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Instrumental Invasion, 10/25/23 October 26, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Baseball, History, Internet, Japanese, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Livestream, Media, Music, Personal, Photography, Pop, Radio, smooth jazz, Sports, Travel, Video.
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The October 25 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP marked the return of original shows after a nine-week hiatus. It was to be seven weeks, but reruns were delayed while the WCWP transmitter was moved. The move was part of ongoing renovations to the Abrams Communications Center.

Before I tell you “how I spent my summer vacation,” let’s get the scoped aircheck out of the way:

There were crossfades in automation between elements, which meant the beginnings and ends of each segment were inaudible. To remedy this, I added one second of silence at the beginnings and ends of next week’s segments before submitting the files to station manager Pete Bellotti. We’ll see if that solves the issue.

I was unable to resume radio show production until after finishing work on the Long Island Retro Gaming Expo photos and blog posts (part one, part two, part three).

I filled out my Casiopea and T-Square collections in July, I expanded my McCoy Tyner collection in September, and new smooth jazz CD preorders (plus one big band release) periodically arrived at my doorstep. Not having an outlet for those new releases required me to make up for lost time in this show’s playlist and the three that followed. I worked on all of them together, one at a time.

The show 177 playlist was created September 5 and 6, and annotated with the next three playlists between the 13th and 16th. The talk break script was drafted on September 19. The first four segments were recorded on the 22nd and the last two on the 23rd. No pickups were necessary during a quality control session on the 30th.

In all, it took me eight days to principally record shows 177 to 180, plus one day of checking for mistakes and mixing down segments. I continued my rerun-proof practice of leaving out dated references and will do so for as long as I’m on the air.

The Bones” was one song I neglected to play from David Benoit‘s A Midnight Rendezvous last year, but I was inspired to end this show with his cover after he used it in a story post to his Instagram account. I made two “Dem Bones” references while talking it up and made sure to end with “‘The Bones.’ The bye!” The “ya see” ad-libs were icing on the cake.

I recycled the “I’ll Take Romance” tidbits from when I played Beegie Adair‘s by-the-books version nearly one year ago (November 2, 2022). An obsession with McCoy Tyner’s solos on his Blue Bossa arrangement led me to include it here. “Point of Departure” by Nelson Rangell was originally played on September 16, 2020.

The Washington Post,” a John Philip Sousa march performed by the Band of the Grenadier Guards, was the middle song of the first segment due to a timing error I initially missed. While that error was caught before recording, the fourth segment error wasn’t. Like in show 176, however, it worked out for the best because I was building up a surplus.

Himiko Kikuchi‘s Flying Beagle was an additional music acquisition this summer, so expect to hear more from that eventually. “Fluffy” was a nice start, and good opportunity to share some of my Japanese learning. I originally learned of “fuwa fuwa” and other onomatopoeia from this Mochi sensei video. On the subject of Japanese teachers/Twitch streamers, I consider Misa an intermediate gamer, but not a pro. That doesn’t ruin her fun, nor the fun of subscribers like me. I began treating her ever-growing Dark Souls: Remastered death count (“YOU DIED”) like career home runs, syncing them to milestone home run calls when milestones arose. Her 400th is one example:

Sourced from Harry Kalas‘s call of Jim Thome‘s 400th career home run

Misa racked up over 200 more deaths since that video, but 80 minutes before air, she finally defeated Ornstein and Smough! I set that triumphant moment to Russ Hodges‘ call of the Shot Heard ‘Round the World, via a retrospective on The Best Damn Sports Show Period. This time, I left in Misa’s audio. Enjoy!

Back at it next week. I’ll leave you with Anders Enger Jensen‘s “Borderline” video:

2023 Long Island Retro Gaming Expo recap: introduction, guests, panels September 1, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Audio, Aviation, Books, Computer, Education, Game Shows, History, Internet, Media, Personal, Photography, Podcast, Radio, Technology, Travel, TV, Video, Video Games.
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Feel free to skip ahead to the second post (touring the expo) or third post (conclusion and pickups).

Introduction

The weekend of August 12 and 13 marked my fifth year at Long Island Retro Gaming Expo, held in the Cradle of Aviation Museum, situated along Museum Row in East Garden City. This is LI Retro’s second year as a three-day event, running from 4PM Friday through 5PM Sunday. Again, I opted to skip Friday and just go Saturday and Sunday. I had to last year since I used my ticket for the postponed 2020 expo, but I saved money this year by purchasing a three-day ticket. I would have gone Friday if I lived within walking distance or had a car of my own.

When LI Retro’s schedule was published a few weeks before the event, I planned my days around panels, three per day. I also hoped to catch musical performances, but time would not allow that. I did not allow myself to buy games from vendors until after the last panel on Sunday.

I brought my Canon EOS R7 (and compatible speedlite, which didn’t cooperate) along with a TASCAM DR-05 audio recorder. While panels would be posted online, I wanted personal recordings to hold me over in the meantime. As of this writing, I have yet to listen, let alone edit out the beginnings and ends.

I hoped not to go overboard with photography, which means I did. A whopping 831 photos (466 Saturday, 366 Sunday) were taken with the R7 at LI Retro, plus four on my iPhone 13 Pro. I spent a week and a half editing them all, spreading out 563 of them in three blog posts. (I couldn’t possibly cram them all in one.)

This first post contains the introduction you’re reading now, photos with guests, photos from the six panels I saw, and relevant links and media embeds.

We start with an establishing exterior shot taken Sunday morning:

Guest table photos

It was fun catching up with guests and staff that I’ve seen before, and meeting new guests for the first time.

Leonard Herman (right) and Mark W. Baer (left), middle child of videogame pioneer Ralph H. Baer:

Mark gifted me with copies of his father Ralph’s patent and of the Magnavox Odyssey licensing agreement between Magnavox, Atari and Sanders Associates. From Leonard, I bought his book ABC to the VCS: A Director of Software for the Atari 2600 and Bill Kunkel‘s Confessions of the Game Doctor. Each book was published by Leonard’s Rolenta Press company.

Leonard and Mark with Patrick Wong:

Me and Jeff:

I didn’t compete with him on the Brown Box prototype this year.

LI Retro staff member Ryan Shapiro posed with Mark Baer prior to Sunday’s panel:

Me and John Riggs:

I bought another Genesis ROM hack cartridge from John’s table this year, but not one he made.

Adam Koralik:

Pat Contri (a.k.a. Pat the NES Punk) and Ian Ferguson:

I congratulated Pat for 15 years on YouTube, and he and Ian on a decade of the CU Podcast. We talked about cameras, the upcoming N64 entry in Pat’s Ultimate Nintendo book series, and my merch purchases. (I also apologized for how my podcast panel question trailed off at the end. [SPOILER])

Sunday morning, Pat was interviewed by Margaret Sykes of WRHU, radio station for nearby Hofstra University:

She then spoke to Leonard and Mark:

Adam’s table had prototype consoles and a signed copy of Shenmue II:

Frank Cifaldi spoke to Lenny and Mark before his panel, my first of the weekend:

John Riggs talking to attendees:

John’s LI Retro vlog:

Travis McGeehan (TIKevin83) and the TASBot:

On to panel photos and relevant links, including video and/or audio.

Saturday Panel 1, 11AM-12PM:
Frank Cifaldi
Adventures in Saving Video Game History

After the panel, I ended up part of a conversation with Frank and fellow archivist Jason Scott. (I had no idea I was in the presence of greatness until a Google search Sunday morning.)

A selfie with Jason (sans top hat) and Frank:

I resorted to AI enhancing to compensate for lens blur.

Saturday Panel 2, 2PM-3PM
Pat Contri and Ian Ferguson
CU Podcast Special 2

Podcast audio out of the way, including my question:

The not-rare Black Tiger cabinet (in reference to this):

And the podcast videos:

While waiting to ask a question, I noticed my friend Daniel Greenberg of Winterion Game Studios in the audience with his wife Alex. I whispered hello and we spoke more after the panel. It turns out Daniel and Alex had visited LIU Post earlier in the day. As you’ll see in the photo Alex took, I was wearing a Post polo on Saturday:

Saturday Panel 3, 3:30-4:30 PM:
G Gracin
Growing Up Genesis with G to the Next Level (streamed live on Twitch)

Watch the Twitch stream VOD here.

G and me:

I tried to go to sleep early Saturday night, but I was wired from the long and exciting day I had. I figure I got four hours of sleep before being jolted awake by a severe thunderstorm just before 3AM. The peak came at 3:13 with two close (and loud) lightning strikes. Thankfully, conditions mellowed after that, though sleep was impossible. I got some editing done and prepped for a return to Cradle of Aviation at 10AM. Somehow, Lenny, Mark, Patrick, Pat, and my parents all slept through the storm.

Sunday morning was when Margaret Sykes conducted her interviews, and where I spoke to her about WRHU general manager John Mullen’s recent induction to the WCWP Hall of Fame.

Sunday Panel 1, 11AM-12PM:
Adam Koralik, Evil Rob Thanos, Sunshine (from Adam’s Discord)
Talking Console Prototypes: Sega Pluto (and hard drives), Atari Jaguar “Hot Rod” Dental Unit, Sony PlayStation Debugging Station, Nintendo GameCube NR Reader

Relevant videos:

Finally, panel photos:

While working on this post, I joined Adam’s aforementioned Discord. I was welcomed with open arms and given the nickname Mike Camera. I like it!

It’s where I found Squishchin’s LI Retro vlog:

10/11 UPDATE: Watch Adam’s travelogue on his second channel, Flying & Eating with Adam Koralik:

Look for me at the 22:43 mark.

Sunday Panel 2, 12:30 PM-1:30 PM:
Frank Cifaldi and Rachel Simone Weil
Unraveling Nintendo’s Most Elusive Lost Hardware: The Nintendo Knitting Machine

Sunday Panel 3, 2PM-3PM:
Leonard Herman and Mark W. Baer
The Life, Time and Influence of Ralph H. Baer, The Father of Videogames

As noted in last year’s recap, Lenny grew to be like a surrogate son to Ralph. You can see the brotherly love between Lenny and Mark in many of the photos below.

This concludes post one. Click here for post two or here for post three.

Instrumental Invasion, 8/16/23 August 17, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Internet, Jazz, Media, Music, Personal, Radio.
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The August 16 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was my last show before going on hiatus. It was recorded from July 12 to 14: the first hour on the 12th, the first segment of hour 2 on the 13th, and the last two (and a pickup) on the 14th.

An additional pickup was recorded on the 23rd. I was dissatisfied with my “to South Central while drinking your juice in the hood” add-on to the long title of The Jazz Crusaders album Old Socks, New Shoes…New Socks, Old Shoes.

The playlist was created on June 19, annotated over several unknown days after that, and scripted on June 30, July 1, and before recording on July 12.

This was yet another show where I built up a time surplus from short segments. It was as high as 47 seconds, down to 40 with two segments to go. So, I chose to record the last segment first and see what was left. There were 32 seconds left, but a timing error in segment five worked in my favor and allowed me to break even.

Click here to download the scoped aircheck or listen below:

Listen for me at least once on Homecoming Weekend, which starts October 6. October 11 is the date of my next new Wednesday night show. Until then, thank you for your support over 176 out of 177 weeks.

8/28 UPDATE: I will still return October 11, but Homecoming Weekend has been postponed until renovation of the Abrams Communications Center is complete.

9/14 UPDATE: The return date has been pushed back to October 25. WCWP and The Wave were off the air from August 30 to September 8 while the transmitter was moved, and I allowed station manager Pete Bellotti to delay my reruns two weeks.

Instrumental Invasion, 8/9/23: Show 175! Same Name Song Trios August 10, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Comedy, Film, Internet, Jazz, Media, Music, Personal, Radio.
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The August 9 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was the 175th Wednesday night show. It was recorded from July 4 to 6.

The playlist was created on June 6, before the prior two shows. Again, I lost track of when I made annotations, but I drafted the talk break script on June 29.

The theme, same name song trios, was a step up from song pairs in show 150, a reflection of my current three-song set format.

Let’s get the scoped aircheck out of the way now:

I recorded one segment ahead of random daytime fireworks on the 4th of July. At the office on the 5th, I recorded top-of-segment talk breaks for all but the top of hour 2. That was followed by the second talk breaks for the other two hour 1 segments as I mixed them. From there, I opted to pump out the remaining talk breaks before leaving for home. Naturally, I struggled and drove myself mad, but I completed them. I didn’t think I’d have any trouble editing those talk breaks and mixing them into segments, which means I did have trouble.

While I made up a 66-second surplus from the first segment, the first two segments of hour 2 left me with 76 seconds! I only made up three in the last segment. Since this was a themed show, I couldn’t throw in a short song to make up the time. So, I had to painstakingly re-record talk breaks in all six segments at a slower pace. I padded transitions between three songs further by adding bumpers. Mind you, any talk breaks with 175th show references required a pass for the evergreen version (scheduled to air September 27). (10/12 UPDATE: It was delayed to October 11.) I had to have both versions in a segment’s multitrack session so I could save the milestone mix, then swap out and save the evergreen mix. Three hours and a headache later, I succeeded in breaking even at 1:49:00. It cost me my morning exercise routine, but I gained a Young Frankenstein reference when talking about Tom Scott following his father Nathan‘s compositional “footsteps, footsteps.”

Retreads:

One more show and my hiatus begins. It couldn’t come at a better time. (That’s how I felt on July 6.)

10/12 UPDATE: Here are the evergreen talk break variations heard last night:

Instrumental Invasion, 8/2/23 August 3, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, City Pop, Internet, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Media, Music, Personal, Radio.
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The August 2 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was recorded one hour per day on June 28 and July 3. The gap between sessions came because my voice sounded nasally again as COVID continued to linger. I felt my voice was close enough to normal on July 3.

The playlist was created between June 6 and 11, same as the one for last week. Annotations followed in a period I don’t remember, but the talk break script was drafted on June 24. As you can see, I had to add a song – “Memorex Reprise” by The Jeff Lorber Fusion – to make up a 45-second surplus after the final talk break of the show. The surplus had been a whopping 116 seconds after four segments.

The following songs were played a second time:

Click here to download the scoped aircheck or listen below:

I realized you can right-click the audio player to save, but why break the “click here … or listen below” habit now?

Next week is show 175, with alternate talk breaks recorded for evergreen reruns.

Instrumental Invasion, 7/26/23 July 27, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, City Pop, Internet, Jazz, Media, Music, Personal, Radio.
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Let’s get the hard part out of the way first before all the stuff written in advance. Automation had difficulties throughout the day. I did not know this until turning on my reference monitors at 9:00 and hearing nothing. I contacted WCWP station manager Pete Bellotti and he told me just what I laid out in this paragraph’s second sentence. The good news is my show was joined in progress once automation was reestablished at 9:10 (after hearing random vocal rock songs for what felt like an eternity). The bad news is the show was joined only eight seconds in. Thus, it was the fifth time in the show’s Wednesday night history, and first time since November 4, 2021, where a show got cut off at 11:00. Five minutes and 19 seconds went unaired and will not be heard until the rerun, whatever date that ends up being. (9/14 UPDATE: It will rerun on September 27.) At least my last talk break aired in its entirety. I tip my hat to Pete for doing what he could to keep WCWP running.

Here is the joining in progress:

“Mona Lisa-” “-is Instrumental Invasion with Mike Chimeri…”

And the cutoff:

Now, the alternate reality where things ran smoothly:

The July 26 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was recorded one hour per day on June 26 and 27 with pickups done on the 27th and 29th. I was getting over COVID at the time and the congestion returned to affect my voice after working on this show. You can hear it in the June 29 pickups.

The playlist was created between June 6 and 11, with annotations coming on the 13th and 15th. The talk break script was drafted June 16 and 19. That script allowed this show to air as an evergreen during an impending hiatus.

Two songs made their second appearance:

Click here to download the scoped aircheck or listen below:

And click here for the backstory on “Ue o Muite Arukō,” a.k.a. [that other title].

Instrumental Invasion, 7/19/23 July 20, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Bluegrass, Country, Internet, Jazz, Media, Music, Personal, Radio, Video.
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The July 19 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was recorded one hour per day on May 31 and June 5. I was hoping to get the second hour finished before the WCWP Hall of Fame Ceremony on June 3 (recap here). Unfortunately, I had a crisis of confidence on June 2, the Friday before, and was overwhelmed by the impending workload. So, I wasn’t in any condition to record that day, and didn’t until June 5, the Monday after. Pickups were also recorded to make up time left over. An additional pickup was done on June 25 (in my COVID-compromised voice) to remove a dated reference.

Like last week, the playlist was created from May 14 to 16. Annotations came on May 22 and 30. The script for the first talk break was written May 30 with the rest of hour 1 written on the 31st and hour 2 on June 1.

It was also the second week in a row with a song originally played last November 16: “Night in the Algarve” by Nils.

My tease for “Foggy Morning Breaking,” Alison Brown‘s banjo duet with Steve Martin, ended with the line “don’t miss this one.” Bill O’Reilly sometimes said that going into commercial breaks on The O’Reilly Factor, following that up with “right back with it.” I’m not ashamed to admit I used to regularly follow politics and watch cable news. I haven’t done that in years. Nowadays, the less I know, the better.

While working on this week’s show, I had no idea how much hype “Foggy Morning Breaking” was getting. There’s even a music video!

And hours before air, the song was nominated for instrumental recording of the year at the IBMA Bluegrass Music Awards! The award ceremony will be held September 28.

Click here to download this week’s scoped aircheck or listen below:

Instrumental Invasion, 7/12/23 July 13, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, City Pop, Internet, Japanese, Jazz, Language, Media, Music, Personal, Radio, Video.
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The July 12 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was recorded on Memorial Day, May 29.

The playlist was created between May 14 and 16. Annotations came on May 22, 26, and 27. (The gap included production on last week’s show.) The talk break script was drafted on the 27th and 28th.

“Forecast” by Jazz Funk Soul was originally played on November 16, 2022.

Since the last song of the week was the Louis Hayes version of “Ugetsu,” I signed off with an homage to Japanese Ammo with Misa. Misa sensei ends her videos by saying, “jaa ma ta ne, bye-bye.” (I left off the “jaa” part.) Here is her latest video:

Click here to download this week’s scoped aircheck or listen below:

Instrumental Invasion, 7/5/23 July 6, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, City Pop, Internet, Jazz, Media, Music, Personal, Radio, Video, World Music.
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The July 5 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was principally recorded on May 24 with evergreen pickups recorded on June 25, denoted by my COVID-compromised voice.

The playlist was created on May 14 and 15, alongside the ones for July 12 and 19. It was annotated with those on May 21 and 22 with the talk break script drafted on the 23rd and before recording on the 24th.

I anticipated going over in the last segment, so I made sure to build a significant surplus before then. The surplus ended up at 57 seconds, which wasn’t enough until I swapped out long liners for short ones.

Thanks to Mike Riccio for providing his year jingle compilation so I could play the 1979 one before “1979” by Roberto Restuccia:

In the House” by Kim Waters was originally played on August 4, 2021. It was included this week with two other songs performed in April at Smooth Jazz for Scholars. Kim and Paul Taylor headlined the second night while Marion Meadows was part of the first night.

The GRP All-Star Big Band recording session was filmed for later video release, and someone posted the “I Remember Clifford” portion to YouTube:

Now, I know what a threnody is.

Click here to download the scoped aircheck or listen below:

Instrumental Invasion, 6/28/23 June 29, 2023

Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, City Pop, Internet, Jazz, Media, Music, Personal, Radio.
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The June 28 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was recorded entirely on May 17, following the Smooth Jazz for Scholars hiatus (first night recap, second night recap).

The playlist was created on April 15 and 16 and annotated between the 21st and 26th. The talk break script wasn’t drafted until May 16 and 17, with the last talk break scripted between recording sessions.

My talk breaks were short enough to build a 49-second surplus, which I made up by redoing the top of hour 2 at a slower pace and excerpting the end of Jay Rowe‘s keyboard solo on “Waterfall” from SJFS night 2. Good thing I played “You Did It Again,” a song inspired by “Waterfall.” Watch the full SJFS performance here:

This was the second week in a row with two T-Square and Casiopea songs.

There were references to Back to the Future, Ghostbusters, and Pinky and the Brain.

Click here to download this week’s aircheck MP3 or listen below: