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| The Sound Contest Page |
Congratulations to Raymond Vigil of Goldsboro, our final winner in our CD giveaway this week. He'll soon receive a copy of Fire Songs by the Watson Twins... a current favorite on The Sound. We'll do this again soon. If you'd like to go ahead and get eligible for our next set of CD drawings, here's everything you need to do... click here and type in your name & mailing address... and that's it. If that click here button isn't working, just e-mail your name & mailing address to me at golsen@publicradioeast.org and put The Sound CD Contest in the Subject line. If you've entered in past contests and haven't won, I've still got your name and you're still eligible (eventually the drawing Gods will smile upon you). If you've won something from Public Radio East in the last 30 days, hold off for a little while and give the other guy a chance.
Thanks for listening. While you're here, check out what's below ... a list of The Sound's top 40 discs so far this year ... some snapshot reviews of new music currently featured on The Sound... and if you'd like some new music now, don't want to wait on the drawing Gods AND you want to help keep The Sound on the air, check out the CDs we're offering as our way of saying thanks for becoming a Public Radio East member.
Thanks for listening, and good luck.
George Olsen Host/producer The Sound
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| What keeps The Sound on the air? |
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The one word answer is “you.” If you’ve been
listening to The Sound for any length of time, you may have noticed the lack of
commercials. That’s what keeps the typical radio station running… they sell
advertisers air time, then you pay for your usage of that station by, in
essence, donating your time to listen to those commercials, and then (they hope) rushing out and buying that product... which has the cost of the advertising tucked into the price. We don’t have that
option. We’re licensed as a non-commercial station, meaning if we air
commercials, we’re in violation of our FCC license, which isn’t a good thing.
So how do we pay for the 1001 incidentals that are involved in getting The Sound into
your home, office or car? We’re back to the one word answer… “you.” The Federal
Communications Commission won’t let us sell commercial time BUT they will allow
us to ask for donations from those folks with the good taste to listen to this
station. The majority of the funds we use to present The Sound are listener
dollars. Without those listener dollars, no Sound… literally. We believe what
you hear on Public Radio East on its own is enough to pledge your financial
support… but a little incentive never hurt, so make a $40-or-more pledge and we'll send you your choice of CDs... Donna the Buffalo's Silverlined, Same Old Man by John Hiatt, Lay It Down by Al Green., or Life Death Love and Freedom by John Mellencamp .. all currently featured on The Sound.
When you go to our pledge
form by clicking here, just type in the comments box the name of the CD you’d
like and we’ll get it out to you as soon as possible.
Thank you for your pledge. You’re making The Sound possible.
George Olsen Host/producer "The Sound"


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| The Best of The Sound 2008 (so far...) |
The Top 40 CDs heard on The Sound (thru July 18, 2008)
CD Name – Artist (Label) 1.Still -- The Bodeans 2.Miss Understood – Carolyn Wonderland (Bismeaux) 3.Come Up Full -- Meg Hutchinson (Red House) 4.Bucket – Mando Saenz (Carnival) 5.Good Summer Rain – Erica Wheeler (Signature) 6.Get on Board – Eric Bibb (Telarc) 7.Jomo Swamp Root Boogie – WSNB 8.The Reckoning – Kasey Anderson (TerraSoul) 9.Live Cactus – Joe Ely (Rack ‘Em) 10.Just Us Kids – James McMurtry (Lightning Rod) 11.Loaded -- The Wood Brothers (Blue Note) 12.Vagabonds – Gary Louris (Ryko) 13.Honeydew – Shawn Mullins (Vanguard) 14.Nelo (Justice) 15.Keep it Simple -- Van Morrison (Lost Highway) 16.Another Country – Tift Merritt (Fantasy) 17.Sleep through the Static -- Jack Johnson (Brushfire) 18.Watch the Sky – Patty Larkin (Vanguard) 19.Beautiful Graffiti – Brandy Robinson 20.Truth – Robben Ford (Concord) 21.My Blueberry Nights -- OST (Blue Note) 22.Hand Built by Robots – Newton Faulkner (Columbia) 23.Man Descending – Justin Rutledge (Six Shooter) 24.Born to be Wilder – Webb Wilder & the Beatnecks (Blind Pig) 25.Secret Heart -- Lauren Adams 26.Mockingbird – Allison Moorer (New Line) 27.Airstream – David Wilcox (What Are Records) 28.The Heavy Circles (Dynamite Child) 29.Today – Mike Zito (Eclecto Groove) 30.Join the Parade – Marc Cohn (Decca) 31.Switchblade Waterpistol – Lifters (Pawn Shop) 32.Low on Cash, Rich in Love – Eric Lindell (Alligator) 33.The Orchard -- Lizz Wright (Verve Forecast) 34.The Heat – NeedToBreathe (Atlantic) 35.Son of Skip James – Dion (Verve Forecast) 36.Let the Woman – Andy Davis (Big Helium) 37.I’m Not There – OST (Columbia) 38.78 -- China Forbes (Heinz) 39.Raisin’ a Ruckus – Roomful of Blues (Alligator) 40.Beautiful World – Eliza Gilkyson (Red House)
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| Because Great Music Needs a Place to Be Heard |

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| What's New on The Sound |
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Broken Lands –
Indigenous (Vanguard) – If you like your blues sweat drenched and emotionally
raw… this ain’t it. But if you like your blues… o-k, blues-rock… along the
lines of Los Lonely Boys, this is the ticket. It’s actually unfair to compare
Indigenous to the Garza Brothers being Indigenous has been at it for much
longer, but, hey, sometimes fame adjusts the equation. Still, this is very good
stuff. The band is essentially guitarist/vocalist/songwriter Mato Nanji and
some other people… at one time Indigenous was a family band similar to Los
Lonely Boys (there’s that comparison again) but the musical family split up a
few years back. My remembrance of those early releases is the split might be a
good thing… Indigenous’ early releases were worth retail price but Mato was
certainly the highlight. Broken Lands
confirms and focuses that.
Found a Reason –
Mad Tea Party (Nine Mile) – I’ve only heard ukulele and electric guitar on
three recordings… “The Who By Numbers,” a Pearl Jam CD whose name I can’t
recall, and, of course, “Don Ho versus the Beatles.” I bring this up because
Mad Tea Party out of Asheville brings those disparate instruments together on
their new release Found a Reason… and
often on the same track, unlike The Who, Pearl Jam, the Beatles and Don Ho. Found a Reason is wildly all over the
road… a little surf music followed by a country weepie followed by a
retro-rocker vaguely reminiscent of “Leader of the Pack.” If your Ipod lives on
shuffle play, you’re going to love Mad Tea Party.
Nobody Left to Crown
– Richie Havens (Verve Forecast) – One of the nice things about being music
director for The Sound is the chance to hear from voices I haven’t heard in a
while… they’ve fallen off the charts, too old & gray for video, but still
every bit the musician when they filled arenas and had hit records. So welcome
back Woodstock
veteran Richie Havens, who after all these years lacks a little of the vocal
power he brought forth back-in-the-day but is still unmistakably Richie
Havens... and he still has something to say. Self-penned tunes and selections
by (amongst others) Peter Yarrow and Jackson Browne put this in the protest
tune category (spoiler alert -- he doesn’t like the direction our country is
taking), and while protest tunes can get tiring sometimes in their
over-righteousness, I like Richie’s take on things. He lists his grievances,
but not in such a way you feel there’s no hope for those on this path. Yes, the
sky is falling, but isn’t it a remarkable shade of blue!
Promised Land –
Dar Williams (Razor & Tie) – If you must buy one album of singer/songwriter
material this year, let it be this one. Promised
Land is about as intelligently crafted as I’ve seen in ages… Dar’s as-usual
smart songwriting with a few carefully chosen covers (she wins points for
covering “Troubled Times” by one of my favorite slightly-below-the-radar bands
Fountains of Wayne) combined with one of the better production jobs I’ve heard
in quite a while. Her producer Brad Wood adds a variety of oddball touches…
from a Farfisa-ish organ rhythm to a mournful brass ensemble… that add emphasis
points to what Dar is singing.
Skin Deep – Buddy
Guy (Silvertone) – If someone’s still searching for the Fountain of Youth, find
out where Buddy Guy lives. While the rock heroes of my college years are
scaling back and writing for Broadway (“I’ll write it, but let the kids sing
it”), Buddy Guy at the age of 72 still rocks the blues as effectively as ever.
In fact, about the only complaint I have with Skin Deep is that on a few occasions he attacks material TOO
frenetically. But otherwise, Buddy spans the gamut on Skin Deep… from the peace-and-brotherhood title track to a sexually
boastful “I Found Happiness,” Buddy is as authentic as they come.
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