Dear fans, before you is Radio Tzar, an audio platform that broadcasts randomly, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, endlessly. It emerged from the need to review all archival audio material stored on the hard drives of R.A.S.M.C., classify it, and bring some order to it.
Facing an immense amount of material, a completely new phenomenon occurred: the most interesting was to hear completely forgotten demo recordings, rehearsals, conversations, failed, never-released "hits," sketch songs created in moments of relaxation from "serious" work.
All of this was lurking on hard drives, frozen, and something had to be done about it, rescued from oblivion, even if just re-recorded on a few more hard drives, just in case. In the end, we decided to let the entire material excavated from the hard drives go to this radio, as a kind of "Audio Memoir" without any forcibly made subsequent order, randomly, and thus the "Rambo Amadeus Archive Audio Memoirs Random Playlist" was born, where nobody has any idea what will play next.
Over these 35 years of work, more than 300 recordings of various concerts have accumulated, waiting to be released. Also, as we create each song, we attach various work phases, from the first demo recordings to the final product, so you can hear the development in our work. Sometimes a demo recording is much better than the final version, especially because you won't listen to them chronologically but randomly.
We experimented a bit and found that it's not bad to play some other music that fits the Tzar's taste, which also ended up in the archive. So, in the end, we really got a fairly authentic and interesting audio base that will only expand over time.
The audio base will continue to grow over time, but even now, it's large enough to be enjoyed for months for a few hours a day without getting bored.
We believe that AI tools will soon appear that will automatically create playlists with different types of mechanical logic. It will be interesting, for example, if one playlist is only "chatter at concerts between songs," another "all versions of the song Balkan Boj," then Kilo Tzar's guitar solos, and so on.
Radio Tzar will undoubtedly develop, primarily as an extensive and original audio archive and, as soon as tools allow, as a conglomerate of all possible playlists created by the strangest choices and criteria from this, in the future, entirely interactive archive.
You'll notice that there's no announcer who constantly blabbers, but we also have a plan for that: all Mega Tzar interviews we come across on the internet will be chopped and inserted in one to two-minute inserts, so they will also pop up randomly, like a quite ambitious announcer who occasionally drops some wisdom.
As for advertisements - the only thing currently offered is a banner on this page; we don't want to interrupt the program with ads, we know how annoying that can be.
Listening to Radio Tzar is completely free. No dirty tricks. Enjoy!