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Crate Digging: Music Discovery

Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, The New York Public Library, “Vingboons Map of Manhattan,” 1639; “A recommendation from the Old Bin from Michele with one L,” via WFMU IG; 1960s era WNYC QSL Card, via WNYC Archive Collections.

Location

We’ll meet at WFMU, 43 Montgomery Street, Jersey City, at 4pm. For those of you who drive, I’ve been told there are many nearby parking garages. I’m also happy to meet folks in Manhattan for a group trek across the Hudson. There’s a 3:30pm PATH train 🚂 from the World Trade Center — we can meet up at at the Entrance to the PATH (on the western end of the lower level of the Oculus), near Epicurie Bouloud (see photo below!), at 3:20 — which will get us to Exchange Place by 3:33; from there, it’s a six-minute walk to WFMU. If you miss the 3:30 train, there’s another at 3:45. N.B. PATH allows for tap (phone/credit card) payment 🙂


Agenda

We’ll visit one of the nation’s preeminent, awesomest free-form radio stations, WFMU. In conversation with Station Manager and Program Director Ken Freedman plus our special guest, music journalist Liz Pelly — author of Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist(Atria, 2025) and much else — we’ll consider how transformations across the entire music ecology (record labels, radio, venues, streaming services, criticism, and beyond) have devalued creative labor and cheated listeners. More importantly, we’ll explore old-school, alternative, non-algorithmic means of resistance and reclamation — as well as agents, like free-form radio and public libraries, that can support these efforts. 


To Prepare for Today


Fieldwork Documentation

An abstracted grid view of our music discovery memoirs.
The Search & Discovery group gathered in WFMU’s music library with Ken Freedman. Photo by Shannon Mattern.
CDs with DJ notes on stickers. Photo by Caiti Borruso.
Rows of LPs and 7-inches. Photo by Holly Wilson.
Gathered in the recording studio with Irwin Chusid. Photo by Shannon Mattern.

A card "to verify your reception of WNYC 810 K.C. 1000 Watts" with typed date and time.
WNYC QSL Card, 1937, via WNYC Archives