Have you ever had this experience at one of those buffet restaurants?
You start filling your plate with things that really look good. And when you get back to your table, you realize that your meal consists of a slice of prime rib, lasagna, a crab leg and some Brunswick stew?
You were just thinking about what looked good. You weren't thinking about balance.
That happens from time to time, while programming the station.
I think most people who don't do this job just assume . . . you pick the best couple of song each week and that becomes your playlist.
But if you do that, without consideration of the bigger picture, you can end up with an unbalanced and awkward plate.
Coming out of the summer rush into some clearer-headed fall consideration, I felt that the station's list of new songs had started leaning toward the modern/alternative a little too heavily.
The playlist is full of Avett Brothers and Vampire Weekend and Neko Case and Elvis Costello & The Roots.
But the MVY tradition is rooted in singers and songwriters. And I realized that the plate was really lacking in artists the huat more closely to the folk roots that are the baseline of MVY.
And that's when, as a programmer, you worry less about the best song, and more about the right song.
It was great to see Garland Jeffreys new record come in, because I knew it was the first step in speaking to the missing part of the current playlist.
Hear the song on Youtube.
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