concert version from The Royal Albert Hall and even a Spanish-language version from Madrid.

Curtain Call can be heard on The AIR Wednesday at 3 PM, with replays Thursday at 8 AM, Friday at 10 AM, Saturday at 8 PM and Monday at 9 AM. A six-hour marathon of classic episodes can be heard Sunday evening starting at 6 PM, and an all-night marathon of Curtain Call episodes can be heard Wednesday nights, beginning at Midnight.

Also on The AIR, Wednesday at 11 PM,  The Comedy Vault  presents a classic episode featuring comedy songs from Garfunkle and Oates.

Frenchy and The Punk, Jamie’s Pawnshop Guitars, The Anchoress, David Synn, Bane Star and More on a new RFC

We have once again arrived at Tuesday on The AIR  and that means it’s time for a new  Radio Free Charleston. You simply have to point your cursor over and tune in at the website, or you could just stay here, and  listen to the cool embedded player found elsewhere on this page.  This week it’s yet another of our hybrid shows, combinging a new hour with a classic throwback.

We do indeed have one brand-new hour and two hours of RFC International from 2017 today on Radio Free Charleston this week.

Our first hour opens with Frenchy and The Punk, who will be performing at The Empty Glass Wednesday night. {Update: Sadly, Frenchy and The Punk had to cancel due to illness. We’ll let you know the next time they’re in town}

Following that we have a couple of tracks from Jamie’s Pawnshop Guitars, a new ongoing jam-session project that has local all-star bands covering classic tunes. This is spectacular stuff and accomplishes something that I tried, but was never able to pull off on the RFC video show. You should check out and subscribe to his YouTube page so you don’t miss any of the upcoming songs.

Here’s one of Jamie’s videos that you’ll hear in the show…

Inspired by Jamie’s project, I put together a whole set of cover tunes, with additional tracks from The Anchoress, Brian Diller, Byzantine and All Torches Lit.

After that we have a set of great music that starts with a brand-new song from David Synn, and wraps up with a brand-new song from Bane Star.

We even toss in a classic local track and a little-heard, latter-day oddity by The Cars.

Our second and third hours revive an old Radio Free Charleston International from January, 2017, and it’s a great mix of free-format stuff. The full show is just a valentine to free-format radio, and weaves all over the freaking map with everything from solo Beatles to DEVO to Frank Zappa, Kate Bush, Screaming Jay Hawkins and more.

Check out the playlist below to see all the goodies we have in store. Live links for the first hour will take you to the artist’s pages so you can find out more about them, buy their music and find out where to see them perform live…

RFC V5 127

hour one
Frenchy And The Punk  “If The World Doesn’t End First”
Jamie’s Pawnshop Guitars featuring Mark Beckner “Just Like Heaven”
Jamie’s Pawnshop Guitars featuring Justin Johnson “Outshined”
The Anchoress “Bizarre Love Triangle”
Brian Diller “Understanding Jane”
Byzantine “Red Skies”
All Torches Lit “Strangelove”
David Synn “Spaghetti Western”
Metallica “Too Far Gone?”
Holden Caufield “Welcome Home”
The Red Book “Other Worlds”
The Cars “Keep on Knocking”
Bane Star “We Don’t Go There”

hour two
John Cale “Changes Made”
They Might Be Giants “Black Ops”
Dirty Heads “Oxygen”
Green Day “Bang Bang”
John Anderson “Midnight Dancing”
Frank Zappa “Uncle Remus (Mix Outtake)
Peter Garrett “Homecoming”
DEVO “I Love Ur Gun”
No Doubt “Snakes”
Kate Pierson “Guitars and Microphones”
Neil Young “Vampire Blues”
Mi Sex “Not Such A Bad Boy”
Sabaton “Camoflauge”
The Who “Cook’s County”
A Day To Remember “Bullfight”

hour three
DGM “Animal”
Placebo “Twenty Years”
Faith No More “Why Do You Bother”
Paul McCartney “Check My Machine”
Ultravox “There Goes A Beautiful World”
Shakespeare’s Sister “Catwoman”
Screamin” Jay Hawkins “Frenzy”
King Grizzard and the Lizard Wizard “Mr. Beat”
George Harrison “Party Seacombe”
Kate Bush “James And The Cold Gun”
The Temptations “Ball Of Confusion”
Strawberry Alarm Clock “Blues For A Young Girl Gone”
The Radio Department “The Thing Was Bored”

You can hear this episode of Radio Free Charleston Tuesday at 10 AM and 10 PM on The AIR, with replays Wednesday at 9 AM,  Thursday at 3 PM, Friday at 9 AM, Saturday at Noon and Midnight,  and  Monday at 11 AM, exclusively on The AIR. Now you can also hear a different episode of RFC every weekday at 5 PM, and we bring you a marathon all night long Saturday night/Sunday morning.

I’m also going to  embed a low-fi, mono version of this show right in this post, right here so you can listen on demand.

 

After RFC, stick around for encores of last week’s episodes of  MIRRORBALL at 1 PM and Curtain Call at 2 PM.

At 3 PM we offer up a couple of early episodes of The Swing Shift. Every week yours truly strives to bring you the best of over 100 years of Swing Music on one of our most-listened-to programs. This week we’re going to encore some of the formative episodes. These two shows orignally aired in October, 2016.

You can hear The Swing Shift Tuesday at 3 PM, with replays Wednesday at 8 AM, Friday at 10 AM and 8 PM and Saturday afternoon, only on The AIR . You can also hear all-night marathons, seven hours each, starting at Midnight Thursday and Sunday evenings.

Monday Morning Art: Warrior Woman

This week’s artistic greeting is a simple, smallish, figure sketch, done very roughly with pastel crayons on Paper For Pens. If that sounds familiar, it’s because I started this one during the same session as the figure sketch I posted here a couple of weeks ago.

This was another attempt to do a figure study with no reference. It’s sort of a collision of Impressionism and Expressionism, only not really because it’s just a product of my imagination. The idea was to depict a strong female form, crouching because I didn’t take the time to properly compose the drawing before I began sketching it. Having her skin blend in with the background in places was intentional. I can’t remember exactly why, but I meant to do that.

She could be a superhero or a barbarian queen or just a very angry lady who’s not at all happy to be stuck in the desert with hardly any clothes on.  I plead artistic license here.

Of course, as with the earlier sketch, it might just be considered a crude drawing of a naked or nearly-naked lady. This one was also scanned with a layer of acetate protecting the scanner bed, and a little color-correction in the computer to compensate for that. I also had to add the black border you see above because the WordPress theme I’m using won’t let me run graphics that are more than 1000 pixels high, so it was either give it a border or squoosh it.  Squooshing would not have been respectful of my artistic integrity.

To see it bigger, and without the border, try clicking HERE

Over in radioland, Monday at 2 PM on The AIR, we bring you a classic episode of Psychedelic Shack, and then at 3 PM a classic edition of Herman Linte’s weekly showcase of the Progressive Rock of the past half-century, Prognosis.  You can listen to The AIR at the website, or on the embedded radio player elsewhere on this page.

Psychedelic Shack can be heard every Monday at 2 PM, with replays Tuesday at 9 AM, Wednesday at 10 PM, Friday at 1 PM,  and Saturday at 9 AM. You can hear Prognosis on The AIR Monday at 3 PM, with replays Tuesday at 7 AM, Wednesday at 8 PM, Thursday at Noon, and Saturday at 10 AM. You can hear two classic episodes of the show Sunday at 2 PM.

At 8 PM you can hear an hour of classic stand-up from Eddie Griffin on an encore episode of Comedy Vault.

Tonight at 9 PM the Monday Marathon presents ten hours of music recorded live, beginning with an all-live Radio Free Charleston, then continuing with a live concert by Go Van Go, and live episodes of Prognosis, Sydney’s Big Electric Cat and The Swing Shift.

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