Instrumental Invasion, 9/20/24, 2PM (Homecoming Weekend) (Live!) October 4, 2024
Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Internet, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Livestream, Media, Music, Personal, Photography, Radio, smooth jazz, Travel, Video.add a comment

Other posts: 9/21 12AM prerecorded show recap, comprehensive Homecoming Weekend recap
The live edition of Instrumental Invasion for WCWP‘s alumni-run Homecoming Weekend programming block aired at 2PM Friday, between Art Beltrone’s interview show and Strictly Jazz, WCWP’s longest-running program, dating back to the pre-FM carrier-current days when it was hosted by John March. The hosts of Strictly Jazz that followed me were Hank Neimark (“NEE-mark”), John LiBretto, and Jon Korkes (“CORE-kiss”) (via Zoom). You’ll see Hank and engineer Jeff Kroll at the end of the video below.
Before I get into how this Instrumental Invasion show was made and share photos taken during the show, let’s get the scoped aircheck out of the way…
…along with the aforementioned video.
The playlist for the live Instrumental Invasion was created July 24, long before a rough schedule was announced by Jeff and Pat Kroll, the Homecoming Weekend coordinators. I assumed I would be hosting one live show – intended for music from new releases – and one prerecord – the 60-year musical journey. So, I figured I’d get the presumed prerecord playlist out of the way and would work on the presumed live show playlist as the weekend approached.
The initial schedule was announced on August 12. I’d be live at 2PM, but didn’t see my name in an overnight slot. In a first for Homecoming Weekend, I made the 60-year musical journey the playlist for the live show, tweaking it slightly. I tweaked further on August 23. There would still be one song each between 1964 and ’89, and two songs for 1994 to 2004, but I scrapped the old plan of three songs each from 2009, ’14, and ’19. The 2024 song to close the remained, preceded by a set of three more songs from this year. 2009, ’14, and ’19 were winnowed down to pairs.
Annotations began August 23 after printing out the playlist, continuing on the 25th, 28th, and September 16. As in 2022, I didn’t make a script. I read the annotations, adding a Dancing with the Stars reference during the set with “Tropical Rain” by Jessy J (in that show’s Ray Chew Live house band). Otherwise, I spoke off the cuff. (It’s a shame that 1982 Weather Report video was pulled from YouTube after I watched it.)
I was the first show of the weekend to air from studio 2 at the renovated Abrams Communications Center. Here are photos I took during the first set of hour 2:
As “Beat Street” by David Benoit and Spice Fusion Big Band played, I had Jeff Kroll take a photo of me at the controls, just as he would be moments later.

Hank Neimark is seen phoning Jon Korkes to set him up on Zoom.
My only regret about the show is that my remix of the WCWP Oldtimers Weekend liner was not in Wavecart. The original was in there and played “Machine Gun” by The Commodores at a slower speed. This is “Machine Gun” (excerpted portion at 1:32):
And this is my remixed liner:
(The Homecoming Weekend moniker was adopted once the programming block coincided with then-C.W. Post‘s Homecoming.)
That aside, dragging and dropping liners in was easy, and I enjoyed using the “WCWP Remembers [year]” liners.
Just when I thought this would be the only show I’d have on Homecoming Weekend, Jeff Kroll called me September 3 to say he needed a three-hour prerecord to fill time early Saturday or Sunday morning. You can read about that show here.
SJFS 2024 Night 2 recap May 2, 2024
Posted by Mike C. in Audio, Classical, Health, Internet, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Livestream, Music, Personal, Pets, Photography, Pop, Radio, smooth jazz, Travel, Video.add a comment
The night of Saturday, April 20, would bring the second set of Jay Rowe‘s 20th Smooth Jazz for Scholars, benefiting the Milford Public Schools music department. Before I recap that, I have another long preamble listing how my day went before the show itself. (Scroll down to Kevin McCabe’s first photo if you don’t want to read it.)
I got six hours of sleep, waking up around 7:30 AM. I neglected to pack mouthwash and could only rinse with warm water on Friday evening. My room at Hampton Inn – room 144 – lacked a bottle of complimentary mouthwash. Upon returning to the hotel from Veterans Memorial Auditorium at Parsons Complex, I asked the front desk if they had any, since a message in my bathroom said to ask there. The clerk had bad news: no mouthwash there, either. Thus, upon waking up Saturday morning and doing a few sets of push-ups, I got dressed, put on my jacket with a sun visor to keep the jacket’s hood from drooping below my forehead, and walked to a nearby supermarket on Boston Post Road (U.S. 1). The approximately quarter-mile walk took me across Plains Road, through a shopping center that featured an Aldi, and to Big Y. Once inside Big Y, I bought pairs of Cool Mint and Total Care Listerine travel-size bottles, a three-pack of ChapStick Medicated (the tube I had was almost finished), and a $1 reusable bag. That should hold me over for the next year or so.
Once back at Hampton Inn, I entered from the south side with my key card and went back to my room. I showered, got dressed in clean clothes, and brought my laptop to the lobby for breakfast and mingling with any musicians or fans I happened to see. Estella Taylor-Greene and Norma Rohadfox were there, Rob and Mel Hoogenboom were there with their dog Olive (third photo below), Mark and Phyllis Abrams had their dog Cody (first and second photos), and Friday night headliner Althea René was there (fourth and fifth photos with Rob, Mel, and Estella).





All the while, I sat at the elevated table with my laptop, eating banana muffins and drinking apple juice. (I didn’t feel like eggs or waffles and it was too late for cereal.) On the laptop, I went through the 401 photos I kept from Friday night, deleting anything overly blurry or where Althea wasn’t blowing into her flute’s lip plate or fellow headliner Marcus Anderson wasn’t on his alto saxophone’s mouthpiece. I struck up a conversation with a young couple who were in town for a friend’s wedding as the boyfriend marveled at the photos I was going through. Diane Roth and her partner Rich said hello and I spoke them for a bit, as I did with John and Theresa Monteverde. I’ve seen John and Theresa since the Houndstooth Pub shows in the early 2010s. They live in Merrick here on Long Island and John was retired from working at the Citibank in Freeport, near my day job. There wasn’t any caffeine free tea available in the lobby; only black tea, which has caffeine. So, John offered a green tea bag from his room and I drank from that instead.
My parents Lisa and Bill came down to check out of their room around 9:30 and said goodbye before driving back to Long Island. My dad is in the Freeport Fire Department (in Truck Co. 1) and they were holding their annual installation dinner Saturday night at a hotel in Melville. It was there that fellow Truck 1 member Joe Falco was named honorary chief for his 50 years of service. (Joe is a 9/11 survivor, and was the focus of a documentary that served as my college senior project.)
Saturday headliner Steve Cole came down to the lobby at one point and I struck up a conversation with him and another fan that was seated next to him.
By 11:30, the lobby began to thin out, so I brought my laptop back to my room. Before finishing up winnowing Friday’s photos, I walked to the fitness center to lift weights. As I exercised, I listened (on my phone) to the remaining “from the vault” tracks on the redone 1989 (Taylor’s Version), one of the CDs I bought when building my Taylor Swift studio album collection earlier in April. “Is It Over Now?” accompanied me back to my room where I completed the winnowing process. 280 of the 401 photos remained.
After eating a protein bar, I used a newly discovered time-saving tool to easily rename the photos from my Canon EOS R7‘s filename system to my date specific names. The old way was long and tedious. Since these photos were taken April 19, 2024, the filenames would begin with “MC41924” and follow with 001 and beyond. A My Life in Gaming video (released exactly two months earlier) introduced me to Advanced Renamer. Thankfully, my task did not require paying for registration. I imported the files, typed “MC41924” in the “new name” section, clicked on “<Inc Nr> – Incrementing Number,” clicked “start batch,” and “start” in the prompt. Immediately, all photos were renamed, from MC41924001 to MC41924280. The process was just as easy for renaming the watermarked photos chosen for the blog posts. Watch this clip from my April 27 photo editing Twitch stream to see how that went. (I streamed most of the photo editing process on my Twitch channel over a seven-day period before going back to video games.)
With the renaming taken care of, I began editing Friday’s remaining 280 photos. I wasn’t going to get them all done, but I did as much as I could. I also jumped ahead to the meet and greet photos since they’d be easier to edit. I listened to various tracks in iTunes by Casiopea, the Chick Corea Elektric Band, and the Dave Brubeck Quartet until around 2:00 when Courtney Visser and Cerian (“kerry ann”) began their Twitch streams. They guided me through the next two hours (and 85 photos) until a second shower and a walk back to Pasquale Pizza for another pasta dinner. I went from rigatoni with meat sauce on Friday to tortellini with meat sauce on Saturday. After paying the check, I went to Cumberland Farms for the same ice cream pints as Friday: Twix Cookie Dough and Snickers. Approaching Hampton Inn’s south entrance, I thought about a line in Taylor Swift’s “Is It Over Now?”: “you search in every model’s bed for something greater.” I joked to myself, yeah, like I have access to models – model cars I made when I was a teenager. (I showed off those cars in the second SJFS photo editing stream.)
My friend Kelly Dacey arrived in the parking lot at 7:00 to drive me to the auditorium. I carried all my gear from my room to her Kia Sportage and put them in the front seat with me. That gear again:
- Canon EOS R7 with RF-S 18-150mm lens
- Panasonic HC-X1500 with VW-HU1 and Rode VideoMic GO II
- GoPro HERO7 with YOLOtek Juicebank
- Magnus VT-300 tripod
- Targus tripod (model number unknown; yes, I said “model”)
We briefly spoke to Steve Cole as he stood outside before his trip to the auditorium. He remembered Kelly from a 2013 Houndstooth Pub gig where she brought her saxophone lesson book with her. After one song, he joked to her “that’s page [I forget the number] in your book.”
Kelly parked in the lot adjacent to Wasson Field, a baseball field where a game was in progress. We walked in to Veterans Memorial Auditorium and I set up my equipment in the orchestra pit. Then, I went back to the lobby to buy a copy of Saturday headliner Blake Aaron‘s latest CD, Love and Rhythm, from Michelle at the merchandise table. I said hello to Jay Rowe’s mother Mia DiStasi who stood at a table next to the 50/50 raffle table. It was there that I bought three tickets for $10. I didn’t expect to win, but I figured I’d take a chance.
On my way back in, I said hello to usher Steve Lewis and his daughter Jen, and to Paul, another usher.
I saw Kevin McCabe and asked if he had a set list for that night, he said no and quickly moved on. There were a lot of things to take care of before the show, after all. Fortunately, I came across Jay Rowe who was able to forward me his e-mail to Kevin with both night’s set lists. So, in the pit, I wrote down the songs on my stenographer pad.
As I was copying the set list, John Monteverde approached me to ask if he and Theresa could drive me back to Wantagh on Sunday morning so my parents wouldn’t have to drive back from Melville to get me in the afternoon. After talking it over with my mom, I agreed. It was set: John, Theresa, and I would check out of our rooms around 9AM, they’d drive me to Wantagh and then drive to their home in Merrick. And that’s why my photo editing streams began Sunday afternoon at my usual approximate 2:00 start time instead of Monday afternoon at around 5:30.
Most of the photographers were the same as Friday night: me, Katherine Gilraine, and Kenny Combs. Dolly Moye’s friend Rick joined us in the pit along with Bill, a friend of Saturday headliner Marion Meadows. Andrew James could only make the sound check, while Ron Hancox couldn’t make it at all. He and his wife Nydia were flying to Greece at midnight.
8:00 finally came, and Kevin McCabe walked on stage to greet the audience:

He introduced the Jonathan Law High School Jazz Ensemble, directed by Dave Pelaggi. Mr. P’s ensemble performed “Blue Moon” and “Cry Me a River.”




Like Friday night, after the crew removed the chairs for the student performers, Kevin returned to thank sponsors and Milford officials…

…and again, showed off a work of art by Marion Meadows.

Then, he introduced the house band, led by Jay Rowe. (Pardon the sheet music tablet.)

In order of appearance, Saturday’s headliners were Blake Aaron:




…and Alex Bugnon:

The four-piece house band was made up of Trever Somerville on drums:

Dave Anderson on bass:

Andy Abel on guitar:

And music director Jay Rowe on keyboards:

This time, I put my earplugs in sooner, during the ensemble performance, and took them out after the finale.
SET LIST (Updated with videos on 5/25/24)
1. City Groove (Jay Rowe)
2023 single
Featured musician: Jay Rowe (keyboards)
2. Groovers and Shakers (Blake Aaron)
Originally heard on: Color and Passion (2020)
Featured musicians: Blake Aaron (guitar), Steve Cole (tenor sax)
3. Crush (Blake Aaron)
Originally heard on: Love and Rhythm (2024)
Featured musicians: Blake Aaron (guitar), Steve Cole (tenor sax)
Blake and Steve both had their share of jokes, but Steve had me in stitches. Before the next song, he said “Alexa…play Steve Cole.”
4. C’mon Y’all (Steve Cole)
Originally heard on: Without a Doubt (2023)
Featured musician: Steve Cole (tenor sax)
Ahead of Steve’s second song, he went from Amazon to Apple: “Hey Siri! (pause) All your phones just went nuts, didn’t they? Play ‘Mirage’!”
5. Mirage (Steve Cole)
Originally heard on: Turn It Up (2016)
Featured musician: Steve Cole (tenor sax)
6. Something About You (Timmy Maia)
Featured musician: Timmy Maia (vocals)
7. Don’t You Worry ’bout a Thing (Timmy Maia) (Stevie Wonder cover)
Featured musician: Timmy Maia (vocals)
8. Wishing on a Star (Marion Meadows)
Originally heard on: Player’s Club (2004)
Featured musician: Marion Meadows (soprano sax) (started in audience)
9. Marcosinho (Marion Meadows; Dave Valentin cover)
Originally heard on: Whisper (2013)
Featured musician: Marion Meadows (soprano sax)
10. Night Groove (Alex Bugnon)
Originally heard on: Soul Purpose (2001)
Featured musicians: Alex Bugnon (keyboards), Marion Meadows (soprano sax)
Jay Rowe did not play.
11. Spellbound (Alex Bugnon) (Joe Sample cover)
Featured musician: Alex Bugnon (keyboards)
The story behind Alex’s cover of “Spellbound” involved filling in for an ailing Joe Sample at Yoshi’s in 2013. Spellbound was the first jazz album I ever bought, in the summer of 1998.
Jay Rowe did not play.
12. Europa (Blake Aaron) (Santana cover)
Originally heard on: Soul Stories (2015)
Featured musician: Blake Aaron (guitar) (played through audience at midpoint)
13. Attitude (Steve Cole)
Originally heard on: Without a Doubt (2023)
Featured musician: Steve Cole (tenor sax)
14. Southern Living (Alex Bugnon)
Originally heard on: Southern Living (2003)
Featured musician: Alex Bugnon (keyboards)
Jay Rowe did not play.
15. Romantica (Marion Meadows)
Originally heard on: Player’s Club (2004)
Featured musicians: Marion Meadows (soprano sax), Blake Aaron (guitar)
16. Can We Talk (Timmy Maia) (Tevin Campbell cover)
Featured musician: Timmy Maia (vocals)
17 (Finale). Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground) (The Jacksons cover)
Featured musicians: Everyone
Photo galleries of the headliners, starting with Blake Aaron:







































































On to the house band, beginning with drummer Trever Somerville:








Bassist Dave Anderson:








Guitarist Andy Abel:








And Jay Rowe on keyboards:











On to medium shots. First, Steve and Blake’s “Groovers and Shakers” call and response:










Blake and Andy:




Marion and Alex:






Marion and Blake:




Steve and Marion:

Wide shots, led by the end of “Don’t Your Worry ’bout a Thing”:

End of “Wishing on a Star”:

End of “Marcosinho”:

End of “Europa”:






The ovation after “Europa”:

More audience shots during “Marcosinho”…

…and the finale, “Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)”:


There’ll be more finale photos after shots of the 50/50 raffle.

Saturday’s pot was $1,250, $400 higher than Friday. As noted earlier, I bought three tickets for $10.

The winner was a photographer in the orchestra pit, but not me. That honor went to my fellow photographer Kenny Combs.


I congratulated Kenny when he returned to the pit.
That leaves the finale, “Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground).” Coincidentally, that song closed the first Smooth Jazz for Scholars I attended in 2007, also featuring Timmy Maia as a headliner. Here are Saturday’s finale photos:
















I balked at an opportunity to speak (and pose for photos) with Steve Cole and Alex Bugnon inside the auditorium, but did get a couple of photos in the lobby. Kelly was waiting for me there. She’d been talking to Jeff, a trombonist who got to play in a band with Steve Davis, another trombonist that Jeff considers his favorite.
As for the artists seen Saturday night, here I am with Blake Aaron:

I told Blake I’d played several tracks from his prior album, Color and Passion, on Instrumental Invasion. In turn, he noted he also hosted a radio show for a while.
The other photo taken in the lobby was with Marion Meadows:

Kevin McCabe finally got a copy of the set lists for both nights and handed it to me right before Kelly took the above photo.
My last photo of the night was a photo of a photo. Estella posed with Marion and his signed artwork (he signed the back of the print):

I briefly said hello to Timmy Maia before he left for the after party. I spoke to Jay Dobbins, Janet Abel, and Dolly Moye. Then, Kelly and I went back to the parking lot, into her SUV, and back to Hampton Inn. I hugged her goodbye until next year and thanked her for her friendship.
I was greeted in the lobby by Estella, Mark and Phyllis, Rob and Mel, their dogs Cody and Olive, and Bennett. Bennett is a loyal concertgoer who’s brought an acoustic guitar to all the shows he attends – including Smooth Jazz for Scholars – and has musicians sign that guitar. Taylor Swift is among those to sign his guitar!
Here is Bennett’s guitar, as seen Friday night:

To the chagrin of the hotel clerk at the front desk, Cody and Olive barked happily at their new friend Bennett. After she politely asked for the dogs to be quiet or brought back to their rooms, I bid everyone good night and went back to my room. I then repeated the process of unloading the photos and videos onto my laptop, and converting the RAW files to JPGs – 440 of them on Saturday – in Adobe Lightroom. All the while, Emily McVicker and her community kept me company on Twitch. For the second time that weekend, my stream viewership coincided with a resub; the start of my fourth month with Emily.
I’m not sure how much sleep I got, but it was at least four hours. I was awakened around 5:30 AM Sunday by chirping birds outside my room. It was too close to sunrise to bother putting in earplugs and trying to sleep a little more. So, I turned my laptop on and took a figurative machete to the 440 photos moved from my camera. 305 remained, and I swiftly (no pun intended) renamed them with Advanced Renamer.
I did not bother editing anymore photos. Instead, I backed up all photos and some videos to the portable hard drive I brought with me. I took a shower, got dressed, and packed up all but the laptop. Then, I went to the lobby for breakfast sans laptop. There was cereal this time, and I ate one small bowl each of Honey Nut Cheerios, Froot Loops, and Rice Krispies, adding a little milk for the first two. I had to eat very carefully because of my hand tremor, but eat I did. I complemented the cereal with two cups of apple juice. I spoke to Diane and Rich, Phyllis, and John and Theresa.
When I finished eating, I went back to my room. There, I packed up the laptop, gathered all my belongings, and trudged them all to the lobby for checkout. It was shortly after 9AM by then, but John and Theresa had yet to check out. So, I sat in the lobby behind the TV as CNN’s State of the Union aired. Within 15 or 20 minutes, they had checked out and we headed to the parking lot to load up their Toyota RAV4.
According to my watch, we left at 9:31. The ride flew by in time and conversation. With SiriusXM Watercolors on in the background, we spent the whole time talking about Smooth Jazz for Scholars, the other events we’ve attended (or they’ve attended), and other things in our lives. I forgot to check my watch when John pulled up to my house in Wantagh, but I assume at was around 10:51. It only took an hour and 20 minutes, shorter than any return trip from Milford since 2007. I recall fast return trips with my parents taking an hour and 50 minutes, but that’s because we would leave around 11AM. There was even less traffic earlier in the morning. I thanked John and Theresa for their generosity and we vowed to keep in touch. In fact, as I type this, I’m due to write back to John.
Now that I’m a Twitch streamer, I vowed to use my stream time to edit photos from Smooth Jazz for Scholars, and will do so again with later events like the WCWP Hall of Fame Ceremony and Long Island Retro Gaming Expo. From Sunday afternoon to Saturday afternoon, April 21 to 27, I streamed 15 hours of editing and picking photos to watermark for use in these blog posts. Since I didn’t want to get copyright strikes, I downloaded classic video game soundtracks off YouTube and played those in the background. I talked about my experience in Milford, about my progress listening to Taylor Swift’s The Tortured Poets Department, and anything else on my mind. I even picked up three photo editing stream followers along the way. I enjoyed sharing the process on Twitch and look forward to doing it again in June with my next event. Until then, it’s back to gaming.
I was in my element at Smooth Jazz for Scholars. I’m honored and privileged to document the event each year and to be surrounded by my fellow fans and musician acquaintances. Thank you very much to Jay Rowe, Kevin McCabe, the headliners, and all my friends. And thank you for reading one or both of my 20th Smooth Jazz for Scholars blog posts.
Until next year, I leave you with a montage of all seven photo editing streams at 100x speed, set to the Wurttemberg Chamber Orchestra performance of Bach’s “Concerto in A minor, BWV 1044 for Flute, Violin, Harpischord and Basso continuo: Allegro.”
SJFS 2024 Night 1 recap May 2, 2024
Posted by Mike C. in Audio, Health, Internet, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Livestream, Music, Personal, Photography, Pop, Rap, smooth jazz, Travel, Video.add a comment
Friday, April 19, was the first of two nights of the 2024 Smooth Jazz for Scholars, hosted by keyboardist Jay Rowe in his hometown of Milford, Connecticut. It was the 21st anniversary, but 20th overall (postponed by COVID in 2020 and ’21). Each year, this two-night event (one night prior to 2012) benefits the Milford Public Schools music department. And as with most years, each night opens with a performance by student musicians under the direction of their music teacher. The “smooth jazz” part comes from the four to five headliners each night. I’ll name Friday’s four headliners after my preamble. (Scroll down to Kevin McCabe’s first photo if you don’t want to read it.)
A lot has changed in my life since last year (night 1, night 2). A chance browse of Twitch on the evening of May 9 sent me down another rabbit hole: the wonderful world of music streamers. As if my horizons hadn’t been broadened enough by Japanese city pop, idol music, and anime thanks to the likes of Caitlin Myers, I was now exposed to female vocalists from the United States, Canada, and even the UK (England, Ireland). Most have written and performed original songs, but others just do covers. Those covers exposed me to the likes of Maisie Peters, Olivia Rodrigo, and Taylor Swift. Over the last few months, I have become a Swiftie, and after buying her CDs, a savant that can name what album a given song appeared on. It’s weird looking in iTunes and seeing Taylor, Cerian (“kerry ann”), Katie Seto, and Steph La Rochelle juxtaposed with all my instrumentals. (I’ve been on a McCoy Tyner kick in recent months.)
On November 3, I joined the ranks of Twitch streamers, primarily playing video games, but occasionally breaking for media production. At first, that involved recording what part of what became the penultimate Instrumental Invasion show and then recording the finale. That was it until all of last week when I edited most of the photos from both nights of the 20th Smooth Jazz for Scholars, all while listening to video game music soundtracks. (I didn’t want to risk copyright strikes for playing music by the SJFS headliners.) Even though I’m not a music streamer, I raid out to (end by sending my audience to) music streams more often than any other category. My road as a streamer and a stream viewer has not been flawless. I’ve had my share of self-inflicted bumps and costly errors, which I won’t get into. On the whole, however, I’m satisfied with the path I’ve taken.
Unlike last year, I wasn’t the least bit anxious about the workload at the Parsons Complex Veterans Memorial Auditorium. I only feared having a meltdown while in Milford as I’d had at prior events like last year’s New York Comic Con (which I’ll never go to again) or various parties where I was out of my comfort zone. Miraculously, there were no meltdowns. I was in my comfort zone all throughout. Nothing broke me. But I’m getting ahead of myself.
I spent parts of Thursday and Friday morning packing up for my journey to Milford. I would be staying at the Hampton Inn on Plains Road, I-95 exit 36. My parents Lisa and Bill would stay until Saturday morning, return to Long Island for the Freeport Fire Department installation dinner, and drive back to Connecticut to pick me up by Sunday afternoon. (SPOILER: They wouldn’t have to come back for me. Read about that in the Saturday recap.)
We left our house in Dad’s Ford Explorer at 1:02 PM Friday. Despite pockets of traffic on the Northern State Parkway, Lakeville Road, and the Throgs Neck Expressway (I-295), we reached the Hampton Inn parking lot at 3:19, only two hours and 17 minutes later. SiriusXM’s Watercolors smooth jazz channel was on the car stereo, but I watched Twitch streams on my phone with earbuds. I started with Gillian Hayek‘s fishing game stream, then moved on to Natalie Paige‘s last stream before moving to Connecticut (can’t say where) from the Seattle, Washington, area. The stream coincided with my six-month renewal, and I chose Norah Jones‘s sinister-sounding “Miriam” for Natalie to cover.
At check-in, I had my dad request rooms facing the parking lot rather than I-95. I was in room 144, near the south entrance accessible by key card. Once my laptop was unpacked and I’d paid for two days of guest Wi-Fi, I returned to Natalie Paige’s stream and put on Ellie Fier‘s stream after 4:00. Ellie is the reason I became a Swiftie in the first place. Friday was a big day for Taylor Swift fans: release day for the latest album, The Tortured Poets Department. I’d already bought Taylor’s prior albums on CD earlier in the month and would be sure to rip the tracks from my TTPD CD (The Manuscript Edition) once I got home. (Yes, there’s The Anthology. I accessed those additional 14 tracks via YouTube Music.) As noted in my photo editing Twitch streams, I wouldn’t listen to all 31 tracks until the following Tuesday, finishing on the treadmill three mornings later. My only exposure to any track prior to then was Ellie’s rendition of “So High School,” track 22 on The Anthology.
At 5:30, like last year, my parents and I drove a short distance to Pasquale Pizza for a pasta dinner, preceded by garlic knots. When I was finished, I left my parents and walked back to Hampton Inn, stopping at Cumberland Farms along the way to buy two low-calorie pints of Mars candy flavored ice cream to eat in my room. One was Twix Cookie Dough and the other was Snickers. By this time, I paired Natalie’s stream with Katie O’Flaherty. I watched until shortly before 7:00, at which I packed my equipment to bring to the auditorium.
The Canon EOS R7 with RF-S 18-150mm lens was in my backpack with a stenographer pad (the same one I bought at the Milford CVS a year ago) and battery charger with spare battery attached. I kept the Panasonic HC-X1500 with VW-HU1 and Rode VideoMic GO II in a travel bag along with a spare battery, but that wasn’t all. I decided to bring my GoPro HERO7 with YOLOtek Juicebank attached for wide cutaway shots when repositioning the HC-X1500. That meant I brought a second tripod, by Targus (I forget the model number), aside from the Magnus VT-300 for the camcorder.
My parents dropped me off adjacent to the auditorium and I lugged my equipment in. It was all surprisingly lightweight. In the lobby, I stopped at the merchandise table where I bought a CD of Friday headliner Althea René‘s Live in Detroit from Michelle. Then, I proceeded to the orchestra pit, limboed under the rope on the right side, and set up in the center. Jay Rowe didn’t e-mail me the set lists for each night beforehand. So, I had to rely on what was said on stage. I only blanked on one song out of 15, but figured out what it was Saturday morning.
As 8:00 approached, I mingled with fellow photographers Katherine Gilraine, Keith McDonald, Ron Hancox, and Andrew James, and with fellow fans like Robin Morin Stewart, Judy Raphael, Mary Jane Manna, Rob and Mel Hoogenboom, and Mark and Phyllis Abrams.
At last, it was time for the house lights to dim and Kevin McCabe bid us “good evening” (and have us repeat it louder):

He introduced the John F. Kennedy Elementary School Select Grade 4 Chorus, under the direction of Theresa Voss.


I saw a stack of jackets on right side of orchestra pit when I arrived. They belonged to members of the chorus.
Kevin returned to thank sponsors and Milford officials:
(Marion Meadows would be one of Saturday’s headliners.)
Jay Rowe had opening remarks, then went into first track – “City Groove,” his latest single. (The full set list follows introductory photos.)

In order of appearance, Friday’s headliners were Vincent Ingala:



…and Marcus Anderson:

Steve Scales was absent this year, but the rest of Jay’s house band was intact from last year.
Trever Somerville on drums:

Dave Anderson on bass:

Andy Abel on guitar (rhythm during Steve Oliver songs):

And directing at all, Jay Rowe on keyboards:

I forgot to put in my earplugs until the first song below. I took them out when the house lights went up after the finale.
SET LIST (Updated with videos on 5/22/24)
1. City Groove (Jay Rowe)
2023 single
Featured musician: Jay Rowe (keyboards)
2. Rosemary’s Tune (Jay Rowe)
Originally heard on: Live at Daniel Street (2011), Smooth Ride (2016)
Featured musicians: Jay Rowe (keyboards), Vincent Ingala (tenor sax)
3. Snap, Crackle, Pop (Vincent Ingala)
Originally heard on: Personal Touch (2018)
Featured musician: Vincent Ingala (tenor sax)
4. High Noon (Steve Oliver)
Originally heard on: Positive Energy (2002)
Featured musician: Steve Oliver (guitar, vocal sounds)
5. Skyway (Steve Oliver)
Originally heard on: A New Light (2023)
Featured musician: Steve Oliver (guitar, vocal sounds)
6. Pastel Leather (Althea René)
Originally heard on: Pastel Leather (2022)
Featured musician: Althea René (flute)
7. Life on Mars (Althea René) (Dexter Wansel cover)
Originally heard on: Flawsome (2019)
Featured musician: Althea René (flute, “flute talk” while playing through audience at midpoint)
8. Reverse (Marcus Anderson)
Originally heard on: Reverse (2022)
Featured musician: Marcus Anderson (alto sax)
9. Understanding (Marcus Anderson)
Originally heard on: Limited Edition (2017)
Featured musician: Marcus Anderson (alto sax)
10. Chips and Salsa (Steve Oliver)
Originally heard on: 3D (2004)
Featured musician: Steve Oliver (guitar, vocal sounds)
11. GoGo Bootz (Althea René)
Originally heard on: Pastel Leather (2022)
Featured musicians: Althea René (flute), Marcus Anderson (alto sax)
12. Care for You (Marcus Anderson)
Originally heard on: Reverse (2022)
Featured musician: Marcus Anderson (alto sax, rap interlude)
13. Personal Touch (Vincent Ingala)
Originally heard on: Personal Touch (2018)
Featured musician: Vincent Ingala (tenor sax)
14. On the Move (Vincent Ingala)
Originally heard on: Fire & Desire (2021)
Featured musician: Vincent Ingala (tenor sax)
15 (Finale). Miss You (The Rolling Stones cover)
Featured musicians: Everyone; Steve Oliver (vocals, vocal sounds)
Here are photo galleries of the headliners, starting with Vincent Ingala:



























































Now, the house band, beginning with drummer Trever Somerville:








Bassist Dave Anderson’s “Life on Mars” solo:







Guitarist Andy Abel:







Finally, Jay Rowe on keyboards:















On to medium shots, starting with Vincent and Jay:

Vincent and Dave:

Vincent, Andy and Trever:

Marcus and Jay:

Althea and Marcus on “GoGo Bootz”:








Wide shots from the end of “Life on Mars”:

End of “Chips and Salsa”:




“GoGo Bootz”:


End of “Care for You”:


Audience dancing during “GoGo Bootz”:




After “Care for You,” Kevin McCabe presented the basket of 50/50 raffle tickets.
The finale, “Miss You“:





































As I packed up, Phyllis Abrams showed me the rose she caught from Marcus Anderson, going so far as putting up to my nose. I said it smelled like fabric softener, but I meant carpet cleaner. Then, I introduced myself to photographer Kenny Combs, and said hello to Jay Dobbins, Janet Abel (Andy’s sister), and Dolly Moye. Dolly introduced me to her high school friend Rick. My friend Kelly Dacey was there and we spoke briefly in the auditorium, but more in the lobby during the meet and greet. Below are photos from the meet and greet.
Estella and Steve reprising the “Chips and Salsa” vocal sounds:

The next two photos are by Andrew James: me with the headliners – Steve, Marcus, Vincent, Althea:

Then, Jay Rowe joined in:

Dolly Moye let me have a pair of dancing sunglasses, as seen in this selfie, my last photo of the night:

At least that was the last photo taken that night on the EOS R7. Andrew wanted photos with the headliners and Jay, and Mark (a different Mark) wanted a photo with Marcus.
Kelly helped me bring the equipment to her, then we drove back to Hampton Inn where she dropped me off. She went to the after party, and I went back to my room to unload the photos and videos onto my laptop, and convert all the RAW files to JPGs in Adobe Lightroom. I had SashiBOOM and her dog Perry keeping me company on Twitch until that process was complete. Then, off to sleep.
February 13 wet snowstorm February 15, 2024
Posted by Mike C. in Jazz, Personal, Photography, Video, Weather.add a comment
The next snow event came nearly a month after the last one, on Tuesday, February 13. I didn’t even know about it until the day before when my mom said a storm was expected. I had not checked the weather forecast in days and was blindsided by what I saw on the National Weather Service website. 3 to 7 inches were expected! That meant I’d have to shovel. Yes, my dad got a snow blower in 2018, but I still need to shovel what he can’t get.
Despite reassurances from Facebook friends that the forecast was media hype and little to no snow would fall, it fell nonstop from about 6AM to about 1PM. I didn’t measure afterward, but going by the NWS snow report for neighboring Levittown, I figure my neighborhood in Wantagh got 6 inches.
Needing to get to his office, my dad used the snow blower at around 11AM. Thankfully, any snow that fell afterward did not accumulate, an upside to above freezing temperatures. Just before 2:30 PM, I went outside to shovel what was left. I shoveled the left side of the house up to the oil burner pipe, the corners of the driveway, the center of the driveway where snow had been cleared off my parents’ cars, the curb, and the sidewalk up to the property line. Aided by the first six tracks of McCoy Tyner’s Double Trios album on my iPhone and Beats Fit Pro earbuds, it took me 43:03 (timed on my watch) to do the job.
Skies cleared within an hour of returning inside.
The next chance of snow comes via a mix with rain tonight and then all snow early Saturday morning.
For now, a photographic timeline of Tuesday’s wet snow follows below. (There’s even a video.)
6:30 AM:

7:30 AM:

8:32 AM:
9:30 AM:
10:57 AM:
11:08 AM, as my Dad clears snow:
11:36 AM, starting with a brief video:
1:02 PM:

1:39 PM, before shoveling, as Mom drives out:
3:11 PM, after shoveling:
Instrumental Invasion, 11/17/23: Finale November 18, 2023
Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Computer, Internet, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Livestream, Media, Music, New Age, Personal, Radio, smooth jazz, Video.add a comment

The final prime time Instrumental Invasion on WCWP began life the same way the prior night did: as a Wednesday night show to air following what I assumed to be a short renovation programming hiatus. I hadn’t recorded this one yet, though. The playlist, annotations, and script were completed, but I wanted to work on more playlists before recording 181 or 182. I made 183 the Christmas show and 184 the third Three-of-a-Kind Showcase special. I’d work on 185 and 186 when I was ready.
The playlist was created on October 20 and 22. Annotations began on October 25, but were put on hold due to uncertainty over the hiatus and lineup change that was to follow. I finished those annotations and drafted the script on November 1. I figured I would record 181, then move on to 182.
After making tweaks to show 181 on the evening of November 6, I tweaked all components of 182: playlist, annotations, and script. Obviously, I’d have to redo the intro and outro, including a proper goodbye on the latter. These are the changes made:
- Extracurricular info about “The Secret Drawer” by Bob James was thrown out to allow more time for the goodbye.
- “This Time Around” by Four80East was replaced with “The End of Our Season” by David Benoit and Russ Freeman, the same song that closed The Instrumental Invasion on WGBB back on May 5, 2005.
- “Fellowship” by Justin-Lee Schultz was replaced by “Wrong Side (instrumental, no backing vocals)” by Cerian (kerry-anne), fulfilling my promise to her in the Twitch stream I raided on November 4.
- Annotations were updated to include the replacement songs, and the script was updated accordingly. The script was revised a few more times before recording began.
Two segments per day were recorded from November 9 to 11. Each time, I streamed the recording sessions on Twitch.
Click here to download the finale’s aircheck scope or listen below:
I’m sad the show is over, but relieved that the hard work is behind me. So much time and effort went into each show, so burnout was inevitable. While this isn’t quite how I wanted to end, I’m grateful to WCWP station manager Pete Bellotti for allowing me a proper ending. Here was Pete’s complimentary statement on the WCWP Alumni Association Facebook group hours before air:
A salute to Mike Chimeri … yes, his birthday (Happy Birthday!!!!!) ….but to his final Instrumental Invasion tonight at 9p on 88.1 FM WCWP. There are no words to describe how important Mike will always be to WCWP as a talent, alum and human being. I am truly grateful for Mike’s friendship and I speak for many by saying THANK YOU! Time for some R & R and the next project that you will execute with class, professionalism & superior skill.
Cheers my friend!!!
Pete Bellotti, 11/17/23, 1:05 PM
Thank you very much, Pete.
Thank you, the listener and reader, for reading these recaps and listening to the airchecks. See you all on Twitch.
Instrumental Invasion, 11/16/23: 60-year musical journey, 1963-2023 November 17, 2023
Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Computer, Football, Game Shows, Internet, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Livestream, Media, Music, Personal, Radio, smooth jazz, Sports, Technology, TV, Video.add a comment

This edition of Instrumental Invasion started out as a regular Wednesday night show that I assumed would air after a short programming hiatus (one or two weeks) for WCWP. I guessed wrong. Thus, this was reworked as a Thursday night show. References to “this week” were removed and the intro and outro were redone to acknowledge the impending demise.
Rather than have my last six shows run on The Wave, station manager Pete Bellotti arranged for this show and the next one to air on consecutive nights, hours before the renovation programming hiatus was to begin. This meant I was on three nights in a row: November 15 to 17, all in the regular 9PM slot.
The playlist was created on October 4 and annotated from October 13 to 15. The script was drafted on the 15th, 17th, and 18th.
Recording began on November 4, during my second-ever Twitch livestream. It was an opportunity let viewers in on the process, though few cared to watch live. I worked on the first hour over the course of a two-hour stream. Then, I raided out to music streamer Cerian (kerry-anne). (Twitch doesn’t have a radio category, so I chose music and felt I should raid a fellow music streamer.) I was giddy (as in Biddy) to raid her because I’d been meaning to give her streams a try. I promised I would play the instrumental version of her song “Wrong Side” in my last show, which I assumed would be 186. More on that in the finale recap.
Livestream clips:
- Making a train-whistle motion while backselling “Dazzling” by Casiopea
- Using Game Dave emotes after playing his liner between songs, then imitating one of his sound commands
- The raid out to Cerian
The first segment of hour 2 was recorded on November 5 and the rest on the morning of the 6th. I was over a minute beyond my desired 1:49:00 threshold, but with legal IDs and spot breaks, I’d still end before 11PM.
As noted earlier, pickups were recorded on the evening of the 6th, but only after reinstating backups of segment session files. Thinking I was moving to The Wave, I recorded a tag to play in place of all FM references in liners, then I saved and exported those files accordingly.
David Benoit‘s cover of “Song for My Father” was first played on July 1, 2020, but not with the lengthy origin story. I ended up hooked on a video YouTube recommended of the Horace Silver Quintet playing “Song for My Father” on Danish TV in April 1968:
That, in turn, sent me down a Billy Cobham rabbit hole, culminating in this August 2016 Drumeo presentation:
Click here to download the penultimate scoped aircheck or listen below:
Instrumental Invasion, 11/15/23: Song pairs from 2023 albums November 16, 2023
Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Livestream, Media, Music, Personal, Radio, smooth jazz, Technology.add a comment

The November 15 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was the last show to air on Wednesday night, and the third song pair show. The theme was pairs from 2023 albums. It was an excuse to accelerate my new release backlog airplay ritual of playing six songs from a new release. Since David Benoit‘s latest release came out in February 2022, he was absent from the show. That’s eight times in 180 shows without my favorite musician. And visiting the future, I can say it ended up eight times in 182 shows.
The playlist was created on September 9, the last in a group of four I worked on. Annotations were made alongside the other three, between September 13 and 18. The talk break script was drafted on the 21st.
I recorded this show’s first hour at the office on September 27. The first segment of hour two was recorded on the 28th (while watching VoiceUnmuted [Katie Seto] on Twitch) and the last two (plus pickups) on the 29th. The pickups were to accommodate the resulting deficit upon replacing Pat Metheny‘s “Trust Your Angels” with “Morning of the Carnival.” My September 30 quality control session (prior to Katie’s charity stream) came up clean, so no further pickups were needed.
The office recordings were the first time I changed my editing technique. You may have noticed distorted audio in talk breaks in last week’s show from the third segment on. Adobe Audition‘s declicker filter worked fine at home when used broadly (for the entire file), but not at the office where I had updated to the latest edition of Audition. So, after applying denoise, I listened intently for mouth clicks and other noises to filter out as I edited. I have since updated all my Adobe programs at home and have the same problem, meaning I have to use the same technique there.
Click here to download the scoped aircheck or listen below:
Instrumental Invasion, 11/8/23 November 9, 2023
Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Internet, Japanese, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Language, Media, Music, Personal, Pop, Radio, Rock, smooth jazz.add a comment

NOTE: This is the last standalone Instrumental Invasion. I have agreed to end the run next week with three more shows airing on consecutive nights at 9:00: show 180 on November 15, 181 on the 16th, and 182 (the finale) on the 17th, my 42nd birthday.
The November 8 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was another two-four recording: the first two segments on September 25, the last four on the 26th. A pickup was recorded on October 21.
The playlist was created on September 7. Annotations were made between September 13 and 18, with the talk break script drafted on the 20th. Caitlin Myers might have planted the “certified bop” seed, which is why I quipped how “Grooveyard” was that.
“Prince Vlad” by T-Square is probably the most metal thing I’ll ever play and it was followed by Najee‘s very smooth jazz thing.
I had to sacrifice another segment format to allow for more songs from recent releases. Next Wednesday, those songs will make up the entire show.
Click here to download this week’s scoped aircheck or listen below:
As a bonus, here is the music video for “Beyond the Galaxy” by Casiopea 3rd:
Instrumental Invasion, 11/1/23 November 2, 2023
Posted by Mike C. in Airchecks, Audio, Comedy, Internet, Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Media, Music, Personal, Radio, Rock, smooth jazz, TV, Video.add a comment

There is a major announcement at the end of this post.
The November 1 Instrumental Invasion on WCWP was recorded on September 23 (first two segments) and 24 (last four). Pickups were recorded on the 30th.
The playlist was created September 6, and annotated with three other shows between the 13th and 18th. The talk break script was drafted on the 20th.
David Benoit‘s cover of “Then the Morning Comes” by Smash Mouth was originally played April 14, 2021. I played it in tribute to their late lead vocalist Steve Harwell.
My talk-up for “Junior” by Euge Groove – “you can call it Junior!” – was a nod to the late Bill Saluga‘s Raymond J. Johnson Jr. character. An example performance:
Click here to download this week’s scoped aircheck or listen below:
Before air, I made the following announcement on Facebook:
Before tonight’s show airs, I would like to announce that I am ending my run of Instrumental Invasion after show 186. If the FM stream is working by 9:00, show 178 will be airing. That means I will have eight shows left to air. Two are ready to be recorded and the last four have yet to be worked on. I have taken this show as far as it can go and am burned out.
Instrumental Invasion has been my longest-running production and my best work creatively. I’m grateful for the opportunity to share it with the world and will carry on with the name each October during Homecoming Weekend.
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.add a comment

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:
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:
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:






































