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Tim Rutili from Califone is an artist, filmmaker and musician who has been making experimental indie rock for well over three decades, including as a founding member of Red Red Meat and Califone. He joins the Club to discuss the 1972 classic "Exile on Main St" by the Rolling Stones.
Our latest episode includes a fount of ideas and information that range from interesting and entertaining (like attending a house concert) to borderline apocalyptic (like newly introduced, widely available, simple to use, and highly sophisticated image management software that allows realistic fakes). We try to keep our heads on straight by also discussing what we are watching and enjoying, as well as providing a taste of the nefarious powers of big banks in Canada. All in all it's 40 minutes that should leave you with things light and things heavy to think about.Links: Shed Dogs; Undertow Shows (house concerts); All My Friends are Funeral Singers, by Califone; Google's scary new Reimagine feature; Gemini AI; how Canadian banks create money; The Double; Creating Christ; Krishnamurti documentary; A Trip to Infinity; One Day; plastic surgery in Korea; K-drama clowns; Emily in Paris.Theme music is Escaping like Indiana Jones by Komiku, with permission.
Ospitiamo in studio Tim Rutili nel giorno del live dei Califone a Milano, e con lui parliamo di musica ma anche tanto della situazione politico sociale degli stati uniti nell'immediatezza dei risultati elettorali.
In episode #38 of LLR, we explore and celebrate the deep discographies of some of our favorite artists. We'll revisit surprisingly solid solo efforts, sensational side projects, and often overlooked, audacious LP releases from way-back-when, which gave listeners a taste of the sonic greatness to come. Plug your noses and blow it out your ears, Podcast America…we're about to dive deep! Sonic contributors to episode thirty-eight of Lightnin' Licks Radio podcast include: Derrick Harriott, Brothers Johnson, Holland-Dozier-Holland, Townes Van Zandt, James Todd Smith, George Gershwin & Michael Sweeney, Johnny Marr, The Smiths, Thin Lizzy, Ace Frehly, M. Ward, Bright Eyes, Monsters of Folk, Rose Royce, Jim Croce, Better Oblivion Community Center, Jim James, Desaparecidos, Modest Mouse, Califone, Ugly Casanova, Kids Bop kids (yeah!), Daryl Hall and John Oates, Dan the Automator, Gulliver, Tim Moore, Bay City Rollers, Adrianne Lenker, Buck Meek, Big Thief, Billy Bob Thorton, Phill Collins, James Taylor, Jackson Browne, Leland Sklar, Russ Kunkel, Kootch, Carol King, The City, Judee Sill, The Byrds, Dillard & Clark, Gram Parsons, Gene Clark, President Joe Biden, The Cars, Ric Ocasek, Ministry, Digable Planets, Beastie Boys, Shabazz Palaces, Latin Playboys, Los Lobos, Chris Keys, and the Clockers. LLR mixtape #38: [SIDE ONE] (1) Shabazz Palaces - #CAKE (2) Latin Playboys - Crayon Sun (3) Gene Clark - Strength of Strings (4) Desaparecidos - City on the Hill (5) Adrianne Lenker & Buck Meek - money [SIDE TWO] (1) Gulliver - Lemon Road (2) Ugly Casanova - Hotcha Girls (3) The City - Paradise Alley (4) Monsters of Folk - Losin' Yo Head Ric Ocasek - Time Bomb Thanks so much for tuning in. LLR will return in a few weeks with another bonus episode featuring a super-special-secret guest. Do your best to stay hydrated and practice selfcare. Making your way in the world today takes everything you've got. Taking a break from all your worries sure would help a lot. Wouldn't you like to get away? Why ask why? Try Blue Chair Bay flavored rums and head outside, let the sun hit you. Stream, rent, or buy the excellent documentary The Immediate Family, it's Kootch approved!
Eric D Johnson is a singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, producer and film composer based in Los Angeles. He is the founding member of Fruit Bats, has played with indie luminaries Califone, Vetiver, The Shins and is a contributing member of Bonny Light Horsemen. In Part 1 of a rare two-part episode, Eric shares a few stories from the road, spanning from his early tenure in Califone (opening for Modest Mouse), his interaction with a MTV beach party, to a more recent experience of jamming with Bob Weir in a small club. Old pals Joe and Eric laugh, they almost cry, and we hear a great live version of a Fruit Bats song. And this is only Part 1. Fruit Bats Episode supported by Distrokid Episode supported by Izotope Episode supported by Thunder Road Guitars
This week, vocalist/songwriter...etc Michael Wiener (The Children...) brings us Chicago's Red Red Meat and their 1993 Sub Pop release 'Jimmywine Majestic'. With singer/songwriter Tim Rutili's - later of Califone - impressionistic lyrics and the band's fuzzed-out bluesy swagger, it's a dark, menacing ride indeed. Songs discussed in this episode: Smokey Mtn Dbl Dip - Red Red Meat (Live 1994 Davenport, IA); God Is A Bereaved, Smothered My Traces - The Children...; Funeral Singers - Califone; Glynis - Smashing Pumpkins; Flank, Stained & Lit - Red Red Meat; Mayonaise - Smashing pumpkins; Braindead, Smokey Mtn Dbl Dip - Red Red Meat; Sitting Still - R.E.M.; Moon Calf Tripe - Red Red Meat; Stull Pt 1 - Urge Overkill; Cillamange, Ball, Lather, Rusted Water, Gorshin, Dowser, Comes, Roses - Red Red Meat; Smothered My Traces - The Children...
Califone stops by i4h for three incredible performances followed by improv scenes featuring Eugene Cordero and Brian Huskey.Unlock the bonus scene by subscribing at improv4humans.com. Only $4 a month gets you the entire ad-free archive of i4h as well as exclusive weekly bonus podcasts further exploring the craft of improv.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
MIXTAPE AVAILABLE NOW ON MIXCLOUD & SOUNDCLOUD Moving forward, but not before we take a look back. 2023 was another wonderful year in music. Lickers Jay and Deon ring in the New Year by each revealing their top 11 (we go to eleven) vinyl long players in the year of Our Lord twenty twenty-three. Break out the champagne and Blue Chair Bay, this episode is a journey. DEON'S TOP 11: 11 - Durand Jones – Wait Til I Get Over 10 – Unknown Mortal Orchestra - V 9 – Dinner Party – Enigmatic Society 8 – Open Mike Eagle – Another Triumph of Ghetto Engineering 7 – Black Belt Eagle Scout - The Land, The Water, The Sky 6 – Young Fathers – Heavy Heavy 5 – Hannah Jadagu - Aperture 4 - Sufjan Stevens -Javelin 3 – Say She She - Silver 2 - Sweeping Promises – Good Living is Coming For You 1 – Califone - Villagers JAY'S TOP 11: 11 – Maple Glider – I Get Into Trouble 10 – Blur – The Ballad of Darren 9 – Film School - Field 8 – Squirrel Flower – Tomorrow's Fire 7 – Cowboy Junkies – Such Ferocious Beauty 6 – Mint Field – Aprender a Ser 5 – The Polyphonic Spree – Salvage Enterprise 4 – Lael Neale – Star Eaters Delight 3 - Sleaford Mods -UK Grim 2 – Olivia Rodrigo - GUTS 1 – Liquid Mike – s/t __ Sonic contributions to episode thirty-four of Lightnin' Licks Radio podcast, 2023's year in review and its supplementary mixtape, include: Lee Moses, Brothers Johnson, Holland-Dozier-Holland, James Todd Smith, Harry Shearer, Rob Reiner, DJ Shadow, De La Soul, Dhanji, Rahsla, Anthony Fantano, Jim DeRogatis, Greg Kot, Herb Honeysuckle, Durand Jones, The Indications, Macho Man Randy Savage, Aziz Ansari, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Maple Glider, Blur, The Beatles, Dinner Party, Retta, Open Mike Eagle, The Roots, Hall and Oates, Young Zee, Wu Tang Clan, Film School, Squirrel Flower, Black Belt Eagle Scout, Young Fathers, Velvet Underground, Cowboy Junkies, Mint Field, Hannah Jadagu, Sufjan Stevens, The Polyphonic Spree, Lael Neale, Chic, Say She She, Sweeping Promises, The Go-Go's, The B-52's, Sleaford Mods, Pet Shop Boys, Jane's Addiction, Nirvana, Olivia Rodrigo, Ugly Casanova, Red Red Meat, Califone, Liquid Mike, Cory Hanson, Scarface, Isaac Hayes, Jack Van Impe, and Marvin Gaye. Music heals us. Happy listening in 2024. To receive a downloadable or physical copy of the mixtape, contact us. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/llradio/message
Esta semana, en Islas de Robinson, suenan: WILCO - "SOLDIER CHILD" ("COUSIN", 2023) / DEVENDRA BANHART - "MAY" ("FLYIN' WIG", 2023) / CATE LE BON - "TYPICAL LOVE" (2022) / H. HAWKLINE - "SUPRESSION STREET" ("MILK FOR FLOWERS", 2023) / WESTERMAN - "CSI PETRALONA" ("AN INBUILT FAULT", 2023) / MODERN NATURE - "ENSÕ" ("NO FIXED POINT IN SPACE", 2023) / BLONDE REDHEAD - "REST OF HER LIFE" ("SIT DOWN FOR DINNER", 2023) / BLAKE MILLS - "BREAKTHROUGH MOON" ("JELLY ROAD", 2023) / FEIST - "BECOME THE EARTH" ("MULTITUDES", 2023) / JONATHAN WILSON - "OL' FATHER TIME" ("EAT THE WORM", 2023) / CALIFONE - "COMEDY" ("VILLAGERS", 2023) / JOHN SOUTHWORTH - "ALWAYS ON THE RIVER" ("WHEN YOU'RE THIS, THIS IN LOVE", 2023) / Escuchar audio
In The Heart of It All (Melville House, 2023), Christian Kiefer imagines a group of factory workers and their families living in a once vibrant Ohio town during the Trump era. The factory is the only place to work outside of Walmart, the grocery store, or a fast-food chain, and it's owned by Mr. Marwat, a Pakistani man whose wife helps in the office, while their teenagers embrace American life. The family is upended when Mr. Marwat's parents move in. The factory foreman, Tom Bailey, and his family's lives are upended when their sick baby dies. Their daughter Janey's life is upended when she befriends the only Black young man in the town. Mr. Marwat's secretary Mary Lou's life is upended when her mother moves into a nursing home and dies. All of their struggles are exacerbated by small injustices but eased by small kindnesses in this sweet and thoughtful glimpse into the lives of people just trying to get by. CHRISTIAN KIEFER's novels have appeared on best of the year lists from Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, and Booklist and have received rave reviews in The Washington Post, Oprah.com, the San Francisco Chronicle, Brooklyn Rain, Library Journal, Huffington Post, and elsewhere. He is the author of the novels The Infinite Tides, The Animals, Phantoms, and the novella One Day Soon Time Will Have No Place Left to Hide. Christian is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize for his short fiction and has enjoyed a long second career in music, under the auspices of which he has collaborated with members of Smog, Pedro the Lion, DNA, 7 Seconds, John Zorn's Naked City, Sun Kil Moon, Boxhead Ensemble, Califone, Cake, Kronos Quartet, Wilco, Low, Fun, Anathallo, and The Band, among many others. He holds a Ph.D. in American literature from the University of California at Davis and has served as contributing editor for Zyzzyva, fiction reader for VQR, and as the West Coast editor for The Paris Review. He teaches at American River College in Sacramento and is the Director of the Ashland University MFA. G.P. Gottlieb is the author of the Whipped and Sipped Mystery Series and a prolific baker of healthful breads and pastries. Please contact her through her website (GPGottlieb.com). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
In The Heart of It All (Melville House, 2023), Christian Kiefer imagines a group of factory workers and their families living in a once vibrant Ohio town during the Trump era. The factory is the only place to work outside of Walmart, the grocery store, or a fast-food chain, and it's owned by Mr. Marwat, a Pakistani man whose wife helps in the office, while their teenagers embrace American life. The family is upended when Mr. Marwat's parents move in. The factory foreman, Tom Bailey, and his family's lives are upended when their sick baby dies. Their daughter Janey's life is upended when she befriends the only Black young man in the town. Mr. Marwat's secretary Mary Lou's life is upended when her mother moves into a nursing home and dies. All of their struggles are exacerbated by small injustices but eased by small kindnesses in this sweet and thoughtful glimpse into the lives of people just trying to get by. CHRISTIAN KIEFER's novels have appeared on best of the year lists from Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, and Booklist and have received rave reviews in The Washington Post, Oprah.com, the San Francisco Chronicle, Brooklyn Rain, Library Journal, Huffington Post, and elsewhere. He is the author of the novels The Infinite Tides, The Animals, Phantoms, and the novella One Day Soon Time Will Have No Place Left to Hide. Christian is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize for his short fiction and has enjoyed a long second career in music, under the auspices of which he has collaborated with members of Smog, Pedro the Lion, DNA, 7 Seconds, John Zorn's Naked City, Sun Kil Moon, Boxhead Ensemble, Califone, Cake, Kronos Quartet, Wilco, Low, Fun, Anathallo, and The Band, among many others. He holds a Ph.D. in American literature from the University of California at Davis and has served as contributing editor for Zyzzyva, fiction reader for VQR, and as the West Coast editor for The Paris Review. He teaches at American River College in Sacramento and is the Director of the Ashland University MFA. G.P. Gottlieb is the author of the Whipped and Sipped Mystery Series and a prolific baker of healthful breads and pastries. Please contact her through her website (GPGottlieb.com). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literature
In The Heart of It All (Melville House, 2023), Christian Kiefer imagines a group of factory workers and their families living in a once vibrant Ohio town during the Trump era. The factory is the only place to work outside of Walmart, the grocery store, or a fast-food chain, and it's owned by Mr. Marwat, a Pakistani man whose wife helps in the office, while their teenagers embrace American life. The family is upended when Mr. Marwat's parents move in. The factory foreman, Tom Bailey, and his family's lives are upended when their sick baby dies. Their daughter Janey's life is upended when she befriends the only Black young man in the town. Mr. Marwat's secretary Mary Lou's life is upended when her mother moves into a nursing home and dies. All of their struggles are exacerbated by small injustices but eased by small kindnesses in this sweet and thoughtful glimpse into the lives of people just trying to get by. CHRISTIAN KIEFER's novels have appeared on best of the year lists from Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, and Booklist and have received rave reviews in The Washington Post, Oprah.com, the San Francisco Chronicle, Brooklyn Rain, Library Journal, Huffington Post, and elsewhere. He is the author of the novels The Infinite Tides, The Animals, Phantoms, and the novella One Day Soon Time Will Have No Place Left to Hide. Christian is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize for his short fiction and has enjoyed a long second career in music, under the auspices of which he has collaborated with members of Smog, Pedro the Lion, DNA, 7 Seconds, John Zorn's Naked City, Sun Kil Moon, Boxhead Ensemble, Califone, Cake, Kronos Quartet, Wilco, Low, Fun, Anathallo, and The Band, among many others. He holds a Ph.D. in American literature from the University of California at Davis and has served as contributing editor for Zyzzyva, fiction reader for VQR, and as the West Coast editor for The Paris Review. He teaches at American River College in Sacramento and is the Director of the Ashland University MFA. G.P. Gottlieb is the author of the Whipped and Sipped Mystery Series and a prolific baker of healthful breads and pastries. Please contact her through her website (GPGottlieb.com). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
The MOJO Record Club decamps to Toyah and Robert Fripp's kitchen to remember lockdown rock-outs, revisit Bowie's liminal zones in Berlin and Milton Keynes, and discover the surprising connections between King Crimson and The Shaggs! Plus new albums from Bob Dylan and Califone. Tracklisting: 1. 'Supermen', written by David Bowie, and originally released on Mercury Records in 1970 2. 'My Pal Foot Foot', composed by Dorothy Wiggin, arranged by The Shaggs and originally released on Third World Records in 1969 3. ‘ox-eye', written by Tim Rutili and released on Jealous Butcher Records 4. 'Watching The River Flow', Bob Dylan / Leon Russell collaboration, released by Columbia Records in 1971
Tim Rutili is a musician, film maker, visual artist and founding member of Califone. The newest record, villagers (out now vie jealous butcher) is a celebration of noise, experimental soundscape and elegant melody garnished with the silk of 70's AM radio and the smooth of classic pop. In this episode Tim tells us how death is a motivator behind his 30+ year musical journey and why the search continues. He explains the ridiculous notion behind the song the habsburg jaw, why he considers himself an "anarchic noise maker" and why he see's beauty in dissonance. Joe and Tim discuss their pointillist based recording project and we hear a few tunes from the new record. tim rutili jealous butcher This episode is supported by Izotope. For a limited time, use code FRET10 for a discount on all software. Check it all out at Izotope
Guitarist, songwriter, and sideman for Califone, Alex Dupree, and others, Max Knouse talks about how seriously everyone takes music, knowing what you're good at by how others react, finding inspiration in gear, and being a guitar-for-hire after the pandemic.
For this week's Talkhouse Podcast we've got a special two-part episode featuring both members of one of my favorite bands, Wye Oak, in conversation with some other fantastic musicians, so be sure to stick around for both halves! First up it's Wye Oak's Jenn Wasner and singer-songwriter Johanna Samuels, both of whom have new music coming out, coincidentally, on June 23. Samuels has been making beautiful, deeply personal music for the last decade or so, and her new one is a doozy. The album is called Bystander, and it was recorded with Josh Kaufman of Bonny Light Horseman—he's the Josh you'll hear referenced in this chat. Check out “Ugly on the Inside” from Bystander right here. Samuels is joined here by Talkhouse pal Jenn Wasner, who's probably best known as half of Wye Oak, but has also recorded music recently under the name Flock of Dimes. It's no wonder that Wasner and Samuels get along, as both are incredibly thoughtful and sincere in their musical pursuits: They're looking for something much bigger than a hooky song to sing, they're out to connect on a deeper level. Wye Oak has sort of morphed into a different kind of band in recent years, choosing to stay away from the make-an-album-then-tour-forever cycle and instead release singles and one-off songs as Wasner and Andy Stack are able. A bunch of those songs have just been compiled on an album called Every Day Like the Last. They sound as good as anything the duo has done, which is to say they sound great. Check out “I Learned it From You” right here. In this conversation, Wasner and Samuels talk about the magic of the Newport Folk Festival, how great it is to work with Josh Kaufman, and how to express heavy thoughts within joyful music. You'll find out whether these are women of mystery, and you'll hear Wasner refer to herself as “a big golden retriever of a person.” Enjoy. In the second half of this epic Talkhouse two-parter, we've actually got three speakers: Andy Stack, who's best known as half of Wye Oak, but who's also made some solo records under the name Joyero. Along with him is Jay Hammond, with whom Stack recently made a great instrumental record, and Joe Westerlund. I'll start with Westerlund, and I'll try to do his bio justice: He started out in the Wisconsin band Deyarmond Edison, which has a massive retrospective box set coming out this year, and which is best known as the band that started Justin Vernon of Bon Iver down his musical path. Westerlund has also contributed to lots of other song-based music over the years, drumming for the likes of Califone and his project Megafaun. But it definitely feels like Westerlund has found his true calling in his solo instrumental work, including the recent Elegies for the Drift, whose compositions were largely inspired by important people in his life who'd passed away recently. It's a gorgeous, emotional ride. Check out “The Circle,” which is dedicated to Akron/Family's Miles Cooper Seaton, a friend of Westerlund's who tragically died in a car crash in 2021. It makes sense that Westerlund got together for a chat with Andy Stack and Jay Hammond, because they all have North Carolina in common: It's become something of a refuge for a bunch of bands over the past few years, with their friends in Sylvan Esso building a studio there, and lots of folks—including both members of Wye Oak—taking up residence there. Stack and Hammond got together recently and struck gold with a series of electro-acoustic improvisations that they winnowed down to album length and titled Inter Personal—a nod to the connection that they deepened by making this music together. Check out “Life on a Ship” right here. Thanks for listening to the Talkhouse Podcast, and thanks to Johanna Samuels, Jenn Wasner, Andy Stack, Jay Hammond, and Joe Westerlund for chatting. This episode was produced by Myron Kaplan, and the Talkhouse theme is composed and performed by the Range. See you next time!
Sesión de actualidad de nuevo esta semana en Islas de Robinson. Casi todo novedades, además. No paran de llegarnos nuevos discos inspiradores. Suenan: DECISIVE PINK - "HAFFMILCH HOLIDAY" ("TICKET TO FAME", 2023) / B.C. CAMPLIGHT - "KICKING UP A FUSS" ("THE LAST ROTATION ON EARTH", 2023) / JAYLA KAI - "SKIPSONG" ("THE SHORT SONG PROJECT", 2023) / H.HAWKLINE - "ATHENS AT NIGHT" ("MILK FOR FLOWERS", 2023) / WESTERMAN - "TAKE" ("AN INBUILT FAULT", 2023) / MEGA BOG - "CACTUS PEOPLE" ("END OF EVERYTHING", 2023) / SARABETH TUCEK - "CATHY SAYS" ("JOAN OF ALL", 2023) / JOHN SOUTHWORTH - "VERTIGO" ("WHEN YOU'RE THIS, THIS IN LOVE", 2023) / NEV COTTEE - "RENUNCIATE" ("MADRID", 2022) / CALIFONE - "THE HABSBURG JAW" ("VILLAGERS", 2023) / FEIST - "I TOOK ALL OF MY RINGS OFF" ("MULTITUDES", 2023) / EMMA TRICCA - "SPACE AND TIME" ("ASPIRIN SUN", 2023) / Escuchar audio
Tim Rutili of Califone returns! Tim shares his thoughts about the pitfalls of nostalgia, the moment playing guitar felt like it was a part of him, the undeniable creepiness of Gene Simmons, and the process of making Califone's new album VILLAGERS. PRODUCTION NOTE: Due to bad internet there are a couple edits that jump a little time. I have much sadness about this. Opening Song, ox-eye from the album Villagers by Califone Villagers is out May 19th, 2023. Purchase it on Califone's BANDCAMPCalifone WebsiteDwyer's Substack The Eleventh Hour: Songs For Climate Justice Get a website from Kelly R Dwyer themattdwyer.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Tim Rutili is not only from the influential and highly regarded art folk skronk rock band Califone, he in fact is that band. Certainly not to say he's not the only person who makes Califone Califone, indeed that band is more like a collective, often made of 15 humans or more for any given record, and it continues to involve many of the same talented humans he's been making music with for the past 30 years including his time as the main maker in 90's SubPop heros Red Red Meat. So it goes with Califone's new offering, Villagers (Jealous Butcher) due May 19 2023, and follows the theme of these friends exploring new sonic territory, widening their scope of influences and finding lyrical themes of seemingly mundane moments which slowly unfold into profound epiphanies. It's a giant record; a huge step forward but also on par with his best offerings. Tim Rutili is a person with a complusion to create, whether it's composing for film scores, directing and scoring his own films, working on his own paintings, or riding the Califone machine into a new record for the 15th time in 23 years, he will happily continue to satisfy this need as long as he is able.
Today I'm talking with the band Califone's founding member Tim Rutili. Califone began 25 years ago as a solo project after the dissolution of his previous group Red Red Meat in Chicago. You may have heard his collaboration with Modest Mouse's Isaac Brock, Ugly Casanova, or his ambient rock group Loftus. Tim has continued to do sporadic collaborative efforts over the years, but Califone has been a constant having released 15 albums as well as a bunch of singles and EPs. Their experimental take on Americana, musique concrete and indie rock is unlike that of any other group around. On May 19th, 2023 they are releasing a new album called Villagers on Jealous Butcher Records. I spoke with Tim about live performances, the new material, the group's previous album Echo Mine which was a score to a dance piece, their experiments with live improvised silent film scoring, the virtue of acting like a baby, writing and directing the film All My Friends are Funeral Singers, and several of his other projects over the years. Tim Rutili spoke with me earlier this year from his home in Los Angeles.Low Profile is supported by you on Patreon and also receives in-kind support from these independent Olympia businesses: Schwart'z Deli, San Francisco Street Bakery, Old School Pizzeria, Rainy Day Records and Scherler Easy Premium Shitty American Lager from Three Magnets Brewing Company.Instagram: @lowpropodcastFacebook Community: Low Profile Listener HubPatreon: patreon.com/lowprofile
A cura di Fabio Barbieri. Musiche: Nico, John Cale, Blondie, Califone, Chicago Underground Duo, Jimi Hendrix Experience, Toro Y Moi, Pullman, Eagles, How To Dress Well, Bon Iver, Bark Psychosis. Lettura: Jacopo Perfetti.
The vintage Califone record player allows sound artist Paul Kikuchi to access and share songs that he inherited from his great-grandfather and other 78rpm records that were left behind by Japanese Americans incarcerated during World War II.Paul Kikuchi got to know his great grandfather, Zenkichi Kikuchi, through the records he'd left behind: 78s of Japanese music from the 30s and 40s. Zenkichi immigrated here in 1900, around the time 78rpm records were invented.When Japanese Americans were incarcerated during World War II under Executive Order 9066, they could take only what they could carry. Many of their music collections were lost, but Paul is helping to preserve some of the musical artifacts that survived.In addition to helping build the archive at the Northwest Nikkei Museum (at the Japanese Community Cultural Center of Washington), Paul brought these sounds into the city, installing a Califone record player in the Panama Hotel café. It is an invitation into a soundscape of this place before Executive Order 9066 changed it forever-- and to consider the history and archives of American music in a new way.Related LinksPaul KikuchiThe Panama Hotel and Tea HouseJapanese Cultural and Community Center of WANikkei Music Archives at the JCCCWMore about the writing Bat of No Bird IslandJoin us for our free live event for The Blue Suit in Seattle on Wednesday, September 7, 2022. Do find our more information to kuow.org/events.We want to hear from you!We're wrapping up our first season of The Blue Suit and we'd like to hear your thoughts about the show. If you have a few minutes please consider answering our brief survey here. Your feedback will really help us as we plan for future episodes. Thanks for taking the time to fill it out.Do you have a special object that you hold close? Share it with us on Instagram. Tag @KUOW and use the hashtag: #bluesuitpod.Your feedback matters to us. Submit your comments and questions to www.kuow.org/feedback
The gang's all here. We've got DJ Big Tokyo, DJ Hollywood, DJ Plaza, DJ Chile, DJ Guitar Riff, and our newest DJ, DJ Hank, in the studio spinning today's hottest tracks. Artists: Rashomon, Scarecrow, Gee Tee, The Mall, Warthog, Brain Tourniquet, Brain Handle, Paralisis Permanente, Dungen, SUMERLANDS, Kevin Ayers, Cobra Man, Beabadoobee, Califone, Air Ween, Michael Beach, Bad Breeding, Krigshoder, and Phantasia. Phew. That's a lot of hot tracks!
The Taproot Therapy Podcast - https://www.GetTherapyBirmingham.com
Tim Rutili is the lead singer and songwriter of the dream like mythological soundscapes of the band Califone. He sits down to talk about the depth psychology behind his life and work. His other projects include contributions to the bands Red Red Meat, Loftus, Ugly Casanova and the fil All My Friends Are Funeral Singers. I have been a life long fan of his projects and we are grateful for his time. Buy Tim's Music at https://www.califonemusic.com/ & https://califonemusic.bandcamp.com/ Check out the podcast version of this interview at: https://gettherapybirmingham.podbean.com/ #califone #music #psychology #depthpsychology #songwriting #mythology #sound #singer #singersongwriter #folk #folkmusic #folklore #redredmeat #modestmouse
A cura di Gigi Longo. Musiche: Balungan, Nathan, Califone, Rich Ruth, Gunter Baby Sommer & The Lucaciu 3, Hannes Buder, Rival Consoles, Nous With Laraaji And Arji OceAnanda, Jabel Kanuteh e Marco Zanotti, Owiny Sigoma Band, Momo Wandel Soumah.
Help produce Basic Folk by contributing at basicfolk.com/donate.Fruit Bats have been on the indie rock radar since the early 00's, so I'd say that calls for a double album compilation documenting their 20 years of music! However, the brains behind FBs and it's only regular member, Eric D. Johnson, is a man who tends to solely look forward. Thankfully for us, he rolled up his sleeves, dug into some old hard drives and sifted through two decades of MP3s, WAVs, AIFFs and the like that make up the band's brand new collection: Sometimes a Cloud Is Just a Cloud: Slow Growers, Sleeper Hits and Lost Songs (2001–2021). On Basic Folk, Eric talks about growing up constantly moving around and the impact on him then and now. He also gets into his time working at Old Town School of Folk Music in Chicago. His time there allowed Eric to evolve and embrace his folk musicality as well as the punk side he was nurturing in Chicago's scene.He also gets into reframing career aspirations after he saw a lot of his friends' careers, who came up in indie rock at the same time he did, reaching new heights that Fruit Bats just simply weren't. He was affordable many amazing opportunities before he was ready, recording Fruit Bats debut album with Tim from Califone and then getting signed to Sub Pop thanks to The Shins and Modest Mouse's advocacy. He talks about how he felt about those chances back then and how he reflects on them now. His time playing with The Shins allowed him to "climb into someone else's work a little bit," which gave him perspective on his own. There was a time when Eric ditched the Fruit Bats name to record under his initials, EDJ, in what he calls “career stalling move,” but I pressed him to expand on the fact that it might have been a really necessary move for him personally. He's been recording and playing under Fruit Bats again since 2015, which he sees as a new era for Fruit Bats, which he gets into. I also brought up Bonny Light Horseman and the incredible vocal pairing of himself with Anaïs Mitchell, who he calls his "main singing partner" these days. Eric D. Johnson is the nicest guy in indie rock and I'm here for that!! Enjoy!Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
Tim Rutili - Red Red Meat/Califone (unedited and in its entirety.Tim Rutili Patreon - 10_18_20, 9.21 AM.m4aTim Rutili from Red Red Meat and Califone joins Dwyer in a candid chat about being bullied in the Chicago suburbs, the 90s Chicago music scene, the complexities of directing film and Califone's up coming live stream. Opening song: "Bandicoot," by Califone from the album Echo MineAll Things Tim: Upcoming Live Stream: https://audiotree.tv/staged-show/califone-rmwahttps://califonemusic.bandcamp.com/Instagram: @califone_timrutiliAll Things Dwyer: https://linktr.ee/All_Things_DwyerThis podcast is produced, edited and hosted by Matt Dwyer. He's cool. Okay. He's not but he talks to cool people.Consulting Producer: Dustin Marshall See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
(Kevin)Playlist: The Cool Greenhouse - Dirty GlassesOra Cogan - SkullBedhead - Bedside TableBig Thief - Mythological BeautyMadeline Kenney - Picture of YouThe Acorn - In Silence (Enantiomers)Wye Oak - (cloud)Califone - howard st & the beach nov 1988 after 11Daniel Blumberg - BoundCat Power - HorizonCommon Holly - You DanceNadia Reid - I Don't Wanna Take Anything From YouBrigid Mae Power - I Had to Keep My Circle SmallJason Molina - Be Told The TruthJenks Miller - Hats Off to Roy (Montgomery)Zoon - Infinite HorizonsBonny Doon - WalkdownZelienople - SaferMark Templeton - Named ExperienceZachary Cale - Black Dirt DriftKris Ellestad - August 8th, 2008Josh Kimbrough - Glowing TreetopsSteve Gunn - Spring in Brooklyn IIIDanny Paul Grody - EveBorealis - Montañas de Azabachebeholding - Hello Beautiful Moon
(Kevin)Playlist: The Cool Greenhouse - Dirty GlassesOra Cogan - SkullBedhead - Bedside TableBig Thief - Mythological BeautyMadeline Kenney - Picture of YouThe Acorn - In Silence (Enantiomers)Wye Oak - (cloud)Califone - howard st & the beach nov 1988 after 11Daniel Blumberg - BoundCat Power - HorizonCommon Holly - You DanceNadia Reid - I Don't Wanna Take Anything From YouBrigid Mae Power - I Had to Keep My Circle SmallJason Molina - Be Told The TruthJenks Miller - Hats Off to Roy (Montgomery)Zoon - Infinite HorizonsBonny Doon - WalkdownZelienople - SaferMark Templeton - Named ExperienceZachary Cale - Black Dirt DriftKris Ellestad - August 8th, 2008Josh Kimbrough - Glowing TreetopsSteve Gunn - Spring in Brooklyn IIIDanny Paul Grody - EveBorealis - Montañas de Azabachebeholding - Hello Beautiful Moon
In this episode, Matt sits down with Choreographer Robyn Mineko Williams. We talk about her career as a dancer and choreographer, her incredible taste in both music and artists, as well as her collaborative approach to creativity.If you’d like to find out more about Robyn and her work, please visit:RobynMinekoWilliams.com Or you can find her on Instagram:@rmineko, @rmw_artists, @undercoverepisodes You can also find her on Facebook at:Robyn Mineko Williams & on the facebook page for Undercover Episodes Next up for her is a co-production of Undercover Episode 018: Home Video with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, and the continuation of Echo Mine and Echo Mine v2 with Califone.
Steph and Danny discuss some of their favorite cover songs and samples. You can find the playlist of cover compilations on Spotify, titled “Covers and Originals” by user smc91. Episode includes The Fugees, Aerosmith, Sylvan Esso, The Band, Aretha Franklin, Califone, Cake, and many others.
......................CHARITY:............................................ http://www.filefactory.com/file/48kl2hd4mrgr/charity.mp3 01. Lights and Motion - Glow; 02. The White Birch - Lantern (04.06); 03. Butcher Boy – Days Like These Will Be the Death of Me (08.38); 04. Carbon Based Lifeforms – Dreamshore Forest (Analog Remake) (11.57); 05. Jane Birkin – Coleur Cafe (15.32); 06. The Echelon Effect – Denver for an Hour (18.01); 07. Tricky (with Anika) – Lonely Dancer (24.23); 08. Califone – Night Gallery/Projector (27.22); 09. Matt Berninger - Holes (32.57); 10. Stray Theories - Nightstate (38.01); 11. Nico – All Tomorrow’s Parties (41.04); 12. nExow – Vapor Trail (45.34); 13. Mick Harvey – Prevert’s Song (49.32); 14. Lanterns on the Lake – Swimming Lessons (52.15); 15. Myar – A Story About Screwing Up (56.29); 16. Agnes Obel – Broken Sleep (58.57); 17. Raphael – Paris et une fete (63.45); 18. Pitch Black – Did You Get the Message? (67.17); 19. Monahans – Echoes (72.03); 20. Tahaninte – Solane (75.31). Total Time: 01.19.57 Sultry voice of Radio Etiopia: Ana Ribeiro This mix has been passed safe to travel across all borders and may contain properties beneficial to your health. ….
The showdown for the Democratic nomination continues, and the gloves have come off. This week, On the Media examines the conflicting narratives around how each candidate raises money. Plus, how changes at the National Archives could distort the historical record of the Trump administration. 1. Michael Grynbaum [@grynbaum], media correspondent for The New York Times, and Kathy Kiely [@kathykiely], former news director at Bloomberg Politics and journalism professor at University of Missouri School of Journalism, on how Bloomberg News is — and isn't — covering the candidacy of its owner. Listen. 2. Taylor Lorenz [@TaylorLorenz], reporter for The New York Times, on Bloomberg's meme-ification. Listen. 3. Sarah Bryner [@AKSarahB], Director of Research & Strategy at Open Secrets, on the state of campaign financing, ten years after Citizens United. Listen. 4. Matthew Connelly [@mattspast], history professor at Columbia University, explains how policy changes at the National Archives could distort the historical record about the Trump Administration. Listen. Music from this week's show: David Holmes — $160 Million Chinese ManAdrian Younge — Turn Down the SoundBilly Bragg and Wilco — Union PrayerAntibalas — Dirty MoneyBill Frisell — Lost, NightCalifone — Burned by the Christians
Eric D. Johnson discusses early days touring with the Shins and Modest Mouse, keeping the faith with a project through high times and low, and learning to write outside of the studio.
Hilary talks to Rachel Blumberg about the *ahem* unique aesthetic of her first drum kit, transitioning from gear head denial to loving gear, band gender breakdowns, the woes and whoas of gear-carrying, and why buying gear should be like butter. RACHEL'S BIO Rachel Blumberg has been bringing her musical feel to bands and solo artists for a good part of the last two decades through her primary instrument, THE DRUMS, as well as percussion, keyboards, voice, and the occasional stringed instrument. She has recorded, toured and performed with many widely acclaimed artists such as Mirah, Tara Jane O'Neil, Laura Gibson, M.Ward, The Decemberists, Sam Beam (Iron & Wine), Michael Hurley, and Bright Eyes. Rachel also composes and performs her own music under her name and her moniker Arch Cape. In addition to being a musician, Rachel is a prolific visual artist and animator, and has produced stop motion music videos for folks like Gillian Welch, Iron & Wine, and Nada Surf, among others. Her paintings and other work have been shown in galleries and other arts spaces around the US. Her current projects includes an interactive audio - visual installation entitled Space Is the Place where drawings turn into sound and then into projections, which she first premiered at the RISD Museum in 2018 and the bands Death Vessel, The Huntress and Holder of Hands, and Califone. Rachel is also a well regarded teacher of percussion and the creative arts, and runs her own music school and volunteers regularly for Girls Rock! Rhode Island. Originally from Portland, Oregon, she now resides in coastal Rhode Island. BRANDS/SHOPS MENTIONED Revival Drum Shop / Village Drum & Music / Ludwig / Rogers / Leedy / Gretsch / Roland / Korg / Teenage Engineering / Electro-Harmonix / Line 6 / DigiTech / Boss / TC Electronic / Atelier Rosenkrantz BANDS RACHEL HAS PLAYED WITH/MENTIONED Califone / The Decemberists / M. Ward / Mirah / Tara Jane O'Neil / The Huntress & the Holder of Hands / Death Vessel / Iron & Wine / Bright Eyes / Arch Cape / Laura Gibson / Sissyface OTHER BANDS MENTIONED Magnetic Fields / The Crabs / Messthetics / Fugazi / Velvet Crush / Eyelids / Retrix / Sun Ra / Juana Molina OTHER MENTIONS Columbus Theater / Jodi & Ted Leo / What Cheer? Brigade / RISD Museum / New Bedford Art Museum / RIOT RI (formerly Girls Rock! RI) / Janet Weiss / Tom Tom magazine / She Shreds magazine RACHEL'S LINKS Website https://www.instagram.com/theerachelblumberg/ (Instagram) https://www.thehuntressandholderofhands.com/ (The Huntress & Holder of Hands) MID-RIFF LINKS http://hilarybjones.com/midriffpodcast (Website) http://instagram.com/midriffpodcast (Instagram) http://facebook.com/midriffpodcast (Facebook) https://www.hilarybjones.com/gender-music-gear-survey (Gender and Music Gear Survey) CREDITS Rachel's Bumper Track: "Red & Gold" by https://www.rachelblumberg.com/archcapemusic (Arch Cape) Theme Music: "Hedonism" by https://towanda.bandcamp.com/ (Towanda) Artwork by https://www.juliagualtieri.com/ (Julia Gualtieri)
00:00 Breakmaster Cylinder - "Purplebutter" 02:41 Califone - "Giving Away The Bride (Live @ KEXP)" 05:52 -ono- - "Fortress" 12:20 Derek Clegg - "Oh My Oh Me Oh" 14:59 Ears - "Looking" 17:45 Bacalao - "Créations" 19:35 Valerie Webber - "Actions" All music sourced from the Free Music Archive under Creative Commons licenses. Info, licenses, and downloads: Purplebutter Giving Away The Bride (Live @ KEXP) Fortress Oh My Oh Me Oh Looking Créations Actions
Multi-instrumentalist/actor Jim Becker delivers pearls of wisdom from his years with Califone and Iron and Wine, why he never takes a gig unless he loves it, why variety is truly the secret to life and what it's like sharing scenes with Terry O'Quinn in the new Epix series Perpetual Grace from his old buddy Steven Conrad.
A controversial bill in Alabama is the latest in a wave of different abortion bans sweeping the country. This week, On the Media looks at the influence of Janet Porter, a little-known lobbyist who has been pushing what are misleadingly referred to as “heartbeat” laws. And, a deep dive into the rise of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, and what his autocratic regime tells us about the future of Europe. Plus, a new book reveals how conspiracy theories became a fact of American life. 1. Jessica Glenza [@JessicaGlenza], health reporter at the Guardian US, on the influence of Janet Porter, the lobbyist behind the so-called "heartbeat" abortion laws. Listen. 2. Paul Lendvai, author of Orbán: Hungary's Strongman, on the rise of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Listen. 3. Anna Merlan [@annamerlan], author of Republic of Lies, on the long arc of conspiratorial thinking in the United States. Listen. Support On the Media today at onthemedia.org/donate. Songs: Dame tu Mano by Combo Chimbita Passing Time by John Renbourn The Glass House by Marjane's Inspiration Califone by Burned by Christians We Insist by Zoe Keating Green Onions by Booker T. and The MG's X-File Theme High Water Everywhere Part 1 by Charlie Patton Bullwinkle, Part II by The Centurians
Who is Tim Rutili: Temistocles (Tim) Hugo Rutili is a Leo raised in Chicago and surrounding suburbs. Presently living in South Pasadena. Musician, filmmaker, visual artist. Founder and principal songwriter of critically acclaimed bands, Califone and Red Meat. Also a member of Boxhead Ensemble, Ugly Casanova. Favorite Career Highlight: Premiering my first feature film as a director/writer, 'All My Friends Are Funeral Singers' at Sundance was a highlight. Touring Italy a few summers ago with my old bandmates/best friends was another. Lovely times. What Tim learned about Moses: I can relate to the character more than I'd like to - long, dangerous journeys, battles, bizarre demands from a powerful and sometimes spiteful God, and the kicker -- Being denied entry into the promised land by that same God (for a minor infraction!!!). There's a really excellent book called 'Moses, a life' by Jonathan Kirsch. Doing this podcast made me start reading this book again. I began to see Moses, this mythical being who gave us law and structure, as a good, strong, humble and also kind of insane, murderous and cruel. I saw God as much the same - jealous, petty, all-powerful, deeply loving and deeply hating. And all of us humans are the same. we carry everything in us - the capability to murder and the capability to love. God and this world are rarely exactly what we want them to be. We have to accept that and work with that in order to experience our moments of joy and peace. it may only be moments, and the end of the story may not justify the journey. I guess we have to be ok with that. It is all horrible and beautiful and hilarious and tragic all at the same time. I had a great time doing the podcast. Thanks Lisa! Who is Moses: Hebrew prophet, teacher, and leader who, in the 13th-century BCE (before the Common Era, or bc), delivered his people from Egyptian slavery. ... Sinai, where the Ten Commandments were promulgated, he founded the religious ...(more) Special Notes: Tim has an amazing song about Moses... Link! Thank you, Kelly June Hutcheson, for the wonderful Moses song that closed this episode. You can also find Kelly on Instagram How to show love to Project Woo Woo: Click here to buy Lisa a cup of joe. This episode was also supported by Amazon. Click on this link --> Amazon any time you need to make an Amazon purchase. A small percentage of your purchase will support the show (no extra cost to you). I receive an affiliate commission from some of the links above. Go get your free be happier than all your friends morning routine over here --> Project Woo Woo Listen to Lisa's other podcasts at Love Bites & Honestly Lisa
Eric D. Johnson is a songwriter, musician and producer. He has been in The Shins, Califone, and his current musical project is Fruit Bats. He’s also a really great guy, and I feel lucky to call him a friend! In this episode, Eric gives some solid advice to young artists, and tells us why failing (“hopefully not spectacularly”) can be a really good thing. We talk about the good and bad of social media. He also shares some great tour stories, talks about the differences between joining someone else’s band as a “side guy” (as he did in The Shins) vs. doing his own thing, fan interactions (and how he wants to make a graphic novel about this! - I can’t wait), the book that had a major impact on him, and a whole lot more. Where to find Eric: Instagram Twitter Website This episode was audio produced by Aaron Moring. Theme music by Heather Maloney.
We open this week's show with a new track from Sylvan Esso, with tentacles that reach into multiple musical universes. The song, "Funeral Singers," was originally written and recorded by the band Califone, features members of the group Collections of Colonies of Bees and was recorded at Wilco's Chicago studio, The Loft. The result is a plaintive, pulsing reflection on heartache and loss. Full playlist for this episode: 1. Sylvan Esso: "Funeral Singers," 2. Thom Yorke: "Suspirium," 3. Theodore: "Disorientation," 4. Half Alive: "Still Feel," 5. Squirrel Flower: "Conditions," 6. Buke & Gase: "No Land," 7. Amber Arcades: "Goodnight Europe"
Welcome to the April edition of the Aquarium Drunkard podcast, coming in from West of the Rockies. On this program, we explore the late night radio theater of the late Art Bell. The Coast to Coast AM host passed away on Friday, April 13th, and we’ve spent the days since exploring his classic archives. Aquarium Drunkard founder Justin Gage and co-host Jason P. Woodbury sat down to reflect on Bell’s singular voice, dedication to chronicling the unknown, and status as a purveyor of genuine American weirdness. Also on the show, guitarist Nels Cline joins us to discuss his new quartet, the Nels Cline 4, and “Imperfect 10” from the combo’s new Blue Note Records LP, Currents, Constellations. Maybe you know his playing with Wilco, but here he focuses on the notion of “jazz fusion,” which he’s been exploring since the late ‘80s. And we begin the podcast with a discussion with Jaime Fennelly of Mind Over Mirrors. The synthesist and composer just released a masterpiece called Bellowing Sun. It’s cosmic in scope but rooted in the earthy reflections of naturalist writers like Henry Beston, whose 1928 book, The Outermost House: A Year of Life on the Great Beach of Cape Cod, served as a guidepost for the new album. Earlier this month, the album debuted alongside a multi-media installation at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago featuring a light sculpture modeled after an enormous drum. The suggestions — of biorhythms and universal patterns — are in keeping with Mind Over Mirrors’ space-folk. Though Mind Over Mirrors began as a solo project, it’s very much a group effort now, featuring Janet Bean of Freakwater and Eleventh Dream Day, Jon Mueller of Volcano Choir, and Jim Becker of Califone. The band’s latest, Bellowing Sun, arrives in conjunction with a multi-media installation at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago featuring an ambitious light sculpture. One of the marvelous things about Mind Over Mirrors is the way the group’s music feels both spacey and earthy. On the new album, which is at turns ecstatic, spooky, and revelatory, Fennelly and company the band maximize that ability, putting the idea of our planet as a cosmic vehicle into context. “I think about [the cosmos] in relation to my own music as being otherworldly, but I also think of it as being grounded, in the way that the Earth is cosmic,” Fennelly says. “It’s not just about the area beyond us or outside of us, in kind of an exploratory sense as well.” On his new album with the Nels Cline 4, Currents, Constellations, guitarist and composer Nels Cline reigns in the conceptual mood music of his previous Blue Note Records release, Lovers, in favor of tight, spiky interplay with guitarist Julian Lage, bassist Scott Colley, and drummer Tom Rainey. It’s a record fueled by Cline’s energy, incorporating avant-garde, rock, and blues influences. It is, for lack of a better term, jazz fusion music, which explains why Cline’s initial title for “Imperfect 10” was “Jazz Fusion Composition.” “I definitely chose that term to bother people, particularly people who think they’re cooler than ‘jazz fusion,'” Cline says. “Basically, it’s a meaningless term. It’s a combination of basically whatever. It doesn’t have to mean a combination of jazz and rock and classical and funk…it doesn’t mean the same thing from one person to another, and that’s why it’s a fun word to use. It’s basically a meaningless word that bothers people, which I find linguistically fascinating, but it also, stylistically, does kind of define me.” If you’ve ever been the sort of person content to sit around the radio late at night or scan the airwaves on a long drive through the middle of nowhere, there’s a good chance you’ve experienced the strange radio theater of Art Bell’s Coast to Coast AM. Since Bell passed away earlier this month and since his passing, we’ve been tuned into his archives. Here, we reflect on the impact and legacy of Bell’s pioneering program. “Coast to Coast AM felt like this secret handshake between people,” AD’s Justin Gage says. “Not unlike when you find a record or something that means a lot to you, that might be a little esoteric or obscure. Coast to Coast AM definitely kind of felt like that in the late ’90s, early 2000s.” Thanks for listening to the Transmissions podcast. Support by subscribing to the Aquarium Drunkard podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Mixcloud, Tune In, or via the RSS feed. Please rate and review the show, or even better, share it directly with friends. Collage image by Michael J. Hentz. Dig into the podcast archives, which include interviews with Laraaji, Tim Heidecker, Eileen Myles, Daniel Lanois, Hiss Golden Messenger, Ryley Walker, Eleanor Friedberger, Idris Ackamoor, and many more.
Stories about the music industry in the 80s, recording in Chicago, how mixing has changed over the years, and great advice on how to capture good music. CLICK HERE FOR SHOW NOTES AT: http://RSRockstars.com/112 Download your FREE RIN-M eBook and Plug-in at: http://RSRockstars.com/RIN Brian Deck is a music producer living and working in Chicago. In their early twenties, Brian and college friend Brad Wood built Idful Music Corp, an under-equipped recording studio in Chicago's Wicker Park neighborhood. Together, they recorded seminal records for Liz Phair, Red Red Meat, Shrimpboat, Tar, Sea and Cake, Tortoise and other Chicago luminaries of the 1990's. Brian's unique music aesthetic can be heard both as a player and engineer producer on The Moon and Antarctica by Modest Mouse, Shephard's Dog by Iron and Wine, Somewhere Under Wonderland by Counting Crows, Animal by Margot and the Nuclear So & So's and All My Friends are Funeral Singers by Califone. Thanks to our sponsors: Check out Chris Graham Mastering: http://RSRockstars.com/FreeMasteringSample Roswell Pro Audio: https://RoswellProAudio.com Leave a Review -Also- Free mix training with Lij at: http://MixMasterBundle.com
All My Friends Are Funeral Singers is a film (and record) by Tim Rutili of the band Califone. We interview Tim about his experience creating a project like this in multiple media and how that changed his process going forward. Additional Resources: All My Friends Are Funeral Singers (Vimeo) All My Friends Are Funeral Singers -- Film Review IndiePix Films Launches Subscription-Streaming Service with 400-Plus International Movies Califone frontman Tim Rutili gets an on-set lesson in filmmaking Music Is Important in 'All My Friends are Funeral Singers' and One of Its Few Redeeming Qualities ‘All My Friends Are Funeral Singers’: Califone’s life beyond Sundance Team Spirits: 'All My Friends Are Funeral Singers'
......................NOWHERE................ A Fray D. Jay mix for Rádio Etiópia 01. Agnes Obel – Stretch Your Eyes; 02. Lab’s Cloud – Seek the Light (05.04); 03. Califone – Trick Bird (10.12); 04. Alaskan Tapes – Plea (feat. Chantal) (15.59); 05. Thea Gilmore – The Dirt is Your Lover Now (18.01); 06. Hinkstep - The Silence (22.09); 07. Blank & Jones – Adios Ayer (feat. Zoe Dee) (28.34); 08. 100 Day Delay - Afterthought (32.52); 09. Radiohead – I Promise (36.10); 10. Last Days - Whitecaps (40.03); 11. London Grammar – Who Am I? (42.41); 12. Tindersticks - Here (46.44); 13. Cerah - Rest (50.48); 14. The Echelon Effect – Late Night Shortwave (55.41); 15. Apne Sinn – Seven Times, Seven Ways (61.20); 16. Bon Iver – 21 Moon Water (Delectatio Remix) (67.34); 17. Toto – Africa (Diezio Remix) (72.57); 18. Brombaer – Wind Glider (77.09). Total Time: 01.19.58 Sultry voice of Radio Etiopia: Ana Ribeiro …. We’re on the road to nowhere. Turn left as soon as possible.
Califone, Will Johnson and Anders Parker populate this, the 3rd episode of Space Heater. Enjoy! Or, Else.
[Some Adult Humor] Episode 80 - In which Eric dislikes awards, Greg likes his Califone, and English Nick enjoys the underground.
[Some Adult Humor] Episode 80 - In which Eric dislikes awards, Greg likes his Califone, and English Nick enjoys the underground.
Yep, a couple of days into September and Scotland really has decided that it's Autumn now, all of a sudden it's fucking Autumn. Cold, crappy rain, wind, all the usual fun and games. Season OVER! We are into shitty territory now, just you accept it! Anyhow, I have never figured out whether good (more likely to leave the house) or bad weather (more likely to want to be inside in a venue) weather is more likely to lead to good gig attendances, but I suppose it's always nice to have the excuse either way if no-one turns up to your gig. One nice thing about the weather turning shitty, of course, is that the fucking builders who repaired our roof - Traditional Roofing and Building - whilst excellent in every other respect, managed to paint my office windows shut and are ignoring my requests to come out and fix them. So at least if it's cold I won't just be sat up here fucking sweltering all day. Enjoy the tunes! 01. Temple Songs - Passed Caring (00.16)02. John Murry - Southern Sky (07.45)03. Sparrow and the Workshop - Odessa (remixed by White Label) (15.47)04. Samantha Crain - For the Miner (23.57)05. Vandaveer - Poor Edward (29.27)06. Stefan Noons - Signals (35.26)07. Playlounge - Grandma Death (40.01)08. The Hundredth Anniversary - Last Drive (43.02)09. Monster Rally - Orchids (48.44)10. Califone - Move Music Kills a Kiss (54.23)
The debut episode of Mix Tape Radio first aired on Folk Radio UK back in July 201`2. As the name of the show implies, this radio show is more like a mix tape. This episode features Scott Rudd, The Wooden Sky, Califone, and 14 other brilliant artists (including an exclusive 'Bedroom Session' from our friend A Singer Of Songs). You can find the full track listing at HI54LOFI.COM (more specifically: http://hi54lofi.com/blog/mix-tape-radio-on-fruk-episode-001)
From the album "All My Friends Are Funeral Singers". You, Me, Them, Everybody Chicago Music Podcast.
Iron and Wine will be playing at Calvin's Fine Arts Center on April 19 at 9:00pm. Special guest Califone will open.
This podcast features a live set by local sound artist, Jay Sullivan, which was first broadcast on March 22, 2007 on WZBC. Jay’s work is composed using a Califone turntable and various lo-fi electronic and mechanical devices. For more information about Jay, check out my interview with him. Rare Frequency Podcast (Special Ed. 13): Jay Sullivan Live 03/22/07