CBC Radio 3

CBC Radio 3
Broadcast area Canada & Contiguous United States on Sirius XM Satellite Radio
Slogan Breaking New Sound
Format Canadian indie music
Owner Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
Webcast Listen Live! (Canada only)
Website music.cbc.ca#/radio3

CBC Radio 3 is a radio network that consists of two parts devoted to Canadian arts and music: a radio service which is available on Sirius XM Satellite Radio and streaming audio, and several daily and weekly podcasts from the CBC Radio 3 website. The audio stream is available from both CBC Music[1] and from iTunes Radio, but geographical restrictions are in place to prevent access outside of Canada.

The network evolved out of programming on CBC Radio 2, which also simulcasted the satellite network on Saturday and Sunday nights from its debut in December 2005 until March 17, 2007. Radio 3 is no longer heard on terrestrial radio, but is still available through its satellite radio and Internet operations. The French-language equivalent to CBC Radio 3 was Bande à part.

The network plays a relatively freeform mix of indie music, including rock, pop, alternative hip hop, folk, country and electronic music. An article on Nerve.com, published in October 2006, called CBC Radio 3 "possibly the world's best radio station".[2]

CBC Radio 3 was nominated for a Webby Award in 2007 and previously won the award in 2003.

The network's unofficial mascot for many years was Bucky, a cartoon creature with the body of a goose and the head of a deer. Bucky was primarily seen in the introduction to the network's weekly R3TV video podcast, and also lent his name to the network's annual year-end music awards.

Origins

Operated by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Radio 3 had its genesis in a late-1990s proposal to launch a radio network devoted to youth culture, comparable to BBC Radio One and Australia's Triple J.[3] The network, which would complement CBC Radio One and CBC Radio 2, would build on existing CBC Radio programming such as Night Lines, Brave New Waves and RealTime. The original plan was codenamed "Clubhouse".[3] The CBC filed an application with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to launch the network in 1998,[4] but later asked the CRTC to defer consideration of its application.[4]

Although technically predating the application, one important step in the development of what would become Radio 3 did take place in 1997, when Nightlines and RealTime were merged into the new program RadioSonic, cohosted by former Nightlines host David Wisdom and former RealTime host Leora Kornfeld.

A slightly different Radio 3 was launched in 2000 as a converged webcasting project based in Vancouver,[5] with its own servers and managed by CBC Radio.[5] The team consisted of Susan Englebert,[6] Robert Ouimet,[5] Dave Tonner, Loc Dao, Rob McLaughlin and other partners. CBC Radio 3 initially launched separate sites 120 Seconds,[5] New Music Canada[5] and Just Concerts[5] through a collaboration between CBC Radio, media design company Dotaku Group, and technology company Internet Edge. Each provided audio, video and Flash content as media-on-demand streaming for site users. 120 Seconds was a directory of user and artist-created video and documentary projects, New Music Canada was composed entirely of user-created and uploaded music by Canadian independent pop, rock, electronic and hip hop musicians, and Just Concerts included exclusive recordings of live performances by independent artists, both regular concert performances and Radio 3 studio sessions. The first musician to create an artist profile on the site was rapper Classified.[3] Roots Music Canada was later added to the trio of websites, and offered songs uploaded by country and folk musicians.

In 2001, Grant Lawrence became the host of RadioSonic.[3]

In late 2002, the group, led by Robert Ouimet and Rob McLaughlin, created CBCRadio3.com, a full-screen online magazine which profiled Canadian music, literature and visual arts, accompanied by a set musical playlist which changed with each "issue".[7] The site also served as a portal to the other content sites. The site was recognized internationally, winning three Webby Awards, including People's Voice Award for Best Broadband site, in 2003.[8] The site won over 20 other awards, including the Art Director's Club, New York Festival Awards[7] and Communication Arts Awards, as well as being published in several books. By this time, the site was averaging 5.5 million page views per month.[9]

In 2003, RadioSonic was integrated into the Radio 3 project, and was renamed CBC Radio 3 to reflect the change.[10] With new host Alexis Mazurin, the program featured music and performances from the Radio 3 website.[3]

On June 2, 2005, CBC Radio 3 also launched a weekly podcast, hosted by Grant Lawrence.[11] The hour-long podcast, which has also aired as a program on the satellite radio network, has ranked as the most downloaded Canadian podcast on the Internet, with an estimated 125,000 weekly listeners in 2006.[12]

Satellite radio

Satellite radio was approved in Canada by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) on June 18, 2005. Over the next several months, Radio 3 was relaunched as a channel on Sirius Satellite Radio.[13] The main CBC Radio 3 site was shut down for part of 2005 to facilitate the relaunch, although the podcast, the media-on-demand subsites and the Saturday night Radio Two program remained active.

The satellite radio service launched on December 3, 2005, at which time the weekend program on CBC Radio 2 became a live simulcast of the satellite radio service. The main CBC Radio 3 website was relaunched a few days earlier, now featuring a collaborative music blog and an Icecast stream of Canadian music.

The network's primary studio is located in the CBC Regional Broadcast Centre in Vancouver, although guest hosts typically host from an alternate CBC studio in their home city. Alexis Mazurin, the original host of CBC Radio 3 in its radio show format, died in October 2005,[14] and the main Vancouver studio was named the Alexis Mazurin Studio in his memory.

In August 2006, Radio 3 launched its own weekly chart show, The R3-30. Originally hosted by Craig Norris until he left the network to join CBC Radio's new outlet for Kitchener-Waterloo, CBLA-FM-2, in 2013, the program was then taken over by Lana Gay.

On December 25, 2006, CBC Radio 3 held its first annual "Bucky Awards". The Bucky Awards is an awards celebration to promote independent Canadian music, and fans decide who wins the awards in each category.[15]

The station aired on Sirius 94 from its launch until June 24, 2008, when it moved to Sirius 86 as part of a major realignment of the Sirius lineup. On May 4, 2011, the channel was again moved as part of a reorganization of Sirius' channel lineup to channel 152. On May 9, 2013 the channel was moved to channel 162 and was also launched on XM.

Radio 3 leaves Radio Two

On January 17, 2007, the CBC announced that as part of a major programming realignment on CBC Radio 2, that network would discontinue its Radio 3 simulcast in March of that year.[16] The final simulcast, which aired on March 17, was a retrospective broadcast which included past interviews with William Shatner and John Lydon, visits from past hosts David Wisdom and Leora Kornfeld, phone interviews with Buck 65, Joel Plaskett, Sara Quin and Jim Bryson, and live in-studio performances by John K. Samson and Christine Fellows, as well as listener requests for classic songs from any era in which Radio 3 or its predecessors aired.

The R3-30, which was usually taped in advance and rebroadcast on Radio Two in a later time slot, also aired live from Vancouver that evening and incorporated listener phone calls into the program's usual format.

Webcast

From 2005 to 2009, the Icecast stream available from the network's website was not a simulcast of the satellite radio broadcast, but was programmed separately. Initially, the webstream consisted exclusively of music with the occasional identification break, but on September 14, 2007 it was relaunched with hosts and feature content, similar to but still programmed separately from the satellite radio station. Due to funding cuts, however, the two services were merged in June 2009, such that the webstream is now a straight simulcast of the satellite radio channel.

Prior to the merger, the two services had slightly different programming strategies – the satellite radio station aired a music mix of 85 per cent Canadian and 15 per cent international, while the web service's mix was 100 per cent Canadian. With the merger of the two services, the station announced that the program mix would be 100 per cent Canadian music on both platforms, although exceptions will be permitted for international music with some Canadian character – such as international artists covering Canadian songs, collaborations between Canadian and non-Canadian artists, international artists appearing on the bill with Canadian artists when the network is airing a live concert, or "honourary [sic] Canadian" artists such as Neko Case and Rose Melberg.

In February 2009, CBC Radio 3 participated with Exclaim! and aux.tv to launch X3, a new collaborative cross-promotional platform which sees all three outlets air feature content spotlighting a particular "Artist of the Month". X3 artists of the month have included K'naan, Malajube, Thunderheist, Japandroids, Apostle of Hustle, The Rural Alberta Advantage, Owen Pallett, and Jenn Grant.[17]

In addition to the service's conventional radio programming, any song in the network's music library can also be played on demand from the artist's profile page on the site. In May 2011, Joel Plaskett became the first artist in the network's history to reach one million on-demand plays.[18]

In 2012, CBC Radio 3 was integrated into the new CBC Music service.

Podcast

Unlike Bande à part, which produced a number of special short run podcasts in addition to its regular weekly music podcast, Radio 3 only produced its main music podcast through 2006.

As a result of the Radio Two schedule changes, on February 26, 2007 CBC Radio 3 created several new podcasts to complement the original CBC Radio 3 podcast, including a daily New Music Canada Track of the Day and an hour-long weekly R3-30 podcast.

As well, the network also launched a new internet streaming program titled CBC Radio 3 Sessions, which featured live performances by artists at the CBC Radio 3 studio.[19] The Sessions also aired as a program on Sirius 86. As of September 12, 2007, the Sessions program also appeared in podcast format. Sessions concerts have also aired on the CBC's cable television service bold.

Notably, all Radio 3 podcasts are available in Ogg (Vorbis), a freely-licensed audio format, in addition to the more conventional mp3 format.

Video

On April 20, 2007, as part of CBC Radio 3's 100th podcast, a weekly video podcast was introduced. The new video-based podcast, R3TV, revolved around the personalities at CBC Radio 3 and featured a particular artist each week, who provided commentary for the podcast and had their music videos featured in the show.[20] R3TV was also available as a channel on Internet television services such as Joost, YouTube and Miro Media Player.

In 2011, CBC Radio 3 sponsored its first documentary movie, Winning America, about Canadian band Said the Whale. The movie was directed by Brent Hodge and Thomas Buchan, and produced by Jon Siddall, Brent Hodge and Sheila Peacock.[21] It first aired on July 23, 2011 on CBC Television in British Columbia, and then nationally on April 2, 2012.

After the success of the first film, Radio 3 decided to do a second documentary movie called What Happens Next? about Canadian musician Dan Mangan. This movie was produced and directed by Brent Hodge and Jon Siddall.[22] It aired on CBC on August 25, 2012 in BC, and then again nationally on October 20, 2012.

Radio 3's next foray into video was in 2013, with the web series The Beetle Roadtrip Sessions. It followed host Grant Lawrence across Canada visiting various musicians and other personalities along the way, including The Darcys, Hollerado, Sam Roberts, Theo Fleury, Hawksley Workman and others. It was also directed by Brent Hodge.[23] The Beetle Roadtrip Sessions won the award for Best Original Program or Series produced for Digital Media – Non-Fiction at the 2nd Canadian Screen Awards.[24]

Concerts

As well as the on-air studio sessions, the network also regularly sponsors public concerts in music venues. The network also broadcasts the annual Polaris Music Prize gala.

The Connect the Dots Tour in 2004 featured a different lineup of bands in each city, including p:ano, Ninja High School, The Russian Futurists, Young and Sexy, The Unicorns, The Super Friendz, Lederhosen Lucil, Dragon Fli Empire and controller.controller.[25]

Tour Tournée in the winter of 2006, jointly sponsored by CBC Radio 3 and Bande à part, included bands such as Wintersleep, Two Hours Traffic, Konflit dramatiK, Hexes and Ohs, Great Aunt Ida, Shout Out Out Out Out, Novillero, Les Breastfeeders, SS Cardiacs, Les Dales Hawerchuk, Pony Up! and The Deadly Snakes. Each of the eight locations had a different lineup of predominantly local bands, and at least one francophone band performed at each venue. On October 1, 2006, Radio 3 and Bande à part again jointly sponsored See Vous Play, a show in Toronto featuring Les Breastfeeders, Emily Haines and the Soft Skeleton, Les Trois Accords and The Joel Plaskett Emergency.[26]

Also in October, the network was a sponsor of the Exclaim! Mint Road Show, a cross-Canada tour featuring The New Pornographers, Immaculate Machine and Novillero to celebrate the 15th birthdays of Exclaim!, a Canadian music magazine, and Mint Records, a Vancouver independent record label.

CBC Radio 3 was also the sponsor of a nationwide tour in March and April 2007 featuring The Constantines and Jon-Rae and the River. The tour also featured Shotgun & Jaybird for the Eastern Canada portion of the tour while Ladyhawk toured for the Western Canadian portion of the tour.

On April 27, 2007, CBC Radio 3 and Bande à part jointly presented Quebec Scene, an Ottawa concert featuring The Stills, The Besnard Lakes, Karkwa and Mahjor Bidet.[27]

On June 9, 2007, as a part of the annual NXNE festival, CBC Radio 3 presented a concert in Toronto featuring United Steel Workers of Montreal, Ohbijou, Sebastien Grainger et Les Montagnes, You Say Party, In-Flight Safety and Two Hours Traffic.[28]

In 2008, the network sponsored and broadcast several live shows at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, including performances by Basia Bulat, The Constantines, The Most Serene Republic, The Stills, Shout Out Louds, Christine Fellows, Grand Analog and Hot Springs.

The network's live broadcast from the 2009 NXNE festival featured Woodpigeon, DD/MM/YYYY, Ruby Coast, Jason Collett, Hot Panda and The Lovely Feathers.[29]

In 2011, they sponsored Victoria's Rifflandia Music Festival Side Stage at Royal Athletic Park, featuring Jon Middleton of Jon and Roy, Besnard Lakes, Jakarta(now called Gold & Youth), Hollerado, and USS.[30]

CBC Radio 3 hosts

As of March 30, 2015, the service no longer features live hosting, although prerecorded feature segments are still heard as interstitials. Grant Lawrence officially remains an employee of the service, although he is currently off on parental leave.

Past hosts heard on the network included Lana Gay, Tariq Hussain, Amanda Putz, Craig Norris, Lauren Burrows, Pete Morey, Lisa Christiansen, Raina Douris, Dave Shumka, Emma Godmere, Vish Khanna and Talia Schlanger. Canadian musicians and other media personalities have also sometimes appeared as guest hosts, including Joel Plaskett, Carolyn Mark, Buck 65, Nirmala Basnayake, Hannah Sung, Brent Bambury, Graham Wright, Alanna Stuart and Nardwuar the Human Serviette. Some personalities associated with sister service Bande à part also appeared on the network as reporters or correspondents covering Quebec's music scene.

Bucky Awards

From 2006 to 2013, CBC Radio 3 presented the annual Bucky Awards,[31][32][33][34] which honour Canadian indie pop and rock music. The awards, determined by listener vote, include such non-traditional categories as "most Canadian tune" and "sexiest musician."[35] The awards were created after Lawrence made comments on the air criticizing the Juno Awards for overlooking Arcade Fire in their nominations, and a listener suggested in response that Radio 3 should create its own awards.[3]

In 2014, the Bucky Awards were merged into the expanded CBC Music Awards.[3]

Year Best Song Sexiest Artist Top Video Lifetime Achievement Most Canadian Song Best New Band Name Best Vocals Best Live Act Best Lyrics Best Reason to Learn French Best New Artist
2007 Two Hours Traffic, "Backseat Sweetheart" Said the Whale Tokyo Police Club, "Your English Is Good" The Weakerthans, "Civil Twilight" We Are Wolves, "Magique"
2008 Matt Mays & El Torpedo, "Tall Trees" Laura Barrett Shad, "The Old Prince Still Lives at Home" Teenage Head Jason Collett, "Charlyn, Angel of Kensington" Library Voices Mother Mother, "Body of Years" Holy Fuck Stars, "14 Forever" Karkwa, "Oublie pas" Plants and Animals
2009[36] Dan Mangan, "Robots" Cœur de pirate Hey Rosetta!, "Red Song" Sloan Said the Whale, "Emerald Lake, AB" Gregory Pepper and His Problems Dan Mangan, "Robots" Mother Mother Joel Plaskett, "Through & Through & Through" Cœur de pirate, "Comme des enfants" Hannah Georgas, "The Beat Stuff"
2010[37] Arcade Fire, "Suburbs" Maylee Todd Hollerado, "Americanarama" Julie Doiron Aidan Knight, "Jasper" Paperplanes and Dragonboats Sarah Harmer Dan Mangan Arcade Fire, "Ready to Start" Karkwa Boxer the Horse
2011[38] Dan Mangan, "Rows of Houses" Dan Mangan Ian Blurton Elliott Brood, "Northern Air" Oh No Yoko Austra, "Lose It" Arkells Hey Rosetta! "Welcome" Coeur de Pirate, "Adieu" Braids
2012[39] Joel Plaskett, "Lightning Bolt" Jaycelyn Brown (of Said the Whale) Said the Whale, "We Are 1980" Nardwuar Hannah Georgas, "Robotic" Mother Mother Bernard Adamus, "Entre ici pis chez vous" The Elwins
2013[40] Said the Whale, "I Love You" The Darcys, "The River" Hollerado, "So It Goes" Joel Plaskett Shad, "Fam Jam (Fe Sum Immigrins)" PUP PUP

Albums

Several compilation albums featuring CBC Radio 3 artists and live performances have also been released:

See also

References

  1. "CBC digital music service launched". CBC News, February 13, 2012.
  2. Will Doig, "Bouncing Off the Satellites", nerve.com, October 10, 2006.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "CBC Radio 3: the definitive timeline". CBC Music, March 27, 2015.
  4. 1 2 "CBC Radio 3 dead, says newspaper". Edmonton Journal, November 26, 1999.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Hottest music now on cool web radio". The Province, January 17, 2001.
  6. Fiona Morrow, "Obituary: Susan Englebert, Broadcaster 1946–2006, The Globe and Mail, November 15, 2006.
  7. 1 2 "CBC's new Radio 3 goes to the Net". The Province, February 9, 2003.
  8. "The Webby Awards". The Telegram, June 13, 2003.
  9. "Pump up the volume, hue and brightness". Toronto Star, August 23, 2003.
  10. "Indie music and beyond". The Globe and Mail, January 19, 2004.
  11. "Choice of listening gets wider for iPod owners". Vancouver Sun, June 11, 2005.
  12. Radio 3 Canada’s most popular podcast – CBC podcast host Lawrence introduces new Canadian music, UWO Gazette, November 9, 2006.
  13. "CBC plans to beam up Radio 3". The Globe and Mail, November 2, 2005.
  14. "Broadcaster, comic Alexis Mazurin dies at 27: CBC Radio 3 loses rising star". Vancouver Sun, October 22, 2005.
  15. Welcome to the First Annual Bucky Awards
  16. "CBC courting younger ears with changes; More Cancon, jazz and indie may not make up for other programming cuts, one critic says". Toronto Star, March 19, 2007.
  17. X3 Artist of the Month
  18. "Live on CBC Radio 3 w/ "Grant Lawrence: Trivia Tuesday... the Joel Plaskett Edition!". CBC Radio 3, May 31, 2011.
  19. New Podcasts Coming Up this Monday.
  20. Here We Grow Again: Announcing R3TV.
  21. http://music.cbc.ca/#/blogs/2013/2/Watch-Winning-America-The-story-of-Said-The-Whales-journey-to-SXSW
  22. http://music.cbc.ca/#/blogs/2012/7/Your-first-look-at-the-Dan-Mangan-documentary-What-Happens-Next
  23. http://music.cbc.ca/#/CBC-Music-Presents-The-Beetle-Roadtrip-Sessions
  24. “Watermark,” “My Prairie Home” up for Canadian Screen Awards. Real Screen, January 13, 2014.
  25. "CBC Radio walks on wild side". Toronto Star, May 7, 2004.
  26. "Québécois bands hit Rest Of Canada". The Globe and Mail, December 2, 2006.
  27. "Sounds great, in any language; Francophone music groups are finding accepting audiences outside La Belle Province". Ottawa Citizen, April 23, 2007.
  28. CBC Radio 3 Presents a NXNE Showcase Spectacular at Toronto's Horseshoe Tavern.
  29. "Radio 3 Coming to you Live from NxNE!", June 16, 2009.
  30. http://music.cbc.ca/#/blogs/2011/9/CBC-Radio-3-proud-sponsor-of-Victorias-2011-Rifflandia-Festival---September-22-to-25
  31. Augustine, Anthony (2006-12-14). "Site: Bucky Awards", Winnipeg Free Press, p. 3.
  32. Mack, Adrian (2008-11-20). "Locals in running for Bucky Awards", The Georgia Straight. Retrieved on 2008-12-27.
  33. Thiessen, Brock (2008-12-18). "CBC Radio 3 Announces Bucky Awards Winners", Exclaim!. Retrieved on 2008-12-27.
  34. Boxer the Horse wins Bucky Award, http://www.thecoast.ca/halifax/boxer-the-horse-milks-and-rectangles-quivers/Event?oid=2101476
  35. Wheeler, Brad (2008-12-18). "Bucky Awards honours music on indie scene," The Globe and Mail, p. R3.
  36. Bucky Awards 2009. "", CBC Radio 3. Retrieved on 2012-06-01.
  37. Bucky Awards 2010. "", CBC Radio 3. Retrieved on 2012-06-01.
  38. Bucky Awards 2011. "", CBC Radio 3. Retrieved on 2012-06-01.
  39. Bucky Awards 2012. "", CBC Radio 3. Retrieved on 2013-12-04.
  40. Bucky Awards 2013. "", CBC Radio 3. Retrieved on 2013-12-04.

External links

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