153: A Jaguar’s Growl

After an outpouring of thanks to Tristen for spending time with us on the previous episode we dive headfirst into a batch of diverse local music. One track may even contain a sample of a jaguar’s growl, a treat that I can’t begin to express my utmost appreciation for.

We hear from Thelma and the Sleaze, Gram Ash, Okey Dokey with Harpooner, Cave Mode Shake, The Mad Gear, Levi J. Miller, Diatom Deli and The Cosmic Collective. It’s a wide range of sounds and I’m pretty sure you’re gonna enjoy it.

Follow us or submit your music:
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Thelma And The Sleaze – “Pain”

Gram Ash – “Jealousy”

Okey Dokey And Harpooner – “Edge of America”

Cave Mode Shake – “This Is It”

The Mad Gear – “Gremlins 2 Office Theme”

Levi J Miller – “This Is Yr God Speaking”

Diatom Deli – “Sonrisa”

Cosmic Collective – “Wiggity Wack”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover Image: Thelma and the Sleaze by Adrienne Battistella.

Levi J. Miller – God Complex

According to his Bandcamp discography, Levi J. Miller has some thirty-eight releases available to listen to. That’s not counting his twenty-eight other releases on his secondary page or his projects where he is collaborating with other musicians. We’ve been over this before. The TLDR of it all; Levi J. Miller has a great deal of output.

Quantity doesn’t always equal quality but there’s almost always a particular spin or theme to each release. Maybe it’s Garage Rock or maybe it’s Something Darker or maybe it’s 77-minute concept album about how the Internet can make us feel like gods.

With God Complex, Levi J. Miller swings for the fences with an incredibly ambitious concept album spanning 33-tracks that follows the tale of an imagined protagonist that gets Internet Famous through his online art and starts a cult to feed his (or her) ego. Without much introspection, it’s likely a feeling we can all relate to thanks to the serotonin uptick that comes with Likes, Subscribes, Follows and Comments coming in through our own personal Internet Portals.

Admirable concepts aside, the music itself within this opus is an, overall, enjoyable listen. Seventy-seven minutes is quite a commitment for our attention addled brains but Miller has obviously done his best to keep things moving along and sonically interesting with plenty of interesting guitar sounds, different vocal styles and memorable lyrics. It is, by and large, a Rock record but tracks like “A Nonverbal Prayer” or “Confusionism” slow things down from a manic pace into ambient and gentle zones (respectively).

The album closes with a heavily vocoded trip into space called “Thx 4 Listening” – in which our protagonist presumably ascends beyond this mortal coil into pure Light and Technology, a fate we’re all headed for whether we like it or not. Levi J. Miller is just showing us the way.

Sick Teachers and Bachelorette Party Fever Dreams

Today we open with a bachelor and bachelorette party fever dream.

I give a good deal of background regarding the MNPS funding issues to this point.

Jack Evan Johnson of Honkytonk Badonkadonk shares an essay from their June issue. The July issue is out now.

Then I talk with teachers Missy Lindsey and Erin Hunt about what it’s like to work in underfunded school districts.

I have been fascinated by the plight of Metro Nashville Public School (MNPS) teachers, around which there have been a number of actions over the past few months both inside and outside of the classroom. Missy and Erin talk about that here, about their tenure as teachers, and about what being underpaid means to them and to the community. They make a few especially compelling points, the first of which is that it can’t help but feel like underpaying teachers feels especially misogynistic when you consider that the profession is largely one in which men are a minority of the labor force. Second, they detail something I had already heard from teachers, particularly teachers in schools with significant populations of color–which is that because of the lack of competitive pay, there are some school districts that are in or going into their second straight hear in which some class rooms go entirely without science or math teachers. Again, these are full years that these students are missing any education in the stem field. It’s absolutely heartbreaking. They then break down what political actions have been taken, and lack thereof, since.

Finally, they discuss something many might not know, which is that most-if-not-all conversation about elevating teacher pay has done little to address honoring and maintaining step increases, which are incremental increases in pay that were supposedly already in place to maintain some regular increase in wages that makes jobs appealing to those who are career minded, though isn’t necessarily guaranteed in public sector work. So often, what looks like promised pay increases have come alongside an accompanying decrease by way of not honoring those step increases.

At one point Missy and Erin refer to the councilors who did not support amending the budget to provide a full funding increase for the districts and their teachers. These are those councilors:

    John Cooper
    Bill Pridemore
    Steve Glover
    Jeff Syracuse
    Davette Blalock
    Jonathan Hall
    Robert Swope
    Holly Huezo
    Sheri Weiner
    Russ Pulley
    Angie Henderson
    Scott Davis
    Nancy VanReece
    Larry Hagar
    Kevin Rhoten
    Mary Carolyn Roberts
    Mina Johnson
    Jeremy Elrod
    Decosta Hastings abstained.

More on Nashville Demystified
Official Site: nashvilledemystified.com
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Twitter: @NDemystified

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A Nashville Video Sessions Primer

For almost as long as Internet Video has been available (I see you RealPlayer), there have been in-studio performances filmed and broadcast. Over time, these kinds of sessions have become easier and easier to create. The cost of great looking cameras has dropped exponentially, editing software doesn’t require a ten week course to understand and, of course, YouTube has essentially removed the barrier to entry for distribution.

With that in mind, it’s still incredibly difficult to get a great sounding recordings, not to mention a performance from the band that is actually compelling to watch. We rounded up a few recent sessions that we’ve run across that are doing a great job across the board and are likely deserving of your Like and Subscribe.

There’s a delightfully surprising amount of these so expect an update on more sessions in the future.

Q Sessions

Embedded above is “The Atmos” performance from Sad Baxter and above that is a supercut of various performances from the Q Sessions. Recorded by Mike Purcell under the Monkey Riot Recordings name, these cuts all stem from Berry Hill’s County Q Studio. Since they’re a professional studio, the performances sound great (and work as a calling card for the studio).

We briefly mentioned the Anchor Thieves performance in another post but there’s performances from The By Gods, Hurts to Laugh, Bill Eberele, Tom Pappas Collection, the aforementioned Sad Baxter and some other regional acts. By the time you read this, there may even be a Hari session in place.

Found Sounds

Admittedly, there’s only one session available from Found Sounds thus far so it might be best to withhold judgement but this 20-minute piece with Commander Keen in the Cookeville Wherehouse Skateshop is a stellar first entry. It looks great, sounds great and the band delivers multiple songs worth keeping your attention. Don’t miss the Nirvana cover they pull out at the end.

Lightning 100

Ahh, Lightning 100! While the DIY / underground side of Nashville certainly seems to prefer the varietal offerings of WXNA, you gotta give it to Lightning 100 for having a deep archive of local music. From their YouTube page you’ll see hundreds of sessions captured in-studio, at venues around town or at bigger events like Bonnaroo from both local artists and national acts. It’s extremely commendable that you can see a video from repeat repeat listed right next to one from Phoenix.

The list of videos goes back some 12 years, so it’s a lot to shift through. We put together this playlist that cherry picks some of those performances from local artists. It’s not exhaustive by any means but you can punch through and see performances from Daniel Pujol, Jessi Baylin (with Courtney Jaye), The Features, Richie, All Them Witches, Andrew Combs and Erin Rae, Self, Steelism and… well, the list is long.

As mentioned, this list of in-studio series is not everything – not by a long shot. There are 615 Sessions, 615 Bus Sessions, the now defunct Balcony TV or Lake Fever Sessions and tons more that I’m not even, yet, aware of. Regardless, there’s lots to unearth and hopefully the above will serve as a decent starting point until our next installment.

Larissa Maestro

Larissa Maestro is a cellist and a co-founder of the Nashville Concerto Orchestra. The daughter of two scientists, she was raised in Ithaca, NY, in a community that strongly encouraged her mother’s Philippine heritage. She was drawn to the cello as a child, further inspired by the passionate playing of Jacqueline du Pre. Larissa is now one of Nashville’s most in-demand cellists for live performances and studio work, having played on recent albums by Margo Price, Caitlin Rose, and Jasmin Kaset.

On this episode of My Fantasy Funeral, she and host Ryan Breegle discuss the importance of Nashville having a locally sourced volunteer orchestra, the 90’s songs she loves and hates singing with My So-Called Band, and how the small, intimate moments of our lives really make us into who we are.

Hear Larissa Maestro Funeral Song Selections on Spotify

Follow My Fantasy Funeral on Instagram & Twitter.

Find host Ryan Breegle on Twitter.

Music by Kindercastle.

152: A Piece of the Hill with Tristen

This week we share our very special interview with Tristen. If you’re somehow unfamiliar, Tristen has been releasing music since 2008 with works that include Charlatans at the Garden Gate, C A V E S, Sneaker Waves and a whole host of singles in between. Her latest 7″ for “Dream within a Dream” is available now via This Man Records and is comprised entirely of lyrics by Edgar Allan Poe; an accomplishment worth an entire episode in and of itself.

As we’ve been a fan since 2008, it’s a rather lengthy piece that covers a ton of topics. The first half of our chat covers her personal history, her discography and her insights on hardships (and celebrations) of releasing music. We go from coffee shop performances in Chicago to touring in a Honda Civic, all the way to sleeping on a tour bus with Jenny Lewis and the next album.

The second half of the conversation covers tangentially related topics to music; largely the perceived burdens of balancing a creative life with motherhood and the very real burdens of politics and thinking in a community minded way; ensuring that everyone gets a piece of the hill.

We are extremely thankful to Tristen for her time, her story and her insights. Do yourself a favor and dive deep into the discography listed below.

More on Tristen:
Official Site: tristen.com
Facebook: /tristenmusic
Twitter: @tristentristen
Instagram: @tristentristen

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

Teardrops & Lollipops

Charlatans at the Garden Gate

C A V E S

Sneaker Waves

“Dream within a Dream”

“Red Lava”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover Image: Tristen by Megan Thompson Fitchuk.

Stereo Specter – “Obsolete Man”

Stereo Specter has been releasing a handful of singles over the past few months that should not be overlooked. The latest, “Obsolete Man“, is a great place to dive in. It’s an upbeat number decrying a relationship in which the narrator was deemed obsolete and is now triumphantly trying to prove his worth; a feeling that we’re all likely able to empathize with.

I’m told that there’s a full EP, or possibly album, on the horizon of these new songs. They’re all culled from a new outlook on the general Stereo Specter sound embracing a bit more pop sensibilities. The pounding drums and swirling keyboards are a nice indication of where things are headed for the band and I’m looking forward to more.

Catch the band at The 5 Spot on July 10th (2019) as they try their hand at winning a spot at this years Pilgrimage Fest and check them out on the streaming services if you’d like to keep up with new releases.

Shots! Shotgunning a beer

Mike and Kenneth spend the Fourth of July holiday talking about pool beers, lawn-mowing beers, camping beers and the ultimate crushing-beer technique, Shotgunning a beer. Kenneth takes one for the team and takes down a beer for the studio audience.

Music by Upright T-Rex Music.
Logo by Jess Machen

Worthy of Having a Crappy Cereal

The guys celebrate the first day of filming Face the Music by covering recent casting news. Then they talk with Becky Delius, a first-time viewer of the films, to discuss her thoughts on the films, how nostalgia bonds us to childhood entertainment, and how great Keanu is.

Honkytonk Badonkadonk and Carolyn Kendrick

We talk with Jack Evan Johnson and Cybelle Elena of Honkytonk Badonkadonk. Jack and Elena launched the monthly zine a year ago this week. They discuss their background as musicians and artists and explain why Nashville may not be over after all.

Honkytonk Badonkadonk’s birthday / anniversary party Donkfest is on Saturday, July 6th at The Cobra.

Carolyn Kendrick, who appeared in our first episode brand new to the city, updates us on what she’s learned in her first three months were and I remind her how she missed that time Rodney Crowell, Vince Gill and Emmylou Harris played a popup show at Honky Tonk Tuesday at the American Legion.

You can see her perform her new song Tear Things Apart here.

And find her online at the links below…

Honkytonk Badonkadonk
Donk Fest
@honkytonkbadonkadonk_zine
@jackevanjohnson
@cybelle_elena

Carolyn Kendrick
carolynkendrick.com
@carekendrick

Nashville Demystified is brought to you by Knack Factory – a commercial video and content production company with offices here in the city and We Own This Town. Knack Factory is a commercial video and content production firm in Nashville. We Own This Town is a collective of podcasters based in Nashville.

More on Nashville Demystified
Official Site: nashvilledemystified.com
Instagram: @nashvilledemystified
Twitter: @NDemystified

Brought to you by Knack Factory

Punk Rock Geriatrics

Thirty years after Chagall’s “Othello and Desdemona” was stolen from a Manhattan apartment, the FBI found it locked inside a makeshift wooden box labeled “Miscellaneous High School Artwork.” Was it the building’s maintenance man who stole the work for Bulgarian mobsters? We discuss the details of this 1988 burglary on this week’s episode.

Episode artwork by Adam Nicholson.

Follow Thick as Thieves on Instagram.

Music by Patrick Damphier.
Show artwork by Saskia Keultjes.

Hear Trevor Mikula on My Fantasy Funeral

Every episode of My Fantasy Funeral comes complete with a playlist of songs hand picked by the guest to accompany their journey into the great beyond (whatever that may be).

The latest episode features an insightful interview and selections from Trevor Mikula, local artist and Provincetown, MA superfan. Give his episode a listen, visit his official site to enjoy his creations and then dive into the playlist of his song choices.