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Blues fans: Opposition to blues radio station in Edmonton

Blues fans: Opposition to blues radio station in Edmonton

Hi everyone,

I hope this doesn’t take too much of anyone’s time, but I have something I believe needs to be said to the
blues community.

My name is Jeremy Loome, and I am a 37-year-old guy from Edmonton.

Like many hardcore blues fans, it’s about all I listen to and has been a comfort, source of inspiration and creative outlet for me for years, ever since hearing BB King sing ‘How Blue Can You Get’ as an 11-year-old homesick kid. It has seen me through turbulent times and near-death experiences, tragedies among those I love and countless other pressures of life.

This hardcore love of all things Albert Collins, Son Seals, Freddie King and Watermelon Slim is a big part of my life; I write about the blues for my newspaper, play in a local band, record local acts occasionally and, in a period of sheer grueling insanity and near fatal workload, ran a free e-zine online that between 800 and 1,500 blues fans would read each week.

Like a lot of blues folk, I’ve secretly yearned for years to see it commercially accepted and for the artists to get their due. Eddie Taylor, I’ve always figured, should be a musical God to people.

Recently, I got a chance to support what may be the first FM radio chain application to service blues and nothing but the blues. A Canadian duo wants to invest millions in being the guys that take the chance on blues that no one else has since its heyday as 45′s spinning on neighbourhood jukeboxes. They’ve proposed six stations across Canada in major markets, and
intend on selling programming to stations across the U.S., as well as streaming all their stations online.

The potential exposure for blues could be huge, increasing its audience by millions instantly.

I was just as surprised, unfortunately, to find out this week that the application is being opposed by CKUA.

CKUA is a brilliant, eclectic outlet in Edmonton that currently has five hours of dedicated blues programming per week. It
believes a commercial blues station could hurt its audience draw, which, as an entirely publicly supported station, would hurt its bottom line.

I am aghast, given that I have financially supported CKUA for years, that it would need to shut blues artists and fans out of their first major FM radio commercial exposure in years to protect such a small percentage of its audience — even assuming people who listen to public radio would simply abandon it for the duration of their two three- hours shows each week.

Although I believe CKUA’s management may feel it must do business by taking on this commercial venture and opposing its CRTC license, the net result will be a substantial loss to the blues community, caused by a public station with a mandate to support cultural expansion and expression. It is also the only public station in Canada opposing the blues stations.

Please write politely to CKUA at the address below or contact them through their website if you feel a full-time, 100% blues station should get a shot.

Thanks for your time,
Jeremy Loome

http://www.ckua.org/

ken.regan@ckua.com — GM Ken Regan’s Email

source: connect2edmonton.ca
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Wildlife: Blues, Blues, And More GTA4 Blues

Blues fest and Blues FM make announcements, and There’s more blues to be had in the gaming sphere
Published May 1, 2008  by Fish Griwkowsky in Music Preview

How much blues is enough for you? Three hundred and fifty-seven pounds? Forty-six and five-sixteenth tonnes? Can such a thing even be measured? Does there even exist a limit as to how much concentrated “done-wrongness” you can accept as your personal saviour?

Well, either way, Edmonton is a fine place to be this summer if you relish dependable textbook beats, lyrics that describe your exact position in life, and repeated citations of the plural form of one of the three primary colours. First off, Jeremy Loome—the singer in front of The Hardline Blues Band and an enthusiastic blues journalist—has issued a general summons:

“A radio company out of Ontario, Skywords, is currently pitching six large-market FM blues stations to the CRTC,” he says. “It has applications in cities across the country, including Edmonton.

“The CRTC is holding a hearing on May 27 in Edmonton and I was hoping you could put the word out over the next week and see if any artists you know would be interested in becoming intervenors on behalf of the station, to show why having mainstream blues (and the license is for 100 per cent blues—a first, as far as I know) on the FM airwaves would benefit blues musicians and music culture in general.”

Done and done. Anyone interested in helping out should e-mail Jeff McFayden quickly at jmcfayden@skywords.com. Non-artists can get involved by writing letters of support through the bluesincananda.com site. Seeing as we’re already groovin’ on the blues-puter, you can also download some of Loome’s music at littleknownblues.com.

Now the second way to seriously immerse your entire twitching body in this music is to join in the 10-year anniversary celebrations at this year’s Blues Fest down at the Heritage Amphitheatre from August 22-24. For the hot dogs alone, people. I must say I admire organizer Cam Hayden’s specific attempt to bring fresh bands in every year—a lesson to be learned. That said, this is a big anniversary, so Blues International is treating 2008 as a best-of year, which is fair enough. The lineup includes a good mix of Downchild, the sultry Janiva Magness, Ann Rabson, Charlie Musselwhite as a festival closer, and piano legend Pinetop Perkins, who’s coming up fast on his 100th birthday in 2013. Tickets go on sale today everywhere, including Megatunes.

Incidentally, Ike Turner was not asked to return. Though his show in Hawrelak a few years back was spectacular and hilarious, he’s actually dead now. Now that, ladies and gentlemen, is some serious blues. But if you’re still looking for even more blues, the realest blues of all, visit democracynow.org.

Fans of music and DJ culture were sorely disappointed in the midnight lineup for the new Grand Theft Auto IV this week, instead serving up a bland, Soviet-style lineup with two models dressed as cops occasionally harassing us with posters and XXL Xbox Live T-shirts, fertile ground for chip grease and man tits. While I hella appreciate the tough love behind cop shades, the only other thing to “entertain” us in the shivering queue were Chinese vacationers torturing a cockroach by melting a Tim Hortons straw onto it and a bunch of showboater, truck-driving doofs rolling over every curb possible, looking around to see if everyone’s watching. I cannot believe the lame depths this **cking world has sunk to.

First, as fun as they are to play, rock ’n’ roll, metal and punk have become inarguably suburbanized by a tsunami of karaoke band games… and now “crime” has been totally nerdified by the latest murder simulator?

Does everything evil need bouncers at the door now? Go back to math, you **cking geeks. At least you’d be good at something.

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There’s a new DAWG in Town

By Lindsey Cole With files from Lauren Gilchrist

The competition is getting fierce for the 96.7 spot on the FM dial.
An 11th station is vying for their chance at getting the spot in the Peterborough and Kawartha Lakes area, hoping they will be able to create an entirely Canadian blues channel.
DAWG FM recently filed an application with the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) for a license to operate 96.7 FM.
“What we’re trying to do is bring the blues format to commercial radio,” says Robyn Metcalfe, the vice president of programming for DAWG.
“A lot of people get their start in blues. We wanted to give them a voice.”
The station will feature community news, local sports, traffic, as well as new and local blues music.
“It’s something that hasn’t been done yet. We’re going to try something different,” she says.
The play list would include 40 per cent Canadian blues content and 30 per cent emerging artists.
“There’s such a great music scene in Peterborough and the Kawartha Lakes area.”
DAWG FM joins 10 others in the fight for the spot, including local station 980 KRUZ, which is currently known as CKRU on the AM band and plays a mix of songs from the ’60s. ’70s and ’80s.
When asked about the competition, Ms Metcalfe chuckled and said a little competition can go along way.
“I think competition is great. It makes me work a little harder. We’re putting in 110 per cent. We’re hoping for the best but expecting the worst. If we don’t get the licence we are better people for going through this process.”
Currently the station is collecting letters of support from the community, and is also collecting research and information about how Peterborough and Kawartha Lakes feel about a blues station in the area.
“We’re getting a lot of positive feedback,” she adds.
DAWG will take this feedback to the commission, who will hold a hearing regarding DAWG’s application, as well the other applicants, at 9:30 a.m. on Dec. 10 in London, Ontario.
For more information about DAWG FM visit www.bluesincanada.com

Source: http://mykawartha.com/article/20954

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ottawa ribfest, dwag fm, ribfest, ribs, food, event, party
ottawa ribfest, dwag fm, ribfest, ribs, food, event, party