Tom Scharpling On The Best of The Best Show
At the end of 2013, fans of The Best Show on WFMU heaved a collective sigh of regret and a small collective “Wow.” For 13 years, its host Tom Scharpling took the airwaves of this noncommercial radio station in New Jersey, playing music, interacting with various callers and guests, and, on almost every show, performing elaborate and hilarious routines with his writing/performing partner Jon Wurster. And now it was all coming to an end.
These weren’t improvised bits or silly conversations, either. Almost all of Wurster’s calls or occasional in-studio appearances were meticulously scripted and planned out, and eventually worked to build out this expansive universe of strangeness and disrepute centered around the fictional town of Newbridge. Considering that each did it while also maintaining thriving careers (Scharpling as a writer/producer on Monk; Wurster as one of indie rock’s most in-demand drummers) makes their efforts seem even more Herculean.
So, when Scharpling wrapped up the last WFMU show on Dec. 17, 2013, after a rare not-in-character appearance from Wurster and a spin of Black Flag’s “Gimme Gimme Gimme,” fans of the show were disappointed but couldn’t complain. After so much free entertainment from these two and their many friends, what more could we ask of them?
What we didn’t expect was that, nearly a year later, we would get the two surprise announcements that Scharpling was resurrecting The Best Show as an online radio venture, and that Numero Group would release The Best of The Best Show, a comprehensive 16-CD collection of the work that Scharpling and Wurster did during their WFMU run.
If you’ve followed Scharpling online during the period since both announcements, you know of the trials he went through to get both the show and the set into the world: the death of his father, having all his broadcast equipment stolen, and having to turn down a number of job offers to concentrate on these projects. If that weren’t enough, the release date of the set had to be pushed back because the finished product was stuck on a barge in Long Beach Harbor due to a stevedore strike.
Now, Scharpling is the one breathing his own sigh, but this one of relief. The show has been up and running for a few months now, and the sets are finally arriving in stores this week. That palpable sense of calm and slight excitement was evident in his voice when we spoke to him recently about the newly-released The Best of The Best Show.
Paste: When I heard that there were delays with getting the box sets delivered, I thought, “That sounds like something Tom and Jon could have written for one of their calls.” I’m sure you must have heard that from other people.
Tom Scharpling: We did hear that. When we were trying to figure out how to tell people that this was happening there was discussion of, “Hey, what if it gets worked into a call and that’s how the news gets announced?” Well, no, then nobody will believe it and they’ll think it’s a routine! This needs to be said as straight as possible that this is where it’s at.
Paste: How does it feel to have this thing that canonizes that work that you and Jon did while you were on WFMU?
Scharpling: It’s really just sinking in now. Hearing people’s actual response to the thing is the first time I have been able to appreciate it as anything accomplishment-wise or the magnitude of it. I haven’t been able to appreciate any of that ‘cause it’s just been…it took forever to do it. It took so much of last year for me. But just recently Patton Oswalt got his copy and he’s, like, “This is a statement of your existence!” And giving one to my wife. The best was giving one to my mom. She just started crying. To her, it was thing that her kid made. I’m finally starting to see what we did and that people are into it. All I could see up to that point was me at five in the morning with headphones on, listening to me go, “C’mon…no….what are you saying?” over and over. You’re not supposed to hear the sound of your own voice in headphones that much. It’s like torture.
Paste: How did the idea of putting this set together get started?