Credits

I would like to give credit where credit is due. Videos are from YouTube and other sources such as NicoNico while Oricon rankings and other information are translated from the Japanese Wikipedia unless noted.

Saturday, June 14, 2025

If I Had an All-Night Radio Show...

from Discogs

 

I had family over tonight for dinner after which most of us ended up watching the New York Yankees-Boston Red Sox game and the Edmonton Oilers-Florida Panthers Stanley Cup matchup. Drowsing off a bit in my armchair which is something that I tend to do with alarming frequency these nights, I started entertaining one of my fantasies which is wondering how it would be like to be an all-night radio DJ.

"Man, you must have been hitting the Canada Dry pretty hard, J-Canuck!" is probably what a lot of you might be thinking. But yeah, I've always wondered about a career in radio, and not just during the daytime drive time but also in the wee hours of the morning. After all, although I'm not sure whether I have a voice for radio, I certainly have a face for it! Plus, not only have I loved Donald Fagen's classic 1982 album "The Nightfly" as you can see above, I've also loved the cover of Fagen himself dressed up as a 1950s or 1960s disc jockey handling the overnight shift in that tiny room while he's charismatically spinning tales and records between midnight and 6 am.

One reason that I would love to try to give this particularly distinct job a whirl despite the hours is that I've read recently that live overnight radio in North America, at least, has been dead for a long time now (wherever you're reading this, perhaps you can tell me if this is also true in your neck of the woods). Financially speaking and in terms of personnel, I can understand why a radio station manager would cut all ties to all-night radio with a real human being; subscribing to a nationally-provided streaming service from a computer while the lights are all out at the station can save a lot of dough. However, I've also read that there had been DJs in the past who relished the overnight shift because they were a whole lot more free to talk and play their own kind of music and talk with the other all-nighters out there ranging from desperate university students cramming for exams to security guards at their lonely stations. Maybe they could have their own favourite guests or buddies come by to keep them company and nosh on pizza and stuff. As someone who used to man the Tuesday night shift at the International Student Centre at the University of Toronto, I was accustomed to seeing and chatting with all sorts of people who passed by the front desk and enjoyed it most of the time. I could enjoy that too as a DJ perhaps (of course, as long as the station manager was a nice and generous person).

But what would I play? Well, this is something that I was musing about for a long time and the six choices that I have are only a mere fraction of what I would like to play during a stint in the booth. Not surprisingly, it would be a mix of Japanese and non-Japanese music. So, typing this close to 11 pm EDT, here's a sextet of cool-down nighttime music coming up here on WKKP in Toronto. I'd also welcome any contributions by you out there.

Anita Baker -- Sweet Love


Earth Wind & Fire -- After the Love Has Gone


Donald Fagen -- I.G.Y. (What A Beautiful World)


Tatsuro Yamashita -- Blue Midnight


Minako Yoshida -- Hoho ni Yoru no Akari(頬に夜の灯)


Toko Furuuchi -- Dare Yori Suki Nanoni (誰より好きなのに)

4 comments:

  1. I am more than sure you would be a very awesome radio host and producer with your experience and knowledge of music! I would be trying hard to find a way to listen to Canadian radio stations, unless of course it was podcasted or youtubed.

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    Replies
    1. Hello, Brian. Yeah, probably podcasts would be the easiest way to get access to programming from Canadian radio stations such as CBC Radio.

      https://www.cbc.ca/radio/podcasts

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  2. Live overnight radio is alive and well in many cities large enough to have a college or "community" station.

    Great choice of songs for your playlist!

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    Replies
    1. Thanks, Robert. Believe me, there were other songs that I wanted to include such as DeBarge's "All This Love" and a number of tunes by Tomita Lab. It's good to hear that such overnight radio at the universities is still booming and probably a good thing, too, for all those pulling all-nighters.

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