Barry Smolin | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Also known as | Mr. Smolin |
Born | April 20, 1961 |
Origin | Los Angeles, California |
Barry Smolin (born April 20, 1961), also known as Mr. Smolin, is an American radio host, teacher, composer, and writer. He last taught at Alexander Hamilton High School in Los Angeles, and was a longtime radio host on L.A. area public radio station KPFK.
Career
Radio
The Music Never Stops
From 1995 to 2012, Smolin was the host of The Music Never Stops, a psychedelic radio show on KPFK in Los Angeles, California[1] for which Smolin won the first ever Jammy Award for "Best Radio Show" in 2000.[2] Smolin's program was also nominated for an LA Weekly Music Award in 2004 in the "Best Radio Show" category.[3] The Music Never Stops began as a program featuring live recordings of the Grateful Dead, but after the death of Jerry Garcia; Smolin expanded the scope of the show to include contemporary jam-rock and miscellaneous psychedelia, paying special attention to music being made by musicians in Los Angeles. The program has been covered in Relix magazine[4] and Jambands.com.
Head Room
Smolin was host of the program Head Room on KPFK,[5] heard on Sunday nights from 8–10. His last show on KPFK aired on April 25, 2021.
Teaching
Smolin's teaching career has been featured in articles in Time[6] and the Los Angeles Times,[7] as well as in the Larchmont Chronicle,[8] and the Library Foundation of L.A.'s "My Moby-Dick" tribute.[9][10] From 1987 to 1992, Smolin taught English at Fairfax High School (the school Smolin himself graduated from in 1978) in the Los Angeles Unified School District. Since leaving Fairfax in 1992, he was on the faculty at Alexander Hamilton High School, teaching English in the Hamilton Humanities Magnet program until 2021.
Music
Pop music
As a songwriter, Smolin has composed music for the Showtime television series Weeds, with his song "The Earth Keeps Turning On" appearing in Season 3's Episode 7, entitled "He Taught Me How to Drive By"[11] as well as on the Weeds Season 3 soundtrack album. Under the performance moniker Mr. Smolin he has released four albums, At Apogee (2004) and The Crumbling Empire of White People (2007) (both produced by Tony Award-winning composer/dramatist Stew), a Los Angeles song cycle entitled Bring Back The Real Don Steele (2009),[12] and a collaboration with Double Naught Spy Car entitled Heaven's Not High (2013). In 2015, Smolin released two singles: "Fairfax High School", about his alma mater, and "The Man I Met Once".
Experimental music
Since 2016, Smolin has primarily composed experimental pieces, both instrumental and spoken word. With Double Naught Spy Car, he set chapter 1 of James Joyce's Finnegans Wake to music as part of the Waywords and Meansigns project,[13] which was released in 2016 as was an album of the project's instrumental tracks called That Tragoady Thundersday. In September 2017, he released an instrumental album entitled The Sooterkin Library, a trio project that Smolin describes as "12-tone avant-freak mongrel psycho-tonk".[14]
Writing
Smolin is the author of two novellas: Narcissus in the Dark (2012),[15] whose narrator is God sentenced to eternity in a dungeon and whose consciousness thinks new universes into being while sorting through the detritus of his troubled past, and the experimental prose project Wake Up in the Dreamhouse,[16] composed one sentence at a time on Twitter. In May 2011, Smolin released a volume of selected poetry covering 1988 to 2010 entitled Always Be Madly in Love.[17] His most recent fiction project is a trilogy entitled The Miranda Complex, Volume 1 of which was published in 2016[18] with Volume 2 following in 2017,[19] and the concluding Volume 3 in 2018.[20] The Miranda Complex chronicles the unconsummated romantic relationship between Lance Atlas and Miranda Savitch, two teenagers in 1970s Los Angeles.
Discography
- At Apogee (2004), produced by Stew
- The Crumbling Empire Of White People (2007), produced by Stew
- Bring Back The Real Don Steele (2009)
- Heaven's Not High (2013)
- Fairfax High School (single, 2015)
- The Man I Met Once (single, 2015)
- Mutt and Jute (single, 2016)
- Finnegans Wake Chapter 1 (Waywords and Meansigns, 2016)
- That Tragoady Thundersday (2016)
- The Sooterkin Library (2017)
- The Mookse & The Gripes (2018)
- Mysterium Fidei (2018)
- The Mole With A Hole In The Whole Of Him (2018)
- The Five Decades (2018)
- The Four Mysteries (2018)
- My Lunch With Lautréamont (2018)
- Baby Methuselah (2019)
- Ancients Link With Presents As The Human Chain Extends (2019)
- Always Be Madly In Love (2019)
- unspoken (2019)
- The Age of Endarkenment (2019)
- Before You Know It (2019)
- Water Signs (2019)
- The Day I Met Blassie & Tolos (2019)
- The Humpback of Nostradamus (2019)
- Play Free (2019), with Vince Meghrouni
- The Fantastic Catch (2020)
- Eyelid Movies (2020)
- Outside Norms (2020)
- Say No More (2020)
- Antediluvian Future (2020)
- Lurch (2020)
- Smoke on the Altar (2020)
- The Minerva Syndrome (2020)
- Remember My Chains (2020)
- Doo-Dads (2020)
- The God Paradox (2020)
- Havdalah Sonata (2020)
- That's What They All Say (2020)
- Pretend To Play (2020)
- In the Name of Zarking Fardwarks (2020)
- Slide Down My Rainbow (2020)
- Hypostasy (2020), with Vince Meghrouni
- Strange Fire (2020)
- Great Seizure's Ghost (2020)
- Radio Andromeda (2020)
- Frenching (2021)
- Ode To Billy Jack (2021)
- Maps To Stars Homes (2021)
- A Jew In Space (2021)
- Underworld Orchestra (2021)
- We Are The Ancestors (2021)
- When A Weasel Steals Your Chumetz (2021)
- I Knew It By The River (2021)
- A Trespass Offering (2021)
- Tender Buttons (2021)
- A Pocketful of Poesies (2021)
- Deep In The Sea-Meant Pond (2021)
- We Hear Voices (2021)
Bibliography
- Wake Up In The Dreamhouse (2011)
- Always Be Madly In Love (2011)
- Narcissus In The Dark (2012)
- The Miranda Complex Volume 1: Munchkinland (2016)
- The Miranda Complex Volume 2: Poppies (2017)
- The Miranda Complex Volume 3: The Man Behind The Curtain (2018)
References
- ↑ "The Music Never Stops with Barry Smolin". Archived from the original on September 22, 2008. Retrieved September 14, 2008.
- ↑ Jammy Award#Award Winners
- ↑ "LAWMA 2004". Retrieved July 29, 2023.
- ↑ "Art Howard -- Radio Rebels: 6 Shows that Bring Jambands to the Airwaves". Arthoward.com. Archived from the original on October 24, 2008. Retrieved September 14, 2008.
- ↑ "mr. smolin - radio - head room kpfk 90.7fm". Mrsmolin.com. Archived from the original on June 30, 2012. Retrieved June 18, 2012.
- ↑ Tifft, Susan (June 11, 2015). "Education: Who's Teaching Our Children?". Time. Archived from the original on June 11, 2015. Retrieved May 3, 2021.
- ↑ Ricci, James (June 9, 2006). "Yes, He Does Digress". Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ "Barry Smolin". Larchmont Chronicle. Archived from the original on April 25, 2007. Retrieved September 14, 2008.
- ↑ LA, Library Foundation of (October 17, 2013). "My Moby Dick - Voice of Ishmael" – via Vimeo.
- ↑ LA, Library Foundation of (October 17, 2013). "My Moby Dick - In the Beginning" – via Vimeo.
- ↑ "Showtime – Weeds Music". Archived from the original on June 15, 2011. Retrieved June 26, 2011.
- ↑ "The Real Don Steele is Alive! Alive!". L.A. Weekly.
- ↑ "Waywords and Meansigns - Joyce's Finnegans Wake Set to Music". Waywordsandmeansigns.com.
- ↑ "The Sooterkin Library, by Mr. Smolin". Mr. Smolin.
- ↑ Smolin, Barry (July 17, 2012). Narcissus In The Dark. ISBN 978-1478217602.
- ↑ Smolin, Barry (March 9, 2011). Wake Up In The Dreamhouse. ISBN 978-1460927120.
- ↑ Smolin, Barry (May 28, 2011). Always Be Madly In Love. ISBN 978-1461190400.
- ↑ Smolin, Barry (January 26, 2016). The Miranda Complex Volume 1. ISBN 978-0692614204.
- ↑ Smolin, Barry (2017). The Miranda Complex Volume 2. ISBN 978-0692797228.
- ↑ Smolin, Barry (January 16, 2018). The Miranda Complex Volume 3: The Man Behind The Curtain (1st ed.). Anomaly Press. ISBN 9780692973769.