Girls Rock Radio is seeking an alliance with media schools and media professionals to enhance our programming and provide opportunities to students and professionals seeking to explore the exciting and vibrant Internet radio venue.

Girls Rock Radio would like to work with you to define programming in the areas of music news, current events and trends, artist interviews, and general-interest radio programming. This may take the form of brief music news and/or current event spots, all the way up to one half to one hour or longer shows. Your programming team must feature a female host, but guys are certainly welcome as co-hosts, and the guests.

Although we seek to attract recurring, long-running programming, we realize that internship-type programs with media schools will likely result in short-term programming projects. This is fine, and we are eager to engage in this kind of relationship with media departments at universities and on down to the high school level. Long and short term programming projects also exist for independent media professionals seeking to add depth to their professional resume.

Girls Rock Radio features the music of women artists in the rock, pop, and alternative music genres. It has attracted a diverse audience from around the world, primarily in English-speaking countries, or where English is a strong secondary language. The listener demographic currently features an approximate 60/40 female/male split with the peak female age range between 25 and 34, and the peak male age range between 35 and 44. The music featured on Girls Rock Radio is generally upbeat and seeks not to align with any particular political, sociological, or lifestyle choice. It's simply a fun place to listen to great music. Girls Rock Radio is not, however, without a social conscience, and seeks to define a more robust role for itself through involvement in noncontroversial socially relevant pursuits.

If you are interested in a media partnership with Girls Rock Radio, please contact the station immediately.

The Guestbook has been fixed. Not sure what broke it, but it's been down for a while. I've set everything straight, and it's all working just fine again.

If you haven't already, I'd love to have you sign the Guestbook, and browse through it to see what others have said.

Hey Artists!  Your station needs your attention...

I am forming a "Council of Artists" to address some of the issues the station faces right now, as well as to set directions and make plans for the future.  In addition to artists, friends of the station, celebrities, and others with a like-minded, helpful attitudes are invited to join as well.

Here's what I'm NOT asking you for:

  • Not asking for Money.
  • Not asking for Deliverables.
  • Not asking for Specific time commitments or scheduled activities.

What I AM asking you for is:

  • Your thoughtful participation in a discussion.

Be a Superhero!
Would you participate in such a discussion if you could save the premier internet radio station featuring the music of women artists from certain doom?  Come on...  Be a superhero!

Here's How to Join:

  1. Head over to the GRR Forum and register for an account, if you don't already have one. (hint: the anti-spam security question answer is "wisconsin" without the quotes.)
  2. Use the contact form (below) to tell me you've joined and what login name you registered with in the Forum. ALSO - If you are not an artist currently receiving airplay on Girls Rock Radio (or band member thereof,) please tell me why you feel qualified to be on the council.
  3. I will authorize you to view and post in area of the Forum devoted to the Council.

That's it. Easy. All Council discussions will occur in the privacy of the special Council members only area of the GRR Forum

Please Join Today!

Your Voice on Girls Rock Radio - Think of all the Possibilities!

The easiest way is to leave GRR a voice mail, and I'll get it on the air. In a moment, I'll mention another "HD" option if you want to sound really awesome on the air, so "stay tuned," for that...

Calling Girls Rock Radio to leave a Shout Out Voice Mail is as easy as clicking this web-sticker, entering your phone number, letting Google call you, then connect you to Girls Rock Radio automatically. How cool is that?

Leaving a Shout Out to GRR is free, and Google can usually connect you to GRR for free within the USA, but your telephone carrier may still charge for airtime minutes and stuff like that. Be sure you know what they will charge before proceeding. I have no clue what will happen if you try using this from other countries.

What to "Shout Out"

You can:

  • Tell everyone your name and where you're from... (required)
  • Tell everyone the name of your favorite radio station... (required)
  • Give a shout out to/from your school, or work...
  • Profess your endless love for someone... 😉
  • Say happy birthday to someone...
  • Be fun and creative (just please keep it clean and brief.)

Messages left in a language other than English must also provide a translation. Just put it at the end of the message telling me what you just said and I'll edit that part out - OR - just do the shout in your native language and English which will probably sound pretty cool!

You can't:

  • Advertise...
  • Be lewd, crude, or objectionable...
  • Say stuff that would make me not want you on the air.

Girls Rock Radio reserves the right to edit your shout for content or length, or refuse to air shouts due to objectionable content, or for any reason at all really, but as long you keep it clean and have fun with this, you should be hearing yourself on GRR real soon!

The "HD" Option for sounding quite awesome

If you have a nice microphone on your PC, you can record yourself and perhaps a whole group of your friends, using one of the coolest audio recording and editing programs around - Audacity. Here's where to get it, and as the link implies, Audacity is available for PC, Mac, and Linux systems:

The Free, Cross-Platform Sound Editor
The Free, Cross-Platform Sound Editor

Of course, if you have your own favorite editor, feel free to use it instead; Audacity is just a suggestion, but it is pretty cool. And free.

Your HD Shout should:

  • Be recorded in 128k (or better) MP3 format. No other format accepted...
  • Follow all the other rules already mentioned for the Voice Mail Shouts...
  • Be emailed as an attachment to shoutoutgrr @ gmail.com

Now, get going and get yourself some air-time on Girls Rock Radio today!

I hope everyone is enjoying their Memorial Day weekend.  It's a time we ought reflect of the service of so many.  Some who have lost their lives, others who work tirelessly defending freedom.

If you live in a country that does not celebrate Memorial Day along with the United States, I hope you will still take a moment to reflect on the freedoms you have and the hardships endured by your fellow countrymen securing those freedoms for you and your families.

 

New Music

As for me, I work tirelessly bringing you lots of cool music from women artists around the world.  🙂

Just added are many new selections to brighten your holiday weekend, and heat things up as we move into the heat of the summer.

 

Chat Up GRR

Whether you visit us in the Girls Rock Radio Chat, or take advantage of the many other opportunities to drop us a line, I always appreciate hearing from you!  Let me know what's on your mind and how I can make the GRR Experience a more pleasant one for you.

We're sounding all "shiny and new" and that's because I've added 72 new songs to the playlist!

If you've been listening over the past couple of days, it really has sounded awesome. All the same great music is here, but adding 72 new songs is like adding around 6 full CDs to your collection. But instead of just adding 6 new artists, there's dozens of artists represented in those 72 songs. Isn't internet radio awesome?!?

The details on everything that's been added can be found on the New Music page.

It's FREE.

I don't think I have to spell that one out for you. Oops, I already did. 😉

It gets you CASH BACK when you shop.

That's on top of what you're already getting back on each purchase with your credit card account.

It PAYS you when the FRIENDS you invited to join shop, too.

That's how you help GRR. When you and your friends shop, we get paid, too - just like you do when the friends you invite do their shopping through the Blastoff Mall. Best of all, you still get the best prices on stuff from the best merchants.

Check it out.

This is what the page where you sign up looks like. Click it now to go there. Watch the videos on the right to learn more. Then sign up - for FREE, remember - and shop everyplace you usually shop, but get to those places through the Blastoff Mall. Otherwise, no cash back. Nothing when your friends shop. No support for Girls Rock Radio.

Blastoff to Support GRR

You want to listen.

I want you to.

All circuits are busy.  Please hang up and try your call again.

Huh?

A little background information...

Regular radio - the kind you listen to in the car, for instance - can allow as many people to listen as can tune in.  As long as they are close enough to the station to pick up the signal, that is.

Not so with internet radio.  When you listen to Internet radio, you take up one of a fixed number of listener slots the station has made available for the listening audience. So for example, if a station has 75 listener slots, the 76th person trying to "tune in" would not be able to listen because all 75 slots are already in use.

Internet radio stations purchase a fixed number of slots on a monthly basis so their audience can tune in, and listener slots are not cheap. For high-quality audio like Girls Rock Radio delivers, each listener slot may cost between one and two dollars per month -- whether anyone is using it or not. So again, our example radio station could expect to pay between $75 and $150 per month to provide 75 listener slots -- whether anyone is listening or not.

What about popular stations with thousands of people listening at the same time?  Yes, you guessed it:  Thousands of dollars per month.

So, as I was saying, when an Internet radio station runs out of listener slots, you won't be able to tune in, and whatever media player you're using will probably show some kind of error. In WinAmp, a very popular media player for Windows, the message says, "service unavailable."

Now, what's happening at Girls Rock Radio...

Well, I can't be sure, but it's clear that something happened recently to increase our popularity and push us right to the limit of our listener slots. Have you seen a "service unavailable" message?  Did you think we crashed, or were off the air for some reason?  Nope.  The station is fine and working normally, but we have been running out of listener slots on a surprisingly frequent basis lately, and that makes us seem "off-air."

Here's the real problem, though:  Without financial support we have no way of increasing the number of listener slots we make available to you.

Some internet radio stations are supported so well that they can afford to send lucky listeners on vacations to exotic destinations.  Girls Rock Radio cannot even pay its bills, let alone send anyone on vacations.  Since Girls Rock Radio started in the summer of 2006, for ever $1 of listener support I have received, I have had to spend well over $7.  And that's just to cover the station's operation.  In other words, GRR is not paying me any sort of salary.  I have a mortgage to pay, a kid to feed and send to college, and all sorts of bills to pay.  Girls Rock Radio is my only job.  And it's providing me no income at all.  Cue the bleeding-hearts violins if you wish, but let me ask you - could you live without a paying job for almost 4 years?  That's what it's been like for me.  And then the economy collapsed.

If every one of Girls Rock Radio's MySpace friends (close to 7000) contributed just $1 per month, consistently, I could begin to make up for lost ground and move the station forward.  That's unrealistic, of course, but if just 20% of those people contributed $5 per month, the effect would be the same.

I was having coffee with a new acquaintance this past fall, and I was telling her about Girls Rock Radio.  She proceeded to tell me how she believed that an internet radio station devoted to women artists was doomed to fail from the start.  She believed that any endeavor tied exclusively to the talents of women must fail because women are never viewed as more than second-class citizens, and will never actually be taken seriously.

I'm like, "You're joking right?  Surely you can't be serious!"

Needless to say, I felt no reason to keep in touch with that person.  But after nearly 4 years of next to no support at all, was she right?  Is there really no redeeming quality to a radio format that celebrates the music of women artists?  I'm desperately trying to find a way out of this failure.

Here's the Bottom Line

We're running out of listener slots regularly now.  I cannot afford more because, well, because I cannot afford the station at all.  If you can tune in, that's awesome.  If you cannot, know that, at least for now, the station is still here and working normally, and you'll just have to keep trying.  When you're done listening, close your media player so someone else can listen.

I am doing some things behind the scenes to try to re-define why the station exists beyond just playing music.  If you have ideas, or are well connected in ways that can help, use the "Contact GRR" link on the Help menu to introduce yourself.

Wish me luck.  It's a race against time now.  Your support of the station and the amazing music it brings to you would be greatly appreciated.

I don't know about where you are, but it sure is cold here in Wisconsin, USA!  Although the weather gave us a little break mid-January, and melted away a little of our snow, it was right back down into the deep freeze as we close out the month.

Here in the studio though, things were nice and toasty warm as I prepared many new songs for the playlist.  Once again, a blend of indie artists and major label artists away you during the New Music spots every :40 past the hour.

And just to clear on the "New Music" thing, I wanted to point out that new music doesn't necessarily mean "just released."  Often it simply means new to Girls Rock Radio.  A good example is Voice of the Beehive, and their song "Playing House," a song that was actually written in the mid-90s.  With a lyric like, "this is the game called playing house; we're all screaming; no one's getting out," how could you possibly go wrong? You'll know it when you hear it!

Elastica is another good example of old becomes new again, with a song I'm sure you'll remember -- "Connection."  And, Alison Moyet takes us all the way back to the 80s with "Invisible."

Other major label bands added to the playlist this month include I Nine with their amazing song from 2007, "Seven Days of Lonely."  Correatown hits the playlist this month after I heard their song, "Play," on the Grey's Anatomy soundtrack in a recent episode.  They've got kind of a retro-surf sound blended with contemporary alternative.  Think you like it!  No Angels is an English-lyrics band from Germany.  Listen for their rather haunting song, "Misguided Heart."  And Martina McBride that's a little touch of Country to the new music lineup this month with, "Wrong Baby Wrong."

On the indie music scene, listen for Frozen Feet with their as of yet unreleased song "Thoughts of You" from the upcoming release, "Sweet Time."  It's got a very cool alternative edge along with that unmistakable Frozen Feet guitar groove.

Spinn is looking for "One Good Reason"and by the sounds of it, they'd be better off not getting one!  Strong lyrics, and empowering song.

Hey You doesn't think this is "Working Out," but that's just a matter of opinion.  It's working out for us here at Girls Rock Radio, and working so well they've got a major motion picture deal in the works for their music!

Kristina Furey has got some soulful guitar riffs comin' at ya with her 2007 release of "King of the Hill" from her "Worth the Risk" CD.

Layla Milou is another English-lyrics pop artist from him and Köln, Germany.  Listen for her song "I Miss You" from her 2009 "Pink Parade" release.

Sarah Lonsert is the youngest ever winner of the Annual USA Songwriting Competition's Overall Grand Prize, and has worked with some amazing talent along the way including Deborah Gibson, and Heather Provost, to name just two.  Listen for her song "He's Gone Again" highlighted this month on Girls Rock Radio.

Shawna Basick rounds out this month's additions with her 2006 release of a song with a very popular title -- "Breathe."  It's as easy to lose yourself in this song as Shawna's desire for this love.  "Breathe into me as I fall into you.  If I fall into you, would I lose all of me."

Enjoy the music everyone.  And stay warm, will ya?

Copyright 2006-2020 Girls Rock Radio.
This Internet radio station is licensed to broadcast by SOCAN through TorontoCast.  The stream you listen to originates in Canada.