This is a post-mortem.
Normally I post a recording of the radio show I do on Fridays, Cradle To Grave, on the Self Help Radio website on Saturdays. I don't expect anyone will listen, but it's part of my ritual. I put SHR up on Wednesdays, CTG on Saturdays.
But there's no recording of the show on the website right now. That's because I only did half the show. If you listened, you'd know why.
When I do my radio shows, I usually bring up CDs. I have stuff on vinyl, but I usually digitize it before I bring it up. What that means is that some of the CDs I have are home-burned. I buy mp3s, I download stuff, etc. & you know what? Some CD players don't like home-burned CDs.
During the show, in the last quarter-hour, one CD player started skipping during on song. I interrupted, I played another song - hey, I have more than enough stuff for the rest of the show, I have birthdays & deathdays I don't get to. But when I used the CD player again, it skipped again, with a different CD.
Okay. This CD player - which worked fine for me the last two shows I did - in the same room! - was rejecting now my burned CDs. I thought about doing a total John Peel & trying to do the show entirely from one player - I'd have to talk while I was changing out CDs. But then! The second CD player started skipping. It was the end of the hour. I decided not to suffer through an entire hour with the uncertainty of the CD players rejecting my CDs.
At WRFL, I would have had a backup - I bring stuff on a flash drive - but I don't know if I can play songs at LXU from the computer that has the automation on it. So I just said "uncle." I apologize for that.
Here's what the second hour would have looked like:
"Piccolo Pete (Parker Gibbs, vocals)" Ted Weems & His Orchestra _Marvellous!_ (ASV)
"Happy Days Are Here Again (vocals by The Rollickers)" Ben Selvin & His Orchestra _Sony Music 100 Years: Soundtrack For A Century_
"Don't Let The Rhythm Go To Your Head (Let The Rhythm Go To Your Feet) (Chu Berry, vocals)" Fletcher Henderson & His Orchestra _Fletcher Henderson & His Orchestra_
"Waterworks" Kai Winding Sextet _Early Bones_
"Mountain Greenery" Barney Kessel _Music To Listen To Barney Kessel By_
Death commemorated here were Ted Weems, songwriter Milton Ager, saxophonist Franz Jackson, Kai Winding, & Barney Kessel.
"Lili Marlene" Marlene Dietrich _Marlene Dietrich_ (Habana)
Venus" Dickie Valentine _The Joe Meek Story, Vol. 5: The Early Years_
"I'll Be Home" Flamingos _The Complete Chess Masters_
"Daddy Rollin' Stone" Otis Blackwell _Chicken Shack Boogie, Vol. 3_
"Sweetback" Viola Wills _Sister Funk_
Death commemorated this set were Marlene Dietrich, Dickie Valentine, Paul Wilson of the Flamingos, Otis Blackwell, & Viola Wills.
"The Road Is So Long" Carey & Lurrie Bell _Second Nature_
"Can I Get A Witness" The Steampacket _The In Crowd: UK Mod R&B-Beat, 1964-1967_
"Blowin' In The Wind" Stevie Wonder _The Complete Motown Singles, Vol. 6: 1966_
"Emma" Hot Chocolate _Super Hits Of The 70s: Have A Nice Day, Vol. 14_
Deaths commemorated here were Carey Bell, Mickey Waller of the Steampacket, Clarence Paul singing with Stevie Wonder, & Errol Brown of Hot Chocolate.
The last song I was going to play was in remembrance of one of my heroes, Grant McClennan, who died ten years ago, May 6, 2006. I would've played "Cattle & Cane" by the Go-Betweens.
Next week I'm out of town but I don't know what I'm going to do in two weeks. I have resisted bringing up a laptop - that has its own problems. Right now I'm going to concentrate on the next Self Help Radio. Otherwise I'm get frustrated all over again.
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