Monday, October 31, 2022

SAVAGE RADIO PLAYLISTS FOR OCTOBER 2022-WVMO 98.7 FM: THE VOICE OF MONONA

 

SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #340
"REMEMBERING TOM PETTY 2022" OCTOBER 5, 2022
all songs performed by Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers except where indicated
1. "Surrender" (outtake 1976)
2. "The Same Old You"
3. "Dirty To The Bone" performed by Jeff Lynne's ELO
4. "Electric Gypsy" performed by Mike Campbell and the Dirty Knobs
5. "Bootleg Flyer" performed by Mudcrutch
6. "Money Becomes King"
7. "The Running Kind" performed by Johnny Cash with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
8. "Jokerman" performed by Bob Dylan
9. "Beautiful World" performed by Mudcrutch
10."Crawling Back To You" performed by Tom Petty
11."Behind That Locked Door" (demo) performed by George Harrison 12."Walls (Circus)"
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #341
"ARTISTS THAT I HAVE SEEN LIVE IN CONCERT-PART 1"
OCTOBER 12, 2022
1. "U-Mass" performed by Pixies
2. "Way Of The World" performed by Cheap Trick
3. "La Villa Strangiato" (live) performed by Rush
4. "Run Baby Run" performed by Garbage
5. "Bread" performed by Todd Rundgren
6. "Patient Zero" performed by Aimee Mann
7. "This Is The Time" performed by Lindsey Buckingham
8. "Straight To My Heart" performed by Sting
9. "New Jack Theme" performed by Living Colour
10."Yin And Yang The Flowerpot Man" performed by Love And Rockets
11."Beguiled" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #342
"ARTISTS THAT I HAVE SEEN LIVE IN CONCERT-PART 2"
OCTOBER 19, 2022
1. "Are You Gonna Go My Way?" (live) performed by Lenny Kravitz
2. "All The Young Dudes" (live) performed by David Bowie
3. "Break Yourself" performed by Aly & AJ
4. "Jean Pierre (reprise)" (live) performed by Miles Davis
5. "Cholly (Funk Getting Ready To Roll)" performed by Funkadelic
6. "Behind The Mask" performed by Fleetwood Mac
7. "This Is Where We Meet In My Mind" (live) performed by Ryan Adams
8. "Love...Hate" performed by Fishbone
9. "The W.A.N.D." performed by The Flaming Lips
10."Shake Your Body (Down To The Ground)" performed by The Jacksons
11. "Coming Up" (live) performed by Paul McCartney & Wings
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #343
"HAPPY HALLOWEEN 2022"
OCTOBER 26, 2022
1. "Haunted House" performed by Pixies
2. "Darkness" performed by Peter Gabriel
3. "Lullaby" performed by The Cure
4. "The Vampire" performed by Opal Voss
5. "I'm Deranged' performed by David Bowie
6. "'97 Bonnie And Clyde" performed by Tori Amos
7. "Careful With That Axe, Eugene" (live) performed by Pink Floyd
8. "Interlude With Ludes" performed by Them Crooked Vultures
9. "Viceroy's Row" performed by Elvis Costello & The Roots
10."Luna"performed by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers

Sunday, October 30, 2022

THE SECOND COMING: "DESPERATELY IMAGINING SOMEPLACE QUIET" DISQ

 
"DESPERATELY IMAGINING SOMEPLACE QUIET"
DISQ

DISQ:
Raina Bock: Vocals, Bass Guitar
Shannon Connor: Vocals, Guitars, Keyboards
Isaac DeBroux-Slone: Vocals, Guitars
Stu Manley: Drums, Percussion, Backing Vocals
Logan Severson: Vocals, Guitars

with additional performances and vocals by Johanna Samuels, Casey Butler, Graham Hunt, and Matt Schuessler 

All music and lyrics by Disq

Artwork by David Compos
Layout by Emma Headley

Produced, Mixed and Engineered by Matt Schuessler
Co Produced and  Co-Engineered by Disq 

Released October 7, 2022

This album only could have been made right now. 

Over two years ago, most specifically upon March 6, 2020, the Madison, WI based indie rock quintet Disq, released their debut album "Collector," a stellar, exuberantly composed and performed work that fulfilled the promise of the band as created by life long friends and co-founders Raina Bock (songwriter/bassist) and Isaac de Broux-Slone (songwriter/singer/multi-instrumentalist) and executed upon their dazzling mission statement "Disq 1," self-released during their high school years on July 11, 2016.  

Officially expanding the ranks from the original core duo to five--now featuring Shannon Connor (songwriter/singer/guitarist), Stu Manley (drums, percussion) and Logan Severson (songwriter/singer/guitarist)--"Collector" served as an energetic, earnest and often poignant arrival displaying the collective statement of five young individuals attempting to navigate an already dark world that was rapidly growing darker. These were expertly written and deeply felt songs from serious musicians matched with the passion of the craft at which they were recorded and performed. 

And even with so much about the album that was celebratory, Disq's "Collector" was inadvertently and grimly prescient.  

Within a week of the album's release, and just before the band was set to embark to Europe for their promotional tour, the world completely shut down due to the full arrival of the Covid-19 pandemic, bringing everything to a standstill...as if reeling from the ongoing turmoil of the Trump administration's post truth/anti-Science society plus rising terrors in sexism, homophobia, White nationalism, fascism and our climate crisis weren't enough. For a band whose profile was rising, the Covid shut down was a devastating blow and truthfully, I would not have blamed them for a moment if whatever music arrived in the future was more downbeat and mournful. Or even moreso, if they had decided to call it a day.  

Now, we have a response.

Disq's "Desperately Imagining Someplace Quiet," is sensational. Eschewing any potential traces of the dreaded "sophomore slump," the band has emerged triumphant as their second album extends far beyond "Collector" with an even greater eclecticism, experimentation, and unwavering determination. With a greater democracy from the songwriting and sharing of lead vocals throughout, Disq has re-emerged not as a band having licked its wounds and tentatively striking out to try again. But more as a brand new band emerging akin to a phoenix from the ashes of two years ago, albeit with the same five members and armed with an even hungrier sense of resolve and expansive drive to create an artistic statement that is committed to meeting this moment in the face while also being built to last. 

After some electronic sounds suggesting a machine warming up and the deadpan announcement of the word "MUSIC," "Desperately Imagining Someplace Quiet" explodes to life with Shannon Connor's propulsive "Civilization Four," a "what is the world coming to" opening salvo during which he repeatedly demands "Please explain the joke" to understand why the world has seemingly flown from its axis into what must be the horrific parallel universe in which we currently exist. 

Just as the dire nature of song threatens to overwhelm Connor, Raina Bock, making her debut as a lead vocalist and lyricist, arrives just in time with a sage perspective.

"Now that the thought screams more than the memory
 Closing your eyes hurts more than the sensory
Sifting through sounds is just like the other thing
Circling round is just like a wedding ring"

All five members, moving as one, surge ahead in ferocious musical lockstep (and dodging falling bombs in the process) in a manner that suggests flight and fight against/with the accelerated velocity of life in an increasingly unforgiving world. It is a thrilling opening, setting the s6age for all yet to arrive.  

Bookended by sequences of rhythmic yet increasingly volatile cacophony, Logan Severson's shimmering "Prize Contest Life" suggests the mantra used to find shelter from the storm, whether emotional, psychological, societal or all of the above. 

"Bright, never ending light
Ever changing shapes, dancing in the sky
Things I knew before, come back to my mind
I can see the glow, shining all the time
In every life, buried deep inside
There's a secret door, on the other side
Every single thought, floating in the tide
I can feel it pull, nothing left to hide

I know where you go to
It's so high above you
You'll know just what to do
When it's time to"

The song's gentleness, as conveyed through its bed of acoustic guitars, loping rhythms courtesy of Bock's bass work and Stu Manley's drums, plus the breeze of harmony vocals often suggesting a lullaby, the song oddly reminded me a bit of Todd Rundgren's synthetic meditation spiritual journey "Healing parts I, II & III" from "Healing" (released January 28, 1981). Even so, and especially as we find ourselves growing calmer and more lost in the tranquility, life's noise re-emerges violently a la the conclusion of The Beatles' "A Day In The Life," threatening to swallow us whole and drowning Severson's screams.

Raina Bock makes her full bodied debut as a composer and lead singer with the striking, creepy "Cujo Kiddies," a selection that pushes Disq into more electronic, and therefore, emotionally colder territory. Bock's lyrics and melodic yet detached singing style feels to conjure up the quandary of navigating the world through a plastic face burying the reality of self underneath, even if you are struggling to define yourself, whether through issues of sobriety, sexual identity, or adjoining or losing oneself to technology. "I finally hooked up with the metal machine/I'm finding comfort in the metal machine," sings Bock repeatedly as the song grows more sinister, with the status of her own sense of humanity in the balance.

Building upon past Disq singles "Communication" and "Parallel" (released January 25, 2019), Isaac de Broux-Slone makes his first lead vocal appearance on the album with the high flying "This Time," a track that delves even deeper into the maelstrom of interpersonal relationships, how they try, and often fail, to connect, despite the urgency of our best efforts and intents. 

"And now I'm trying too hard
'Cause I don't know where to begin
I wonder how to escape
And now I realize I can't 'cause I don't know myself
If all I know is you"  

On an outro that serves a staggeringly melodic twin guitar line, the kind of which makes you reach for your air guitars as your eyes fill with tears, the album's motif of potentially losing one's own sense of self precisely at the moment it might already be lost for fear of never regaining it arises again.

Pastoral philosophical musings arrive in Shannon's Connor's delicate track "The Curtain," tucked gently in the space somewhere between mid-period XTC and Connor and Stu Manley's previous band Post Social. "Did you think it through well enough?" Connor asks of himself as a series of questions that have no instantly attainable answers grow into a kaleidoscopic swirl, augmented by crystalline acoustic guitars, handclaps and Manley's percolating percussion, before concluding in exhaustion. Yet, there's no time to rest and recover as "The Curtain" leads directly into the darkened, threatening skies of Logan Severson's "The Hardest Part," a "great big shakedown" of ambiguity that congeals into a pounding "head full of 'I don't knows'" amplified by Stu Manley's mule kick snare drum. 

Heartbreaks and soul aches return (or continue) in Isaac de Broux-Slone's "If Only," stunning slice of timeless power pop, where Disq miraculously injects both country and prog leanings through de Broux-Slone's fiddle playing and guitar wizardry as the music works in lockstep with the lyrics. Rising and falling, the song absolutely soars yet when de Broux-Slone sings the absolutely perfect couplet, "You build me up on Sunday/I'm down again by Monday," the music buckles under the emotional weight. You can almost hear his knees giving out due to the sorrow in his heart.  

And then, we fall into Raina Bock's daydream...

Phasing into the constantly audacious, shape shifting, lusty "Charley Chimp," a track as if pulled from the ether, like Prince's "The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker," it is one that continuously reveals itself as Bock unveils a tale of the push and pull between her intellect and more animalistic instincts that reveal themselves underneath the sway of every arrival of "that one thing" in a "Catwoman outfit" and punctuated by Logan Severson's succulent bass playing. Like any dream, the song is one that is impossible to pin down and all you can do is to allow it to gloriously wash over you.

From the depths of fantasy, we return to brutally harsh realities with the album's one-two death punch of Logan Severson's slashing "Tightrope" and Shannon Connor's annihilating "(With Respect To) Loyal Serfs." On the former, Severson and his bandmates create an eviscerating soundscape filled with quiet-loud-quiet dynamics that build into an army of buzzsaw guitars which are determined to lacerate the song in half.

On the latter, and through molten lava guitars and Stu Manley's death knell drums, Connor channels his best Roger Waters by way of Metallica ("Goodnight to planet Earth") to create a lament for the planet that is as sardonic as it is rapacious. It is as if the incredulity of the album's opening track has extended into grave inevitability as our extinction will undoubtedly arrive at our own hands and frankly...we've had it coming. As stewards of the planet, we have failed and the existential rage and howl contained in these two songs are palpable. 

As the dust settles, Isaac de Broux-Slone returns one last time with the fragile "Meant To Be," starring a melody that feels so familiar and yet long forgotten but somehow magically plucked from the sea of time by its supremely gifted songwriter. 

"Do you think about me
It's been so long now I can't see
But I still try to believe
The way things are is meant to be
Do you think about me
A crystal ball that I can't read
Cause somehow all that I see
Is a future with you next to me

The way things are is meant to be"

While framed in the aftermath of a relationship, "Meant To Be," could also be a statement reaching outwards to the state of the world at this point in time, making it a song of acceptance despite the pain and turmoil. For no matter how much we wish for things to be different, we are where we are and it is up to us to determine how we are going to live in the reality we have been given, whether nursing a broken heart or teetering on the end of the world. 

Raina Bock gets the final word upon the album and what a bold, unflinching, whimsically chilling word it is! With "Hitting A Nail With A BB Gun," Bock conjures up another synthscape dreamscape that suggests Brian Wilson at his weirdest and most poignant, as if The Beach Boys' "I Guess I Just Wasn't Made For These Times" and "A Day In The Life Of A Tree" congealed and birthed this song. 

Speak-singing a narrative that reminded me darkly of an HBO series entitled "Years And Years," set just a few short years in the future from now and featuring a character who wished to become "transhuman," therefore merging her flesh and blood body into artificial intelligence itself, Bock's lyrics fluctuate between "I don't wanna be alive/I wanna be A.I." and "I don't wanna die/I wanna be A.I." (possibly maybe a nod to Disq's "I Wanna Die" from "Collector"?) perhaps suggesting a wish to maintain existence but without the trauma of being human.

After all of the passion, heart and fury, the album quietly sputters to a mechanized close, exhausted and spent from all that transpired...yet still inspires you to immediately press PLAY and hear it all over again.  

As previously stated, Disq's "Desperately Imagining Someplace Quiet" only could have been made right now. If circumstances had been different two years ago, if the pandemic had never occurred, if Disq had been able to cultivate and ride whatever wave "Collector" could have inspired, whatever the band created as their follow up would have been completely different from what they ended up creating.

That being said, and knowing what happened has indeed happened, Disq created this album and it is more than I could have ever hoped to have heard from this unit without question. With full disclosure, I do have a personal relationship with the band members as they are people I genuinely love. That also being said, Disq created the very type of album that I would cherish if I did not know them personally. An album very much in the universe of albums that upended me with their artistry, grabbed me by the heart and made me a devotee, listening and re-listening and re-listening further still being fully enveloped into the musical world envisioned. 

I am reminded of albums like Prince's "1999" (released October 27, 1982), XTC's "Oranges And Lemons" (released February 27, 1989), The Smashing Pumpkins' "Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness" (released October 24, 1995), Tame Impala's "Lonerism" (released October 5, 2012) and  Sloan's "Commonwealth" (released September 9, 2014) to name just a few. 

And yet, my musical brain keeps shifting to none other than Pink Floyd's iconic "The Dark Side Of The Moon" (released March 1, 1973). not in terms of the actual sound but of the conceptual reach and completed vision, as Disq seemingly confronts exactly what it means to live and survive the times in which we all currently share. and the difficulties of remaining humane in a world that is growing dangerously inhumane. The band meets this moment miraculously, beautifully and brilliantly, without trepidation of fear and it is decidedly not tentative or muted. And most importantly, the band meets this time together through the bonds of their friendships and combined musical gifts.

One minor criticism of "Collector" that actually infuriated me was one that suggested that the band's debut album was perhaps too eclectic. That if they had simple picked one musical lane, it might have made for a more cohesive experience. Truly the worst advice for a band like Disq for it is not their job to temper their abilities to make it easier for a music journalist to write about them. It is the job of the band to create fearlessly, blaze their own lane and for listeners to come to them!

Honestly, truly think of the amount of music that exists within the five members of Disq, a collective that contains five multi-instrumentalists and four songwriters and singers. Should this band really be relegated to solely bring the compositions of one member to life when there is so much to pull from? I do understand that on paper, it may sound like a bit of a mess but the greater democracy of Disq, one which gives each songwriter the same amount of musical real estate upon the album, ultimately delivered a boldly unified and somehow singular band statement. 

Disq's "Desperately Imagining Someplace Quiet" is a complete work of art, that has been superbly fine crafted in every area and detail from the songs themselves to its packaging. From the acronym of the album's title to its cover artwork--which felt to me to be a foreboding response to the visual sunshine psychedelia of the artwork seen upon the band digital single, their sky high cover version of Jeff Tweedy's "I Know What It's Like" (released June 30, 2020)--to its sequencing, sonic delivery (again...that snare drum sound is spectacular) and near elimination of pauses between tracks, it is difficult to simply pull one song from the album to represent the whole. In doing so, the album almost feels like one big song split into movements, therefore making the experience more cohesive than some skeptical music journalists might suspect. 

Additionally. and despite their youth, all five members are seasoned musicians. Through their long history with each other and their musical contemporaries, during which they have all written, performed and recorded with each other in a variety of bands and projects, we are seeing musicians that are as malleable as they are gifted, who work without ego and as always, treat the song itself as the star of the show. As the band embraces each song, they also embrace each other and it is in their union where we find such balance, grace and connectivity which extends to the listener rapturously which then, builds our empathy towards the album and the statements woven throughout.   

It's all in the title. Disq's' "Desperately Imagining Someplace Quiet" is a testament to the bond held between five skilled and deeply feeling individuals white knuckling life together and right alongside us. It is an album that speaks directly to the tension of trying to hold oneself together and the release that happens when one cannot shoulder the stress and strain to repress any longer. Certainly, the members of Disq are old and wise enough to understand the realities and inevitabilities of life's unfairness. However, the album displays a more than justified rage against the previous generation's inability to not leave them a dying world to grow up within. 

In a year of music that has already delivered so generously with albums of power and purpose from artists veteran and rising, Disq has emerged with one of 2022's highest achievements to my ears. If they could pull this off, I think and furthermore, believe, that they can now go anywhere and do anything they set their collective minds towards. 

Sunday, October 9, 2022

SAVAGE RADIO PLAYLISTS FOR JULY 2022-SEPTEMBER 2022: WVMO 98.7 FM-THE VOICE OF MONONA

 

SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #327
JULY 6, 2022
1. "No Small Things" performed by Tears For Fears
2. "Crutch" performed by Band Of Horses
3. "If They're Shooting At You" performed by Belle and Sebastian
4. "On The Radio" performed by Spoon
5. "Pretty Places" performed by Aly & AJ
6. "Starlight" performed by Electric Light Orchestra
7. "It's Only Natural" performed by Red Hot Chili Peppers
8. "Bring On The Night" performed by The Police
9. "New Days" performed by The Lickerish Quartet
10."Hotel Arizona" performed by Wilco
11."Thank You And Good Night" performed by Weezer
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #328
"1982: HAPPY 40TH ANNIVERSARY-PART 2"
JULY 13, 2022
1. "Situation" performed by Yaz
2. "Dancing In The Streets" performed by Van Halen
3. "Time (Clock Of The Heart)" performed by Culture Club
4. "More Than This" performed by Roxy Music
5. "Ghosts" performed by The Jam
6. "Pull Out The Pin" performed by Kate Bush
7. "Automatic" performed by Prince
8. "Cancer" performed by Joe Jackson
9. "It's Hard" performed by The Who
10."The Analog Kid" performed by Rush
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #329
"1982: HAPPY 4TH ANNIVERSARY-PART 3"
JULY 20, 2022
1. "Burning Down One Side" performed by Robert Plant
2. "I Have The Touch" performed by Peter Gabriel
3. "The Sea Refuses No River" performed by Pete Townshend
4. "There Goes Your Baybay" performed by Todd Rundgren
5. "Afraid Of Love" performed by Toto
6. "Gigolos Get Lonely Too" performed by The Time
7. "Windpower" performed by Thomas Dolby
8. "It Never Rains" performed by Dire Straits
9. "What's That You're Doing?" performed by Paul McCartney with Stevie Wonder
10. "Only Over You" performed by Fleetwood Mac
11. "Ozone Baby" performed by Led Zeppelin
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #330
JULY 27, 2022
1. "Silent Running" performed by Mike + The Mechanics
2. "Who Put You Up To This?" performed by Sunflower Bean
3. "Age Of Anxiety II (Rabbit Hole)" performed by Arcade Fire
4. "Greener" performed b FKJ featuring Carlos Santana
5. "Never In The Real World" performed by My Morning Jacket
6. "In The Meadow" performed by Ryan Adams
7. "Smoke Of Dreams" performed by Thurston Moore
8. "Breakfast In America" performed by Supertramp
9. "Long Promised Road" performed by The Beach Boys
10. "Thin Thing" performed by The Smile
11. "Heartbeat" performed by King Crimson
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #331
AUGUST 3, 2022
1. "Hot Thoughts" performed by Spoon
2. "Good Love" performed by The Black Keys featuring Billy Gibbons
3. "They Go Low" performed by Fantastic Negrito
4. "Tornado Alley" performed by Able Baker
5. "Birch Grove" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
6. "Ripples" performed by Genesis
7. "Rose Water" performed by Hiatus Kaiyote
8. "Straight On" performed by Heart
9. "Don't Need Nothing" performed by Aly & AJ
10. "Cujo Kiddies" performed by Disq
11."Below Sea Level"/"We Need To Talk About It" performed by Ben Harper

SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #332
"LET'S MAKE IT A DOUBLE: SIDES 1 & 2"
AUGUST 10, 2022
1. "Black And White America" performed by Lenny Kravitz
2. "Rocks Off" performed by The Rolling Stones
3. "Death Or Glory" performed by The Clash
4. "Don Juan's Reckless Daughter" performed by Joni Mitchell
5. "Martha My Dear" performed by The Beatles
6. "Cupid De Locke" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
7. "This Song Has No Title" performed by Elton John
8. "One Of The Millions" performed by XTC
9. "Pastime Paradise" performed by Stevie Wonder
10."I Got You (At The End Of The Century) performed by Wilco
11."The Opposite" performed by The Smile
12."Flowers Of Blood" performed by Big Thief
13."Free Me" performed by Foo Fighters
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #333
"LET'S MAKE IT A DOUBLE: SIDES 3 & 4"
AUGUST 17, 2022
1. "Night In The City" performed by Electric Light Orchestra
2. "Balance" performed by Funkadelic
3. "Rain In L.A." performed by Ryan Adams
4. "I Am Yours" performed by Derek and the Dominos
5. "Gypsy Eyes" performed by The Jimi Hendrix Experience
6. "These Are The Ways" performed by Red Hot Chili Peppers
7. "Sparks" performed by The Who
8. "The Chamber Of 32 Doors" performed by Genesis
9. "Night Flight" performed by Led Zeppelin
10."I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man" performed by Prince
11."Saving Grace" performed by Todd Rundgren
12."Human" performed by Johnny Marr
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #334
AUGUST 24, 2022
1. "Path Of Wellness" performed by Sleater-Kinney
2. "Warning Signs" performed by Band Of Horses
3. "Frank Sinatra's Party" performed by Paul McCartney
4. "Giorgio By Moroder" performed by Daft Punk ft. Giorgio Moroder
5. "I've Got You Surrounded (With My Love)" performed by Jack White
6. "I'm So Afraid" (live) performed by Fleetwood Mac
7. "Mobius" performed by Nai Palm
8. "Calling All Girls" performed by Queen
9. "Please" performed by U2
10."Supercollider" performed by Fountains Of Wayne
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #335
"SUMMER'S OVER-THE LAST SONG"
AUGUST 31, 2022
1. "Come A Long Way" performed by Simple Minds
2. "Lucifer On The Sofa" performed by Spoon
3. "Always" performed by World Party
4. "Crying Like A Church On Monday" performed by New Radicals
5. "A Beautiful Song" performed by Nazz
6. "Wild Is The Wind" performed by David Bowie
7. "Let Her Down Easy" performed by Terence Trent D'Arby
8. "From The Morning" performed by Nick Drake
9. "WE" performed by Arcade Fire
10."Please Mr. Please' performed by Olivia Newton-John
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #336
"GREAT DEBUTS"
SEPTEMBER 7, 2022
1. "Magic Man" performed by Heart
2. "Next To You" performed by The Police
3. "The Phone Call" performed by Pretenders
4. "21st Century Schizoid Man" performed by King Crimson
5. "Put Me On Top" performed by Aimee Mann
6. "Venus As A Boy" performed by Bjork
7. "On Fire" performed by Phoenix
8. "In Love" performed by Prince
9. "Cry Cry" performed by Cheap Trick
10."Only Happy When It Rains" performed by Garbage
11."He's Got A Secret" performed by The Bangles
12."Desperate People" performed by Living Colour
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #337
"LOCAL ARTISTS, LOCAL HEROES 2022"
1. "Running On Fumes" performed by Post Social
2. "Gaslight" performed by Heavy Looks
3. "Glances Part 1" performed by Skyline Sounds
4. "Queen Of Wands" performed by Kainalu
5. "Track" performed by Slow Pulp
6. "Last Day Of Summer" performed by Sean Michael Dargan
7. "The Need To Fail" performed by Loveblaster
8. "You Know My Secret" performed by Pollinators
9. "Scramble" performed by Thompson Springs
10."Floors On Fire" performed by Able Baker
11."Survival" performed by Vowl Sounds
12."If Only" performed by Disq
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #339
"WELCOME AUTUMN: NEW SEASON, NEW 2022 MUSIC"
SEPTEMBER 21, 2022
1. "Where I'll Stand" performed by The Dream Syndicate
2. "Scratch The Surface" performed by Sloan
3. "Do You Feel" performed by Ryan Adams
4. "Feel Somebody" performed by Sunflower Bean
5. "Roman Candles" performed by Death Cab For Cutie
6. "Blacklight Shine" performed by The Mars Volta
7. "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi" performed by Rodrigo y Gabriela
8. "The Same" performed by The Smile
9. "There'd Better Be A Mirrorball" performed by Arctic Monkeys
10."Man Invisible" performed by Elise Trouw
11."The Death Of Magic Thinking" performed by Elvis Costello & The Imposters
12."Sonny The Strong" performed by Gaz Coombes
13."New Gold" performed by Gorillaz ft. Tame Impala and Bootie Brown
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #339
SEPTEMBER 28, 2022
1. "In The Meantime" performed by The Lickerish Quartet
2. "Paradise" performed by Aly & AJ
3. "Doyenne" performed by Antonio Sanchez featuring Thana Alexa, Nicole Zuraitis & Julia Adamy
4. "War & Peace" performed by Ryuichi Sakamoto
5. "Jeremy's Storm" performed by Tame Impala
6. "Telegram" performed by The Chamber Strings
7. "Bird Without A Tail/Base Of My Skull" performed by Wilco
8. "Man On The Corner" performed by Genesis
9. "Walking In The Woods" performed by The Pursuit Of Happiness
10."Changing" performed by The Fixx
11."Sons Of The Silent Age" performed by David Bowie
12."When You're Gone" performed by Benjamin Orr

HELLO

FROM THE DJ'S STUDIO DESK:

Hello. It's me.

As the song continues to express, I have indeed thought about us for a long, long time as this blogsite has been something I have been missing for an exceedingly lengthy period of time. If you have visited this site in the past, and especially once Covid 19 became a most unwanted part of our world, you may have seen the point where activity upon Synesthesia slowly dwindled into silence. 

I wish to assure you that the reasons for this extended absence were not for lack of interest whatsoever. The reasons fell into the new anxiety of the times combined with a punishing work schedule in my real world career as a preschool teacher during The Great Resignation and the aforementioned pandemic. Most of all, and most openly, my issues with depression rose considerably and to be able to function while navigating mental illness took its toll upon my mental energy, leaving me with barely anything remaining in order to just sit and create, let alone derive any enjoyment from one of the only things in my life that has provided me with a true sense of joy, purpose and accomplishment.

To say Synesthesia, and its companion blogsite Savage Cinema, are extensions of myself would be an understatement to say the least. They ARE me. And yet, I was not here writing and musing and sharing with you as I had been doing for years. In fact, in addition to my activities upon both blogsites diminishing greatly, my times at the movie theater or even watching at home slowed, and furthermore, my love of reading also essentially ceased as I found myself struggling to concentrate upon anything.

So, aside from continuing to create new episodes of Savage Radio and installments of The VMO Show and VMO After Dark for WVMO (having the deadlines of air dates perfectly served as a proper push when I otherwise may have folded myself inwards), my creative life has been placed on an unexpected and unwanted hiatus. 

In doing so, I felt that I was losing myself.

And so, here I am again, attempting to try once again because truthfully, I do not ever wish to lose this piece of myself. I do not have writer's block. Just as it has been, the words are sitting patiently inside of me and I know that when have the proper time, space and energy, they will arrive. It is the motivation and confidence to try again that this time has been insidiously robbing from me (thanks depression!). But, I really do wish to try. 

I have begun reading again and I am currently reading and thoroughly enjoying Dave Grohl's beautifully written memoir as I also remember Taylor Hawkins and the two tribute concerts have come to pass. My musical purchases have not slowed down whatsoever and truthfully, they have increased as 2022 has proven itself to being a stellar year in music with artists both veteran and rising releasing art that is supremely purposeful and enriching. 

My experiences with live music have been minimal as, contrary to popular belief and wishes, we are still living within a pandemic, so safety first. That said, I have been to a couple of shows including my friends in Disq and a complete surprise starring Aly & AJ. To that end, I have words at the ready for my first significant Synesthesia writing in far too long and I really wish to push myself to bring it into the world.

And still, I do not wish to get ahead of myself and I do not wish to make promises for fear of disappointing myself. 

But I will try. And that is all that I can do. All of us for that matter. 

Keep listening to what brings you joy, everyone.

PLAY LOUD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!