Samizdat Plunder: Kim Paris and Jason Gross
This week: two interviews. Kim Paris runs the FM Radio Archive at the Internet Archive, and after wading through some Grateful Dead sides there I found a whole new portal onto FM broadcasts and related treasures. Paris answered my email queries for context on underground sources and their peers. Then: Jason Gross, who founded Perfect Sound Forever. We spoke in June of 2022, in what now sounds like a dated postcard from the Great Emergence. Our conversation roams from pandemic to 9/11 to historical over-corrections to the streaming wars and that strange David Letterman writer Steve Youngs documentary about "industrial musicals," enough material for its own link box below.
Coming soon: 2022 lists, including a exceptional year for music books...
POCO Live on the King Biscuit Flower Hour, courtesy of FM Radio Archive.
Samizdat Plunder
Insider Chat
Kim Paris, Founder of FM Radio Archive
Can you share your most popular search terms?
Per the data on archive.org, the 3 most popular search terms by topic on FM Radio Archive are: 1. FM broadcast, 2. live concert & 3. aircheck.
Do you find certain genres more popular than others, and theorize as to why this happens?
Based on views, it seems that rock concerts (Allman Brothers, Grateful Dead, Pink Floyd, Bob Marley, Fleetwood Mac) are the most popular. I think this is just because those bands were all very popular and played a lot on FM radio. It appears that jazz concerts are the next biggest draw, which may be due in part to many mentions of FM Radio Archive on Marc Myers' JazzWax blog, including this one.
Do you see a difference between traffic and download activity?
I can't see the download activity from archive.org's data, but FM Radio Archive currently has >950K views, and I expect to pass 1M views on the third anniversary of my archive in January 2023.
What surprises you most about user data?
I'm often surprised about broadcast recordings that get lots of views, when the band or artist is not so well known, or from a long time ago. Two recent surprises have been Poco from 1973 (currently #1) and Linda Ronstadt. I think the Linda Ronstadt recordings experienced an initial surge after a relatively recent TV special about the singer and how she lost her singing voice. The other surprise is where listeners are located, I get a lot in the Netherlands, the UK, and South Africa.
Have you ever expected something to surge and find it goes flat?
I have sometimes been disappointed when a broadcast recording I post doesn't trend well on views. But then I can also be surprised when they trend higher months after I post them.
What would you do with this archive if you had infinite resources?
I am the sole creator and curator for FM Radio Archive, although I have a few "regulars" who send me broadcast recordings to post. I plan to publicize it more on Facebook and/or Instragram after I retire. I also donate often to archive.org, which is the world's largest online digital repository for music and many other types of media, and I encourage everyone to support the archive's mission to preserve and share historical media.
Do you get requests for additions and changes?
Yes, if I list the wrong date or location for a concert recording, or the wrong band members, I often get reviews with the corrected info. In some cases when I post a show as a single track, I'll get the setlist added in a review, which I appreciate.
Can you share other sites you find helpful in maintaining this one?
1. Other collections of broadcast concerts and radio shows on archive.org
2. JazzWax by Marc Myers
3. CTProduced by Mark Cathcart
4. The Music History Calendar to celebrate anniversaries related to artists, concerts or album releases
5. Setlist.fm for the song lists and other facts about broadcast concert recordings.
Any tips on computer streaming wifi setup?
I have a whole house Sonos system with speakers in 6 rooms, so we can listen throughout our home, either the same music in all rooms or different music in various rooms.
Dexter Gordon & Friends Live at The Keystone Korner, San Francisco - New Years Eve 1980, courtesy of FM Radio Archive.
Do you sense any overlaps between FM Radio Archive and youtube… does stuff show up in both places, or shortly after you’ve posted yours?
Yes, I occasionally pull music clips from YouTube, and often find someone has lifted music from FM Radio Archive and posted it on YouTube. Here's an example, this cover art is mine.
Who do you consider your strongest competition if any?
As there is no financial incentive for me with FM Radio Archive, I don't think about competition. The goal is just to share the music, via the archive and my Melting Pot radio show on Freeform Portland. I feature 30 minutes of FM Radio Archive tracks at the end of most of my 2 hour radio shows.
Where do you go to find stray obscurities, broadcasts?
I get most of the music for FM Radio Archive from my music trading network. Also other postings on archive.org and from some internet blogs and searches.
Has anybody compiled the complete King Biscuit Flower Hour archives? Or other radio/TV programs that deserve attention?
Discogs has a list of all the albums that were released on the King Biscuit Flower Hour record label. King Biscuit Radio streams recordings from the radio show and I'm also a fan of NPR's Jazz Night in America program.
Where can others follow you on Instagram or Twitter?
I don't use or plan to use Twitter, and I don't currently post much on Instagram or Facebook. My Melting Pot radio shows on Freeform Portland can be found on FM Radio Archive and on MixCloud. I plan to do more on social media after I retire next year, when I have more free time.
How do you promote this content to your target audience?
At this time, the only "promotion" of FM Radio Archive is when I write to Marc Myers on JazzWax (like this post about Creed Taylor & CTI Records), or when I play tracks from the Archive on my Melting Pot radio show. I plan to do more on social media next year, after I retire.
mentioned in this interview:
As Serious As Your Life: Black Music and the Free Jazz Revolution, by Val Wilmer
A covid Spotify playlist
The Pandemic Songs by Hamell on Trial on Bandcamp
"Stay Away," by Randy Newman
Other PSF writers: Evelyn McDonnell, Robin Cook, Simon Reynolds, Peter Stampfel, Brian Eno
Dance Pop recommendations:
Sofi Tukker
Confidence Man
Demidevil by Ashnikko
Times by SG Lewis
Step inside Club Future Nostalgia: The Blessed Madonna breaks down her Dua Lipa remix album, by Katie Thomas in Crack Magazine
And beyond:
Teeth Marks by SG Goodman (streaming links)
"How the 'Spotify Sound' Is Changing Music," by James Shotwell in Hypebot
"Phish’s Incredible Hoax About A Fake Scandinavian Band Stretches Across The Internet," by Andy Cush in Spin
more
FM Radio Archive
Perfect Sound Forever
RJ Smith on Chuck Berry, by Tim Riley in Creem magazine
coming soon
Recoiling from Bob Dylan's reactionary Philosophy of Song in World Literature Today, January 2023
Simone Dinnerstein, pianist
newsletters
Music Journalism Insider
Aquarium Drunkard
Public Domain Review
More newsletters
riley rock report
twitter: @timrileyauthor
twitter likes
Buzzsprout: audio segments
riley rock report archives
sign up for the newsletter