182: Foolish Assumptions and Bombastic Rewards

A gentle reminder that Spewfest V is right around the corner. On Feb 8th, 2020 there will be some fourty-four bands between multiple stages between The East Room and The Cobra. Tickets are on sale now.

After a quick rundown of notable news about some other WOTT podcasts, we dive headfirst into new music from Grumpy, The Rally Club, Carolyn Kendrick, Shell of a Shell, Donors, Tom Violence, Thad Kopec and Music Band. It’s 40 minutes of a great dose of eclectic music offerings from our city.

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

Grumpy
“Davy Jones”

The Rally Club
“No Room”

Carolyn Kendrick
“Tear Things Apart”

Shell Of A Shell
“Knock”

Donors
“Help Yourself”

Tom Violence
“The Beggar”

Thad Kopec
“Nature of Belonging”

Music Band
“Superstition”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover Image: Donors.

We Own This Town partners with TNDP for new podcast

We Own This Town is proud to announce that we’ve partnered up with the Tennessee Democratic Party (TNDP) to bring you a brand new podcast entitled If You Don’t Know, Now You Know. Each episode will feature lawmakers, activists, and candidates talking about the issues that shape our lives in TN.

The show is hosted by Mary Mancini, Chair of the TNDP and a pillar of the Nashville community; having previously hosted the liberal radio show Liberadio and operating the DIY Record Shop Lucy’s in the late 90s. To learn more about Mancini, we suggest tuning in to her episode of My Fantasy Funeral in which she talks at length about her history with our city. Also, follow her on Twitter.

The first installment of the show is out now and features Senator Katrina Robinson, TN AFL-CIO Alyssa Hanson political and communications director, and TN AFL-CIO Secretary/Treasurer AJ Starling to speak on the recent proposal to introduce Right To Work laws into the TN Constitution. Despite the misleading name, `Right to Work` has serious negative impact on Unions across the State and should not become a part of the State Constitution.

Politics are hard, full stop. There are many confusing processes that bills must process through and, often, large amounts of historical baggage that come with them further complicating their impact on residents of the State. If You Don’t Know, Now You Know aims to simplify those topics and make them more easily understandable to those of us that they will directly impact.

Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you like to listen.

Now You Know Right To Work

The same week Senator Brian Kelsey (R) of Shelby County celebrated the life and work of Martin Luther King, Jr. by tweeting the MLK quote “The time is always right to do what is right.” he introduced legislation that would cement Tennessee as a “Right To Work” in our Constitution.

For those that don’t know, the Right To Work law was enacted in 1947 but does not do what the name suggests Instead of being a guarantee of employment to people seeking work, it depletes union resources by enacting a government ban on requiring employees in union workplaces to pay union dues. They get the benefits, i.e. safe workplaces, collective bargaining, etc., without the investment.

For our inaugural episode of If You Don’t Know, Now You Know we sit down with Senator Katrina Robinson, TN AFL-CIO Alyssa Hanson political and communications director, and TN AFL-CIO Secretary/Treasurer AJ Starling to discuss this issue, how it negatively impacts every resident of Tennessee and the misnomers around the name itself.

As always, we remind you of the importance of voting, particularly in local and State elections. If you aren’t registered to vote, or don’t remember if you are or not, please check your status by visiting sos.tn.gov.

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

Guests
Senator Katrina Robinson
TN AFL-CIO Alyssa Hanson
TN AFL-CIO Secretary/Treasurer AJ Starling

Music Band – “Superstition”

Just the other day I was thinking what a shame it was that Music Band had released an album a few years ago and then seemed to have vanished into the ether. Wake Up Laughing was released via Infinity Cat back in 2016 and continues to be a rather enjoyable dose of rock music that manages to be both upbeat and languid at the same time. So, it was with great surprise and delight that the band has announced a brand new single in the form of “Superstition” and a forthcoming album entitled Celebration, due out April 3rd via Dine Alone Records.

Aside from the delight that the track even exists at all, it sounds like the band isn’t interesting in repeating themselves. The track blasts off with pounding drums and crunchy guitars that give way to a joyous and wide open layer of soaring guitars and dance-y tambourine. While it’s certainly not adhering to the tenants of krautrock, there’s a wall of sound through building and repetitive elements that feels like a healthy nod towards the genre. All that’s to say, it’s a surprising new approach from the band that, personally, sets up quite a bit of anticipation for the full-length.

The official press release for the record provides some pleasant insight into the creation of the record:

Celebration stands as Music Band’s most fully-realized project to date. Where Can I Live and Wake Up Laughing were compilations of songs written over a series of years, Celebration was written in 2017 as a cohesive collection, self-produced and recorded by the band’s own Duncan Shea at his home in Nashville. The record was mixed by Grammy Award winning engineer Collin Dupuis (Angel Olsen, JEFF The Brotherhood, Ex Hex) and was mastered by John Baldwin (The Rolling Stones, Deer Tick, Jessica Lea Mayfield) at his studio in Nashville. “This album is a very clear snapshot of one year in my life,” says vocalist/guitarist Harry Kagan. “Thematically, we tend to write songs about relationships, relatable stuff, but this record is specific to my thoughts on those topics when I was turning 27. It’s interesting to see this album as encapsulating that time.”

If album release cycles are as reliable as I think they are, we should have at least one more single released ahead of the full album. So keep you ears peeled for that and the forthcoming full-length on April 3rd. In the meantime, go listen on Youtube or Spotify and follow the band on Twitter and Instagram.

Nashville Demystified presents Music City Tales from the 1980’s

Nashville Demystified host Alex Steed moved to Nashville in February of 2019 and immediately set out to learn about his new home through interviews, research and personal anecdotes. He’s discussed The Death Penalty with journalist Steven Hale, he’s dug into The Nashville Bombings with historian Betsy Phillips and educated us all on The Problems with Gentrification happening all around us.

On a lighter side, he’s also shared stories of Ernest P. Worrell, turned heads with insights on The Nashville Flame and learned about The Nun Bun. These stories specifically stem from a time that isn’t perfectly well formed when it comes to the way we think about Nashville; the 1980’s.

Starting today, Nashville Demystified embarks on a 10-part series investigating stories culled from cities rich history during that decade. To frame it in Steed’s own words:

We know all about Nashville and Country Music in the 70s, and then about Garth and Shania’s 90’s, but what the hell was going on in Music City in the 1980s? What was the city like in the last robust decade of King-Makers. Back when it was well known that you had to curry favor with political bosses to make it in any real way. When Sheriffs deputized country singers, and, as an honor, gave away “keys to the prison?”

What was it like back when parents dropped their kids off for an unmonitored day at Opryland? Or, when they were older, to the Rivergate Mall? What was it like when you could “Call 244-2222 and have a Mr. Gatti’s Pizza Delivered? When Aladdin Industries was cranking out Care Bear and Popples lunchboxes. When shops like Adult News and The Wheel sold porn on Broadway? Back when the Tennessee Titans were the Houston Oilers? When you could play a handful of sets at the brand-new Bluebird Cafe and score a record contract in a matter of months?

Over the course of the new series, Steed plants to take look at the strange decision making of Mayor Bill Boner, the wonders of Opryland, the allure of the Bluebird, cruising 2nd Ave and Broadway before there was any reason to, homelessness and race and bussing and all matter of subjects that came and went some thirty years ago. If Nashville’s foundation was laid in the 60’s and 70’s and firmly cemented in place during the 90’s that means that the 1980’s laid the scaffolding for where we are today.

Please join Nashville Demystified, We Own This Town and Knack Factory on this journey. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and everywhere else you listen to podcasts. Be sure to follow on Instagram and on Twitter for updates.

Music City Tales From the 1980s: Prologue: Last Ticket to Bonertown

This is the first of a ten episode miniseries about Nashville in the 1980s.

Let’s get to know Music City city as it was in Reagan’s decade, and understand how the hell it got to this place.

It won’t be all politics. We’ll get to know Sheriff Fate Thomas and Mayor Bill Boner a bit better — and Boner’s predecessor, Richard Fulton. We’ll hang out at malls and go to Opryland, and spend time at the Bluebird. We’ll try to understand homelessness, and race and bussing and the music industry and why Broadway was less of a destination for bachelorette parties than it is today. We’ll talk with some of the folks who were there. It will be an incomplete picture, and it will very much be a work in progress. I’ll try like hell to be as accurate as I can be, I want to understand the decade of my birth in music city, and I’ll be honored if you come along or that ride.

Bedroom – “Gulf”

Noah Kittinger has been releasing music under the name Bedroom since 2012. The recordings have always embraced a decidedly DIY bedroom recording vibe (hence, the name) but slowly grown over time to become more layered, more textured and nuanced. Starting in May of 2019, Kittinger began to collaborate with Paul Kintzing of German Error Message; another solo outfit with a deceivingly sparse approach.

Gulf” is the third release from this collaboration (with Two and Count to Five preceding it) and serves as a wonderful confirmation that the two work extremely well together. The song itself is a natural growth in style and instrumentation for Bedroom; stretching it out to include touches of saxophone, samplers and drums – none of which would be out of place without the collaboration but presumably stemmed from working together to push the boundaries of what is normally produced.

Generally, the work of Bedroom would be firmly placed in the “Winter Music” category; as it is withdrawn, introspective and a bit quiet. With “Gulf”, not only is the instrumentation stretched into new territories but the general feeling of the music is as well, pushing the listener into more of a Spring feeling; as the introspection turns to an optimistic realm. It’s fleeting but it’s certainly there. Without more behind-the-scenes straight talk from the two of them it’s pure speculation to know what nurtured this change but it’s a welcome respite during sub-freezing days.

Paul Thomas Anderson: Inherent Vice

In this penultimate season one episode, Jason is joined by Meaghin Burke to dissect the fever dream that is the 2014 Paul Thomas Anderson film, Inherent Vice. Burke is an intellectual property and entertainment law attorney from Oxford, MS, as well as a filmmaker and actor. She produced a documentary on regional cuisine thanks to a Southern Foodways Alliance grant and her short film, Garage Sale, won a Hoka at the Oxford Film Festival. Her studies have focused on art criticism and the examination of an artist’s intent as related to the artistic product.

More importantly, she’s a film geek and a rabid reader. Specifically Thomas Pynchon’s complicated and heady novel Inherent Vice. This film marks the first time that Paul Thomas Anderson has adapted someone else’s story for the screen* and Burke brings masterful insight to the discussion of the often misunderstood film.

More on Meaghin Burke:
Watch her short film Garage Sale and catch her appearances in Trick or Treat and Earthrise.

Follow Filmography Club on Instagram @filmography_club_podcast.

Music by Uncle Skeleton

*Filmography Club recognizes Upton Sinclair’s Oil as inspiration for There Will Be Blood but it’s not a full adaptation.

181: No Compass, No Course

A gentle reminder that Spewfest V is right around the corner. On Feb 8th, 2020 there will be some fourty-four bands between multiple stages between The East Room and The Cobra. Tickets are on sale now.

This week on WOTT Music we cover eight new discoveries across a satisfying diversity of genres. In between pointless stories from yours truly, Michael Eades, there’s a little bit of something for everybody.

Find more from each artist with the links below. Many thanks Palm Ghosts, Dead Cures, Novice Leaders, Anson Hohne, Stationwagon, Blackpool Mecca, Harpooner and Sean Nelson for the contributions.

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

Palm Ghosts – “Wide Awake and Waiting”

Dead Cures – “Listen Repeat”

Novice Leaders – “Rush”

Anson Hohne – “Lazy Susan”

Stationwagon – “The Waitress”

Blackpool Mecca – “Surf Lords”

Harpooner – “Everybody Likes You”

Sean Nelson – “Gotta Get Up (Harry Nilsson)”

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music

Cover Image: Harpooner by Kane Wayne.

Drinks of the Decade

Here it is, first of the 20s! “Drinks of the Decade” and a look ahead to the 2020’s as hosts Mike and Kenneth share recipes for the 3 drinks that shaped the 2010’s. They also talk recent dining/drinking highlights in Nashville, throw some Impeachment cocktail ideas out, dish on some methods for working with ginger in the New Year, while Booze News takes a welcome detour down south for the Florida Files.

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

To Space and Back with The Weird Sisters

I spent an hour with The Weird Sisters before accidentally getting too stoned and having to skip a party. We turned the interview into a galactic sound collage.

Featured in this episode are four Weird Sisters songs:
Carol of the Bells (cover)
Masterminder Rewinder
The Martian Queen
Will You Be Mine

More from The Weird Sisters
Official Site: theweirdsistersband.com
Instagram: @the_weirdsisters
Facebook: /theweirdsistersband
And find their music on Spotify or wherever you stream music.

More on Nashville Demystified
Official Site: nashvilledemystified.com
Instagram: @nashvilledemystified
Twitter: @NDemystified

Brought to you by Knack Factory

An Ipso Facto Invitation to Urination

Sara and Veronica return for Season 2 of Thick as Thieves! This go around each episode will focus on Art Destruction, Vandalism and the impetus behind the perpetrators actions.

To start things off, our illustrious hosts take a look at the Most Vandalizable Artwork around, Marcel Duchamp’s 1917 work, Fountain. Unsurprisingly, the Readymade art has been soiled a number of times by the likes of fellow artists, upstart academics and even one Brian Eno.

Follow Thick as Thieves on Instagram.

Music by Patrick Damphier.
Show artwork by Saskia Keultjes.