Mike Lupica from 9/11/2006

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Playlist
Mercury Rev
Empire State
See You on the Other Side
0:07:24
Interpol
NYC
Turn on the Bright Lights
0:11:35
Joe Bataan
Subway Joe
Latin Funk Brother
0:14:20
Jonathan Richman
Springtime in New York
Her Mystery Not of High Heels and Eye Shadow
0:17:13
T. Rex
New York City
MP3
0:20:41
Sex Pistols
New York
Never Mind the Bollocks
0:23:43
MC Shan
The Bridge
Kurtis Blow's History of Rap Vol. 3
0:29:14
David Peel & the Lower East Side
Lower East Side
MP3
0:32:20
The Dictators
Avenue A
MP3
0:35:56
Laura Cantrell
14th Street
Humming by the Flowered Vine
0:39:06
Voices of East Harlem
New York Lightning
Soul Gospel
0:41:56
Al Kooper
New York's My Home
Rare & Well Done
0:44:27
Lou Reed
Dirty Blvd.
New York
0:47:49
Daddy Warbucks & Friends
NYC
"Annie"
0:52:36
Archie & Edith Bunker
Those Were the Days
"All in the Family"
0:54:04
Your DJ speaks
1:03:06
The Sweet
New York Connection
Hellraisers!
1:06:32
King Kong
Kingdom of Kong
Kingdom of Kong
1:09:56
Magnetic Fields
The Luckiest Guy on the Lower East Side
69 Love Songs
1:13:42
Frank Sinatra
Autumn in New York
MP3
1:16:45
Beverly Kenney
Brooklyn Love Song
MP3
1:19:37
Elsa Lanchester
New York Slip
MP3
1:21:49
Sonic Youth
The Empty Page
Murray Street
1:26:07
Simon & Garfunkel
The Only Living Boy in New York
Bridge Over Troubled Water
1:29:56
John Carpenter
The 69th Street Bridge
"Escape from New York"
1:32:39
Moondog
New York
Rare Material 2xCD
1:36:03
Hounds
Old Man in New York
Stora Popboxen Vol. 3 1967-1069
1:38:33
New York Dolls
Subway Train
New York Dolls
1:42:48
Chandra
Subway
Transportation
1:45:33
James Brown
Down and Out in NYC
MP3
1:50:18
Suicide
Frankie Teardrop
Suicide
2:00:44
Your DJ speaks
2:11:26
Run DMC
Here we Go (Live at the Funhouse)
Greatest Hits
2:15:29
Kiss
Back in the New York Groove
Kiss
2:18:17
Harry Nilsson
I Guess the Lord Must be In NYC
Nilsson Anthology
2:20:56
Pedestal
On the Subway
MP3
2:23:15
Petula Clark
Don't Sleep in the Subway
Petula Clark Collection
2:26:10
Wendy Mae Chambers
New York, New York
Gravikords, Whirlies, & Pyrophones
Ramones
53rd and 3rd
Ramones
2:30:39
Nikki Sudden
New York
Waiting on Egypt
2:33:47
Peter Sellers
New York Girls
A Celebration of Sellers
2:36:46
Lou Reed
Romeo Had Juliette
New York
2:39:51
Nico
Chelsea Girls
Chelsea Girl
2:47:21
Duke Ellington
New York City Blues
The Carnegie Hall Concerts: 1947
2:52:25
Joey Ramone
What a Wonderful World
2:55:09
Your DJ speaks
A new set begins: A few listener emails in response to the question: What first made you want to move to New York?
Comment: From Listener Maria: I've got no songs to suggest, but I thought I'd share that I have often thought that I moved to New York because of the years of Sesame Street as a kid.
Comment: From Listener Wendy: I started coming to NYC as a child during the late-1970s, when I was a wee girl. My Mom brought me to Chinatown on a regular basis, usually at night. It was a particularly scummy time for NYC, and in Chinatown, it often smelled terrible. I loved it. I liked the variety of darkness endemic to NYC - dark in a way the suburbs weren't, darker it seemed, but with lots of twinkling, buzzing, flashing lights. But no sky. All the scenes in Taxi Driver where Travis Bickle is driving in his cab at night - that kind of night. I moved to Vermont when I was 17. I liked it there. But as I navigated my way through my 20s, every time I read anything about NYC, especially anything food-related - like Russ & Daughters, Chinatown, Murray's Cheese, The 2nd Avenue Deli (RIP), I got very nostalgic. I moved here for a lot of reasons. The final reason that sent me and the U-Haul here was the knowledge that something bigger than myself, bigger than Vermont, was waiting for me here. And now I'm the Cheese Snob, taking over the world of cheese, in Manhattan and beyond. I moved here because it was the right thing to do. But that Channel 9 Million Dollar Movie thing is pretty awesome, now that you mention it.
Comment: From Listener Jason: Another thing that attracted me to NYC was News 4 New York, especially their coverage of the West Village Halloween Parade at the end of the usual 11 o'clock broadcast on Halloween. It was the creepiest thing I had ever seen, especially being from the suburbs, but it was incredibly attractive as being the place where people were having fun and could do anything they want - bigger, rougher, and scarier than ever - and all at the same time being in as rough and scaray a city as it was in the early 80s.
Comment: From Listener Johnny: I think of it often, it has a yellow banana on the cover: The Velvet Underground's first album was a great advertisment for me to move to NYC back in 1984. I wanted Femme Fatale to break my heart. I wanted to actually SEE what the poor girl would wear [to] all tomorrows parties. I wanted to wear tight black jeans and pointy boots and be an artist. Just like that. Simple. As far as entering the city if you come down the major degan (95?) and you see the confluence of bridges, five or seven, the harlem river parkway connnecting later to the GW bridge, there is what looks like a Roman aquaduct, even.. Where do all those bridges lead, no one knows for sure.. but I never get tired of that feeling of passing under them on the way to the island of Manhattan...
Comment: From Listener Rebecca: Why did I move to New York? Because it was a groovy option, sort of like the Oz thing and the Million Dollar Movie thing, I guess we get to know cities through the sweet lens of the movies; all of it presented to you exactly as someone else sees New York full of music and particular lead charcters that best exemplify New York and of course, street scenes where lots is bound to be seen even by everyday folk-- though this isn't the reason I moved, it was one of the reasons that deep down made it better to move here than to stay in buffalo: the last scene of Arthur where trashy Liza Minelli walked a very pathetic and drunk [Dudley Moore] down the steps of a church and they're laughing and not looking all that together (like how other movies tried to make you think of New Yorkers as fashionable and quickwitted) then everything looked wider the way movies used to do at the end and they drive away to the song "When you get lost between the moon and New York City" a song that always used to scare me because where the hell was between the moon and New York City? And also make me sad because it was obviously a love song but it was in a minor key? Maybe. Not sure. Either way, I liked that a lot, even as a little girl.
Comment: From Listener Steve: Movies [like] West Side Story, Midnight Cowboy, James Bond too, for some reason, probably the glam factor. Music [like] Miles Davis, Wes Montgomery and jazz in general, music recorded at Cafe a Go Go like Blues Project w/ Al Kooper, Lovin Spoonful w/ John Sebastian.
Comment: From Listener Andy: Spike Lee movies.
Comment: From Listener Jacob: I'd wanted to move to the city all my life, but I realized exactly why while listening to a late night radio show one night back in Maryland when I was in high school. The now defunct WDCU played a song which I have never heard since and which I've been unable to find despite having looked extensively, entitled "When You Leave New York You're Going Nowhere." Any chance you've heard of it? The singer sounded a bit like Joe Williams.
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