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ECLECTIC, INDEED: Acharya spins
tunes from every genre you’ve ever heard—and
some you haven’t.
Linda Cicero |
In her freshman year, Neepa
Acharya organized a student string quartet and got Barry
Shiffman, second violinist of the resident St. Lawrence
String Quartet, to coach it. As a sophomore, she gives
free violin lessons to kids at a local middle school.
Acharya is co-chair of Sanskriti and treasurer of another
South Asian group, SAHELI, and she single-handedly built
and tends the herb garden at Columbae, the co-op where
she lives. In her spare moments she hosts—what
else?—Eclectica, a weekly midday show on KZSU,
90.1 FM.
It’s a fitting title. “It’s
like, my show is ‘Eclectica,’ and my life
is ‘eclectica,’ so I can just keep talking
about so many things,” says the likely double
major in music and economics. “The three hours
on the radio is a time for me to do something I really
enjoy.”
From Isaac Stern to Hot Hot Heat to George
Clinton and the P-Funk All Stars. Acharya plays
vinyl and CDs. Major labels and indies. Glam, math rock,
punk, funk, classical, hip-hop, alternate country, blues
and flamenco. “If you’re a lover of music,
you don’t stick to just one thing. You love music
for what it is.”
Um, math rock? “It’s between
metal and punk rock, where the music constantly changes
time signatures and modulates to different keys,”
Acharya says. “It’s similar to classical
music and becomes a rhythmic cycle, constantly changing.”
Thank you, Milwaukee Youth Symphony.
Years of lessons on violin, viola, piano and French
horn probably deserve a line in the show’s credits.
“Being trained classically, I think I look for
things with a lot of intricacies, like a lot of guitar
work, or music that uses polyphonic tradition, with
more chord structures—things that aren’t
minimalist,” Acharya says.
Tuning in from the South Pole. KZSU
inherited its equipment in the 1960s from a Girl Scout
troop on the techno-rise. Several lights on the mixing
board don’t work, and the words “replacement
parts” make the chief engineer giggle. But the
500-watt signal that emanates from the dingy bunker
under Pigott Theater can be heard from San Jose to Oakland,
and music is streamed over the Internet to listeners
as far afield as the McMurdo Station in Antarctica.
“Sometimes I feel like a teacher when I’m
on the air,” Acharya says. “I like to tell
a lot of stories about the musicians and their history.”
DJ Decorum 101. There’s a long
waiting list for the 50-plus DJ slots, and only a handful
of show hosts are undergraduates. Everyone who makes
the cut has to put in 15 hours each quarter at the station
on such tasks as reviewing new CDs or looking for older
“lost lambs” that have escaped from the
fold. The DJs also take a broadcast training course.
“The idea is to teach you how to use the boards
and do bookkeeping, and also get familiar with what
FCC violations you could commit while you’re on
the air,” Acharya says.
Time for something a little different.
In a library of more than 100,000 titles to choose from,
plus the 100 to 200 new CDs that arrive each week, Acharya
can pluck out something as specific as postpunk bands
from San Diego, like The Strokes or Blood Brothers.
“For college students and people in the community
who are exposed to pop music on stations run by Clear
Channel, there are so many interesting artists they
don’t hear about,” she says. “That’s
why I like to play a lot of different music, because
I think it really is accessible and people can find
things they’ll really enjoy.” Postpunk,
by the way, is a mixture of funk and rock ’n’
roll.
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