NoiseMatter: A Counterculture of Sound

This weekend, October 11th and 12th, there will be a gathering of musicians and experimenters creating sounds that weave their way between hypnotically transfixing and brutally assaulting your senses. The inaugural Noise Matter fest is a two-day undertaking that gathers musicians from Nashville and the surrounding Southeast to celebrate in the creation of non-mainstream music, focusing on the avant-garde, the improvised and noise varieties.

Curator Steven Cosand was kind enough to share some insights into the impetus behind the festival and how experimental music of this nature fits into the current scene. The lineup of the festival is below and you can preview most of the acts on the festivals Instagram, @noisematter.

Friday, October 11th · Drkmttr

Proud Father (New Orleans, LA)
Proud Father is an all tape recording project from the ruins of New Orleans, Louisiana, featuring noise bursts, tape collages, shoegaze-esque distortion/reverb, and analogue synthesizers.

Nonconnah (Memphis, TN)

Pas Moi (Memphis, TN)

Grain Death (Nashville, TN)

Cøurtney (Nashville, TN)

Saturday, October 12th · Springwater

Clang Quartet (Stokesdale, NC)
Clang Quartet is the brainchild of Scotty Irving. Irving has been wreaking spirit filled havoc under the moniker since 1997. With the use of various instruments and pedals constructed as masks and other props, he describes his performances as “…an abstract journey of my walk in life without Jesus Christ, his death and resurrection, and then my life WITH Jesus as Lord and Savior.”

GMO Sharia Law (Cleveland, TN)

Cryptic Rising (Murfreesboro, TN)

Quaker Folk (Nashville, TN)

Victimes de Regime (Tullahoma, TN)

WOTT: What is your relationship with the Nashville music scene?

Cosand: I played in a few hardcore bands in Nashville a number of years ago before turning my focus on more experimental music. When I first moved to town I was floored by both the diversity and quality in the local scene. There are so many solid bands and artists playing music that is outside the realm of more mainstream genres. Pujol, Mother Adam, and Vacant Future are still some of my favorites.

After moving to Tennessee I had the opportunity to see so many bands that I didn’t get the chance to see before and in such intimate settings as well. Venues like Cafe Coco, The End, and The Owl Farm hosted some of the best shows I’ve seen since I got into both the heavier and weirder side of music at a young age. I could hardly handle myself at record stores like The Groove and McKay’s. I used to live in walking distance from the Groove. It was so dangerous because of how easy it was to spend hours in that shop flipping through bins and bins of used records.

WOTT: What are your thoughts on the Noise Scene in Nashville?

Cosand: Right now there is such a variety of noise and experimental music going on in the Southeast, and Nashville in particular. Circuit Benders Ball happened recently at Little Harpeth. It showcased some some incredible local acts. Working in Retail, Strepitus Diaboli, and Neon Black were three of my favorites. With the music industry playing such a prominent role in the city, I feel like there is this sort of natural countercultural reaction towards mainstream music. It’s definitely grown over the past few years and I hope to see more and more folks experimenting in their creative endeavors. Keep it weird. Keep it noisy. Don’t stop.

Kristin Luna

In this episode, Kim Baldwin sits down with Kristin Luna, journalist/photographer/blogger/digital marketer/entrepreneur and mural enthusiast. A professional journalist who uses her storytelling skills to help travel brands figure out the best way to market their products, Kristin’s writing appears in Travel + Leisure, Conde Nast Traveler, Parade and AAA Living, though she more regularly works with city and state tourism boards on their content efforts through her company, Odinn Media, and 12-year-old blog Camels & Chocolate. Kristin has visited all 50 states and over 120 countries.

Join us for a conversation about the long road to becoming a travel writer, how many sources it takes to verify a Trivial Pursuit answer, and how Kristin helped Kim learn how to fly.

Find Kristin on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and at Camels & Chocolate. To follow along on her mural journey, or to support public art in Tennessee, visit DMA Events.

To get full show notes and learn more about Ladyland, visit us at ladyland.show and follow us on Instagram at @ladyland_podcast.

Music by You Drive.
Logo by Elizabeth Williams.

165: History’s Confirmation

For as long as Nashville has been known for its Country Music, there’s been another side to the city thriving with all sorts of musical styles and genres. This week, we take a look back at a few of them. This show tends to focus on upcoming releases and recent discoveries but generally fails to look way back and appreciate all the variety that came before.

So, we make an honest effort to fix that a little bit this week! Herein are six songs going as far back as the late 60’s to as recent as 1997. It’s not an overly researched or belabored history lesson, it’s just music you probably missed if you didn’t go looking for it.

Lots of great contextual information, research and bands to investigate came from this Nashville Scene article , Nashville80sRock.net and Versus magazine. Oh, and this 1996 Features performance will be sure to take you back in time.

Follow us or submit your music:
Facebook: /weownthistown
Twitter: @weownthistown
Instagram: @weownthistown

Feminine Complex – “Hide and Seek”

Jason and The Scorchers – “Both Sides of the Line”

Walk The West – “Living at Night”

Actuals – “Today”

Trauma Team – “Rub Her Right”

The Features – “Armani Suede”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover Image: Trauma Team.

Introducing Filmography Club

Today we are happy to announce the launch of a brand new show entitled Filmography Club. Each season will take on the task of tackling a director’s full filmography to learn more about the art and craft of filmmaking. The first season looks to the work of auteur Paul Thomas Anderson, the revered director known for Boogie Nights, Magnolia, The Master and, most recently, The Phantom Thread.

Your host for this journey is Jason Caviness, a film enthusiast and cinephile in training. He’ll be joined by guests each episode to help provide insight into answering the elusive question “What makes a film good?” For the debut, he and director Will Fox start at the beginning of PTA’s career and the first full-length film he released, Hard Eight (or Sydney if you’re the type that prefers original titles).

The show is available wherever you like to stream podcasts. Give the first episode a listen in the player above or subscribe on Apple, Spotify, Sticher, etc.

Follow the show on Instgram at @filmography_club_podcast for episode updates and other ephemera about the show.

Paul Thomas Anderson: Hard Eight

Join passionate movie fan Jason Caviness as he invites a cast of like-minded co-conspirators to explore the filmographies of his favorite filmmakers. Each season will tackle the filmography of a respected auteur, and each episode will take a probing look into one particular movie from their body of work. What makes a movie work? Does this movie work? How does the film fit into the creator’s overall body of work? Jason and company will get into all of it and more this season on Filmography Club!

In the inaugural season, the work of filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson will be examined in detail. Join him, along with a cast of insightful cinephiles, to discuss everything from Hard Eight to Phantom Thread.

For episode one, they start at the beginning with PTA’s debut film Hard Eight (aka Sydney). Jason is joined by longtime friend and critical film appreciator Will Fox.

Music by Uncle Skeleton

12 Milkmen Is Theoretically Possible

The guys discuss the exciting career of Don Zimmerman, the recently announced editor of Face the Music. Later, the discuss “Freaked” the 1993 hidden gem that reunited Alex Winter, William Sadler, and another dude you might recognize if not for the dog costume.

Black Market – Ghostbusters

It’s officially October, which means it’s time to break let the anxiety begin of deciding which party you’re going to attend at the end of the month and settle on exactly how clever your costume is going to be. It also means it’s socially acceptable to finally break out that neglected playlist of Halloween music you’ve been curating for the past 11 months.

One addition you should take into serious consideration is this Ghostbusters EP from Black Market, a Nashville mashup artist known for taking popular entities and reworking them into surprisingly pleasing Dub versions. Truth be told, there’s much in his discography that would work for this particular holiday season – Stranger Things Dub, “Thriller” Dub, Twin Peaks Dub or The Twilight Zone – but if there can only be one selection to emerge from the pile, let it be Ghostbusters.

The EP is just four tracks but he manages to squeeze in Ray Parker Jr, tons of clips from the entire Ghostbusters crew, just enough Zuul and the right balance of creepy crawly instrumentation. Plus, it’s Dub so it’s inherently laid back and chill; not an overly doom-and-gloom undertaking. It’s Halloween for those that like to kick back, open up a bag of miscellaneous bulk candy and have a relaxed good time.

The Mad Gear – “Nebuli”

The Mad Gear is an instrumental rock band that is largely known for creating songs done in the vein of videogame music. Their last full-length record, Super Mad Gear: Symphony of the Fight dove into familiar works from Megaman X, Super Metroid, Bad Dudes, Donkey Kong Country and the less familiar Gremlins 2 and Sonic Spinball. If you follow them on any social network, their passion for these songs clearly comes from a non-kitschy place.

That being said, they do create their own original music. 2017’s Go Right and Fight OST was all original compositions that served as the actual soundtrack to a beat-em-up game of the same name. 2014’s The Mad Gear Must Pay was also original composition, recorded live with very few edits. All that is to give context to the fact that “Nebuli” is an original composition that feels like live videogame music but it’s not chiptune and it’s much better produced than their previous live offering.

The shredding guitar, the prominent bass, the big drum fills and the swirling keyboards all feel like familiar videogame elements but it’s the saxophone that really sets The Mad Gear apart. At first glance you’d assume it would stick out like a sore thumb in this environment but it gives the music a noir vibe that would be harder to come by otherwise. It instantly feels like there’s a story of some sort unfolding because of that wailing. Maybe I’m just being overly partial to usage of the instrument but it works and it works well.

All and all, it’s great to see the band dipping back into the world of originals as that usually means there’s some impressive project that goes to accompany it.

Jasmin Kaset

Jasmin Kaset is a songwriter and vocalist who records under her own name and as one half of two very different musical duos — the vulgar yet witty Birdcloud, and the electronic and emotional You Drive. She grew up in Cottontown, TN, a place that she doesn’t enjoy visiting now except for its good thrifting opportunities. Yet she has remained close to her family, and they play a large part in her funeral plans.

On this episode of My Fantasy Funeral, Jasmin and host Ryan Breegle discuss the surprising reason Birdcloud performed a tour in adult diapers, whether there might be a second You Drive album, and the prominent pubs she would choose for her ghost to haunt.

Hear Jasmin Kaset Funeral Song Selections on Spotify

Follow Jasmin:
Instagram: @jasminkaset
Twitter: @jasminkaset
Facebook: /jasminkaset
Birdcloud: birdcloudamerica.com
You Drive: you-drive.co

Follow My Fantasy Funeral on Instagram & Twitter.

Find host Ryan Breegle on Twitter.

Music by Kindercastle.

164: The Most Dangerous Game: Genres

This week we continue to focus on new releases, new discoveries and a general enjoyment of the diversity of the Nashville music scene. I’ve said it many times before and I’ll say it many times again, that’s whole the point of the show.

To emphasize that point, we’ll hear some concept album stoner rock from Howling Giant, dark dancefloor pop from Sundaes, glitzy garage rock from Rock Eupora, math-y pop from Relatable Action Star, melancholic indie rock from Telefones and a meditative oddity courtesy of Bobby Peppermint. It’s consistently refreshing to be able to hop through so many genres in one show and still know that you’re leaving so much out. It’s the best problem to have.

Dive in, enjoy the show and be sure to click through below and hear more from each artist. Also, for your convenience, we put those songs that are available on Spotify up on one massive playlist; go follow it.

Follow us or submit your music:
Facebook: /weownthistown
Twitter: @weownthistown
Instagram: @weownthistown

Howling Giant – “The River Guide”

Sundaes – “Lipstick”

Rock Eupora – “Way Out”

Relatable Action Star – “Garden”

Telefones – “Hang Up”

Bobby Peppermint – “Inside”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover Image: Howling Giant.

Twen – Awestruck

We spent a good deal of time covering the impending release of Twen’s debut full-length, Awestruck. We were overjoyed at the news back in March of 2019 that they’d signed to Frenchkiss and would be releasing the album via them. We were equally as pleased when the band released four singles from the record and two incredibly great videos for “Holy River” and “Damsel.” So, with all that pre-release coverage in place, it only makes sense to actually tackle the record itself.

With four singles leading into the album it was a fairly safe bet on where to place expectations; a delicate balance of indie pop informed by some shoegaze elements and the occasional off-kilter vocal lilt. What’s surprising is the places the album goes that is only barely hinted at within the singles. “Baptism” gives a glimpse at the more chaotic places the album is willing to go but it isn’t until you dive into album tracks “Awestruck”, “Long Time” and closer “Horseblood” that it really clicks that the band isn’t just writing shoegaze pop songs, they’re willing to infuse some soaring cacophony when the occasion calls for it.

All things considered, Twen’s story is relatively short. They released a Live EP back in 2016 and now find themselves with a major indie release and a robust tour schedule behind it. That’s not to underplay their hard work; the opposite in fact. The band’s unique blend of elements and willingness to embrace a bit of dramatic presentation with a massive wall of sound is a brilliant and infectious accomplishment. When the time comes for Best Of Lists to crawl out of the woodwork, Awestruck should be considered in the short list.