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Edgeclub Midnight Mixes - 20 Years and Counting [04 Jul 2009|08:24pm]

Posted by gary-o on July 4, 2009

edgelogo

June 30th marked the 20th anniversary of the top alternative radio station in Dallas, KDGE, and there was a party last night to celebrate this milestone (wish I could have been there). The station launched on 94.5FM, then moved up the dial to 102.1FM where it currently sits today. The one show on KDGE that has stood the test of time is Edgeclub, founded by my good friend Jeff K, and presently hosted by another dear friend, DJ Merritt. When Kelly and I first started dating, we used to listen to Jeff K’s KNON show “Thudslap” and one Saturday when we were driving around Dallas listening to the show Jeff announced he was leaving KNON and moving to this new station called KDGE. We were skeptical at first, but were quickly hooked.

Edgeclub was a breath of fresh air for Dallas airwaves and currently enjoys a position as the nation’s longest-running and highest-rated mixshow on the air. During the 5-6 years Jeff hosted the show, he and his sidekick (and world-renowned DJ) Redeye/Scottie Canfield, played host to the most talented and sought after electronic/techno DJs and producers from around the globe. Miss Melissa was also Jeff’s partner in crime for a few of those years. Merritt took over the show and made it his own in 1996 when Jeff packed up his family and moved to LA to start Groove Radio with Swedish Egil (the same month Kelly and I moved to LA from Dallas). Every Edgeclub show features a late night guest mix from local and out-of town DJs, and I’ve had the privilege of being invited to guest mix 8-10 times, with my most recent appearance in February 2009. In the early years, I recorded a number of shows on tape and I’ve digitized a few of my favorite old-skool recordings for you to enjoy, including my first guest mix from July 1994 - I followed Scott Hardkiss‘ in-studio interview and debut of God Within - “The Phoenix”. I also shared the bill with him that night at a party called “Pure”. Stream or right click to download the mixes at your leisure.

Skinny G & Tim Chapman - Edgeclub Midnight Mix - 1991

Rob Vaughan - Edgeclub Midnight Mix - 1991
 

N.A.S.A Project - Edgeclub Midnight Mix - 1991

DJ Gary-O - Edgeclub Midnight Mix - 1994

Track listings for these mixes can be found on Jeff K’s site.

You can also find more recent Edgeclub shows on Merritt’s blog - www.ipodfood.com

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Stars Games Go True-HD [09 Jun 2009|01:48pm]

American Airlines Center Becomes First NHL and NBA Venue to Install 1080-Resolution Arena Display


Stars fans, get ready for an upgrade to your season seats at American Airlines Center like you’ve never seen before. In fact – no hockey fans in America have seen this before!


American Airlines Center, home of the Dallas Stars and Dallas Mavericks, today announced plans to install the first and largest 1080 high-definition video replay system in an NHL and NBA venue in the country. Digital video throughout the arena bowl will be increased by over 300 percent with the addition of a new high-definition center scoreboard and two stadium-sized video displays that will dominate the upper end walls. The new video displays will be manufactured and installed this summer and ready for the 2009-2010 hockey and basketball seasons.

The new video system is being designed, manufactured and installed through a collaboration of Lighthouse Technologies Limited of Hong Kong and its U.S. affiliate, TS Sports. The system features four true 1080-resolution video screens in the center scoreboard. Each screen is designed to promote brightness, clarity and high-definition viewing quality through the use of the latest four millimeter light-emitting-diode (LED) technology, a 33 percent  increase in resolution over existing LED displays currently installed in any arena.

What does this really mean? Quite simply, the experience of watching Dallas Stars games in-person just got better. The combination of witnessing the speed and power of NHL action is joined by the picture and sound quality of even the best home theater system available. It’s the best of both worlds, all in one place.

“The size and quality of these boards, coupled with the live-game experience, will make attending our games far superior than watching at home,” said Stars President Jeff Cogen. “High definition and 1080-resolution have greatly improved the at-home TV experience and now will be a part of Stars home games, giving our fans an incredible combination.”

The new generation audio system will have the ability to create custom audio effects. Featuring a state-of-the-art linear array speaker system with surround sound effects, the new audio system will also be installed this summer in time for the 2009-2010 NHL and NBA seasons.


“When we opened the doors of American Airlines Center in 2001, we told the fans that we would remain on the forefront of technology,” Martin Woodall, vice president of Mark Cuban Companies said. “We’ve gone beyond that commitment, with the highest resolution and largest video screens ever installed in an arena and we’re combining this with a new custom digital sound system to greatly enhance the fan experience.”

In addition to the center scoreboard, two new massive video displays will be installed at both ends of the arena. The new end video displays will provide crystal clear instant replays and on-demand statistics. Also, a new 360 degree LED ribbon display will surround the interior of the arena bowl. The ribbon board will provide spectators with high resolution animations, graphics and game information. The timing of installation for the combination of state of the art video and audio will provide the ultimate showcase for the 2010 NBA All-Star weekend activities.

Brad Mayne, president of Center Operating Company applauds the commitment of team owners Mark Cuban and Tom Hicks for their support of the new video and audio systems.

“Mark and Tom continue their commitment to make improvements to the American Airlines Center.  These improvements will maintain American Airlines Center’s position in hosting the ‘best of the best’ in the NBA, NHL and concert events for many years to come.  I applaud our owners, staff, Mavericks & Stars, along with our vendors for delivering the very best live experience available to the sports and entertainment industry.”

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REMEMBERING A LEGEND [19 Apr 2009|05:22pm]
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Hey Hey I Wanna Be A Rockstar! [13 Apr 2009|04:56pm]

Nickelback - Superpages.com Center 04.11.09
JeffK | DallasStars.com
Apr 13, 2009, 3:21 PM EDT

As Dallas Stars Music Director I’ve had the privilege to work in an environment that embraces two of my favorite things; hockey and music. Every so often a band comes along that fuses these two worlds in perfect harmony. Mixing the know-how to rock, with the skill to pass, shoot and score. At the top of this unique list are the good Canadian boys in a little band called Nickelback.

To say Nickelback are passionate hockey fans is an understatement. The band grew up in a small Canadian town (Hanna, Alberta) worshiping at the altar of Hockey Night In Canada, and young superstars like Lemieux and Gretzky.

Since the bands inception in 1996 they’ve become a worldwide phenomenon, selling over 25 million albums worldwide, winning 9 Junos (Canada’s Grammys) and in 2007 they were inducted into Canada’s Walk Of Fame. All this has allowed Alberta’s favorite sons the latitude to do some really fun hockey-related stuff, including casting Wayne Gretzky in their video for “Rock Star” , Their cover of Elton John’ “Saturday Night’s Alright For Fighting” was used during CBC’s Hockey Night in Canada broadcasts. Nickelback even skated alongside the Great One during a 2006 stop in Phoenix during a Coyotes’ morning skate.

And if you’re still not convinced, Nickelback frontman Chad Kroeger had a full size ice rink constructed in the basement of his 20,000 sq ft home… complete with Zamboni, on his 20 acre spread outside Vancouver.

Like a proud papa Chad couldn’t wait to whip out his iPhone and show me pix of the Kroeger Ice Rink

A few months back when we discovered Nickelback would again be in Dallas I sent word to their record label to see if they’d be interested in autographing custom made NICKELBACK 09 Stars jerseys. The hope was to eventually auction them off to benefit the Dallas Stars Foundation. When the band agreed I made arrangements to meet them before their recent show at Superpages.com Center.

It was about that time the band’s tour manager mentioned 20 MORE people had just been added to the meet and greet. Normally this would NOT be allowed…. Except this time it wasn’t just any people. These people were led by Chad Kroeger’s good pal Mark Parrish. Nearly the entire Stars team had ventured out to see their favorite Canadian Rockers!

Seems Parrish and Nickelback go way back… to Parrish’s days in Minny when he joined the band on stage at the Target Center to shoot T-Shirts into the crowd. No formal arrangements were needed and Chad immediately treated the Stars to the finest hospitality.

Following Parrish backstage were Brenden Morrow, Marty Turco, James Neal, Steve Ott, Stephane Robidas, Mike Ribeiro, Joel Lundqvist, Loui Eriksson, Trevor Daley, Matt Niskanen, Brian Sutherby, and Jere Lehtinen, just to name a few. Even former Dallas Stars great Guy Carbonneau was spotted in the crowd enjoying the show.

The backstage banter varied between the legendary Playoff Series between the Stars and Canucks in 2007 to Nickelback’s thoughts on the Canucks chances this post season. The Nickelback boys have full confidence in Roberto Luongo’s ability to get the job done. They were also quite sympathetic to the Stars situation, realizing the Stars were kept from reaching their full potential this season.

Nickelback’s Dark Horse Tour amphitheatre show comes complete with pyro, fire and explosions, a huge video wall and a traveling drum riser. They blew through 2 hours of their hits, including “How You Remind Me”, “Rock Star”, “Photograph”, “Someday”, “Animals”, Savin’ Me”, “If Everyone Cared”, “Gotta Be Somebody”… and they also did a few covers; Filter’s “Hey Man Nice Shot” (featuring Seether’s Shaun Morgan on vocals), and Kings Of Leon’s “Use Somebody”.

On the night after the Stars 2008-09 season ended WAY TOO SOON it would have been understandable for the team to go their separate ways, but the Dallas Stars had one final “team” outing – a celebration of music and friends… and FUN. Nobody deserves it more.
 
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When 'The Summer of Love' Meant Sex In a Club [27 Mar 2009|06:02pm]

"Are you one of the beautiful people? Is my name on the list? I want to be with the beautiful people... I wanna feel like I'm missed..." Eels - "Guest List"

 

I went to high school with a kid named Greg Holman. His father was a painter named George, who lived in the old Expo Park space that later became the Bar of Soap.

George Holman was the first truly gifted intellectual I had ever crossed paths with; he was the one who showed me the true value of knowledge and information. He was also a guy who loved inspiring young people with his art. My friends and I would often pile into a car and drive down to Holman's place to hang out, gobble some microdot, listen to him talk and watch the creation of his work.

One night, he told us about this French guy by the name of Philippe Starck. George detailed Starck's relevance and introduced us to his sense of design aesthetic by showing us these bizarre catalogs he had brought back from overseas. I was a kinda young and dumb to be thinking about stuff like expensive European furniture, but Holman's description of Starck's creative approach made it seem really interesting.

George also mentioned that he was helping to bring this guy to Dallas to open a nightclub in an old brewery just northwest of downtown. For months afterwards he kept us up to date with details on the renovation of the building.

 

 

starck.jpg
When the Starck Club finally opened in April of 1984, there was something about the place that just didn't appeal to me. Without ever having stepped inside the building, I had already decided that it was going to be filled with Cocaine Republicans. Not my crowd at all. I was a 22-year-old dreadlocked kid who wore ripped jeans, pajama tops and old black Chuck Taylor's.

I wasn't going to a snooty fuckin' disco where Martian lizards were going to stand there and judge me at the front door.

A year later, I hooked up with Russell Hobbs and Theatre Gallery. We were living in a dirty Deep Ellum loft without AC or heat, and going to the Starck Club was the last thing on our minds. They were spending millions on that place. We were scraping together fifty bucks every night to buy a keg and a sleeve of plastic cups so our people would have something to drink.

I distinctly remember resenting the Starck Club just because I knew they had badass air conditioning. Fuckers.

Then Starck co-owner Blake Woodall, general manager Greg McCone and the beautiful scenestress Christina de Limur all showed up for the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Karen Finley shows at Theatre Gallery. We hung out a bit and became friends. Russell and I would venture over to The Brewery every couple of months or so, and Vaal, George Baum and the rest of the Starck door crew always treated us like we were part of the show. They even let us sit on the side of the stage on the night that Washington DC go-go group Trouble Funk dropped The Bomb.

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Sita, aka Christina de Limur
After getting to know all of the people involved, I started to see just exactly what George Holman had been talking about years before. The Starck Club was the exact polar opposite of what we doing at Theatre Gallery; we were a dirty performance space and they were a high-tech dance hall. Still, all of us recognized that we were essentially in the same business: providing a necessary liberal cultural diversion to a very conservative and uptight city.

A few of us even lived to tell about it.

As we mark the 25th anniversary of the opening of the most decadent and infamous nightclub in the history of our city, I have only one question: Can anybody remember anything?


"Hey you, with the walkie-talkie/ I know my clothes are not right/ I wish I had my own walkie-talkie/ that reached to God every night..."

Lisa Taylor (Dallas writer): "I was assigned by The Dallas Times Herald to cover the opening in 1984. I remember ordering a Betsey Johnson dress just for the event. I was gratified that I passed the doorman as he was advertised as being a real hard ass. David Seeley was my date and he was covering it for another publication. I do recall the great bathrooms and the great videos from Dave Hynds and Suzy Riddle. I danced the night away... ah the good ol' days."

Mark Ridlen (DJ Mr. Rid): "Starck Club was a pretty incomparable union of high/low art and commerce--especially in our one-horse town. In early '84, I ran into one of the club's tastemakers Sarah Yates when my girlfriend lived at the Argyle apartments with (designer) Todd Oldham. Sarah fondly remembered the mix tapes I made and asked me to program music for the soon-to-be Mecca. Philippe Starck was also in town, so I ushered him and Sarah to Metamorphosis and VVV Records, which possessed the arty dance music the club would need for its library. When it opened in '84, I spun on various nights until DJ Phillipe Krootchey could come over from Paris for his residency."

Angus Wynne (promoter): "I booked Jack Mack and the Heart Attack for a private party for the Davidson Racing Team on the night before the club opened to the public. Unfortunately, they had to set up just above the hole that the dance floor was in--and the only people who could see them were those standing on the barriers around the hole. To make matters worse, live music was always tragic in the joint because there wasn't a soft surface anywhere to baffle the audio, resulting in absolute cacophony. Concrete and terrazzo made up the bulk of the place, and the cotton drapes did absolutely nothing to abate the profound echo that ricocheted around the room. Philippe Starck told me that his original design was being sabotaged even before the opening, after which he hightailed it out of town. I'm not certain, but I think he never returned to his namesake after that."

Darren Ryan (DJ/musician): "I was there to see Chris and Cozy/SPK perform. It was a terrible venue for live music with giant columns in the middle of the stage. I was underage back then, and they let me in because I worked at Record Gallery and was on the guest list for those shows. (Thanks Steve Stokes!) Don't forget about Starck and the NYC club kids connection, the whole Michael Alig gang. That's kind of interesting too. All that said, it was a fascinating place."

 

 

Bart Weiss (On The Air/Video Bar): "I remember the video in the bathroom by Suzy and David Hynds, including one of their baby daughter Cecil with sugar being pored over her to the tune of 'Sugar Sugar'; and I remember waiting for Grace Jones; when they lost their dance permit, and they did a version of The Sun City about not being able to dance."

Joe Howington (VJ, Fallout Lounge): "After hitting up On The Air on Lower Greenville, we headed downtown into an area of mostly abandoned buildings. Under the mixmaster overpass and over unmarked railroad tracks were the draped stairs of the Starck Club. I immediately knew I was somewhere. Once inside, it was a whole other world to me. A Tuesday night around 12:30 a.m. and the place was full of the most incredible people I could have imagined. To this day, I recall a portly man in pseudo-professional attire doing laps around the balcony of the dance floor with what looked like a 12-foot-tall drag queen in full showgirl get-up and roller skates. All I could think of was, 'Where did all of these people come from?' My sense of style was forever altered."

Amy Curnutt (model): "I was introduced to the Starck Club by my hairdresser, Chip Woods of Looker Hair Group. Hairdressers were the kingpins of the club. I was 17 and a model at the time, so this made it easy to get in. It was always a fashion show. There were always great shows. Book of Love was one I remember. The vibe in the club was always electric. Like something was going to happen. And we all know it eventually did."

LithXmas.jpg
Lithium X-Mas

Greg Synodis (Lithium X-Mas): "Starck Club was this catalyst for cultural vistas temporarily opening in Dallas. It was uniquely perched at the nexus of money (which Dallas has always responded to), sin, sexual politics, style, recreational chemicals, and strange new musical hybrids. The Starck Club influenced people's tastes and acceptance of what was right or wrong, even on the west frontiers of Dallas. We were now at the crossroads of a bigger cultural world than Dallas had ever been exposed to, or guessed even existed."

 

 

Mark Ridlen: "I loved the original door girl named Edwidge, who would be doing the Watusi to my random mix one minute, and the next be manhandling an unruly cokehead to the nearest exit. From my connections to the inner sanctum, I found lasting jobs for some of my closest friends throughout Starck's lifespan. Dave Hynds and Suzie Riddle procured and created all of the amazing video that was shown throughout the club, as well as designed art and props for all of the club's theme nights and special events. My band Lithium X-Mas was conceived strictly as a one-off party group for their Psychedelic Night in early '85."

Jeff K (DJ): "George Baum was working the door at Starck Club during the late '80s when we were both DJs at KNON. I had heard all about the debauchery and decided to take George up on his offer to experience it firsthand. About this same time I became interested in the profession of club DJing, as well as radio DJing. On the decks at Starck Club was a diminutive, rather shy DJ by the name of Mike DuPriest. Mike and I became fast friends, taking me under his wing showing me the DJ ropes and teaching me the art of beat mixing. Mike not only taught me how to mix, but also educated an entire generation of Dallas DJs about house music."

Mike Graff (Course of Empire): "I remember going on a date with a girl I met at the old On The Air video bar. I was really into her and thought we were getting on. Then she blew me off for another guy who was better looking and made great money working in the film biz. For a week, I felt like shit and couldn't let it go. The next weekend, I saw him in the bathroom at the Starck Club making out with another guy. Locked in passionate embrace, they kissed, tongues twisting. It should have been clear to anybody that these two men were seriously in love. (Then again, it might have just been some of that legal Ecstacy. Or, they were just posing. In those days, even straight guys were desperate to appear gay at The Starck Club.) Seeing that display in the bathroom was a boon to my self-esteem. I checked my look in the mirror, teased my sprayed-up, Setzer-like hair up further, went back out and danced like a fool."

 

It might be hard to imagine, but there was a time when the drug Ecstasy was, indeed, still a legal drug. Everybody was doing it, maybe even your Mom and Dad. It was the drug that straight people could take and get their freak on. It was easy and clean, and all of the clubs in town were making it available to their clientele.

The new drug made users drop their inhibitions and wanna fuck anything with a pulse or driver's license. Life had suddenly taken on new meaning; everything was profoundly important and significant. It was generally understood that if we could just get all of the world's leaders together in one room to drop a handful of X, they could hug it out and there would never again be any war, famine or imposition of will. At Starck Club, people were having sex with strangers in the bathrooms, the private boudoirs and on the dance floor every single night.
 

Everybody loved everybody.

AIDS and the criminalization of Ecstacy changed that dynamic dramatically.

Chris Motley (Club Clearview): "I don't think there was ever a time I was in the club that I wasn't on X. That drug, that club, the time, that music, those people... all unashamedly intertwined. In my mind, there's no way to separate any of the elements, including X, from any of the others. Particular evenings that stand out to me include the insanity of the after-hours Red Hot Chili Peppers show and the night that Frankie Goes to Hollywood played the Bronco Bowl. The Chili Peppers night is a haze of debauched fun, but after the Frankie party, I distinctly remember emerging out of Starck to go home afterwards and being horrified that dawn had already broken over the city. I felt like a fucking vampire."

Craig Depoi (Bartender): "The money was crazy and so were the drugs! Every night I'd make 600 to 800 bucks. People would slide ten or twenty hits of legal X across the bar in matchbooks. One night, Billy Boots and I were working the round bar, and at closing time a guy named Rick Candies gave us a thousand dollar tip on his charge card. Crazy money, man! $50 and Honey Bees thrown in our tip jar all night long."

Darren Ryan: "Let's be honest, both the music and fashion were highly questionable back then, and whether people like it or not, Starck Club is defined by the drug Ecstasy. That whole club era is about AIDS and drugs."

 

"Everyone needs to be somebody/Everybody needs to find someone who cares/ But I don't if you know what I mean/ 'Cause I'm never on your list... I'm never on your list."

Joe Howington: "As much as I liked hanging out on street corners and warehouses later on in my scenester days, nothing ever compared to the enigma of those early days at Starck. Subsequent clubs have always felt faint in comparison. It was pure fantasy, like being at the MILK BAR from A Clockwork Orange. Believe it or not, I was never really into X or the drug thing there in general. I just liked the vibe."

Katie Barber: "I remember being alone with Robert Plant in the women's restroom one night. I walked in and he was sitting on the counter. We said hi to each other, and I said, 'I have some really cool pictures of you and Eric Clapton that were taken at Phil Collins' recent wedding.' He replied, 'Wow, that was an incredibly small wedding. How in the world did you get them?' I explained that I knew a woman who was a friend of Phil and his then-wife, Jill. She had attended the wedding in a small town in England and had given me the pictures. We had a nice 'small world' conversation before some meathead guy came in and accosted him. We just kind of shrugged at each other like, 'Oh well...' and said goodbye. His fame never came up. Lots of famous people came into Starck back then, but before the club got popular, the crowd there was way too cool to bother them. Don't know where that particular knucklehead came from."

Juan Porrata (DJ): "One aspect of the Starck Club which is often overlooked--due to the much-deserved adulation that DJ Rick Squillante always received--is the fact that those final years with 'Go-Go' Mike were so very influential for the burgeoning local rave/DJ community. I recall hearing the elements of acid house in Mike's set, which, at the time, was brand new in Dallas. This was a new, emerging genre which Mike championed; and he helped to mentor up-and-comers such as Jeff K, who at the time was playing industrial and therefore helped change Dallas radio; as well as other DJ's who are still important today, such as Redeye, Luke Sardello (Com:Plex), Robert Taylor and a host of others."

Christina de Limur aka "Sita" (co-founder of Starck Club): "The early years of new wave were incredible, emotional, meaningful ballads--Rick Squillante was a true mixmaster. The techno phase was a little cold and repetitive--thank God there was the early hip-hop (we had a spot called Lizzard Lounge in the basement) to give it meaning once again. Liza 'Mad Doll' Richardson was always giving it meaning with her intelligent, saucy mixes. It was a lot of fun and a great time in music!"

Jeff K: "England had its 'Summer of Love' in 1988; Dallas had it's great awakening that same year at Starck Club, when young and impressionable club goers like Red Eye, Rob Vaughan, Cle Acklin, JT Donaldson, DJ Merritt, Ronnie Bruno and DJ Daisy were first exposed to the sound of Chicago house tracks by Frankie Knuckles and Fast Eddie, Detroit Techno tracks from Derrick May and Juan Atkins alongside UK Acid House artists like 808 State, S' Express, Baby Ford and The Beatmasters. Having come to Dallas from NYC, Mike DuPriest had the knowledge of these records and understood the movement that was upon us. Looking back on the history of house and techno music breaking in America, you can point to the obvious cities; NY, LA, Chicago and Detroit, but Dallas is also given credit... and much of that was due to DuPriest. 'Go-Go' Mike (as he was known) was also blessed with the skill and technique to phrase, mix and generate emotion unlike any DJ I'd ever seen before. Prior to Starck, electronic dance music had never made me cry. That final night of Starck Club with Mike DuPriest at the helm, I wept like a child."

When Decadent Dub Team was booked to perform an after-hours show one weekend, we used the opportunity to really bring the noise. That was probably the loudest show we ever played. It was quite strange to look out from the stage and see your audience standing down at the bottom of a staircase thirty feet below. And even though we didn't go on until 2:45 in the morning, the crowd at Starck Club was just starting to peak. Sweaty socialites ground their teeth and chain-smoked expensive imported cigarettes; by the time we finished our set it felt like the place was on fire... and this was a club that always kept the thermostat at somewhere around 50 degrees.

It's hard to imagine that it has been 25 years since the Starck Club first provided safe haven for grown adults of both sexes to pee in front of one another and dress like aliens. Along the way there were drug busts and police raids; eventually the club closed down and then re-opened under new management. There were suicides and overdoses, HIV casualties and damaged relationships. Blake Woodall, like Russell Hobbs before him, eventually had a spiritual awakening and embraced a life of family and sobriety.

For each, there was a price to be paid for the commitment to wanton self-indulgence.

"Are you one of the beautiful people?/ Am I on the wrong track?/ Sometimes it feels like I made of eggshell/ It feels like I'm gonna crack."

In retrospect, it's altogether possible that Philippe Starck probably only saw the nightclub as functional showcase for his furniture and design work. As Angus Wynne pointed out, the guy never came back after that first week. Starck probably thought we were some backwoods soap-on-a-rope motherfuckers. Of course, years later, he signed on as a house designer for Target... wouldn't ya know.
 

The Enlightened Aesthetic Master is off on some trailer park shit now.

Regardless of how you choose to frame it, the Starck Club was an interesting part of our cultural fabric during the '80s and early '90s. For those who wholeheartedly embraced the hypersexual/pharmaceutical lifestyle, the memory exists as something they would never dare tell their kids about now.

What they don't know won't hurt 'em, right?

 

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Our Radio Heads Are Waxing Nostalgic [06 Mar 2009|02:03pm]

by Jeff Liles

Echoes and Reverberations

zoodjposter.jpg
The staff of the Zoo, as seen on Liles' bedroom wall poster.

I was twelve years old and up way past my bedtime.

The headphones were on and I was hiding underneath the blankets. The stereo was tuned to a Dallas radio station called "The Zoo". A DJ named JD was playing a track from The Beatles' White Album called "Revolution #9", which had no guitars, drums, verses or choruses--just ten minutes of psychedelic backwards tape loops and abstract sound collage.

In 1974, Dallas rock radio was a truly subversive phenomenon. Program directors and DJs had the guts to try some new shit. It wasn't uncommon to hear songs that you were long to lose your virginity to: "Kashmir" by Led Zeppelin, "Stranglehold" by Ted Nugent, and Peter Frampton's "Do You Feel Like We Do?" were all like sex on the radio. Fringe artists like Funkadelic, Frank Zappa and Little Feat were getting regular spins at night. An experimental instrumental record like the Edgar Winter Group's "Frankenstein" even registered as a hit single. Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon was on the Billboard Top 200 Albums chart for over five years straight.

For a twerp kid in Richardson, The Zoo was the analog portal into a bizarre subversive counterculture. A mysterious black vacuum where men wore earrings, women smoked pot and all of the lyrics were profoundly poetic. (What was a stairway to heaven, anyway? And just how much did it cost? Have you seen the wheel in the sky? I hear it keeps on turnin'.)

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The first Zoo Freak sticker.
Bands like Yes and Iron Butterfly sang half-hour-long songs about nothing in particular. Nature or the Bible, I think. Humanity. Something kooky like that.

When you're young, everything is way more important than it should be. I actually made my Dad go see the Led Zeppelin movie The Song Remains the Same. His response: "People your age don't need to be thinking about stuff like this. Just go out and have some fun. Be a kid while you still can."

But it was back to the world in my headphones: David Bowie's "Golden Years" and Roxy Music's "Love is the Drug" sounded sophisticated and European; while Lou Reed's "Take A Walk On The Wild Side", David Essex's "Rock On" and 10cc's "I'm Not in Love" were narcotic and minimalist.

zoofreak2.jpg
The second model of the Zoo Freak sticker.
All of it was the essence of cool. The Apple 7" single of John Lennon's "Instant Karma" brought tears to my eyes, even if I was ignorantly oblivious to the subject matter. It just sounded urgent and important. "And we all shine on... like the moon and the stars and the sun..." Again with the Humanity; the ever-expanding universe. You never knew what you were gonna hear next on The Zoo.

Even the commercials were pretty weird. It was perfect if you were a teenager getting baked in the basement. The sound of Doc Morgan announcing the KZEW-FM call letters was like a message from God, or the Freak voice of authority. FM radio was like outer space, an almost empty frequency with a handful of stations operating under the radar.

It wasn't easy to sell advertising in this unproven format. The DJs played records--real records, not CDs or carts. If you listened to the station daily, you became familiar with the individual pops and scratches on your favorite songs. I can still hear the needle noise during the intro to The Who's "Baba O'Reilly" coming out of my car stereo speakers. It's etched in my mind forever.

Mike Rhyner (The Ticket/KZEW): "Bizarre but true: There was a time when there wasn't much of anything on the FM radio band. That seems beyond belief today. Several of the bigger AM stations in the early '60's owned FM frequencies; if they did anything at all with them, they ran what was known as 'soft music'. Think slightly more ambitious Muzak. KRLD-FM had an overnight show called 'Music 'til Dawn'. How that differed from what they did during the daylight hours is anybody's guess."

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Jon Dillon
George Geurin (producer/recording engineer): "I was able to witness the birth of Dallas FM rock radio--KFAD-FM 94.9 and KNUS-FM 98.7. I'm pretty sure KFAD was the first progressive FM station in Texas. When it first fired up, it was only on for about half a day and Jon Dillon was the DJ. They would broadcast from Arlington part of the day and Cleburne the other. It was obvious when Dillon was on the air; he played a lot of blues and progressive rock. They were the definition of underground radio: KFAD was a little more structured, while KNUS was a totally open format, non-commercial station. I don't remember if KFAD had commercials, but KNUS definitely didn't. When the music ended it might be 15 seconds before the DJ said anything. The news segments featured music stuff, youth counterculture updates on peace marches and rallies, and unfair arrests by 'the Pigs'."

Mike Rhyner: "It took the greatness of KNUS to shock the FM band to life; I don't mean the Top 40 KNUS, which we know today as KLUV; I mean the underground KNUS. Same frequency, 98.7, but the similarities come to a rather abrupt end at that point. KNUS was the FM sister of the all-powerful KLIF, the Mighty 1190 AM, totally dominant in this market and one of the most groundbreaking, imitated radio stations you would find anywhere. But look at the landscape of the day--things were blowing up everywhere, including here in ultra-conservative Big D-Little A-Double L-A-S. Everything was changing, and what we now know today as 'demographics' were splintering faster than anybody could keep up with."

Bucks Burnett (record collector): "I loved KLIF 1190 AM because it was a happy, zany Top 40 station broadcasting in that cool corner building on Commerce Street downtown (where the Observer was later located.) They had great, colorful DJs--Cousin Lenny was their number one dude--and they put out vinyl LPs of various artists in the '60s. I think WBAP was all news; not sure. And there was KBOX for a while, in early/mid '60s. They played rock music."

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Mike Rhyner: "I suspect--and somebody out there can confirm or refute this--the real change came from inside KLIF/ KNUS. They got the signal thing figured out and discovered they were sitting on an FM blowtorch. That golden light bulb went off and they got to thinking they might be able to make a buck off this FM thing, if they just took what they were doing on KLIF over to the other frequency. So they did it. And that was the end of real, raw, underground, 'hey-man-play-whatever-record-you-feel-like' rock radio in our fair burg."

George Geurin: "KNUS changed to its progressive format around 1967. I was aware of its pending birth because teens in Nocona listened to KLIF-AM, also owned by Gordon McLendon. The station aggressively promoted the start of KNUS for a couple of weeks before it went on the air. (I was a KNUS P1, for you Ticketheads.) The station was actually an experiment by McLendon; word was that he was actually just stalling until he would eventually change it to an all-news station, hence the DJs pronouncing it 'K-News'."

Mike Rhyner: "Some thought there was a sizable market for the more radical music of the time, and KLIF had little to lose by giving it a shot on their FM. They tried to push the envelope at night on the AM side but that wasn't what they were about. You could barely hear it anyway. For technical reasons beyond my comprehension, the FM signal sounded like it was powered by a disposable lighter. Out in southwest Oak Cliff, you had to position the tuner just right on the best radio in the house, and still had to fight through static and fading. You actually had to sit still because if you wandered six feet away from the radio, you couldn't hear it at all. I was willing to do that to get to hear records like Ultimate Spinach's 'Your Head Is Reeling', Spirit's 'Mechanical World', Clear Light's 'Mr. Blue', Country Joe and the Fish's 'Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine'."

George Geurin: "The music was unbelievable. It was totally up to the DJ, and these guys had excellent taste. On KNUS, you might hear a Jimi Hendrix record, some old Muddy Waters, then maybe a whole side of a Mothers of Invention album. It would be no shock to hear Mozart after that. It was so exciting and influential; the DJ's would often play music for 30 minutes without talking; if you were lucky, they told you what you had just heard. The DJs were so good at blending records that even the hip-hop guys would've been impressed."

Mike Rhyner: "No matter what anyone says, nothing that came after it was really close to what KNUS was. The cliche holds that if you can remember it, you weren't there. Well, I was there. I remember it. It was greatness. And the times were good."

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It was 1973 when a program director named Ira Lipson and a handful of transplants from Detroit rolled out KZEW-FM 97.9--aka "The Zoo". If you were a ninth-grader who snuck out of the house to make the scene on Monday night at the Gemini Drive-In "Dollar Night", then you were a faithful listener of the Zoo. It was far more influential than anything I ever learned at home or in school; these people were shaping our perspective, and the DJs became like local rock stars. Every kid in my neighborhood had a poster featuring all of the on-air personalities hanging on their wall. The back of my bedroom door was literally covered from top to bottom with "Zoo Freak" bumper stickers.

People from all over the South were well aware of what was happening at this rebel radio station in Dallas.

Randee Smith Prez (former buyer for Hastings Music): "Growing up in Amarillo during the '70s, the only decent radio we could get was via cable. KZEW was the one station that we all listened to. Everyone I knew up there had a ZooLoo sticker on the car. Bobby Harper, who managed the Cooper and Mellin record store there, introduced me to The Zoo. We both went on to work for Hastings and it was our exposure to that diversity from cable radio that eventually helped us as music buyers. And I've actually worked with Jon Dillon on a number of charity events over the years; the man has always been there for the community. Good people, good times!"

Paul Quigg (Decadent Dub Team/Vibrolux): "During the early '70s, FM radio here was mostly classical music and highbrow jazz. And these two radio stations, KNUS and The Zoo, kind of came out of nowhere and were doing something that was really diverse. The Zoo freaks could hear King Crimson's '21st century Schizoid Man'--or Peter Frampton and his talking guitar--but the straight kids were all still listening to KBOX, KLIF and KVIL. Those stations were playing 45 rpm singles by The Beatles and The Carpenters. KNUS was different because it just sounded intelligent; I mean the announcers sounded like they were on drugs, but the subject matter seemed important and otherworldly. The DJs on KNUS would play records by Otis Redding and Muddy Waters. The black stations on AM wouldn't play Sly and the Family Stone, but they got played on KNUS all the time."

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A Zooberry Jam compilation album of Dallas artists
Having a KZEW sticker on your car was a statement of lifestyle. It meant that you smoked pot, had long hair and skipped school. The Zoo was like The Matrix for the Zig-Zag crew; lots of late night commercials for head shops and massage parlors. Back when people still camped out to buy concert tickets, there was the Texxas Jam: 80,000 sun-burned freaks listening to Aerosmith in the Cotton Bowl. We knew what time it was.

Need a visual? Revisit the movie Dazed and Confused. That's what Dallas, Texas, looked like from my POV. The Zoo was the soundtrack to our lives. Shit was happening in real time. A DJ would make an announcement about a peace rally at Lee Park, then play Black Sabbath's "War Pigs" or the Rolling Stones' "Sympathy For the Devil".

Lynyrd Skynyrd released a record with a cover that shows the band members standing in a fire, and a week later their plane crashes and singer Ronnie Van Zant dies. You noticed stuff like that... finding profound revelation in matters of coincidence.

Seems like there were a lot of bands named after fake people back then, too: Captain Beefheart, Molly Hatchet, Uriah Heep, Max Webster, Steely Dan, etc. It was hard enough just to sort out the solo artists and their real names. Brutal.

Frank Campagna (Studio D/Kettle Gallery): "KZEW used to have 'Zoo Free Sundays' at the Texas Electric Ballroom. Every weekend, acts like AC/DC, The Ramones, or jazz violinist Jean Luc Ponty would play for free. They also held a yearly 'lifestyle' event called Zoo World at the Dallas Convention Center. This was a huge trade show with cars, guitars, live music and all of the KZEW DJs. I recall shouting over towards the DJ booth, 'Hey, Beverly Beasley! Play some Ramones!' because they never got airplay. She politely responded, 'I can't, they won't let me'. But they did love Ted Nugent. He played the event several times, but that night the Motor City Madman got snowed in and couldn't make it. Due to some local critical acclaim, somebody asked Dallas punk pioneers the Nervebreakers to play instead. Two songs into their set, they pulled the plug on them (supposedly) because they were out of time. There were 20 or so 'punks' there, and we threw folding chairs around, shouted 'No Fun, No Fun, No Fun' and got chased out by the police as we laughed our asses off.

Katie Barber (KZEW volunteer): "We loved all things KZEW and had ZooLoo stickers plastered all over everything we owned. The first concert I ever went to was Texxas Jam, which was sponsored by KZEW; I was 13 years old at the time. The station held a big annual event called Zoo World. I jumped at the chance to work for a vendor there in '81. My employer that day was Evelyn Wood Speed Reading, probably the only vendor there that wasn't music-related. I walked around with a clipboard, signing people up for a drawing at the end of the day. We were giving away T-shirts, Frisbees and speed-reading courses. My clipboard was crammed with names of rock enthusiasts--all men--trying to win the free lessons. I was wearing a T-shirt that day read, 'I Can DO IT Three Times Faster.'"

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George Gimarc
George Gimarc (The Rock and Roll Alternative): "I did the Rock & Roll Alternative on KZEW from May of 1980, up through the big layoffs at Christmas of 1986. I came to the station straight out of college; I was about 10 years younger than most of the staff--and, boy, did they treat me like the kid for the first several years. At the time, there was no outlet for fringe music on the airwaves in DFW. Even records by safe artists like Elvis Costello, Blondie, and Devo were considered pretty doggone weird. So that's where the comfort level was when the show first launched."

Jeff K (The Edge/Dallas Stars): "I moved to Dallas in 1982 to attend UTA, and quickly realized my quest for alternative or even decent college radio would indeed be challenging. My like-minded friends from the area quickly pointed me in the direction of 98 KZEW; on Sunday nights a virtually unknown (but extremely eloquent) DJ named George Gimarc delivered the goods! Many years before any format would ever be labeled 'Alternative', George had already branded his show The Rock And Roll Alternative. It was an amazing: Sundays were devoted to gathering round the radio to hear him preach the gospel of XTC, Cocteau Twins, Smiths, The Cure. We looked forward to entire album previews, Christmas specials, and the rare occasion we might meet him at the Hot Klub or Bronco Bowl."

George Gimarc: "The audience was always the best--and I would go to any lengths to try to meet requests, answer the phones, and sneak people backstage. Ultimately, when the show was pulled from the air for a little while, it was the audience that got it put back on through their phone calls and letters. It was astounding. That sort of thing just didn't happen. After a few years, I became quite close to many in the Zoo family--yeah, it really was like a family around there. Some 20-plus years later, there's still about a half-dozen of them that I regularly stay in contact with. The only other station staff like that was the group that Wendy and I assembled for the Edge 1.0."

Hal Samples (photographer): "Growing up out in Mesquite, I used to love Sunday nights on the Zoo. Rock and Roll Alternative was great, and I totally loved the Dr. Demento Show, which came on right after it. That whole night was always weird. I was into all kinds of crazy shit back then; Monty Python's Flying Circus, The Benny Hill Show... Sunday night was always great because you could hear punk rock freaks on the radio and see real tits on TV on Channel 13."

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In 1978, Q102 emerged and the Dallas rock audience had a new Album Oriented Rock station on the menu. The two were almost too close for comfort; The Zoo had established a template, and the guys at Q102 kinda "borrowed" the proven formula. Most listeners split time between stations. Within three months of taking them head on, Q102 was pulling higher ratings numbers than The Zoo. There was division in the ranks, and our loyalty as listeners was now up for grabs.

Mike Rhyner: "The Zoo, Q102--what was the difference? As I saw it back then, very little. As I see it now, it's the reason why neither exists today. Each had its own quirks that made it slightly different, but neither dared venture so far off the path that it would make a diversion as, say, George Gimarc's show, as part of its everyday fabric. Each tried to convince itself that its DJs were better than the others; in fact, both were good, and neither allowed their talent to develop much in the way of a real definable personality. Had they done so, the real tipping point might have lurked therein. By then, this business of radio had long since driven past that exit. It was, 'Play what you're told, read the liners, tell 'em what 's coming up, and make sure you don't say anything to piss anyone off'. And for God's sake, never, ever lose sight of the fact that no one cares what you think about anything."

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Gary Shaw
Gary Shaw (DJ): "Having been on the original Zoo Crew, and then later at Q102, the first thing I would mention is that, as competitive as the two stations were, I believe they really needed each other. It was good to have two very good 'Album Rock' stations in Dallas because it made each station work harder at being the best they could be. It also gave me an opportunity to work with some of the best radio people in the country. People like Ira Lipson, Ken Rundel, Mark Addy, Mark Christopher, Mike Taylor, and Jon Dillon at the Zoo; and Tim Spencer, Tempie Lindsay, Randy Davis, John Michaels, and Bud Stiker at Q-102."

Mike Rhyner: "The DJs of this time period were the pioneers of radio. They were cool, smart, they loved the music, they would play whatever records they wanted, say whatever they wanted. If they felt like going off on a ten-minute-long rap about something, they did it. It was their show and they could and did do whatever they wanted. So what happened? Over time, they inspired competitors and the market fragmented. 92.5 jumped into the fray; then KAMC; neither of which was quite as radical as KNUS. Today, that happens all the time in the business--just look at the Ticket. You just roll with it."

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George Gimarc: "There was a time when the program director restricted my guest bands in the station to a very narrow area. They didn't look 'right' to him. I think the one that caused the policy to start was The Damned. They showed up for their interview in complete stage makeup. A few years later, that same PD wanted me to get him backstage to meet U2--one of those bands that he had restricted."

Gary Shaw: "I really enjoyed those years at both stations, and in particular, producing The Texas Music Hour at Q-102. I had a chance to record over 50 of Texas' best bands for the show. I still have the master tape of the first public performance by Pantera, back when 'Dimebag' Darrell Abbott was only 16 years old."

K.O. Saltsman (KZEW volunteer): "It was odd that The Zoo was owned and operated by ultra-conservative Belo Broadcasting when their target audience was anything but. I loved working with George Gimarc on the Rock and Roll Alternative. I was almost fired from the show one night while doing it solo (George was in England buying records) for playing 'Mutiny in Heaven' by The Birthday Party, in which Nick Cave screams the word 'fuck' a dozen times. The phones lit up with callers telling me that was the coolest song they'd ever heard on the radio. Well, management got lit up too... but I played it again the next time George went out of town."

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The Zoo Can Jam benefit concert
Bucks Burnett: "My favorite radio moment ever in Dallas was hearing 'And Your Bird Can Sing' on the Zoo one night at 3 a.m. and freaking out--a great Beatles song I had never heard! Ran out and bought the record the next day; and, to this day, still a top favorite. That's the true value of radio right there--turning people onto something they didn't have heard before."

By the time both stations were done jamming Pink Floyd's "Welcome to the Machine", AOR radio had become a demo-specific goldmine. Analysts from KZEW's parent company started dissecting the template and tweaking the presentation. Meanwhile, Q102 had successfully hijacked The Zoo's core audience. The freaks had jumped ship and embraced "Texas' Best Rock".

Now there were lots of bands named after places: Chicago, Boston, Alabama, Kansas, Asia and Europe... it was like you needed an atlas just to walk through a record store. But I had always loved the politics of the Zoo: One minute, they would play Neil Young's "Southern Man", then the next song up would be Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Sweet Home Alabama", which had lyrics that called Young out by name. It was hard not to dig it, no matter which side you were on; down deep we were all just freaks with long hair and jean jackets.

Gary Shaw: "I think that Q102 outlasted the Zoo mostly because they managed to keep the corporate suits out of programming. Once the Zoo became a Monster station, the Board of Directors at Belo got dollar signs in their eyes, and, over time, really screwed up the station. Dallas radio was great in those days. It's a shame that it sucks so bad today."

Mike Rhyner: "Don't misunderstand--I value my time at the Zoo greatly. Though, I was a low-level operative, I watched and listened, made mental notes on what worked and what didn't. Mainly, I was grateful beyond belief that I was somehow allowed to slip in and see the thing at very close range. I made many friends with all who passed through there during my seven years, and I still consider those people friends today. And talent--man, at the Zoo, we had it! I equate that bunch to the crew at The Ticket. It would have really been neat to see what it might have turned into had they been allowed to apply their creativity and personality in a larger sense. Just wasn't the right time, or the right place. And that's too bad."

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What a young ZKEW fan (aka Jeff Liles) looked like back in the day.
The closest thing we've got to free-form radio now is KNON 89.3: The Voice of the People. I did a two-year bid right around the time The Zoo went dark; the show was called Life Is Hard. I cringe when listening to old air check tapes; Man, that guy sounded like a little kid! Rap music was starting filter in from each coast, and no commercial soul stations were ready to put it on the airwaves. It was the middle of the night, so I played stuff like Beastie Boys, Slayer, Motorhead and NWA. In the summer of '86, I was terminated for playing an unedited pre-release cassette tape of "Boyz N Tha Hood".

In retrospect, losing my gig was really a small price to pay for us to be able to say that a tiny station broadcasting out of a house in East Dallas played Eazy E on the radio before anyone in his hometown of Los Angeles ever did. And though my time spent on the air was short, I'm still part of a tiny fraternal brotherhood: strictly improvisational DJs who played real vinyl records on the radio.

Trust me when I say there is no feeling like it in the world. Alone in a room with two turntables, a microphone, a wall full of records and an invisible audience... nobody telling you what to play or sell. For a hardcore underground music head, it just doesn't get any heavier than that.

 
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JEFF LILES DOCUMENTS THE DALLAS INDUSTRIAL SCENE [12 Dec 2008|09:25am]

Echoes And Reverberations: Hitchhiking Along Post-Industrial Boulevard

Fri Nov 14, 2008 at 09:14:54 AM

Noise is not for everybody.

Some people hear a jackhammer on the street corner and promptly cover their ears; others hear a subsonic melody and random harmonic movement in the staccato repetition of mechanized machinery.

“Industrial music” is the umbrella term used to describe artists who eschew acoustic or organic instrumentation for equipment like samplers, sequencers, and the odd chunk of found metal. Vocals aren’t so much sung as spoken or bleated repeatedly as if coming from a military drill sergeant. The tone is usually quite serious and utilitarian, totally devoid of any sense of humor.

Rule of thumb: If the audience is smiling, the artist must suck. Over the past three decades the definition of industrial music has become even more oblique; popular groups like Ministry, Nine Inch Nails and Marilyn Manson have incorporated various elements of replicated mechanized noise within the context of mainstream dance music. Other groups like Skinny Puppy, Consolidated and Pigface have leveraged industrial noise as a backdrop to message politics and human rights issues.
 

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MC 900 Ft Jesus and DJ Zero in 1990

Those of you who are my age probably met Mark Griffin (aka MC 900 Ft Jesus) during the 80’s, when he worked for almost a decade at VVV, an influential indie record store that was located in Oak Lawn. Mark was always about a month ahead of everybody else when it came to discovering new music.

He still remembers when “industrial” music first started showing up on the radar. “I came into it from the academic end of it; as an undergrad student I studied German composers like Karl Heinz Stockhausen, who would create these repetitive pieces that incorporated lots of found materials,” Griffin says. “And I was really fascinated by this concept—like, say, the idea that people were using machine guns as musical instruments; so much so that I would actually buy textbooks on the subject that weren’t even part of the normal curriculum.”

Griffin first heard the term “industrial music” in relation to an early ’80s record label of the same name: “Genesis P-Orridge of Throbbing Gristle was one of the very first people behind it. This label called Industrial Music released early records by Caberet Voltaire, Clock DVA and, of course his own band, Throbbing Gristle. This was somewhere around 1982 or ’83, I believe. After they broke up, two of their members went on to form Chris and Cosey, and then Genesis started Psychic TV.”

VVV Records was a great place to discover interesting new shit. Griffin and owner Neal Caldwell were both into the Wax Trax label out of Chicago and the Nettwerk Records scene coming out of Vancouver, Canada. And they loved the ideas that these records came without shrink-wrap—it enabled them to play records for customers beforehand.

When Griffin released his first album as MC 900 Ft Jesus, he did so on the Nettwerk label. This affiliation brought his record credibility with the industrial crowd.

“At first, my main motivation was just being able to sell enough of them to recoup the money I had spent producing and manufacturing the record,” he says. “By working at VVV, I had already met the people at Nettwerk. I knew they would find the right audience for it.”

In 1985, Theatre Gallery promoted amazing shows by San Francisco artist My Sin (aka Stan Fairbanks), and the LA-based group Savage Republic. Both artists were way ahead of their time. Savage Republic would later inspire the group Crash Worship. Fairbanks (who hung out in the neighborhood long enough to help build the stage at the first Prophet Bar) had an act very similar to that of Trent Reznor, yet pre-dated the debut of Nine Inch Nails by a three or four years.

As the opening act for controversial New York performance artist Karen Finley and Black Flag’s Henry Rollins (doing his first Dallas spoken word reading), My Sin totally stole the show at Theatre Gallery that evening.

No band or instruments; just a guy with a sequencer, sampler and a bunch of TV sets. It was punk attitude with machinery and software rather than traditional instrumentation. The My Sin performance made a lot of Deep Ellum people stand up and notice: This guy was really onto something different.

Dallas soon became an electric beehive for followers of this new mechanical cult of noise. For a large majority of the public, the initial introduction came via a half dozen or so radio programs on community station KNON. Many of the DJs often crossed over back and forth between industrial noise and other genres, blurring the delineation of species and opening up myriad creative possibilities.

Jeff K’s Thud Slap featured international acts like Dessau, 808 State, Front 242 and Laibach; along with Dallas artists like Audio Assault, I.T.T, Psychic Surgery and Lesson 7. (Jeff K was also an employee at Bill’s Records, and also helped to bring the group Prodigy to Dallas for the first time.) During the 80’s he grew up listening to George Gimarc’s Rock and Roll Alternative, so his presentation was very much like Gimarc’s: very informative, lots of back story on the artists.

Owl and Audrey’s weekly HA! on KNON incorporated groups like Front 242, Coil, Throbbing Gristle, Foetus, My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult, and Young Gods into the mix. Texas artists like Houston’s Painteens, Austin-based Skatenigs, and Trance Records artist Crust were all introduced on HA!

My Wednesday night show was called Life Is Hard. The typical play list brought together industrial groups like Skinny Puppy and Tackhead with early hip-hop artists like Public Enemy, Beastie Boys, Eazy E and NWA… as well as the occasional speed metal groups like Slayer and Motorhead tossed in to keep everyone awake. Dallas-based Rigor Mortis once set up in the control booth and performed live on the show. Club DJ Joe Virus (real name: Joe Gonzalez) gives props to the late Rob Spray (aka DJ Stereotype) as a particularly influential disc jockey during this era.

“DJ Stereotype had the Grey Zone show on KNON for years,” says Gonzalez. “He played a wide mix of industrial, goth, punk, and techno. You would see him at all the underground shows and he would have killer KNON benefit concerts with local industrial bands filling up the bill.”

Spray was a prominent supporter of our local artists.

The menu of North Texas noise artists over the last 20 years sounds like some end-of-the-world shit. Check it out: Species; Post Mortem Statement; Apparatus; Steel Porn Rhino; International Thief Thief; Puncture; Audio Paradox; Threshold; Crash Worship; Blixaboy; Hard Sector Error; Cyberwhore; Bleed and Weld; Charred.

Even ’90s-era Deep Ellum groups Ugly Mus-tard , Chain Link Fence and Course of Empire had definitive elements of industrial influence in their music.

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Right this way, folks. (Marcia Cirillo)

Besides VVV, a lot of us discovered industrial music by hanging out at three other influential local record stores: the Record Gallery on Lower Greenville Avenue, Bill’s Records in North Dallas and Tunnelwerks in Deep Ellum. Those who embraced the culture read Re/Search magazine and bought the huge European subway posters. Some gobbled ecstasy or shot speed and watched Blade Runner and Mad Max. Those with a turntable and enough disposable income grabbed every Einstuerzende Neubauten, Young Gods or Zoviet France 12” they could get their hands on.

This was some serious lifestyle shit. The fashion element represented commitment and personality. Shiny black boots and expensive rubber underwear. Ball gags and cod pieces. Tell Deiter to let go of my crotch.

Located just down the block from the current location of Good Records, Record Gallery was one of the first to feature the work of local visual artists as well.

“Record Gallery, as far as I know, has been the template for so many Texas record stores,” says former Dallas DJ Darren Ryan. “It's a simple enough concept; take a record shop, put art on the walls: Record Gallery.”

Owner/operator Steve Stokes lived in the adjacent upstairs loft space. Over the years, Stokes turned me onto everything from Ministry (the Adrian Sherwood 12” remix of “Over The Shoulder” was my first purchase at the store) to Severed Heads, Sister Machine Gun and Chemlab.

“Record Gallery had a certain atmosphere,” recalls Ryan, now living in Austin. “We played really bizarre electronic and industrial music and burned incense constantly. The place just felt otherworldly; there were no windows and a black light art room. As weird as all of that sounds, people felt really comfortable there.”

Stokes (aka “Martian Neon Creature”) hosted a popular late night program on KNON called Radio Soiree. His weekly play list featured a number of early industrial and ambient electronic artists, but it was eventually cancelled by station program director Craig Taylor when he decided there was a conflict of interest relating to Stokes’ ownership of the record store. Many of the records that I played on my own show
were purchased at the shop.

“I blew loads of cash at The Record Gallery, “says former Forbidden Books owner Jason Cohen. “For years I put on a monthly event at Galaxy Club called ‘The Orgone Mystery Evening’, which was a showcase for local Avant-Garde, performance art and industrial music,” says Cohen, who was also a founding member of the Dallas group Vas Deferens Organization.. “A great aspect to the industrial scene was the fact we had the Finn
brothers from Fort Worth, who documented most of the industrial bands on video. Dan Plunket also published ND Magazine, one of the best serious journals in the world that documented and reviewed industrial and experimental music.“

Joe Virus points to Cohen’s Forbidden Books shop in Expo Park as another key piece to the puzz: “I first heard about Forbidden from some friends at The ChURcH one night during the mid-’90s, and soon discovered that I could rent music videos from Nocturnal Emissions, SPK, and Throbbing Gristle, and also buy CDs by Legendary Pink Dots and magazines like Skin Two.”

“The place was decorated with twisted toys, creepy paintings, old medical supplies, and sculptures made of animal bones,” he says. Like Jason Cohen and Steve Stokes, most hardcore noise fans were also into Survival Research Laboratories, a group of artists who built weird mechanical structures and blew up robots in the desert. In a lot of ways this artist collective was a logical precursor to all of the post-nuclear freaks who now populate the Burning Man festival every year.

My own Decadent Dub Team started out as a logical extension of the Life Is Hard radio show. Our primary inspiration was Tackhead, Mark Stewart + Maffia, Fats Comet and lot of abstract hip-hop projects which ultimately fell by default into the industrial subgenre.

There was three of us in the original incarnation of DDT. Paul Quigg and David Williams played samplers, analog synthesizers and drum machines; and I found the spoken audio sound bytes and scratched vinyl spoken word records on an old cheap turntable.

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A lot of the drum sounds and sampled noise we incorporated sounded metallic and percussive source materials; the industrial crowd loved it, but we wouldn’t wear their uniform. None of us could afford to buy rubber clothes. Quigg’s initial fascination with this style of music came from reading an essay by an Italian composer named Luigi Russolo called “The Art of Noises”. The theme was premised on the idea that the human ear had become accustomed to the sound of mechanized machinery, and that this
type of noise would eventually become part of our collective musical composition process. (This was where the UK group Art of Noise would get their name and initial inspiration.)

Mark Griffin recalls absorbing that same essay in a different context. “I still have this really great old compilation album of industrial artists, and one of the tracks is a reading of that essay set against the backdrop of that same kind of Stockhausen music,” he says.

“I was friends with a Dallas musician named Will Clay, who played a number of New Wave bands in Dallas during the late ’70s and early ’80s,” recalls Quigg. “Will’s father was Dr. Jack Clay, an SMU theatre director. He would turn us on to all sorts music that was totally outside of the realm of imagination. At this same time, Will and I would get together in his parent’s basement and make this music that had no vocals or obvious
melodic structure.”

In 1986, the time was right for a project like Decadent Dub Team. I actually thought of the name while rinsing off in the shower one morning. Quigg, Williams and I would get together at Paul’s loft space at the Mitchell Building in Deep Ellum, smoke a lot of Jamaican pot and then experiment with random slabs of rhythmic noise. We would loop up funky breaks out of everything from Bad Company to Ornette Coleman. It wasn’t about creating something from scratch; it was more about the radical juxtaposition and layering of dissonant noise and funky-ass shit.

Our first handful of live shows included opening slots on bills with Tackhead, Gary Clail and Swans. At the Tackhead/Fats Comet show at Empire (now known as Lizard Lounge) we were flattered that their producer Adrian Sherwood willingly provided the live mix for our set. Drummer Keith LeBlanc and Sherwood took us out to dinner after sound
check and we reciprocated by getting them stoned at my apartment next to Moon Mansion.

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Will Clay

There weren’t a lot of groups borrowing from both the industrial gene pool and the still-new hip-hop genre at the time; DDT had that in common with the Tackhead crew. By the end of that year, we had placed a song on Island Records’ The Sound of Deep Ellum compilation album, and our first single “Six Gun” had been remixed by a 19-year-old Dr. Dre and included on the soundtrack to the Dennis Hopper-directed film Colors. It was Dre’s first ever remix-for-hire. Island Records paid him 500 bucks to do it.

Meanwhile, gears were really grinding on the local club scene downtown. Nightspots like Starck Club, Empire, Industry and Club Clearview all promoted shows by internationally known acts like Chris and Cosey, Front Line Assembly, Psychic TV and Severed Heads.
During this same time period I was also managing Rigor Mortis, the only local speed metal band to have found a home and a following in Deep Ellum. The band agreed to a deal with Capitol Records; and our A&R rep was Rachel Matthews.

Matthews and I shared a love for Skinny Puppy, also signed to the same label at the time. SP collaborator David Ogilvie was tapped to produce the debut Rigor Mortis album for Capitol. Rachel and I figured that raves would help the band make a sort of crossover speed metal record that would also appeal to the industrial music community.

This really wasn’t that far-fetched of an idea. Rick Rubin had just recorded Slayer’s Reign in Blood and was using an affiliation with Def Jam Records to establish credibility with kids who also listened to hip-hop music.

Why couldn’t we do the same thing with a similar band in a different genre? It wasn’t long before everybody was mix-and-matchin’ all kinds of sonic goop. Kerry King from Slayer played on the Beastie Boys’ debut record. Rev. Horton Heat brought Ministry’s Al Jourgensen to Dallas to produce one of his albums.

A few years later, Rigor Mortis lead guitarist Mike Scaccia would join Ministry as full-time member. He has also recorded with Revolting Cocks and 1000 Homo DJs. Scaccia has to be the fastest guitar player on Earth. (RM recently reunited and played at OzzFest.)

Dedicated fans of the industrial genre love to debate the importance of their favorite performances over the last couple of decades. The Chris and Cosey/SPK show at Starck Club was legendary, while the Ministry gig at the Sportatorium found the band peaking on more than just its popularity. K.M.F.D.M.’s show at Trees (seen at the top of this post) was kinda like a Nazi pep rally, while Swans performance at Club Clearview was like a glimpse into Hell.

Most lifers point to an early appearance by Nine Inch Nails at the Video Bar in Deep Ellum as one of the best shows in the history of the neighborhood; while Skinny Puppy’s 1992 gut-wrenching performance at the Bronco Bowl (seen below) certainly raised the bar on subversive performance art.

Career gear heads will tell you that this barely scratches the surface of what has transpired within the context of the noise music scene in Dallas over the last couple of decades. A lot of experimental music never makes it out of the garage or practice room.

Griffin recalls the thrill of doing the very first MC 900 Ft Jesus recordings: “I started out when [local musician] David Dennard would lend me his Tascam four-track recorder; I had a brand new sampler and I would just lock myself in my apartment for a whole weekend and just create stuff. That was really fun and inspiring.”

These days, Griffin is content to work at a book store and do a weekly Thursday night DJ gig at Lee Harvey’s.

“Yeah, all of my musical gear is in storage right now,” he says. “I just haven’t felt like doing much creatively. If I ever did do it again, it would be something totally
different than what I was doing before.”

Today the Industrial community still gravitates towards Lizard Lounge, a building with a substantial, enduring legacy. The ChURcH has been home base for the latex-and-spikes set for over 15 years now. DJs like “Reverend” Karl Vought, Joe Virus, Lord Byron, Eric Beck, Angry John and the late Jasper 23 have each brought their signature styles to the
ChURcH pulpit over the years.

Sampled noise and sequenced beats are their common denominator. Atonal dissonance is the hot rock in their crack pipe.

I think the linear theme is something along the lines of “technology will only expedite the eventual downfall of mankind.”

So don’t say that I never warned you. --Jeffrey Liles

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NHL GOAL & FIGHT OF THE YEAR (so far) ON SAME NIGHT! [29 Nov 2008|09:34am]
I know it's only November but we may have seen the best of the best already, both taking place on Wednesday the 26th

JOHAN FRANZEN of the Detroit Redwings turns Ryan O'Byrne of the Montreal Canadiens inside out



Then check out this bigtime brawl between DANIEL CARCILLO of the Phoenix Coyotes and DEREK DORSETT of the Columbus Blue Jackets.... WOW!!!!!!

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COULDN'T HAVE HAPPENED TO A NICER GUY [17 Nov 2008|07:05pm]
I've known Jason Bentley for almost 20 years now, we kinda started in radio at the same time in the early 90s. For a few cherished years in the mid 90s I actually had the chance to learn from the master in person, as we became comrades in arms, fighting to promote what we believed in - both on and off the turntable - Jason has worked hard and no one deserves it more than he. If there's a "perfect fit" for MBE and KCRW it's Jason Bentley.

here's the article from the LA Observed...



KCRW Announces New Music Director
Jason Bentley

The longtime KCRW DJ will leave his current evening time slot to host Morning Becomes Eclectic starting in December


KCRW announces the appointment of Jason Bentley as Music Director and host of Morning Becomes Eclectic, effective December 1. Bentley will leave his current evening time slot to take over KCRW’s signature music program from 9am to noon PST, Monday through Friday.

"This is a wonderful KCRW story. Jason began as a phone volunteer in the front office when he was still in high school. He grew up on KCRW because his parents were listeners. When he returned from college he reconnected with the station and debuted on the air here 16 years ago,” said KCRW General Manager Ruth Seymour. “He has a passion for the music and a deep connection to the local music scene. Moreover KCRW is in his DNA."

“I’m immensely grateful for the opportunity and humbled by the task, which is to open a new chapter for the station. It's a reinvention of myself to match the gold standards set by previous music directors. It’s no longer the hypnotic pulse of the city at night – it’s the ever-evolving optimism of weekday mornings,” said Bentley.

“My show has always reflected the continual evolution of music and emerging artists. And while I built my foundation as a champion of dance and electronic music, this is a great opportunity for me to grow, a challenge I will take very seriously. “

"The other side to this position, no less important than MBE, is to work closely with the incredibly talented group of DJs we have at KCRW to inspire the best from these bright minds and celebrate the diversity of our music department. Together we will build on KCRW's stellar reputation in Los Angeles and around the world."

Bentley is widely respected, not just as a KCRW DJ but as a Music Supervisor for film (“The Matrix” soundtracks), a music executive (co-founder of the Quango Music Group and an A&R exec at Madonna's Maverick imprint) and as a music producer and remixer in his own right.

Jason has nurtured a thriving music scene in Los Angeles over the years, Producing events at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Museum of Contemporary Art, Skirball Cultural Center, and The Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County and consults for the LA Philharmonic on special events at the Hollywood Bowl and Disney Hall. He was the headlining DJ at Uptown Underground, a hugely successful public art installation that drew more than 8,000 people to the Music Center in Downtown LA and the Orange County Performing Arts Center.

Jason has served for two consecutive terms on the Board of Governors of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, and is involved in awards committees every year leading up to the Grammy's. Earlier this year, Jason became the first ever DJ for the Governor’s Ball, the celebration following the Academy Awards, and more recently, he headlined the official election night party for President elect Barack Obama in Los Angeles at the Hyatt Century Plaza to a capacity crowd.

Current Music Director Nic Harcourt will step down at the end of the month to pursue several independent projects and will continue as a KCRW DJ, hosting a 3-hour show on Sunday nights from 6-9 pm PST.

Further programming updates will be released in the next few weeks
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MOBY REMEMBERS THE GOOD OL DAYS [01 Nov 2008|12:37pm]
just got back from dallas and the meltdown rave/party/festival.
October 26, 2008

just got back from dallas and the meltdown rave/party/festival.
being in dallas over the weekend reminded me of one of the first times i ever went there, to dj at the lizard lounge in ...1992?
the rave scene was just blowing up in dallas, and, to indulge in some gentle hyperbole, it was awesome.
i did two shows in one night at the lizard lounge and they were at that point in my life the most enjoyable shows i'd ever done. i remember standing at the edge of the stage and i was wrestled to the ground by a man and a woman who proceeded to good-naturedly steal my belt and then try to steal my pants(stealing a belt is ok, stealing pants: less so).
i also remember being backstage with jeff k. and a bunch of the early dallas ravers and being amazed at how NICE everybody was.
i've been back to dallas and texas many times since(the last time i was there i ended up going out with tommy lee and dimebag from pantera(r.i.p)and some hells angels, but that's another story for another time), but this time it was particularly interesting being back at the lizard lounge(well, outside the lizard lounge, with 5,000 people) after 16 years.
oh, and apparently there was a rumor that i had refused to go to dallas while gw was president.
to be clear, it's not true.
i really like dallas, and i certainly don't hold it against texans that dimwitted gw pretends to be from texas(because last time i checked andover and yale and harvard and greenwich, connecticut and kennebunkport, maine aren't actually in texas, and those are the places where dimwit gw actually grew up. gw bought the crawford ranch in 1999, just fyi).
dallas(and most texan cities)is progressive and friendly and tolerant and nice and, as i said, i like it a lot.
last night was really fun. my only regret is that i wasn't able to hear too many of the other dj's(which is a shame, as it was a really good line-up).
thanks for coming out and making it a great night.
-moby
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PUCK DADDY SEASON PREVIEW - DALLAS STARS [10 Sep 2008|05:39pm]

Puck Daddy

Puck Daddy

Wed Sep 10, 2008 11:40 am EDT

Season Preview: Dallas Stars, Class of '08-'09

NHL previews are often superfluous collections of popular opinions that, in the end, usually have no relation to how life actually works out. Which makes using stereotypical high-school yearbook superlatives and awards the appropriate template for Puck Daddy's 2008-09 NHL season previews, presented throughout September.

Last Semester (see also Stars eulogy): Finished fifth in the Western Conference (45-30-7, 97 points). Dallas dipped 10 points in the standings and found itself third in the Pacific Division behind San Jose and Anaheim for the second straight year. It was an historic year for their longest-tenured player, Mike Modano, who became the all-time leading American-born scorer, passing Phil Housley's 1,232 points.

In the playoffs, the Stars impressed many by dispatching both teams that were ahead of them in the Pacific Division, San Jose and Anaheim, quite handily (4-2). We all remember how insane the four overtime Stars-Sharks Game Six was, and how Evgeni Nabokov extended the series for just a bit longer thanks in part to this highlight reel save:

Dallas may have left everything they had on the ice in the American Airlines Center during Game Six of the Western Conference semifinals. Once they met Detroit in the conference final, they had no answer for the duo of Henrik Zetterberg and Pavel Datsyuk, and just could not find a way to put a puck past Chris Osgood on a regular basis. 

Homecoming King (Top Player): Brendan Morrow is the unquestioned heart and soul of the Dallas Stars. After taking over captain's duties from Mike Modano before the 2006-07 season, Morrow turned up his game and point production before having his wrist stepped on during a game and severing two tendons. The injury sidelined him for almost three months, but he rebounded last season with career highs in goals (32), points (74), power-play goals (12), and game-winning goals (7).

As with tradition, the homecoming king always has the first dance; and on his arm is the daughter of former Stars and current Canadiens head coach, Guy Carbonneau. 

Most Likely To Succeed (Potential Breakout): Is it possible to say that a former Conn Smythe Trophy winner will "break out" four seasons later?  Now that he's out of Tampa Bay, it seems as if Brad Richards can relax and stop hearing about how his point production is not matching his $7.8 million salary on a consistent basis. Now that he's in a better situation, on a better team, Richards can stop gripping the stick so tightly and focus on feeding the puck to the Mike Ribeiro and Jere Lehtonen. Don't forget, in 2005-06, Richards put up 68 helpers and 91 points two seasons after winning the Stanley Cup and a year into the "new" NHL. He's done it before and I'm betting he'll do it again.

Worst Expulsion: (Subtraction by Subtraction): Losing what Mattias Norstrom and Stu Barnes brought to the locker room might heed the call for Mike Modano to step back into veteran leadership spotlight. After having his 'C' stripped a few years back, Modano might be needed to help Brendan Morrow instill some faith into the club should they stutter at any point. And someone's got to help Morrow keep an eye on Sean Avery

Niklas Hagman was one of those guys who had a career year in 07-08. His 27 goals were tied for second on the team and he was valuable on the penalty-kill, which was second in the NHL.

Exchange Students (Key New Additions): Sean Avery brings his annoying tendencies back to the Western Conference, and you can be sure that Martin Brodeur was smiling when he heard the Stars signed the sports world's most famous intern and soon-to-be movie subject. Avery typically wears out his welcome after 2-3 years, so Stars fans know that by the time his four-year deal comes to an end, his act will be tired and it'll be time to move on.

The world's most sought-after 22-year old unrestricted free agent chose Dallas to be his new home for the next two years. Fabian Brunnstrom, he of nine goals last year in the Swedish Elite League, is bringing his size, speed, and quick hands to the NHL beginning next month. It will be interesting to see how this "late-bloomer" will adapt to the style of play in the NHL. More importantly, will he be stuck on the 3rd or 4th lines on Dave Tippett's depth chart?

Class Clowns (Pests and Pugilists): We know what Avery will bring to the team, but he'll have competition for class clown with Steve Ott. "Otter" is known for flying fists and his eagerness to learn about opponents:

 

"In a recent game against the Oilers, rookie Zack Stortini came into the face-off circle and Ott pulled Stortini's shoulder pad forward to get a better view of the name on the back of the jersey.

 

 

"I was just trying to find out who he was," Ott joked."

 

Let's also hope that when Avery and Ott meet (if they haven't already), they throw back some Corona's and have a good laugh at their scrap from a few years ago.

Teacher of the Year: What more can Dave Tippett do to get the most out of his players?  The Stars had a handful of players who saw their production hit career bests last season.  After making it to the Western Conference final in 2007-08, the pressure will be on to prove that last year's success wasn't a case of overachievement.  With four consecutive playoff appearances, Dallas and Tippett can't afford a long stretch of poor play otherwise changes might be in store. Just ask Doug Armstrong.

The Custodians (Goalies): Marty Turco exercised some playoff demons last year, but time is running out for the 33 year old to get a shot at Stanley Cup glory. The former Michigan Wolverine, known to be a bit of a prankster, is a good presence in the locker room and is just the guy to help tutor whoever the Stars decide on their backup, because, well, it ain't deep. Matt Climie (zero NHL games) and Tobias Stephan (one NHL game) aren't exactly allowing Dave Tippett to sleep well at night if Turco should go down for an extended period of time. You have to think Les Jackson is going to bring in a more experienced backup goaltender (Jocelyn Thibault?), while Brett Hull is busy being the team's "Ambassador of Fun".

The Hall Monitors (Defensemen): A good mix of experience veterans and young, hungry grasshoppers, the Stars defense allowed 2.49 goals per game (6th in the NHL) and that was with Sergei Zubov, Phillipe Boucher, and Mattias Norstrom missing long stretches of games. Infused by young'ins like Matt Niskanen, Trevor Daley and Stephane Robidas, Dallas has zero holes on their blue line and if the defense corps can stay healthy all season, they could seriously make some noise in the Western Conference.

Most Likely To Earn a Wedgie in the Hallway (Potential Flop): Brunnstrom is the landslide winner here. The Hockey News' Ken Campbell compared his late blooming to that of Daniel Alfredsson, who was drafted as a 21-year old in 1994. The 23-year old Brunnstrom passed over offers from Canucks, Canadiens, Maple Leafs, and Red Wings because he felt he had a better chance to make an immediate impact in Dallas.  Everything's bigger in Texas. Will that be the same for his point totals come April?

AV Club (Media): Mike Heika writes a tremendous blog on the Dallas Morning News website. Other blogs to be bookmarked: Andrew's Stars Page, Five for Fighting, and Untypical Girls. Aspiring actor Ralph Strangis handles the play-by-play duties, while blogger Daryl Reaugh gives you the color.

2008-09 Preseason Report Card:

Forwards: B+
Defense: A
Goaltending: A-
Special Teams: B+
Coaching: A
Management: B+

Prom Theme: "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" by Bachman Turner Overdrive. Last year's appearance in the Conference final was no fluke, the Stars are back and prepared to seriously contend for the next few seasons. Their defense is top-notch and while their offense isn't up to par with the likes of Montreal or Detroit, Dallas rolls a solid four lines that can score on any shift. Depth wins championships and that aspect of the Stars lineup will keep them in contention this season.

Expected Graduation: Co-general managers Les Jackson and Brett Hull are expecting their young core players to gradually begin taking larger leadership roles as aging vets (Barnes, Norstrom, Modano, Zubov, Boucher) begin to move on. With stiff competition always getting better in the Western Conference, it might seems like the Stars will be in a dogfight for a playoff spot at times this year, but in the end, they'll qualify with ease and if healthy, can put together a deep run, similar to what we saw last spring.

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JUST AN AVERAGE 48 HOURS IN CHICAGO [24 Aug 2008|12:06am]
I've spent a month freelancing in the Windy City,

here's what I did on 8/21 & 8/22


http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/1121267,CST-FTR-vedder22.article


http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/lifestyle/chi-vedder-ovn-0823aug23,0,4503859.story


http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/cs-080822-chris-chelios-stanley-cup-wrigley,0,2527594.story
 
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MY FAVORITE NEW HOCKEY-BLOG [30 Jun 2008|12:46am]
I can't go a few hours without checking this page - you should bookmark it NOW!

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GHOST BAR - TUESDAY JUNE 24th [17 Jun 2008|01:54pm]
Listen to the REJECTED radio spot for Ghost Bar (courtesy of Lou)

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NHL response to Tiger Woods recent comments [09 Jun 2008|12:29pm]
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DALLAS STARS SOUNDS OF THE GAME - OFFICIAL iMix [27 May 2008|05:12pm]
I get emails all the time concerning the tunes I play during Stars games, so here ya go, 50 of the most popular titles, in alphabetical order by artist - there are 5 pages of songs, enjoy!
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AMAZING JOURNEY COMES TO AN END [20 May 2008|08:13pm]
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GHOSTBAR - TUESDAY 05.13.08 [12 May 2008|01:30pm]
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COME BACK TO TEXAS - IT'S JUST NOT THE SAME SINCE YOU WENT AWAY [10 May 2008|10:26pm]
The Dallas Stars hockey club has secured several popular musical acts to perform during the Western Conference Finals while the series is in Dallas for Games Three and Four. The music will be featured at both the Pre-Game Parties on the Plaza and during Intermissions of the games. The Stars will host the Detroit Red Wings for Games Three and Four on Monday, May 12, and Wednesday, May 14 (both 7:00 pm start times).

Monday May 12 – Game Three of the Western Conference Finals

Pre-game PARTY ON THE PLAZA LIVE PERFORMANCE by Grammy-nominated artist Bowling for Soup. These hometown heroes (Denton) are best known for singles Girl All the Bad Guys Want, 1985, Ohio (Come Back to Texas) and High School Never Ends. They’ve sold over a million albums and their intense live show is the perfect complement to an already exciting event, Stars playoff hockey.

Between Periods LIVE ACOUSTIC PERFORMANCE from the Stars’ player bench by Vaden Todd Lewis of legendary DFW-based bands The Toadies and Burden Brothers. Vaden is no stranger to Stars games and his song Beautiful Night has become an anthem with the lyric “a perfect time to watch The Stars.” There’s a rumor he may be joined by “special guests” during his intermission performance.



Wednesday May 14 – Game Four of the Western Conference Finals


Pre-game PARTY ON THE PLAZA LIVE PERFORMANCE AND Between Periods LIVE ACOUSTIC PERFORMANCE from the Stars' player bench by The Old 97’s. Fresh off their performance on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno these former Dallas Stars season ticket holders couldn’t wait to return home to support their favorite NHL team. The Old 97’s have always “BELIEVED” in the Stars and they were the first band to ever perform from the Players’ bench during the 2007 Playoffs. The Old 97’s are best known for songs Murder (Or A Heart Attack) and Timebomb (they performed the latter in the 2006 Jennifer Aniston / Vince Vaughn movie The Break-Up). The Old 97’s new album Blame It On Gravity is available everywhere May 13th.

 
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05.09.08 - OLD SCHOOL DJ SET [01 May 2008|10:12am]
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