Showing posts with label brave new waves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brave new waves. Show all posts

Saturday, March 24, 2007

BNW - Stories from Other Bloggers

While I've been collecting up listeners' reminiscences about Brave New Waves, a couple of Toronto-based writers have been documenting the on-coming changes at CBC and pretty much offering a blow-by-blow for their readers.

Michael Barclay's Canuckistan blog has been keeping up with the changes, staff dismissals (including one Michael Barclay), and broadcast stoppages of late. However, being a longtime fan, Barclay also has a storehouse of old interviews with CBC late night personalities such as David Wisdom and former BNW host Brent Bambury to draw from to inform his position. Barclay is open about his love of BNW and seems a fan of the radio format generally. His stuff is worth checking out, if only because it balances a real respect for the show and its importance, while acknowledging that it probably should have been cancelled. Not an easy position to maintain, but one he is capable of.

Also of note would be Carl Wilson's Zoilus blog, which has been following the switch away from BNW and listening to the proposed replacements with interest. Wilson's position is similar to Barclay's in that he believes in the importance of radio, the significance of BNW, and the logic in its demise. His blog is worth reading through even if you are not in Toronto (which is an official medical condition now), because even if Wilson's posts about BNW's end are balanced and even, the comments from his readers speak to the anger and confusion a lot of CBC listeners feel. It is an interesting way to cross-reference the reaction to the end of BNW.

Personally, I don't understand a lot of the changes at CBC, both literally (as in, I don't know what shows have been cancelled, are in short-term re-runs, or are on permanent hiatus), and strategically (as in, why certain shows have been cancelled in the first place). Why Brave New Waves was not given the opportunity to become a podcast, especially given the popularity of Grant Lawrence's Radio 3 podcast, I will never understand.

The saga continues, I suppose. I just wanted to post about some of the more skilled commentary that has been tracking the end of BNW, to promote the understanding that these changes are being felt across the country.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

BNW Stories - Keep Them Coming

Okay, so I have started talking to people about Brave New Waves and its impact on their lives growing up. I am working on this idea that BNW acted like the internet to many of us, providing a music resource of depth and breadth before the internet was as widespread and ubiquitous as it is now.

A couple of conversations have happened and an email or two have come my way. However, I am still looking for more snapshots from former BNW listeners. And frankly, I think almost everyone has a story or two. Here's something Andrew Wedman said in a note:

"bnw was definitely important to me. not only did it expose me to all sorts of new music, but they were also one of tinkertoy’s biggest supporters. patti was playing the first cdr shit that we made. I always loved that she would play pretty much anything from anyone as long as she thought it was interesting."

And these are the sorts of reports that I am trying to track down. Drop me a note with a couple of lines about your favourite BNW stories, and maybe I'll try to cook up some sort of prize pack.

(Note: prize pack will not actually involve cooking)

Saturday, March 10, 2007

BNW Stories - Philly

My request for peoples' Brave New Wave stories is beginning to yield results. Today I received an anonymous comment on the original post about this, but it was so moving to me, I thought it deserved a post of its own.

I don't know how this little blog was seen by someone in Philadelphia, but I am honoured to have such honesty shared with me. So thank you, Anonymous, for your story. Have a read:

"I'm a rare breed, I'm a long time American listener of BNW. I don't live in Detroit/Windor, or Seattle/Vancouver. I live in Philadelphia, PA. And by some force of sheer luck, one night 15 years ago, scanning the dial I discovered this show was simulcasting on one of the local public radio stations here. I was 12, about to turn 13, and at the time I was living with my family in a shelter. I hated being there, the food was awful, and the beds were not that much better. I heard this crazy cut-up of Heatwave's "Grooveline", and everything changed. I had no idea what it was, but it was the escape I needed every night since. To make a long story short, the simulcast didn't last long, and then when we found a new place to live and I got online I have been listening ever since. All I can say that it wasn't just my musical tastes that have been altered by this show. It also affected my philosophies as well. Losing this show is losing the driving force of my life, and as much as it has changed over the last few years, I still come home from work listening to it and being blown away by what I hear. There will be nothing on Earth like Brave New Waves again, and I'm glad I got to know it so well and for so long."

If you have a comment, or a story you'd like to share, by all means, send it my way. Thanks again for such candour.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

The End of Brave New Waves - Your Stories

Canada's premier weirdness radio show, Brave New Waves, has been cancelled by CBC radio.

Since 1984, Brave New Waves has been generating late-night strangeness for insomniacs and underground music fans alike. I happen to be both, so it was perfect for me.

Long before the internet was a household reality for most of us, BNW was the primary source of bringing us the newest music from outside the margins, and filling in the blanks in our music knowledge with their extensive artist features. As a reformed record-store snob, I can say that these artist profiles helped me understand the interconnections and collaborations between artists in different cities: Portland, Oregon; Chapel Hill, North Carolina; Louisville, Tennesee; Cologne, Germany. This kind of stuff used to be really important to me.

Lying in bed in the desiccated suburbs of an Okanagan town, my world expanded every night. In university, we had a party to mark Brent Bambury's last show and Patti Schmidt's first. What I've found over the last few weeks is that everyone I talk to has a similar story. Brave New Waves had a major impact on a lot of people, over the years.

Let's celebrate it.

I'm looking to collect some of these stories from Brave New Waves listeners. I am pitching pieces at various magazines about the end of BNW, and how important it was to us, and I am looking to hear some peoples' anecdotes about the show's impact on their life. This is not about getting CBC to change their decision (that can be someone else's job), it is simply about officially recognizing the cultural impact of this important show.

If you are interested in participating, either leave a comment below or email me. I'm looking for all Brave New Waves tales, be they tales of woe or tales of WHOAH!