A history of America’s left-of-the-dial college radio stations.
If you know the Replacements’ paean, you’ll know that college radio gave many alternative acts their start. History professor Jewell, a veteran DJ with a penchant for the “indie-rock scene” of her college years, notes that by the 1980s, the network of college-affiliated, mostly student-run radio stations numbered about 1,200. Soon after, as an entity, it “had earned a national identity that evoked generational dissatisfaction with pop culture even as it remained deeply conversant with it.” Some college administrators didn’t quite know what to do with the broadcasters and their “none of the hits, all the time” ethos, while others smelled money in the much-coveted FM bands that the stations controlled. (So it is, Jewell observes, that most college stations now stream over the internet, their FM airwaves having been sold off long ago.) The author, who considers 1978 to be the ground-zero year when “college radio” emerged as a genre, tells some wonderfully obscure tales—such as UCLA’s attempt to buy then-faltering KROQ, which turned around and presented playlists that were heavily influenced by what was happening on college radio, thus becoming a station without pedigree until emerging as “a launchpad to commercial success for underground artists in the 1980s.” Another anecdote from Jewell’s deeply researched files concerns Sean Hannity, who was noxious even back when he was a student DJ on UC Santa Barbara’s station—and who, fired for his calumnies, recruited the ACLU to defend him, an affiliation he probably wouldn’t want to admit today. College radio continues to be “a site of struggle over the sound of America,” Jewell writes, even if it may be a shadow of its golden-age self.
A pleasure for fans of alt-rock and its dissemination in the face of corporate and academic resistance.