Got It Covered

Anatomy of the Ear 2012

November 3, 2012

Prepare your eardrums: WRCT’s Anatomy of the Ear is back!

Starting Monday, Nov. 5, our DJs will be collaborating live on air to take you on a journey through the vast gamut of genres that WRCT is most fond of in hour-long blocks, every night from 6 p.m. until midnight. Be sure to tune in over the air on right here on the website!

Here’s the full schedule:

Monday, Nov. 5:
6-7 p.m. “Rustbelt Radio”
7-8 p.m. Blues
8-9 p.m. Americana
9-10 p.m. “Advanced Calculus”
10-11 p.m. Old-school hip hop
11-12 a.m. Underground hip hop

Tuesday, Nov. 6
6-7 p.m. House
7-8 p.m. IDM
8-9 p.m. Experimental
9-10 p.m. Modern classical
10-11 p.m. Classic classical
11-12 a.m. C/K/J-pop

Wednesday, Nov. 7
6-7 p.m. Classic rock
7-8 p.m. Punk
8-9 p.m. Black/death metal
9-10 p.m. Progressive metal
10-11 p.m. Post-punk
11-12 a.m. Disco

Thursday, Nov. 8
6-7 p.m. International (Latin America)
7-8 p.m. International (Africa)
8-9 p.m. Indie rock
9-10 p.m. Math rock
10-11 p.m. Spiritual jazz
11-12 a.m. Big band jazz

Special thanks goes out to Union Pig & Chicken, Harvard & Highland, and Szmidt’s Old World Deli for providing us with some awesome food to keep our DJs full and happy.

All of this leads up to our favorite fall event: the WRCT Fall Dance Party. This year’s dance party will be at the Shadow Lounge (5972 Baum Blvd.) on Friday, Nov. 9, starting at 9 p.m. More information is available on the Facebook event page: https://www.facebook.com/events/375534539190681


For the week of October 30th, 2012

October 30, 2012
  1. Flying Lotus: Until the Quiet Comes
  2. The XX: Coexist
  3. Neurosis: Honor Found in Decay
  4. Jon Spencer Blues Explosion: Meat and Bone
  5. Ry Cooder: Election Special
  6. Abysme: Strange Rites
  7. Ty Segall: Twins
  8. 300 Bases: Sei Ritornelli
  9. The Presets: Pacifica
  10. Pig Destroyer: Book Burner

Paperhouse: On Halloween

October 29, 2012

It’s that time of year again. Your Facebook is flooded with invitations to Halloween parties, slasher fests, pumpkin patch frolicking, nights of horror — the list goes on. Yet upon attending these events, you are overwhelmed with downright bad costumes and a lack of Halloween spirit.

Invitations to these events include descriptions that tell girls to be whatever they want, as long as they add the word “slutty” to the costume description. Now, I’m all for expressing yourself, but what happened to good, clean Halloween fun that focused on ghouls, goblins, and witches instead of sexy nurses, teachers, and police officers?

This past week, I went to an event that embodied my idealized image of Halloween. Tucked away in Lawrenceville, Arsenal Bowling Lanes hosts a weekly college night on Tuesdays, complete with cheap bowling, booze, and a live band. This week, the bowling alley was decked out with skeletons, cobwebs, and the usual Halloween fare. The red velvet walls, the skeletons atop the alleyways, and the live band made for a great evening.

The band, aptly called The Graveyard Rockers, played psychobilly and surf rock tunes focused on zombies, Frankenstein, and all your favorite monsters. The tongue-in-cheek references to science fiction, horror, violence, and sex were quite a relief from the bevy of electronic dance music I’d grown accustomed to hearing during “Halloween” parties.

As soon as Thanksgiving comes, our ears will be assaulted with Christmas music; why isn’t this the case with Halloween music? If you dig around, you’ll find that there are some great Halloween anthems out there that bring together the dark, fun, and ultimately over-sexualized aspects of Halloween. Take a break from your usual playlists and crank up some psychobilly. I would recommend you start with the compilations Halloween Hootenanny and Halloween A Go-Go.

(Originally published in The Tartan)


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