Alex Green, Editor, Caught in the Carousel
Alex Green made his first foray into the music industry when at 15,
along with David Fieni, he began co-hosting The Dave and Alex
Show on KVHS, one of the largest high school radio stations in
the country. On the strength of the duos finely tuned teenage
cynicism and recurring characters and segments like The Ravioli Brothers
and Meat of the Week, the show garnered some of the highest
ratings in the stations history. Opening every show with the Velvet
Undergrounds Were Gonna Have A Real Good Time Together,
The Dave and Alex Show became a beloved prime time staple
and the two attracted such a groundswell of local attention, they were
convinced they would appear on Letterman and be regarded as Americas
Favorite Teens.
A year his senior, Fieni ended up in college at Berkeley while Alex
stayed on and re-named the show Bedtime With Alex. After
graduating himself, Alex went on to KSMC where he continued to host
the program and also served as the stations Music Director. After
graduating from college with an English degree Alex began writing live
reviews for the Contra Costa Times. My first assignment was Eddie
Money, he recalls, and then Kris Kross. One of those shows
brought tears to my eyes, but Ill never tell you which one.
He later became the Music Editor of SOMA Magazine in San Francisco where
he stayed until going back to graduate school at St. Marys College
of California, where he received his M.F.A. in Poetry. His poems have
since appeared in Barrow Street, The Canary, The Mid-American Review,
RHINO and The Berkeley Poetry Review.
As a music critic, Alex has interviewed everyone from David Bowie to
R.E.M. and his reviews and interviews have appeared in CMJ New Music
Monthly, Discoveries, Magnet, Trouser Press and Amplifier. When it comes
to music, Alex says, I am in possession of arcane, albeit encyclopedic
facts that would probably alarm you--I can name every b-side by The
Jam and I know the name of the original drummer of the Boomtown Rats.
His book on The Stone Roses for Continuum Publishings 33 1/3
series on seminal albums was published in 2006. Currently he teaches
English Composition and Music Journalism at St. Marys College
of California.
A former Division 1 tennis player, although Alex shares the same birthday
as Bjorn Borg, he is quick to point out he has five less Wimbledon titles.