![]() ![]() “I have no part in it, but I got to thinking about a good way for these guys go out. “Dave and I were getting ready to do a few final episodes and then bring the podcast down,” Taylor said. The Internet venture ended in early 2010. He was also part of the online version that was based in Cincinnati and later in Austin where he lives. Taylor did two stints with the Oxford station, which stopped broadcasting terrestrially in 2004. I caught up with Dave about a year ago and he said they were close to exhausting all the guests and topics they had.” It was a way for folks to reconnect and share their love for the station, whether you actually worked there, were an advertiser or you were just a listener. “I’ve known Dave and Damien for a long time,” said Taylor, a graduate of Centerville High School and Wright State University. And it will be online so you can get it globally and not just Darrtown, Hamilton and maybe Miamisburg.” In between you’ll hear a lot of the old DJs talking about, you know, ‘On lap 365 that was the Cure’ or ‘On lap 357 it was Guided By Voices.’ It will be like you’re listening to 97X again so it should be cool. “It’s like we’re driving to Oxford, sitting down, hitting play on the turntable and playing the songs. “There were some tweaks here and there but we’re doing the top 500 songs you would’ve heard on 97X or while it was on the air,” said “Rumblings from the Big Bush” co-host Dave Tellmann, who was at WOXY from 1988 until 1997. The signature program has returned to celebrate the end of the WOXY-focused podcast, “Rumblings from the Big Bush.” The recap of popular songs by acts like Talking Heads, Tori Amos, R.E.M., David Bowie, the Violent Femmes and the Clash are included in the Modern Rock 500. ![]() Nineteen years after ending its terrestrial broadcast, WOXY is back albeit briefly using the format of its once annual 500-song Memorial Day countdown.
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