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Dialed In: Radio Contact personalizes the story of Boston radio for new Harvard exhibit

The story of radio is one far from completion, but at relative odds with itself. On one hand, the internet has proven that the saga is ever-evolving, with a future that's promising but completely uncertain, but on the other, there's a real sense of finality to the era of FM (and even moreso for AM's long-gone appeal and reach).

Ian Coss, a PhD student at Boston University, radio journalist, and local musician, set out to tell the tale of Boston's involvement with the growth and success of radio over the past several decades with Radio Contact, an audio oral history of the Boston airwaves with an exhibit that opens tomorrow, March 11, at the Collection of Historic Scientific Instruments at Harvard University (1 Oxford St. in Cambridge). It's presented as part of a special exhibit on radio technology and culture.

Billed as taking "a broad view—covering everything from music shows and propaganda broadcasts to ham radio transmissions and Internet radio algorithms," the series includes discussions with '60s radio icon Arnie Ginsburg, longtime Boston Red Sox radio voice Joe Castiglione, and Spotify developer Paul Lamere of the Echo Nest. Seven of the interviews can be heard below.

Coss, who worked with editor Julie Caine of Bay Area public radio station KALW on the project, says Radio Contact has family roots.

"[It's a] personal connection, for one," Coss writes via email. "My grandfather and great-uncle (Paul Coss, one of the oral history stories) were both broadcasters in the city going back to the '40s. I was familiar with the museum from some previous work, so when I heard about the upcoming radio exhibit I pitched the idea of an audio companion that would provide a more personal and local perspective. This is really just a sample of course; Boston has such a long and rich radio history, but maybe I'll have a chance to expand on it at some point."

Listen to a few of the interviews below, with bios provided by Radio Contact.

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Charles Clemons: “Can you show me how to build one?”

Born and raised in Boston, Charles Clemons has been a serial entrepreneur since he was 12 years old. He began working in radio while still in high school, and at age 19 became the Music Director for WILD FM. He founded TOUCH 106.1 FM in 2006, and since then has become a vocal advocate for low power community radio. In 2009 he even walked from Boston to Washington DC, in support of the Local Community Radio Act. Clemons has also worked as a Boston police officer, managed a limousine service, and run for both mayor and city councilor. In 2014, Touch FM was shut down by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for broadcasting without a license. Clemons describes his struggles with the FCC, and articulates the importance of radio representation for communities of color in American cities.

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