If you don't count the many,
many hours I spent listening to my transistor as a kid (first
WABC, then
99X, then finally graduating to the likes of
WPLJ and
WNEW by the time I hit 12 or 13), my first experience in radio came
at age 30 when I took my first radio class at
Fairleigh Dickinson University.
Barry Sheffield, our Program Director here at the station, was my
teacher, and with his encouragement, I made my broadcast debut as the
newscaster for
Marc Copeland's
Jazz Influences. I enjoyed being on the air every week,
but I really wanted to play music. I was working full-time and
attending FDU at night, so I needed a hard-to- come-by weekend shift.
When Larry Hopper gave up the Down Home Frolic in 1995, I was
offered his slot and began the Carnival of Song.
Music
was always part of my life. I grew up listening to my Mom's
Frank Sinatra and country-western records and quickly grew into my own
sounds. Looking back on it, I was really a product of my times.
"Brandy" by Looking Glass was the first single I ever wanted. I
had all the
Partridge Family albums and watched the show religiously.
After a short
detour to
Tony DeFranco and the DeFranco family(!), I was on my way to
Elton John, whose Greatest Hits album (the first one; there's
been a ton since then) was the first record I ever bought with my own
money. Eventually, I discovered the confessional songs of
Jackson Browne and
Joni Mitchell and fell in love with their lyrics, which inspired me
to begin writing poems. After I graduated high school, I worked in
New Jersey record stores for years (Crazy
Eddie, where I toiled behind the cassette counter with fellow
WFDU DJ Jim Riecken, and
Sam Goody, where I went through a metal phase -- big hair and all!).
During that time, thanks to my co-workers, friends, and customers, I was
exposed to and developed an appreciation for all types of music,
including Richard
Thompson and Leonard
Cohen, 2 staples of the Carnival of Song.
My love of a good
lyric is what continues to stop me in my tracks wherever I am, whatever
I'm doing. I was driving the first time I heard Counting Crows'
"Mr. Jones", and when Adam Duritz sang, "I felt so symbolic
yesterday" I literally pulled over on the side of the road to listen.
I still recall the day at the radio station I happened upon an album
called
Bloomed in our Alternative/New Music library, thought it looked
interesting and put it on to hear, "I saw you as the answer to the years
of blue and wonder." Right then, I knew that Richard Buckner would
be one of one of the most important and beloved musicians that I would
ever hear. Most recently (as of this writing), Cory Branan
enchanted me with
"Crackerjack Heart" from his wonderful album
The Hell You Say. Even after nearly 9 years of doing the
radio show, every week I'm still excited to check out the new releases
that come in and to talk music with my fellow DJs, my
guests, and my listeners.
It was a long time
coming (a total of 11 years and 2 tattoos -- a sun and moon on one ankle
and a carousel around the other, just in case you were wondering), but I
graduated from FDU in May of 2002 with a BA in English/Writing and a
minor in Communications. Luckily, you don't have to be a current
student to have a show at WFDU. This is a volunteer gig (truly a
labor of love); my "real" job is with a music consulting firm in NJ.
Currently, I'm attending a poetry workshop at the
Writers Institute at
Sarah Lawrence. In April of 2007, two poems of mine were
published in
Blood Orange Review. I
hope to continue growing as a poet and a person and to continue sharing the songs
that mean so much to me with the
Carnival of Song.
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