Playlists

Clam Radio playlist for 02/05/2015

Bob Ball is my guest.

WUSB Alternatives playlist for 02/04/2015

INTO THE FIRE WITH JOJO ALL LIVE AND RARE

Blue Grass Time playlist for 02/04/2015

2 hours of bluegrass music

Everything Is Broken playlist for 02/03/2015

Our program tomorrow TUESDAY; 1:00PM will take a look at progressives’ “cafeteria” science choices – why does the left insist that vaccines are dangerous? We will also consult with an expert on sports law and review the sorry state of collegiate and professional athletics.

Our featured interview is with Holt Hackney, President of Hackney Publications, a leading publisher of sports law newsletters. Among their current titles are Sports Litigation Alert, Legal Issues in Collegiate Athletics, Legal Issues in High School Athletics, Professional Sports and the Law, Concussion Litigation Review, and the Journal of NCAA Compliance. Hackney has spent the better part of three decades writing about sports, business and the law. He began covering sports for weekly and daily newspapers in the state of Florida in the 1980s.
http://www.hackneypublications.com/

Wake and Bake playlist for 02/03/2015

Starting a little early this morning. Special live musical guest and birthday boy Jesse Pagano

Jim Dexter playlist for 02/03/2015

Jim's show for Tuesday February 3, 2015

Fugue Atop the Mobius Strip playlist for 02/03/2015

fill-in for BAM by DJ Cornflower of Fugue Atop the Mobius Strip

Finn's Revolution playlist for 02/03/2015

We celebrate the release of Bob Dylan's new album, Shadows In The Night....

A Woman's Perspective On Politics playlist for 02/02/2015

Fill-in by psychedelic jesus and village astrologer

Soul Glo Bistro playlist for 02/02/2015

Captain Rockit plays two hours of soul classics from the 60's, 70's and beyond with a spotlight on the late Ruffin brothers Jimmy and David.

Sunday Street playlist for 02/01/2015

Today's program featured several tracks from Bob Dylan's "Shadows in The Night," to be released this Tuesday. We spent time talking about the album, sharing our initial concerns when we heard about this project (which sent shivers of fearing something along the lines of "Christmas in the Heart.") However, this album works for us on several levels. Dylan's weathered voice is well-suited to these American standards and he has avoided the temptation to surround the singer's voice with heavy (Gordon Jenkins' like) orchestration. Instead, it is basically his touring band accompanying him and the sounds of some beautiful pedal and lap steel guitar serve to link many of these songs. Aside from a few tracks, he's avoided the usual chestnuts artists seize upon when they venture into the "great American songbook" territory and has included some more obscure works.