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9:56
a.m. “You’re listening to WCFA-LP 101.5
FM now on the air from Cape May Point to
Cape May Court House and beyond with an
Eclectic Blend of Jazz. I’m Peg Long.
I’ll be with you until noon and remember
today is Valentine’s Day. You still have
time to run out and find something but
keep an eye on the weather. The
temperature is 38° and falling. And now
I am going to play….”
My assignment? Spend a session with disc jockey Peg Long at the new
F.M. radio station launched by the
Center for Community Arts (CCA) November
28th. Peg starts at 9 a.m. on
the dot but wanted an hour to warm up
before I came to sit with her. I arrive
at the station, which currently is
located at CCA’s offices on Lafayette
Street, a little early and Peg is
already talking to her audience as I
walk in. The door is shut tight and a
red light above it says – “On Air.”
Now, how’s Peg going to know I’m out here? It’s a few minutes past
10 o’clock when I see the red light go
out. Should I knock on the door? Should
I just open the door? What if I knock
and you can hear the knock out there in
radio land? I gingerly approach the door
and stand in front of it like Susan in
The Chronicles of Narnia.
And then, I look up and see the message:
“Stop. Please just announce that you are
here and then wait in the meeting room
until you are called.” Well, o.k. then.
That’s easy enough. I do as I am told
and then wait. While I’m waiting, I go
over my notes on how 101.5 came to be.
The idea of a community radio station started five years ago when
radio enthusiast Drew
Butkocy came to
CCA with the idea. The FCC was offering
community-based, nonprofit organizations
the chance to apply for licenses to
operate low power (83 watts) FM
community radio stations. FCC approval
came in mid-2005 but by that time the
antenna location originally proposed for
the station was no longer available. It
took one year to find a new antenna
location which would meet FCC
requirements and serve Cape May, the
Wildwoods and Lower Township, the
communities where CCA’s other
programming is based. Help came from
Wildwood Mayor Ernie Troiano and
Wildwood Water Utility Director Gary
Ziegler. They were able to place a
100-watt antenna on the Utility’s tower
in Wildwood Crest, all that was needed
was a variance from the Borough of
Wildwood Crest, which the commissioners
granted by unanimous vote.
10:04 a.m. Peg opens the door. Butkocy has created a temporary
studio at CCA’s Cape May offices using
donated and recently purchased equipment. When the Franklin Street
School Community Cultural Center
opens
in 2008, the studio will move across the
street.
With three months under her belt, Peg is a virtual veteran one of
only three women (one of whom is still
in training) out of a total of 19 DJ
volunteers. 101.5 airs 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.,
seven days a week.
“I can pick anything I care to listen to,” she says looking over
the impressive array of electronic
equipment to her left – the catalog of
music, tracks, times and mini notes
regarding the artists just in front of
her
– and the board which magically
(well to me it’s magic) takes us live at
her fingertips. “I have to cue up for
the next album,” she says looking at the
time and computer listings.
She especially leans toward the female vocalists but tries to mix
it up as per the instructions on the
wall ahead of her and above me. “It’s
all about the music.” “The Music Mix is
what makes this format work…so Please
Mix it up.” To ensure this, Butkocy has
divided 50-minutes of the hour into
three parts - Straight jazz, like Billy
Taylor and Bobby Hutcherson; Latin Jazz
like Paquito D’ Riveira and Herbie Mann;
Pop Jazz like George Benson. Leaving
ten minutes for new artist play and
underwriting announcements.
True enough – it is all about the music, but it’s also all about
the minutes. Although we have a little
time to chat, Peg spends most of her
off-air time planning out the rest of
the program. She scans the computer
looking for artists who interest her, or
whose album title sounds interesting.
Then – and this is the tricky part – she
figures out how many tracks she should
play from that album to get the mix in
and bring her audience up to the hour.
“I try to end on the hour but sometimes it doesn’t work out that
way. I stopped too soon earlier. It was
only 9:52 so I had to fill the time
until 10 a.m. It takes me the first hour
to get into a rhythm,” she
says, “where
I feel comfortable that I won’t screw
anything up. Some of the DJs are very
intense about jazz and come prepared
knowing what they want to play. Not me.
I’m very much a learner.”
And, as you may have noticed, at WCFA-LP 101.5 FM, it’s always an
album during the intro and back-announce
(after the selection has played). It is
never called a CD. Never a cassette and
never, ever an eight-track. Do you think
there are any of those (8-tracks) still
around?
10:17 a.m. She presses the red button and we’re on the air. “You
were listening to the sounds of Paquito
D’Rivera from his album Havana Café.”
There are a series of community
announcements and sponsors’ messages and
then: “I’m going to send a Valentine
out to all you ladies. This is Kenia on
her latest album Initial Thrill.”
I’m wondering how Peg chooses the artists she does. Well, she went
to Cuba some years ago on a church
mission trip and that’s why she played
Havana Café. She likes the piano
and leans that way. She likes to play
female artists and tries to search the
archives for different names. “I really
like Kenia,” Peg says of the
Brazilian-born singer and tries to give
her as much airtime as she can.
10:30 a.m. Peg’s head phones are back on as she gets ready for a
track change. Her fingers are perched on
the red button on the control board. I
stop talking. I stop breathing. My
biggest fear? I’ll start coughing, drop
something or otherwise screw up. I do
not cough. I do hear a pencil drop and I
do stop breathing, gingerly looking
about me to see where the errant pencil
has gone. Thankfully, the pencil is no
where near me and the sound didn’t go
out into the airwaves. I’m thinkin’
poltergeist.
She fills the moments with promotions for the upcoming Jazz
Festival at Somers Point, CCA’s March 9th
Aquamarine Madness
gala and, as always,
the station’s sponsors and underwriters.
By 10:35 a.m. we’re listening to the
piano virtuoso of Monty Alexander from
his album Caribbean Circle.
Before becoming a high-power jazz DJ, Peg was a clinical
psychologist back in Pennsylvania.
Actually she and her husband retired to
Cape May about 13 years ago and little
did she know she would be starting a
new, would it be too presumptuous to
say, career? “I don’t expect it to be a
career but I really wanted to help get
this (radio station) started.
But does she like it, I ask. “Yes,” she says without hesitation, “I
have a sense of accomplishment when I’m
done.” She also has a sense of the
nerves when she wakes up on Wednesday
morning but each week gets a little
easier. “I’ve always liked radio
especially talk radio,” she says. And
would she consider doing a little talk
radio-counseling? “No way.” All righty
then back to the station that servers
our community – 101.5 FM on your dial.
Hey. I bet I could do this the DJing.
At 10:52 Peg informs her listeners that the temperature has dropped
to 35°. The winds have shifted to
North-North-West. We are about the
listen to the Rippingtons, she tells us.
Once the headphones come off, she
carefully pencils in her log of
announcements. Keeping the log, she
says, helps her stay on track, time
wise. “It’s amazing,” she says, “how
your brain goes dead if you don’t plan
what you’re going to say. If I can catch
my brain, then I try and say something
off the cuff,” Something snappy, she
says, like the barometer pressure’s
going up.
11:05 a.m. “Oh this is one of my favorites,” Peg says to her
listeners. Debbie Spring playing viola
on her album Ocean Drive. By
now, when Peg looks at the computer
archives, I look at them too and I find
myself checking the clock and the track
times and trying to do the math. Can we
have the cut end at exactly the noon
hour. Hey listen to me – “we” who’s we?
Me?
Peg figures out that the cut from guitarist Lee Ritenour’s album
Color Rit brings us up to 11:41. A
couple of brief announcements and she
takes us to a selection from Peter
Moffitt’s album Riverdance which
has four tracks, totaling 21 minutes.
That brings us to the top of the hour
and she fade away early and hit the
airwaves right at noon.
“I think this is going to work out just right,” she says, deep in
thought. Me? I got lost back at Color Rit and trying to add 17 minutes to 21
minutes but allowing for two to four
minutes of announcements and whew! I
think I better leave this to the
professionals.
And indeed, Riverdance winds up at 12 on the dot. It is now
30° and Peg advises us to be careful out
there because the roads are expected to
be icy.
“Happy Valentines Day and this is Peggy Long signing off.”
WFNF goes on auto-pilot. Peg takes her headset off and leans back
in the chair.
“At first, it was just my husband listening. Now people say they
listen to my show – and that’s scary.”
But it’s good news for the Center for
Community Arts and radio station WCFA-LP
101.5 FM. This is Susan Tischler signing
off.
Volunteers interested in learning more about radio broadcasting on
WCFA can call 609-884-7525 and speak with
Drew. Local businesses that would be
interested in becoming founding
underwriters should call the same number
and speak with Judy Austermiller,
Development Director. CCA can also be
contacted at
info@centerforcommunityarts.org |