Word: radio
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...It’s been more than a century since radio’s rise to public prominence, and more than twenty years after the supposed death of the radio star. Despite the greatly exaggerated reports of radio’s demise (what happened to that video star, after all?), it continues to make headlines and generate a great deal of excitement for its faithful listeners and detractors alike...
...positive forces that have kept radio going for all this time show no sign of stopping. That is why it?...
...Staff writer Kimberly E. Gittleson and contributing writer Evan L. Hanlon are the president and rock director of WHRB, Harvard’s student-run radio station. Gittleson can be reached at gittles@fas.harvard.edu...
...been so ignorant of a whole world of dance music. But I wasn’t all that late to the game. It was only in 2004 that the genre, born as “underground” music in the streets of San Juan, scored its first mainstream radio hit in the States: Daddy Yankee’s “Gasolina.” The track was produced by Luny Tunes, two beatmakers who honed their hit-making skills while working in Harvard dining halls, before leaving for Puerto Rico in 2001. As Luny and Tunes (Francisco Salda?...
...pretty much formed a band right there, coming out of Sever Hall.”The band Rudder and Rice formed, however, was not the one which would later lead them to indie glory and critical renown. Both were members of Record Hospital, the underground rock department of Harvard radio station WHRB, and their first band accordingly had a rougher edge. “We were called the Pissed Officers,” Rudder explains. “We were sort of punk and we played around campus.”It wasn’t until after graduation that...