BeHoward & FU Stan – “Dope Boy” (Official Video)

Collaboration has always been King when it comes to hip-hop. The earliest days of the genre established sampling as an extremely valid form of creation and no other genre has been more open to “featuring” like-minded artists on one another’s tracks. Lately Nashville’s been seeing these types of collab’s taken to the next level. The latest from BeHoward and FU Stan, entitled “Dope Boy“, finds the two talented emcees not only working on a track together but an entire short film.

“Dope Boy” as a standalone track is a deep bass extravaganza that gives plenty of room for both BeHoward and FU Stan to shine on their individual verses. It’s an enjoyable listen that takes on entirely different meaning when paired with the official video, in which BeHoward and FU Stan portray Claude and Ray, two elderly gentleman looking to make a buck off a bottle of pills. They stumbled their way through a possible exchange before completely botching a sympathy purchase by over-asking on the price of the goods. No description of the piece could do it justice as the absurd acting and improvised exchanges between the two just simply must be seen to be understood. The duo’s ineptitude undermines the lyrics of the track which are primarily aimed at the cunning lifestyle of a dealer. Claude and Ray are anything but cunning.

It’s unclear if the track was meant to be satire paired with the video but, regardless, it’s a brilliant turn of play made even more impressive by how ridiculously enjoyable the characters are. As luck would have it, this isn’t a one off track. There is a full release between BeHoward and FU Stan looming on the horizon in the form of a Claude and Ray EP. If we’re lucky, there will be more videos following all sorts of additional bumbling misadventures. BeHoward and FU Stan are setting a new bar on what collaboration looks like.

Mike Wolf’s Barantined brings the bar to you

Mike Wolf is a man of many talents; author, bartender and storyteller being among the top notable attributes. He brings together all three of those skills in his latest book Barantined: Recipes, Tips, and Stories To Enjoy At Home, a compendium of at-home drink recipes and stories from a variety of expert bartenders and sommeliers gathered during the pandemic.

Wolf also happens to be the host of We Own This Town podcast Liquid Gold, a bi-weekly show that focuses on much of the same kind of material; talking with experts about the history of specific drinks and how best to make those concoctions in your own space. Over the course of some 80 episodes, he’s spoken with the likes of Charles Nelson of Greenbriar Distillery, Rum legend Ed Hamilton, Nicolette Anctil of Husk, Foggy Ridge Cider’s own Diane Flynt and even Cold Brew Afficionado Chris Crofton… just to name a few. All that’s to say, Wolf’s insights on a myriad of drinks is well exercised in both the podcast and his publications.

The discussions within Barantined capture a moment in time; one that we’re still feeling the ripples of as we work our way through new variants of the COVID-19 coronavirus. These stories are double-y fascinating given that Nashville was still struggling with the recovery efforts from a tornado shortly before quarantine locked us all down. The situation is unique but the stories and insights Wolf compiles from a long list of experts are timeless. They remind us that making a good cocktail at home is a great skill but there’s also something irreplaceable about being served from the bar.

The book is available now from Turner Publishing, Bookshop, Paranassus or wherever you prefer to buy online.


Update: Mike Wolf will be appearing at the Honeytree Meadery on Saturday, August 7th as part of National Mead Day. He’ll be there to chat Barantined and cocktails. More details over at The Scene.

261: Back into the Mailbag

This episode we dip a heavy hand into the We Own This Town Mailbag and come back with a variety of songs that we might not have discovered on our own. Truth be told, there are plenty of selections here that didn’t come from submissions but, hey, it’s a healthy mix! If you’re interested in submitting your music, feel free to DM us on Twitter or Facebook or just shoot an email to michael [at] weownthistown [dot] net, we’d love to hear from you.


We always recommend you keep up each artist for more news and announcements directly from them. With that in mind, go follow Volunteer Department, Gee Slab feat. Namir Blade, Slow Pass, B. Stokes, Lord Goldie & Sweet Poison, Chico Rashad, Kara Frazier feat The Aquaducks, Ayanana Jahneé, Jyou, Richard String, Tedadore, Aaron Parke, Apollo Crier and Total Wife.

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

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music.

Volunteer Department feat Heaven Honey
“Cows of Tomorrow”

Gee Slab feat Namir Blade
“Hand Grenades.png”

Slow Pass
“Tuesday Morning”

B Stokes
“Ballin”

Lord Goldie & Sweet Poison
“Flip Mode”

Chico Rashad
“Heroic”

Kara Frazier
“I Wanna Be Your Woman”

Ayanna Jahnee
“Fog”

Jyou
“Brokeboi feat. K.O.N”

Richard String
“The Tempo”

Tedadore
“Dancing with Another”

Aaron Parke
“Water Feeds the Wasp”

Apollo Crier
“If You’re Not Having Fun, You Suck”

Total Wife
“Web”

Shots! Mojitos with Travis Archer

Mike is joined by Travis Archer, formerly the Mojito master behind “Mojito Mondays” at Dino’s. Travis now runs the bar at Osteria La Buca in Los Angeles and makes incredibly delicious and creative cocktails. Travis gives his traditional mojito recipe as well as a California-centric riff on the classic with lemon verbena. Also discussed: egg white style foams for vegans, gems of the California spirit scene, the perfect music to pair with a Mojito, Travis’ “Shot Girl Summer” at Osteria La Buca, and why restaurant and bar teams are like basketball teams.


Order Mike’s new book Barantined: Recipes, Tips, and Stories To Enjoy At Home; stories from a range of bartenders and sommeliers on how they survived the pandemic and how you can upgrade your home bar setup.

You can also see Mike talk about the new book on July 23rd at Parnassus Books at this event in conversation with author (and James Beard winner) Lisa Donovan.

Follow Liquid Gold on Instagram at @liquidgold_pod.

Music by Upright T-Rex Music.
Logo by Jess Machen. Mojito photos from Delicious Table.

Freewheeling Recommendations and High Controversy

For the first time in a long time, Matt, Mickey and Michael are all in the studio together. Together they dive into a litany of freewheeling recommendations and more than a dash of controversial topics. You’ll have to tune in for the debatable discussion but the Not So Controversial chat includes the endorsements for H&S Bagel, Old Nashville Experience Smeraldo’s, brand new spot Eastwood Deli and comfortable bar Lucky’s 3 Star Bar… just to name a few.

Musical selections include Total Wife and Lithics.


If you have suggestions for spots to check out, please reach out to @thisisthaplace on Twitter or Instagram.

Intro Music by Uncle Skeleton, Outro Music by Jay Leo Phillips.

Music Therapy in Star Trek: IDIC Podcast Festival

Larissa and Lauren are excited to share their live podcast from the recent IDIC Podcast Festival (presented by Women at Warp)! They are joined by board-certified music therapist and Trekkie Amanda Maestro-Scherer to talk about instances in the franchise in which characters have therapeutic relationships or experiences with music. The trio discuss possibilities for the future of expressive therapies, the role that science fiction could play in pushing forward a more holistic approach to care, and how the EMH is the perfect candidate to be a space music therapist.


Subscribe to catch all the new episodes and follow @intothewormhole.podcast on Instagram for more!

Gee Slab – “Hand Grenades (feat Namir Blade)”

What happens when you put two extremely prolific artists together for a collaboration track? Gee Slab and Namir Blade aim to find out with the release of the single “Hand Grenades,” now streaming everywhere.

For those not paying attention; Gee Slab’s been keeping busy recently with the release of his Because I Can EP, a Negro Justice collab EP entitled Resplendent, a short film for “Triple Beam,” and episodes of his KeepItGee video series… all while continuing to feature on plenty of other artists tracks. Namir Blade has been busy with the release of his highly acclaimed Aphelion’s Traveling Circus, a collab album with L’Orange entitled Imaginary Everything, blowing minds at Acme Feed and Seed, producing tracks for a large number of artists and featuring his verses on additional collabs. It’s safe to say those overviews are incomplete.

Slab’s cadence and wry delivery shines on each of his tracks, while Blade drops clever references through a high-speed, sometimes sing-song, delivery. A Venn Diagram of the two would certainly overlap but, stylistically, they each contain their own unique flair. On “Hand Grenades,” the two fuse these approaches into something uniquely fresh. Slab delivers plenty of personal-but-coy turn-of-phrase with Blade’s choral contributions steering the track in a new direction. The dreamy production and increasingly emphatic delivery on the verses eventually give way to a deep space experience, floating the listener away on a total high. Fusing highly personal lyrics while still being able to inject a dreamy pop hook is not an easy feat to pull off. If it sounds too good to be true, give it a listen; you’ll find it to be accurate and extremely enjoyable.

For now, it’s a one-off collab track between the two but the results are wildly successful. Both MC’s were already worthy of keeping up with, now we can all collectively hope they find themselves together again.

Jordan Lehning – “Drunk Dreaming” (Official Video)

We here at We Own This Town are big fans of Jordan Lehning. From our original introduction in 2007 via the band Eureka Gold, to his contributions on the sublime Make-out with Violence soundtrack to his plethora of solo albums over the years, he’s proven to be consistently enjoyable. He’s announced a new full-length album entitled Three Colored Walls (Tree Tone) for release on August 6th along with a fantastic new video for the track “Drunk Dreaming.”

The video, directed by the Duensing brothers, has the production values of a full-on short film coupled with an engagingly abstract narrative. The protagonist of the piece (Sari Hoke) awakes and beautifully stumbles through a dance of quilted characters and beasts. If there were a way to portray “Drunk Dreaming” on film, this would be it. Lehning, goggled and quilted himself, speeds toward the scene in a muscle car and is eventually ravaged by the dream figures.

Over on Backseat Mafia, where the video premiered, Lehning describes the song as “a cautionary fairytale that warns us against dwelling too long on things no longer attainable.” The Duensing’s video can certainly be interpreted as such, with Hoke tangling with the figures (the past) before escaping and barely looking back. All that said, it’s also just an enjoyable three and a half minutes that can be enjoyed devoid of interpretation or meaning. Sometimes a mysterious video can be just that, a mysterious video.

Lehning’s track that underlies the entire effort is exemplary of what we love enjoy about his body of work; it’s catchy and upbeat but with just the right dash of melancholy and foreboding. It’s a pop song but it’s layered and nuanced, a listening experience that bears repeating. It’s also a great anticipatory offering for the forthcoming Three Colored Walls album, one that we’re now waiting with bated breath to drop.

Ross McReynolds & Juan Solorzano – Instrumentals

Ross McReynolds and Juan Solorzano are possibly not names you are familiar with but have contributed to recordings you have likely encountered. Both musicians are multi-instrumentalists that lend their input to a number of recordings – McReynolds most recently appeared with Lydia Luce and Jess Nolan while Solorzano plays with Molly Parden and Becca Mancari. Scouring their Instagram’s, there’s countless examples of recordings and performances they’ve been a part of; they get around in the good way.

Powerful players of their ilk often don’t get quite as much time to shine with their own material. Fortunately, these two came together to create a full-length album of original compositions simply entitled Instrumentals. The eleven song undertaking manages to weave its way through a number of different styles, embracing both soothingly ambient tones and more upbeat and engaging compositions. Solorzano had this to say of the creation of the record:

If I was ever to make a “guitar” record, this is probably it. I hadn’t been able to write a “song” song in a while. Between being at loss with the state of the world and struggling with my mental health, I couldn’t find a single fucking thing to say. So instrumentals, it is. I hope that it can be of some solace and healing for someone, just as making this with Ross was for me.

The notion that the record was created as an outlet during the stress of the pandemic and resulted in a calming undertaking is a story we’ve heard before with the Rich Ruth series of ambient EP’s – Where There’s Life – released during the height of quarantine for much the same reasoning. However, this collaborative album results in a much different record from Ruth’s (not that anyone is comparing). These songs honestly do emit a feeling of escape and optimism. “Where Have You Been” lies at the mid-point of the album and serves as the prime example of how these two can craft a song that feels like you’re emerging from a darker place.

It’s unclear if this is a one off record or a sign of future collaborations between the two but that’s immaterial, Instrumentals captures a feeling of a place in time and manages to express itself as a timeless journey of overcoming those hardships. Granted, it’s an instrumental album so you may not glean that feeling from it without the context of why it was made but knowing that the record served as a light through the dark only adds to the level of appreciation we have for it.

260: Familiar Songs

We tend to treat our WOTT Music episodes like birthdays; try to do something special for those that end in five or zero. As such, we’re sharing a playlist of cover songs this go around. We’ve got a long list of covers from Nashville artists and think sharing a solid twelve of them is a nice refreshing break from the norm. You may know these songs but you don’t know these versions.


We always recommend you keep up each artist for more news and announcements directly from them. With that in mind, go follow cosmic collective, Dirty Fuss, Butthole, Trip God F’RF’R & Negro Justice, Tristen, Reno Bo, And the Relatives & Caitlin Rose, Nick Woods, Cheers for Fears, Jesse Noah Wilson, Nicole Atkins and Sean Nelson.

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

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music.

Cosmic Collective
“One-Beer” (MF Doom)

Dirty Fuss
“About a Girl” (Nirvana)

Butthole
“Take Care” (Beach House)

Trip God FRFR And Negro Justice
“Clint Eastwood” (Gorillaz)

Tristen
“Just Like Heaven” (The Cure)

Reno Bo
“Sexy Sadie” (The Beatles)

And The Relatives
“Be Here to Love Me” (Townes Van Zandt)

Nick Woods
“Time to Move On” (Tom Petty)

Cheers For Fears
“Goodbye Horses” (Q Lazzarus)

Jesse Noah Wilson
“Me and My Arrow” (Harry Nilsson)

Nicole Atkins
“Everybodys Talkin” (Harry Nilsson)

Sean Nelson
“Gotta Get Up” (Harry Nilsson)

Shots! Whiskey Smash

The “Summer of Shots” continues as hosts Mike and Kenneth discuss the origins of the first produce-driven cocktail, the Smash. Find out why this is the ultimate summer cocktail template that can be tailored to fit whatever ingredients you may have on hand. They also discuss the ice component of this drink, and why you may need an ice-crusher for that home bar setup.


Order Mike’s new book Barantined: Recipes, Tips, and Stories To Enjoy At Home; stories from a range of bartenders and sommeliers on how they survived the pandemic and how you can upgrade your home bar setup.

You can also see Mike talk about the new book on July 23rd at Parnassus Books at this event in conversation with author (and James Beard winner) Lisa Donovan.

Follow Liquid Gold on Instagram at @liquidgold_pod.

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

Our Favorite Movies: Bride of Frankenstein with Mykki Newton [Rebroadcast]

Rebroadcast: Film historian and friend of the show Mykki Newton recently passed away. In memoriam, we are rebroadcasting Jason’s conversation with her from our July 7th, 2020 episode; a lively discussion about the James Whale classic Bride of Frankenstein. Jason shares his reflections on Mykki and her contagious enthusiasm for classic cinema.

We thought we’d repost this episode in the hope that her friends that missed this the first time around can hear Mykki doing what she loved, talking classic Hollywood.

We recommend taking some time to read through Mykki’s phenomenal blog Mykki Newton and Classic Movie History, as well as partaking in a viewing of Voodoo Child: Memories of a Freak, a documentary about Newton’s fascinating life.


My guest today is Mykki Newton. Mykki is a film historian and writer. She is also an award-winning broadcast journalist and documentary filmmaker with more than 40 years of experience in journalism and acting. She is a former television news anchor, reporter, entertainment correspondent and film critic. She studied at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute in New York, NY. and appeared in several feature films, television shows and on-stage. Mykki Newton is currently a producer/videographer/editor at The University of Mississippi’s School of Journalism and New Media.

She researches and writes extensively about classic cinema on her very readable blog Mykki Newton and Classic Movie History.


Follow Filmography Club on Instagram @filmography_club_podcast.

Music by Uncle Skeleton