The Chicano Connection and KXCI Radio

KXCI and the Chicano Connection

Note: To hear some of my old shows (2013-2020), please visit the Chicano Connection Archive. Thanks.

KXCI is a non-profit, non-commercial, community radio station in Tucson, Arizona, that first hit the local airwaves in late November, 1983. It was the brainchild of several local music lovers, including Paul Bear, John Cannon, Frank Milan and Roger Greer. Together these individuals, with the help of countless others,  laid the groundwork for the establishment of KXCI, forming the Foundation for Creative Broadcasting, applying for an FCC license, as well as  raising funds and awareness for the idea of “community” radio in Tucson. Getting such a project off the ground was a lot of work that took several years, and I for one am very grateful to these guys for  having the vision and drive needed to establish KXCI! The station was located in the old Dave Bloom and Sons building,  a decent sized  storefront  at 145 E. Congress, on the northwest corner of Sixth Ave. and Congress.  In 1987, operations were moved to the station’s  present location at  220  S. 4th Ave.

KXCI had been a project in the works for many years. 1983 would be the year it finally hit the airwaves.

1983 was a year that would change my life. At the time, I was a recent college graduate and was working part time at Fry’s Food Stores while taking classes at the University of Arizona  as  an undeclared graduate student. I didn’t know which direction I wanted to move in career-wise, but  I felt I needed to explore my creativity,  so I joined a radical theater collective called Teatro Libertad. It was with the Teatro that I developed a sense of self confidence. I learned the basics of acting and was also able to utilize  my musical skills singing and playing my guitar and flute.  I’ve always loved  music, and with the money I was earning as a grocery clerk, was also able to begin building what I thought was a pretty good, eclectic  record collection of music from all over the world, including Mexico and the US.

Playing my guitar at Oak Creek Canyon, 1983 (Click image to enlarge it).

One day in late Spring, 1983,  I read an ad in the local weekly alternative newspaper about a class being offered in radio programming at a new radio station called KXCI. I was intrigued and decided to sign up. I thought it would be cool to be a disc jockey and to be on the radio. My brother Rudy had gone through similar training at Tucson High School back in the mid-1960s. The photo below appeared in the Tucson Daily Citizen on October 12, 1966.

My brother Rudy in high school.

I felt that becoming a radio dj would be a great opportunity to turn people on to the music that I loved. It cost a few hundred dollars,  but in the end, was well worth it and one of the best decisions I ever made. Richard Towne, one of the station’s  staff members,  taught the class. There was a lot of technical information to learn, but it wasn’t too difficult to understand and I caught on very quickly.

The really fun part started when we were given time to  practice producing our own shows, which included writing out scripts and announcements, and selecting music to play on the air. I fondly remember putting my very first mock show together. Every song I featured was either about drugs or alcohol. My very first “commercial” was for what I called “Tata Jerry’s Bong Juice Cookbook”. Go figure. I was very young and wild at the time… By the end of the class, I had my very own programmer’s license. I was now legitimately qualified to work as a radio announcer and could hardly wait to go on the air!

My FCC radio license

In addition to Rich Towne, the core staff at KXCI  included  Sheila Key, Paul Bear, Frank Milan, Martha Van Winkle,  John Cannon and Roger Greer. There was such excitement in those early days!  Everyone’s  goal was  to get the station up and running. In November, after much anticipation, the station aired its first broadcast, a marathon program that featured the history of recorded sound and music from its beginnings to the present. I think it was called “the big broadcast of 1983.”

The Tucson Citizen, October 7, 1983.

The station officially went on the air on December 5, 1983. My very first show aired three days later.

By December, some of the most challenging bugs had been worked out, and KXCI was officially on the air. I was invited to host two of my very own radio shows, one of which I dubbed “The Chicano Connection”.

The show featured a variety of genres of Latin music, in addition to oldies but goodies, r&b and soul. While the above flyer indicates the show was from 11pm to 1am on Thursday nights, originally it aired from 7pm to 9pm on Thursdays.

Yours truly standing in front of the KXCI station on Congress St.

I had two shows initially and I was a”techie” for both Victor Blue, who hosted the Bluegrass show, and for Ted Warmbrand, who hosted a folk show called “Music From the Living Loom”. By Techie, I mean I ran the control board, cue-ing up music, and turning the mics on and off for the announcer. It was my way of giving back to the station. I felt so grateful for being on the air!

The other show I hosted was called the Friday morning music mix, and it  aired weekly from 9am to noon.  The morning music mix shows  aired Monday through Friday and were intended to appeal to a broad audience . Programmers were encouraged to  feature lots of contemporary jazz like Spyro Gyra and Weather Report, but I played just about anything I wanted, even though it got me into trouble a few times. More on that in a minute…

My very first playlist for my very first show. Aretha Franklin’s hit, “Respect,” was the first song I ever played on the air.

Mom hated my beard…

I didn’t own a lot of Latin music at first, but over time, I have acquired quite a collection, especially of Mexican rancheras.

My knowledge of music and my shows were also starting to get noticed out in the community, and I quickly became known for playing stuff that nobody else was playing or was long forgotten. Senator Dennis DeConcini even wrote to the station early on and noted how impressed he was with me and Kidd Squidd. I was in heaven.

My first morning music mix playlist. I would play the same artists a lot over time, but would try to vary the individual songs that I featured.

Here are more of my playlists from December, 1983. (click the title to see the list).

The Morning Music Mix, December 16, 1983.

The Chicano Connection, December 22, 1983.

The Morning Music Mix, December 23, 1983.

The Chicano Connection, December 29, 1983.

The Morning Music Mix, December 30, 1983.

The music I featured included folk music, classic pop, soul, R&B, Latin music, rock and roll, oldies and classic jazz. I developed a loyal following of listeners,  and was featured in a newspaper produced by the United Food and Commercial Workers Union , of which I was a member at the time.

ABOUT TOWN WITH THE MEMBERS

(Just a quick correction… The above article notes that the class I attended was free. Not so. I paid a lot of money, $300 if I recall correctly,  to attend the class. Kathy got it wrong.)

Unfortunately, a couple of members of the station management at the time didn’t appreciate my playing protest music or leftist songs like “The Internacionale”,  nor was I allowed to bring in more than a few albums of my own at a time. There was a little rule that stipulated that we were supposed to use the station’s music when on the air, and I had a difficult time with that, because I felt that my own record collection was far superior to the material the station supplied.  Things got so tense that I quit at one point after I was reprimanded for playing my own material, including an anti-gun  song called “Shoot First” by Judy Collins.  Quitting wasn’t a very smart move on my part, but I wasn’t thrilled about being censored or coerced into playing music I thought was boring and irrelevant, when there was so much good music out there that I felt people needed to hear!

Lo and behold, within less than a year, Paul Bear invited me  to return to KXCI to host a Latin show from 11pm to 1am on Thursday nights.  I named program “The Chicano Connected Revisited”! I guess  the station management figured it was okay if I played radical protest music late at night when most of the uptight crowd was already asleep! I happily agreed to return to the air, as I missed being on the radio.  I also missed my friends at the station.

An ad in the local paper advertising Latin night. Pepe Galvez is still on the air there.

I have lots of fond memories of these years at KXCI. The highlight of the entire experience was getting to meet and interview the great singer-songwriter, and one of my heroes,  Buffy Sainte Marie,  after a benefit concert she gave at the Heard Museum in Phoenix. Other highlights included co-hosting a gay and lesbian-themed Father’s Day show with Jamie Anderson, a local folksinger, and hosting a two hour Aretha Franklin tribute show.

I also remember  having a great time dancing in broad daylight on Congress Street during KXCI’s fun-filled  street parties. The station also sponsored a number of great concerts, including shows featuring Queen Ida and Her Zydeco Band, Albert Collins, Ray Charles, Etta James, The Persuasions and countless others. Oh, what fun we had back then! They were wild times, indeed! KXCI put Tucson on the cultural map, and the Old Pueblo has been a musical paradise ever since, thanks in large part to the dedicated staff and volunteers of this little community radio station.

1985 KXCI program guide

I stayed with the station until December 1986, the same month I graduated from Library School at the University of Arizona. By the following month, with master’s degree in hand, I was working as a librarian in Nogales, Arizona. From there, I moved to Ann Arbor Michigan for several years and worked at the University of Michigan Undergraduate Library. I finally made my way back home in 1992, after being offered  a job at the University of Arizona Library.

2003-2020

After spending nearly three years with the station, I left KXCI in December, 1986 . I had just graduated from Library School with a master’s degree in Library Science. Early the following month, I started my new career as a librarian in Nogales, Arizona. After sticking it out for 7 months, I decided to try my hand at academic librarianship, so from there, I moved to Ann Arbor Michigan for several years and worked at the University of Michigan Undergraduate Library. I finally made my way back home in 1992, after being offered a job at the University of Arizona Library.

After I returned to Tucson, I never thought I’d go  back to radio.  It had been over five years since I had been on the air, and I had heard and read that KXCI was having its share of ups and downs, with managerial and board  shake-ups happening on a regular basis. I still maintained a passion for music, however, and continued to collect records and cds and learn as much as possible about all kinds of music, particularly Latin popular music. At my job at the UA Library, after eight years of working in an administrative position, I applied for and was offered the music librarian position. While classical music wasn’t my forte, I quickly learned all  I needed to know to serve the students and faculty of the School of Music. It helped that I knew how to read music and that I played several instruments.

I also started conducting local and regional  workshops focused on building Latin music collections for librarians interested in serving Latinos and the Spanish speaking. These workshops were fun to do,  well attended and quite popular, and were a way for me to continue focusing on the music I loved.

After reading about my work  in the local paper, in May, 2003, Ernesto Portillo Jr.,  a KXCI dj, newspaper columnist and old friend, called  to invite me to be a guest host on his program, Onda Suave. I put a show on Mexican rancheras together for the occasion, and I was happy to hear that Ernesto’s listeners, (especially his father, a former Spanish language radio personality and Tucson legend),  enjoyed the show. Before long,  I was filling in for Ernesto on a regular basis,  and within a year,  I was back in the saddle as a regular programmer. From 2004 to 2006, I co-hosted a show with longtime KXCI programmer  Pepe Galvez,  called Barrio Sounds. I featured music from Mexico and the U.S.,  but played other  genres as well. The show aired every Wednesday from 10pm to midnight.

My friend Alex Rivera and I in the KXCI Library

In 2006, one of the Latin night programmers decided to take a break from radio, and I successfully lobbied the station management to let me have my own show, which I decided to once again dub “the Chicano Connection”. I particularly enjoyed putting together  thematic shows featuring specific genres and styles  of both Latin and American music such as corridos and rancheras, protest music, and music written by specific composers. I also enjoyed playing civil rights-themed music on Martin Luther King Day and Cesar Chavez’s birthday.  I particularly enjoyed the opportunity to interview  singers like  Tish Hinojosa and work with local musicians  John Contreras, Olga Flores and Justin Enriquez, arranging recording sessions for them and intervewing them  in our station studio.

Unfortunately, there came a point when juggling  a full time job, family obligations and a late night radio show every week turned out to be more of a challenge than I could handle, so  in October 2008, I decided I needed a little break. Justin Enriquez, a fine young mariachi musician, took the reins,  changing  the name of the program to “La Serenata,” which featured  mostly mariachi and ranchera music.

My time away from the station didn’t last too long this time around.  After subbing here and there  for Justin and other programmers,  in late 2010, I approached Justin  and asked him if he would consider letting me  co-host La Serenata. He graciously agreed. We took turns hosting  for the first nine months of 2011, but in  September, he handed the program  over to me full time. A short while later, Onda Suave host Ernesto Portillo, Jr. decided he needed a long term break, and I requested to have my show moved   from the 10pm to midnight slot to the 8pm to 10pm slot. The request was granted and I’m very happy with my new time slot.  I’m now on the air every Wednesday from 8pm to 10pm.

Being a programmer on KXCI presents itself with many wonderful opportunities. Last Fall (2012), I had the pleasure of  producing four  specialty shows, which I called “Songbirds of the Sixties”. Each week for a month I featured a different singer–Joan Baez, Judy Collins, Buffy Sainte Marie and Joni Mitchell.  I went through all of my recordings of each of these women and found material that I thought was worth including, some of it was quite rare and included songs that folks probably had never heard before on KXCI. For example, I played Scarlet Ribbons by Joan Baez, a song that appeared on her very first, unofficial recording session back in 1958. I also played a song or two from her “Folksingers Round Harvard Square” album, a very rare recording that has long been out of print.

At this point, I don’t ever plan to leave radio again!   I have found that it keeps me focused and energized when I have a weekly commitment such as a radio show.  I also love the music and I love being on the air. The station management allowed me to change the name of the  program back to  “The Chicano Connection.” I  now once again have a very loyal foilowing and have a venue for promoting Latin music as well as the work I do at the University of Arizona Library, where I now, among other things, coordinate exhibits and events for Special Collections. Some things are just too worthwhile to let go of for good!

KXCI is member supported, so if you like what you hear, become one of the many, many people who support the station. Use this link to learn more about how you can become a member!

November 2015 Update: I’m still here! I never seem to tire of doing this work and am so, so grateful to the members of KXCI and to all the folks that listen to my radio show. Thank you!

Bridgette Thum and me during a recent KXCI fund drive.

January 2020 Update: Wow,  how time flies! I’m still on the air and hope to continue for a while longer. My record collection continues to grow, and I am always listening to new material, even though I don’t always play it! There’s nothing like hearing the classics. I  am so grateful to all the listeners in Tucson and beyond who come forward during our fund drives and support my show and the station. Thanks so much, my friends. Here’s to hoping that the new year will be a better one than the last one, as it was sure a challenge living through all the turmoil our current administration has caused. Anyone with a heart knows that children shouldn’t be kept in cages and packed in like sardines in jail cells meant for a mere fraction of the number that are put there. Music helps soothe the soul in troubled times. I hope that the music I play achieves at least a little of that. Peace, my friends. — Bob Diaz

March, 2020 Update:

Putting shows together these past few weeks has been more difficult than usual. I seem to have lost the creative spark that usually helps push me forward with yet another show. I promised myself that if this volunteer gig became too much of a burden, that I’d let it go, and unfortunately, the time has arrived to hang up my headphones for good. It’s been a wild, fun ride all these years. I’ve enjoyed this work immensely, and I’m happy that many people in the community enjoyed it too. It’s time to move on to other endeavors. I don’t foresee myself going back at this point, but one never knows. Lord knows I’ve done this before! My replacement will be Gwen Hernandez, who I believe will be an outstanding radio host. She knows Mexico and Mexican music, and that to me is what is most important, to have someone on the air who knows what a ranchera is and what son jarocho is, and who knows the history of Mexico’s music. I’m sure Gwen will be just wonderful. Please join me in supporting her and give her shows a listen. Thanks, my friends. So long. Love you!

Old Main Renovation 2014

UncategorizedEdit

Note: this page is still under construction. Please check back again later to see the complete post. Thanks.

During her tenure as President of the University of Arizona (2012-2017), Ann Weaver Hart decided it was time to renovate Old Main, the University’s oldest and best-known campus building. It was previously renovated in the 1940s and in 1972 was selected for listing on the National Register of Historic places. The latest project, begun in early 2013, was expensive, totaling over 13 million dollars, and not a very popular undertaking (with some donors and administrators), but in the end, the transformation of the second floor of Old Main was a sight to behold. The newly renovated building, replete with new air conditioning units on both floors, now houses, among other things, student services, spacious meeting rooms, and the president’s office, and showcases some of the University’s finest artwork and cultural artifacts. The architectural firm, Poster, Frost, Mirto took the lead in designing the recent project. Sundt Construction completed the work.

In 2013, the director of Special Collections assigned me and another colleague the task of assisting the coordinator of the Old Main interior design project in identifying historic photographs and other materials for display in Old Main. My colleague took the lead in identifying and providing photographs and I worked on identifying materials for a small exhibit case and wrote annotations for many of the photos.

Historic photographs of the campus and photographs of covers of UA Yearbooks now fill the hallways and meeting rooms of the 2nd floor the Old Main building.

I chose materials for the exhibit case below. An inventory follows.

This is the exhibit case that I filled with memorabilia and documents from Special Collections. Below is the inventory of material included.

Most of the following photographs are from Special Collections. My colleague and the interior designer assigned to the renovation project worked with a professional photographer to restore and frame the historic photos included here.

Old Main at the beginning…
The original floor plan, courtesy of Special Collections.
Old Main now.
Corky Poster, one of the architects involved in the renovation project.
Photos from Special Collections above the exhibit case that I contributed material to.
Rodney Mackey, a staff member of the UA’s Planning Design and Construction department, gave a tour to the UA staff who contributed artwork and artifacts to the project.
The Arizona State Museum contributed some beautiful American Indian pottery to the project.
Minerals from the UA minerals collection.
From Special Collections, a photo of an early 20th century celebration at the Old Main fountain.
This sign, belonging to the original contractor, was found in the attic during the renovation.
The walls are also filled with photos from the Center for Creative Photography.
Meeting rooms on the 2nd floor.

Another shot of Old Main, courtesy of Special Collections.
One of the larger meeting rooms on the 2nd floor.
Another large meeting room.
The reception area leading to the President’s office.
Students at work in a science classroom, early 1900’s.
UA co-eds outside one of the women’s dorms.
Yearbook covers lined the walls of the various meeting rooms on the renovated second floor.

The architects held an open house for contributors to the project in advance of the grand opening. Below are some of the photos of the renovation.

From a presentation given by the architect, Corky Poster.
More photos of the work.
Photo courtesy of Sundt Construction.

Click here see a complete, annotated list of the photos contributed to both the Old Main project and the Phoenix Health Sciences building project.

A thank you letter from President Hart

Further reading:

Saving Old Main, The UA’s Oldest Building, by La Monica Everett Haynes, University Communication, October 1, 2013.

Old Main Renovation almost finished at University of Arizona, by Anne Ryman. The Arizona Republic, May 5, 2014

Old Main Re-opens Its Doors, University Relations-Communications, August 27, 2014.

University of Arizona Old Main Renovation. Sundt Construction.

That’s all, folks!

UA Alumni Association 50 year reunion exhibition

Note: this page is still under construction. Please check back again later to see the complete post. Thanks.

2015 UA Alumni Association 50 Year reunion

In early 2015, I was asked to work with representatives of the UA Alumni Association to create a small exhibit of materials from the UA Class of 1965. The exhibit cubes shown below are housed on the 1st floor of Old Main. The exhibit remained in place for several years.

I did a lot of research for this particular exhibit, and could not possibly fit everthing I wanted to into three cases. I still have all the material I gathered and will be adding more to this blog post, as there is no limit here. I can add as much stuff as I want, so I will! What I have gathered together so far does not provide much context for what happened in 1965, so I’ll be working to add more factual information and additional photos etc. Stay tuned. It may take me a while, but I’ll get there soon enough!

Stay tuned. More to come…

Mike Carroll

Mike Carroll died today. He was Denise Shavers longtime partner. They have lived in New York for many years, but I first knew them when they lived here in Tucson downtown in an apartment on 9th street near my friend Richard back in the early 1980s. Mike was Irish, born in Massachusetts, but raised here. He loved beer.

Mike and Denise
My birthday party in 1983. Mike and Denise were there.

He was also an amazing artist. He gave me a painting he did once of Bob Dylan. It was a dual portrait. One was of Dylan before Highway 61 Revisited and the other was post Highway 61, kind of like what he looked like during Blonde on Blonde. I also have a hand-painted Christmas card he and Denise sent me, and a couple of  photos of the two of them together. I treasure these things.

Dylan, then and then…

One day we had a big party at Richard’s house. This was in the early 80s. Everyone was drinking and smoking. We may have even been doing hallucinogenics at the time too. He he he. Someone put on The Basement Tapes by Dylan and the Band, and wow, there were moments when everyone was singing along. Only a few of us die hard Dylan fans knew all the lyrics, but it didn’t stop the rest of the gang from joining in. With Dylan’s songs, one can just mumble their way through the tune and nobody notices… Mike was in the middle of it all, singing his heart out along with Bob and the Band, his buddy Jimmy, and all our friends. We sure had fun right then. It was a magical moment, one I’ll never forget.

We sure had some great times back then. In mid-June, 1982, we all piled up in my brand new 1964 Galaxy 500, given to me by my mom as a college graduation gift a couple of months earlier, and drove up to Mesa to see the Clash perform. Denise had made some really cool silk screened t-shirts to sell at the concert. (I used to have one, but wore it out). On the way up to Phoenix on this particular trip, we were all partying in the car, and as luck would have it, a cop stopped us. It turns out I had expired plates. The cop could tell we were partying. Who wouldn’t have smelled the smoke? But he was kind that day and let us off the hook, and we ended up getting to the concert in plenty of time. It turned out to be a blast after all. The Clash were on the same bill as the English Beat, but they sucked.

One of the greatest rock bands ever.
A 1964 Galaxy 500, just like the one I used to own. Having six to eight people pile up in a car like this will turn it into a “low rider” for sure. No wonder the cop stopped us.

Another time, we all drove down, in my Galaxy 500 again, to Nogales to eat,drink and shop. It was also a fun trip. We sang songs along the way and had such fun. I was into listening to music of the civil rights era at the time, and had everyone singing along to tunes like “If you miss me at the back of the bus”.

We also sang “South Street”. Seems like Denise was the only other person in the world who knew the song!

My favorite girl singer of the early 60s!

In the summer of 1987, I traveled to San Francisco to meet my future boss from the University of Michigan Library. She wanted to check me out before deciding whether or not she wanted me to come to Ann Arbor for a job interview. The American Library Association conference was in progress,  but I was there just to meet her. Once that was all over, I hooked up with Mike, who lived there with Denise in the Fillmore district at the time on Hayes Street. Denise was out of town so I got to hang out just with Mike. He took me out drinking all over the city to a number of Irish bars, and then we ended up at a party with a lot of his “artist” friends. It was the strangest scene, with artsy-fartsy gabachos everywhere, and I of course felt totally out of place. Mikey fit right in. He was an artist too, after all, and a gabacho, but a cool one! Wow.

Later that same night, I came up with new words to the song, “On Top of Spaghetti”, which I had been singing to the kids in Nogales at the time. They went something like this…On top of your chi chis, all covered with cheese, I lost my virginity, when you said please. We rolled on the table, then on to the floor, and when it was over, you wanted some more…” Wow. That’s Pulitzer prize material, for sure! Or at least National Poetry award stuff…Actually I was drunk as a skunk. The words just flowed out of me as easily as the alcohol had been flowing in the entire day…

On Top of Spaghetti. When I was a children’s librarian back in 1987, I would sing this to the kids during story hour. They loved it.
What I look like when I’m shit-faced…

Mike’s gifts were art and music. I don’t know if he ever had a “straight,” regular job. He leaned on Denise a lot.

A photo of Mike, Denise, RIchard, Emily and Luz, circa 1995.

I got a text message earlier today from Richard’s wife Emily that Mike had died this morning. Now Mikey and Richard are both up in heaven, probably partying and singing the same Dylan songs they sang together that day at Richard’s party almost 40 years ago. At least I like to think that.

I called Denise and we talked for a while. Mike died of melanoma. It had spread throughout his body and ended up in his brain. He wasn’t in any pain and he got to be at home when he passed. That’s probably all he wanted at the end, was to be at home with Denise. Denise has covid, but she sounded okay. After all she’s been through, the poor thing needs a rest. I hope she gets it. Mike will be cremated next week. And life will go on.

My friend Denise. Please send her a big hug.
Another MIke Carroll original.