Jason and Kelly Face the Music Supervisor (Pt. 1)

Jason and Kelly sit down with for an epic-sized interview with Jonathan Leahy, the Music Supervisor for Bill & Ted Face the Music, to discuss the film, score, soundtrack, and more.

219: Win-Win, Lose-Lose Situation

Some accidental themes reveal themselves on this episode. First off, picking a single song from local releases where multiple songs are stand-out tracks is quickly becoming a real problem. Secondly, with the election on the horizon; many of these tracks directly speak to the State of the Union, the frustrations with it and the ire that stems from it. On that note, be sure to visit Please Vote Nashville and download your free ballot rundown so you’re going to the polls educated. And, yes, you’re going to thee polls.

We mention the hip-hop compilation Tenn Toes Down at the top of the show, which you can (and should) hear right here.

Be sure to click through on the releases below for more music and follow Friendship Commanders, Wilby, Yours Truly, Jai, Hurts to Laugh, Chuck Indigo, Da Real A1yo, Rainsticks, Tommy and the Ohs and Mary Richard for updates direct from the artists.

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

Friendship Commanders
“Your Reign Is Over”

Wilby
“Bad”

Yours Truly Jai
“One Day (feat. Chuck Indigo)”

Babe Curry
“Eternal Sunshine / Another Day”

Hurts To Laugh
“You Got to Go”

Chuck Indigo
“Burn It Down”

Da Real A1yo
“Bac2Bac (feat. B Stokes)”

Rainsticks
“Last Frontier”

Tommy And The Ohs
“Bombshell”

Mary Richard
“Deja Vu”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover image: Friendship Commanders.

Sylvia’s Best Ever Cheesecake

The first time Jamie and I hung out we were both in Massachusetts for the wedding of some mutual friends. She and several others had rented this big old house in Salem for the weekend and after the reception shut down, all the Nashvillians went back and partied there. While everybody else drank and played games in the other rooms, we spent most of the night in the kitchen bonding over Yankee Candle hauls on YouTube, the price of trailers in a local Pennysaver somebody had left behind, and our fucked up families.

There’s a kinship between people who have experienced loss. There’s even more of one between those of us who knew that loss would come but not exactly when. I knew from a fairly young age that my father didn’t have so much time. Jamie knew this about her mother. To live with death before it’s happened, that will cook into you a dark crust that has to be cut with something sweet. Or at least something palatable.

Jamie is funny. Like, really, really funny. The kind of funny that you just have to be born with. It’s in the recipe of your genes. Even when discussing some really dark stuff, she has a sense of humor about it that makes you so at ease about what she’s telling you, even if you haven’t lived it. In the early spring of last year, Jamie and I met for brunch, drank about a hundred Bloody Marys and talked about our dead mothers. Actually, we drank about a hundred Bloody Marys, talked about our dead mothers, and laughed hysterically. It was electrifying. Grief doesn’t have to be one thing or another.

A couple of years ago, Jamie did a stand up routine at Springwater for amateur night. Her set was brilliant. I mean, truly. And so much of it was just about her life, the sad parts, the unbelievable parts, about her dad who at that time was recently diagnosed with dementia. And it was so smart. That’s key. If you’re not smart, laughing or poking fun at the misfortune of your loved ones can come across as well, sociopathic. But this was more Tig Notaro than Jeffrey Dahmer.

Before this interview started, Jamie told me she wanted it to be serious, because that’s not something she’s ever really able to be when talking about her family. She didn’t want to trivialize the material. She wanted people to understand that some of her experiences have really affected her and it’s not funny, even if she makes it funny.

That’s harder to do than it sounds. It’s hard to suddenly let down your guard when you’ve processed everything through the lens of gallows humor and self deprecation. If that’s been the crutch that’s kept you from falling apart. She’s never said this, but I’m willing to bet that Jamie often feels like I do, which is profoundly alone. But loss and feeling alone, it might be the two most fundamental ingredients in the human condition; which is why you add vanilla extract to almost every baked good – to cover up the dry and bitter.

Loss, it happens to everyone. It happened to us, it will happen to you. So you might as well laugh about it.

Official site: mementostori.show
Instagram: @mementostori

Show Music: Ryan Breegle

Cider Season Finale Pt. 1: Orchard Legend Diane Flynt of Foggy Ridge Ciders

For the season 2 finale, Liquid Gold dives into all things cider. In part one, Mike sits down with cider and orchard legend Diane Flynt, from Virginia’s famed Foggy Ridge Ciders. They talk about the terroir of the Blue Ridge Mountains and the different varieties of apples that are so crucial to American cider. Diane also drops some news about a new book she’s working on about apples in the south. Mike gives a few cider cocktail recipes, while Kenneth checks in with a wide-ranging Booze News™ that has our hosts worried they’re actually going crazy.


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

Cocktails & Questions with Candidates: Gabby Salinas (District 97)

Cocktails & Questions with Candidates is a series from the Tennessee Democratic Party where we talk with candidates across the State of Tennessee to find out who they are, what they stand for and how we can help them win.

This episode we’re joined by Gabby Salinas, Democratic candidate for TN District 97. We chat with Gabby about her inspiring history that brought her to politics, the importance of a representative government and her plans for ensuring schools are funded and working people have access to health care.

For more on Gabby Salinas and her campaign, visit her official site:
http://voteforgabby.com

These conversations are taken from our Facebook Live events that broadcast every Thursday at 4pm CT.

Watch us live at facebook.com/tndem

Hosted by Mary Mancini
Produced by Emily Cupples and TNDP
Distributed by We Own This Town

These conversations are taken from our Facebook Live events that broadcast every Thursday at 4pm CT. Watch us live at facebook.com/tndem.

Hosted by Mary Mancini
Produced by Emily Cupples and TNDP

The Transformative Powers of Co-fermented Wine

After a long break, This Is The Place returns to kick off Season 2. Host Matt Meeks is now joined by new co-host Michael Eades in taking a look at the ever growing restaurant scene in Nashville. After a little catchup on All The Thingsâ„¢ that have been going down since the last official episode, we discuss our adoration for Lou, Haggs & Ornette Bread, Rosemary, BeHive and numerous other locations that have been keeping us sane.

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.

Shaboi – Curse Walk

Curse Walk* is the one and only release by Shaboi. It was released in 2009 and we’ve talked about it many times. In fact, this is at least the fifth mention of the record in the history of We Own This Town; likely more than any other album has been mentioned on this site. But why?

It’s a valid question but the answer simply lies in the eclecticism of the album itself. Curse Walk is a Halloween record that spins tales of mad scientist experiments gone wrong, fighting zombies, being a lonely specter adrift in the world and even falling in love with a sluggish ghoul – normal subject matter given the context. However, it covers all of that by hopping effortlessly through styles; hip-hop, rock, country and R&B are all embraced in the roughly 20-minute runtime.

Beyond the factual description of the record, it’s also just fun to listen to. Shaboi (and his various guests; Shorty Tall Small, Lil Big Lil and Cadence) is clearly enjoying himself in the delivery of these tracks. It’s not brooding or particularly scary, nor is it pessimistic or snarky. It’s an abundance of joy mixed with the macabre, perfectly executed.

It’s likely that as long as this site exists, we’ll talk about Curse Walk every October. It’s been eleven years since its release and shows no signs of wearing.

* Released via yk Records; an indie label operated by yours truly, the author of this review. Bias is present but my enjoyment is pure.

Musicians for Marquita Bradshaw set for Oct. 20th

On Tuesday, October 20th, Third Man Records will host Musicians for Marquita Bradshaw, a live streaming telethon event to raise funds for U.S. Senate candidate Marquita Bradshaw. If you aren’t familiar with Bradshaw and her platform, check out this episode of our TNDP podcast in which she discusses her history and her plan for fighting for an economy designed for the working class. In our humble opinion, this is a candidate that deserves maximum exposure and financial backing to help claim her spot in the Senate.

The telethon aims to cover both of those goals by enticing us all with a list of performances that is hard to comprehend. Look at this wall of announced performers:

Margo Price, Daisha McBride, Robyn Hitchcock, Emma Swift, Lillie Mae, William Tyler, Roseanne Cash, John McCauley, Vanessa Carlton, Andrew Combs, Lolo Pritchard, Caitlin Rose, Amelia White, Tristen, Erin Rae, Caroline Spence, Logan Ledger, Kendra DeColo, Rob and Jay Griffith, Langhorne Slim, Aaron James, IMakeMadBeats, Kid Maestro, Chris Crofton, Michaela Anne, Bully, John Paul Keith, Kyshona Armstrong, Rodney Crowell, Mampy Hikes, Matt Morelock, Yourstruly Jai, Aaron Lee Tasjan, Liza Anne, Pujol, Birds of Chicago, Steelism, Fu Stan, She’s a Rebel, Crystal Woods, Caroline Randall Williams, Ciona Rouse, The Cherry Blossoms, Kristen Chapman, Brad Sativa, B Stokes, Mike Floss, Jessie Jo Dillon, Ben Burgess, Elizabeth White

It’s a lot to parse through but the lineup does a good job of covering a variety of different genres. Personally, we’re looking forward to the hip-hop performers and WOTT mainstays like Caitlin Rose, Tristen and Bully.

Details are still forthcoming on the specifics of the event – i.e. what time does it start? – but given that Third Man has been transmitting their Public Access episodes over on YouTube for awhile now, it seems likely that it’ll be available there.

Long story short, mark your calendar for October 20th. Set a reminder. In the meantime, save some extra cash to donate to the Bradshaw campaign and get familiar with her stance on the issues. See you October 20th.

Jeremy Saulnier: Hold the Dark with Dycee Wildman

This is our final entry exploring the (existing) work of Jeremy Saulnier by discussing the 2018 Netflix production Hold the Dark. Based on the novel of the same name by William Giraldi, the films screenplay is by Saulnier best buddy, Macon Blair, and marks the first time the director is not responsible for the source material he is filming. The cast of Jeffrey Wright, Alexander Skarsgård, James Badge Dale, Riley Keough, Tantoo Cardinal and Julian Black Antelope help weave a tale that starts off as one thing before twisting and turning into a number of wildly different other things. Spoilers abound.

We’re joined by Dycee Wildman, a Nashville native, writer/director and a real film enthusiast. In addition to making short, feminist films with Daisy Dukes Films she helps foster the arts community in Nashville – possibly best exemplified by, but not limited to, her co-founding the Defy Film Fest, an underground film festival highlighting oddball international cinema. We’re happy to have her back and suggest you follow her on Instagram, @diceydycee.

Follow Filmography Club on Instagram @filmography_club_podcast.

Music by Uncle Skeleton

218: Captivating Reinvention

Another wild batch of local music that really runs the gamut, powered in part by last Friday’s #BandcampFriday. So, settle in for a rewardingly wild ride.

Be sure to click through on the releases below for more music and follow Wilderwater, Tree Dream Inc, Brian Brown, Cody Cody Cody, Magic Medallion, Arch Echo, Early Humans, D1ON, Gardening, Not Architecture, the Futurecast and Bill Eberle for updates direct from the artists.

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

Wilderwater
“In and Out of Love”

Tree Dream, Inc
“Cypher Rolling”

Brian Brown
“Car and Driver”

Cody Cody Cody
“Today”

Magic Medallion
“Sushi Knight / Hyper Pig / Loaflord”

Arch Echo
“To the Moon”

Early Humans
“Parasite”

Gardening, Not Architecture
“Fossils”

D1ON
“Love Is Kind”

The Futurecast
“Touch of Love”

Bill Eberle
“Q2”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover image: Gardening, Not Architecture.

The Maternity Episode

To celebrate Lauren’s pandemic pregnancy, The ladies are talking Star Trek maternity episodes and all the fun sci-fi issues that come along with it! This means focusing on one of the most pregnancy-related episodes, TNG’s “The Child” with Troi (and a very bizarre-acting Riker), DS9’s “The Begotten” with Kira’s and Odo’s stumble into parenthood, and other topics like why Worf shouldn’t be your first choice for a Doula. And no, Lauren’s baby isn’t a glowing ball of light, OR shape-shifting space goop, OR a result of weird alien-sand-telepathic-whatever, so don’t ask!

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

FMK: Count Chocula, Frankenberry, Boo Berry

Before we begin: Fuck, Marry, Kill: Count Chocula, Frankenberry, Boo Berry

Ashley and Jamie turn their eyes to the Capitalist Hellscape we live in by measuring up the hotties in Advertising Icons. Do you think Tony the Tiger would be great in the sack? Can Tommy LaSorda show you his frozen delights? Would you let the Sun Maid Raisin girl keep the bonnet on? These questions, and so many more, are answered in great detail like only Hott Minute could do.

This episode of Hott Minute is culled from a previous Twitch Livestream. As such, it is more visually oriented than usual and highly recommended that you follow along with the gallery below.

Theme song by Mike Shepherd

Hear some of Mike’s other music here…
Tower Defense
The Prudish Few

Artwork by Elizabeth Williams
BG Music by Upright T-Rex Music