Just when you thought it was safe to turn on your radio, another political attack ad screams out at you. You cower in fear, wondering when the torment will end.
That's what you'll get if you hit your local commercial station this week. If you tune in to Hear It Wow, you'll get the fun kind of terror--the kind that comes with a back beat, a catchy riff, and eerily appropriate Halloween lyrics.
Hear It Howl 2 will shock you with an outstanding collection of Halloween favorites, including deep, gaping cuts from David Bowie, Concrete Blonde, the Rolling Stones, Oingo Boingo, Hot Blood, Zombina and the Skeletones and the Rocky Horror Picture Show. It's the only thing you'll want to hear while you're carving your pumpkin--or whatever else you need to carve.
This year's four-hour horrorfest kicks off at a special time, 5PM Eastern on October 29. Get your drive-time ghoul on in Boston at 91.5 FM. Or check out the new and improved CD-quality 256kbps Web stream at wmfo.org.
Election Night Special
On Tuesday, November 4, I'll be co-anchoring WMFO's live election night coverage with Joel from On the Town with Mikey Dee and Edward from Plastic Sushi Tears of the Strawberry Gods or whatever he's calling that show this week. We'll be broadcasting live from the Tufts University Student Center, providing up-to-date election results and instant feedback from Tufts students and panelists.
This is a big undertaking for our little station, and it should be a lot of fun. Coverage begins at 7PM and ends when a winner is projected.
It Howls Again
Labels: Show News 1 commentsPosted by HearItWow at 9:10 AM Links to this post
Hear It Howl
Labels: Show News 0 commentsScared yet? Halloween is a week from Saturday, so I'm opening the the door to the beyond and letting the ghosts and ghouls take over the airwaves. If you're planning a Halloween party, you'll catch some great ideas for songs to play.
Tonight's show reaches deep into the dark side, with cuts from Pink Floyd, Arch Oboler, Ministry, the Hoodoo Gurus, Charlie Sexton, and soundtrack cuts from John Carpenter, Goblin, and Modern Man. Next week I'll unleash the better-known Halloween tracks.
Turn down the lights and tune in to 91.5 FM in Boston, or get your shockingly free Web stream from WMFO.org. The haunting begins at 7PM Eastern time tonight.
Posted by HearItWow at 10:03 AM Links to this post
10 Essential Halloween Songs
Labels: Releases 0 commentsOne of the truly great horrors of Halloween for me is seeing the dreck that people add to their list of the top 10 Halloween songs. I don't know if these people are bound by their local jukebox or an innate inability to see beyond iTunes, but they inevitably toss a few tracks that have nothing to do with ghouls and ghosts onto their Halloween party playlists.
"Psycho Killer" is not a Halloween song. Neither is Rick James' "Superfreak," a choice that's all the stranger when you think that any soul/R&B fan should know about Parliament's "Dr. Funkenstein." And I'm pretty sure that Mike Oldfield didn't spend all that time building and composing for a new musical instrument to have his "Tubular Bells" turned into an October cliche, The Exorcist aside.
So here are some party songs that are actually about Halloween, horror, or ghoulish apparitions. I've left off the perennial favorites, "Ghostbusters" and "Monster Mash," because they're on your list already. At the end, you'll find a bonus MP3 of some spooky music to set the mood.
10. Madness, "One Step Beyond." If I see The Specials' "Ghost Town" on one more Halloween list, you'll know by the sound of my bloodcurdling scream. That's a song about youth violence and disillusionment, about as relevant to Halloween as "A Message to Rudy." They do spook it up a bit with the echo and the backing vocals, so it's passable, but on all counts, "One Step Beyond" is the better choice. It's a grooving, upbeat instrumental that does for ska what Edgar Winter's "Frankenstein" did for rock. "Ghost Train" is another spooky Madness number worth a spot on longer playlists.
9. Warren Zevon, "Werewolves of London." An obvious choice, but expect your guests to howl if they don't hear it. Everyone knows the words, and it's slow enough to coax people onto the dance floor. If you want to defy convention, "Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner" is another great Zevon tune that will impress the music snobs, if not the dancers.
8. The Charlie Daniels Band, "Devil Went Down to Georgia." Everybody knows this one too, and there's nothing like an Irish reel to get your guests moving. Thanks to Coyote Ugly, this one's a favorite with the ladies.
7. David Bowie, "Scary Monsters." Why this never shows up on Halloween lists is a mystery. Maybe because it's so hard to pin down what most Bowie songs are supposed to be about. A driving beat and some eerie sounds add to the scare appeal here. If you want to go off the beaten path with Bowie, "Please Mr. Gravedigger" is a wonderful spoken-word piece that sets a Halloween mood. "Up the Hill Backwards," Bowie's paean to teen suicide and societal apathy, fits a gothic mood for fans of the Ziggy Stardust years.
6. Mike Myers, "Halloween Theme (Terror Mix)." You can find this track pretty easily online, and you can preview it here. Take John Carpenter's signature horror score, set it to a techno beat, add a few quotes from Donald Pleasance, and you've got one danceable piece of scary music.
5. Blue Oyster Cult, "Don't Fear the Reaper." The most blatantly pro-suicide song to ever crack the Top 20 on the Billboard charts, this was B.O.C.'s biggest hit, peaking at #12 in 1976. If the screaming guitar solo doesn't stand your hairs on end, the lyrics, in which a young man offers his girl all the reasons why they should kill themselves, certainly will.
4. Michael Jackson, "Thriller." Come on, you know this is going to be on any Halloween playlist. It's a song about classic horror cinema with a great dance beat and all the stock sound effects you could want. Everybody loves doing that zombie dance. Just be sure to get the full-length version with all of Vincent Price's narration, or you're denying your guests the best part of the song.
3. The Rocky Horror Picture Show, "The Time Warp." This has been adopted by fans as one of the must-play songs of Halloween. It's not about ghosts, or science fiction, or really anything for that matter, but you can't deny the power of the Pelvic Thrust to get the room hopping. Lead into this with "Science Fiction Double Feature" to set the mood.
2. Zombina and the Skeletones, "Nobody Likes You When You're Dead." This Liverpudlian quintet blends a post-punk energy with horror lyrics that are the funniest thing this side of Jesus H. Christ and The Four Hornsmen of the Apocalypse. If you're lucky enough to live near England, you can catch them live. Over here in the States, we'll have to settle for their hard-to-find studio albums and the offerings on the ZATS MySpace page. This song is my personal favorite and a great introduction to their sound. Try it. You'll look very hip.
1. Oingo Boingo, "Dead Man's Party." Anyone who doesn't include this in their list of the best Halloween songs loses their right to have a list of the best Halloween songs. Pure, creepy fun from Danny Elfman, wholly appropriate lyrics, and the finest horn sound this side of early '80s British ska, even if it's coming from a synth.
Halloween Tunes for You
I'd planned to post Claudio Simonetti's outstanding title track from Tenebre, which is a delicious goth-rock synth exploration set to a disco beat. The great wrong of this track being unavailable has been corrected, however, thanks to the DARIO ARGENTO ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK CD. Buy this and you'll get some Keith Emerson, Morricone, and Goblin thrown in for good measure.
So for those of you who love Halloween humor but can't take any more Monster Mash, here's John Zacherley's Dinner with Drac Part 1 and Dinner with Drac Part 2. Why two parts? Most of the lyrics are the same, but Dick Clark found some parts of "Dinner with Drac" too intense for the American Bandstand audience in 1958, so he asked Zacherley to switch it up for his live performance. Fans started clamoring for the alternate version, so Cameo Records released it as a b-side.
The rip's a bit rough, but that only adds to the Halloween charm, doesn't it?
Posted by HearItWow at 4:00 PM Links to this post
On-air and live!
Labels: Show News 1 commentsI've had to make some last-minute adjustments to tonight's show. Tune in at 7PM on WMFO, 91.5 FM or online at wmfo.org and you'll hear why. I'll also be covering the first half hour of On the Town with Mikey Dee tonight at 9, and I'm busting out Weezer's cover of "Velouria" and some tracks from the new Robby Roadsteamer CD, available at finer Newbury Comics locations near you. I think that shoebox in Saugus has it too.
Get yer butt out of the house
Like live comedy? Don't like spending a lot of money? Have I got some deals for you.
You've got one, two, THREE chances to catch me at The Comedy Studio over the next 11 days. I'll be doing a set as part of the incredible Zach Sherwin show on Thursday, October 16, which also features fellow WMFO personality Billy Bob Neck. Sunday night, October 19, I'm hosting, and Robby Roadsteamer is on the bill. Then I'm back again on Sunday, October 26. All these shows cost less than ten bucks, so forget about those diminishing 401(k) returns and come laugh your troubles away.
Don't like the city? No problem. I'll be part of the Friday night showcase at The Bostonville Bar and Grill on scenic Route 1 in Lynnfield, Mass., on October 24. Come see comedy and more televisions per square inch than your average Best Buy, then stick around for the video games. It's Chuck E. Cheese for grownups after 10 PM. That's right, booze and whack-a-mole. That's entertainment.
Posted by HearItWow at 11:43 AM Links to this post
It's the Stupid Economy
Labels: Show News 0 commentsMy attempts to inject some audio prozac into the collective zeitgeist seem to have failed, so this week I'm jumping on the anxiety bandwagon. For those still interested in promoting their businesses, we'll have some more of THE TM SYSTEM (no beds this time, promise!), insurance advice from the nice folks at Geico, and a blast from radio's past with Volume 1, Issue 1 of Programmer's Digest, the magazine you read on vinyl.
In between, I'll be letting The Smiths speak to the current sociopolitical climate. It all goes down from 7 to 9PM Eastern tonight, if you're reading this on October 8.
Robby Roadsteamer went and got himself booked at Mottley's, Boston's hot new comedy club, so he won't be stopping by, but he's promised to come in for next week's show.
How to listen?
91.5 FM in Boston and points Northeast
wmfo.org for free streaming Internet radio
Posted by HearItWow at 12:08 PM Links to this post
Audio Prozac for You!
Labels: Releases, Show News 0 commentsLet's face it, this has been a scary and unsettling couple of weeks as we watch the economy gyrate and politicians squabble. Losing your optimism? Wondering what the future will hold? You're not alone.
Just remember that radio is FREE, and tune in tonight as I try to cheer us all up with two hours of happy, carefee music, featuring The J's with Jamie, Howard Jones, The Beatles, ABBA, and another record from the incredible Bert Tenzer. That all happens at 7PM Eastern Time, for FREE, on WMFO 91.5 FM. There's also a FREE Web stream at wmfo.org that might be a little less than FREE if you're paying for your Internet connection, so loot some free wi-fi at the coffee shop.
Want something else that's FREE and fun? Download The Wonderful World of Music at WFMU's Beware of the Blog. This album is a compliation of jazzy themes composed by a young Robert Way when he was working at W-EZE in Boston. As a local promotional album, it's on the rare side, and well worth a listen.
Next week...Robby Roadsteamer.
Posted by HearItWow at 1:17 PM Links to this post
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