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WRPI Radio Station To Feature “Summer of Woodstock” Music
Special program will air Sunday evenings throughout
the summer
Taking a trip down memory lane, 40 years ago, nearly half a
million concert goers gathered on a dairy farm in the rural
town of Bethel, N.Y., to hear 32 of the best-known musicians of
that time. Billed as one of the greatest moments in popular
music history, the 1969 Woodstock Music and Arts Festival was
also listed in Rolling Stone magazine’s “50 Moments
That Changed the History of Rock and Roll.” In honor of the
event, WRPI, a college radio station based on the Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute campus, will host a special program
titled “Summer of Woodstock” highlighting performances from the
historic festival.
From June through August, recordings from the festival will
air Sunday evenings from 8 to 10 p.m. EDT on 91.5 FM for
audiences in New York’s Capital Region. The program will also
be available via live Web stream at http://www.wrpi.org/.
Additionally, since some of the artists have not released
their full Woodstock performances, the remaining portion of
WRPI’s weekly, two-hour “Summer of Woodstock” program will
feature other studio and live recordings from Woodstock
artists.
In cooperation with the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts,
located on the site of the 1969 festival, WRPI will be giving
away tickets to the “Heroes of Woodstock” tour. This tour is
hosted by Country Joe McDonald and will include performances
from a few of the original artists who performed at the
festival. Listen to “Summer of Woodstock” on WRPI on Sunday
nights in August for more information on how to win
tickets.
Of special note, last month marked the 40th anniversary of
The Who’s release of “Tommy,” a celebrated album that the band
performed nearly in its entirety at Woodstock. One of WRPI’s
“Summer of Woodstock” programs will include The Who’s
performance of “Tommy,” which appears on the band’s 1989 live
release, “Join Together.”
Steve Malinski, a 2009 graduate of Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, will host the program. “It is fair to say that WRPI
is largely responsible for exposing a large number of youth in
1969 to the music that was heard at Woodstock, and by hosting
this program, we hope to share the music not only with people
from that generation, but others as well,” Malinski
said.
More than 50 years ago, WRPI made history when it joined a
small but growing group of radio stations presenting regular FM
broadcasting. An enterprising group of students convinced WROW,
an Albany-based radio station, to donate an unused FM
transmitter to Rensselaer, allowing WRPI to operate 1,000 watts
with an FM broadcast radius of 30 miles. At the time, WRPI was
located in the 15th Street Lounge, now the RPI Playhouse, and
had been airing programs via AM “carrier current” broadcasting
since the early 1950s.
While that transmitter put WRPI on the FM map, it was in
1968-1969 that the current 700-foot transmitter tower in North
Greenbush, N.Y., was acquired from WTEN- TV Channel 10, which
had switched frequencies. Getting the transmitter tower allowed
the station to jump from 1,000- to 20,000-watt stereo, quite an
accomplishment for a college, non-commercial radio station.
Soon after, WRPI broke ground on the FM dial, being the first
radio station in the area to adopt a progressive rock format,
playing for the first time artists such as the Doors, Jimi
Hendrix, and others. The station’s next big change came in 1975
when it moved its studio to the basement of the Darrin
Communications Center, where it still is today.
In 2007, WRPI celebrated the 50th anniversary of its first
FM broadcast and honored the contributions of students, alumni,
and community volunteers. Today, the station continues to set
new milestones in its efforts to persevere in the long and
valued tradition of transmitting music, conversations, and more
to the loyal audiences who tune in.
For more information regarding the Bethel Woods Center for
the Arts, visit: http://bethelwoodscenter.org/.
For more information regarding the “Summer of Woodstock”
program, contact Steve Malinski at steve.malinski@gmail.com.
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Published
June 15,
2009 |
Contact: Jessica Otitigbe
Phone: (518) 276-6050
E-mail: otitij@rpi.edu |
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