Les Ailes – Tennessee

The debut Les Ailes album Tennessee is full of secrets, the kind that hide in plain sight but are unseen nonetheless. If that sounds confusing, bear with me.

Taking a look at the liner notes for the record you’ll see that it is produced by Mike McCarthy; best known for his work with Spoon, A Giant Dog and, locally, The Features and Forget Cassettes. Guest appearances from Matt Chamberlain (Soundgarden, Pearl Jam), Britt Daniel (Spoon), Charles Spearin (Broken Social Scene) and many other notable names dot the credit list but never aurally presents themselves as front and centered. They’re nestled within the tracks but are far from featured players; secrets hiding in plain sight.

Les Ailes is the pseudonym of Rylie DeGarmo, a native Seattle-ite that found themselves traveling in the South and eventually set up shop. This location shifting may partially explain these surprising guests but, if we’re being honest here, the guests spots are the MacGuffin to pique your interest, the real draw here is the songwriting, the musical tone and the delivery of the songs themselves. DeGarmo’s vocals often register as detached but yearning; always front and center spinning a tale of something unrequited and unfulfilled. That’s esoteric but apt, as the record is highly effective at reaching down and really stirring an emotional response of longing.

“Full On” exemplifies this well with the combination of swirling, static-y, keys against an acceptance of friendship over romantic love. The lead single that pulled us in, “Lately”, manages to float between precariously delicate and declaratively mournful. This tone continues throughout the album, not in a repetitious manner but as an underlying theme.

Tennessee is an album that insists on multiple listens. You may be enticed to give it a whirl simply to spot the Broken Social Scene player but it’s guaranteed that you’ll stay for the lush and diverse instrumentation, the forlorn vocals and the sweeping moments of empowerment that surface through the softer moments.

237: Filling a Snowpocalypse Sized Hole

The recent Nashville snowpacalypse set us back a week and we couldn’t be more anxious to get all this great new local music out into the world. We slide right in to a full playlist of diverse new offerings spanning all sorts of genres; it’s our bread and butter!

As always, there’s more music from every artist on this show to be enjoyed so be sure to follow The Feature (Eve Maret & Adrienne Franke), Lydia Luce, Styrofoam Winos, $avvy, The BlackSon, Pink Sweat$, Casters, The Ragcoats, Soviet Shiska, Enki, Satorian, Dominic Billet and faster is faster directly for updates on their latest projects.

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

The Feature
“Space Freeway”

Lydia Luce
“Dark River”

Styrofoam Winos
“Once”

$avvy
“Shameless Feat Chuck Indigo”

The BlackSon
“Uncle Fester”

Pink Sweat$
“Pink Money”

Casters
“Pearl Diving”

The Ragcoats
“I Need Your Love”

Soviet Shiksa
“Rise”

Enki
“Gravel Bar”

Satorian
“Downside up”

Dominic Billett
“Theme I, The Squirrel”

Faster Is Faster
“Bass Choir in E”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music. Cover Image: $avvy.

All the Patina and Charm You Need

This is the Place founder Mickey Parks returns to the show to talk about his role at the new Nashville radio station WNXP and to provide a lengthy list of worthwhile destinations from all over town. Midnight Oil Pizza, Headquarters Coffee, Conny and Jonny Donuts, Sindoore, Habanero Grill and more are discussed. In short, we affirm exactly why Parks was the originator of the show in the first place.

Our music recommendations section yields suggestions for Black Haus, Lee Morgan’s Cornbread and Les Ailes Tennessee.


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.

Chocolate and Chinato with Scott Witherow of Olive and Sinclair

For our Valentines episode this year, we cure loneliness by indulging in Chocolate and the magical elixir known as Chinato. Mike sits down with founder and chief chocolate maker at Olive and Sinclair, Scott Witherow. They discuss the process of making chocolate from scratch and the amazing tale of Scott’s stone grinder. Witherow also talks about his brand new milk chocolate, as well as his favorite chocolate pairing: Priorat wines of Spain.

Jess Backhus joins in on the Priorat discussion before diving into the delicious world of Chinato, complete with cocktail recipes and a deep dive on the process of making Chinato. Kenneth joins the fray with a new segment: “Musings on Boozings,” where he ties in Julia Child’s Valentines, the Queen’s new gin, and Jay Z.

Find Olive & Sinclair on the Internet:
oliveandsinclair.com.
@oliveandsinclair on Instagram.


Order Lost Spring: How We Cocktailed Through Crisis on Amazon.

Hear the companion playlist over on Spotify.

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

Let’s Talk About Bandsplainer

It was recently announced that Spotify Studios launched a new original podcast series called “Bandsplain” – a program in which the host invites a different guest every episode to explain cult bands. This sounded oddly familiar because we here at We Own This Town are partnered with music journalist Olivia Ladd and her podcast Bandsplainer, a show in which she invites a different guest every episode to explain cult bands. If you didn’t catch it, they’re almost identical in concept and name.

To call the situation “unfortunate” is the least we can do. It’s a scenario in which Spotify, or producing agency Spoke Media, either didn’t do any due diligence on naming their new show or did do the research and didn’t mind that there was only one other show with the same name. “Bandsplainer” is not a copyright title nor is it a concept that is so inconceivable to believe that someone else could come up with it independently but it sure does feel like a dash of plagiarism from our perspective. Obviously, we love the idea of an insightful host breaking down the relevance of cult bands (that’s why we have the show!) but it sure would have been nice to see a big company go with a name that wasn’t so close to home. We’d err on the side of “honest mistake” but, in reality, it’s more likely they just didn’t care.

While we’d love to forge a campaign alerting Spotify of the transgression, it’s unlikely that a Corporate Goliath of that scale is going to change anything they’re doing because of a local podcast network. The best path forward is to remind you that Bandsplainer has been around for years and contains a load of quality episodes. Host Olivia Ladd is extremely thoughtful in the guests that she brings aboard and does an excellent job of covering the history and cultural significance of cult bands.

If you haven’t already, check out the shows Official Site, follow it on Twitter, subscribe wherever you get your podcasts (Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Overcast, even Spotify!) and dig into these fantastic episodes. We won’t tell you to tweet at Spotify Podcasts or Spoke Media but we also won’t not tell you to.

Bikini Kill
with Beth Cameron (Black Bra)

The Slits
with Olivia Jean

Patti Smith
with Elena Franklin (Reality Something)

Women in Country Music Special

Brandi Carlile
with Lorie Liebig

Lucinda Williams
with Heaven Honey

Devo
with Mark Campbell

Pulp
with Taylor Cole (Tayls)

Black Flag
with Zach Prosser (Z)

Animal Collective
with Patty Greer

Squeeze
with Charlie Zaillian

The Avett Brothers
with Collin Fidler and Luke Adamson

Death Grips
with John Connor Coulston

Brian Jonestown Massacre
with John Condit

Joy Division
with Alex Fowler

Checking in with Tony Escamilla (S.T.A.I.N. and Anti-Human)

DRKMTTR Radio sits down with Tony Escamilla, from the solo project S.T.A.I.N. and Anti-Human, for a check in. They going to cover how making music has changed for them during COVID, navigating life as a high school aged person in our new isolated digital age, and we even go over a few music suggestions.


Follow DRKMTTR
Instagram: @drkmttrcollective
Facebook: /drkmttrcollective
Official Site: drkmttrcollective.com
Nashville Free Store: @nashvillefreestore

S.T.A.I.N.
“#​*​(​022: FACTORY”

Scumpcorpse
“Blue Crystal Fire (Robbie Basho)”

Jhenetics
“Overwhelmed”

Divorcer
“Aspiring Mighty Exalted”

S.T.A.I.N.
“Shreds”

Star Trek: Remix! The Naked Time & The Naked Now

Death by partying! Larissa and Lauren take on their second Star Trek Remix episode by comparing TOS’s “The Naked Time” and TNG’s “The Naked Now”. Both surprisingly early episodes, the ladies discuss why these stories would have been more successful if aired later in their respective series, the wonderfully ineffective hazard suits of TOS, and why they adore drunk Picard.

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

The Ragcoats – “I Need Your Love” [Premiere]

Appropriately unveiled just days ahead of Valentine’s, we’re happy to premiere The Ragcoats first single, “I Need Your Love,” taken from their forthcoming full-length record due out this summer on Cold Lunch Recordings. This raucous dose of southern psychedelia is the perfect soundtrack for wooing your partner, especially if you’re partaking in some mind-altering mental enhancements (I’m talking `shrooms, folks).

The tracks pounding garage rock guitars and howling lead vocals are set against a bed of gentle ooh’s and aah’s that unfurl into a massive layered wall of sound. It’s a quick 2 and a half minutes but there’s no wasted time here as the band induces a euphoric jangle begging the listener to let their inhibitions go.

It’s no surprise the band came together at the Adams, TN camping festival Bobfest; an altogether appropriate meeting grounds for like-minded individuals to bond through the aforementioned mental enhancements (again, shrooms). Additionally, it’s clear that the band has spent a significant amount of time playing together live, as the energy captured here could only come from a band firing together on all cylinders.

“I Need Your Love” is a striking introduction that comes with a anticipatory reminder that when live shows start back up again, The Ragcoats should be at the top of our collective lists.

236: Going Off Book

Working our way through a massive backlog of Nashville area music that only grows exponentially every time there’s a Bandcamp Friday. Fourteen tracks are all queued up in this episode for a solid hour of local area offerings across pop, indie, hip-hop, electronic, ambient and other. I’ll let you decide which fits into which category. Enjoy!

As always, there’s more music from every artist on this show to be enjoyed so be sure to follow No Stress, Bear in the Campsite, Rainsticks, Reaux Marquez, Da Real A1yo, Chuck Indigo, Aaron Lee Tasjan, The Marvelles, Joe Pisapia, Maiden Mother Crone, bloopr, blaqspace_, Nashville Ambient Ensemble and Other Nothing directly for updates on their latest projects.

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

No Stress
“Freedomlove”

Bear In The Campsite
“Started a Fire”

Rainsticks
“Moss Curtain”

Reaux Marquez
“Big Fish (feat The Blackson)”

Da Real A1yo
“Thinking About You”

Chuck Indigo
“Outta My Way”

Aaron Lee Tasjan
“Computer of Love”

The Marvelles
“Buried Treasure”

Joe Pisapia
“On the Other Side”

Maiden Mother Crone
“Empty Hills”

Bloopr
“Nisus”

Blaqspace
“letit[go]”

Nashville Ambient Ensemble
“Conversion”

Other Nothing
“Joy”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music. Cover Image: Reaux Marquez.

Egg Cream and the Ramos Gin Fizz

The content remains highly carbonated as we continue to focus on classics of the soda fountain era with Darcy O’Neil. This week we focus on the Egg Cream and how it inspired the most decadent of egg cocktails: the Ramos Gin Fizz.

Cocktail correspondent Jessica Backhus drops a Ramos riff recipe featuring Mead, while Honeytree Meadery’s Dru Sousan goes over his Egg Cream technique from his days at the Pharmacy in Nashville. Darcy O’Neil provides some historical reference on the sub-genre of egg creams, while Kenneth Dedmon joins in to bid good riddance to the infamous soda, Tab. He also gives an update on the most famous soda parlor in Nashville, the soon-to-be-reopened Elliston Place Soda Shop.

Follow Darcy O’Neil on Instagram at @farmfoodfeast.

Follow Honeytree Meadery on Instagram at @honeytreemeadery.


Order Lost Spring: How We Cocktailed Through Crisis on Amazon.

Hear the companion playlist over on Spotify.

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

Selections from Nashville’s #BandcampFriday

If it’s not clear yet, we are huge fans of Bandcamp. It’s a music streaming platform designed from the ground up to actually assist in the turbulent task of making money as an artist. As we’ve noted many times before, streaming platforms like Spotify or Apple Music definitely have their role in exposing an artist to an audience but Bandcamp really seals the deal when it comes to generating income. It may sound wild to say in 2021 but there really are music fans that want to buy and own their music.

Over the course of 2020 and into 2021, Bandcamp has reserved the first Friday of the month for Bandcamp Friday, a day in which their waive their revenue share and give 100% of funds to the artists. This started as a way to help out creative folks during COVID and has blossomed into something of its own Internet Event.

Today, February 5th, is the first Bandcamp Friday of 2021 and we’re doing what we always do; sharing a list of noteworthy releases that we hope you’ll consider throwing some dollars at. This list isn’t exhaustive by any means but it’s a place to start.

Things move fast on Bandcamp Friday, so we tend to get the word out via Twitter thread to provide a bit more detail. The list below will help you hop out to the individual releases.