Thursday, November 13, 2008

It's A Pre-Race Party!


Okay all you NASCAR fans... come join the BIG BASH at HotTrax Live... Saturday, noon to 3 HotTrax Radio time. DJ LilHippie is hosting an end of the season party on Rock Your Racin'! You say you don't follow NASCAR? Well, c'mon anyway... LilHippie is an AWESOME DJ, and she will be playin' tunes that will really pump you up! And my Sista and honorary Texan, LilHippie, can PARTY! I promise, if you come, you'll have a GREAT time! You'll even have more time if you wander into our chat room. "How do I do that?" you ask. It's easy! Just go to our homepage at http://www.hottraxradio.com/. Once there, click on the HotTraxLive Link near the top of the page. On the right side of the page, under the "This Is HotTrax Live" Banner you will find a box that says "Chat." Just choose a nickname, type it in, and hit the "Connect" button. DJ LilHippie will be there. I will be there. And chances are, HardtoH8 (aka DJ Jazzy) will be there, too. And probably that won't be all... but even if it is, we'll be havin' fun.

LilHippie promises to have a spectacular show- better than usual, which in my humble opinion is going to be hard to beat, 'cause DJ LilHippie ALWAYS ROCKS! There will be a lot of Jimmie praisin' and a lot of Shrub bashin'... and all the latest NASCAR news. Hope to see you there!

Friday, November 7, 2008

WOW! What a week!

Yep, WOW is the word! I watched from the moment of my last post here till the listener count on HotTrax Smooth topped 240 listeners. It was at that moment that the server, (which was never intended to handle such loads) crashed and burned and the station came to a screeching halt. It only took five hours to get it back online and that was quite possibly the worst five hours of my life (at least in the last couple of years). It was however, a triumphant moment in that it showed me that people really DID want what we have to offer. And not just a few, but SIGNIFICANT numbers of people.

So after a short time, we've come up with a strategy, and our opportunity has been renewed. HotTrax Smooth will be the Featured Station again for Windows Media Tuner during the week of November 18th. We're so very happy to have a second shot at it.

For all of you listeners out there who may be reading this, thank you, from the bottom of our hearts for giving us the continuing will to move forward!

The Lizard Boss

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

OK, I'm officially excited now!

I'll be honest. From the beginning, I have hoped that we could bring our music and fun to an audience larger than that of just our circle of friends. We have worked hard to make more and more available in the hopes that we could draw a good solid crowd of listeners who would enjoy what we have to offer.

Today, we are beginning to realize that goal. For the first time, one of the HotTrax channels, HotTrax Smooth to be specific, has been listed as the feature station on Windows Media Tuner. This in itself is a major accomplishment, but whats even more gratifying is that instead of just the 5 or 10 listeners that we have been seeing on a regular basis, right now we are averaging almost 90.

All I can say is WOW!!! Thank you, to all of you out there listening, and checking us out! And thank you to everyone who has supported this adventure of ours. We will continue to do all we can to bring excellence to what we offer.

This is truly exciting!
The Lizard Boss

Sunday, November 2, 2008

DJs and Music

Here on this very blog DJ Alex and DJ Tatianna have spoken beautifully about music. Of course, at HotTrax we are all about the music. Each of us have a unique love of music, or we wouldn't be here. The "pay" we receive for being a DJ is simply the joy we get from bringing our music to the listeners. Each DJ has put together their own playlist. We occasionally receive music from a loyal listener, or another DJ, but the majority of our music we have put together individually. So every DJ's list is uniquely different. I would say that most of the DJ's have primarily rock music, with country being a close second. What we play, however, is up to the individual DJ and the listeners.

Some DJs program a lot of their shows before they ever take the airwaves, while others chose a few songs to start their show, and then see how it goes. I generally start my shows with a set of songs in the que, and then wait to see if I get any requests. Once I get going, I'll see who is in the chat room, and who appears to be tuned in on the listeners map, and then chose my tunes accordingly. After being a DJ for a while, you learn what your loyal listeners like, and I think most of the DJs try to remember songs and groups that their listeners enjoy. We also try to keep up with what is on the charts, and add current tunes as we can. Of course along with obtaining new music, comes tagging all the music. A DJ's music library is a never ending pursuit. Occasionally DJs have been known to compete with regard to the size of their libraries. But the single thing we absolutely have in common is our love for music. Without that, we could never be the quality station that we have become.

Yes, as DJs, we all love music... and our job is to get the listener to love it, too!

There's many a slip twixt cup and lip!...

...No, folks, I'm not referring to the ease or otherwise of removing a bra with your teeth but that old adage warning about overconfidence before you reach the end of the journey.

It's certainly true for the internet DJ. Just look at all the things that can go wrong and, at some point during at least one of your broadcasts, invariably will. Just look at the elements in the chain which are all required to work 100% for your live show to reach a satisfactory conclusion after 2 or 3 hours of continuous, uninterrupted broadcasting.

I'll start with the inanimate ones. You have to hope for no electricity cuts - OK rare but they happen. You have to hope there are no problems with your internet service -far more common. Sure your computer won't break down or freeze up? After all you've got quite a lot going on while you're on the air. You hope you don't get any problems with SAM or with the MP3 - like it sits on the SAM deck and nothing happens. And one embarrassing disaster which is SO easy to walk into as I did in my early days - Don't reorganise your source music into other folders or files AFTER you have set up your SAM playlist...or the song hits the virtual decks and shoots off again because it can't find the source, leaving you open mouthed and lost...especially when the next one does the same thing! Major major horror!! Oh and of course if you have a tower PC and its under your table, you can guarantee that, at least once, a stray foot will hook round wiring and disconnect something....yep, bin there, done that.

Then there are the animate ones like someone ringing the doorbell when you are in mid show. You can, of course, usually ignore these but just occasionally they are accompanied by cries through the letter box of 'my husband has fallen over and can't get up - please help' as happened once to me. The other one is phone calls so don't have your phone too near your microphone!

These are just the things that can happen at YOUR end. What happens at the really complex end where the server is, heaven only knows. A few things do but Bill loses me in the technical detail whenever I've asked so now I just worry about my end. So watch those encoders like a hawk - something I failed to do last week when the stream faltered !

I'd say one quality the internet DJ needs is a calm, composed temperament in a crisis. Failing that, a pair of reliable incontinence pants!

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Two nations divided by a common beverage!!

We on HotTraxRadio don't disagree about much. In fact we have a degree of synergy that borders on the miraculous, (I got 'synergy' from an American boss I once had when no one in Britain even knew the word) but if there is one issue that stirs debate and division, particularly among the male contingent and ESPECIALLY DJ Jazzy, it's BEER!

Now DJ Jazzy's judgment is generally pretty good (well he employed me , didn't he? ) but I'm afraid on the issue of beer, I shall continue to claim a certain vindication of my own good taste. It's a shame, I suppose, that Americans are exposed to the frozen polar-bear temperature stuff provided, primarily, by Anheuser-Busch, thus they think all our beer is warm and outlandish. I shake my head in sorrow at such a misrepresentation.

For example, only yesterday, I visited my local hostelry and took away the regular brochure of cask ale delights (another delight most Americans never sample unless they taste the products of micro breweries). Cask Ale, for the uninitiated, is living beer where the yeast is still active, unlike the pasteurised, pressurised carbon dioxide filled stuff that keeps for ever and tastes like gassy water.

Now just sample some of the delights of the cask catalogue and salivate. These are just some of the names and descriptions:-

Stonehenge Eye Opener - A beautiful, dry and smooth premium bitter with a hint of toffee, complementing the citrus and spicy flavours

Harviestoun 666 - The Number of the Beast - A tasty ale light in colour but strong on flavour.

Mystic Libra - A hoppy beer with a light citrus orangey aroma


Drunken Monkey - Burnt toffee and light custard hints permeate from this flavour packed best bitter.


See what I mean? And that's just a few. I suppose now I have retired from a 'proper job' the quality of ale has become an even higher priority than it used to be but even when I was working in computer systems I once turned down a job in New York, the horrible worry racing through my mind of where on earth I would get a decent drink at night. I saw the prospect of endless glasses of freezing cold....nothing.

Seriously, I love the United States and its people. I have literally dozens of friends there..and now hopefully even more on this station (until they read this ) but live there? Not until you import a British brewery!!!

Cheers

DJ Alex


Wednesday, October 29, 2008

..and music says so much about our society too

Tatianna has written a beautifully expressive piece on the power of music in all its moods and how it affects the listener. But music in all its forms can also take the temperature of our society too.This has been recognised by historians over the years and, over the past few years, by NASA who have blasted pop hits into space as a kind of audio introduction to the human race at the point in time the mission blasted off, for any extra-terrestrials who might happen to own an Ipod.

But, seriously, popular music (and in the past that could include works by Beethoven and Tchaikovsky) is a sounding board for the moods and attitudes of our society and is thus worthily packaged, along with newspapers and video tapes, as part of the record of an era and how society is thinking. Music is reactive and if we look at the post second world war history, very briefly, you may see what I mean.

In the late 40s, there was swing, bebob and tuneful but, message free, music for those tired of war and conflict who just wanted something to let their hair down by. It was the mid fifties before the youth culture born during WW2 and not burdened by their parents experiences began to seek new outlets. They adopted a mix of black rhythm and blues music and white country music, doctored and manipulated to some extent, and called rock n'roll. Their parents hated it, thought it alien and hostile - just in fact what the kids wanted. A voice of their own. In Britain the 60s produced a new phenomenon with the Beatles - urban rock with a lot of pertinent social comment about their lives and their environment. In America the Vietnam War produced Flower Power - and music to complement it. Out of that era came some of the finest poets and musicians popular music has ever produced.

I guess you could say the early 70s went soft, both musically and socially, with and that, in turn, produced a backlash in both America and Britain with punk music, designed for the disadvantaged working class.

I suppose the point I've tried to make is that music doesn't always 'soothe the savage breast' but often reflects and focuses discontent and anger too. The 60s spawned a revolution in singer/songwriters which has since flourished and new Dylans have sprung up with the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan , Todd Snider being an excellent example, and of course the Flobots and others do highly political material.

In conclusion, and to go back to Tatianna's point about music being such a powerful force, it most certainly is and has the power, not merely to entertain, soothe and satisfy, but to hold people in its thrall. A powerful song with powerful lyrics can sometimes undo in three minutes all the obsequious justifications our politicians have spent months in preparing. Its a power not to be underestimated and can be such an accurate reflection of the mood of the world we inhabit.

DJ Alex