Former WDET Music Host Liz Copeland On Filling the Midnight Shift

As WDET celebrates 70 years of news, music and conversation programming, we take a trip down memory lane with Liz Copeland, former host of ‘Alternate Take’.

WDET Voice Photo

In 1995, Liz Copeland, now Liz Warner, reigned the nightly airwaves at 101.9 WDET, as host of “Alternate Take,” the music program that plugged listeners into new sounds across genres ranging from electronic and jazz to avant-garde and indie. 

It was the perfect gig for a girl who grew up loving everything about music, audio frequencies, and “the invisible airwaves.” 

“From very early on, when I was coming up, radio had such crazy variety,” Warner says. “I am just a big fan of music. It’s always been a part of my life.”

Support the news you love.

Here at WDET, we strive to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a non-profit public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. Because you value WDET as your source of news, music, and conversation, please make a gift of support today. Even $5 helps!

Donate today »

Copeland’s entry to WDET came in the 1990s, as a volunteer. Then, the volunteer gig turned into part-time employment handling check processing. When she heard about an opening for the overnight shift, she stepped up – nerves and all. 

She tells CultureShift’s Amanda LeClaire, “I was a fan of WDET and while I was there, I learned about the overnight opening.”

The shift was midnight to 5:00 am — five nights a week. The 25-hour a week hosting gig was a challenge for a first-time host. 

For twelve years, Warner curated programming and found ways to keeps the vibes fresh and creatively flowing. 

 

The creative mix for filling 25 hours of programming–according to Liz: 

Explore: “WDET had an astounding library to choose from with the music. So, I would explore through that.” 

Read and research: “Back then, when you wanted to learn about new music, that wasn’t right in front of you, going online wasn’t really an option. So I would find books that I had, ‘The Trouser Press,’  Billboard guides. I would search through those. Any kind of ‘zines and papers that I could and search through.”

Be resourceful: “I’d talk to friends, go through my own collections and go record shopping. Wherever I could find music that I thought would be great to share, I would share it. And hopefully, try to share it in a creative way! 

“It’s not just about sharing,” Liz says. “It’s about trying to create conversations and engagement with the music.” 

Warner continues to host a music show on Los Angeles non-profit radio station, dublab.

Click the player to hear WDET alum Liz Warner in conversation with CultureShift’s Amanda LeClaire. 

Authors

  • Amanda LeClaire is an award-winning host and producer of CultureShift on 101.9 WDET-FM Detroit’s NPR station. She’s a founding producer of WDET’s flagship news talk show Detroit Today, and a former host/reporter for Arizona Public Media. Amanda is also an artist, certified intuitive and energy healer, and professional tarot reader.