Tune in NOW – to Night Flight

February 19, 2008 by onair

Join Steve and Lo NOW for freeform until 10 pm. Yes, this is the show formerly known as Tuesday Night.

Adieu Monsieur Henri !

February 19, 2008 by onair

Do you remember Mahna Mahna ? mais oui mais oui !
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HENRI SALVADOR passed away in Paris few days before Valentine at age 90 . The PARIS OF THE SOUTH RADIO HOUR is paying respect with an hommage to the man credited to have :
- INVENTED BOSSA NOVA..
- INTRODUCED Rock and Roll to the French .
- Invented the MUSIC-VIDEO (called scopitones).
- Inspired constant Humor and distance from the world’s mess.

MERCI Henri for this INCREDIBLE long and inspiring life !
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Don’t miss that special show tomorrow Wednesday live at 9 am and rebroadcasted Saturday night at 7pm.
YOU CAN NOW LISTEN TO THE ARCHIVED SHOW BY CLICKING HERE !

Your Afternoon Slacken is in Capable Hands

February 19, 2008 by onair

This week your substitute host, Easy Brian, graciously brings you your Afternoon Slacken while Easy Mark is on vacation.  So loosen up with groovy music, commentaries, and lots of audio mash ups (two or more songs mixed together to create a special new song).

The Crossover Segment is an inclusive feature which offers insight into another WPVM host. This week, Brian Nesbit, Music Director and host of two shows, turns the tables in a previously recorded interview with Easy Mark.

Word! The last word, a remixed commentary from Mumia Abu Jamal.

Click here to read the .    Click here to listen to the audio .

Be sure to check out the programming guide for information on all of the great WPVM shows. Music shows are only archived for one week after broadcast. So get ‘em before they’re gone!

So, how do you like your Afternoon Slacken? Got comments? Suggestions? Flattery? Email: easymark@wpvm.org

This week on Wordplay: Jeff reads Natures

February 16, 2008 by onair

This week’s show, still available via stream or podcast from the archive page [but see the second update below] features my debut reading of NatureS from April, 2006. The reading took place at the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, and I talked a bit about the Black Mountain poets, especially Robert Creeley, and my sense of their relevance to my own work. I also wanted to speak to the poetics that informs the work, and so spent probably too much time talking about parataxis, as practiced particularly by Robin Blaser, and about Novalis, whose Encyclopedia explores the identity of the character each of us calls “I” in a way that remains useful some two hundred years, now, further on.

Listening to the recording for the first time just ten or twelve days ago, I realized that I had seriously mangled my recapitulation of Creeley’s account of the rhinoceros argument between Wittgenstein and Russell. Wittgenstein refused to agree with Russell’s assertion that there was no rhinoceros in the room, and Russell, so the story goes, tried to prove to him empirically that, in fact, no such creature was around; he looked under tables and chairs, and so on. My telling scrambles Wittgenstein’s position, and so obscures the import of the whole argument – and, sadly, likewise obscures the humor of the situation as legend tells us it unfolded. When Creeley told the story, he managed to preserve that humor. My apologies to Bob’s spirit, and to any who might listen to this version, for getting things scrambled in my jangled brain that night.

We don’t offer feature our own work on Wordplay, but we had a week with no guest on board, and I’d been having difficulties cleaning up a noisy recording of Jonathan Williams that I wanted to air, … so there it is. Enjoy. We’ll hopefully be able to include the Williams reading in a future show.

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Update: Coming up Sunday (or Monday via on-demand stream and podcast), Lori Horvitz.

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Update, Sunday after the show: Well, hope you heard the show with Lori live, because the archiving system didn’t record it. Apologies to Lori. We’ll have her on again as soon as we can.

I also discovered that the automated FTP upload of last week’s show to the site from which it streams and podcasts didn’t happen, so that show hasn’t been available after all. It should upload tonight. And Mercury, a little planet which loves to play little tricks with cars, computers, and broadcast equipment, goes direct tomorrow (don’t tell me how superstitious I am until you ponder the posts at the link), so perhaps it’ll actually upload this time. If not, I’ll do it by hand; FTP uploads and downloads aren’t rocket science, and I’ve set many of them up, and even automated them, through the years.

And on we go.

Asheville Sound Swap

February 15, 2008 by onair

Harvest Records & Tomentosa Records present ASHEVILLE SOUND SWAP, a record fair featuring dealers from all over the southeast, set for Sunday, February 17th here in Asheville at the Grey Eagle Music Hall.

Admission is FREE, and will entitle the public to peruse dozens of tables in a venue full of the finest vinyl, cd’s, dvd, zines & posters there are to offer, including any and all genres of music. From 11am to 5pm, come enjoy your music hunting while WPVM DJ’s provide a fabulously eclectic soundtrack. The bar and in-house cajun restaurant will be open as well, so there’s absolutely no better way to spend a cold Sunday in February.

Need info? Contact Harvest Records at 828.258.2999 or harvestrecords@gmail.com

February 17th, 11am-5pm at the Grey Eagle in Asheville.

TANGO(week4-final) Analysis/Dissection/Synthesis and Firework .

February 14, 2008 by onair

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Well ! This is our TANGO week four and final . We will hear about the History of tango and , of course , as the word history contain the word story we will learn from your stories …. Karren Jaffe will tell us about her experience in Buenos aires with her husband Michael , we will read an exerpt of the essay of Christine Denison about the dark age of Tango and the rebuked idea that it was born in Brothels . Finally , fun answers to the question: who are you in the tango of life ? victim or dictators ?
Lots of music and humor , stay tune , a fun 88th show of the Paris of the south radio hour .
CLICKhereTOlistenTOtheSHOWnow!
(Our router is being replaced . Jason and Miranda are working on all archives ,keep trying ! Well…maybe they just started to dance ….)
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Let Me Introduce Yourself, James Whittle

February 13, 2008 by onair

Every now and then on Thursday Morning Collaboraform I have the opportunity to talk with a person about their work in our community.  I’m calling this occasional space for conversation Let Me Introduce Yourself. 

 This week James Whittle, founder of the Blue Ridge Acupuncture Clinic, tells us how this NC kid, who wanted to grow up and be a doctor, became an acupuncturist and specialist in Chinese herbal medicine and healing.  James introduces himself, his approach to healing, and China to us Westerners in WNC. 

Tune in Thursday, February 14.
For more information on James, the clinic, and much more, visit www.blueridgeclinic.com or call (828) 254-4405.