Barry Smolin


Barry Smolin is an American radio host, teacher, composer, and writer.

Radio

The Music Never Stops

From 1995–2012, Smolin was the host of The Music Never Stops, a psychedelic radio show on KPFK in Los Angeles, California for which Smolin won the first ever Jammy Award for "Best Radio Show" in 2000. Smolin's program was also nominated for an LA Weekly Music Award in 2004 in the "Best Radio Show" category. 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 and Jambands.com.

Head Room

Smolin is currently the host of the program Head Room on KPFK, heard every Sunday Night from 8pm-10pm. Head Room is a wide-open venue for exploratory rock and roll, be it psychedelic pioneers such as the Grateful Dead, contemporary jam-rock, healthy doses of vintage progressive rock, new music from myriad experimental, improvisational, accidental, avant-freak, arty-smarty pop, and psychedelic cabaret artists. Special emphasis is given to interesting offbeat local acts currently making art-music in Los Angeles.

Teaching

Smolin is also a noted teacher who has been featured in articles in Time and the Los Angeles Times., as well as in the Larchmont Chronicle, and the Library Foundation of L.A.'s "My Moby-Dick" tribute. In 2014 he was featured in a short film entitled Flying Lessons With Mr. Smolin that highlighted the impact he's had on a generation of students. From 1987–1992, Smolin taught English at Fairfax High School in the Los Angeles Unified School District. Since leaving Fairfax in 1992, he has been on the faculty at Hamilton High School, teaching English in the Hamilton Humanities Magnet program.

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." as well as on the Weeds Season 3 Soundtrack album. Under the performance moniker Mr. Smolin he has released four albums, At Apogee and The Crumbling Empire Of White People , a Los Angeles song-cycle entitled Bring Back The Real Don Steele., and a collaboration with Double Naught Spy Car entitled Heaven's Not High. In 2015, Smolin released two singles: "Fairfax High School" about his alma mater and "The Man I Met Once." Smolin's songs typically feature complex lyrics set to catchy pop melodies. He is also known for his postmodern explorations of historical/cultural incidents and figures, such as World War I espionage legend Mata Hari and Hollywood actress Veronica Lake, as well as the fictional The Guns of Navarone.

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, 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.".

Writing

Smolin is the author of 2 novellas: Narcissus In The Dark, 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, composed one sentence at a time on Twitter. In May 2011, Smolin released a volume of selected poetry covering the years 1988–2010 entitled Always Be Madly In Love. His most recent fiction project is a Trilogy entitled The Miranda Complex, Volume 1 of which was published in 2016 with Volume 2 following in 2017, and the concluding Volume 3 in 2018. The Miranda Complex chronicles the unconsummated romantic relationship between Lance Atlas and Miranda Savitch, 2 teenagers in 1970s Los Angeles.

Discography