POPULARITY
As a tribute to Jenny Kander, we're reaching back to 2008 for an episode of Jenny reading her own work. She reads from her "Maternal" series: "Late Insight," "Mother's Sister, Dury," "The Misfit," and "Painted Screen."Jenny Kander move from South Africa to Bloomington, Indiana in 1992. She began writing poetry later in life and became a prominent member of the local poetry scene. Of her many contributions, Jenny created two radio programs, one of which is the Poets Weave, which she began at WFIU in 1999. Her poetry has appeared in Flying Island, California Quarterly, Bathtub Gin, Wind, Southern Indiana Review, and Shiver. She published two chapbooks: Taboo and The Altering Air. Jenny passed away on October 8, 2024 at the age of 91.
As a tribute to Jenny Kander, we're reaching back to 2007 for an episode of Jenny reading her own work. She read "Dream," "Great Aunt," "Eve of Grown Daughter's Birthday," "Ice Late February," "Tattoo," and "Dream On."Jenny Kander move from South Africa to Bloomington, Indiana in 1992. She began writing poetry later in life and became a prominent member of the local poetry scene. Of her many contributions, Jenny created two radio programs, one of which is the Poets Weave, which she began at WFIU in 1999. Her poetry has appeared in Flying Island, California Quarterly, Bathtub Gin, Wind, Southern Indiana Review, and Shiver. She published two chapbooks: Taboo and The Altering Air. Jenny passed away on October 8, 2024 at the age of 91.In her memory, we're reaching back to 2007 for an episode of Jenny reading her own work.
Sharing an episode of our longest-running Phish podcast, HF Pod. Here's the first episode of a fun new series, Mt. Rushmore. -- Welcome to the first episode of our new series, Mt. Rushmore! Today we're talking about the four versions of Bathtub Gin that belong on that mountain. Thanks for listening! Next week we're tackling Harry Hood. To vote for your top four versions, go here: OsirisPod.com/Rushmore Please give us a call at (484) 416-0488 and leave us your thoughts and questions! And give us a review wherever you listen to podcasts. The Helping Friendly Podcast is hosted and produced by Brian Brinkman, Megan Glionna, and RJ Bee. Original music by Amar Sastry. Brought to you by Osiris Media. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to the first episode of our new series, Mt. Rushmore! Today we're talking about the four versions of Bathtub Gin that belong on that mountain. Thanks for listening! Next week we're tackling Harry Hood. To vote for your top four versions, go here: OsirisPod.com/Rushmore Please give us a call at (484) 416-0488 and leave us your thoughts and questions! And give us a review wherever you listen to podcasts. The Helping Friendly Podcast is hosted and produced by Brian Brinkman, Megan Glionna, and RJ Bee. Original music by Amar Sastry. Brought to you by Osiris Media. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today we're joined by our friend Ryan Storm, who talks Mexico 2019 with us. Please give us a call at (484) 416-0488 and leave us your thoughts and questions! And give us a review wherever you listen to podcasts. Tell us your favorite versions of Bathtub Gin here: OsirisPod.com/Rushmore The Helping Friendly Podcast is hosted and produced by Brian Brinkman, Megan Glionna, and RJ Bee. Original music by Amar Sastry. Brought to you by Osiris Media. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We wanted to bring you a couple episodes from our longest-running Phish podcast, the Helping Friendly Podcast. We thought you'd enjoy some of these draft episodes. Thank you. -- Thanks for joining us as we do dive back into drafts, this time of Phish's studio albums. This one was a lot of fun and we hope you enjoy. Vote on who you thought won the draft: OsirisPod.com/draft Share your top versions of Bathtub Gin for our Mt. Rushmore series: OsirisPod.com/Rushmore Please give us a call at (484) 416-0488 and leave us your thoughts and questions! And give us a review wherever you listen to podcasts. The Helping Friendly Podcast is hosted and produced by Brian Brinkman, Megan Glionna, and RJ Bee. Original music by Amar Sastry. Brought to you by Osiris Media. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We're back today with a roundtable discussion, we're talking about Phish shows and jams we turn to when we need some warmth in the dead of winter. We hope you enjoy! Vote for your favorite versions of Bathtub Gin here: OsirisPod.com/Rushmore Please give us a call at (484) 416-0488 and leave us your thoughts and questions! And give us a review wherever you listen to podcasts. The Helping Friendly Podcast is hosted and produced by Brian Brinkman, Megan Glionna, and RJ Bee. Original music by Amar Sastry. Brought to you by Osiris Media. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Thanks for joining us as we do dive back into drafts, this time of Phish's studio albums. This one was a lot of fun and we hope you enjoy. Vote on who you thought won the draft: OsirisPod.com/draft Share your top versions of Bathtub Gin for our Mt. Rushmore series: OsirisPod.com/Rushmore Please give us a call at (484) 416-0488 and leave us your thoughts and questions! And give us a review wherever you listen to podcasts. The Helping Friendly Podcast is hosted and produced by Brian Brinkman, Megan Glionna, and RJ Bee. Original music by Amar Sastry. Brought to you by Osiris Media. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Thanks for joining us to discuss Mexico 2025. To vote on your Mt. Rushmore versions of Bathtub Gin, please go to OsirisPod.com/Rushmore Please give us a call at (484) 416-0488 and leave us your thoughts and questions! And give us a review wherever you listen to podcasts. The Helping Friendly Podcast is hosted and produced by Brian Brinkman, Megan Glionna, and RJ Bee. Original music by Amar Sastry. Brought to you by Osiris Media. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Thanks for joining as we talk about a show from 2/15/91 in Keene, NH, but we also talk about a lot of other stuff, including our new Mt. Rushmore series! To vote on your Mt. Rushmore versions of Bathtub Gin, please go to OsirisPod.com/Rushmore And here's the full video from 2/15/91: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UrSzuzfusY Please give us a call at (484) 416-0488 and leave us your thoughts and questions! And give us a review wherever you listen to podcasts. The Helping Friendly Podcast is hosted and produced by Brian Brinkman, Megan Glionna, Jonathan Hart, and RJ Bee. Original music by Amar Sastry. Brought to you by Osiris Media. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Abigail Virginia - Episode 92 Set It on Fire, Wherever We AreBekx - Episode 100 Roots, HeartwallKayce Laine - Episode 108Another side, Wide AwakeKelli Owens Hutton - Episode 101 Put Your Cell Phones Down, So Quick to Correct MeJonathan Bright of Raelyn Nelson band - Episode 96 He's All Mine, Weed and WhiskeyRobby Hecht - Episode 99 Old Radio, Real SomedaySarah Mason Walden - Episode 102 Far from Free, Mulberry GalScott Hylbert - Episode 98 Amiga, KeseySenie Hunt - Episode 97 Stand Together, SleeplessSimon Kerr of the Wans - Episode 110 Hell Don't Wait, Point of OriginBill DeMain of Swan Dive - Episode 93 Circle, UntilMalarie and Tim of The FBR - Episode 107 Before I Drown, Still on the RunJeff Holmes of The Floating Men - Episode 87 Bathtub Gin, Fire escapeButch Rice - Episode 111 Low, Toothpaste & CoffeeHost - Trey MitchellIG - treymitchellphotography IG - feeding_the_senses_unsensoredFB - facebook.com/profile.php?id=100074368084848Threads - www.threads.net/@treymitchellphotographySponsorship Information - ftsunashville@gmail.com
Send us a textHi everybody and welcome to today's episode of Attendance Bias. I am your host, Brian Weinstein. Today's guest, Cris Coey, chose to speak about Phish's show at the Rupp Arena in Lexington, Kentucky from November 7, 1996. It's a show that is famous in Phish history for mostly one reason–the long, multi-faceted version of Bathtub Gin that is jammed out in the middle of the 2nd set. The has been released twice on soundboard by LivePhish, and for good reason: widely known as the “Rupp Gin,” the jam perfectly encapsulates everything that was great about Phish in 1996. There are innumerable great Phish jams, but this is a rare one that gets a specific name based on its location. Yeah, one of those jams.However, this episode is not just about that Bathtub Gin. As Cris and I discuss, Phish had a lot to offer in 1996 as they embraced their newfound dominance in arenas and large-scale venues, coast to coast. They were done with theaters and the occasional arena. With Billy Breathes demonstrating their maturing songwriting skills and expertise in the studio, as well as having conquered the abstract rock madness of 1995, Phish had one foot in the past and one in the future, when they had yet to destroy America. Although the Bathtub Gin is the centerpiece of the show, there's much more to it.As we talked, it became obvious that Cris is a fan's fan. He's obviously attended a lot of great Phish shows in his time, and we had a lot in common, but also some disagreements in our opinions. It was really a pleasure to hear some new points of view when I took my opinions for granted. But I don't want to get ahead of myself.Let's join Cris to chat about Frankenstein, the YEM vocal jam, and whether or not northeast Ohio is Phish country as we break down November 7, 1996 at The Rupp Arena in Lexington.
可以搜索公号【璐璐的英文小酒馆】或者添加【luluxjg2】咨询课程or加入社群,查看文稿和其他精彩内容哦~Hi, everyone. And welcome back to Britain Under the Microscope. 欢迎回来《闲话英伦》. Hi 安澜, what are we going to talk about today? Hi, 璐璐.What's going on? So hot! I can't take this heat anymore. I think the heat in Wuhan is getting to 安澜. But tell you what, how about I get you a cold drink and we talk about British summer drinks? That sounds like a very good idea. Ok, 所以今天我们就来聊聊这些英国人常喝的summer drinks, 就是听起来就很夏天的这种. 我们说饮料其实 they're all alcoholic. Well, yeah. This is not an episode for kids. This is an episode for the parents or the big kids. Yep. First of all, if you ask me about the quintessential British drinks, I would say G&T.Gin and Tonic.Gin and Tonic金汤力. Whichever bar or even just cafe converted into a bar place you go to, you definitely, definitely, definitely will see this classic drink. In London, they just call it G&T, right? Exactly. Because it's a classic cocktail, because it's so easy to make.You say it's a cocktail, it's just a mixed drink, really, it doesn't take any skill. It doesn't use any skill. All you have to do is get some gin, tonic water and lime or lemon. That's it. But because I know, although we're called 酒馆, I'm pretty sure some of our fans, some of our listeners, they are not drinkers, they don't really drink alcohol. So, let's explain what this is. Gin is translated into金酒,琴酒,或者什么杜松子酒,更早的翻译 that gin is a very, very British thing, isn't it? Not really. Gin was actually created in Holland. I did not know that. I thought gin, because you see London Dry Gin or like the original Gin, you think gin must be a London thing. No, it was first invented in 17th century in the Netherlands, but it became very popular in the 18th century and it was so cheap that what it's known as the Gin Craze made many British people completely alcoholic.Yeah, blame the drink.Because you could buy pints of Gin. And people, particularly poorer people, poorer women would actually drink lots and lots of gin. Even nowadays the basic Gin really is not very expensive. I mean, you can check it online like for example, London Dry Gin, they are very basic brand. It's relatively affordable.And that's after taxes. So you can imagine how cheap it was to create and how much gin you could get. Now for those of you who are non drinkers, you probably read the word Gin in some of the British literature. I wouldn't say where, just English literature. Then I would not recommend you to drink it but at least smell it. It has a very distinctive smell. I actually really love the gin smell. Yeah, I really like Gin&Tonic, but it always had a bit of a reputation. So we talked about Bathtub Gin. ("Bathtub gin" 是一种在禁酒令时期(1920-1933年)在美国出现的高度酒精饮料,其名称来源于家庭酿酒者将大容量的酒精容器存放在浴缸中,以便添加水和其他成分来稀释和调味 。这种自行制作的酒精饮料通常使用廉价的谷物酒精,通过添加杜松子等植物来赋予其味道,但质量参差不齐,有时可能存在安全隐患 。而 "toilet wine" 或 "prison hooch" 通常是指在监狱中非法制作的酒精饮料,由于缺乏适当的设备和原料,囚犯们会使用任何可用的甜味水果、面包或糖,以及酵母或面包来发酵制作酒精。这种饮料可能隐藏在厕所的水箱中进行发酵,因此得名 "toilet wine" 。然而,这种自制酒精饮料可能存在健康风险,包括肉毒杆菌中毒 。)
Phish's three-night run at Alpine ValleyLarry Mishkin features a Grateful Dead concert at a "funky" venue on July 29, 1994, at Buckeye Lake, Ohio. The Grateful Dead opened with "Rain" by the Beatles, reflecting their admiration for the Beatles' music. "Rain," primarily written by John Lennon, was a song exploring themes of reality and illusion and was notable for its use of reverse audio effects. The Grateful Dead incorporated several Beatles songs into their performances, demonstrating their appreciation for the band.The conversation touches on the Grateful Dead's setlist, which included several opening songs like "Feel Like a Stranger" and "Bertha." The speakers recall personal experiences and the excitement of attending these concerts, sharing memories of Buckeye Lake as a vibrant venue despite unpredictable weather. The conversation transitions to "Wang Dang Doodle," a blues standard written by Willie Dixon and performed by artists like Howlin' Wolf and Koko Taylor. The Grateful Dead's affinity for blues music and their ability to blend various musical influences into their performances is highlighted. Larry changes his focus and shifts to a discussion about the band Phish, detailing a recent three-night run at Alpine Valley. He express his excitement and nostalgia for the venue, sharing experiences of attending concerts there over the years. The recap of Phish's performances includes a detailed analysis of the setlists, noting songs like "46 Days," "Moma Dance," "Cities," "Cavern," "Axilla," "Down with Disease," "Bathtub Gin," and a cover of Led Zeppelin's "Good Times Bad Times." Larry's enthusiasm is evident as he recount the energy and musicianship of Phish, highlighting the unique experience of attending their concerts and the connection it fosters among fans. Grateful DeadJuly 29, 1994 (30 years ago)Buckeye Lake OhioGrateful Dead Live at Buckeye Lake Music Center on 1994-07-29 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive INTRO: Rain Track #1 :26 – 2:10 John Lennon wrote most of "Rain." It was his first song to get really deep, exploring themes of reality and illusion - after all, rain or shine is just a state of mind.Written by John “about people moaning about the weather all the time” as he was becoming more in tune with his role as a social leader – as is evidenced by the lines “I can show you” and “Can you hear me”Played 29 timesFirst: December 2, 1992 at McNichols Sports Arena, Denver, CO, USALast: June 30, 1995 at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, PA, USA SHOW No. 1: Wang Dang Doodle Track #4 4:03 – 5:43 "Wang Dang Doodle" is a blues song written by Willie Dixon. Music critic Mike Rowe calls it a party song in an urban style with its massive, rolling, exciting beat.[1] It was first recorded by Howlin' Wolf in 1960 and released by Chess Records in 1961. In 1965, Dixon and Leonard Chess persuaded Koko Taylor to record it for Checker Records, a Chess subsidiary. Taylor's rendition quickly became a hit, reaching number thirteen on the Billboard R&B chart and number 58 on the pop chart.[2] "Wang Dang Doodle" became a blues standard[3] and has been recorded by various artists. Taylor's version was added to the United States National Recording Registry in 2023. In 1995, Taylor's rendition was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in the "Classics of Blues Recording – Singles or Album Tracks" category.[17] The Foundation noted that the song was the last blues single produced by Dixon to reach the record charts, and "became Koko Taylor's signature crowdpleaser, inspiring singalongs to the 'all night long' refrain night after night".[17]Taylor's version of "Wang Dang Doodle" was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Recording Registry in 2023.[18]Chuck Berry, Bruce Hornsby, John Popper, Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead and Willie Dixon's daughter, Shirley Dixon, performed "Wang Dang Doodle" in tribute to Willie Dixon at the 1994 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony.In his autobiography, I Am The Blues, Willie Dixon says;Wang Dang Doodle meant a good time. Especially if a guy came in from the South. A wang dang meant having a ball and a lot of dancing, they called it a rocking style so that's what it meant to wang dang doodle. Wang Dang Doodle was first performed by the Grateful Dead in August 1983. The song was played only a few times each year through the rest of the 1980's. From 1991 onwards it was performed more often averaging about 15 performances a year through to 1995. Played: 95 timesFirst: August 26, 1983 at Portland Memorial Coliseum, Portland, OR, USALast: July 8, 1995 at Soldier Field, Chicago, IL, USA MUSIC NEWS: Phish shows, Friday and Saturday night at Alpine ValleyRIP – John Mayall SHOW No. 2: Althea Track #7 9:40 – end INTO Eternity Track #8 0:00 – 1:39 Co-writing a song with one of your personal heroes—that seems like a dream come true.Willie Dixon (1915-1992) was one of the preeminent blues songwriters and performers of all time. The Grateful Dead covered a fairly lengthy list of his songs, attesting to his influence on the band: “Down in the Bottom,” “I Ain't Superstitious,” “I Just Want to Make Love To You,” “Little Red Rooster,” “The Same Thing,” “Spoonful,” and “Wang Dang Doodle.” Plus a couple they only played once, or only in soundcheck.The song was written during the sessions for Rob Wasserman's Trios album. “Guitar Player” magazine ran an interview with Weir in 1993:I had this chord progression and melody that I wanted to run by Willie to see if he liked it .... he did, so he started dashing off words. He wanted me to run a certain section by him again and stuff like that, and we started working on a bridge. Then he dashes off this sheet of lyrics and hands it to me. Now I'm really stoked to be working with the legendary Willie Dixon and I'm prepared for just about anything.He hands these lyrics to me and I'm reading through them. And they seem, you know, awfully simplistic. Like there wasn't a whole lot to them........Now he wants me to read through it and sing the melody I have and see if they fit. And so I started singing through these simplistic lyrics, and that simplicity takes on a whole other direction.By the time I had sung through them, it's like my head is suddenly eons wide. I can hear what's happening just sort of echoing around in there and I'm astounded by the simple grace of what he has just presented to me. I'm sitting there with my mouth open literally, and Willie's laughing. He's just sitting there laughing, saying, 'Now you see it. Now you see it. That's the wisdom of the bluesPlayed: 44 timesFirst: February 21, 1993 at Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena, Oakland, CA, USALast: July 8, 1995 at Soldier Field, Chicago, IL, USA SHOW No. 3: I Want To Tell You Track #11 0:00 – 1:35 "I Want to Tell You" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1966 album Revolver. It was written and sung by George Harrison, the band's lead guitarist. After "Taxman" and "Love You To", it was the third Harrison composition recorded for Revolver. Its inclusion on the LP marked the first time that he was allocated more than two songs on a Beatles album, a reflection of his continued growth as a songwriter beside John Lennon and Paul McCartney.When writing "I Want to Tell You", Harrison drew inspiration from his experimentation with the hallucinogenic drug LSD. The lyrics address what he later termed "the avalanche of thoughts that are so hard to write down or say or transmit".[1] In combination with the song's philosophical message, Harrison's stuttering guitar riff and the dissonance he employs in the melody reflect the difficulties of achieving meaningful communication. The recording marked the first time that McCartney played his bass guitar part after the band had completed the rhythm track for a song, a technique that became commonplace on the Beatles' subsequent recordings.George Harrison wrote "I Want to Tell You" in the early part of 1966, the year in which his songwriting matured in terms of subject matter and productivity.[2] As a secondary composer to John Lennon and Paul McCartney in the Beatles,[3] Harrison began to establish his own musical identity through his absorption in Indian culture,[4][5] as well as the perspective he gained through his experiences with the hallucinogenic drug LSD.[6] According to author Gary Tillery, the song resulted from a "creative surge" that Harrison experienced at the start of 1966. In his autobiography, I, Me, Mine, Harrison says that "I Want to Tell You" addresses "the avalanche of thoughts that are so hard to write down or say or transmit".[1][12] Authors Russell Reising and Jim LeBlanc cite the song, along with "Rain" and "Within You Without You", as an early example of the Beatles abandoning "coy" statements in their lyrics and instead "adopt[ing] an urgent tone, intent on channeling some essential knowledge, the psychological and/or philosophical epiphanies of LSD experience" to their listeners.[13] Writing in The Beatles Anthology, Harrison likened the outlook inspired by his taking the drug to that of "an astronaut on the moon, or in his spaceship, looking back at the Earth. I was looking back to the Earth from my awareness." Played: 7 timesFirst: July 1, 1994 at Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountain View, CA, USALast: May 24, 1995 at Memorial Stadium, Seattle, WA, USA MJ NEWS SHOW No. 4: Standing On The Moon Track #19 7:23 – 9:00 Garcia/Hunter tune from Built To Last (1989) Played: 76 timesFirst: February 5, 1989 at Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center, Oakland, CA, USALast: June 30, 1995 at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, PA OUTRO: Quinn The Eskimo Track #21 2:28 – 4:17 "Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)" is a folk-rock song written and first recorded by Bob Dylan in 1967 during the Basement Tapes sessions. The song's first release was in January 1968 as "Mighty Quinn" in a version by the British band Manfred Mann,[4] which became a great success. It has been recorded by a number of performers, often under the "Mighty Quinn" title.The subject of the song is the arrival of Quinn (an Eskimo), who prefers a more relaxed lifestyle [" jumping queues, and making haste just ain't my cup of meat"] and refuses hard work ["Just tell me where to put 'em and I'll tell you who to call"], but brings joy to the people.Dylan is widely believed to have derived the title character from actor Anthony Quinn's role as an Eskimo in the 1960 movie The Savage Innocents.[5] Dylan has also been quoted as saying that the song was nothing more than a "simple nursery rhyme". A 2004 Chicago Tribune article[6] said the song was named after Gordon Quinn, co-founder of Kartemquin Films, who had given Dylan and Howard Alk uncredited editing assistance on Eat the Document.Dylan first recorded the song in 1967 during the Basement Tapes sessions, but did not release a version for another three years. Meanwhile, the song was picked up and recorded in December 1967 by the British band Manfred Mann,[7] who released it as a single in the US on 8 January 1968 under the title "Mighty Quinn".[8] A UK single followed within a week.[8] The Manfred Mann version reached No. 1 in the UK Singles Chart for the week of 14 February 1968, and remained there the following week.[9] It also charted on the American Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at No. 10, and reached No. 4 in Cash Box. Cash Box called it a "funky-rock track" with "a trace of calypso [to] add zest to a tremendous effort." Played: 59 timesFirst: December 30, 1985 at Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena, Oakland, CA, USALast: July 2, 1995 at Deer Creek Music Center, Noblesville, IN, USA .Produced by PodConx Deadhead Cannabis Show - https://podconx.com/podcasts/deadhead-cannabis-showLarry Mishkin - https://podconx.com/guests/larry-mishkinRob Hunt - https://podconx.com/guests/rob-huntJay Blakesberg - https://podconx.com/guests/jay-blakesbergSound Designed by Jamie Humiston - https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamie-humiston-91718b1b3/Recorded on Squadcast
A Trump trial judge decides to overturn Supreme Court precedent on home distilling. And speaking of sobriety … we'll check in on Rudy Giuliani's attempt to replicate Alex Jones's stunning success in the bankruptcy court. Patreons get an extra field trip to Congress, where Oversight Chair James Comer invites the Biden administration to say where it would like to be kicked. Links: Wait, The Fifth Circuit Is Snatching Cases From Other Circuits Now? https://www.lawandchaospod.com/p/the-fifth-circuit-is-snatching-cases 26 USC 5178 https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/5178 26 USC 5601 https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/5601 HDA complaint https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.txnd.384014/gov.uscourts.txnd.384014.1.0.pdf HDA docket https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/68073961/hobby-distillers-association-v-alcohol-and-tobacco-tax-and-trade-bureau/ HDA decision https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.txnd.384014/gov.uscourts.txnd.384014.49.0_1.pdf FRCP 26 https://www.law.cornell.edu/rules/frcp/rule_26 Freeman v. Giuliani (DC docket) https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/61642105/freeman-v-giuliani/ Giuliani stipulation https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.dcd.238720/gov.uscourts.dcd.238720.84.2_1.pdf 11 USC 362 https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/11/362 Giuliani May MOR https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysb.319064/gov.uscourts.nysb.319064.267.0.pdf Giuliani May exhibits https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysb.319064/gov.uscourts.nysb.319064.267.4.pdf House GOP Letters to Biden Agencies Post-Chevron https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/07.10.2024-Letters-to-federal-agencies-regarding-Loper-Bright-v.-Raimondo.pdf Distillers Want to Decriminalize Making Booze at Home https://www.texasobserver.org/distillers-decriminalize-home-booze/ Show Links: https://www.lawandchaospod.com/ BlueSky: @LawAndChaosPod Threads: @LawAndChaosPod Twitter: @LawAndChaosPod Patreon: patreon.com/LawAndChaosPod
In our first podcast devoted to gin, we talk with Brendan Bartley, the head bartender and beverage director at the renowned speakeasy Bathtub Gin and the creator of Botanery Barn Distilling's new Revivalist Garden Gin. We discuss the challenges in getting people to overcome their apprehension about gin, the new and different gin styles, brands and botanicals and why this year could finally be the spirit's time to break out.
January 17th, 1920 was the day the United States was suppose to get sober. Prohibition and the Volstead Act were officially official, and things were going to change. Prior to Prohibition things weren't great. Drunken crimes were hitting too close to home, and some thought drying out the country was the answer. What they didn't count on was the crime that came with the pursuit of supplying bootleg liqour to the masses who still wanted to wet their beak. Join us as we get Historically High on Prohibition!
Prohibition might have made the production and sale of alcohol in the United States illegal, but that doesn't mean Americans stopped. The supply chain for the alcohol beverage flourished during the ban, but in a completely different way. Follow the Tracks Through Time Podcast Other FreightWaves Shows Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Drain your bathing tubs but no need to clean them, because this episode we're making bathtub gin and it just wouldn't be the same without that secret flavor: family. In Hobby Collectors Kristin teaches us all about her newfound lifestyle as an old-timey moonshiner, including some captivating gin hobby history, what materials you need to get started, and why she thinks it's a great hobby for ADHDers. Unless you're a child, in which case disregard that, alcohol sucks, stay in school. Plus, Grace outwits, outplays, and outlasts a childhood friend in a mean girl Pizza Secret, Kristin shushes someone and becomes the very person she hates the most in I'm So Quirky, and we both share controversial opinions that you're just mad about because you know we're right in our new Alternative Segment, You're Just Mad Because I'm Right. Resources The History of Gin (world-gin-club.com) How to Make Gin: 11 Steps (with Pictures) - wikiHow The History of Gin and its Medicinal Origins – allgin.com Gin - Wikipedia
Today we are looking at a pivotal show in Phish's history, 8/13/93 from the Murat Theater in Indianapolis. This show features the legendary version of "Bathtub Gin" which is seen as a turning point in the band's ability to jam outside of the structure of their compositions. Charlie Dirksen and Brian Feller, two longtime fans and board members of The Mockingbird Foundation, join us to talk about the magical month of August 1993. Thanks to our partners at Green Future Wealth—they can help with all of your financial planning needs.Undermine is brought to you by Osiris Media. Executive Producers are Tom Marshall, RJ Bee, Brian Brinkman, Matt Dwyer, and Benjy Eisen. Produced and edited by Brian Brinkman and Eric Limarenko. Mixed and Mastered by Matt Dwyer. Production assistance from Christina Collins and Nick Cejas. Original Music by Amar Sastry. Art by Mark Dowd. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This podcast covers episodes 10,729 to 10,734. Summer's 18th birthday arrives and with it comes a missive from BEYOND THE GRAVE. Bernie's evil twin reappears to return Joseph's school uniform and has a weird proposition for Bernie. Audrey hasn't signed her trust documentation and her mind is on other matters when she's pressed on the matter. Sean gets back in touch with Violet to get approval for Dylan's more permanent move to Weatherfield. Kelly and Aadi are forced to come clean with their parents and guardians when a Weathy Gazette article is posted a week early. Toyah and her activist chums learn that the knicker factory will be welcoming a special visitor next week whose carbon footprint leaves a lot to be desired. Sam gets caught being mysterious with a letter and is reluctant to come clean about its intended recipient. Wendy meets Mary and is quickly roped into an AdDram production. Jenny is distraught when she discovers how important the move to Canada was to Leo. Stephen hates blue bins. Ken has massive scissors. Nick runs out of his text allowance.
In this week's Wednesday Whiskey Review, we switch some things up and pull out the Devils Bathtub. This extremely affordable Gin from Honeoye Falls definitely made an impression. Bargain for the money, or not even worth pennies? Tune in and find out! For this particular week, Addys is offering a discount on this product! You can use our code "BHH" at checkout when you download the Addys Wine and Spirits app on your device and purchase this whiskey. Offer only valid until 7/20/2022! Download the app here!Android link: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.cta.AddyFineWineApple Link: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/addys-lexis-wine-spirits/id1375492533 As always, please subscribe to our YouTube Channel, it really helps us grow as a podcast which in turn helps the businesses we promote! Leave a like comment, and subscribe. New videos every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday!Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
This week's guest is Tim Bangert! After a few failed attempts by some friends to get Phish to stick in Tim's ears he finally took the plunge and went to The Great Went, and the rest is history! After The Great Went, the majority of Tim's Phish shows fell into the years of '98 & '99. We talked about Tim's First show experience, some of his favorite jams, the songs he is chasing, and what member of Phish he would most like to meet. To be featured on a future episode, shoot an email to sttf.weareeverywhere@gmail.com Tim summed up his trip to The Great Went in an essay that you can read below. How did I end up in Limestone, Maine, in August of 1997 to see a band in which I had relatively little interest? I will start the tale of my first Phish show a few years prior to that. I did know a little of the band and had a few friends loan me their music telling me how great they were, but even with all the music I chased down in used music stores and played on a weekly college radio shows, Phish was a barely part of it. The first time I recall hearing the name of the band was in 1992 in a local radio ad for a Santana concert. Funny story there is that the announcer said, “with special guest Phish,” over Santana's “All I Ever Wanted.” I only knew the few Santana songs in K-SHE 95's rotation (“Black Magic Woman,” “Oye Como Va”), so my brain immediately associated “All I Ever Wanted” with Phish. Thinking about it, that might be a fun cover for Phish to play. Phish obviously wasn't getting played on local commercial stations in St. Louis, so that was that. The following winter in college a guy named Joe who lived across the hall from me told me I had to listen to Phish. He handed me a copy of A Picture of Nectar. I am not certain how much of it I listened to, but I think I thought it was too goofy and underproduced as it jumped from the manic “Llama” to gentle “Eliza” and so on. I still think it's goofy and underproduced but in a much more endearing way. A short while later my cousin came to visit me at school. She was a senior in high school and brought a copy of Junta along. I remember hearing “Fee” and once again thinking what a goofy band this was. Why were people recommending them to me? What was I missing here? Later that year she made me a mix tape that include The Mango Song. A strange one to hand anyone to say, hey, listen to this band! Somehow it wound its daft way into my brain with every listen. I think I thought the piano had a bit of Vince Guaraldi's sound from all the Charlie Brown specials. In the fall of 1994, a fellow RA named Matt asks me if I play any music by Phish on my weekly college radio show. I tell him I had heard a bit, but they never did it for me. He hands me a copy of the just-released Hoist and says to give it another shot. I immediately liked the opening track “Julius” and played it on my show. I recall liking “Down with Disease,” “Sample in a Jar,” and possibly “Wolfman's Brother” enough that I dubbed the whole thing and had it on a steady rotation in my car's cassette deck. There were a few songs I always skipped past. “Lifeboy,” “Dog Faced Boy,” and “Demand” come to mind. I'm still not big on them and oddly enough they are the three that I have never seen live (“Riker's Mailbox” and “Yerushalayim Shel Zahav” notwithstanding). Jump ahead to spring of 1996 and Andy Rosenhack, who worked in the dorms with me and showed me how to run the board and queue up songs at WRBU, returned to Peoria for Senior Walk (that's a whole different story). We were out to lunch with a group of friends and he starts telling me about going to see Phish and how great it was. His first show was the 12/7/95 Niagara Falls show. He was also talking a lot about seeing DMB and how great they were, which I think steered the conversation because by that point DMB was pretty big on the radio. I'm pretty sure I was evangelizing for Wilco around that point in time, which seemed pretty not-Phish. That summer I moved out to Colorado for a short time. Phish was in the news, as their four-night stand at Red Rocks was marred by the weird clashes taking place in Morrison by fans unable to get tickets to the shows. I was nowhere near it and Phish still was not really on my radar. I moved back to Illinois in early 1997, bounced around looking for work, and ended up with a contract job in the suburbs of Chicago. It was a pretty dreary time and I was looking for a way to get out of the rut that was surely forming in the 8-to-5 world of I.T. Andy contacts me and says I should come see Phish with him. Where are they playing? Why, in Maine! It's a festival! I tell him sure, why not. I've been at my job a few months and deserve some time off, right? He sent me two 90-minute cassettes to prep me for the show. The first was set 2 of the first night of the Clifford Ball 1. It's an interesting set covering a wide range of styles. The second tape was a doozy that probably made me say “What the hell is this?” It was the Bomb Factory Tweezerfest set. Really, is that what you hand somebody when you want them to listen to live Phish for the first time? It was out there. We wrangled another college friend Bill Korbecki to come along for the road trip. Bill lived near Chicago, so I had company for the drive to Rochester. If I recall correctly, we drove the northern route through Detroit and Niagara to get to Andy's place in Rochester, New York. Ah, for the days when crossing into and out of Canada didn't require a passport or a lot of suspicion. We didn't head straight up to the show, though. Andy was working as a day camp counselor that summer. Bill and I tagged along to help out, as they were making tie-dye t-shirts that day. I made mine out of a Sugar 1994 Tour shirt 2. That evening Bill and I hung out at Andy's place because he had tickets to take his girlfriend to see James Taylor. When he returned from the JT show we took off for Maine. It couldn't be that far, right? It's just getting to Massachusetts and then through a sliver of New Hampshire. Ha. Little did I realize how remote this concert would be. The route couldn't be easier. Take I-90 east until it hits I-95 outside Boston. Head north on I-95 until the final exit before New Brunswick. Hop off and go north on US-1 and follow the traffic jam to the decommissioned Loring Air Force Base. I remember hearing on the radio local kids in Arastook County were out of school for potato harvest. The residents in the area were curious about the parade of cars winding northward, but they were gracious nonetheless. Getting to the lot the morning of the show we were parked far back on the right side of the runway. The scale of it was overwhelming. Where the heck was the stage? Attempting to piece together the first day of music here. The walk to the concert grounds was far but did not feel that way. Too many interesting people and too much interesting merchandise being hawked. I don't remember much of the festival area. Andy did paint on one of the wooden planks flanking the area. Those planks would become part of the sculpture that evolved on the scaffolding to the right of the stage. I think Andy met Page in that time, too. I had no clue who any of the band were. 1 Split Open and Melt, Sparkle, Free, The Squirming Coil, Waste, Talk, Train Song, Strange Design, Hello My Baby, Mikes Song, Simple, Contact & Weekapaug Groove. 2 I can't believe I did that. My apologies to Bob Mould. The show started late that afternoon. “Makisupa Policeman” holds the honor of the first live song I saw Phish play. Keyword? “Goo balls.” Me being the neophyte I am, I thought Trey said “blue balls.” Ha. I had no idea the significance of the partial “Harpua” that followed. That day warped me for how long an opening set should be at around 100 minutes. I later learned listening to the tapes that the first few songs were a de facto soundcheck. Looking back it's strange to think I got a daytime YEM (it's hard to think of it without the lights) and a beautiful solo to end “Squirming Coil.” Page's words after his bow? “Stick around.” I knew only two songs they played that day. “Wolfman's Brother” to open the second set and “Julius” to close it out. That helped keep things familiar for me. I was worn out late in the third set and told the guys I would meet them back at the car, so I listened to the encore from afar. Not knowing much of anything, I obviously missed the late-night DJ set the band put on in the disco tent. The next morning was crisp and bright. Flyers had been circulating requesting participants for a mass photo shoot. The catch? It called for folks to doff their clothes. Anyone hearing this story would think I was the one who had to be dragged into such an event, but the opposite is the case. I told Bill and Andy that we should be in the photo. They thought I was bluffing and said if I was in, they'd be in, too. So sometime late that morning I led them to the staging area to sign waivers, drop our clothes near some bike racks, and parade out onto an empty stretch of runway in our birthday suits with 1,100 other people. It was not as nerve-wracking as I thought it might be. For our participation, we were supposed to be sent a copy of the photo, but unfortunately, I was bouncing between addresses at the time and mine never made it to me. Andy did receive his. The photo is rather morbid in my eyes. It's monochrome and looks like a thousand corpses lined up on pavement, which completely belies the festive atmosphere of the shoot. While I did not receive the poster, there is proof of me in one of the pictures in 1998's The Phish Book. Yep. My caveat for anyone seeing that page in the book is that northern Maine mornings are chilly. ;) We meandered about that day. I was amazed at all the vending taking place, though I was still too green to understand references to songs or other cultural touchstones. I did buy a lot shirt, though. It was tie-dye, had a Phish logo with Summer Tour 97 around it, and on the back a faux Maine license plate with GR8-WENT. It cost me $5 because it had some rips in the front and was the last of the vendor's lot. I don't think I ever wore it, but it's still stowed away too cherished to be thrown out. I remember much more of the second day of music. I loved the song “The Wedge” the moment they opened with it. Limestone blocks so large, indeed. After the set we wandered a bit for food and water. Getting back into the concert area we ended up about 20 to 25 rows back Page side. The place was buzzing as the night and cool air creeped in. One anomaly of this show that I did not realize was Fish not wearing his trademark donut dress. He was in jeans that weekend. For the second night he had on a fleece adorned winter hat. Trey also had on a warm striped beanie for the second set. They kicked off the set with “Down With Disease” which I knew from good old Hoist. The song raged on for twenty minutes and then dropped down to a simple little guitar and bass conversation between Trey and Mike, as Page and Fish stepped to two easels on the stage. We could see the two of them painting on shaped boards, similar to those Andy had painted on in the festival area. Trey played the chords of “Bathtub Gin” as Fish found his way back to the drum kit. The song was new to me, but it's so catchy. The cadence of lyrics at first reminded me of Bob Dylan's “Subterranean Homesick Blues” and of course was familiar with its Gershwin quotes throughout. Something clicked for me right then and there. Little did I know this would be one of the signature live jams of the band's career, but I did know something special was happening. It's a version that never loses steam and never grows stale on repeated listenings. There's a group on Facebook called “The Great Went Bathtub Gin Changed My Life.” I did not start the group, but I certainly understand why it was created. The song is 20 minutes of inspired playing and improvisation. As Gin wound down and melted into the quick bluegrass fix of “Uncle Pen,” we were only halfway through the set. The next 45 minutes would be just as inspired. The next song was just as familiar because Strauss' “Also Sprach Zarathustra” is embedded in the DNA of anyone alive after 2001: A Space Odyssey. More painting, this time Trey and Mike stepping to the easels while Fish and Page keep the jam going. What's up with all this painting, anyway? As 2001 fades into what becomes known as “Art Jam” on tapes, Trey tells us about creating art with the audience. The band's planks are crowd surfed over to the scaffolding where all the planks painted by festival-goers hang in one crazy pile. The spotlight is on the newly created sculpture as the band kicks into “Harry Hood.” Another new one for me, but it's a glorious swell. As “Hood” drops into the post “Thank you, Mr. Miner” jam, Trey asks Chris Kuroda to cut the lights because the moon is bright and the sculpture is growing in beauty with every passing second. With that, the air begins to fill with colored lights. A glowstick war breaks out. Without the usual concert lights to dampen things, the sticks take on an epic feel. The jam seems to rise and fall with the number in the air. It was exhilarating. I couldn't imagine being anywhere else. As “Hood” ended Trey tells the crowd to go get more of those things because they look amazing. 90 minutes had gone by in what seemed like 9. The crowd was floating. And we still had another set to go. Over the course of the second set the crowd grew more dense. We had nowhere to go between sets. I remember gallon jugs of water being passed around the crowd. I was so thankful for a few sips. It sustained me through the end of the show in an incredibly cramped space. The final set was not as epic, but introduced me to a few more facets of the band. I remember each song, but specifics of only a few. We were still pinned in with the crowd and hadn't had a chance to sit down in hours (maybe we did? I remember standing the whole time). I'm sure a lot of people took “Dirt” to be a chance to rest after the intricate “Guyute,” but it hit me just right. Combined with the cold air, Trey's whistling and the simple guitar line were an emotional high point for me. The same goes with the set closing “Prince Caspian.” I was thrilled hearing “When the Circus Comes” as the encore, since I am a big fan of the old Los Lobos tune. I didn't realize its lyric “the day I burn this whole place down” would soon become a reality as they tore into “Tweezer Reprise.” A huge timber dressed up as a match was lit and tipped against the sculpture that an hour or two earlier we had been admiring during “Harry Hood.” The whole thing went up in an intense blaze as the encore raged. The crowd was going crazy. Wow. Is this what every Phish show is like? Maybe so, maybe not. One of the great things about the fest were all the folks vending from their vehicles. I was famished after the nighttime sets. As we strolled back up the runway I hear a voice singing out “15 ingredient veggie burritos!” A burrito sounded like it would be perfect, so we stopped to grab one. As the woman is wrapping one up I can't resist asking, “So, what are the 15 ingredients in this burrito?” Here's how Andy recalls her reply: “Rice, 5 kinds of beans, cilantro, cheese, cilantro, rice, cilantro, 5 kinds of beans, cheese, rice, and cilantro.” Ha! Who am I to question that? It was delicious. We took time to rest at the car and headed out of the base the next morning. Traffic was heavy, but moved pretty well. When we hopped on I-95 again one of the strangest things I've ever seen happened. Troopers were pulling cars over en masse. We were not among those targeted by the state patrol, but it was weird. The only other Maine thing we really did when we were up that way was a stop at the L.L. Bean flagship store. I bought a wool plaid cap that I recently passed on to my daughter. The rest of the ride back to Rochester I remember mainly for Andy introducing us to the music of Ani Difranco. As the rest of the year went along, I got a bit more into Phish, but really sought out Ani's stuff. Two completely different sounds, but artists who completely do things their own way. The drive to Chicago is a bit of a blur to me now. I'm guessing exhaustion was setting in and we were looking forward to getting home.
John Wohlfert is our guest for this episode.John and his wife Karen have an interesting history with alcohol. John's great grandfather may or may not of blown up part of his home "brewing beer". You need to hear all of the story. Karen's grandmother was known for her Bathtub Gin. Indeed they had outlaws in the Family.We learn how the Wohlfert's navigated many challenges to open Wohlfert Craft Distilling. County, State, and Federal regulations can be daunting and in this case they indeed where. They continued moving forward and in 2021 they were able to open the doors.The products are names after motorcycle parts.Headlight: VodkaClutch: Coffee Liqueur Starter: Sugar ShineSpark: Basil Flavored VodkaTorque: Apple LiqueurWohlfert Craft Distilling has already won awards for their products and continue to develop new items to bring to the market.Listen in and find out more about what John and Karen are up to. If you're in the area you can visit the tasting room and try everything and see the distillery.Thanks for tuning into this episode of the Exploring Washington State Podcast! If the information in our conversations and interviews are enjoyable and valuable to you, please head over to iTunes, subscribe to the show, and leave us an honest review.Your reviews and feedback will not only help us continue to deliver great, helpful content, but it will also help us reach even more amazing listeners just like you!If you want to read about some of the many amazing places to explore in Washington State, you should just pack your bags and go! Explore Washington State is the perfect place for inspiration. Check it out today. Support the show
Here's the article we review:https://www.thespiritsbusiness.com/2022/02/top-10-spirits-launches-in-january-2022/Check us out on Instagram @curiosity_publichttps://www.instagram.com/curiosity_public/Watch us on YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcplnOSfcnOh5paIL2LdaAwWe have t-shirts! Grab them here:https://curiosity-public.myspreadshop.com/allhttps://www.redbubble.com/people/CuriosityPublic/shopJoin our Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/CuriosityPublicStay curious!All claims made here about alcohol, whether in this podcast, in this description, or on our Youtube channel, are solely our opinions and intended only for those of legal drinking age. All links provided here should only be accessed by those of legal drinking age.
After rumbling through one of the most mystically magical art infusions of all time, Dapper District is ready to dance in your ears. But are you ready? We've got Britnee Breeze of Breeze Creations, Janice Savonen of Sisu Tattoo, Katrin Bell of Happy Messes_Art, Jenny Verrochi of Wild Barn Coffee, and Laura Bukowski of Maus. They are all business residents of the North Boulder (NoBo) Arts District who share their creative methodology and the day-to-day of being an artist-entrepreneur. Now that Boulder, Colordo has the 3rd highest concentration of artists in the USA, how can a solo adventurer compete? What's their roadmap for upskilling techniques and growing their name around town and around the nation? Today's conversations have a mix of practical tools and inspiritational advice to help you find your way in the Wonder Star Universe! To Learn More about Boulder ArtWhere do local artists gather to strut their stuff: Boulder Arts WeekDoes Boulder really have one of the top 5 concentrations of artists in the United States: Daily Camera articleLearn what's on the docket for our 2022 art season: The Year Ahead annual event hosted by the Boulder Art CommissionTo Read about Women Artists From 1920 to 2020Bobbed Hair and Bathtub Gin by Marion MeadeThe Gospel According to Coco Chanel by Karen KarboLucille by Kathleen BradySeven Days in the Art World by Sarah ThorntonTo Connect Further with Today's Guests@BritneeBreeze @SisuTattoo@HappyMesses_Art@JennnnyGirl + her LinkTree@Maus_Creative + her portfolio To Connect Further with the Eboni Freeman InstituteTweet at me using #WonderStarsFollow what I'm up to @EJDFreed on InstagramTell me what to checkout by DMing me on FacebookSee the full list of Wonder Star Possibilities at WonderStarsUniverse.comSign up for my Newsletter Timestamps01:12 Britnee Breeze09:55 Releasing your fear of failure through an Attitude of Gratitude14:20 Janice Savonen14:57 Co-creating illustrative body art with clients 21:10 Katrin Bell23:39 Translating your aesthetic across mediums37:44 Jenny Verrochi and Laura Bukowski39:38 Creating an artists' collective in NoBo Art District
Episode 328: No Bourbon, No Scotch and No Beer Pt 2 of Just Say No America This week Host Dave Bledsoe demands a national prohibition on his bar tabs, only to be voted down by the bartender with extreme prejudice. (Again) On the show this week, we talk about how Prohibition was more about keeping immigrants and minorities in their place rather than saving them from demon alcohol. (Are you shocked? You shouldn't be) Along the way we learn about Dave's grandpa running moonshine in the mountains of Tennessee and why that makes Dave think he should run a distillery. (It doesn't and he shouldn't) Then we dive right into the history of how Prohibition became the law of the land and how the same tactics are being used today. After that we look at how all this not drinking impacted our most precious national resource: rich people. (Short answer not at all, longer answer, it made them more money!) Finally we examine the connection between the Noble Cause of Prohibition and keeping immigrants, minorities and the poor in their place. (The Venn Diagram is a perfect circle.) Our Sponsor this week is Fast Eddie's Bathtub Gin, the small batch artisanal gin that tastes like it was made in a Queens used car lot bathroom, because it was. We open the show with newsreel footage of the government taking down the bootleggers and close with Larry Lacerte reading Dave's bar tabs. Show Theme: https://www.jamendo.com/track/421668/prelude-to-common-sense The Show on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheHell_Podcast The Show on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/whatthehellpodcast/ www.whatthehellpodcast.com Give us your money on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/Whatthehellpodcast The Show Line: 347 687 9601 Closing Music: https://youtu.be/XNmk_uK05dY We are a proud member of the Seltzer Kings Podcast Network! http://seltzerkings.com/ Citations Needed: Wayne B. Wheeler: The Man Who Turned Off the Taps https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/wayne-b-wheeler-the-man-who-turned-off-the-taps-14783512/ Anti-Saloon League Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Saloon_League Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eighteenth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution Prohibition as Class Warfare https://offtheleash.net/2017/12/19/prohibition-as-class-warfare/ The Chemist's War The little-told story of how the U.S. government poisoned alcohol during Prohibition with deadly consequences. https://slate.com/technology/2010/02/the-little-told-story-of-how-the-u-s-government-poisoned-alcohol-during-prohibition.html More Class Warfare: The Real Point of the 18th Amendment (Prohibition) https://angrybearblog.com/2015/06/more-class-warfare-the-real-point-of-the-18th-amendment-prohibition Xenophobia, Racism and Classism: The Sinister Roots of America's Prohibition https://www.winemag.com/2021/03/08/history-american-prohibition/ Uncited Additional Reading: https://prohibition.themobmuseum.org/the-history/the-road-to-prohibition/why-prohibition-happened/ https://www.thoughtco.com/history-of-prohibition-1779250 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK216414/ https://www.cato.org/policy-analysis/alcohol-prohibition-was-failure https://www.theguardian.com/film/2012/aug/26/lawless-prohibition-gangsters-speakeasies Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It makes perfect sense that a comedy podcast would cover this week’s topic, because prohibition was a joke. If you’re not familiar with the story behind the bootlegging, moon shining, home-brewing chaos of 1920s America, you’ll want to listen to this week’s episode and learn all about the giant clusterf*** that was the 18th Amendment. In this episode: Prohibition Through the Ages The Code of Hammurabi Beer Bartering The Puritans, Pilgrims, and Alcohol The American Temperance Society Women's Christian Temperance Union Drys vs Wets Visitation Bands Carrie Nation The Anti-Saloon League Wayne Wheeler Wheelerism and Pressure Politics Prohibition and the Ku Klux Klan Blue Mondays World War 1 and the War Against German Brewers The Food and Fuel Control Act The Alcoholic Blues The Volstead Act and an Epic Mustache The 18th Amendment Connecticut and Rhode Island, Heroes Woodrow Wilson's Veto Attempt The Conundrum of Enforcement Section 29 Vine-Glo Warren G. Harding Flouts the Law Congress Flouts the Law Congress and the Man in the Green Hat Flout the Law Everyone Flouts the Law Smuggling, Brewing, Bootlegging, Bathtub Gin, Moonshine NASCAR Denatured Alcohol Al Capone The Stock Market Crash Franklin Delano Roosevelt Repeal ~ Join the Midnight Masses! Become an Insomniac by dropping a review, adding us on social media, and contacting us with episode ideas. And we now have Midnight Merch! Show your Insomniac pride and pick up a tee shirt or coffee mug to spread the word! https://midnightbonus.weebly.com/midnight-merch.html ~ CONTACT: Leave an audio message: https://www.podpage.com/midnight-facts-for-insomniacs/voicemail/popup/?from=https://www.podpage.com/midnight-facts-for-insomniacs/ ~ Leave a voicemail or shoot us a text with comments, suggestions, or feedback: +1 (408) 596-4603 ~ Email: mailto:midnightfactsforinsomniacs@gmail.com ~ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/midnightfactsforinsomniacs/ ~ Discord: https://discord.gg/4KUWbgj4PN ~ Shane's Comedy Schedule and Info: www.shanerogers.net ~ Episode Transcript: https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/t4qiky/Prohibition.pdf ~ Website: www.midnightfactsforinsomniacs.com ~ KNOWLEDGE IS POWER, AND SLEEP IS OVERRATED ~
Matt is a born and raised New Yorker, but moved down to the city in 2014 to pursue his artistic career. He shares great recommendations on bars he enjoys and some DE-RECOMMENDATIONS so you can avoid overpriced drinks, mediocre service, and questionable times. Best Bars in New York CityNew York City’s bars are some of the best in the world. Classy bars on the HOT LIST include John Doe, Rye House, and Dear Irving/Rooftop Bar. A classy night club to add to your list should be 230 Fifth Rooftop. For a mix between classy and trashy with a specific vibe and “artsy” shows, visit the Box. Also on the hot list, for cheap drinks and a wilder night, check out The 13th Step. To enjoy mini pizza pies with every drink and a dive bar environment, you will have options like the Crocodile Lounge and the Alligator Lounge. For a speakeasy spot, the Bathtub Gin is highly regarded. To hear which bars to avoid - tune into the 63rd episode of the Travel Brats. Best Restaurants in New York CitySince Matt is a bartender, he is often asked where the best place to have dinner is. Matt makes sure not to steer us wrong by recommending his favorite restaurants in the city. The top dinner spots with seasonal menus include Tribeca Kitchen, Rag Trader, and Esther and Carol. Best Places To Stay in New York CityIf you don’t live in the city, there are amazing, diverse places to call home during your stay. For classy hotel recommendations, look to Expedia for Langham Place, Baccarat Hotel, The MADE Hotel, Soho Grand Hotel, and The Pierre A Taj Hotel. To enjoy budget friendly options and to get a feel of how New Yorkers live, Airbnb in NYC has great options for boutique hotels and other neighborhoods. I recommend staying with a superhost and exploring Airbnb Experiences to make the most of your trip. To wrap up your New York adventures, treat yourself to delicious goodies. Two bakeries worth visiting are Carlo’s Bakery from Cake Boss and Veniero’s Italian Bakery for cannoli's. Thank you for tuning into our New York city podcast episode and blog. We appreciate Matt taking the time to share his experience and indulge us with his stories from brighter days. Enjoy our NYC recommendations and share some of your favorites with us. Please like, subscribe, and connect with us on social media.
Prohibition is always a fun topic - speakeasies, Al Capone, bootlegging! Alex is here to tell you that none of that exciting stuff happened in Manitoba. Believe it or not, Manitobans demanded prohibition. And then we changed our mind. Were temperance-advocates just middle-class busybodies? Did bootleg liquor really taste like old boots? Listen to find out!
Fall 2000 delivered the goods more often than not as Phish punctuated the end of the 1.0 era with several great shows, many of which fly under the radar. My favorite gig, 9-17-2000 at MPP, offers a hearty serving of classics in Set 1, and some stretched out, unique jams across Set 2. I include clips from Bathtub Gin, The Curtain With, Rock and Roll, a sublime segue from Theme From the Bottom into Dog Log, Mango Song, and Free in this episode. Listen to the full show at phish.in and read the set list and reviews at Phish.net.As promised in the podcast, here are the eleven data points to back up my "Mango Song equals a great late 1.0 show" theory: 8-16-98 (Lemonwheel), 11-2-98 (Dark Side of the Moon), 11-21-98 (Hampton Comes Alive), 7-24-99 (a top five Summer '99 show), 12-16-99 (Live Phish release), 5-22-00 (Radio City Ghost), 6-9-00 (epic Tweezer), 6-30-00 (part of a huge six show stretch in Summer 2000), 7-15-2000 (a monster S2 wraps Summer 2000), 9-17-00 (the best Fall 2000 show), and 9-27-00 (under-the-radar show with a superb S2).
For this episode, I am joined by RJ Bee! RJ is the CEO of Osiris Media. A longtime Phish fan, he co-founded the Helping Friendly Podcast in 2013 and Osiris in 2018. His background is in storytelling and business, which he brings to Osiris to lead the company's growth. He saw his first Phish show in 1995, and has spent way too much time thinking about setlists and jams. Listen to us talk about our favourite versions of Gin, its evolution from a jam titan to straight-forward rocker and back again, and more!Ryan's Pick: 8/21/15 MagnaballRJ's Pick: 7/29/98 Riverport
In this episode of Thick & Thin, we’re going back in time to the 1920’s prohibition in America to uncover secrets and intriguing parallels found between that era and modern times. I also discuss underground parties, gangsters, risky alcohol allegedly made in bathtubs, and just how far people will go to maintain a sense of normalcy. // Follow me on IG: instagram.com/katybellotte / SOURCES: https://www.thecut.com/2020/11/nyc-underground-nightlife-covid-19.html https://www.pbs.org/kenburns/prohibition/unintended-consequences/ https://www.history.com/news/10-things-you-should-know-about-prohibition “Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition" by Daniel Okrent (a book) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Episode #18, Michael Anstendig and Hanna Lee chat with Wendy Gillette, anchor for CBS News Radio, and correspondent, anchor and producer for CBS Newspath, which provides national and international stories to CBS television stations. In 2020, Wendy launched a new travel series, “Travel Tuesday,” for TV, radio and digital.As an avid traveler, Wendy has visited 60 countries and reported travel stories from the Maldives, Vietnam, the Seychelles, South Africa, Alaska and Iceland.Tune in to hear this globetrotting broadcast journalist share her thoughts on:1) How she balances her multiple roles, both on-air and behind the scenes, spanning TV and radio.2) What she likes most about travel and why it is her calling to get more people to go out and experience the world.3) How her new “Travel Tuesday” series came about.4) Why getting back to nature via road trips, RV excursions and cabin rentals will remain popular forms of travel for the foreseeable future.5) Why flying by private jet is no longer just for the very wealthy.6) Why story ideas for broadcast media have to be of interest to a general audience, rather than just those in the trade.7) How newbies should get their feet wet with local broadcast media first, rather than start off with national outlets.8) Why cultivating relationships with local broadcast media members is critical and how following them on social media and commenting on their work is a great way to start building a rapport.Wendy also answers a listener question from António Saldanha de Oliveira of Nimb Hotel in Copenhagen, Denmark on the steps hotels should take to safely welcome international travelers once travel restrictions are lifted.Connect with Wendy on IG at @wendygilletteny and via email at WGillette@cbs.com.Follow “Hospitality Forward” Podcast hosts Hanna Lee at @hannaleeny, Michael Anstendig at @michaelanstendig and our agency at @hannaleepr on IG.In this week’s “HLC Innovation Report,” we feature:#1: What We Are Reading This week - Our agency celebrates book authors we admire through our #AskTheAuthor series. This week, we are reading “Behind the Bar: 50 Cocktail Recipes from the World’s Most Iconic Hotels” by Alia Akkam. Check out @hlcbookmedia on IG for our full interview on how Alia and Hardie Grant Books brought her book to life (https://www.instagram.com/hlcbookmedia/).#2: Who We Are Honoring This Week - Daniela Curiel, Engagement Manager of Pernod Ricard USA. Her inspiring motto is “Spend all your energy on what makes you extraordinary.” Each week, we celebrate pioneering women via our digital channels, so check out http://www.hannaleecommunications.com/inspiring-women for over 250 women’s words of wisdom.#3: What We Are Celebrating This Week - The Bathtub Whiskey Pop-Up in New York City by Bathtub Gin’s Dave Oz and Head Bartender Brendan Bartley. Starting this week, the two-month pop-up brings this beloved Chelsea speakeasy bar to the Financial District with whiskey-focused cocktails, Gin & Tonics and bacon & whiskey pairing flights. This cozy spot is definitely worth checking out (https://bathtubginnyc.com/). #4: What Podcast We Are Listening to This Week - “A Hotel Life Live,” hosted by Ben Pundole. Ben recently interviewed Ian Schrager, the legendary hotelier behind The EDITION, the PUBLIC Hotel and other iconic brands. Amidst the pandemic, Ian shares his wise advice, “We have to look at this as an opportunity of a new beginning in everything.” Have a listen to Ian’s inspiring insights on the future of hospitality (https://bit.ly/3gtGFUL).#5: Who Is Inspiring Us This Week - Tony Abou-Ganim, a master mixologist, book author and leading light of the Cocktail Renaissance. Tony is also the founder of The Helen David Relief Fund at the USBG National Charity Foundation that supports bartenders battling breast cancer. This fall, he led Team Negroni to cycle 4,000 miles and raised $50,000 for this worthy cause. Thanks, Tony, for your continued support of the industry and this meaningful initiative (https://bit.ly/3lRYbTJ). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In Episode 111 we discuss the near perfect take on Bathtub Gin from Limestone, ME on August 17, 1997. A melodic and emotive hose jam, it’s a brilliant example of pure playing, musical connection, and Trey-led jamming that, while it doesn’t break new ground for the band, neither has to. The Went Gin is here to serve as a peak moment of connectivity and communal joy over where Phish was, some 10 months into their reinvention period. Songs featured in this episode are:The Kinks: “This Time Tomorrow”Faith No More: “Midlife Crisis”Bob Dylan: “Not Dark Yet”The Verve: “Space & Time”— — — In addition, we discuss two new 2020 records we highly recommend: Winston CW: “Good Guess” and David Nance: “Staunch Honey”— — — As we announced today, we are thrilled to team up with our friends at the Helping Friendly Podcast & Under The Scales to create UNDERMINE! — — —We’re Proud To Be Sponsored By Synlawn!Visit: https://www.synlawn.com/beyond/ to learn more.— — — Grady’s Cold Brew is independently owned and operated in New York City since 2011. Ready to give it a Swirl? Get 20% of your first order at gradyscoldbrew.com with promo code: BTP20.— — — Check us out on Spotify: Beyond The Pond Podcast SongsYou can find us on Twitter: @_beyondthepondMedium: https://medium.com/beyond-the-pondEmail: beyondthepondpodcast@gmail.comPlease check out the Osiris Podcast Network at: OsirisPod.com and JamBase.comPlease leave us a review on iTunes! Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/beyondthepond. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It's that time of year again! The BTC ladies have looked over their leftover notes and cases they haven't quite gotten to yet, dug down deep, and pulled out another wild card episode just for you! There's no telling what they will be discussing this week, but they can guarantee it will be in bad taste. You can check out Devil We Know podcast here!: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/devil-we-know/id1460607200 Research links here!: https://www.badtastecrimecast.com/podcast/episode-95-bathtub-gin/
Dr. Fix Me learns what Blake and Dillon miss about their best friend, Doug. Doug explains what caused him to stop fapping. This episode is sponsored by Kelly with Nana Betty’s Bathtub Gin. Experts inside Doug, Wally and Filbert, offer insight into what happened to Doug internally. Will Dr. Fix Me restore Doug to his former self?Cast: Joshua Zuar, Lauren Levine, Shawn Mayer, Christina Salesberry, Danielle Seright, Austin Guttery, and Michael Kim Lewis as Dr. Fix MeEnjoy the show? Let us know! drfixmeshow@gmail.com
In our first episode, we speak with Robert Simonson, a cocktail and bar writer for the New York Times, PUNCH and Imbibe, as well as a noted author of four books, "The Martini Cocktail," "3-Ingredient Cocktails," "A Proper Drink" and "The Old-Fashioned."Robert chats with us about:1) Why he loves writing about cocktails and bartenders2) Why cocktails-to-go and outdoor dining should stay3) How creativity, innovation and resilience in the bar community are inspiring him during this challenging time4) How pitches to him should be tailored to a major national newspaper or an industry-specific outlet5) What kind of bar personalities he is looking to profile, whether young craft bartenders or lifelong career veterans6) Why he continues to spotlight diverse voices in the bar and spirits world, which is even more important at this time7) What his upcoming new cocktail book is all about (Spring 2021 publication date by Ten Speed Press)8) What the bar community should be doing to move hospitality forwardRobert also addresses a listener question from Dave Oz of Bathtub Gin and The 18th Room on the future of sustainability in bars. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On this episode of Our PNW Music, we sit down with Skagit County's premiere rockabilly band, Gin Gypsy. Lead singer, and ringer for a 1940's pin up model, Michelle Ammons Montoya leads this band of well dressed Hepcats: JW Couey (lead guitar), Jesse Eldridge (stand up bass) and Sonny Brown (percussion).As a band, Gin Gypsy has been around for a relatively short period of time; only six years ..... however this group of musicians have known each other for more than a decade. They have that family vibe both on and off the stage. And they definitely like to have fun.We learn about their musical backgrounds, what brought them together and they walk us through the experience of shooting a top-tier video for their hit single “Bathtub Gin”. In addition, we are treated to live performances of their biggest hits....and we also laughed .... a lot!! We hope you have as much fun listening to Gin Gypsy as we did interviewing them.Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GinGypsy/Instagram: https://instagram.com/gingypsyband?igshid=zyvx15bjal7mYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUOUnLCfCP98DNysgldubSQWebsite: https://www.gingypsymusic.comEmail: gingypsyband@outlook.com
A few great things to share with you today—enjoy! If you like what you hear, please consider giving us a review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Late Night Jazz Fest on Festival Circuit. We have reached episode 4, where we're going to go in depth on the late night music scene around the annual jazz festival. We start with the legendary shows on the Riverboat President, and trace that history and those performances to today's typically-thriving late night scene that spans a lot of the city. We hear from people like Rob Mercurio of Galactic, Robert Walter, George Porter, Jr., Irma Thomas, Papa Mali, and more.1996 Rupp Gin on Beyond the Pond. On this episode, Brian and Dave take on the Bathtub Gin from the 11/7/96. A jam that was ahead of its time, and is still one of the most memorable of all time. It was a week after their Remain in Light cover, and you can just start to hear the 1997 sound creeping in. As always, you'll hear about new music and music inspired by the sound of this jam. Osirecs: FeelFree! I want to give a shout out to a band that I've been listening to for 10 years, FeelFree. This is my brother-in-law's band, so I'm biased, but they have great songwriting, tight playing, good jams, and awesome horn lines. This is good Summer music, so you should check them out. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In Episode 103 we discuss the wide-ranging, forward-thinking, infectious take on Bathtub Gin from the University of Kentucky on November 7, 1996. One week removed from their performance of the Talking Heads Remain In Light, Phish was already applying the lessons of the album to one of their longest-serving jam vehicles. The hints of 1997’s reinvention are hard to avoid now as nearly every BIG jam over the next four weeks would further push the band towards their Linear Musical Communication rebirth.One quick note, we recorded this episode before the larger push to change the name of the Kentucky Wildcats’ arena from Rupp Arena. It’s clear in research that Adolph Rupp was a racist and that his name no longer deserves to grace the basketball arena. We support the faculty at the University of Kentucky pushing to change the name. Songs featured in this episode are:Neil Young: “Transformer Man”Stevie Wonder: “Golden Lady”My Bloody Valentine: “(When You Wake) You’re Still In A Dream”Hum: “In The Den”— — — In addition, we discuss two new 2020 records we highly recommend: Daniel Carter, Matthew Shipp, William Parker, Gerald Clever: “Welcome Adventure! Vol 1” and Nadine Shah: “Kitchen Sink”— — — We encourage all BTP listeners to check out Late Era on Osiris Media.— — — We are proud to be sponsored by Harry’s! Harry’s is a return to the essential: quality, durable blades at a fair price — just $2 per blade! They’ve cut out the middleman, manufacturing blades in their German blade factory that’s been honing precision blades for a century. Which means you get incredibly high-quality blades at factory direct prices Harry’s is super convenient: Blade refills are delivered directly to your door on your schedule — with or without a subscription! 100% quality guarantee — If you don’t love your shave, let them know and they’ll give you a full refund. 1% of proceeds are set aside for non-profit organizations devoted to helping provide access to better health care for men and veterans.Listeners of Beyond The Pond show can redeem their Harry’s trial set at HARRYS.COM/BTP. You’ll get a: Weighted ergonomic handle for a firm grip, 5-blade razor with a lubricating strip and trimmer blade, Rich lathering shave gel with aloe to keep your skin hydrated, And a travel blade cover to keep your razor dry and easy to grab on the go. Go to HARRYS.COM/BTP to start shaving better today!— — — If you’re like me, things like Music, Running, and Cooking all bring me happiness and meaning. However there are times where even the things you rely on for happiness are not enough to help you achieve your goals. The good news is, BetterHelp Online Counseling Is there for you.BetterHelp Online Counseling is a way for you to connect with a professional counselor in a safe, private, and conveniently online environment. Schedule your own secure video or phone session, plus chat & text with your therapist. Everything you share is confidential & Licensed professional counselors are available with specializations... Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/beyondthepond. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
(From The 06/27/2020 Show) Or, Hootch…White Lightening…Mountain Dew? All are names for moonshine. Today we hear from Jesse Brown’s own Christopher Lawing, as he steps in to answer questions all about moonshining. Moonshining stills of all sizes, existed across the Carolinas, especially in the Appalachia regions. Bootleggers even gave rise to NASCAR! So, let's learn about what they were made of and where they existed, and if Bill and Christopher have ever seen one in person…
The 18th Amendment of the United States Constitution established the prohibition of alcohol in the U.S. Enforcement of the new law started on January 17, 1920. In this encore episode, our panelists dive into St. Louis' rich Prohibition-era history. They describe the time robbers siphoned off 3,000 barrels of whiskey from the Jack Daniels distillery, how Anheuser-Busch survived more than a decade of a nationwide ban on alcoholic beverages, and they recall the tale of a 1922 New Year’s Eve party at the Chase Hotel when an enforcement raid led to plates being thrown, shots being fired and pandemonium spilling out onto Lindell Boulevard.
Justo antes de empezar la crisis de COVID-19, tuvimos el placer de sentarnos con Ariel y Elvis en la cuidad de NY. Siendo ambos de la Republica Dominicana, hablamos de su trayectoria, sus logros, y sus consejos a aquellos que desean seguir creciendo. Disfruten, suscríbanse, y compartan con sus amistades dentro y fuera de la industria. Anfitrión: David Cid Invitado: Ariel Suarez y Elvis J. Rosario Muxica por: MYGXD IG: azucar.y.limon FB: https://www.facebook.com/azucarylimonpodcast/ ¡Sígannos en YouTube para ver los videos! https://youtu.be/y6kHmfWkIoo Ya disponibles con subtítulos en ingles #azucarylimon #azúcarylimón #azucar.y.limon
Justo antes de empezar la crisis de COVID-19, tuvimos el placer de sentarnos con Ariel y Elvis en la cuidad de NY. Siendo ambos de la Republica Dominicana, hablamos de su trayectoria, sus logros, y sus consejos a aquellos que desean seguir creciendo. Disfruten, suscríbanse, y compartan con sus amistades dentro y fuera de la industria. Anfitrión: David Cid Invitado: Ariel Suarez y Elvis J. Rosario Muxica por: MYGXD IG: azucar.y.limon FB: https://www.facebook.com/azucarylimonpodcast/ ¡Sígannos en YouTube para ver los videos! https://youtu.be/y6kHmfWkIoo Ya disponibles con subtítulos en ingles #azucarylimon #azúcarylimón #azucar.y.limon
Here's to Fuck Corona! Matt and Justin are coming at you from separate locations. Matt in his Fortress of Solitude aka Bathtub Gin, and Justin from his Southnorth Seattle manse. They're drinking, but not the same thing, because, well, logistics are challenging. But they've got stories to tell and things to say and whether it's the state of the industry, their plans for the week (spoiler: not a lot), it's a nice break from the news!
#COVID19 Special Coverage: Over the next few weeks, Entrepreneurial Minds has switched over to virtual interviews in order to learn how different businesses are adjusting to this unique time. On this episode we have one of Brooklyn’s favorite DJ’s - DJ Alex Edge. Alex has been running his Brooklyn-based events and production company for over 12 years, and just this year won the “Wedding Wire Couple Choice” award. Alex is the resident DJ at Bathtub Gin and throughout his career him and his team have done the entertainment for countless US-based and destination weddings. We touch on virtual events and what human energy adds to a space, what COVID means for the wedding industry, and how the live music space will change coming out of all this.
This week, it's a Les Claypool/Trey Anastasio bonanza as Raf and Karina talk Oysterhead's return, Trey Anastasio's surprise sit-in with Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds in Mexico and Primus' upcoming Rush tribute tour. [Recorded Feb. 18 2020, Send your messages to RafandKarina@gmail.com]
The 18th Amendment of the United States Constitution established the prohibition of alcohol in the U.S. Enforcement of the new law started on January 17, 1920. In this episode, our panelists dive into St. Louis' rich Prohibition-era history. They describe the time robbers siphoned off 3,000 barrels of whiskey from the Jack Daniels distillery, how Anheuser-Busch survived more than a decade of a nationwide ban on alcoholic beverages, and they recall the tale of a 1922 New Year’s Eve party at the Chase Hotel when an enforcement raid led to plates being thrown, shots being fired and pandemonium spilling out onto Lindell Boulevard.
Preperations for carnevale are in full swing & the parade of endless sweets: castagnole, struffoli, cookies and so much more! We finally answer your burning question, Where’s the Tractor? Which leads us into a discussion on the garden and learning how to start thousands of seeds for our tomatoes, onions,… everything! On a recent wine tasting (for research purposes only), I happily discover a nearby winery, is one of the last in Italy making vin santo in the antique way - hanging the grapes in the kitchen rafters & letting the fireplace slowly smoke & cure the grapes before they make the wine. Another chapter from the Book: This Ain't No Bathtub Gin
On this episode I talk Kanye's new album, Cereal Box sizes, Stonehenge, Chickfila in the U.K., Censorship on TV vs Streaming Services and Bathtub Gin.
Michael Waddell, better known as "The Bone Collector" in the hunting circles, joins Steve on this classic podcast. Be here as Steve and Michael talk about hunting excursions with legends such as Dale Earnhardt Sr., homemade moonshine, Michael's famous turkey calls and even some Stone Cold turkey trivia! Check out GetRoman.com/AUSTIN to receive your FREE online medical visit and FREE two-day shipping. Create a free account on BetOnline.AG and receive a 50% SIGN UP BONUS just by using the promo code PODCASTONE Save 15% or more with Geico today!
This week the Maier's discuss their weekend visit to Seattle, Washington! Topics include: summer's end, Aerosmith, meeting Ty, getting in late, Bathtub Gin, ironing, the Alibi, Portage Bay, walking in Seattle, Jays vs Mariners, a night out, meeting Chris, S.O.W., bad guitar playing and sick sexy time. Reach Us: @kmaemaier @chrismaierbc @hwywhoney hwywhoney@gmail.com
Weekend Clubbing (Cj024 Instrumentals) by Love Justin Perry & Cwspod © Copyright - Cwspod / Creative Wind Studios (193428884281) High Energy Party Dance Jams, 3 Hours, Easy DJ Mixable into Classics, Club Style, Practice Skills, Freestyle Beats, Bar / Tavern, Upbeat Mood, Background Tunes, Public Events, Social Gathering, Dancing School Material. Genre: Hip-Hop/Rap: Instrumental Hip-Hop Release Date: 2019 Download $1.99 available for download only TRACKS all songs 01. Adjunct (Instrumental) 3:30 02. Antifogmatic (Instrumental) 3:49 03. Bathtub Gin (Instrumental) 3:22 04. Blind Pig (Instrumental) 2:04 05. Blotto (Instrumental) 3:57 06. Blowout (Instrumental) 2:26 07. Bottle Conditioning (Instrumental) 5:17 08. Brett (Instrumental) 4:03 09. Brick of Wine (Instrumental) 3:34 10. Bug Juice (Instrumental) 3:53 11. Cask Beer (Instrumental) 2:54 12. Celebration (Instrumental) 3:48 13. Clean (Instrumental) 3:18 14. Dead Man (Instrumental) 3:49 15. Double (Instrumental) 3:26 16. Dry (Instrumental) 4:17 17. Dry Hopped (Instrumental) 3:57 18. Esters (Instrumental) 3:18 19. Festivity (Instrumental) 3:56 20. Fresh Hopped (Instrumental) 3:33 21. Giggle Water (Instrumental) 3:04 22. Glorious (Instrumental) 3:31 23. Gravity (Instrumental) 3:33 24. Hooch (Instrumental) 4:36 25. Hootenanny (Instrumental) 3:18 26. Ibu (Instrumental) 6:38 27. Imperial (Instrumental) 3:24 28. Jack Roller (Instrumental) 3:44 29. Jake Walk (Instrumental) 3:05 30. Jingled (Instrumental) 3:18 31. Juice Joint (Instrumental) 2:44 32. Macro Lager (Instrumental) 5:15 33. Malty (Instrumental) 4:06 34. Nippitaty (Instrumental) 2:55 35. Noble Hops (Instrumental) 4:03 36. Ombibulous (Instrumental) 2:48 37. Phenols (Instrumental) 2:51 38. Piney (Instrumental) 4:31 39. Session Beer (Instrumental) 2:50 40. Single Hopped (Instrumental) 2:59 41. Skid Road (Instrumental) 2:30 42. Skunked (Instrumental) 2:51 43. Teetotaler (Instrumental) 3:21 44. Vandyke (Instrumental) 3:49 45. Wet (Instrumental) 3:05 46. Wet Hopped (Instrumental) 3:22 47. Whale (Instrumental) 4:44 48. White Lightning 3:21 49. Wing-Ding (Instrumental) 3:51 50. Yeasty (Instrumental) 2:19
With so many Gins around, we talk to Adam Carpenter, from Australian Gin brand Prohibition Liquor Co, about their Bathtub Gin expression. We ask Carpenter to explain an overproof Gin, why it was created and in what cocktails it can be used. Additionally, we discuss Gin in South Australia, whether Australian Gin should be a category and whether consumers should buy spirits based on their awards.
In Episode 050 (Pt II) we once again take a break from exploring the various bands and artists connected to Phish's music, and instead reflect on the Phish shows we've seen that have had the biggest impact on us. These are the shows that hit us the hardest in the moment, and that we've returned to most regularly since. This week, we count down our Top 5 Favorite Phish Shows Ever. David's Top 5 Favorite Phish Shows: 05. Worcester, MA - 11/27/1998: "Chalk Dust Torture -> Mirror In The Bathroom -> Chalk Dust Torture," 04. New York City, NY - 07/25/2017: "Sample In A Jar," 03. Worcester, MA- 12/29/1995: "Bathtub Gin -> The Real Me -> Bathtub Gin," 02. Limestone, ME - 08/17/1997: "Bathtub Gin," 01. Worcester, MA- 11/28/1997: "Ghost" Brian's Top 5 Favorite Phish Shows: 05. New York City, NY - 07/30/2017: "Drowned," 04. Columbia, MD - 08/15/2015: "46 Days," 03. New York City, NY - 07/28/2017: "Chalk Dust Torture," 02. New York City, NY- 12/30/2016: "Ghost," 01. Commerce City, CO -08/31/2012: "Undermind" We're proud to partner with Ben & Jerry's to help raise awareness of The WaterWheel Foundation. As mentioned in the episode, listeners can receive free shipping on all orders over $50 using the promo code OSIRIS at checkout. Click here to order "It's Ice…Cream" and pick up a t-shirt. Do it today - the holidays are right around the corner. - - - Check us out on Spotify: Beyond The Pond Podcast Songs You can find us on Twitter: @_beyondthepond Medium: https://medium.com/beyond-the-pond Please check out the Osiris Podcast Network at: OsirisPod.com // Go to Relix.com to learn more about Osiris, our sister podcasts, & upcoming events! Please leave us a review on iTunes! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Hey everyone, Welcome to episode 50! Today we've decided to talk about one drink in particular, the Winter Bathtub Gin by New World Distilleries. It's something we've been eager to try since we saw it a few weeks ago, and we thought we'd tell you all about it! Thanks for listening! This episode, we're drinking Winter Bathtub Gin from Starward. Facebook: www.facebook.com/agooddroppodcast Email: agooddrop@gmail.com Website: www.agooddrop.com.au
We have a special episode this week, talking with Will Urquhart about the Trey solo acoustic tour that just wrapped up. We also play Will's recording from the Trey show at the Sixth & I Historic Synagogue in Washington, DC on Valentine's Day (setlist below).Will is with DC Music Review and leads the DC Scene-in-Review Podcast.For everyone who was entertained by all of Trey's banter and stories, you'll like this Jambase compilation of all the stories from the tour.We're happy to say that HF Pod is part of the Osiris podcasting family. Osiris is a growing community of music and culture podcasts, connecting music fans with conversation, commentary and music. Osiris works in partnership with Relix, check them out for music news and information.Get in touch with us on Twitter, Facebook or email (helpingfriendlypodcast at gmail dot com), and if you haven't yet, give us a review us on iTunes. Thanks, have a great week.--Trey Anastasio, Sixth & I, Washington, DCAC/DC Bag, The Man Who Stepped Into Yesterday > Avenu Malkenu, Water in the Sky, Theme From the Bottom, Wolfman's Brother, Everything's Right, Miss You, Back on the Train, The Inlaw Josie Wales, Strange Design, Blaze On, Tide Turns, Sand, The Curtain, Farmhouse > Pigtail > Bathtub Gin, Waste, Show of Life, WilsonE: Brian and Robert, Bouncing Around the Room, More See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 025 - December 2017 Set 2Bathtub Gin (1998-07-29) David Bowie (1994-12-29) Crosseyed and Painless (2003-07-29) You Enjoy Myself (1997-11-17) Run Like an Antelope (1995-10-24)
On this episode, we finish our conversation with Wally Holland on turning point jams in Phish's career. We also talk Sci-Fi novels, confined spaces, and whether Lawn Boy even matters. Here is the full list of jams we discussed with Wally: 8/13/93 - Bathtub Gin 5/7/94 - Tweezer 11/2/94 - Tweezer 12/29/94 - David Bowie 6/14/95 - Tweezer 11/2/96 - Crosseyed and Painless 8/17/97 - Art Jam 11/14/97 - Twist 12/31/99 - 2001 2/28/03 - Tweezer 11/28/09 - Seven Below > Ghost 7/3/11 - Storage Jam 8/31/12 - Undermind 7/31/13 - Tweezer 7/25/17 - Lawn Boy Got 2 minutes? Review us on iTunes. And if you love the podcast and want to hear more, check out HF Pod Plus. Lastly, if you want an HF Pod t-shirt, we have men's and women's here. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week we are joined by a return guest, Wally Holland, who helps us run through what we're calling "turning points" in Phish history. This is a two-part episode, because obviously, there are lots of turning points in the history of the band. The idea for this episode started with a Twitter conversation, sparked by yet again another listen to the Baker's Dozen Lawn Boy. We talk about many turning points—let us know what you think, we're eager to hear what you would have included. And join us next week for part 2, as we pick up from 1997 through the present. Got 2 minutes? Review us on iTunes. And if you love the podcast and want to hear more, check out HF Pod Plus. Lastly, if you want an HF Pod t-shirt, we have men's and women's here. -- 8/13/93 Bathtub Gin 5/7/94 Tweezer > Sparks > Makisupa > DDL Jam > Sweet Emotion Jam > Walk Away 11/2/94 Tweezer 12/29/94 Bowie 6/14/95 Tweezer 11/2/96 Crosseyed 8/17/97 2001 > Art Jam > Hood See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week, we're diverging from Baker's Dozen listening and analysis to look back at a summer show from 1996. We play the first set of 8.10.96, which was Phish's first show at the storied Alpine Valley, as well as a couple tracks from set 2. The details of the set are below. During this episode, we mentioned that we covered 8.6.96 in episode 8. If you want to go back and check that out, you can find it here. We had a blast doing the Baker's Dozen Quick Hits as well as the live event in New York. We'll be back with Quick Hits this weekend from the Dick's shows, and we hope that we can do another live event over the holidays if they do indeed pull the trigger on a New Year's MSG run. If you can, review us on iTunes, and support HF Pod Plus. Thank you. -- Phish, 8.10.96, Alpine Valley Music Theater, East Troy, WI Set 1: My Friend, My Friend, Poor Heart > AC/DC Bag > Fee > Reba, I Didn't Know, The Horse > Silent in the Morning, Rift > Bathtub Gin, Cavern Intro Music: Phish, Whipping Post, 8.10.96 Outro Music: Harry Hood > A Day In The Life, 8.10.96 Photo from Golgi Project See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 010 - May 2017 Set 1Tweezer[1]-> (1999-07-10)Mountains In The Mist[1] (1999-07-10)Makisupa Policeman[1]-> (1997-08-11)Maze (1997-08-11)McGrupp and the Watchful Hosemasters[1]-> (1994-04-30)Possum (1994-04-30)Reba (1994-05-28)Timber (Jerry)[1] (1997-11-28)Limb By Limb (1997-11-28)Bathtub Gin-> (1994-05-20)Fast Enough For You (1994-05-20)Martian Monster[1] (2014-12-31)[1] Phish Phantasy Debut
Welcome back to Beyond The Pond! Hosted by Brian Brinkman and David Goldstein, our goal is to use the music of Phish to introduce you, the listener, to a diverse assortment of music. Through the medium of great Phish jams, we’re going to dive into music history, draw parallels with a wide range of genres, and discuss some of our favorite bands & albums. We hope you dig it! Episode 003 focuses on the 07/29/1998 Bathtub Gin from the Riverport Ampitheatre in Maryland Heights, MO. The show's opener, this is one of the most popular Phish jams of all time, and one of the best examples of Phish's foray into Funk music from 1996-1998. Songs selected for this episode are: The Meters: "Live Wire," Orgone: "Sabi," 5ive Style: "Pledge Drive," Thundercat: "Oh Sheit It's X," and St. Vincent: "Digital Witness." In addition, we discuss two new 2017 albums we highly recommend: Jamiroquai "Automaton," and Ne-Hi "Offers." Check us out on Spotify: Beyond The Pond Podcast Playlist You can find us on Twitter: @_beyondthepond, Medium: https://medium.com/beyond-the-pond, and/or send us an email: beyondthepondpodcast@gmail.com. Please leave us a review on iTunes! Finally, we want to give thanks to three fantastic Podcasts who have helped us immensely in getting up & running: Check out the Helping Friendly Podcast for ALL things Phish, Under The Scales for fantastic interviews with key members of the larger Phish community, and Brokedown Podcast for an inventive approach to curating Grateful Dead history. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 003 - February 2017 Set 1Punch You In The Eye (1999-07-09)Back on the Train (2003-02-28)Beauty of My Dreams (2000-07-01)Roggae (1999-07-10)Bathtub Gin (1996-08-16)Ocelot (2009-06-16)Limb By Limb (1997-08-03)46 Days (2009-11-18)555 (2013-10-31)Bittersweet Motel (1998-08-07)Run Like An Antelope (1999-12-02)Birds of a Feather (2014-11-01)Funky Bitch (1998-07-28)
Thanks for tuning in this week! We made it to episode 100, so we decided to take this time to reflect back on the first 99 episodes and talk about some notable conversations, the lessons we've learned, and how much this podcast means to all 3 of us. We also want to reiterate how thankful we are to all of our listeners for your support, ideas, feedback and enthusiasm. We'll keep going as long as you keep listening. Of course, we also play some music. We each chose a track that we wanted to keep revisiting and share it with you (Brad, being Brad, chose 2. He's a lawyer, so we can't argue with him.) Please subscribe and review us on iTunes and follow us on Twitter. Also like us on Facebook. And check out CashorTrade for face value tickets to shows across the country. If you are on Stitcher, give us a review. -- Bathtub Gin, 2.22.03 Undermind, 8.31.12 Reba, 6.19.95 David Bowie, 12.29.94 Intro/Outro Music: Santana, A-1 Funk See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Glenn Fleishman returns to the show. Topics include indoor plumbing, a spoiler-free discussion about HBO’s excellent “Westworld”, our favorite beverages, Apple’s AirPods launch debacle, Apple TV single sign-on, and more.
This week, it's just us, and we are sharing the tour opener from Summer 1999. This show is from Sandstone Amphitheater (details below), and there are a lot of gems in here. We're trying something a little different—instead of discussing the show in detail after we play the music, we have a shorter discussion up front, and then just leave you to the music. Let us know what you think! And here's the picture of Brad's shirt that we mentioned. It was scary. The music starts at just about 18 minutes. And please review us on iTunes, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. -- Phish, 6.30.99, Sandstone Amphitheater, Bonner Springs, KS Set 1: Bathtub Gin, Farmhouse, Tube, Horn, Back on the Train, Maze, Limb By Limb , Golgi Apparatus Set 2: The Squirming Coil > Free , Birds of a Feather > Simple > Swept Away > Steep > Piper, Bug -> My Left Toe, Stash E: Bouncing Around the Room, Sample in a Jar -- Intro Music: My Bloody Valentine, I Only Said See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
BBC Good Food Show Summer & Gardeners' World Live - The NEC Birmingham 16 - 19 June 2016
Dan Crother from Ampleforths in Kent on how they infuse rather than distil their Bathtub gin.
Roberta Donnay looks like she just walked out of the Great Gatsby. She doesn't just look the part, she lives it. Roberta is a Jazz Age preservationist, guardian of Depression-era sounds, and extender of traditions. On her album Bathtub Gin, this singer-composer contributes originals in the spirit of the '20s and '30. On this album, which she co-produced and co-arranged with Sam Bevan, Roberta imbues classic songs with a contemporary verve while also managing to capture the spirit of her musical predecessors and an emerging America. Honoring the tradition of such seminal singers as Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Sippie Wallace, Louis Armstrong, Ethel Waters, Billie Holiday and Josephine Baker. Especially well-known in the Bay Area, where she lives, Roberta was originally produced by the late Orrin Keepnews. She has toured the country with her guitar, and has performed live and in recordings with the late Dan Hicks. Roberta has also appeared with Ernestine Anderson, Booker T, Junior Brown, Tommy Castro, Peter Coyote, David Grisman, Bob Dorough, Woody Harrelson, Johnny Lange, Huey Lewis, Eddie Money, Maria Muldaur, Joe Sample, Lenny Williams, Mitch Woods,and Neil Young. Roberta has won awards including being listed in DownBeat Magazine's Top 50 Albums of 2015. Learn more about Roberta at www.robertadonnay.com. Follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/robertadonnay Her album, Bathtub Gin, is available here: http://www.amazon.com/Bathtub-Roberta-Donnay-Prohibition-Band/dp/B00QKMCT2O
#10 - Bathtub Gin's Matt James, Chef Keller's Fading Stars, Batalli's Legal Trouble IOW: Sunchokes by The Soundcasting Network
January 11, 2016 - In this episode, we're going to Charleston our way back to the Manhattan of our theme song, New York Ain't New York Anymore. Yes, it's the Jazz Age of speakeasies and Prohibition -- and our tour guide is none other than the Theater Districts most famous resident ghost, sighted from time to time in the New Amsterdam Theater. Our guest, author Laini Giles, has written our ticket to one of Hollywood Land's very first scandal in The Forgotten Flapper: A Novel of Olive Thomas. You may not know Olive's name today, but a hundred years ago she was one of the loveliest girls who ever lit up the Ziegfeld Follies or the silent screen. Laini Giles' previous novel is Love Lies Bleeding. You can follow her on Twitter @4GottenFlapper and visit her online at LainiGiles.com. Laini is also happy to share some other Jazz Age books in this episode. They are Loving Frank, by Nancy Horan. Hollywood Babylon, by Kenneth Anger. Bobbed Hair and Bathtub Gin, by Marion Meade.
Well, that was a fun run of shows from MSG in New York last week. This week we're bringing you some highlights from all 4 nights of the 2015-2016 New Year's run. We have an intro discussion, and then we get into a bunch of great music. Instead of going chronologically with the musical highlights, we put together some songs from each night that we feel flow pretty well. The chapters and track listing are below. We thank you for listening, and encourage you to send any feedback that you might have for us. And as always, we ask you to follow us on Twitter and review us on iTunes. And check out Cash or Trade for face value tickets. Chapter 1 0:00 MSG New Year's Run Discussion Chapter 2 39:11 MSG New Year's Run Tracks (details below) Chalk Dust Torture (12/30) Undermind (1/1) Roggae (12/30) Bathtub Gin (12/30) Reba (12/31) Twist (12/31) No Man In No Man's Land > Auld Lang Syne > Blaze On (12/31) Theme from the Bottom > Light (1/1) Tweezer (1/2) Weekapaug Groove > What's the Use? > Weekapaug Groove (12/30) Intro Music: Ryan Adams, Welcome to New York See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It’s been 20 years, folks, since the epic Fall 1995 tour. Everything changed for Phish in 1995 (as it did again in ’97, ’99, ’04, ’13 and ’15). But this signaled the beginning of a new era—bigger venues, bigger crowds, bigger expectations. And during this tour, Phish did what they do best. They delivered. Our friends Wade and Josh joined us for this equally epic 3-part episode, where we played and discussed some of the highlights from this Fall 1995 tour. In contrast to the Summer 1995 tour, these jams have an incredible level of focus and clarity. But they’re not jams to be taken lightly. They’re dense, heady. As Wade says, listening to Fall 1995 “is not a spectator sport.” Hope you’re geared up. The details for all 3 parts are below. As always, we ask you to follow us on Twitter and review us on iTunes. And check out Cash or Trade for face value tickets. Part 3 Chapters Chapter 1 0:00 Fall '95 Highlights Chapter 2 1:51:41 Music Discussion Part 3 Tracks Halley's Comet -> NICU -> Slave to the Traffic Light, 12.14.95 Tweezer, 12.28.95 Bathtub Gin -> The Real Me -> Bathtub Gin, 12.29.95 Harry Hood, 12.30.95 Runaway Jim, 12.31.95 Intro/Outro music: LCD Soundsystem, Losing My Edge See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It’s been 20 years, folks, since the epic Fall 1995 tour. Everything changed for Phish in 1995 (as it did again in ’97, ’99, ’04, ’13 and ’15). But this signaled the beginning of a new era—bigger venues, bigger crowds, bigger expectations. And during this tour, Phish did what they do best. They delivered. Our friends Wade and Josh join us for this equally epic 3-part episode, where we play and discuss some of the highlights from this Fall 1995 tour. In contrast to the Summer 1995 tour, these jams have an incredible level of focus and clarity. But they’re not jams to be taken lightly. They’re dense, heady. As Wade says, listening to Fall 1995 “is not a spectator sport.” Hope you’re geared up. We’ll have Part 1 this week, and Parts 2 and 3 over the next 2 weeks. Chapters and track listing for Part 1 are below. As always, we ask you to follow us on Twitter and review us on iTunes. And check out Cash or Trade for face value tickets. Part 1 Chapters Chapter 1 0:00 Intro Discussion Chapter 2 10:36 Fall 95 Highlights Chapter 3 2:14:30 Music Discussion Part 1 Tracks Split Open & Melt, 10.7.95 Run Like An Antelope, 10.24.95 Reba, 10.25.95 Mike's Song -> Breathe Jam, 10.25.95 David Bowie, 10.27.95 Bathtub Gin, 11.9.95 Mike's Song, 11.15.95 Intro/Outro music: LCD Soundsystem, Losing My Edge See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week our guest is George (@McGrupp_), who joins us to discuss Summer Tour and to share his "Just the Jams" mix—2 hours of musical excerpts from this past tour. This is a very well-edited, smooth-flowing mix, and you often can't tell when one jam starts and another begins. Great work by George, and definitely worth checking out. The track list is below (the music starts around 36 minutes). Please review us on iTunes and follow us on Twitter. And check out CashorTrade.org for face value tickets to shows across the country. If you are on Stitcher, give us a review! Start - 5:07 - Llama - 8/14/15 Raleigh, NC 5:07 - 12:35 - Mike's Song - 8/4/15 Nashville, TN 12:35 - 19:45 - Piper - 8/15/15 Columbia, MD 19:45 - 36:03 - Tweezer - 8/1/15 Atlanta, GA 36:03 - 40:52 - Chalk Dust Torture - 8/7/15 Blossom, OH 40:52 - 50:40 - Prince Caspian - 8/22/15 Watkins Glen, NY 50:40 - 54:44 - Martian Monster - 8/11/15 Philly, PA 54:44 - 1:04:54 - 46 Days - 8/15/15 Columbia, MD 1:04:54 - 1:11:28 - Simple - 7/22/15 Bend, OR 1:11:28 - 1:22:13 - Kill Devil Falls - 7/31/15 Atlanta, GA 1:22:13 - 1:37:11 - Bathtub Gin - 8/21/15 Watkins Glen, NY 1:37:11 - 1:49:35 - Twist - 7/24/15 Shoreline, CA 1:49:35 - 1:57:00 - Golden Age - 9/4/15 Commerce City, CO 1:57:00 - 1:59:41 - Sneakin' Sally - 8/16/15 Columbia, MD 1:59:41 - 2:05:22 - Cities - 8/12/15 Philly, PA 2:05:22 - End - 2001 - 8/11/15 Philly, PA Intro/Outro Music: The Libertines, What Katie Did See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week we are joined by the great The Vic, who brought us back to a great show from the impressive Chicago run from 1998. We're going to play and discuss the last show of that run, 11.9.98. Phish has played some great shows at UIC Pavilion, including the "Elements" set from 2011 and the wonderful 6.18.94 show. This episode contains Set 2. Chapter markers below. And please review us on iTunes and send comments and feedback to helpingfriendlypodcast at gmail dot com, and follow us on Twitter. And check out CashorTrade.org for face value tickets to shows across the country. If you are on Stitcher, give us a review! Chapter 1 0:00 Intro & Set 2 Phish 11.9.98 Chapter 2 1:31:15 Set 2 Breakdown -- Phish 11.9.98, UIC Pavilion, Chicago, IL Set 2: Bathtub Gin, The Man Who Stepped Into Yesterday > Avenu Malkenu > The Man Who Stepped Into Yesterday > The Moma Dance > Slave to the Traffic Light > You Enjoy Myself Encore: Frankenstein, Free Bird See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week we are joined by our friend and guest host Jonathan, who brought us back to a wonderful show from 1989, from "Ian's House" (or "Ian's Party" at someone else's house). Either way, Ian was awesome. This show is historic, fun, and filled with really excellent playing. Trey's tone and precision in playing is just crisp, clear and on point, and as Jonathan pointed out, this is among the finest banter you'll ever hear in a Phish show. Very entertaining listen. But even more than entertaining, it's a reminder of how musically mature Phish was even by 1989—26 years ago. A great sounding show, taboot (taboot). This is part 2 of this episode. Here's Charlie Dirksen's review of the YEM. We mentioned Matt Burnham's Phish Hall of Fame voting project, check it out! And please review us on iTunes and send comments and feedback to helpingfriendlypodcast at gmail dot com, and follow us on Twitter. And check out CashorTrade.org for face value tickets to shows across the country. If you are on Stitcher, give us a review! Chapter 1 0:00 Sets 2 & 3 Phish 5.28.89 Chapter 2 2:44:08 Sets 2 & 3 Breakdown -- Phish 5.28.89, "Ian's House", Hebron, NY Set 2: Fire, Mike's Song > I Am Hydrogen > Weekapaug Groove, Bathtub Gin, Sanity, Ride Captain Ride, Peaches en Regalia, Take the 'A' Train, Possum, Contact, Funky (Breakdown) -> The Price of Love, Funky Bitch, Split Open and Melt, The Mango Song, Harry Hood Set 3: Jam -> La Grange Jam, The Sloth, Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley > Ya Mar, Jesus Just Left Chicago See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week we have a long overdue guest, CJ, who is a longtime fan of the podcast and Mainer exiled in London. But we'll have him back for this Summer Tour, which we discuss on this show, along with lots of other things. The timing of this pick was stellar -- we'll be discussing and listening to the first day of the first Phish festival, the Clifford Ball, from 1996. This discussion comes just days after the latest festival announcement, Magnaball, coming in August 2015. Set 1 this week, chapter markers below. And please review us on iTunes and send comments and feedback to helpingfriendlypodcast at gmail dot com, and follow us on Twitter. And check out CashorTrade.org for face value tickets to shows across the country. If you are on Stitcher, give us a review! Chapter 1 0:00 Chat w/CJ Chapter 2 27:38 Phish 8.16.96 Set 1 Chapter 3 1:50:03 Set 1 Breakdown -- Phish 8.16.96, The Clifford Ball, Plattsburgh, NY Set 1: Chalk Dust Torture, Bathtub Gin, Ya Mar, AC/DC Bag > Esther > Divided Sky, Halley's Comet > David Bowie See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week we have Adam Menzo joining us, who picked a show that was his first and is near and dear to our hearts, 12.6.97 from The Palace. All 3 of us were lucky enough to have been there, and this show still ranks as one of the best in Phish history. New Experiment! We're trying something different this week. Instead of including the show audio in the podcast, we're going to point you to a few places where you can hear it (links below). Because there are so many ways to listen to shows these days, we wanted to save some bandwidth/file size and deliver the guest conversation while letting you listen to the music in whatever way works for you. Chapters below. Listen to 12.6.97 on PhishTracks, Phish On Demand App or Live Phish. Please please send us feedback about this experiment and let us know what you think. Chapter 1 0:00 Intro Chat w/Adam Chapter 2 26:46 Set 1 Breakdown Chapter 3 33:41 Set 2 Breakdown & Wrap Up -- Phish, 12.6.97, The Palace, Auburn Hills, MI Set 1: Golgi Apparatus, Run Like an Antelope, Train Song > Bathtub Gin -> Foam, Sample in a Jar, Fee > Maze, Cavern Set 2: Tweezer -> Izabella -> Twist -> Piper, Sleeping Monkey > Tweezer Reprise Encore: Rocky Top See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
For Episode 30, we wanted to celebrate the announcement of Summer Tour dates by playing and discussing one of our first Summer Phish shows—8.10.97, from Noblesville, IN, at the venue we'll always know as Deer Creek. The setlist is at the bottom of the page, and the chapter markers are below. Please review us on iTunes, and send comments and feedback to helpingfriendlypodcast at gmail dot com, and follow us on Twitter @hfpod. And check out CashorTrade.org for face value tickets to shows across the country. Chapter 1 0:00-8:56 Intro Chat Chapter 2 8:57-1:34:20 Set 1 Phish 8.10.97 Chapter 3 1:34:20-1:42:03 Set 1 Breakdown Chapter 4 1:42:04-2:58:39 Set 2 Phish 8.10.97 Chapter 5 2:58:40-End Set 2 Breakdown -- Phish 8.10.97, Deer Creek Music Center, Noblesville, IN Set 1: Bathtub Gin -> Sparkle > Down with Disease > Dirt, Cars Trucks Buses, Billy Breathes, Split Open and Melt, Bye Bye Foot > Ginseng Sullivan, Harry Hood Set 2: Cities -> Good Times Bad Times -> Rotation Jam -> Rock A William -> David Bowie E: Cavern See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week we have another guest pick—this one is from Rob Mitchum (@robmitchum & @phishcrit), 4.24.94 from Charlotte, NC. The setlist is below, and visit http://hfpod.blogspot.com/ for more information. Below are the chapter markers for this episode, for your reference (you should be able to skip chapters on most podcast apps/devices, please let us know if it doesn't work for you): Chapter 1 0:00-40:39 Conversation with Rob Mitchum Chapter 2 40:39-1:43:31 Set 1 Phish 4.24.94 Chapter 3 1:43:31-2:04:05 Set 1 Breakdown Chapter 4 2:04:05-3:22:30 Set 2 Phish 4.24.94 Chapter 5 3:22:30-End Set 2 Breakdown Please take a moment and review us on iTunes! -- Phish 4.24.94, Grady Cole Center, Charlotte, NC Set 1: My Friend, My Friend, Ya Mar, Axilla (Part II) > Maze, Bathtub Gin -> Jump Monk -> Bathtub Gin > Dog Faced Boy, Paul and Silas > It's Ice > Slave to the Traffic Light Set 2: Demand > David Bowie, The Mango Song > Julius, Colonel Forbin's Ascent > Fly Famous Mockingbird, Chalk Dust Torture, Contact, Good Times Bad Times E: Sweet Adeline See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving. This week we have another guest pick, this time from our friend Scott. We had a great conversation, and we discussed and played Phish 11.16.91, from Washington, DC. The show's setlist is below, and visit http://hfpod.blogspot.com/ for our Listener Notes and for more information. One quick appeal: Please review us on iTunes! -- Phish 11.16.91, The Bayou, Washington, DC Set 1: The Landlady, Uncle Pen, Wilson > Runaway Jim, It's Ice > Sparkle > Fluffhead, Foam, Stash, Ya Mar, Cavern Set 2: Tube > My Sweet One > Bathtub Gin, Brother, You Enjoy Myself, Horn > Chalk Dust Torture, Hold Your Head Up > Terrapin > Hold Your Head Up, Llama E: Glide, Rocky Top See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.