The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 10, 1990 - Page 9 Windsor station starts up their own cutting edge show *, .- -,- --_ _ I fy waUWPuu w'EiCU"U"" Are you sick and tired (and tired always follows sick) of those endless repetitions of Paula Abdul and Madonna on the radio? Radio station CIMX-FM (88.7) offers a fresh alternative to monotonous, mass-appeal stations. Following its motto of "The Best Variety," CIMX provides the program "The Cutting Edge," . an honest approach to music airing every night from 9 p.m. until 3 a.m. Produced and hosted by self- dubbed "rock 'n' roll pop-tart" Greg St. James, the broadcast fea- tures alternative, state-of-the-art, progressive and modern rock - the cutting edge of music. "It's more a state of mind than any- thing," St. James said of his pro- gram. "Basically, it's all the great music that every other radio sta- tion is too damn chicken to play." While St. James plays a great deal of typical college radio fare, his station is unique because it is a commercial station that ig- nores typical rock formats. St. James, a native of Detroit, has been involved in radio since the age of 16, a proponent of al- ternative music even then. Since that time he has worked with var- ious stations including Detroit's WRIF-FM, where he was voted best nighttime disc jockey in the city and one of Detroit's top ten on-air personalities. In a typical hour of "The Cut- ting Edge" St. James may feature anything from Soul Asylum and Sonic Youth to R.E.M. or The Clash. To this pop-tart, his pro- gramming preterences are more or an outlook than anything: "Hey! This is done by and for thinking people," he said. Focusing on the contrast between mass taste and what's really happening in the program to. Other stations pro- gram to what's number one, and what is number one? Roseanne?" Instead of focusing on why certain records could be played, St. James said he looks at why CIMX should play them. As op- posed to simply playing the top- 40 hits on the charts, the host said they also look at alternative record stores, clubs and other cut- ting-edge stations as well as pub- lic opinion. St. James said the views and tastes of their public affects CIMX's policy. Unlike other ra- dio stations, "The Cutting Edge" takes requests to heart. Using computer technology, they track the requests and play them on an hourly basis. Every Sunday at 9 p.m., the station features the top request of the week. Although focusing on alterna- tive music, St. James admits they play popular artists as well. Suzanne Vega and INXS often appear on the playlist. "I am not here to educate, but to entertain," he said. "We don't necessarily play really obscure music, but if you want to play something, play it." This carefree, "no-bullshit" approach to radio is meant to at- tract intelligent listeners from the Windsor and Detroit area as well as Ann Arbor, Lansing and Toledo. Along with eight or nine other cutting edge stations throughout the country, St. James said, "We've realized that the eighties actually happened." Records Continued from page 8 meconium/ lungs full of meconium/ heart full of meconium/ meconium/ meconium" on the title track to their latest LP. Do you know what the word meconium means? Webster's NewWorld Dictionary defines it as "the greenish fecal matter in a fetus, forming the first bowel movement of a newborn infant." Gross. They even chant it. But it's a profound image and funny in its own twisted way. And more intriguing than saying "Mouthwash of shit." James are vegans. Morrissey likes them. The Inspiral Carpets do the backing vocals on "Gold Mother." They're from Manchester. Their pop defines textured pop for the intelligentsia and pseudo- thoughtful. "Ya, I'm into James. They know what's what in the world." Though, I suppose it's not their fault that those who long to be weighty reflectors on the state of the world like them. They are still bril- liant. Who else would have the gall to ask "How do you sail the ship from the bottle?" ("Gold Mother") and then answer it in complex metaphor that the average music fan would have to ponder for days. They have timely, right-on-the- nose social commentary in the song "God only Knows." The beginning starts with a sample of Jimmy Swaggart preaching about music and the devil. Then they state "Swaggart has been caught with his trousers round his knees/ after damning me and you to hell for eternity/ sex and power and money is the prayer of these priests/ they bribe their way past heaven's gates and steal a set of keys." The urgent beat and the un- forgettable hook, along with more chanting to add a different sound in tandem with these images, demon- strates James' musical genius. The God Swaggart believes in is not St. James Members of James threaten to punch you out and make you eat meconium if you don't think once or twice. world, the program offers some- thing "a little closer to the bone," St. James said. Although it is a commercial station, CIMX has been called "border radio," perched on the line between two radio worlds: college and commercial. However, the station is more accessible than college radio and is not block- oriented or directed toward mass tastes. "We're not exactly Arme- nian Poetry Hour, but we're dif- ferent," St. James explained. Unlike most radio stations, which view their audience as a big, stupid beast, St. James said, "We see our listeners as at least as smart as us. You get who you something James likes: "As self- righteous and bigoted as those who created him/ a cruel desert God with absolutely no sense of humor." They aren't always cold, serious types. They claim "After thirty years I've become my fears/I've become the man I've always hated" and "And I don't believe you're all I'll ever need" ("Come Home") so you know they have feelings too. Songs like "Come Home" and "How Was It For You" are just plain clever, hummable and latch-that-catch to be unforgettable pop. The pacing of this album creates texture; the slow movements like "Walking the Ghost" drag a little, but make the album sound varied and keep the ear piqued. They also use fiddles, whistling, chanting, synth noises and other sounds to add to the texture.Gold Mother is also a bit on the long side, one of the evils of the CDs new length ability. But it all doesn't matter, as James explains how to fascinate the pop world in a keen, shrewd, quick-witted fashion. Annette Petrusso ., _ _ a a 1 - U Save the LP' [ .Daily arts HE DOESN'T WRITE FOR ARTS. You can. Call 763-0379. 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