Tag Archives: Neue Regel Radio

The Fyre & Ice Show’s “Locals Only Show” this Tuesday, featuring Gerard Longo of LVU

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!

The Fyre and Ice Show to Team With Musicians to ‘Imagine a World Without Bullying’

MEDIA RELEASE
3/29/2016

Contact:
Tracie Lovett & Amy Danner
fyreandiceshow@gmail.com

The Fyre and Ice Show to Team With Musicians to ‘Imagine a World Without Bullying’

Music video featuring rock remix of John Lennon’s “Imagine” to be taped this summer.

LEHIGH VALLEY, Pa. – Mar. 29, 2016The Fyre and Ice Show, an internet radio show based in the Lehigh Valley and featuring independent artists worldwide, is teaming up this summer with Neue Regel Radio and musicians from around the world to Imagine a World Without Bullying.

The radio show will be revamping John Lennon’s world-renowned hit “Imagine” with a rocked-out remix that will feature additional verses geared toward the anti-bullying movement. The song will be accompanied by a music video featuring musicians from all corners of the globe, who will lend their voices to the project.

The video project is part of a larger movement by Neue Regel Radio to eliminate bullying as a major issue nationwide.

“We know so many amazing, talented and dedicated musicians that all have hearts of gold,” said Tracie Lovett and Amy Danner, co-hosts of The Fyre and Ice Show. “With their assistance, we will knock this movement out of the park in a huge, rock and roll way.”

The Fyre and Ice Show will provide musicians with a re-worked recording of “Imagine” for rehearsal purposes in advance of taping. Musicians from outside the Lehigh Valley are encouraged to record a verse using this official recording for inclusion into the project. Additionally, The Fyre and Ice Show will be collecting testimonials from musicians about the bullying they have experienced in their lives.

Taping dates and locations will be announced in the coming months. For updates, please visit The Fyre and Ice Show’s official website.

About The Fyre and Ice Show

Ninja (Tracie Lovett) and Pitbull (Amy Danner) are avid and committed supporters of the local music scene. They both decided to start The Fyre and Ice Show to give bands another outlet for their music to be heard. The Fyre and Ice Show is full of current events locally and abroad, interviews, rant sessions and, most importantly, your music! For more information, please visit http://fyreandiceshow.wix.com/fyreandiceshow.

The Fyre (and Ice) Burns

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.”