Twist in KUSF Events Efforts to Save Station Persist




Denise Sullivan published on June 7, 2011
http://www.crawdaddy.com/index.php/2011/06/07/twist-in-kusf-events-efforts-to-save-station-persist/

There has been a strange turn in the ongoing fight to Save KUSF, as personnel of the college radio station formerly operated by students and community volunteers at the University of San Francisco awaited the FCC’s ruling on the sale and transfer of KUSF’s license. In late May it was discovered the university planned to dismantle the studio and did. Now attorneys for Friends of KUSF, the grassroots organization formed in the wake of the station’s closure in January, claim the university acted in violation of FCC regulations. They’ve since filed a declaration with the federal licensing agency in addition to their previous Petition to Deny transfer of license. “This action by the University is one more action which demonstrates that the parties to this whole transaction act as if the FCC was nothing but a rubber stamp,” said Friends of KUSF attorney Peter Franck in a statement released by Save KUSF on Monday. ”In fact, approving this license transfer would violate the FCC’s duty to act in the Public Interest, as we will point out further if the FCC grants our petition to set the whole matter for a public hearing.”

The University of San Francisco has maintained the KUSF broadcast facility since the station’s closure in January and the Petition to Deny was filed in February, which was a stipulation of FCC rules, at least until the pending case resolved. Thanks to the generous technical support of WFMU, KUSF in Exile has been streaming online with the ultimate goal of getting back on the air. But now without a studio to return to, KUSF radio as it was shall never again be. However morale and determination on the Save KUSF side remains affirmative and undimmed. “Once again, USF has acted in bad faith towards the community and the FCC. Ignoring the fact that this bad deal for San Francisco has not been approved, they continue to act in arrogance, ignoring both the will of the city and violating the rules of the FCC,” said Save KUSF spokesperson Irwin Swirnoff in Monday’s release. “The time has come for the University to do the right thing and work with us in getting 90.3 FM back in the hands of the community where it belongs,” he said.

The University of San Francisco shutdown KUSF on January 18. When security escorted staff and DJs from the building, the music, community programming, and voices that made the station not only world famous but vital to SF’s multi-cultural communities and the community at large, ceased to be heard. KUSF is not the only college station that has had its license or broadcast status threatened in recent months. Though its status as an award-winning, 33 year-old community resource in a major US city is an incalculable loss to not only the listeners it served but also to community broadcasting nationwide. Stay tuned to Save KUSF for all the news as it develops and we will occasionally continue to post updates here.

KUSF Studio Dismantled Prematurely While Sale of College Radio Station Awaits FCC Approval

June 7th, 2011 by Jennifer Waits in college radio, public radio
http://www.radiosurvivor.com/2011/06/07/kusf-studio-dismantled-prematurely-while-sale-of-college-radio-station-awaits-fcc-approval/

Sad Sign on Door at KUSF on May 17, 2011 (Photo: J. Waits)

Just four months after University of San Francisco (USF) pulled the plug on KUSF’s terrestrial broadcast, the former KUSF studio in Phelan Hall has been dismantled.

When I stopped by the station on May 17, DJs were still broadcasting from the now online-only KUSF.org. I was told that May 18th would be the final day of online-only broadcasts from the Phelan Hall studio. As movers worked to haul away boxes full of vinyl records, CDs, and decades worth of station equipment (college radio operations at USF had been housed in Phelan Hall since KUSF’s beginnings as a carrier current station in 1963), KUSF General Manager Steve Runyon and KUSF Fundraising Coordinator Miranda Morris spoke about the future of the online-only station.

According to Runyon, the station was being forced to move to smaller quarters in another building on the USF campus. He expected that KUSF.org would be off the air for at least a month, as they would have to entirely rebuild a new studio in their new building. He added that, “KUSF online is still feeding audio to keep our Live 365 streaming active. We expect to again have studio availability in mid to late summer.” The new studio will be located on the 4th floor of Cowell Hall. According to Runyon, “It still has to be designed and built with extremely limited resources. It is presently an academic seminar room.”


DJ doing one of the final KUSF.org shows from the Phelan Studio (Photo: J. Waits)

Since the new location has less storage space, they were in the process of purging files and paperwork when I visited.

Runyon said that they needed to cull down miscellaneous paperwork in order to fit into 3 filing cabinets, compared with the 15 cabinets they used in Phelan Hall. He acknowledged that this wasn’t the first time that the station has had to dispense with archival material. In the past various classical recordings and audio tape archives have been trashed when the university needed the space. He added that in the new location there will be less room for music storage, so much of it will need to be stored off campus. The hope is that they will gradually be able to digitize their large vinyl collection. According to Runyon, KUSF will be moving to “various rooms in Cowell and Kalmanovitz Halls.” He added that the “future location of KUSF’s record/CD collection is undecided at present.”


Boxing up KUSF (Photo: J. Waits)

Ever since January 18, when USF announced that it would be selling KUSF’s 90.3 FM license and transmitter to Classical Public Radio Network (CPRN), the KUSF studio and online-only broadcast have been a shadow of their former selves. Most DJs fled the station and have been working under the mantle of Save KUSF (with many DJing at KUSF in Exile, hosted by WFMU) in order to fight the station sale.

Only a handful of DJs stuck around the old KUSF, so its online-only station has only had a few DJs since January 18. By May 17, only about 4 or 5 DJs were on the air at KUSF.org and the station was doing live shows for only about 10 hours a day, with the rest of the broadcast coming from an iPod. Runyon said, “we don’t have a listening audience, basically.” He added that, “there’s no morale left whatsoever among students or staff.”

It was sad to see the station in ruins and also obvious to me that it must be heartbreaking for Runyon to see the demise of KUSF. He launched the station back in 1977 and he’s proud of all of the achievements over the years. He pointed out that KUSF attracted many students to University of San Francisco and speculated that the university would lose donations from alumni disappointed about the station sale.


KUSF's Steve Runyon and Miranda Morris (Photo: J. Waits)

As I toured KUSF on May 17, the mood was melancholy and I couldn’t help but remember my first visit 2 years ago and a subsequent trip there last summer when the studio was full of life and the surrounding rooms were full of records, CDs, framed gold records, and historical artifacts. It was a depressing scene and a shot of reality about USF’s disinterest in KUSF’s future.

Nearly two weeks ago, as former KUSF volunteers started to realize the fate of the old studio, another letter was sent to the FCC regarding Friends of KUSF’s “Petition to Deny” the assignment of the KUSF license to CPRN. In support of the Petition to Deny, this latest letter dated May 26 provides a supplemental declaration. The declaration from KUSF’s former Personnel Co-Director Claudia Mueller argues that on May 22, 2011, “The entire studio space of KUSF 90.3 FM in Phelan Hall…that includes former production studio C, broadcasting studio B and live studio A have been completely dismantled. No studio equipment that enables any form of broadcasting is left in the premises of KUSF 90.3 FM.”

This statement from Mueller is meant to support the argument in the Petition to Deny that USF has ceded control of its license prematurely and is in violation of FCC rules regarding its ability to originate programming from its main studio. In fact, several recent FCC actions confirm the strong stance that the FCC has taken as far as studio control goes. In the University of San Francisco’s Opposition to the Petition to Deny, lawyers argued that, Programming on KUSF is originating from the [sic] CPRN’s studios and is subject to the University’s control. The Commission’s Rules do not require programming to originate from a station’s main studio. The main studio must have the ability to originate programming. KUSF retains full ability to broadcast from its main studio on the University campus.”


Packing up old KUSF equipment (Photo: J. Waits)

With the dismantling of the KUSF studio at USF in mid-May, it’s pretty clear that KUSF is in violation of the FCC’s rules about maintaining a main studio. So far there’s no word from the FCC on this, but Save KUSF and Friends of KUSF are hoping for a hearing to review all of these potentially problematic moves by USF. According to a press release from Save KUSF this week, “Peter Franck one of the attorneys for Friends of KUSF commented: ‘This action by the University is one more action which demonstrates that the parties to this whole transaction act as if the FCC was nothing but a rubber stamp. In fact approving this license transfer would violate the FCC’s duty to act in the Public Interest, as we will point out further if the FCC grants our petition to set the whole matter for a public hearing.’”

It will be interesting to hear how both USF and the FCC respond.

KUSF In Exile 06.07.11 3-6 PM DJ Toby

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KUSF In Exile 06.07.11 Noon-3 PM Carolyn



If anyone personifies the word 'maven' it's DJ Carolyn. Her impeccable
taste in punk, garage and rock has influenced Bay Area listeners for over
two decades. A listener passionately sent in, 'she has always been the
only DJ that matters. She finds music nobody else does, and it rocks!' Her
dedication to the local scene goes beyond spinning the latest indie disc
or old-school classic, to outright mentorship of fledgling talent. Catch
her weekly show... and you'll find out why, when it comes to Bay Area
rock, you've been served." -From SF Bay Guardian who awarded Carolyn as
2006's and 2008's Best DJ: Terrestrial Radio

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CAROLYN – TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 2011 NOON TO 3PM

Teenage Head “Picture My Face”
Spider “Back To The Wall”
Problematics “Teenage Heartattack”
Homer Simpson “Spider Pig”
Peripherique Est “Le Rock D’Ici”
Davila 666 “Obsessiano”
The Mantles “Roman Hat”

TV Ghost “Wired Trap”
Wire “Smash”
Alex Chilton “Hey, Little Child”
Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich “Hold Tight”
The Limiñanas “I’m Dead”
Los Negretes “Ella”

Personal & The Pizzas “I Want You”
Predator “Creep”
The Blitzz “You Got What You Want”
Gears “Teenage Brain”
Pylon “Feast On My Heart”
Parting Gifts “(Walking Through The) Sleepy City”
Ty Segall “I Can’t Feel It”

Buzzcocks “Noise Annoys”
Buzzcocks “I Don’t Mind”
Primitive Calculators “Pumping Ugly Muscle”
Eddy Current Suppression Ring “We Got The Beat”
Timmy’s Organism “Scum Revolution”

Guinea Worms “Thinking About You”
Ed Nasty & The Dopeds “I’m Gonna Be Everything”
The Drags “My Girlfriend’s In The F.B.I.”
Cheap Time “Down The Tubes”
Jacknife “Shankin’ Puppy Shake”
Bo Diddley “Rock N Roll”
Tav Falco & The Panther Burns “Shade Tree Mechanic”
Jack Oblivian “Moses & Me”

Women In Prison “Strange Waves”
Dadfag “Crest”
Drugs Dragons “Skinned Creatures”
The Buzz “Insanity”
The Scrams “Eat The Beat”

Vacuum “Kicks”
Vacuum “Shade”
Weekend “End Times”
The Only Ones “Another Girl, Another Planet”
The DB’s “Write Back”
Wau Y Los Arrrghs! “Bli Blu Bla (Bla Bla Bla)”
Dalia Llamas “I Want You”

Demon’s Claws “Trip To The Clinic”
Alex Cuervo “Everybody Disappears”
Swell Maps “Vertical Slum”
Nightingales “Idiot Strength”
The Welders “S-O-S Now”
Normals “Sometimes The Truth”
UV Race “Burn That Cat”

Bäddat För Trubbel “Jag Har Ingenting”
Lame Drivers “Last Call For Violence”
Tyrades “I Hate Your Wave”
Terry Malts “I’m Neurotic”

Negative Trend “Black & Red”

KUSF In Exile 06.07.11 9-Noon DJ Schmeejay


Visceral, cinematic radio

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john cage : sonata no 1 for prepared piano
gastr del sol : work from smile
dean martin : hey brother pour the wine
(born 6.07.17)
ilya ahmed : earn your blood
liz allbee and christopher riggs : failure
alan parsons project : the raven
paavoharju : ikusuden
the banjoist : medley
prince : controversy
(born 6.07.58)

:::::::: j o y f u l n o i s e :::::::

the cowsills : the prophecy of daniel
meredith monk : explorer #5
christian death : the luxury of tears

ruth etting : button up your overcoat
wounded lion : degobah system
john cooper clark " the ghost of al capone
kasin & adrianowicz : never weary mariner
dictation letter : mr canfield
beau brummels : just a little
(beau brummel born 6.07.1778)
excepter : the heart
tiny tim : delilah
(tom jones born 6.07.40)

:::::::: b e s t a l b u m e v e r ::::::::

robert wyatt : this summer night (hot chip mix)

khun paw : unknown
atelicine : chroeg zen
paul & linda : uncle albert/ admiral halsey
birdshow band : arp solo
king crimson : 21st century schizoid man
buffalo bills barbershop quartet : my baby just cares for me
tom jones : the man who knows too much
(born 6.07.40)
buzzcocks : what do i get?
nillson : courtship of eddie's father
grant hart : you are the reflection of the moon on the water
michael yonkers : smile awhile
dean martin : memories are made of this
(born 6.07.17)

:::::::: b a c k i n g m u s i c a t b r e a k s ::::::::

john cage : sonatas and interludes for prepared piano

KUSF In Exile 06.07.11 6-9 AM DJ Stevil


The Stevil show is a moody collage of music that soothes and attacks your senses every Tuesday morning from 6 to 9 a.m. If music is the language of the heart, then the Stevil show is hieroglyphics on the caverns of the aorta.

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KUSF In Exile 06.07.11 Midnight-3 AM Fly By Night DJ Terry Dactyl



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KUSF In Exile 06.06.11 10-11 PM Jazz On The Cusp DJ Doctor Jekkyll



For over a century, jazz music has continued to be a living, breathing entity. To date, the music itself has defended itself admirably against those self-appointed guardians of last year's blues who would compartmentalize jazz as swing, bebop, cool, avant-garde, etc. Rather than hearing jazz as a sequence of separate styles, it is important to hear its continuity across time. Jazz is always on the cusp, always searching, always ready to incorporate a new discovery into the body of work that preceded it. There is no radical break between swing and bebop, between bebop and cool, between the early New Orleans styles and the avant-garde group improvisations of the 1960s. The music exists on a continuum.









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PLAYLIST
10th edition
6 June 2011

1. King Porter Stomp
(Jell Roll Morton)
Air
Air Lore
1979
RCA
Henry Threadgill - tenor sax
Fred Hopkins - bass
Steve McCall - drums

2. Old
(Roscoe Mitchell)
Roscoe Mitchell
Old/Quartet
1979
ECM
Roscoe Mitchell - alto sax
Lester Bowie - trumpet
Malachi Favors Maghostus - bass
Philip Wilson - drums

3. Jitterbug Waltz
(Thomas "Fats" Waller)
David Murray
Morning Song
Black Saint
1983
David Murray - tenor saxophone
John Hicks - piano
Reggie Workman - bass
Ed Blackwell - drums

4. Soft Dance
(John Carter)
John Carter Octet
Dauwhe
Black Saint
1982
John Carter - clarinet, composition
Bobby Bradford - cornet
Red Callender - tuba
James Newton - flute, bass flute
Charles Owen - soprano sax, oboe, clarinet
Roberto Miranda - bass
William Jeffrey - drums
Luis Peralta - percussion

5. My Blue Heaven
(Donaldson/Whiting)
Art Tatum
The Tatum Group Masterpieces, Vol. 1
Pablo
1975
recorded on 25 June 1954
Benny Carter - alto sax
Art Tatum - piano
Louis Bellson - drums

6. These Foolish Things Remind Me Of You
(Strachey/Marvell/Link)
Count Basie
Count Basie Jam Montreux '77
Pablo
1977
Benny Carter - alto sax
Count Basie - piano
Ray Brown - bass
Louis Bellson - drums

7. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans?
(Alter/DeLange)
Booker Ervin
Booker 'n' Brass
Pacific Jazz
1998
recorded 14 September 1967
Booker Ervin - tenor sax
Martin Banks, Ray Copeland, Freddie Hubbard, Richard Williams - trumpets
Garnett Brown, Bennie Green - trombones
Kenny Barron - piano
Reggie Johnson - bass
Lennie McBrowne - drums
arranged and conducted by Teddy Edwards

8. Forever
(Jordan/Parker/Drake)
Kidd Jordan
Palm of Soul
Aum Fidelity
2006
Kidd Jordan - tenor sax
William Parker - gongs and bowls
Hamid Drake - drums

9. After the Rain
(Coltrane)
John Coltrane
To the Beat of a Different Drum
Impulse!
1965
John Coltrane - tenor sax
McCoy Tyner - piano
Jimmy Garrison - bass
Roy Haynes - drums

KUSF In Exile 06.06.11 9-10 PM Guitar Journeys DJ Giacomo Fiore



Guitar Journeys champions diverse traditions of guitar music from around the world, including classical, fingerstyle, jazz, bossa nova, and genre-defying contemporary compositions.  Featuring the ancient music of 16th century lutenists, fresh compositions by today's living artists, and just about everything in between, Guitar Journeys is the Bay Area's portal into a spectacular universe of guitar music. Email guitarjourneys@yahoo.com, and tune in Monday nights at 11pm.

Producer: Brian Dowdy
Hosts: Brian Dowdy, Theresa Calpotura, DJ Tuggy, and Teja Gerken, Giacomo Fiore









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KUSF In Exile 06.06.11 Shaping San Francisco

Shaping San Francisco is an ongoing multimedia project in bottom-up, participatory history... recovering lost history and sharing the story of daily life in the City by the Bay, recorded live at CounterPULSE each Wednesday.

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