Thứ Sáu, 7 tháng 9, 2012

alternative rock revives WRXP


In NYC radio ratings, alternative rock revives WRXP 


 Green Day (with Billie Joe Armstrong, above) is prominent on the playlist of WRXP’s new format.
Rock music brought WRXP back to life in the August Arbitron radio ratings released Tuesday, while WBLS continued its recent surge toward the top.
WRXP (101.9 FM) was resurrected this summer from the ashes of WEMP, an ill-fated attempt to launch an all-news station on FM.
WRXP had been an alternative rock station before it switched to WEMP last year and now it has switched back, playing male-targeted rock like Foo Fighters, Green Day, Weezer, Foster the People and Silverchair.
Its share of the audience, which had hovered around 0.6% as WEMP, almost tripled in August to 1.7%.
Among 18- to 34-year-olds, WRXP is close to the top 10 with 3% of the audience, even though at this point it’s using an automated format programmed in Chicago.
WRXP’s current ratings are a bit below the ratings it drew in its first go-round as an alternative rock station, when it had a full deejay staff.
The return of WRXP was presumably responsible for a drop in the ratings at classic rock WAXQ, which fell from 4.5% of the audience to 3.8%.
At the same time, all-news WINS (1010 AM) gained almost the exact share of the audience that WEMP had been drawing.
WBLS (107.5 FM), the survivor of a quasi-merger with its longtime rival WRKS earlier this year, has leapt to second place both in the overall ratings and among advertiser-coveted 25- to 54-year-olds.
It’s No. 1 among men 25-54, one of the hardest groups for advertisers to reach.
Elsewhere in the ratings, WLTW (106.7 FM) continued to rule, finishing first both overall and among 25-54s. WCBS-FM (101.1 FM) also stayed strong, as did WHTZ (100.3 FM). WABC (770 AM) has yet to see a big election bump.
Here are the top 15 overall. The number in parentheses is the percentage of total audience listening to that station in an average quarter hour.



Thứ Ba, 14 tháng 8, 2012

Foster The People’s New Record Influenced By EDM Side Project

Foster The People’s New Record Influenced By EDM Side Project

There’s already been one rock band this year that’s taken a radical departure from their established sound, with Muse releasing their Skrillex-inspired single Unsustainable. Now beloved indie act Foster the People are also looking to fuse together electronic sounds with their more traditional instrumentation.
However, in the case of Foster the People it’s not so much an outside influence as it is the musical ideas that have been realised by Mark Foster and Isom Innis in their EDM side project Smims & Belle. With the duo recently making their festival debut at Hard Summer in Los Angeles, Foster caught up with Rolling Stone to explain how Smims & Belle effects Foster the People.
“[Innis] makes stuff a lot more in the electronic realm,” Foster explained to Rolling Stone, “He’ll build foundational stuff for Smims and Belle and we’ll come together while I’m doing foundational stuff for Foster the People.”
“It’s all in there. We make a really heavily electronic hip hop track and explore that world, [and] it’s floating around in my brain the next time I write a Foster track. One thing about Foster the People is that it’s taking pieces of a lot of different genres of music and kind of melding them together.”
In June Foster said the new Foster the People record will also be influenced by The Kinks and The Clash. As Foster more recently explained to Rolling Stone, the amalgamation of various genres has always been his goal with FTP.
“In the first record, I was looking at my vision for the project through a piece of opaque glass. This next record’s going to be more evolved; it’s going to be a clearer picture of what I’ve had in my head when it comes to that vision. Working on this project and getting deeper into electronic music is gonna help bring a deeper color in the next Foster record,” Foster revealed.

 

Thứ Tư, 4 tháng 7, 2012

Mark Foster of Foster the People

Interview with Mark Foster of Foster the People — in Utah July 5 


If Mark Foster has time, there’s something he would like to do on the Fourth of July.

The frontman of Grammy-nominated indie-pop group Foster the People would love to drive to Provo to check out the Beach Boys at the Stadium of Fire.

"They were one of my favorite groups when I was 6," Foster said in a phone interview. "My first show when I was 7 was the Beach Boys at the Blossom [Music Center], David Cassidy opened the show, [and] I started crying."

Twenty years later, Foster the People headlined the same Blossom Music Center in Ohio after an incredible 2011, when the trio’s debut single "Pumped Up Kicks" unexpectedly lit up the charts all summer.

The song became the most popular song about school violence since Pearl Jam’s "Jeremy." With distorted vocals during the verses and a bouncy, catchy chorus you couldn’t shake from your head, the unlikely hit was something hipsters and tweens could agree on.

The song changed the trio’s lives in an instant, with a perfect example being its venues in Utah. In early 2011, the band performed at tiny Kilby Court. Several months later, it headlined the larger Urban Lounge. Now, the band will headline the much larger Saltair.

Thứ Bảy, 23 tháng 6, 2012

Foster the People

Single pumps up Foster the People

The next time Mark Foster has a chance to skip out of his work writing songs to go to the beach, don't be surprised if he decides to stay inside and write.
Another time he chose work over play, things worked out pretty well for Foster and his band, Foster the People.
"I really didn't have anything to do that day," Foster recalled in an early June phone interview. "I was standing there in the studio, and this thought came in my mind like, 'I'm going to write a song,' which I did all the time. I just kind of built a song from the ground up …and then I was like, 'I don't feel like writing. I don't want to write a song.' I was a block away from the beach, and it was a beautiful day. I kind of just wanted to just be lazy and go hang out at the beach or whatever. But I just forced myself to write a song. I was like, 'Nope, I want to write a song.' By that time the next day, the song was finished."
It wasn't just any song he finished. It was "Pumped Up Kicks," the multiformat hit song that propelled Foster the People's debut CD, "Torches," toward platinum-selling success and a level of popularity that is allowing the group this summer to headline outdoor amphitheaters.
Beyond its success, Foster feels that he learned an important songwriting lesson from "Pumped Up Kicks."
"I've heard a lot of other artists talk about this as well, like, 'I'm not inspired right now. I've got writer's block. I'm just not really feeling anything,'" Foster said. "And I've felt that way, too, just not being inspired and wanting to wait for inspiration to come before I wrote. But I wasn't inspired when I wrote 'Pumped Up Kicks,' and that's what came out. So … it just solidified the notion that perspiration is more powerful than inspiration."
Foster knows a thing or two about working to carve out a path in music. In fact, it took him some seven years before he formed Foster the People with drummer Mark Pontius (bassist Cubbie Fink completed the lineup later) and wrote "Pumped Up Kicks" over the space of that single day.
After finishing "Pumped Up Kicks," Foster posted the song as a free download, and it went viral. Around the same time, Foster the People landed a slot at the South By Southwest Music Festival in Austin in March 2010.
Soon the buzz was on. By summer of 2010, Foster the People had signed to Startime International, part of the Columbia Records group of labels.
The group debuted with a self-titled EP featuring "Pumped Up Kicks" in January 2011. This allowed the song to get early radio play and placement on several high-profile television shows.
By the time "Torches" arrived in May, "Pumped Up Kicks" had already cracked Billboard magazine's Hot 100 singles chart and paved the way for "Torches" to debut at No. 8 on Billboard's album chart. By July, "Pumped Up Kicks" was crossing over to Adult Top 40 and Mainstream Top 40 and on its way to No. 3 on the Hot 100 chart.
The song's popularity is easy to understand. Fueled by a thumping beat, a hooky bass line and a sing-along-worthy chorus, it's an irresistible slice of synthy dance pop. The rest of "Torches" is solid as well, as on songs like "Call It What You Want," "Don't Stop (Color On The Walls) and "Warrant," Foster the People fashion a sound that deftly blends rock, synthy pop and dance-inducing rhythms.
The song's success, though, also created a challenge -- to establish Foster the People as more than a one-hit wonder.
"I really wanted to make sure that people knew we were more than 'Pumped Up Kicks' and that it wasn't a fluke," Foster said.
The group got the follow-up hit it wanted with "Don't Stop (Color On the Walls)," which went top 10 on several rock charts. And now the latest single, "Houdini," has cracked the top 40 on the latest Billboard's Alternative Songs chart.
The summer tour should help the band maintain its momentum heading into work this fall on its second album. The tour will be Foster the People's biggest production to date.
"For this tour, we wanted to bring the 'Torches' artwork to life, bring the characters to life and kind of bring that whole world, make that whole world real," Foster said. "So we've got a fair amount of video, animation in the same style of that. We've got a backdrop that's kind of a town in the same art as the characters, basically like where the characters live, behind us. Then there are inflatables that blow up throughout the show that are different characters from the album art.
"I've not seen anything like it before," he said. "And then there are bubbles and confetti and all that stuff, too, which never really gets old."