S01.E04: The Evil Dead

The boys review and discuss Sam Raimi’s 1981 film The Evil Dead. Starring Bruce Campbell, Ellen Sandweiss, Richard DeManincor, Betsy Baker and Theresa Tilly.


Follow The Horror Fried Podcast on Instagram @thehorrorfriedpodcast, Letterbox @thfp615 and Slasher @THFP615.

Andrew Adkins – “Broken Fangs” (Official Video)

If you do some light googling on Andrew Adkins you’ll see his work described as a “talented singer songwriter” from the likes of No Depression, American Songwriter and Paste Magazine. Excellent accolades that evoke melancholy, contemplative ruminations accompanied by acoustic guitar and some brushed snare drums. Adkins is indeed a talented songwriter but there’s a freak flag flying high on “Broken Fangs” that is decidedly not what the label insinuates.

Serving as the first single off of the forthcoming full-length record Rattlesnake Motions, the track blends together the psychedelic, percussive grooves, fuzzy bass and a giant mix bag of playful instrumentation. It’s a bouncy and delightful track that also manages to be just a bit foreboding and menacing. If you’re not picking up on that vibe from the lyrics, simply watch the official video and you’ll be inundated with visions of ghosts, haunting twins, a Ouija board ritual gone astray and one grinning, murderous, clown. None of it evokes true terror but it is an emotional rollercoaster to watch as you’re bopping along to the song. I can’t say for certain but the whole thing feels like a subtle nod to the likes of The Shining, It, Blair Witch and a bit of The Cell; all blended together into a quality fever dream.

Spending some time with Adkins back catalog reveals a lot of diversity in the styles embraced for a given release. There’s no telling if “Broken Fangs” is an indication of the full sound of Rattlesnake Motions or an outlier but I’m on board to find out more. The full record releases is set for July and, in the meantime, I’ll be grooving along while also being just a bit freaked out.

303: Going Absolutely Bonkers

Folks, I’m going to be honest with you. This week I’m going absolutely nuts. I was putting together the playlist for this episode and decided, to hell with it, it’s a PODCAST. Who says what format I need to stick to? 10 tracks? 15 tracks? *19* tracks? This show is whatever I want it to be and for this episode, I want to go absolutely bonkers. Stayed tuned for a mega playlist of great local music courtesy of Notelle, D Striker, Slow Pass, Mike Floss, $avvy, Gee Slab, Villin, Wulven, Chamber and so so many more. This isn’t even everything in the backlog! I’m just losing my mind over here with how much music there is to share. If you’re reading this, hello.

Be sure to subscribe to this show and click below for more information.


Find more music from each of our artists linked below and be sure to follow Notelle, D. Striker, Intro, Slow Pass, Snooper, Rock Eupora, $avvy, Mike Floss, Gee Slab, Ornament, Passion Fruit Boys, Wilderwater x Kyshona, kidDEAD, villin, Que Rico, The Alphabet Zero, Wulven & Jake Kroll, Chamber and Montauk Error for more updates.

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

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music.

Notelle
“Bugs”

D Stiker
“R-H-Y-T-H-M”

Intro
“Push It Back”

Slow Pass
“Stay Fading”

Snooper
“Xerox”

Rock Eupora
“Can You Feel the Weight?”

$avvy
“GO!”

Mike Floss
“Fighting”

Gee Slab
“The White Couch”

Ornament
“In Her Light”

Passion Fruit Boys
“Glad You Came”

Wilderwater X Kyshona
“Is That All You Got”

kidDEAD
“Live”

Villin
“Kings Breath”

Que Rico
“Chaka Essence”

The Alphabet Zero
“Ganymede”

Wulven X Jake Kroll
“Gloom Room”

Chamber
“Cellophane Form”

Montauk Error
“No Food”

The Spikes Protect Our Tender Hearts

Host Mary Mancini sits down with poet and artist Christine Hall.

Christine was raised in a trailer at the edge of the Adirondacks by troubadours and cultist pornographers. Inculcated with American mythology—tool girl calendars, bible stories, science fiction—she built on this education while hitching across the continent.

Before she set off on her travels she was a teenager at Lucy’s trying to find her way out of a difficult and painful childhood. Christine found Lucy’s to be a safe space and her story has a happy ending, but the safety she found inside didn’t always prevent her from acting out her trauma in dangerous and self-destructive ways on the outside.

Now at home in the Nashville arts community, Christine hosts the Poetry in the Brew open mic. Her work has appeared in Out & About Nashville, several anthologies including Sinew (April Gloaming Publishing, 2021), Be About It zine, on MTA buses, and on stages with the Yoni Pearl Monologues, Cabaret Noir Collective, TSU, Third Man Records, and OZ Arts.


This episode comes with a content warning. We talk about self-harm, and suicide, as well as the trauma brought on by religious indocrination. If you’re in need of resources or support, please go to suicidepreventionlifeline.org or call Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255. The Lifeline provides free and confidential support for anyone in distress and prevention and crisis resources for you or your loved ones 24/7. If you live outside the U.S., look for the local resources in your community.


Follow us / Say hello
Instagram: @lucysrecordshop
Twitter: @lucysrecordshop
Facebook: /lucysrecordshop

Nashville Bandcamp Friday, May 2022

If you’re unfamiliar with the phenomena of Bandcamp Friday, here’s the official rundown on the ongoing event. In short, the service Bandcamp waives their fees as a way of showing their support for artists. It began in March of 2020 at the start of the pandemic and has been going ever since. Will it continue past this month? No way to know at this time but it’s a great opportunity to support an artist or two.

We here at We Own This Town take the opportunity to highlight a bunch of releases from the local scene that are on Bandcamp and are, we feel, worthy of your support. It’s not an exhaustive list but it’s a place to start. Buying music has become a very foreign concept since the rise of streaming services but you don’t actually have to download any music. You can use today as an opportunity to support an artist that you enjoy, or missed their last live show or just want to encourage them to keep going by means of a few dollars. It’s not charity but it is a direct line to give 100% of your money to a musician that would otherwise be shared with a service. It’s also a helluva lot better way to support someone than just streaming their music; which we all know is not a viable monetary path.

No matter what, it’s a fun way to spotlight some music from around the Nashville area. Keep up with this list or follow our tweeting if you want a bit more detail. We’ll also advise that you find your own Nashville discoveries and show your support!!

Ready To Drink: Canned Cocktails with Ali Besten of Cathead

Gearing up for summer, hosts Mike and Kenneth invite one of their favorite folks in beverage, Ali Besten, to come discuss the five year phenomenon of canned cocktails and ready to drink (RTD) beverages. Ali is gearing up for the launch of Cathead’s new sparkling drinks line, and the hosts are very impressed with the results. Before tasting through the new line, the panel discusses the meteoric rise of White Claw, what it’s exactly made of, hard kombuchas and organic alternatives, and who makes the best gas station Mojito. Topo Chico’s line of canned beverages disappoint the hosts, before the panel breaks out into an impromptu fast-food beverage discussion. Which fast food company has the best beverage program? Kenneth takes a break from Booze News but can’t resist sharing a new “Florida Files,” story about cocaine blowing in the wind in Florida. Bonus content: wait, Tequila mixes well with RTD cans? We’re shocked…


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

302: The Wide Spectrum of Delights

Back at it again with sixteen local tracks spanning a wide spectrum of delights. I’ll be honest with y’all, this show is HARD TO KEEP UP WITH. There’s just so much music coming out at all times, keeping aware of it all and slimming it down to just an hour of music is rough. Sleep on instagram for a day and you missed 10 things! It’s a problem but it’s a good problem.

One editorial note; the NGC 4414 track included in this episode is an excerpt but not noted as such in the actual episode. My bad! It’s a fifteen minute track and that somehow slipped past me until I was editing. Is this Inside Baseball that you don’t really need to know? Maybe not! But it’s a clarification I felt necessary to make.

Be sure to subscribe to this show and click below for more information.


Find more music from each of our artists linked below and be sure to follow Felix Tandem, Los Colognes, Sean Thompson’s Weird Ears, The BlackSon, Ron Obasi, blaxhippie, Kyle Etges, WhoIsJordan, LUNAR, B. Stokes, Joey Kneiser, Highland Kites, Babe, local spells, NGC 4414 and No Milk for more updates.

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

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music.

Felix Tandem
“Shoplifter”

Los Colognes
“Troll”

Sean Thompson’s Weird Ears
“Before The Flowers Bloom”

The BlackSon
“My First Song” (Video)

Ron Obasi
“THISALAYUP”

blaxhippie
“LETS GET BLAZED”

Kyle Etges
“Voodoo Shop”

WhoIsJordan
“WYA?”

LUNAR
“Vampire Gatorade”

B. Stokes
“Ghost”

Joey Kneiser
“Nothings Wasted on the Soul”

Highland Kites
“Helpless Heart”

Babe
“Freeze”

Local Spells
“A2”

NGC 4414
“Past Prologue Excerpt”

No Milk
“Oh La La Bomba”

The Wiz

Kelsey & Alex visit an often terrifying version of Oz in 1978’s box office dud and eventual cult classic The Wiz. Diana Ross led a seemingly relentless campaign to secure the film’s lead role (the unofficial fictionalization of which we discussed in our Dreamgirls episode), and her age being 33 at the time of filming resulted in a new director and a new script that transformed the film’s Dorothy from Broadway’s Kansas teen into a 24 year-old New York City school teacher. Due to these scattered story revisions and its monetary & critical failure, The Wiz tends to be known as the end of Hollywood’s 1970’s “blaxploitation” era and Ross’s big screen career. Join our dive into scantily clad modern dance, the horrifying uncanny valley of “skin suits” and facial prosthetics, and endless confusion as Dorothy’s “there’s no place like home” mantra apparently becomes, “you should actually definitely leave home, you old spinster!”

Follow The Hills are Alive on Instagram at @thehillsarealivepod

Schtucket! Schtucket! Schtucket!

When they first met at a suburban Junior High just outside of Nashville some thirty years ago, Mike Shepherd was the rule-following new kid with a stash of X-Men comics under his chair and Jereme Frey was the black and white checkered Skidz-overalls wearing local with a stash of X-Men comics under his chair. They sat next to each other in band, and for the most part, followed the rules. Then they heard that damn Nirvana record, scooched their trombone and tenor sax over just a little to make room for a bass guitar and drum kit, and Schtucket was born.

A few short months later, Mike (Bass, Vocals), Jereme (Drums, Vocals), and their other bestie, Ryan Shogren (Guitar, Vocals), recorded a demo on a boombox / karaoke dual cassette tape machine to take down to Lucy’s to see if maybe, just maybe, they could get a show. Spoiler alert: they did. On the regular.

Thirty years later, “Nashville’s happy-go-lucky musical tricksters” are members of Tower Defense, and they’re still cranking out their unique version of loud, high-powered punk, making records, and playing live shows to packed houses.


Jereme Frey and Mike Shepherd have played rock music together for nearly 30 years, beginning with “Nashville’s happy-go-lucky trio of musical tricksters,” Schtucket. Schtucket was together from 1993-1998, and their run included ten appearances at Lucy’s Record Shop between 1994 and 1997. Following Schtucket’s dissolution, they went on to play together in The Shakedown Cruise, Shiboleth, Gentleman Divers, Partytown Hospital, and early-aughts loud-rock legends Apollo Up! For the last ten years, they’ve collaborated in Tower Defense, alongside Mike’s wife Sarah Shepherd on bass and Currey May on guitar. In The City, the latest LP from Tower Defense, was released in 2020 on Nashville’s YK Records.


Follow us / Say hello
Instagram: @lucysrecordshop
Twitter: @lucysrecordshop
Facebook: /lucysrecordshop

Episode Music
Skirts” – Schtucket (1994)
In the City” – Tower Defense (2020)
So I Hear You’re Moving” – Lambchop (1994)

Additional Links
Schtucket – Discography 1994?-?1998
Apollo Up!
Tower Defense
Gentleman Divers
Partytown Hospital
The Drmls with Mike Seymour
Stone Deep
Fun Girls From Mt. Pilot – Hi Doll 7”
— Troy Pigue – bass; Chris Fox – Drums; Donnie Kendall – Guitar, Vocals; Cat – vocals
Fun Girls From Mt. Pilot – “Hold A Grudge
Dion and The Belmonts – “Teenager in Love
Nirvana – “Tourettes
Pixies – “UMass
Daphne’s Operation (Murfreesboro, TN)
Logic Bomb
Uncle Daddy
Hammerhead
Hoover
Brainiac – “Bonzai Superstar
Dallas Thomas (Fingerhutt)
Murdered Minority
Jon Sewell
They Might Be Giants
Forget Cassettes
YK Records
Drkmttr
Southern Rock & Roll Girls Camp

Season 4 Update… and a Surprise

Just wanted to drop everyone a quick note to let you know that we’re hard at work on Season 4 of Ladyland and plan to start releasing episodes this summer. In the meantime, we’ve got some exciting bonus news for you… we made VIDEOS! We invited some Ladyland guests to find out what a day in their life is all about.

You’ll find the videos on our official site at ladyland.show and follow us on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and Patreon.


Music by You Drive.
Logo by Elizabeth Williams.

Not so fast, Advice King

Before we get to the meat of this, let me take a quick moment to establish that when it comes to Chris Crofton, I am decidedly a fan. His Advice King columns are wonderfully outlandish, his Cold Brew Got Me Like podcast is a hoot, his Twitter is a consistent source of entertainment, and I proudly pre-ordered his book (I even got it signed!). Beyond being a fan, I’d also like to think I consider him an actual friend. I have hung out with him socially many times, he attended my wedding, and I’ve always had a blast. All that is to say, you can be a fan of someone and disagree with them. The following isn’t an indictment of Mr Crofton, I just happen to have a bug in my craw.

So, with that established, the Advice King column from the Nashville Scene entitled “Where’s the Best Place for Live Music in Nashville?” really wound me up. Within the piece, writer Crofton proceeds to tear down Nashville as “not really so much of a music town anymore… It’s more of a ‘hotel town.’ Or a ‘tax shelter.'” That quote is the sub-headline so I’m not mining for hidden sub-context. However, I am calling bullshit.

Let’s set the context, here’s the question posed to the Advice King

I’m going to be in Nashville for my buddy’s wedding, and I was wondering if you had any tips for where to catch the best live music. We don’t want to go where the tourists go. I like all kinds of music, as long as it’s good.
—Chip from Denver

Crofton’s response is hilariously over the top (as any good Advice King response should be) as he laments the impending loss of the Cannery Row complex of venues, the unknown fate of Exit/In and the empty gestures by developers to preserve Nashville history. All of that is somewhat true but overly pessimistic. The Cannery complex announced a new General Manager for the DZL owned facility (who also own Cummins Station, not Thor Equities) and while the article is a bit murky that the existing staff that we all know and love really isn’t involved with the change, it is somewhat hopeful that the future may be in good hands. As for the old Sounds scoreboard over at Nashville Warehouse Co., it would have been destroyed had someone not preserved it. It may not be optimal that it’s in front of Live Nation HQ but isn’t that better than it being destroyed? As for Exit/In, the future is unwritten and we don’t know what AJ Capital is going to do with it. I’m sympathetic to the pessimism around the unlikelihood that Chris and Telisha Cobb will continue to run the space but we simply don’t know.

Over on Crofton’s socials I’ve seen people commenting to the tune of “What a shame, I grew up in those venues!”, “Reading this kills me”, “I moved away months ago, the city is dead.” It all strikes me as a bit over the top. The news of Mercy and Exit/In is decidedly unfortunate but if you’re an out-of-towner looking to experience live music outside of downtown, there are so many phenomenal options. Go see Time Jumpers at 3rd and Lindsley. Go to Motown Monday or Tim Carrol’s Rock n Roll Hour at The 5 Spot. Go see any show at DRKMTTR, The East Room, Springwater, The End, The Basement, Dee’s Lounge. Hit up Rudy’s Jazz Room, swing by Third Man’s Blue Room, see what’s up at Marathon Music Works, The Basement East, Brooklyn Bowl.* Keep an eye on the live music schedules at Grimey’s, The Groove and Vinyl Tap. Maybe you can go check out the brand new venue The Eighth Room? Or, if you do find yourself downtown, see a local show at Slim & Husky’s or the forthcoming Vinyl Lab? Oh yea, there’s also The Ryman, City Winery, The Station Inn and Bluebird Cafe if that’s your thing. I know he dodged answering the question for the purposes of humor but glossing over the real answer paints things as much worse than they actually are.

Look, I get it, The Advice King is confrontational and over the top for the purposes of delightful entertainment. I imbibe in it and consistently enjoy it. I also completely sympathize with the fact that for many of us, Mercy Lounge and Exit/In were a large part of our formative years; seeing bands we love, playing shows with friends and having genuinely irreplaceable memories formed. However, the knee jerk reaction to shit upon the state of things simply because they’re changing is unfair to all of the other great things that are happening. Nashville isn’t dying, it’s evolving. Not everything about that evolution is going to appeal to everyone and not everything is going to be great. Criticism is welcome but let’s not forget to embrace all of the great things that we do have.

I was hesitant to even write this piece because I understand that Advice King’s place in the world is to be a bit of an absurdist antagonist. Arguing with his responses immediately puts you in the fool’s position. Lamenting the comfortable past in favor of the unknown future is natural and valid. My hope is that even as we lose some of the things that have made Nashville special, we can hold on to hope that the new and existing spaces continue to make our city incredibly special. The weight of change can be heavy but I simply hope that we can all hold on to some optimism that the future of the city is still intact and, dare I say, brighter than ever.

* Live Nation does booking at these venues; which is one of Crofton’s additional complaints that the independent nature of Nashville is dying but, frankly, the booking agents at these spots have done a very good job of including local acts on bills.

S01.E03: The Town That Dreaded Sundown

The boys review and discuss Charles B. Pierce’s 1976 film The Town That Dreaded Sundown. Starring Ben Johnson, Andrew Prine and Dawn Wells.


Follow The Horror Fried Podcast on Instagram @thehorrorfriedpodcast, Letterbox @thfp615 and Slasher @THFP615.