The Balcony Show to Welcome Gilmore Girls’ Scott Patterson to WLVU
Fans of Gilmore Girls and great music alike will want to tune into WLVU: The Sound of The Underground this coming Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET.
Fans of Gilmore Girls and great music alike will want to tune into WLVU: The Sound of The Underground this coming Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET.
This week, The Balcony Show is smokin’ the airwaves with some straight up good time blues!
Now that the first full week of WLVU: The Sound of the Underground’s existence is underway, we thought we’d offer you a look at what you can expect from our fine internet radio programming in the coming days.
So, here it goes: we plan on making a weekly tradition out of this. Learn what’s coming up…
The day is here! Today, we proudly launch WLVU: The Sound of The Underground, Lehigh Valley Underground’s own internet radio station.
Neue Regel Radio, the New Jersey-based internet radio station that plays host to independent music and radio shows worldwide, begins its 36 Hours for Autism radiothon Friday.
The Fyre & Ice Show, which airs every Tuesday night from 8-10 p.m. on Neue Regel Radio, will be hosting another special “Locals Only” edition of the program on Tuesday, March 7.
I promise that the headline is the only point today where I’ll talk in the third-person. Just had to present things professionally…
Anyway, I’m super excited to be joining The Fyre & Ice Show this Tuesday for their fourth Locals Only broadcast on Neue Regel Radio. You can expect two hours of the best in local music and fun times, and perhaps a little bit of chatter about our local music scene here in eastern PA.
For me, it will be the first time I’ve gone live in nearly six years. I hope I’m not too rusty, but I trust that doing this for the better part of the past three years has prepared me well.
Want a shoutout? Have a question? Let me know in the comments and I’ll do my best to get it on the air!
A couple weeks ago, we told you about The Originals Music Series, a local weekly showcase hosted at Chicago Restaurant in Allentown by Tracie Lovett and Amy Danner, better known as Ninja and Pitbull of the Fyre and Ice Show on Neue Regel Radio.
The internet-based radio show, running strong on the internet for three years and counting, deserves its own look. Tracie and Amy, in their continued public service to all things independent music, host the show every Tuesday night from 8-10 p.m. on Neue Regel.
It started simply for the duo, with nothing more than a cell phone, a laptop, and the Spreaker app. The early setup presented its challenges to the show’s hosts.
“We were actually playing music on my laptop, but recording the show through my cell phone,” Lovett said. “So, I was actually sitting the phone on top of my speakers.”
“We couldn’t talk (while the music played). That was the worst part,” Danner recalled. “Now, we have the DJ setup with mics that we can turn off and on.”
Since then, the duo has moved beyond Speaker and to a number of internet radio stations, to varying degrees of compatibility and success based on location and timing.
“We weren’t even on the same map (as some of the stations) with our goals,” Danner said.
Then, the relatively local, New Jersey-based Neue Regel Radio came calling.
The Culture of Neue Regel
“When (Neue Regel Radio founder Mike Presti) offered (the position) to us, it was all about timing,” Danner noted. “Their whole attitude is positive. There’s no negative. They give back to the community, and the way it’s run is so different (from other stations).
In giving back to the indie community, Presti himself has his own radio show called the Launch Pad, which airs Wednesday nights at 9 p.m. The station owner interacts directly with the bands he provides an opportunity, buying their music whenever possible.
“Last week on his show, he said that he had $7,000 worth of indie artist music,” Lovett said. “He refuses to have them give it to him.”
While each show on Neue Regel tends to stay more in the rock sphere, Danner explained that every show has a theme. For the Fyre & Ice Show, opportunities remain open to a wide spectrum of artists.
“We’ll do some blues and a little bit of heavy metal, but we’re straight up rock and roll,” Danner said. “We have brought in a few country acts. We’re a little more open than some of the other shows.”
The station’s shows also share music, working together to create a database of hundreds of indie artists.
“If another show comes across a band that doesn’t fit their show, they’ll hit us or another show up,” Danner said. “Now, we have this huge database of all the music that was purchased and sent to us to utilize.”
Fighting for Respect
Operating a successful internet radio show doesn’t come without challenges, with external forces that can make music licensing and relevance difficult to maintain.
“There were times where I really wanted to throw it all in and be like, ‘I’m done. I’m tired of all the drama and headaches,’” Lovett said.
However, validation comes in the form of a mutual respect between indie artists and those who support them.
“Bands constantly thank us, but I would much rather the bands thank themselves, because they’re the ones that deserve the credit,” Lovett said. “We couldn’t do what we’re doing now if it weren’t for the bands and their music, hard work, talent, and putting themselves out there for us.”
It’s easier to do as an artist when you know the support you receive is genuine, and the duo has spent years on the scene offering their authentic selves to the cause.
“I think a lot of these musicians already had respect for us, knowing that we were going out and supporting them,” Danner said. “When we started the Fyre & Ice Show, it was just another step.”
When it comes to the indie music world, I operate under a simple M.O.
Everybody supports everybody.
Independent musicians, radio hosts, bloggers, photographers, producers and supporters already face an uphill battle. The music industry has certain measures in place to ensure that they control the narrative of what’s best for business. It’s no secret or surprise that certain artists are pushed to the moon, while others and their genres – who else is sick of hearing, “Rock is dead?” – are downplayed as insignificant. As time has gone on, and depending on your market, terrestrial radio play and mainstream publicity has become more difficult to come by on a typical indie artist’s budget, and much less opportunity is often the result.
So, the indie community and the internet prides itself on being the counter-culture; the foil to the mass-produced, overly processed content put forth by “the machine.” This self-proclamation is well-intentioned, sure – however, the catch is that the indie community will never be an effective counter-culture if everyone involved doesn’t work together.
Yet, there’s a sense of competition that permeates the indie world, with internet radio stations that all claim to be #1, radio shows and venues who close their doors to certain genres, and artists who, at times, arrive to a show, play, and leave, without so much as a second thought to get to know the other bands sharing their bill.
In a world full of social media noise and clutter – from branded content, to that aunt who shares every sassy Minion “quote” she can get her hands on – your one band, podcast, blog or venue will not bring about change on its own. A movement to point the “noise” in our direction requires strength in numbers. Therefore, we should not only look at our places in the indie world in an individual context. Instead of focusing on being “number one,” we need to look at the people around us – regardless of genre – and determine how we can raise up together. How can we, as a united community, fight for and achieve more relevance – and how can we do so while achieving a balance between individual and group success?
For starters, I suggest that you check out some artists you don’t yet know. Buy their music and go to their shows. Uncover things you like about different genres, and expand your horizons. Find some indie music media – radio shows, podcasts and blogs – and start to follow them. Reach out to the folks doing the work, tell them how much you appreciate what they do, and spread the word about it. Use your platform – whatever it is – to strengthen the indie community into a force to be reckoned with.
It’s going to take a village – here at home, and the world over – for our vast music community to get the respect it deserves. Don’t be a village of one.
Image credit: SaveNetRadio3.0
The Small Webcasters Agreement of 2009 expired on January 1 of this year. With that, royalty rates have skyrocketed for internet radio hosts and station owners, leaving tens of thousands of webcasters with no choice but to shutter their doors to countless talented independent musicians throughout the world.
The Copyright Royalty Board (CRB) has left small webcasters and hard-working musicians out in the cold, with no representation whatsoever. With no provisions to assist small webcasters, many will not only struggle to keep up — they will find it impossible.
The good news? A Change.org petition (containing all of the information you need) has gained steam, hoping to preserve the platforms that independent musicians of all genres hold dear. As it nears its goal of 1,500 signatures, we at Lehigh Valley Underground encourage you join this fight. Make Congress reconsider this injustice to our indie brothers and sisters by signing it today.