Sometimes it seems I'll never get used to writing on this blog on the weekend. I'm sitting here listening to songs about sand. There are lots of songs about sand. There's a lot of sand.
Oh, I should point out something. In case you're expecting something on the sand show on Tuesday: I'm not going to play any songs about quicksand. But why not? Quicksand! The most interesting sand of all!*
It turns out that I did a show two years ago with the theme "quick", & I played a quicksand set. & I hate to repeat myself. Even if two years have passed. & no one cares but me.
Why do I even care? Because, like that dude says in The Wire,** "A man's got to have a code." (A woman, too, I presume.) I grew up with commercial radio, & even one ennui-filled afternoon, sat next to my radio writing down the songs that were being played, & found that a few artists (I wish I still had that notebook) were played pretty much every hour, & a couple of songs were replayed at the same time hour after hour. There might have been a moment when I said to myself, "If I ever get a radio show, I will never ever never never ever be so damned repetitive."
Even though that's how & why radio works.
But I suppose I was a curious sort. I remember discovering non-commercial radio & it was amazing, because I wanted radio to help me find new music, not take advantage of how the brain processes repetition to breed familiarity & eventually acceptance.*** Radio shows that play the same thing over & over will always be more popular because, like I said, that's how radio works.
One time, talking with a friend, we were discussing how out-of-touch we are with today's popular music. I suggested that we look at the Billboard charts & listen to the top three songs or whatever, just to find out. She said, "No! Those terrible songs will just get stuck in my head!"
Apologies, then, for not repeating stuff. But, a deejay's gotta have a code. Or this deejay does, anyway.
Did I mention there are a lot of songs about sand?
* One would assume.
** I thought it was Omar, but one search engine query later I discovered I was wrong.
*** I need to research this more. Maybe Oliver Sachs has written about it?
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