Someone asked me the other day if we actually write notes for all of the music we play on the show. And I love that question, because it gets at the heart of what this whole strange, beautiful ritual is about.
The short answer? Yes. Absolutely. Maybe not always in the neat, bullet-point, producer-approved sense. But every song has a story attached to it. Every track gets time, attention, a listen with the lights low or the car windows cracked. We don’t just drag and drop files into a playlist and hope for magic. The magic is in the listening.
Sometimes the notes are scribbled in a notebook—half-legible phrases about a guitar tone that sounds like “late summer asphalt” or a chorus that feels like it’s trying to outrun heartbreak. Sometimes they’re typed up neatly: where the band’s from, who produced the record, why this particular track matters right now. And sometimes the notes are just a feeling we carry into the mic—a memory, a connection, a reason this song needs to be heard tonight.
Writing notes is a way of honoring the artists. Someone spent months, maybe years, making that three-minute song. They argued over snare sounds. They rewrote verses. They risked something personal in the lyrics. The least we can do is meet that effort with attention. To listen closely. To ask: what is this song trying to say? Where does it sit in the arc of the record? Why does it belong in this hour, next to these other songs?
It’s also about you—the listener. When we share a few thoughts before or after a track, we’re not trying to lecture. We’re building a bridge. Maybe you’ll hear a lyric differently. Maybe you’ll catch a harmony you might’ve missed. Maybe you’ll go home and play the whole album because something about it stuck.
Radio, at its best, is companionship. It’s someone in the dark saying, “Hey, listen to this.” The notes are part of that companionship. They’re proof that this isn’t background noise. It’s a conversation. A relationship. A shared moment in time.
So yes, we write notes. We think about sequencing. We care about transitions. We argue lovingly over which song should close the set. Because music deserves that care. And honestly? So do you.
Thanks for listening closely enough to even ask.

