By Mark Flaum
Weird?  Experimental?  Those  ad-
jectives  might  apply,  but  the  real  word 
behind  the  outer  limits  of  the  Houston 
underground is unstoppable. There is a 
fountain of creativity in the sounds of this 
city, and when a musician hits the mainline, 
the ow cannot be stemmed. Record after 
record, song after song, the true innova-
tors  of  Houston  music  stretch  the  word 
prolic until it begs for relief. 
Take for example DJ Screwno longer 
underground,  the  music  of  Robert  Earl 
Davis  Jr.  has  nally  fallen  from  the  sky 
and changed the face of hip hop. Shift the 
pitch down, let the beats oat gently like 
hammers made of cloud, let the voice of 
the  MC  blow  up  like  a  balloon,  like  the 
words you cant quite understand in those 
quicksand  dreams,  let  it  all  get  screwed 
up. Screw music might relate to hip hop 
today  the  way  shoegaze  did  to  rock  in 
the early 90sits an inescapable sound 
that changed everyone who listened but 
disappeared as soon as it began. And yet 
today, a rapper cant pass through Houston 
without dropping the name of DJ Screw, 
though he left the world seven years ago. 
His  legacy  lives,  and  so  does  his  back 
cataloghundred of hours of mixes and 
freestyle  backing  tracks.  So  prolic  was 
Screw that an entire storefront has been 
established (7717 Cullen) to market noth-
ing more than his back catalog. 
Not all of Houstons outer voices have 
been  so  charmed  by  public  attention. 
Another  true  original  has  managed  to 
escape  the  limelight  since  releasing  his 
rst  album  to  almost  universal  inatten-
tion back in 1978. Jandeks blues is unlike 
any other the world has ever known. His 
music  is  a  metaphor  for  itselfat  times 
broken,  unmusical,  and  staggering,  at 
times wretched and tremendously sad. He 
is earnest and honest, and while hell tell 
you everything you could possibly ask him 
about his soul, you will never understand 
him.  For  decades  he  was  dismissed  as 
amateurish and untalented, but ears have 
nally  started  to  turn  back  to  Jandek; 
were starting to realize that his music is 
his  music,  not  my  music  or  your  music. 
Fortunately, Jandek was prolic, too45 
studio albums and seven live recordings. 
The latter are particularly remarkable in 
that, prior to 2004, Jandek never performed 
a  note  in  public.  At  a  music  festival  in 
Glasgow, he was nally persuaded to break 
his  silence  unannounced  and  shocked 
fans worldwide. To this date he has only 
performed  once  in  his  hometown,  also 
unannounced, back in 2006. Curious fans 
will  nd  a  little  insight  into  the  myth  of 
Jandek  in  the  documentary  Jandek  on 
Corwood.
Even further from the mainstream lies 
one of the early originators of the sub-base-
ment genre known as harsh noise. Richard 
Ramirez rst created explosive feedback 
assaults and collages in 1989, inspired by 
Japanese  innovators  such  as  Hijokaidan 
and Merzbow, as well as by a broad sweep 
of less harsh outsiders such as Nurse with 
Wound. Ramirez has stayed active since 
then,  moving  through  group  and  solo 
projects of his own (Black Leather Jesus, 
Priest  in  Shit,  and  Werewolf  Jerusalem, 
as well as a number of releases under his 
own  name)  and  in  collaboration  with  a 
huge range of performers. For music so 
determinedly un-listenable and abrasive, 
harsh noise has stayed surprisingly alive 
through two decades of development, and 
is surely as popular today as it has been at 
any other point in its history. After a ood 
of compact discs, records, tapes, CD-Rs, 
and 7s, I doubt even Ramirez himself has 
a clear sense of how much music he has 
created over his career. He still performs 
live regularly in Houston and elsewhere.
Lastly, Rotten Piece, composed of two 
musicians who have been a creative force 
in Houston since the early 90s, has also 
never earned enough attention outside of 
city limits. The duo has been performing 
since the early 90s, moving comfortably 
between  noise,  wild  collages  of  sound 
and  video,  rumbling  drone  music,  and 
free  improvisation.  Theyve  recorded  at 
least 50 compact discs, perhaps a dozen 
tapes,  and  a  number  of  videosmost  of 
which were self-released. They run a local 
label  called  Lazy  Squid  Rekkids,  which 
releases their own work as well as music 
from a number of other performers who 
explore  similar  musical  terrains.  Live, 
Rotten Piece performances have featured 
dual electronics, guitar-synth histrionics, 
and  even  a  duet  for  sawsone  singing, 
one chain-style. Moreover, the group has 
been  very  active  in  supporting  touring 
noise musicians, and performs regularly 
at Super Happy Fun Land.
These are just a few examples of local 
musicians at the citys creative core, past 
and present. Acts that have since moved 
away from H-town, such as Charalambides 
or  the  mystery  man  behind  most  of  the 
Ventricle  Records  catalog,  should  also 
be honored for their innovation. So many 
Houston musicians have provided hours 
upon hours of original music to intrigue 
your ears and mind.
The Houston Experiment
What is the  
Rice Radio Folio?
The Folio is rst and foremost a pro-
gramming and listening guide designed 
to help you keep up with whats on 
air. For your pleasure, our DJs also 
generate a healthy serving of album 
reviews, playlists, band proles, concert 
calendars, interviews, and news and in-
formation about KTRU and the Houston 
music scene.
The Folio was a more regular feature 
from the 1980s through the early 
1990s, when it educated and enter-
tained readers on a weekly basis. The 
stations boost to 50,000 watts and 
resultant lack of a reliable on-campus 
signal until the late 1990s contributed 
to its (partial) abandonment. This year, 
the folio lives again, in a longer, if less 
frequent form. If you are new to KTRU, 
the Folio is an excellent place to begin 
what will no doubt be a long and fruitful 
love affair. If youre already hooked, the 
folio is just another way to get more of 
what you love.
People often say that there isnt much good music in 
Houston. They are wrong, and getting wronger by the 
minute: 2007 was one of the best years for Houston music 
in  recent  memory.  In  no  particular  order,  KTRU  runs 
down 10 of the years most notable releases in this quick 
guide to a banner year in a burgeoning music scene.
Jana Hunter
Theres No Home
Gnomonsong
Erstwhile Houstonian Jana Hunter, 
an  Arlington  native  who  recently  mi-
grated to Baltimore, is a key player in 
the national New Weird America/Freak 
Folk  Scene.  However,  this  album  is  less  abstract  than 
some of her contemporaries workdelicate meandering 
guitar, tasteful reverb, and occasional backing strings or 
steel make this album appropriate in any laid-back set-
ting. Her voice gives the album a curious modern tinge, 
unduplicated elsewhere and worth checking out.
Insect Warfare
World Extermination
625
Over  the  past  two  years,  Insect 
Warfare have become one of the most 
respected  names  in  the  Gulf  Coast 
heavy  music  scene,  exploring  the 
speedy, uncompromising blend of hardcore and grindcore 
known as power violence. Their rst full-length crams 
20 impossibly violent songs into just 22 punishing min-
utes. Its complex, brutal, and unstoppably amazing.
Devin the Dude
Waitin to Inhale
Rap-a-lot
Waitin  to  Inhale  is  relaxed  and 
humorousthat is, weed-fueledrap. 
Devins most recent release didnt sell 
much more than its predecessor, 2004s 
To Tha X-Treme, but has cemented Devins position as 
one  of  the  most  friendly,  talented  and  downright  fun 
rap  artists  in  the  South.  The  Dude,  during  his  leaner 
years  referred  to  as  your  favorite  rappers  favorite 
rapper,  is  now  Houstons  very  own  favorite  rapper. 
Linus Pauling Quartet
All Things Are Light
Camera Obscura
Linus Pauling Quartet reminds us 
that barbarians, aliens, malt liquor, 24-
hour Mexican food, and motorcycles 
all lie at the foundation of rock and rolls 
hallowed  temple.  Dont  call  it  tongue-in-cheekevery 
track  is  backed  with  dead-serious  Jimmy  Page-grade 
Marshall-stack ass-kicking. Veterans of Houstons psych 
heyday LP4 mix hard rock imagery with utter electried 
competence, the way unpretentious rock was meant to be. 
Balaclavas
Balaclavas EP & Inferno EP
Self-released
This young band debuted in 2007 
with two surprisingly strong EPs that 
are really halves of a full album. Their 
pseudo-Gothic  punk  combines  the 
brooding minimalism of Joy Division with the unsettling 
oddness of the Residents for one of the most unusual, 
idiosyncratic and affecting sounds in Houston.
UGK
Underground Kingz
Jive
This album from the country rap 
duo was among the most anticipated 
and then the most celebrated hip-hop 
albums  of  2007.  Bun  B  and  Pimp  C 
had  one  of  the  sharpest  one-two  punches  around,  set-
ting off a real counterpoint of vocal styles with swampy 
production  and  a  rare  political  consciousness.  John 
Lomax  of  the  Houston  Press  called  it  a  very  promis-
ing  kickoff  for  the  second  phase  of  UGKs  career 
a phase that, sadly, will never materialize: Pimp C was 
found dead in a Hollywood hotel room on December 4. 
Fatal Flying Guilloteens
Quantum Fucking
French Kiss
Once a costumed gag, this aggres-
sive, unpredictable punk band is now 
getting  national  attention.  See  the 
reviews section later in the folio for a full synopsis. 
Bring Back The Guns
Dry Futures
Feow!
After changing names and winning 
three  Houston  Press  Music  Awards 
(Best  New  Act  00,  Best  Indie  Rock 
03, Best Indie Rock 05), Bring Back 
the Guns have nally released a full album, and it was 
easily  worth  the  wait.  Their  guitar-driven  sound  is 
heavy  but  still  quick  on  its  feet,  framed  by  constantly 
shifting time signatures, punctuated with guitar hooks 
that  never  end  like  youd  expect.  Vocals  are  strained, 
overdriven. Bring Back The Guns are at the vanguard 
of Houston indie rock.
Kay
The Talk Show
Self-released
Kay, leader of the underground soul/
hip-hop group The Foundation, stands 
out in the Houston rap scene because 
of  his  introspective  lyrics  and  jazzy, 
atmospheric production. Intelligent and urbane, his music 
looks back to independent rap acts from the early 90s 
like A Tribe Called Quest, updating them with a smooth, 
modern sound. Kay is undoubtedly one of the gures to 
watch in underground hip-hop, in part for his unorthodox 
approach to promotion: he offered the entire album as 
a  free  download  on  The  Foundations  MySpace  page. 
Motion Turns It On
Rima
Self-released
Motion Turns It On may just have 
the most apt name in Houston: their 
instrumental  rock  is  both  suffused 
with  joyous  motion  and  profoundly 
turned on. Combining the scope of prog with the energy 
of math rock, the band races through dynamite riffs that 
evoke  masters  of  jammy  guitar  rock from  Hendrix  to 
Explosions in the Sky. Their rst full-length release is 
expansive and roomy yet, at just over half an hour, lean 
and easily digestible.
Ian  Wells,  Daniel  Mee,  Matthew  Wettergreen  and 
Dennis Lee contributed to this article.
Houstons Local Artists: 
2007s Best Albums in Review
KTRU 91.7 FM SPRING 2008
1
By Alyssa Ibarra
I sat in the studio the early morning of 
my rst shift, throwing tracks on air like I 
was spreading something volatile through 
Houstona wave of (Smog) hailing from 
the K-T-R-U Houston transmitter. I wont 
lie. I enjoyed it. But I wished Id paid more 
attention to the DJs who had trained me. 
Yes, I knew the rules and policies, as they 
were so politely shoved down my throat, 
but  the  grace  of  navigating  through  the 
stacks with purposethe intuition of know-
ing whether to play the blues track or the 
Indonesian  number  after  the  electronic 
onewas  all  lost  in  the  shufe.  I  was 
simply a new DJ with an old perspective on 
music, one that relied on safeness, though 
I knew very well that safeness would get 
me nowhere.
I had picked up the DJ application on 
impulse. The only time I actually listened 
to KTRU was in my car, where once every 
couple  of  weeks  I  would  nd  myself  ex-
claiming in surprise to no one in particular 
that I actually knew the song playing. The 
songs were, for the most part, stuff I would 
never  intentionally  listen  to,  but  oddly 
enough they managed to get my ngers 
tapping  on  the  steering  wheel.  Im  not 
saying I was sucked in immediately; it was 
a slow-growing addiction. But over time I 
enjoyed having the unknown funneled into 
my ears, because even if the style didnt 
t, my ears adapted to it. They now hang 
low, hypertrophied. 
I was generally curious about the sta-
tion to begin with, but I applied to become 
a DJ simply because my ears demanded 
more music. Unfortunately, mere curiosity 
couldnt wipe clean the musical assump-
tions and predispositions already etched 
deeply into my brain. For years, Id pushed 
away  metal  and  slept  through  classical, 
so  it  was  no  surprise  that  on  the  day  of 
my rst shift, I conveniently walked past 
their shelves in the stacks, looking instead 
for  bands  that  felt  welcoming  in  their 
familiarity. I stopped mid-shift and asked 
myself, where did my initial curiosity go? 
I closed my eyes, trying to picture its last 
manifestation, and realized that the curios-
ity was trapped in my car, the place where 
I was last spoon-fed good, diverse music. 
You see, the DJs were the ones that did it 
so well. They fed me these sounds and I 
gulped them up, believing they knew what 
they were doing. But then I became the 
DJ, and I couldnt nd a spoon.
This  confusion  stuck  with  me  for  a 
couple of weeks. After a few shifts, I now 
understand that I would choke if I tried to 
swallow this station whole. I have to start 
off  nibbling  around  whats  comfortable 
and inch my way through the rest. Only 
then will I learn to drown out my musical 
ignorance  with  the  beats  of  reggae  and 
wash  away  my  preconceived  notions  of 
what good music is with the soapy noise 
that is genetic memory. Its a process that 
I may never fully complete, but in my at-
tempt, I will serve it all to you in three-hour 
shifts  and  ve-song  sets,  hoping  that  at 
least  one  tune  will  get  your  ngers  tap-
pingmaybe  even  crawling  toward  the 
stack  of  blank  DJ  applications.  After  all, 
the music tastes so good, and you know 
Houston is always hungry.
KTRUVIEW: 
Being a New DJ 
By Mark Flaum
Marion Brown is often referred to as 
one of the great, unknown musicians of 
the free jazz era. He started his recording 
career  as  a  sideman  in  New  York  City, 
playing  alto  sax  behind  a  wide  array  of 
important bandleaders. His contributions 
can  be  heard  on  Archie  Shepps  Fire 
Music  and  John  Contranes  Ascension, 
two  powerful  and  vital  masterworks  of 
free jazz recorded in 1965. Soon after, he 
debuted as a bandleader, with a tribute to 
Shepp on Impulse! and two albums on the 
underground ESP-Disc label, released in 
1966 and 1967. These albums established 
Brown  as  a  ery,  explosive  player  who 
could cut through and soar above erce 
percussive storms. He was also a scholar, 
moving  to  France  to  pursue  his  studies 
and  eventually  holding  faculty  positions 
at  several  American  universities.  Soon 
his  music  moved  in  another  direction, 
becoming  more  spiritual  and  soulful, 
and less explosive. He released a trio of 
albums in the early 70s entitled Afternoon 
of the Georgia Faun, Geechee Recollections, 
and  Sweet  Earth  Flying,  which  drew  on 
Browns Georgia upbringing as much as 
they did free jazz. These albums are the 
bulk of the focus of the band His Name 
Is Alives tribute project, which began as 
a concert performance in Detroit back in 
2004 and has now been released as a new 
album  on  the  Philadelphia-based  High 
Two record label.
His Name Is Alive (HNIA) is perhaps 
a  strange  band  to  be  involved  in  bring-
ing  attention  to  the  forgotten  works  of 
a  jazz  master.  HNIA  is  the  brainchild  of 
Warn Defever, who started his band as a 
home-taping project with various female 
friends providing vocals for his basement 
pop songs. Defever eventually caught the 
attention of the 4AD label, and His Name Is 
Alive became a staple of the 4AD catalog, 
which features seven HNIA albums in just 
over  a  decade.  While  the  early  albums 
were  comfortably  rooted  in  the  4AD 
dreamy pop aesthetic, by the early 2000s 
(when 4AD became part of the Beggars 
Banquet family), Defever turned towards 
soul and rhythm-and-blues, which brought 
his relationship with the label to an early 
close and may have alienated his fan base. 
Since  then  he  has  moved  on to  his own 
label and continued to release albums. But 
that doesnt fully encompass the recorded 
output  of  HNIADefever  continued  to 
release basement tapes, live recordings, 
and noise side-projects on the Time Stereo 
label, named after his own home studio. 
Jazz was possibly the only style of music 
Defever hadnt dabbled in.
Then, in November 2004, in a gallery 
in the Detroit area, Warn Defever teamed 
up with members of two afrobeat-oriented 
ensembles:  Detroit  based  Nomo  and 
New  York  Citys  Antibalas.  They  played 
two songs from Browns early Free Jazz 
work,  and  a  further  three  from  the  70s 
trio.  Defever  later  brought  the  band  to 
his  studio  to  re-record  several  of  those 
songs and supplement an album release 
with three tracks. The album begins with 
a  condensed  studio  version  of  the  rst 
part of Sweet Earth Flying and is played 
almost tenderly despite a powerful pres-
ence from the saxophone. Next is Juba 
Lee from 1967, a piece that grows slowly 
in waves, though a certain tension lurks 
below. Capricorn Moon, another early 
work, brings a gentle funkiness that wasnt 
in the original, and the solos are a lot less 
visceral. Next on the album are Novem-
ber Cotton Flower, a rearrangement for 
electric piano of one of Browns earliest 
compositions, and Bismallhi Rrahmani 
Rrahim,  the  only  piece  on  the  disc  not 
actually composed by Brown. This piece 
was in fact composed by Harold Budd, and 
Brown performs it on Budds Pavilion of 
Dreams  album  for  Brian  Enos  Obscure 
label.  Defever  injects  it  with  searing, 
glowing  guitar  to  make  a  powerful  and 
emotive piece. Following that are two takes 
of Geechee Recollections, one from the 
performance and one from the studio, both 
with  a  percussive  foundation  that  feels 
Indian, or like Alice Coltranes Indian-Jazz 
Fusion. Finally, a live take on the rst track 
brings the album to a close. 
Overall,  the  per formances  here 
may  lack  the  pure  musicianship  of  the 
original  works,  for  Marion  Brown  and 
his  colleagues  are  among  the  most  ac-
complished jazz musicians. Nevertheless, 
separated  from  the  erce  talents  of  the 
original  performances,  the  beauty  and 
power  of  the  compositions  hold  their 
own. Furthermore, Defever brings a very 
different  sensibility  to  the  music,  in  the 
touches of funk, the electronic glows, and 
the arrangements for a very different set 
of performers. The jazz canon has always 
been  hesitant  to  adopt  works  from  the 
free jazz era and after, and it falls to musi-
cians such as Defever to prove that these 
compositions have as much life outside of 
their creators hands as do the classics of 
the bop era. 
The  label  High  Two  is  donating  a 
portion  of  the  proceeds  from  this  re-
lease to the Nepalese Youth Opportunity 
Foundation. Also, as Browns own health 
has been failinghe recently underwent 
multiple surgeries and is convalescing in 
a  rest  homea  rediscovery  of  Marion 
Browns work may be more critical now 
than ever.
Artist Prole: His Name Is Alive
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2
RICE RADIO FOLIO SPRING 2008
ARTIST PROFILES AND KTRUVIEWS
ktru 91.7 fm
By Lindsey Simard
The  Red  Krayola  began,  humbly,  as 
a  Houston  rock  trio  in  1966,  with  the 
copyright-infringing  name  The  Red 
Crayola. University of St. Thomas student 
Mayo Thompson, a guitarist and the only 
stable member of the group throughout 
its  history,  teamed  up  with  fellow  St. 
Thomas  student  Steve  Cunningham  on 
bass  and  Frederik  Barthleme,  who  was 
better known for his ction than for his 
drumming.  Barthleme  described  them 
as elitist pseudo-hippies entrenched in 
the  arts,  better  at  thinking  about  music 
than at playing it.
Like most post-punk groups, The Red 
Krayola wanted to deconstruct rock music 
through experimental noise and structure. 
The  bands  debut  The  Parable  of  Arable 
Land demonstrates these arty ambitions. 
When International Artists released the 
album in 1967, it was lumped with other 
Texas  psychedelia,  such  as  label  mates 
the 13th Floor Elevators. Now, this still-
notorious  debut  is  seen  as  a  precursor 
to industrial rock and avant-garde noise 
rock.
Given the band members involvement 
in  the  Houston  art  scene,  Red  Krayola 
naturally  became  a  notable  participant 
in  the  Houston  music  scene.  The  Red 
Krayola regularly played at Love, a club 
then located on the corner of Richmond 
and Shepherd and frequented by hippies. 
The band encouraged audience members 
to join them on stage and do something 
audible  during  its  free  form  pieces. 
The  band  members  referred  to  these 
participants  as  the  Familiar  Ugly;  their 
cacophony can be heard on The Parable 
of Arable Land.
After creating an even less accessible 
album Coconut Hotel and then releasing 
the more accessible God Bless the Red Kray-
ola and All Who Sail With It, Red Krayola 
dissolved  until  the  late  70s.  Thompson 
moved to the UK and enlisted other post-
punk  greatsincluding  Gina  Birch  of 
the Raincoats, Epic Soundtracks of Swell 
Maps, and Lora Logic of X-Ray Spex and 
Essential  Logicto  revive  the  group. 
In  the  mid-90s,  after  several  more  Red 
Krayola albums and a stint in Pere Ubu, 
Thompson began releasing Red Krayola 
albums on the Drag City label, including 
2007s Sighs Trapped By Liars.
Want to hear Houstons most famous 
post-punk band? Call KTRU to request Red 
Krayola  or  listen  to  the  post-punk  show 
on Tuesdays from 7 to 8 p.m.
Artist Prole:
The Red Krayola
TUNE IN TO 91.5 FM
K-T-R-U HOUSTON RICE RADIO
91.7 AROUND TOWN
91.5 NEAR CAMPUS
By Lance Higdon 
The  Bug  is  the  moniker  of  Kevin 
Martin, a native of rural southeast Eng-
land who pioneered a particularly brutal 
take  on  dancehall  reggae.  After  putting 
in time in the noise/improv group GOD, 
Martin began exploring the shared spaces 
between experimental music, hip-hop and 
dub reggae in the groups Techno Animal 
(a  collaboration  with  Justin  Broaderick 
of  Napalm  Death/Jesu  fame),  Ice,  and 
Sidewinder. In the late 90s, Martin debuted 
The Bug with Tapping the Conversation, 
an alternative soundtrack to the Coppola 
lm The Conversation. Produced with DJ 
Vadim, the album mined digital dub and 
broken beat for inspiration.
On the 2003 album Pressure, however, 
Martin smeared the brutal sonic palette 
of industrial and noise music over frantic 
dancehall reggae. The tracks juxtaposed 
the  gruff,  near-impenetrable  sounds  of 
MCs  like  ragga  pioneer  Daddy  Freddy 
with  distorted,  dystopian  versions  that 
threaten to implode ones speaker cones. 
The  subsequent  album  Killing  Sound 
(released  under  the  name  Razor  X  Pro-
ductions  in  collaboration  with  veteran 
soundclash  DJ  The  Rootsman)  pushed 
the  industrial-bashment  juggernaut 
even  further  to  the  margins.  Featuring 
cutthroat  chants  from  MCs  like  Wayne 
Lonesome and Cutty Ranks, Killing Sound 
presents a blissfully un-ironic ltering of 
titanium-tough  drum  machines  and  ca-
reening sound effects through a derelict 
Kingston meat grindera sound clash in 
a simulacrum. 
Subsequent to Killing Sound, The Bug 
has released two 12 singles that mark a 
step away from dancehall towards dubstep, 
favoring a bass science and a half-time stut-
ter  to  the  formers  tightwound  riddims. 
Nonetheless, the ragga-inuenced vocal 
contributions of Flowdan and Killa P (both 
from the grimey Roll Deep Crew), along 
with  Martins  splatter-happy  production 
values, keep The Bug safely on the dark 
side of the yard.
Artist Prole:
The Bug
  On December 18, 2007, the 
FCCs ve commissioners, in a 3-
2 party line decision that would 
make George Orwell Proud,
1 
voted to loosen media ownership 
rules to allow cross ownership 
between newspapers and TV and 
radio stations in the U.S.s 20 
largest media markets.
  The decision follows over 20 
years of eviscerated pubic ser-
vice requirements, and a series 
of townhall meetings across the 
country in which citizens almost 
unanimously spoke out against 
altering regulations to promote 
media consolidation. 
  Commissioner Kevin Martin 
cites a changing media land-
scape (e.g. the internet) as dilut-
ing the need to regulate diversity 
in media ownership between 
major networks, radio, and news-
papers. And, he submits, news-
papers are dying as advertising 
revenues dry up and paper sales 
sour, necessitating that compa-
nies diversify into radio and TV to 
remain solvent. 
  The economies of scale driv-
ing consolidation are understand-
able. We would suggest however 
that consolidating ownership and 
narrowing the range of voices 
available to the public outweighs 
any growth of the economic pie.
  We worry about the impact 
of consolidation on a country 
involved in a global war on terror, 
yet with some of the lowest voter 
turnout in the Western world, 
and where localism in network 
TV extends primarily to weather, 
sports, and if it bleeds it leads 
junk news. We nd it hard to 
believe that further consolidation 
and homogenization will improve 
the already tenuous quality of 
U.S. media.
  In a world of mediated ex-
perience, those who control the 
media control reality. Watch Al 
Jazeera (if you can nd it in the 
U.S.), or listen to the World Radio 
Network on KTRUyou would 
think you inhabited a whole other 
planet. We need more credible 
voices, not less.
  Even if all you care about is 
music, you should be concerned 
about media consolidation. It 
used to be you could hear local 
artists and styles of all sorts on 
your local radio rotation. Today 
you can drive from L.A. to N.Y.C. 
and hear the same 20 songs 
from Cumulus and Clear Channel 
stations. Radio, television, and 
newspapers are dominated by a 
handful of mega corporations.
  A healthy democracy requires 
media that challenges the status 
quo, that challenges the gov-
ernment, that acts as a fourth 
estate, not for the state. That is, 
before the consolidated press 
leads us into another war.
2
  KTRU has a role in this. 
We are one of the last places 
in Houston you can hear local 
music. We have a News show 
a small one, which we are trying 
to build up. With 50,000 watts, 
we are uniquely positioned for a 
college station to do a little good 
in the world.
  The role of KTRU is to do 
what little it can to ght the 
homogenized, the dissolute, and 
the vapid. This underpins our 
mission statement calling for 
underexposed, eclectic, progres-
sive programming. Our mission is 
more profound than playing weird 
music.
  Comments can be directed 
to ktru@ktru.org
1
 Commissioner Michael J. Copps
2
 Amy Goodman, The FCCs Christmas 
Gift to Big Media
KTRUVIEW: From the Board of Directors
Field between RMC, Fondren 
Library and Herring Hall
3
RICE RADIO FOLIO SPRING 2008
ARTIST PROFILES AND KTRUVIEWS
ktru 91.7 fm
*All items subject to change 
Stay up-to-date at ktru.org with maps, times, etc.
Friday, January 18, 2008, 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.
KTRU Live Broadcast @ Rice Memorial Center Lobby
Wednesday, January 23, 2008, 5 p.m.
Deadline: Fall DJ Applications: Turn in Outside KTRU
Friday, February 1, 2008, 5 p.m.
Deadline: Battle of the Bands Demos 
and Applications
See ktru.org for submission details
Friday, February 29, 2008, 7 p.m.
KTRU Battle of the Bands @  
Lovett Undergrounds/Lyles, Rice University
Sunday, April 13, 2008, Noon to 9 p.m
KTRU Outdoor Show @  
Field between RMC, Fondren Library and Herring Hall
HIT THE GROUND RUNNING
By Mark Flaum and Daniel Mee
Houstons scene runs the gamut from experimental to bubblegum 
pop, death metal to gamelan, so mark your calendars and checkout 
KTRUs upcoming shows page, and other sites that note upcoming 
shows in the area. Dont forget to ask around or make a call and see 
if the show is sold out. Also, stay tuned, and you just might pick up 
a few free tickets. 
PICK YOUR FIGHTS:
Friday, January 18: Six Organs of Admittance @ Walters on  
Washington
Saturday, January 19: Cooper-Moore, Forbes Graham & Nioka 
Workman @ Barnevelder Movement/Arts Complex
Sunday, January 20: MGMT/Yeasayer @ Walters on Washington
Friday, January 25: Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings @  
Walters on Washington
Wednesday, January 30: Tetuzi Akiyama and Jozef van Wissem 
@ Byzantine Chapel Fresco Museum, The Menil Collection.
Friday, February 22: Black Lips @ Rudyards
Friday, February 29: Tatsuya Nakatani @ Super Happy Fun Land
Tuesday, March 11: Parts & Labor @ The Mink Backroom
Friday, March 28: The Dirtbombs @ Rudyards
Make sure you check out calendars online for a full list of  
upcoming shows!
http://www.spacecityrock.com/
http://www.namelesssound.org/
http://www.superhappyfunland.com/super_happy_calendar.htm
http://www.superunison.com/
EVENTS AND CALENDARS
4
RICE RADIO FOLIO SPRING 2008
ktru 91.7 fm
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Gowns make do with limited space in Farnsworth Pavilion by leveling with fans.
Who needs a stage?
J. VAN 
Space City Gamelan rocks out at Unusual Animals, an October collaberation of  
Asthmatic Kitty Records, Diverseworks, and KTRU Houston
Space City Gamelan rocks out
SHAWNA FORNEY
By Rachel Orosco
This past fall, KTRUs tried to bring to 
Rice some of the best bands that Houstons 
underground has to offer, free of cost. At-
tendees saw everything from the quirky 
tunes of The Mathletes, who compelled 
the  audience  to  form  dancing  lines  in 
Rices  Grand  Hall,  to  the  funky  beats  of 
Studemont Project, which provided some 
of  the  fuel  for  Falls  Sausage  Fest  when 
they performed outside of Valhalla. 
  Other performers in KTRUs series 
of four free-concerts included The Satin 
Hooks,  Earnie  Banks,  The  Blades,  The 
Gowns, Television Skies, Free Radicals, 
and The Jonx. We chose these bands by 
searching  for  the  best-sounding  under-
exposed artists in the Houston area and 
beyond.  To  attract  different  groups  of 
students on campus and spark a general 
interest in concert-going, we used a variety 
of  on-campus  venuesthe  Grand  Hall, 
Farnsworth  Pavilion,  and  the  Valhalla 
lawn.  We  hope  these  conveniently  lo-
cated free concerts provided an enjoyable 
alternative  to  more  typical  Rice  social 
functions.
  Although  Houstons  ckle  weather 
forced  us  indoors  for  two  of  our  four 
concerts, the bands still rocked out and 
made sure the crowds experienced a great 
show. Even in the connes of Farnsworth 
Pavilion, The Blades and The Gowns each 
delivered phenomenal sets, captivating a 
circle of fans and student-center passers-
by,  who  sat  around  the  stage,  bobbing 
their heads from side to side.
  Why does KTRU organize these free 
concerts? To put it simply, we want to get 
underexposed music out to whomever we 
can, however we can. These concerts are 
not just for DJs or the KTRU crowd. This 
semester weve seen quite a few new faces 
from both Rice and the rest of the Houston 
community show up to our concerts, and 
we  hope  this  continues.  And  frankly,  at 
the end of the day, outside of expanding 
your musical bubble and making it easy 
for  you  to  experience  bands  you  might 
otherwise never get a chance to see, we 
would be plenty satised just to see you 
come out and have a good time listening 
to good music.
KTRU Small Concerts: 
A Semester  
in Review
17th Annual Outdoor Show:
13 April 2008, 
Noon  9:00 p.m.
  This year, were working on an Outdoor Show to match last 
years, which featured a catchy national act that drew large crowds 
to pack the Grand Hall to capacity. Weather and construction  
permitting, we will hold this years show on the eld between  
the Student Center and Herring Hall, behind Fondren Library.  
Otherwise, we will rock it from the Grand Hall as we did last year.
  With the support of local businesses, student organizations 
and student government on campus, and from the nine residential 
colleges, we hope to secure a headlining act sure to entertain any-
one who gives it a chance. This year we also expect to increase 
the number of bands at the show from last years ve acts to eight 
or nine. Expect to see a wide array of genres represented at this 
show, as no two acts will fall in the same category. KTRUs  
17th Annual Outdoor Show promises to be eclectic, electric,  
and, hopefully, outdoors. See you there.
SNEAK PREVIEW:
Studemont Project mixes things up at the Sausage Fest outside Valhalla by  
adorning themselves with strings of light.
Friday Night Lights
J. VAN 
5
EVENTS AND SCHEDULES
RICE RADIO FOLIO SPRING 2008
ktru 91.7 fm
TOP 35 FOR THE WEEK OF 01.07.2008
ARTIST  ALBUM  LABEL
Robert Wyatt  Comicopera  Domino
Various Artists  Everything You Always Wanted To Know About 60s Mind Expansive Punkadelic   Arf! Arf!
  Garage Rock Instrumentals But Were Afraid To Ask
Odd Nosdam  Level Live Wires  Anticon
Prefuse 73  Preparations  Warp
Mirah And Spectratone International  Share This Place  K
Vashti Bunyan  Lookaftering  Fat Cat/Dicristina
Motion Turns It On  Rima   Self-released
Richard Youngs  Autumn Response  Jagjaguwar
Bush Tetras  Boom In The Night  Roir
DJ Alibi  One Day  Tres
Edit  Certied Air Raid Material  Alpha Pup
The Lickets  Journey In Caldecott  International Corporation
New Model Army  High  Attack Attack
Yasushi Miura  Meek  Karidome
Various Artists  Eccentric Soul: Mighty Mike Lenaburg  Numero
Charlie Peacock  Love Express Ex-curio  Runway
The Budos Band  The Budos Band II  Daptone
Los Campesinos  Sticking Fingers Into Sockets  Arts And Crafts
Future Rapper  Land Of A Thousand Rappers  Asthmatic Kitty
Flying Lotus  Reset EP  Warp
Letters  Letters  Type
Treasure Mammal  You Wish I Was Channeling Your Spirit  Dreamy Draw
Charalambides  Likeness  Kranky
The Cave Singers  Invitation Songs  Matador
Siouxsie  Mantaray  Universal
Toots And The Maytals  Light Your Light  Concord
Various Artists  Cant Stop It II: Australian Post-Punk 1979-84  Chapter Music
Chicago Afrobeat Project  (A) Move To Silent Unrest  Self-released
Corrina Repp  The Absent And The Distant  Caldo Verde
Alice Coltrane  Journey In Satchidananda  Impulse!
Coco  Play Drums And Bass  K
Kilowatts  Routes  Articial Music Machine
Extra Golden  Hera Ma Nono  Thrill Jockey
Various Artists  Tango Around The World  Putumayo
The Donkeys  The Donkeys  Antenna Farm
Artist  Title  Label
Donald Byrd  Ethiopian Knights  Blue Note Records
Drakkar Sauna  Jambraham Lincoln  Marriage Records
Concrete Violin  Triskedekaphobia  Axis Mundi 
Turner Cody  Buds of May  Digitalis Industries
Various Artists  Cant Stop It! Australian Post-Punk 1978-82  Festival 
Two Star Symphony  Danse Macabre  Self-Released 
Winston Jazz Routine  Sospiri  The Record Machine
Jake Lefco  And You Are?  KRURecords
Peter Toh  Shoes of a Beast  Hidden Track Music
Konk  The Sounds of Konk  Soul Jazz
By Adam Guerra
The playlist is a group of 100 CDs 
chosen  by  the  Music  Department 
that  most  people  (including  DJs)  are 
unfamiliar with.  CDs are dropped and 
added  from  the  playlist  each  week  to 
keep things fresh. Listed below are ten 
Fall  2007  former  playlist  albums  that 
were  particularly  good  and  deserve 
extra  attention.   They  run  the  musical 
gamut  from  Jake  Lefco  (Philadelphia 
rap)  to  Donald  Byrd  (70s  funk)  to  a 
compilation  of  Australian  post-punk. 
Concrete Violin and Two Star Symphony 
are both innovative local bands. Though 
all of these albums have now been led 
in the general stacks, all these albums 
are still worth checking out, or at least 
worth requesting at KTRU.
FROM THE MUSIC DEPARTMENT
6
RICE RADIO FOLIO SPRING 2008
ktru 91.7 fm
Monday Tuesday 
KTRU 91.7 FM RICE RADIO CURRENT ON-AIR SCHEDULE
Wednesday  Thursday  Friday  Saturday Sunday
1 am
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Americana Ska
Kids
Navrang
New Specialty
Show
Spoken Word Revelry Report
News
Electronic
Metal
Jazz &
Improvised 
Music
World
Music
ROBO ROBO ROBO ROBO ROBO ROBO ROBO
WRN WRN WRN WRN WRN WRN WRN
ROBO ROBO ROBO ROBO ROBO
Genetic
Memory
Hip-Hop
Local
Post-Punk
Reggae
Blues
Funk
Scordatura
Chickenskin
Hardcore
MK Ultra
Sixties
Specialty Shows  
With Strange Names
Specialty  shows  make  up  around  30  percent  of  our  programming  hours,  most 
during the evening hours between 5 p.m. and 1 a.m. These shows endeavor to play 
under/unexposed music from genres other than rock. Some of our shows have less-
than-intuitive names, which might leave you wondering what the hell is actually going 
on air. Here are the shows with the weirdest naming conventions:
Chickenskin
Chickenskin Music airs Thursday Evenings on KTRU from 8 - 10 p.m. The show 
gets its name from an old blues expression referring to music that gives you chick-
enskin, or goose bumps. At the beginning it was collage of bluegrass, folk, rockabilly, 
classical and jazz. The idea coming from a thoughtall music from A to Z is related, 
and can be played together. Its just a matter of how you get from A to Z. Live guests 
have always been a part of the show. Over the years weve hosted Lyle Lovett, Eric 
Taylor,  Jason  Eklund,  The  Neville  Brothers,  James  McMurtry,  Preston  Reed,  Sue 
Foley, Tish Hinijosa, Ani DiFranco and the list goes on.
Genetic Memory
Genetic Memory is a series of three-hour experiments within the sonic void. It is a 
continuously redening aural enigma, wrapped around a divergent collection of refer-
ence points, from percussive implosions to explosive decompressions, from trepanned 
sound poetry to doomed Grimmrobe sludge, from the meticulous and improvised to 
the orchestrated and chaotic, from old school industrial to new school drone, from 
free-jazz freakouts to freaky prog noodlings, from primitive electrons to digital dust 
devils, from Dadaist spasms to Actionist Grand Guignols, and a myriad of tangents in 
between. A rotating crew of hosts and hostesses gives each show a constantly shifting 
center of gravity, with each DJ formulating his or her own denition of music minus 
one chromosome. On Monday nights, from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m., follow the unraveling 
strands of Genetic Memory.
MK Ultra
Need a x of the latest in underground electronic dance music? Not to worry 
MK Ultra has you covered, and were one of the very few Houston radio shows that 
does. Every Friday night from 9 p.m.12 a.m., we showcase 3 hours of live in-station 
DJ-mixes  from  the  cream  of  the  crop  of  local  acts  (and  every  now  and  then  some 
international superstars). We hit all the sub-genres, whether its house, drum n bass, 
progressive, breaks, etc! You can check us out on the web, at http://mkultra.us for 
past set recordings, details on sending promos, and how to submit DJ demos!
Mutant Hardcore Flower Hour
Once upon a time, when todays college freshmen were little more than a staring 
complex and a bad perm, alternative, indie rock, garage, emo, grunge and hardcore 
all  had  the  same  name:  punk.  Every  Thursday  night  at  10,  the  Mutant  Hardcore 
Flower Hour explores the genre that gave birth to all the lame bands that annoy your 
parents, your roommates, and your friends, proving that nothing is more cathartic 
than giving everyone the nger at the same time, including yourself. Like Steven Van 
Zandt, we play the Ramones, everyone who inuenced the Ramones, and everyone 
the Ramones inuenced. If its fast and loud, if its angry, if it rocks, weve got itbut 
its  more  complicated  than  that.  D.  Boon  of  the  Minutemen  put  it  simply:  Punk  is 
whatever we make it to be.
Navrang
The Navrang (Nine Colors) Show covers the music of the Indian subcontinent, 
with a focus on music from lms, but also capturing the diversity of the region with 
Indian classical, folk, Indipop, Asian underground and Western fusion music out of the 
region in a spicy musical curry. Check it out Saturday afternoons, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Revelry Report
The Revelry Report airs Friday nights from 5 to 7 p.m. and focuses primarily on 
local events in and around Texas. In the past, the Revelry Report focused on just about 
everything, including Austin City Limits, national art openings (occurring locally), 
SXSW (South by Southwest, for newcomers), College Music Journal and a number 
of major benets for various charities in and around town.
In its current incarnation, the show also places a strong emphasis on live studio 
performances by local and touring musicians, interviews with artists and musicians, 
and an overall coverage of events in Houston. By doing so, the Revelry Report has 
narrowed its focus, aiming to introduce our audience to alternative outlets for night-
life while exposing the many wonderful events in Houston that might otherwise go 
under the radar.
Scordatura
The  Scordatura  Show  explores  modern  and  contemporary  classical  music:  i.e., 
experimental, electronic, or otherwise unusual music voiced for more or less tradi-
tionally  orchestral  instruments,  generally  since  1900.  Representative  artists  would 
include Glass, Reich, Cage, Stockhausen, Pierre Schaeffer, and the like, though we 
try to emphasize lesser known material, as our show bleeds across into the glitchi-
ness of the Electronic Show, the experimentation of the Jazz Show, and the noisiness 
of Genetic Memory.
Please note that once our newest crop of DJs on air, all spaces marked Robo and WRN will be lled with live bodies.
The General Shift
  What does a general shift, which makes up around 70% of our schedule, 
sound like? The answer is as varied as the DJs that spin tracks, but there are 
certain commonalities.
  Our playlist consists of around 100 albums. General shift shows in-
clude 4 playlist tracks per hour, plus one each shift. The hope is for DJs to try 
out new and challenging music, while leaving them by and large free to select 
their own tracks. You also will hear at least 2 tracks from underrepresented 
genres each hour, including blues, jazz, world music from Afghanistan to 
Zimbabwe, improvised and experimental music, and even pure noise. Its not 
uncommon to hear a modern classical track, followed by indie pop, chased 
with drumming out of Cameroon, followed by hip hop. 
  Its eclectic; its challenging; its KTRU.
Programming Changes
  Listeners should note the following changes from our Fall 2007 Folios 
published schedule:
 Scordatura has gone from defunct to airing Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. 
Tune in for modern and contemporary classical music.
 KTRU News has gone from defunct to airing Fridays from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.  
as we try to bring relevant issues and unheard voices to the fore.
 The Electronic Show has been moved forward one hour, and now airs from  
7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday. MK Ultra has been moved forward as well, to air 
9 p.m. to midnight.
 Navrang has gone from defunct to airing Saturdays from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. 
Tune in for the music of the Indian subcontinent.
 Spoken Word is back from the grave, and now airs Saturdays from 6 p.m.  
to 7 p.m.
7
PROGRAMMING GUIDE
RICE RADIO FOLIO SPRING 2008
ktru 91.7 fm
By Carina Baskett
This  summer,  part  of  my  job  doing 
ecology research was to sit outside alone 
and watch bees for hours on end. My iPod 
became my best friend, but I hadnt added 
new music for ages, so my playlists quickly 
grew old. Thank goodness for countless 
fresh  podcasts,  free  radio-style  shows 
downloadable through iTunes. I listened 
to national and world news, science news, 
ction and nonction stories. I fell in love 
with  the  creative  medium  of  radio  com-
municationthe  way  it  leaves  so  much 
to the minds eye of the listener, the way 
the speakers are so human and intimate 
because they use tone to convey emotion 
and mood in the absence of imagesso I 
decided to somehow get involved in radio 
production. I looked to KTRU.
Part of KTRUs mission is to educate 
Houstonians and Rice students with eclec-
tic programming which brings underex-
posed  and  unheard  ideas  and  traditions 
to  the  foreKTRU  News  nicely  ts  the 
bill. Sadly, news programming had been 
absent from KTRU for several years. 
KTRU News now broadcasts the voices 
of Houston and Rice thinkers, doers, and 
leaders.  In  just  one  semester,  we  have 
already produced interviews, a bilingual 
radio drama, and shows on politics, faculty 
diversity, nanotechnology, and nonprot 
organizations  doing  some  good  in  the 
world. For example, we interviewed Dr. 
Fady Joudah of Doctors Without Borders, 
an  organization  bringing  doctors  and 
medicine to people such as refugees who 
do not have access to healthcare. We also 
interviewed Professor Allen Matusow of 
the Rice History Department about how 
the  Bush  administration  compares  to 
those of the past, getting past the garbage 
on what passes for network news, and to 
dispel some of the mystery surrounding 
the culture of academia.
Additionally,  through  the  show,  we 
hope to and highlight some fascinating and 
relevant research youve never heard of, 
but is going on in your own backyard.
KTRU News overall focus is on Rice, 
Houston, and issues or perspectives that 
are  absent  from  the  mainstream  media. 
We are just getting started. The interest 
from  the  student  body  and  community 
and the quality of the programming have 
already risen greatly in one semester, and 
we can only get better.
Listen to KTRU News Fridays at 5 p.m. 
To  see  the  schedule  of  upcoming  topics 
and  hear  past  shows,  visit  http://bang.
rice.edu/outdoor. Email lexusinabaskett@
ktru.org to get involved, or with questions 
or comments 
KTRU News, Reborn, Amplies 
Otherwise Unheard Voices
8
RICE RADIO FOLIO SPRING 2008
PROGRAMMING GUIDE
ktru 91.7 fm
By Paul Thompson
Techno is lame, repetitive, and dull. It 
barely qualies as an artistic endeavor. Its 
the music of choice for people who cant 
seem to nd the beat on the dance oor, 
and it all sounds exactly the same.
I  can  see  where  these  critics  are 
coming from; radio-friendly, cookie-cutter 
techno  tracks,  for  lack  of  a  better  term, 
blow.  KTRU  is  not  about  radio-friendly 
music. MK Ultra is not about radio-friendly 
dance music. You can nd that stuff else-
where.  Instead,  we  want  to  expand  our 
listeners awareness of how large a genre 
electronic dance really is by featuring DJs 
from both the Houston area and further 
aeld  who  produce  and  spin  tracks  you 
have never heard before.
After  the  initial  boom  of  rave  cul-
ture  in  the  early  90s,  the  dance  music 
industry  became  saturated  with  a  slew 
of underwhelming releases aimed at the 
general  public.  Hardcore  listeners  were 
upset  with  artists  decisions  to  yield  to 
the  allure  of  pop  culture,  while  casual 
listeners just thought the music sucked. 
Recently, however, dance music has seen a 
dramatic revival. Daft Punks current world 
tour, featuring the duo clad in robot suits 
performing inside of a giant LED pyramid 
is being called the must-see experience of 
the year. House music is getting sampled 
in hit songs and names like the Chemical 
Brothers,  Underworld,  and  Fatboy  Slim 
are reinventing their sound and tweaking 
their performances to appeal to a changing 
market. Acts such as Justice, Digitalism, 
and  Simian  Mobile  Disco  have  released 
critically-acclaimed albums and embarked 
upon North American tours. 
Houston  is  a  prime  location  for  elec-
tronic  music  that  is  slowly  beginning  to 
be  recognized  on  a  larger  stage.  Local 
producers create tracks that end up being 
spun in Asia and Europe by world-famous 
artists like Tiesto, releasing their cuts on 
websites  like  iTunes  and  Beatport,  and 
turning out remixes for some of the big-
gest names. DJs from the area are invited 
across the world to spin in front of huge 
crowds.  Houston  is  home  to  one  of  the 
largest  dubstep  (slow,  bass-heavy  music 
that grew out of the English trip-hop scene) 
communities in the US. Its a popular city 
for DJs to perform in, with clubs like Richs, 
Warehouse, and Bar-Rio pulling in artists 
ranging from the aggressive electro-house 
mayhem of MSTRKRFT to the cascading 
synth lines and huge build-ups of progres-
sive trance legend Paul van Dyk. Houston-
based record labels and producing crews 
organize some of the largest techno shows 
in the South. MK Ultra allows DJs an op-
portunity to showcase their mixing skills 
and track selections, producers with the 
chance for their music to be heard by the 
masses, and clubs to spread word about 
upcoming events.
As the only radio show based in Hous-
ton  devoted  entirely  to  electronic  dance 
music, we have a passionate group of local 
and national listeners (thanks to KTRUs 
webstream), an active presence on local 
music forums, and a wealth of high-quality, 
archived sets at www.mkultra.us.. Every 
Friday night from 9 p.m. until midnight, 
MK Ultra features three guests who spin 
live sets in our studio. Although the show 
is  centered  on  the  Houston  electronic 
music scene, we have had internationally-
renowned artists such as Junkie XL, BT, 
Infusion, and Hybrid drop in for live sets 
and  interviews.  Our  sound  varies  from 
show to show: One week we might have 
a  three-hour  dirty-house  extravaganza, 
full of energy and pounding bass, and the 
next time you tune in you could hear sexy, 
laid-back deep house, or stuttering, glitchy 
breakbeats. We try to keep our listeners 
coming  back  for  more,  and  we  do  our 
best  to  give  newer  or  lesser-known  DJs 
an opportunity to be heard. 
Dance  music  is  back,  and  Houston 
has  put  itself  on  the  map  as  a  hotspot 
for  producers  and  DJs  alike.  The  inux 
of big names in addition to the wealth of 
local talent in the area makes MK Ultra a 
really exciting show to be working for at 
the  moment.  Its  a  great  way  to  expand 
your  musical  knowledge,  and  learn  the 
ins and outs of electronic music. Tune in 
on Fridays from 9PM until midnight and 
start your night off right!
What is MK Ultra?
MK ULTRA
W^^  kL  ^  Jr  xu  I^l
^rr|iI^fi5  uL  J^.   71.   5  r. .
Junkie XL drops by the studio for a live set 
and interview.
2006: Best Radio Station
Rice Universitys KTRU gives Houston the 
very thing most other radio stations lack: 
quality. The kids cutting their teeth on 
indie rock, hip-hop and electro manage 
to pull off a better radio station than 
Clear Channel could ever dream up.
2003: Best Hip-Hop Show
(
for The Vinyl Frontier
)
Dennis Lees radio show, 
which broadcasts every Tuesday 
night out of the Student Center 
at Rice University, is three hours 
of unadulterated hip-hop ecstasy.
2000: Best Radio Station
The 50,000-watt outlet is a throwback to 
a time when stations were programmed 
by people who really liked music.
9
RICE RADIO FOLIO SPRING 2008
PROGRAMMING GUIDE
ktru 91.7 fm
Artist: Little Brother
Title: Get Back
Label: ABB
By Devin Naquin
  Unfortunately,  many  deserving  rappers  get  glossed  over 
in both the mainstream rap and indie hip-hop circuits. These 
artists get ignored in the game because they dont have the 
publicity backing of Interscope or Jive, and they get passed on 
by the indie hip-hop elite because they arent conscientious 
enough in their verses.
  Little Brother is one of those perennially forgotten. Since the inception of the group 
by rappers Phonte and Rapper Big Pooh and producer 9th Wonder in North Carolina 
in 2001, Little Brother has run the gamut of the small-town hip-hop crew. Their rst full 
length album The Listening released in 2003 was a surprise underground sensation but 
went relatively unnoticed until Jay-Z enlisted 9th Wonder to produce Threat on The 
Black Album. Jay-Zs notoriety and a subsequent national tour with Oakland hip-hop crew 
Hieroglyphics pushed Little Brother to ink a major label deal with Atlantic. The groups 
sophomore effort The Minstrel Show released in 2005 reaped the rewards of the Atlantic 
promotions behemoth with both critical acclaim and a glimpse on the Billboard charts. 
However, the waters since then have been murky.
  Released October 23 2007, Little Brothers third album Get Back is the result of several 
drastic changes. The group has split with 9th Wonder, thereby pulling in various known 
and unknown producers including Illmind, Khrysis, and Hi-Tek for the album. However, 
there remains one track produced by 9th WonderBreakin My Heart, the shining star 
track of the album featuring the self-proclaimed best rapper alive Lil Wayne. As if a 
change in personnel werent enough, Little Brother has also opted to go independent 
on this release and bid farewell to Atlantic. Likewise, any headway Atlantic was making 
in pushing the group onto mainstream media has lost momentum, leaving the group to 
remain relatively unknown.
  Get Back then is an attempt at answering the fundamental question of groups like Little 
Brother: Who are we rapping for and why? With popular rap culture and the independent 
art chic so diametrically opposed, an artist is forced to choose sides, but what do you 
do when your work lies somewhere in between? After a stint at testing the mainstream 
waters, Little Brother is nally trying to answer this question. In Cant Win For Losing, 
Phonte summarizes the groups thoughts and ultimately comes to the conclusion that 
now Im back on my shit/Cause me and my team gon make do what it do/had a long 
hard talk with my nigga Jazzy Jeff/He said, Fuck em te, do it for you! This realization 
sets  the  stage  for  the  rest  of  Get  Backa  manifesto  for  the  new  midstream  hip-hop 
existential crisis.
Artist: Noiseshaper
Title: Real to Reel
Label: Miracle Sounds
By Scottie McDonald
  Noiseshapers Real to Reel is by far Rice Radio Reggaes 
2007 album of the year. Real to Reel has the feel of a traditional 
Dub disc, yet one that is sprinkled throughout with avorful 
vocalsall of the 16 tracks feature electro Dub-style mixes, 
and most include guest singer, sing-jay or deejay vocals.
  A number of the tracks are re-mixes from previously-released Noiseshaper albums 
and, while the original mix might be considered preferable, having all these tracks on 
one CD strengthens its content. The two non-Noiseshaper tracks, the opening Sly & 
Robbie track featuring Beans & Hawkmans vocals (remixed by Noiseshaper, of course) 
and a remix which follows of Ari Ups Me Done from her Dread More Den Dead album, 
are fun listens also done well.
  Real to Reel is the debut release for Miracle Sounds (.com), the US extension of the 
astonishing EU (predominantly Dub) label, Echo Beach. Readers can hear excerpts from 
Noiseshaper CDs at www.noiseshaper.net. Real to Reel continues its rotation on Rice 
Radio Reggae Wednesday afternoons, 5:00 to 7:00 p.m., where we spin eclectic mixes 
that underscore the multifaceted nature of reggae. Advance requests can be emailed 
to reggae@ktru.org or anytime via e-quest at www.ktru.org.
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Artist: Fatal Flying Guilloteens 
Title: Quantum Fucking 
Label: French Kiss 
By Ian Wells
  Eleven years after starting as a one-off gag act, the Fatal 
Flying Guilloteens have been featured in Vice, Pitchfork, and 
even Spin, cementing them as the kings of Houstons under-
estimated punk demographic. Their third full-length, released 
on French Kiss (Les Savy Fav, Thunderbirds are Now!), is their 
most polished to date (perhaps cleanly recorded is a better way to say it), absent of the 
fuzz of their previous albums but still just as dangerous and raw as their infamous live 
shows. Each track is a riot, driven not so much by the drums as the screaming, grinding 
guitarsthis isnt power-chord punk; each song is all over the fretboard. The Guilloteens 
(with Something Fierce, and in the vein of Pain Teens and Sad Pygmy) are keeping gut-
ter-punk alive in this city. Highly recommended.
Artist: James Blackshaw
Title: The Cloud of Unknowing
Label: Tompkins Square
By Sam Barrett
    At a time when contemporary artists use a lot to say very 
little, James Blackshaws The Cloud of Unknowing is innitely 
refreshing: armed almost solely with a 12-string acoustic guitar, 
he crafts elegant musical landscapes that even some of the 
most ornate instrumentation couldnt hope to captureall at 
the tender age of 25. Yet the album is never intimidating or overwhelming for the casual 
listener;  it  nds  a  perfect  balance  between  experimentation  and  accessibility  that  it 
maintains throughout.
  The four major tracks on The Cloud of Unknowing share the same narrative structure. 
First, Blackshaw introduces a skillfully articulated idea, and thenthrough absolutely 
frantic  nger  pickingmutates  it  into  its  new  but  altogether  tting  conclusion.  This 
transformation  is  fascinating  to  hear;  literally  thousands  of  distinct  notes  barrage  the 
listeners  ear  as  the  track  revises  itself.  These  highly  detailed  lines  never  lose  focus, 
however; there is clear purpose to the way Blackshaw plays.
  Because the album is so sparse, the added glockenspiel and violin on Running to 
the Ghost provide unexpected counterweight to the guitars intricate melody. Yet they 
are never out of place; they merely provide emphasis for the songs relentless progres-
sion. Later, on the albums 15-plus-minute closer Stained Glass Window, Blackshaws 
picking  is  in  its  freest  and  most  contemplative  form,  meandering  until  it  nally  takes 
shape and moves resolutely toward its stunning conclusion. Just as the track seems to 
be climaxing, dissonance sets in, and the listener is brought back down from perhaps 
the records most serene moment.
  It  is  these  moments  that  stand  as  a  testament  to  how  powerful  Blackshaws  new 
album really is. The fact that it is composed on a traditionally limited medium is of no 
importancethe album is a unique and wholly engaging listening experience.
Artist: Various Artists
Title: Black Mirror: Reections in Global Musics  
1918-1955
Label: Dust to Digital
By Nick Schlossman
  This is a 24-track album of musical snapshots from over 20 
nations. Each track has been pulled from crumbling 78 RPM 
records produced between 1918 and 1955 (now an obsolete 
format, replaced by 45 and 33.3 RPM vinyl) and cleaned to a sparkle.
  Music store owner, musician, and writer Ian Nagoski takes you by the hand to visit 
some of his favorite sounds from around the world, from intense Serbian nationalist epic 
poetry to droning, otherworldly Buddhist prayer, to upbeat, pre-independence Cameroo-
nian rumba. Only a small handful of the tracks have been re-released since their original 
pressings to vinyl in the rst half of the 20th century, making for an eclectic collection 
of rarities and exotica.
  On the album you will nd one of the rst commercial recordings of gamelan music 
(while the original recording opped in the 1920s, gamelan has gone on to become a 
world music clich), as well as a very strange and wonderful portion of Chinese opera 
and a 10-year-old Scandinavian boy singing.
  The  album  does  not  have  an  organizing  idea  or  generic,  targeted  sound  like  the 
Putumayo World compilations you nd in airport gift shops and ner grocery stores. It 
is an all too brief foray into unknown world music, with Nagoski there to point out his 
favorites.
  The liner notes are invaluable and attempt to situate each song in terms of its com-
positional background, and why it was recorded. The album also provides a glance at 
the rst several decades of an infant but growing recording industry.
  Listeners will be excited by how difcult it is to pinpoint what part of the world each 
song comes from without checking the track listing, and many share a peculiarly mys-
terious, haunting quality. It is indeed a black mirror, a murky, distorted reection of a 
bygone world, the inuences behind much of the music untraceable.
  The album is conveniently available, tax exempt, for $15 from Dust to Digitals website. 
It comes highly recommended.
Artist: The 1900s
Title: Cold & Kind
Label: Parasol
By Rose Cahalan
  The 1960s might be a more tting name for this seven-
piece  Chicago  band,  because  its  utterly  infectious  debut 
Cold & Kind is seasoned with an ample dose of gentle 60s 
psych-popthink  of  a  slightly  less  corny,  more  substantial 
Fleetwood Mac with a touch of Belle & Sebastian silliness. The opening track No Delay 
builds nicely, albeit a bit predictably, from a simple piano line into a lush mix of vocals and 
strings, but the album really starts to shine with Georgia, a shufing, absurdly catchy 
little number that foregrounds The 1900s greatest strength: incredible vocal harmonies. 
The almost choral blend of Caroline Donovans reedy soprano, Jeanine OTooles bluesy 
alto, and Edward Andersons rough-around-the-edges rasp is so good that itll send a 
shiver down your spine. The rest of the album (with the exception of the random 50-
second woodwind interlude When We Lay Down) consistently delivers upbeat melodies 
that are always poppy without getting too sweet.
  Some might le this lighthearted band away under that pleasant but not terribly inter-
esting category of twee and write it off as innocuous hipster uff. But theres a subtlety 
here that would be easy to miss: the weird tension between bright, jangly music and 
darker lyrics. In the title track, which dees characterization by interweaving touches of 
country and folk with standard driving guitars, OToole reveals that she is cold and kind 
and lled with hate, but she sounds so darn happy about it. Its the same story with City 
Water, which contrasts downright angsty lyrics with lots of plucky arpeggios. Still, Im 
impressed by the way the album as a whole manages to be so extremely orchestrated 
and lush (lots of tambourine, violin, and gorgeous interplays between shifting basslines 
and vocals) without overindulging. Two Ways, a great folksy track that melds rollick-
ing fun with wistful yearning a la Iron & Wine (whom The 1900s has opened for on tour), 
exemplies this ne balance.
  Cold & Kind proves that The 1900s has two crucial ingredients for an even better 
sophomore album: a signature sound that blends 60s pop and folk with slightly bluesy 
harmonies, and an ability to craft songs that are just plain catchy. With their next effort 
theyll either further rene their sound by adding even more sonic layers, or sink into 
that dangerous territory of glossy overproduction by burying genuine emotion under a 
saccharine veneer of a bland commercialized indie sound. I can only hope they choose 
the former path. Overall, this is a nice little secret of an album, so check it out.
ALBUM REVIEWS
RICE RADIO FOLIO
10
SPRING 2008
ktru 91.7 fm
To submit music for airplay consideration:
Music Directors 
C/O KTRU
P.O. Box 1892
Houston, TX 77450
Listen to or read about KTRU at www.ktru.org. 
On air music requests: 713.348.KTRU (5878)
You can also nd email addresses for all of our directors at ktru.org.
General correspondence can be directed to ktru@ktru.org
HOW CAN I SUBMIT MUSIC?
Station Manager: Nick Schlossman
Program Director: Claire Hein
DJ Directors: Michael Weeks & Katie Mayer
Music Director: Adam Guerra
Assistant Music Directors: Diana Yen, Alyssa Ibarra & Miguel Quirch
Music Librarian: Burton DeWitt
Business Manager: Claire Hein
External Communications: Claire Taylor & Jane Bocchini
Folio: Ann Wang
Small Concerts: Rachel Orosco
Partnerships & Events: Jessica Streets
Promotions: Alice Chai
PSAs and Community: Brittany Wise
Sultan o Stick: Meta Weiss
Operations: Lacey Pyle
Socials: Nikki Metzgar
Webmaster: Alex Stoll
General Manager: Will Robedee
Chief Engineer: Bob Cham
Ofce Manager: Scottie McDonald
<Insert Name of Director/ Department/ Specialty Show>
C/O KTRU
P.O. Box 1892
Houston, TX 77450
HOW CAN I CONTACT OTHER PEOPLE?
KTRU STAFF LISTING
Editor: Ann Wang
Copy: Nick Schlossman
Layout and Design: David Wang
Contributors: Sam Barrett, Carina Baskett, Rose Cahalan, Alice Chai, 
Mark Flaum, Shawna Forney, Adam Guerra, Claire Hein, 
Lance Higdon, Alyssa Ibarra, Dennis Lee (D.L.), Scottie 
McDonald, Daniel Mee, MK Ultra, Devin Naquin, Rachel 
Orosco,  Nick  Schlossman,  Paul  Thompson,  Lindsey 
Simard, J. Van, Ian Wells, Matthew Wettergreen
KTRU SPRING 2008 FOLIO STAFF HOW CAN I CONTACT KTRU?
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KTRU carries Rice Womens
Basketball and Rice Baseball. 
Check out www.ktru.org or the 
respective Rice Owls team 
pages for broadcast dates and 
times. If a game isnt on air, its 
probably streaming online!
Womens Basketball 2008
(All Games To Be Carried Live On Air) 
1/20/08   vs UCF  2 p.m. 
1/26/08   vs Houston  2 p.m. 
2/01/08   at UAB  7 p.m. 
2/03/08   at Memphis  2 p.m. 
2/07/08   vs SMU  7 p.m. 
2/09/08   vs Tulsa  1 p.m. 
2/14/08   at Tulane  7 p.m. 
2/16/08   at UTEP  8 p.m. 
2/21/08   at SMU  7 p.m. 
2/23/08   at Tulsa  7 p.m. 
2/28/08   vs Marshall  7 p.m. 
3/01/08   vs East Carolina  2 p.m. 
3/06-3/09   Conference USA Tournament
Rice Baseball Schedule TBD: Check riceowls.com for detail
RICE RADIO FOLIO
12
SPRING 2008
KTRU STAFF/FOLIO STAFF/CONTACT KTRU
ktru 91.7 fm