Art Crime Salad

The season finale of Season 2! We’re wrapping up this season with one of the biggest names in art history. Back in the 16th century, Italian master Carravagio was dabbling in a lot more than oil paints and chiaroscuro. His rap sheet includes gambling, theft, and even murder! In between creating his devastating and beautiful masterpieces, this scrappy artist lived a hardboiled life of crime. On this week’s episode, we discuss his lesser-known felonious legacy.

Follow Thick as Thieves on Instagram.

Music by Patrick Damphier.
Show artwork by Saskia Keultjes.

Missy’s Many Capacities

The always delightful Dr. Amy Stoch returns to discuss filming on Face the Music, Missy’s “interesting” love life, and the reception of the third film.

Venus in Furs

We don’t always get what we want.

Rachel’s grandmother never left the house without makeup. And she used to pull the credit card bills from the mail so her husband, Rachel’s grandfather, wouldn’t see how much she’d spent on clothes that week. She loved dancing and would throw big parties at their house which had an actual dance floor and bar in the basement. She was the kind of woman that possibly could have only existed when she did.

Rachel is a very different kind of woman, and in many ways, also a woman of her time. I met her back when we were both angsty young high school freshmen and her outfit of choice at that time was a Bikini Kill t-shirt, combat boots, tiny plastic barettes in her hair and a padlock chain around her neck. She was a feminist who didn’t eat meat. She was cool with a smile that made her small features crinkle up beneath her bleached out pixie cut. Think of a young Renee Zellweger with the Enid Ghost World fashion treatment and that was her.

Rachel told me her grandmother would often let her know she did not find her heavy eyeliner, mohawk, or ripped tights at all fashionable, or at all flattering. It’s fascinating, who and what we come from and what parts of them stick.

When Rachel was about 11 or 12, her grandmother took her and her cousin to Glamour Shots. For those who didn’t grow up with these in every shopping mall, think of them as a portrait studio where you went to get photos with filters before filters were a thing. They would tease out your hair, pile on the makeup, give you a rhinestone necklace and take as many blurry, soft focus pics as you could pay for. Rachel said she went back to look at those pictures and remembered how she’d really loved doing them, no matter how corny they look now. During that session, she’d felt as sophisticated and fancy and as grown up as her grandmother.

When Rachel’s grandmother passed, she got something that seemed to encompass all of the elegance she associated with her. Unfortunately, it was also something that she found grotesque and that went against her deeply held personal beliefs.

Official site: mementostori.show
Instagram: @mementostori

Show Music: Ryan Breegle

217: Effortless

This week, we continue to focus on our fundamentals. Ten new tracks culled from a myriad of genres across our local scene, peppered with a little insight about each in between. Truth be told, there is a growing backlog of tracks to play but we’re sticking with this format; even if it doesn’t maximize song cramming.

Be sure to click through on the releases below for more music and follow Joy Oladokun, 24., Elements x Ron Obasi, Classic Williams, Dale Hollow, Palace Ghosts, Brineaboy, Basic Printer, Monkheads and Luke Quarto for updates direct from the artists.

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

Joy Oladokun
“if you got a problem”

24
“Lose My Mind (Percy Priest)”

Ron Obasi X Elements
“Dreamer SZN”

Classic Williams
“Black Lives”

Dale Hollow
“I’m a Lover, but I’ll Still Fight”

Palace Ghosts
“Soapbox”

Brineaboy
“Backbone”

Basic Printer
“Smoke and Scowl”

Monkheads
“Hella Beats”

Luke Quarto
“Moonfishing”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover image: Brineaboy.

Apertivo Hour with Andy Wedge (The Lost Episode)

Six months after recording, we’re finally releasing our lone “Lost Episode” with Andy Wedge of Momofuku in New York City. As a continuation of last week’s theme, hosts Mike and Kenneth explore the traditions of apertivo hour with Wedge, along with wine correspondent Alex Burch from Bastion. This is the last time the whole group was together in the studio going back to March 1, 2020.

Also covered: the legendary Garibaldi cocktail, pairing wine with spicy food, the difficulties of categorizing food, pairing wines with hip hop, and what sommeliers really think of white claw. To close, Mike follows up with Andy in the present time to discuss all the adversity he has faced since their chat in March.


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

Makeup and Vanity Set – “Algorithm” (Official Video)

Makeup and Vanity Set is likely one of the most prolific artists in the Nashville area. He provides the score for countless podcasts such as Monster, Radio Rental and Up and Vanished, drops multiple full-length albums that embrace a range of styles and even manages to post up exclusives for his Bandcamp subscribers. It’s a lot to keep up with but it’s never exhausting.

The latest release is entitled Endless Destiny, a bit of a concept album that deals with our modern world of social networks and algorithms. The official writeup sums it up nicely:

We came to age believing the future would be controlled by mega corps and Skynet AI, but instead we got multibillion dollar algorithms that exploit the social constructs of racism and outrage as a business model. The music on Endless Destiny is the byproduct of this human / machine relationship.

You may be asking; how does an electronic musician make an album that speaks to those concepts without lyrics? Enter, the official video for the track “Algorithm,” written and directed by Saman Kesh and Justin Dashuur Hopkins. The piece is more short film than music video as it follows a scammer trying to brute force a Help Bot into a refund. Things do not go as planned.

Spoiling the plot specifics would rob you of the enjoyment of watching as things unfold but, suffice to say, it’s clear how the video could be viewed as controversial. Questions around data privacy are the most obvious touchpoint for discussion but the rampant underbelly of nefarious and disgusting Internet behaviors is the real subject to tackle. By the end of the video, it’s clear who the protagonist is but it’s uncomfortable to root for either party. Even more damning is the realization that this storyline isn’t set in some future, dystopian, alternate universe; this is our world as it exists today.

Makeup and Vanity Set’s output is impressive and enjoyable on all accounts. The “Algorithm” track finds itself being an ominously dance-y number; a unexpected dichotomy well reflected in the video. Music aside, the willingness from MAVS to push the envelope on subjects like trolls, AI, privacy and our relationship with technology – ever evolving and devolving – is what sets his work apart.

Endless Destiny is available everywhere now.

Story Slam and Trash Plants with Bliss Cortez

Kathryn Edwards is joined this week by Bliss Cortez, Nashville Producer for The Moth and runner of the mutual aid project Bliss and the Trash Plants. They break down what The Moth is all about and how you can tune in for a few plant rescue tips. Oh, and of course some great new music.

Many thanks to the DRKMTTR Patreon supporters for helping to keep DRKMTTR and the Nashville Free Store a reality.

Cover Image: Bliss Cortz

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

Peachy
“Fetish”

Marbled Eye
“Isle”

Yukons
“Red Flag”

Mannequin Pussy
“Anything”

Tuffy
“Subhuman”

Ray Gun
“Seance”

Donors
“Top”

Maze
“Spread the Germicide”

Depression Breakfast
“Type”

M80
“Apathy”

Patti
“Animals”

Hash Redactor
“Terri”

Dale Hollow – “I’m a Lover, But I’ll Still Fight”

Dale Hollow is a bit of an enigma. He is purportedly friends with the mysterious Orville Peck; a fact backed up by his brief appearance in the video for “Legends Never Die” and his performance in the Orville Peck Rodeo. His online persona is boastful and absurd but yet somehow manages to ride the line between complete farce and honest delusion. His posts are filled with errant hashtags, emoji and plenty of UPPERCASE emphasis; a combination that might lead one to believe that Hollow is simply joking about his role as the World’s Greatest Country Star.

But here’s the thing, he actually does write a helluva country song. The latest single, “I’m a Lover, But I’ll Still Fight,” showcases Hollow’s baritone vocals against a backdrop of traditional acoustic strumming, guitar licks and galloping drums. Lyrically, he’ll dip into the absurd with verses like “Well, I’ve seen Roadhouse 30 times / Studied all the dialogue, I memorized the fights / so go ahead and bust the glass / I’ll even give you one free swing and then I’ll beat your ass” – not exactly the classic lines you’d expect from a country song but I’ll be damned if it isn’t delightful to hear and fully in service of the song as a whole.

There’s a passion in the delivery of the song; particularly in the back third, that yearns for a singalong. That adoring audience may one day be in concert screaming the words back at Hollow or simply in their car hollering along with the their own passion but one thing is for certain, Dale Hollow’s mysterious ways will woo you.

Our Favorite Movies: It Follows with Alex Steed

Jason talks with Alex Steed – host of Nashville Demystified and Why Are Dads?, writer, and co-founder of Knack-Factory – about the 2014 “prestige horror” movie, It Follows. They discuss both the overt and subtle themes of the film, the impetus for new directors to steer towards horror and how twisting genre tropes can be done in surprisingly rewarding ways.

Oh, and some fun trivia about John Carpenter and the difference in scoring films now versus the 1970s.

Follow Alex on Instagram @alexsteed.

Follow Filmography Club on Instagram @filmography_club_podcast.

Music by Uncle Skeleton

Cocktails & Questions with Candidates: Marquita Bradshaw (U.S. Senate)

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 Marquita Bradshaw, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate. We chat with Marquita about her history with activism, why she decided to run and her plan for an economy that works for working class people.

For more on Marquita Bradshaw and her campaign, visit her official site:
https://www.marquitabradshaw.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

216: All My Hopes and Dreams

This week we’re back to our fundamentals – a variety of local music for you to check out culled from Instagram posts, Direct Messages, Bandcamp browsing and wherever else folks are posting music. Many of these records have yet to fully sink in but they’re all well worth investing more time with.

Be sure to click through on the releases below for more music and follow Tummyache, Namir Blade, Smart Objects, Protomen, Luke Baron, BnQuez the Artist, Trash Man, Maiden Mother Crone, Makeup and Vanity Set, Shueh-li Ong, Enki for updates direct from the artists.

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

Tummyache
“Ctrl+Alt+Delete”

Namir Blade
“Patlabor”

Smart Objects
“White Under Blacklight”

Protomen
“Hope Rides Alone”

Luke Baron
“Summer Of ’83”

BnQuez The Artist
“Some Trash”

Trash Man
“Please Don’t Murder Me”

Maiden Mother Crone
“Vile Hands”

Makeup And Vanity Set
“Algorithm” + Video

Shueh-li Ong
“I’m a Simian”

Enki
“Welcome to Brimley”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover image: Namir Blade.

Shots! Negroni

For a very special episode 50 (!) hosts Mike and Kenneth cover one of their favorite drinks, the Negroni. They go over the history of the drink, the fascinating rise of apertivo culture in America, as well as a few of the secret ingredients that make Campari so special. They also discuss a few recipes and how using salt in cocktails at home can transform your drinks. Other topics explored: was Count Negroni cool? Is Campari and soda the drink of futurism? Is there a cricket in the room? An enjoyable cap to Negroni Week indeed!


Be sure to read this Nashville Scene interview with Mike Wolf about his new book and the announcement of another wonderful surprise: Liquid Gold: The Book.

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