And on it goes… Your Tuesday Afternoon Alternative

AlbumsThis week we begin — and we want to emphasize its only the first show, a mere beginning — of reflecting on 2014. Remarkable amounts of music have come at us in 2014 – Wussy, Motel Beds, Sun Kil Moon, St. Vincent, Drive By Truckers, Elbow, The War on Drugs, The Hold Steady, Kaiser Chiefs, Cloud Nothings, The Afghan Whigs, Ingrid Michaelson, Eels, return of The Pixies. Wye Oak, new music from The Buzzcocks, Broken Bells, the R.E.M. video collection, The Horrors, The Ready Set, The Brain Jonestown Massacre, Maniac Street Preachers, Morrissey, Johnny Marr, Weird Al Yankovic, Jenny Lewis, The Gaslight Anthem, Ty Segall, The Kooks, U2, Aphex Twin, Foxygen, Cold War Kids, The Flaming Lips did The Beatles, Simple Minds, Pink Floyd, Bryan Ferry, and much much more!

Think about all that you have enjoyed in 2014: Music, Concerts and Shows, Experiences, Books, and more. What are among some of your favorites of this year that is slowly drawing to a close? This past weekend we had an amazing group of shows in our fine city of Dayton so this is a perfect time to beginning thinking about this past year.

A nearly complete listing of releases can be found on the Wikipedia site for music in 2014!  While not entirely without some notable misses… it is a good place to see why 2014 was a great year for music.

Join Mrs. Dr. J and Dr. J this Tuesday from 3-6pm for Your Tuesday Afternoon Alternative on WUDR Flyer Radio 99.5/98.1 onwudr.udayton.edu as we being to reflect on the year that has passed!

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Remembering Two Great Dayton Musicians: Jeremy Frederick and Tim Taylor

Written by Art Jipson (our own Dr. J) & Shelly Hulce for Dayton Most Metro, cross posted with permission.
Dayton, Ohio
10462882_771795486225757_7458810705605439738_nThis Saturday the Dayton music community remembers several members of our music family.  Jeremy Frederick Presents: North Of Nowhere South brings together several exciting bands to celebrate the life and music of Jeremy Frederick.

The Dayton music community has long had a unique “band of brothers” landscape as far back as anyone can remember.  Even in the 1970’s when Dayton funk was taking the world by storm, it was very much a family affair here on the Dayton home front.  It might be a Midwest thing, but the social bond between musicians in this town of ours has always seemed to transcend the average notion of a “scene.”  In the James Greer book, Guided by Voices: A Brief History Twenty-one Years of Hunting Accidents in the Forests of Rock and Roll, there is a Dayton music family tree.  While that book will be 10 years old next month, the truth of the bonds that bind all of us remain eternal.  A lot has happened to the music family tree in 10 years (and in Dayton years, that’s a lot longer than 10!) The one element that seems unaffected by time has been the bonds of solidarity, relationships, and family.

Tim!

The ripples of Tim Taylor’s loss can still be felt by music fans, even 17 years later. Those who were closest to the epicenter of that tragedy have a deep survivor’s bond.  A wound filled of memories, music, and possibilities.  Many of Taylor’s closest friends and band mates resided at the infamous Rock and Roll Bed and Breakfast, 1317 N. Main St. in Dayton and are still shaped by the loss of Tim.  As deeply as when he passed, the community at large still has that day etched in their hearts, those in Taylor’s social and musical circle had their lives forever altered.

Another loss equally felt by all of us, was the loss of Jeremy Frederick. Every bit the talented and outlandish a personality as Tim Taylor, Jeremy was a pillar in the music community we call family.  Jeremy carried the grief of a brother.  Taylor and Frederick were, and still are, twin flames – creating remarkable music in amazing bands that dazzled the Dayton community and beyond.  At times, their light was bigger than the room.  It’s obvious those flames have never dimmed.  The thought of Taylor and Fredericks as surviving brothers in arms joining together in music celebration in one place at one time is sure to create a light that’s bigger than the room itself.

As John Schmersal noted about the musical celebration happening on Saturday:  “I happened to be at my folks for Thanksgiving and after to visit so, I wanted to take part. We discussed doing songs from the high school band that Jeremy, Tyler, and I had called Sunken Giraffe. We weren’t able to get the bass player Brian involved and from there it turned into doing a Brainiac thing, since this year the idea was opened to not only celebrating Jeremy’s music but, other local musician’s who had passed. It has never occurred to any of us to reform the band because it is simply not Brainiac without Tim Taylor. This is about celebrating the music of our friends with our friends in the community where it came out from.”

Jeremy!

As anyone who has loved deeply can tell you, the most incredible and humbling thing you’ll ever experience is someone caring for your child.  Jeremy loved his daughter like he loved music.  A lot of folks in our community remember Jeremy’s joy the day Izzy was born.  This annual birthday party for Jeremy Frederick is more than an excuse to keep the fun and the memories going. This annual event also serves in tending to the future.  The proceeds from the show go to her education fund.  Jeremy and his mother, Jackie, were good examples of higher education to Izzy with their long history of attendance and employment at Wright State University.  Jeremy’s personal legacy lives on in the stories of his WSU professors (If you knew Jeremy, let that sink in for a few minutes…).

Always at the forefront of Jeremy’s education and band life was his mother Jackie.  This lady should be considered for sainthood.  She once said that it was quite normal to awake in the middle of the night to find Jeremy and his band mates in women’s clothing. They were usually her clothes. Jackie cheerfully served as band roadie, chauffer, cook, secretary, you name it. She is very much a guest of honor during the annual benefit show. Jeremy’s father, Butch Frederick, was in ill health but attended the 2013 show.
Butch recently passed away and we send special thoughts and prayers to the Frederick family this holiday season.

Memories such as these are remarkable gifts.  And nothing connects memory, loss, and the celebration of life as music.  This weekend we have a very rare and special reminder of what music can – and should mean – to us as members of the Dayton community who have lost such remarkable people.  The return of We’ll Eat Anything this Saturday night at Blind Bob’s is nothing short of the appropriate celebration of life and music that Jeremy and Tim’s flames require.  For you see, We’ll Eat Anything represents not just an opportunity to celebrate lives lost far far too soon but connect us all to a strand of Dayton music that hails from one of the finest Dayton bands, Brainiac.

The late great band known as Brainiac was born in January 1992 with an initial lineup that included Tim Taylor on lead vocals, guitar, keyboards, and synthesizers, bassist Juan Monasterio known in the beginning as “Monostereo”, guitarist Michelle Bodine and percussionist Tyler Trent. On March 12th, the band played an legendary first show at Wright State University’s Cafeteria, under the name We’ll Eat Anything.  The band that would become known as Brainiac with the now-classic logo – debuted a short time later:  3RA1N1AC.

Brainiac

The influence of Brainiac on local music cannot be overstated.  So many local bands – Oh Condor, Northwest Ordinance, Toads and Mice and so many others were influenced by the sound of Brainiac yet, it is hard to describe Brainiac to the uninitiated.  The music was post-punk inspired art noise before such a term had any meaning other than that of John Cage and his musical successors such as Sonic Youth (in New York), Husker Du (from Minneapolis), Blood Brothers (from Seattle), Big Black (started in Evanston, Illinois) to name a few.  The music of Brainiac was a joyous clash of sound.  The songs were a result of barely controlled alienation fueling the use of discordant guitars playing over a noise-rock combination of percussion, booming bass, and varied aural accompaniment of looping synth elements, beats, and sounds.  The use of the synth as an equally aggressive instrument along with the guitars and bass combined expected and unexpected components to the music.  In fact, many of the most exciting elements of the early Brainiac sound were the brilliant clash of different tuned guitars, bass, and synth that fused experiments of alternative sound collage, the most liberating elements of DIY punk rock aesthetic, and unique deconstruction of the rock and roll form.  What Brainiac did so well – and light years ahead of their peers – was the creation of music that reinvigorated the rock and roll paradigm into directions of heat, light, sound, feeling, body, and musical escape that merged diverse voices and noise, art, sweat, and love and community  into a solidarity of music.

Brainiac shows were collections of music lovers, adventurers, neighbors, and friends who were merged into a family through their shared experience and interactions at the performance.  The intensity of the vocals – often accompanied with sweaty cathartic movement on stage – were remarkable collective episodes of community.  Those who attended the early shows were thrown into a state of near euphoric collective almost tribal activity.  You danced.  You danced hard.  And then you moved around some more.

As the band released a series of singles, the interest in this unique sound grew.  The singles sold extremely well in the Dayton and surrounding areas.  No other band in the area was fusing indie, post-punk and noise rock in this fashion.  The band’s debut was released on the indie Grass, which was distributed by major label BMG Records in 1993. The debut Smack Bunny Baby produced by Girls against Boys Eli Janney was very well received both in the Dayton community that sheltered the developing band and garnered support nationally.  The band’s intense performances only increased after the release of their first record.  While on a regional tour the band picked up fans from each stop.  In 1994, the band released its sophomore record, Bonsai Superstar.  The record attracted even more attention than the first from recognized national critics and music fans alike.  Pitchfork Magazine has called the record one of the best albums of the 90s.   Bodine had left the band shortly after the release of Bonsai Superstar to be replaced by guitarist, multi-instrumentalist John Schmersal.

While supporting Bonsai Superstar, Brainiac’s influence continued to attract the attention of music fans, critics, and other artists.  In 1995, Brainiac played on the Lollapalooza side stage and recorded four songs for the venerable Peel Sessions in the UK.  The band was courted by Chicago-based independent label Touch and Go and released Internationale, produced by fellow Daytonian Kim Deal (The Pixies and The Breeders).  This record continued their uncompromising approach to sound textures while still maintaining the intensity of post-punk, alternative rock, and indie.

Brainiac’s third album came out in 1996, Hissing Prigs in Static Coutre was another record released on the well-respected Touch & Go label. This album also increased the national stature of this local band.  The album sold very well for Touch & Go and was listed as one of their best sellers that year.  The band released what many consider their finest record a year later Electro Shock for President in 1997.   This record has been cited by many artists as an example of what art noise rock can accomplish.  Artists as diverse as Trent Reznor (Nine Inch Nails) and Chris Walla (Death Cab for Cutie) cited Brainiac as an influence on their music.  Brainiac generated serious attention as the live act to see that resulted in them opening tours for such diverse artists as Beck, The Breeders, labelmates The Jesus Lizard.  In addition, the band began receiving offers from major labels for their next record. Unfortunately the ep Electro Shock for President was their last record due to the sudden death of Tim Taylor.  Taylor was killed in a car accident on May 23, 1997, during the pre-production for their fourth full length album.  The record was to be the first of several for Interscope Records. Without Taylor, the other members decided to disband.  A benefit show featuring fellow Daytonians Guided by Voices and The Breeders took place shortly after Taylor’s passing.  So beloved was Brainiac that the benefit became more of an elegy to the band and the music that they had created rather than as a simple concert.  Many Dayton music fans still remember the outpouring of emotion during that show and carry the memory of Brainiac with them today.  Information about the Tim Taylor memorial fund can be found at BigBeef.com.

So, this weekend we have a rare opportunity to see the remaining members of Brainiac along with several great Brainiac-inspired bands, Oh Condor, My Latex Brain, and Cigar Jar Crash Attack.  So, what are you waiting for?  Make your plans now to join our community as we celebrate Tim and Jeremy’s lives, raise money for Izzy’s education, and remember some of the best of what makes Dayton a vibrant rock and roll city.

To experience some of what made Brainiac so real and so powerful watch the video – Vincent Come on Down  And to experience what is special about our music community in Dayton, join us at Blind Bob’s this Saturday from 9 to well, who knows when the celebration will end that’s the thing about family!

For those who cannot make this show and want to contribute to Izzy Frederick’s college fund, you can send checks or money orders to her educational fund at the following address:

Isabella Frederick Educational Fund
Wright Patt Credit Union
P.O. Box 286, Fairborn, Ohio 45324

(photos in this essay contributed by Tim Krug and the Frederick Family)

Go See Local Bands and Local Art! A Dayton Show Extravaganza Weekend!

10462882_771795486225757_7458810705605439738_nWho needs help with their plans this week and weekend? We got a few suggestions for you on the show this Tuesday on Your Tuesday Afternoon Alternative! In addition to all of the great music and indie music news that you have come to expect, we are living our show motto – ‘Support Your Local Music Scene.’

Join us for our radio show on http://wudr.udayton.edu/ because Mrs Dr. J and Dr. J have many excellent shows to discuss this week happening in the Dayton, Ohio area! If you live elsewhere – do yourself a favor and check out some local music in your scene. Our suggestions for the Dayton area include a few suggestions…

Dear Fawn has a release show coming up on December 5th: Dear Fawn Ep Release Show w/ Jamaican Queens & Forage and OldNews, The Great Wide Open, and The New Old-Fashioned‘s David Payne are also playing out this week also on December 6th. If that was not cool enough we also have the album release party for Across the Vast & Deep from Tim Pritchard and the Boxcar Suite also on December 6th! Scientists… we need that time machine now! Dear Fawn

And yup there’s more… on December 6th we have The Jeremy Frederick Presents: North Of Nowhere South: An annual celebration of the life and music of Jeremy Frederick, Tim Taylor, Chris Green, and other friends, loved ones, and musical heroes we’ve lost in Dayton. Proceeds to go to the Izzy Frederick’s Education Fund. More info here: http://ow.ly/F7a85 

If anyone can’t make it, but would still like to make a donation to Izzy’s college fund, you can send checks or money orders to:

Isabella Frederick Educational Fund
Wright Patt Credit Union
P.O. Box 286, Fairborn, Ohio 45324

Yeah there’s some great new, local, Dayton, and indie music on the radio show this Tuesday too… but we bet you already knew that!

PlaygroundAnd finally, we are all excited about The Playground Theatre’s Breakfast Club production on December 11th!

Handmade DaytonExpect a report on Handmade Holiday Dayton for 2014! 

This is a great event – find one in your neck of the woods if you are not from Dayton!  Find the local artists for your gift giving needs.

So, join us this week for new music and a discussion of shows!  You can always contact us at drjwdur on twitter and gmail.  As always you can call in at 937-229-2774!

We give Thanks for Great Music: A YTAA Musicsgiving

PJ,-Ian,-TodMrs. Dr. J and Dr. J have a musicsgiving on the show this week. We give thanks for great independent music by playing an assortment of local, Dayton, and indie songs! What songs have been so powerful on you that you cannot imagine your world without them? So, give us a call 937-229-2774 or a tweet for drjwudr with the songs that matter to you.  We will be taking comments throughout the show.  What is it about music that moves us so?  Let us know your thoughts!

Expect new music from Donora, The Lost Patrol, Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors, The Pass, Lightouts, Christian O’Connor, Oh Honey, Manco, Expect some favorites from The Motel Beds, Ghost Town Silence, The Boxcar Suite, Vanity Theft and The New Old Fashioned!  We also have some classics from Gear Daddies, Jen Trynin, R.E.M., and much more!

So remember to join us this Tuesday from 3-6pm for Your Tuesday Afternoon Alternative on WUDR!  Listen online or 99.5/98.1 fm in the Dayton, OH region of the country!  However you do it, take some time today to give thanks for great music!  Have a happy and safe Thanksgiving on Thursday!

Popthrillz---Alternative

Dayton Most Metro Article on Dr. J

Art-JipsonWe want to thank DaytonMostMetro and Tommy Johnson for writing such a nice article on our Dr. J (Art Jipson): Still Teaching Us After 10 Years Being On-Air | Dayton Most Metro

Remember our 10th anniversary show will be broadcast on WUDR from 10pm to 1am this Friday!  Or if you find yourself in Dayton on Friday night you can join us at the University of Dayton McGinnis Multipurpose room and watch The Motel Beds and Ghost Town Silence (formerly The Rebel Set) play to a packed house!

You can always tweet us on twitter at drjwudr! Or visit our Facebook Group page!

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Join us at wudr.udayton.edu

Tod Weidner Helps Us Celebrate Ten Years of YTAA

Very Final Band_Poster_CJS_final (2)_Page_03Fine fellow and great musician Tod Weidner joins Your Tuesday Afternoon Alternative this week as we celebrate 10 years of the show. Tod plays in some mighty special Dayton bands – SHRUG and The Motel Beds! The ‘Beds will play our tenth anniversary show this Friday with Ghost Town Silence!

You can expect music from all of those bands as well as an assortment of new tunes and music that spans the anniversary of the show!  Ten years gives us quite a bit to fall back on for the set list but you can always suggest songs and bands by connecting with us on twitter or gmail at drjwudr.  And, hey remember those old analog ways of making connections?  Sure, us too.  Give us a call during the show at 937-229-2774 – we would love to hear from you.

So, join us Tuesday, November 18 from 3-6pm on WUDR and then come to the anniversary concert on Friday from 10pm -1am at the Very Final Band_Poster_CJS_final (2)_Page_04McGinnis MultiPurpose room at the University of Dayton. Remember if you can’t make the concert although you should – you can catch it on the live stream at wudr.udayton.edu because who loves ya?  Yeah we know that was way too much.  What can we say?  You have excellent taste in music and radio programming!

10th Anniversary show is coming soon… real soon… in a matter of days!

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The Self and Community in the Twenty-First Century LLC in collaboration with WUDR Flyer Radio are hosting a Late Night Concert Event to Celebrate 10 Years of Your Tuesday Afternoon Alternative as our final C21 LLC music event for the Fall 2014 semester.
Co-sponsored by the Center for Student Involvement, the College of Arts and Sciences, ArtStreet, the Social Science Departments and Programs (Communications, Criminal Justice Studies, Political Science, Psychology, and Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work) and the Department of English this program is a late night concert featuring two Dayton bands, The Motel Beds and Ghost Town Silence.  All semester first year students in the social sciences have been attending C21 LLC events focused around the theme of self identity, music, and community.  This event brings two outstanding Dayton bands who have released new music in 2014 to the University of Dayton campus.  The concert will be held at the McGinnis MultiPurpose room from 10pm to 1:30am.  A Facebook event page is ready for all who seek.
Social media hashtags for the event include: #c21llc #YTAA #WUDR #UDLATENIGHT
DrJ

Countdown to Ten… A Decade of Your Tuesday Afternoon Alternative

Canal Street Tavern Wall

We begin our celebration of ten years of YTAA this week with music over the last ten years of the radio show! Expect great new, indie, local, Dayton, and alternative music today! And we will preview our up coming 10th anniversary show on November 21st!

Next week Tod Weidner from The Motel Beds will be on the show as we gear up for a terrific musical celebration of a decade of independent radio!

Expect some music from the new Boxcar Suite songs and we promise that we will be playing some of them today! Because they are amazing! Tim Pritchard and the Boxcar Suite!  You can also support that band here as they get ready to release ‘Across the Vast & Deep.’

Join Dr. J and Mrs. Dr. J as we preview, dance, and new and a decade of independent music!

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Who Wants to Listen to Music Alone? A Collective Conversation on YTAA

DSC05534What is the first thought that you have when a great song comes along? As you listen to it over and over again…does excitement build? Do you start dancing? And, be honest –Don’t names of friends pop into your head? And why is that?

When you hear a great song it captures your attention and often the first thought you have is that you want — need — to share it! A great tune leads ultimately to the need to be shared. Well that is what we are going to do this week. In addition to playing new songs, we are talking to musicians about their music and what is it about music that makes it such a collective — community experience.

Starving in the Belly of the WhaleRicky Terrell of Starving in the Belly of the Whale and Dave Zup will join us in the studio to talk about upcoming shows, projects, and their interpretation on the collective power of music. Ricky will be talking about the upcoming release of the crowd-funded Missionaries and Impostors; and he’ll give us all the info on the release show!

And as always expect new and classic indie tunes!  You can help shape the show by tweeting Dr. J at drjwudr or you can email us at drjwudr on the ol’ gmail.  And for those who prefer to use the phone – you can always call into the show at 937-229-2774!

So, join us this Tuesday from 3-6pm as we talk about new songs, some recent shows, upcoming releases, and the need to share music!

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