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This week, part 2 of our celebration of 2024 releases! It's been another amazing year for new music from legacy, current, and new artists. Join Kevin as he's on his own once again for our end-of-year celebration and recognition of all of the amazing, recorded output in rock n' punk n' metal for 2024! What is it we do here at InObscuria? Every show Kevin opens the crypt to exhume and dissect from his personal collection; an artist, album, or grouping of tunes from the broad spectrum of rock, punk, and metal. This week we look back on another amazing year for the world of rock n' punk n' metal. In celebration of the New Year, we wanted to find some nuggets of joy from the last 12 months. We hope everyone enjoyed the holidays, and that you can take some time to kick back and rock with us! Happy New Year everyone!Songs this week include:Greenleaf - “Different Horses” from The Head & The Habit (2024)The Nöw - “Wind Up” from Too Hot To Handle (2024)Cactus - “One Way… Or Another (ft. Dug Pinnick & Ted Nugent)” from Temple Of The Blues – Influences And Friends (2024)Hot Water Music - “Fences” from VOWS (2024)Lips Speak Louder - “Hype” from Hype - single (2024)The Watchers - “Haunt You When I'm Dead” from Nyctophilia (2024)Seven Year Witch - “Weaponize Your Love” from Vampire Calamity (2024)Vision Video - “Modern Horror” from Modern Horror (2024)J. Robbins - “Exquisite Corpse” from Basilisk (2024)Melvins - “Smiler” from Tarantula Heart (2024)Girlschool - “Auld Lang Sine” from We Wish You a Metal Xmas and a Headbanging New Year (2008)Please subscribe everywhere that you listen to podcasts!Visit us: https://inobscuria.com/https://www.facebook.com/InObscuriahttps://twitter.com/inobscuriahttps://www.instagram.com/inobscuria/Buy cool stuff with our logo on it!: https://www.redbubble.com/people/InObscuria?asc=uIf you want to hear Robert and Kevin's band from the late 90s – early 00s BIG JACK PNEUMATIC, check it out here: https://bigjackpnuematic.bandcamp.com/If you'd like to check out Kevin's band THE SWEAR, take a listen on all streaming services or pick up a digital copy of their latest release here: https://theswear.bandcamp.com/Check out Robert's amazing fire sculptures and metal workings here: http://flamewerx.com/
Tonight (this week, et all) is a night to dismember, so we three folks fair discuss the most important album about turning 27 that ever once was wrote: Emergency & I. We do not determine if they are called Dismemberment Plan or The Dismemberment Plan, so don't be thinking about that.Also up for discussion: Albums turn a certain age and Chris does too. Similar Alley, Different Rats life. We also drink a holiday bev and also also (oso oso): it is the last episode of 2024 we are taking a break-- Genuinely thank you for listening. I can't believe you did but I'm so glad it happened. Tell us your new years resolution at 360-55WADS1. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In the latest episode of Columbia House Party, hosts Jake Goldsbie and Blake Murphy discuss Emergency & I, the 1999 album from The Dismemberment Plan. More than two decades later, it remains held in the highest of indie esteem. Find out more about the best rhythm section in indie rock, what Jake feels is maybe THE best song (period!), which band member moved on to work for NASA, and more on this week's podcast.Sick of hearing all the ads? Subscribe to Soda Premium on Apple Podcasts to get rid of them!Follow @ColumbiaHP on X!While you're there say hello to @BlakeMurphyODC and @JGoldsbie.If merch is your thing, be sure to check out the store: http://bit.ly/chpmerchOr reach out to the show and say hey: podcast@columbiahouseparty.comIf you enjoyed today's show, please rate Columbia House Party 5-Stars on Apple Podcasts.See you next week for another episode of CHP.
It's been a rough couple weeks for everyone, but DEVO are bringing some extraterrestrial cheer early with a holiday drop at Hello Merch. Plus: We're going to see King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard this weekend, The Dismemberment Plan's Emergency and I turns 25, and WASTOIDS is screening Born Innocent: The Redd Kross Story at Hello Lincoln December 6, at 7 PM. Get details and tickets. Call us anytime at 1-877-WASTOIDS. More podcasts and videos at WASTOIDS.com | Follow us on Instagram and YouTube.
Introducing the Band:Your hosts Scot Bertram (@ScotBertram) and Jeff Blehar (@EsotericCD) are joined by guest Peter Suderman. Suderman is the features editor at Reason magazine. He also writes the Substack Cocktails With Suderman, which is about making better cocktails at home. Find him online at Reason or @petersuderman on Twitter/X.Peter's Music Pick: The Dismemberment PlanThe name might sound like you're in for a three-and-a-half hour barrage of trendily obscure post-punk music with this episode, and you could not be more wrong. Though we're not going to lie: The first album and a half from Washington, D.C.'s mid-to-late Nineties indie-rock darlings do feel an awful lot like the twitchily inchoate remnants of the Bad Brains/Fugazi regional hardcore scene of the Eighties with a healthy dose of West Coast Minutemen math-rock thrown in as metric ballast. What they quickly settled into around the turn of the century however, with albums like The Dismemberment Plan Is Terrified, Emergency & I, and Change, was not just a genre-defining statement of what “indie-rock” was supposed to be about during what we now know retrospectively -- and jadedly -- as “the PitchforkMedia era” of rock criticism, but timeless music that can still get a crowd of downcast nerds to start dancing uncontrollably as they muse about that time they too got ruinously drunk on New Year's Eve.It is quite possible that (outside of that one Robbie Fulks episode) Political Beats may be covering its most obscure rock group to date with the Dismemberment Plan. Click now, remedy that, and open yourself to a life of dangerous possibilities.
Join our PATREON for bonus episodes. This week we have Keegan Bradford of Camp Trash on to talk about the Dismemberment Plan album Change. We also talk about: music twitter, Listen Up Nerds, podding from Texas, Camp Trah workflow, NW Portland, Oogles, Mo Troper, Portland scene report, Reconstruction Site, Pitchfork, Fountains of Wayne, the fringes of power pop, Friendship America, Buffalo Bills, "everybody always liked everything", Asian alternative bands, Hostage Calm (t-shirt band), Emergency & I, "Sentimental Man", rhythm section influences, Jawbox, the cover art, Desoto Records, "Come Home", Travis' lyrics, and so much more. ________ Order our Gatekeep Harder shirt here! // Follow us at @danbassini, @mysprocalledlife, @franziamom and @runintotheground.
We did an episode on The Dismemberment Plan! In classic 'Scroll fashion, two of us weren't familiar with this band and the other two are longtime fans. We talk about their classic albums, what makes them so beloved, how a band as odd as them became indie-rock icons, and why some of us find them so goddamn irritating.
Episode 513 is brought to you by... Stringjoy Use code: HUM to save 10% Chase Bliss Audio Support this channel on Patreon Want to send us mail? 60 Cycle Hum #615 9450 Mira Mesa Blvd. San Diego, CA 92126 Did you know that the Dismemberment Plan released an album in 2013? 00:00 Baritone PRS 18:35 Wordy 30:19 Ryan's got an upcoming Dinosaur Ghost show. Steve shows off his Fuzzrocious Li'l Fella 41:00 Let's talk about Gibson amps and also rumors that Gibson is for sale 1:13:05 This is for the Twins This week's song was from Spruce Pine and is called "Big Kahuna" **************************** 60CH on Patreon Buy Something with our affiliate links: Buy a Shirt Sweetwater zZounds Thomann Amazon Perfect Circuit Ebay Reverb Tour Gear Designs Patch Cables +++++++++++++++++++++ Social Media Stuff: Facebook Discord Instagram and Twitter @60cyclehum TikTok Hire us for Demos and other marketing opportunities #60cyclehum #guitar #guitars #shameflute
Esta semana, en Islas de Robinson, caemos a finales de los 90. Rock alternativo, con un puñado de clásicos bañados en angustia, rabia y desconcierto. Sin redención posible.... Bien vigentes, como buenos clásicos. Suenan: SMOG - "COLD BLOODED OLD TIMES" ("KNOCK, KNOCK", 1999) / SILVER JEWS - "BUCKINGHAM RABBIT" ("AMERICAN WATER", 1998) / PAVEMENT - "FIN" ("BRIGHTEN THE CORNERS", 1997) / HELIUM - "LEON'S SPACE SONG" ("THE MAGIC CITY", 1997) / MODEST MOUSE - "OUT OF GAS" ("THE LONESOME CROWDED WEST", 1997) / SPOON - "ADVANCE CASSETTE" ("A SERIES OF SNEAKS", 1998) / THE DISMEMBERMENT PLAN - "THE CITY" ("EMERGENCY & I", 1999) / THE SUPER FRIENDZ - "STAR IN ONE" ("THE SLIDE SHOW", 1996) / BEULAH - "SILVERADO DAYS" ("WHEN YOUR HEARTSTRINGS BREAK", 1999) / CAT POWER - "COLORS AND THE KIDS" ("MOON PIX", 1998) / SPARKLEHORSE - "SUNSHINE" ("GOOD MORNING SPIDER", 1998) / WILCO - "WE'RE JUST FRIENDS" ("SUMMERTEETH", 1999) / YO LA TENGO - "STOCKHOLM SYNDROME" ("I CAN HEAR THE HEART BEATING AS ONE", 1997) /Escuchar audio
Milliseconds, a new trio with two members of The Dismemberment Plan, deliver a debut album of energetic, intricate songs confronting alienation and despair. We discuss "So This is How it Happens" on episode #198 of "For the Record."
We discuss the best and worst songs from "Emergency & I" by Dismemberment Plan. Let us know your thoughts about these songs and follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. Please support the Dismemberment Plan by purchasing and streaming this album wherever you pay for music! We have a Spotify playlist containing this album and all albums discussed on The Album Argument Podcast: https://spoti.fi/3ddbwaL. *********************** If you're like us here on The Album Argument, you don't just like a great album. You also like the theatre! If you are in the Atlanta, Georgia area, be sure to get your tickets now for Main Street Theatre's production of “Kodachrome” - a play written by Adam Szymkowicz and directed by Carrie Harris. Tickets can be purchased online at mainstreettheatre.org. Kodachrome is a dramedy (drama/comedy) about love, loss, and moving on. Our very own Ryan Stroud is even in this play! Kodachrome will be at the Tucker Recreation Center every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, October 20th through November 4th. Get your tickets now for Kodachrome by visiting mainstreettheatre.org! ***********************
Mike spoke with Eric Axelson, bassist of Milliseconds and the Dismemberment Plan to discuss how technology has influenced him and what changes are alive in music today. Eric also shares some D-Plan history, gear knowledge and what influences made him the unique player he is today. You can check out Eric's new band, Milliseconds on all the socials, and hear his work with Dismemberment Plan and Maritime on your favorite streaming services.
For this week's NOW episode, Jake and Ryley are discussing their favorite albums that approach the 2 hour mark and sometimes go way longer - how can a band justify such an absurd length for a record, and what makes the best super-long albums work? Join us as we dig into these questions and more. Plus we also discuss our thoughts on the 2023 Oscar winners, the abysmal new albums from Morgan Wallen and Macklemore, as well as new announcements and discussion topics from the week in music. Let us know your favourite 2+ hour albums in the comments on YouTube! TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Our Thoughts on the 2023 Oscars 14:21 The Meg White Discourse 20:47 The Cure versus Ticketmaster 26:50 Announcements: Animal Collective reissue, Sigur Ros return 30:48 Jake Gets Into Wilco 37:55 Jake's Recs: The Magnetic Fields, Sidney Gish, Meaningful Stone 42:01 The Dismemberment Plan's Change is a Perfect 10 53:17 The New Morgan Wallen Album Is Bad 1:06:33 The New Macklemore Album Is Terrible 1:22:15 Our Essential 2+ Hour Albums
If any band personified a record collection with ADHD, it was The Dismemberment Plan. Connecting the dots between soul, post-punk and experimentalism, the quartet also brought dark humor, deep grooves and an appreciation for music history to the forefront, over five albums and millions of miles on the road. On today's show, vocalist Travis Morrison delves into the go-go scene of Washington DC, the artists that influenced his improvisational nature on stage, and a long-lost reel-to-reel that connected Travis' parents during the Vietnam War. The Dismemberment Plan's 2001 album Change will be reissued on sky blue vinyl for this year's Record Store Day, April 22nd. Follow both @travismmorrison and @thedplan on Instagram, and visit recordstoreday.com for more details.
Note from Pepper: This episode is special for me. J Robbins is my favorite producer and I never in a million years thought I would get the chance to have a conversation with him. Yay! Robbins began his career as a bassist for Government Issue, and has also led five of his own bands: Jawbox, Rollkicker Laydown, Burning Airlines, Channels, and Office of Future Plans. He was a touring bassist for Scream and played bass on the debut 7" from Jack Potential, which was issued by DeSoto Records in 1993. More recently he played bass in Report Suspicious Activity with Vic Bondi, which released two albums on Alternative Tentacles Records. In 2011, Robbins, along with Kerosene 454's drummer and fellow Channels bandmate Darren Zentek, bassist Brooks Harlan, and guitarist/cellist Gordon Withers, released an EP under the name Office of Future Plans. The band, who had been playing since 2009 and released an album on Dischord Records in November 2011, but as of October 2016, they are not together anymore. In May 31, 2019, J. Robbins released his first solo album, Un-Becoming. Robbins is also a successful producer and engineer for bands such as Ponytail, Clutch (and side project The Bakerton Group), Jets to Brazil, Hey Mercedes, Shiner, Mock Orange, The Pauses, The Life and Times, Miranda Sound, Time Spent Driving, Faraquet, The Dismemberment Plan, The Monorchid, The Promise Ring, Dwindle, Pilot to Gunner, Paint It Black, None More Black, Jawbreaker, Discount, Against Me!, Goodbye Soundscape, Modern Life is War, Stapleton, Murder By Death, mewithoutYou, Black Cross (hardcore), Lemuria, Caustic Casanova, The Sword, Debate (from Sao Paulo, Brazil), Coliseum, Hammer No More the Fingers, Small Brown Bike, Broadcaster, Noyo Mathis and Nakatomi Plaza. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Our 2023 season is officially underway. This week on the show, Chad Clark of Beauty Pill. He and his bandmate Erin Nelson joined AD in March last year, and on January 20th, Ernest Jenning Record Co. releases Blue Period, a double LP compilation featuring music Clark recorded for the legendary punk label Dischord Records between 2003-2005—including the full-length LP The Unsustainable Lifestyle, the You Are Right To Be Afraid EP, and a whole slew of outtakes, demos, and rarities. When this music was originally released, fans accustomed to Clark's pioneering punk band Smart Went Crazy, early Beauty Pill, or Clark's work with Fugazi and The Dismemberment Plan, wasn't sure what to make of its art-pop ambitions, detours into jazz, and complex lyricism. Clark and Transmissions host Jason P. Woodbury get into all that, and along the way, they touch on his recurring health issues, race, mortality, what it feels like when critics dismiss your work, and much more. Thanks for checking out Transmissions. If you dig the show, please consider leaving a five star rating or a review—or just forwarding your favorite episodes to a friend. We're a part of the Talkhouse Podcast Network. Aquarium Drunkard is powered by its Patrons—if you'd like to become one, visit us on Patreon. Next week on the show: James McNew of Dump and Yo La Tengo.
Danny introduces Lush to The Dismemberment Plan. Apple Music playlist: https://music.apple.com/us/playlist/the-dismemberment-plan/pl.u-eJqpsDdar2 YouTube playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLokn-agIY3tMkhXO6s5x96CN2QX69UZHu
Will and I pretend to be lawyers and act like we know what we're talking about with the GOR contract. --- If you like the pod, consider supporting us @ https://redwhitenetwork.com/membership --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/red-white-ncstate-podcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/red-white-ncstate-podcast/support
In the latest episode of Columbia House Party, hosts Jake Goldsbie and Blake Murphy discuss Emergency & I, the 1999 album from The Dismemberment Plan. More than two decades later, it remains held in the highest of indie esteem. Find out more about the best rhythm section in indie rock, what Jake feels is maybe THE best song (period!), which band member moved on to work for NASA, and more on this week's podcast. Sick of hearing all the ads? Subscribe to Soda Premium on Apple Podcasts to get rid of them!Come join the Patreon family for bonus episodes, mailbags, show notes and even more goodness: https://www.patreon.com/columbiahousepartyFollow @ColumbiaHP on Twitter! While you're there say hello to @BlakeMurphyODC and @JGoldsbie. If merch is your thing, be sure to check out the store: http://bit.ly/chpmerch Or reach out to the show and say hey: podcast@columbiahouseparty.com If you enjoyed today's show, please rate Columbia House Party 5-Stars on Apple Podcasts.See you next week for an all new episode of CHP.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4114831/advertisement
In the latest episode of Columbia House Party, hosts Jake Goldsbie and Blake Murphy discuss Emergency & I, the 1999 album from The Dismemberment Plan. More than two decades later, it remains held in the highest of indie esteem. Find out more about the best rhythm section in indie rock, what Jake feels is maybe THE best song (period!), which band member moved on to work for NASA, and more on this week's podcast. Come join the Patreon family for bonus episodes, mailbags, show notes and even more goodness: https://www.patreon.com/columbiahouseparty Follow @ColumbiaHP on Twitter! While you're there say hello to @BlakeMurphyODC and @JGoldsbie. If merch is your thing, be sure to check out the store: http://bit.ly/chpmerch Or reach out to the show and say hey: podcast@columbiahouseparty.com If you enjoyed today's show, please rate Columbia House Party 5-Stars on Apple Podcasts.See you next week for an all new episode of CHP.
On this week's Talkhouse Podcast, we've got two veterans of ‘90s rock who went on to form bands that referenced air travel in their name and whose biggest bands both start with Jaw: Blake Schwarzenbach of Jawbreaker and J. Robbins of Jawbox. Sorry if that was confusing, I'll clear it up for you. Blake Schwarzenbach was and is the singer and guitarist of the band Jawbreaker, which had its initial run from 1986 until 1996, at which time they acrimoniously splintered after longtime fans turned their backs on 1995's Dear You, mostly because these dogmatic listeners were mad that the band had signed to a major label. These things were a big deal then, which seems kind of quaint now. History was incredibly kind to both Jawbreaker and Dear You, so much so that in 2017 they reformed to headline Chicago's massive Riot Fest, and they've been playing together on and off ever since. In the intervening years, Schwarzenbach also played in other great bands, most notably Jets to Brazil, which is what I was referencing earlier. Jawbreaker is on tour now, and they're bringing along some of their favorite bands to open, which brings us to… Jawbox, which followed a sorta similar trajectory to Jawbreaker. They came together in the late ‘80s, released a couple of incredible albums for a respected independent label, and then moved into the big leagues, with all the baggage and joy that might bring. Jawbox split in 1997, and Robbins went on to form Burning Airlines—are you seeing a pattern here?—but Jawbox reconvened in 2019. Those two bands certainly aren't the beginning and end of Robbins' amazing contributions to the world of music, though: Prior to Jawbox he was in Government Issue—you'll hear them referred to as GI in this chat—he's served as producer for a number of bands over the years, including Jets to Brazil, the Promise Ring, the Dismemberment Plan, Against Me, and other bands that make my 1990s heart sing. I hope you'll notice I haven't said emo once yet. In this conversation, J. and Blake talk about what it feels like to play shows together again after all these years—and all this pandemic. Blake compliments J. on his psychedelic guitar playing, and J. isn't sure what to make of that. And we learn—I think for the first time—that Jawbox briefly considered calling themselves Jawbreaker, before J. discovered Jawbreaker's first single at a record store and crossed it off his list. Enjoy. Thanks for listening to the Talkhouse Podcast, and thanks to J. Robbins and Blake Schwarzenbach for chatting. This episode was produced by Myron Kaplan, and the Talkhouse theme is composed and performed by the Range.
Our guests this week are Chad Clark and Erin Nelson of DC post-punk band Beauty Pill. Clark emerged from the DC/Dischord punk scene with his band Smart Went Crazy, and he worked on records by Fugazi, Dismemberment Plan, Lungfish, Q & Not U, and many more. He formed Beauty Pill in the early 2000s and it's proved a musically restless unit ever since. He's allowed the band to shift and morph in public and in 2012 the group was commissioned to craft the album Beauty Pill Describes Things As They Are live in public. Most recently, the band has released some great EPs, including Instant Night and Please Advise. For this episode of Transmissions, host Jason P. Woodbury spoke with Clark and Nelson about the oblique lyrical references in these works—get ready for our most Matt Damon-centric episode yet—as well as dig into the influence of Miles Davis, William Eggleston, and collaborations with the Taffety Punk Theatre Company.
i'm thrilled to announce the acquisition of this radio show on the part of the PESKY MEDIA GROUP. I realize there's a handful of you who take exception to their ties to the last Presidential administration, if not the investments they've received by what some consider to be a a murderous regime with no patience for human rights, but I prefer to look at the big picture. Just think of all the synergistic opportunities this will provide for me and the program? So what if they've told me I can no longer play anything by The Dismemberment Plan, it's not like I was going to anyways.
Today we stop thinking with our heads, and start thinking with our chests. That's right, singing nerds — your hosts are doing a cantabile episode about vocal registers. Whether you're an expert in all things glottis or you're wondering if a larynx is a type of mythical creature, you're about to hear us talk about what singers do best: push air out of their throats in different ways. We discuss our favorite instances of singers using the following vocal registers: (1) whistle (2) falsetto (3) modal (4) vocal fry Featuring music from Björk, The Dismemberment Plan, Ruth Brown, Ariana Grande, and more.
In the latest episode of Columbia House Party, hosts Jake Goldsbie and Blake Murphy discuss Emergency & I, the 1999 album from The Dismemberment Plan. More than two decades later, it remains held in the highest of indie esteem. Find out more about the best rhythm section in indie rock, what Jake feels is maybe THE best song (period!), which band member moved on to work for NASA, and more on this week's podcast.Come join the Patreon family for bonus episodes, mailbags, show notes and even more goodness: https://www.patreon.com/columbiahouseparty Follow @ColumbiaHP on Twitter! While you're there say hello to @BlakeMurphyODC and @JGoldsbie. If merch is your thing, be sure to check out the store: http://bit.ly/chpmerch Or reach out to the show and say hey: podcast@columbiahouseparty.com If you enjoyed today's show, please rate Columbia House Party 5-Stars on Apple Podcasts.See you next week for an all new episode of CHP.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4114831/advertisement
In the latest episode of Columbia House Party, hosts Jake Goldsbie and Blake Murphy discuss Emergency & I, the 1999 album from The Dismemberment Plan. More than two decades later, it remains held in the highest of indie esteem. Find out more about the best rhythm section in indie rock, what Jake feels is maybe THE best song (period!), which band member moved on to work for NASA, and more on this week's podcast.Come join the Patreon family for bonus episodes, mailbags, show notes and even more goodness: https://www.patreon.com/columbiahouseparty Follow @ColumbiaHP on Twitter! While you're there say hello to @BlakeMurphyODC and @JGoldsbie. If merch is your thing, be sure to check out the store: http://bit.ly/chpmerch Or reach out to the show and say hey: podcast@columbiahouseparty.com If you enjoyed today’s show, please rate Columbia House Party 5-Stars on Apple Podcasts.See you next week for an all new episode of CHP.
Our theme this week comes from Robert Christgau, who can turn a phrase better than any other music critic. (The) Dismemberment Plan’s Emergency & I is all nervy energy, jittery mood swings, and mid-20s panic. It’s also an album Matt and Tim like quite a lot. For replacements, Matt offers two albums even closer to his heart in Motion City Soundtrack’s I Am the Movie and Los Campesinos! No Blues. We talk ennui and existentialism and freaking the f*** out, then Tim does some fun math to make a choice.
Heggs, Jooon and Guy are back and they're talking Season 2 of Twin Peaks! In the Season premier we see Coop narrowly escaping death with the help of a new friend. So many comas! So many riddles! SO MUCH COFFEE! Join the guys as they try to make sense of it all. This episode we played a clip from the band Dismemberment Plan. The song was "Gyroscope" from the album "Emergency & I". Dismemberment plan are a band this podcast endorses. They have been around since the late 1990 and I believe are still going strong. They are available to listen and download on all major platforms! We reeeeeealy want to hear from you! Seriously! Tweet at us @GDoodmen Send an email to happyhourinfrance119@gmail.com This episode contains music by Angelo Badalamenti and David Lynch. Hours of music from Twin Peaks seasons 1 , 2 and Fire Walk With Me can be found here for $10!!!: https://www.discogs.com/David-Lynch-The-Twin-Peaks-Archive/release/8885999 And if you like the theme song here are a few others you might like: guydoodmen/bandcamp.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/happyhourinfrance/message
Plus/Minus, is an American band formed in 2001 out of New York, NY. I first heard their 2008 album You Are Here, which I loved. Pitchfork Media gave it a stellar review at the time and compared Plus/Minus to one of my favorite bands of all time, The Dismemberment Plan.MembersJames Baluyut (vocals, guitar, keyboard, producer)Patrick Ramos (vocals, guitar, keyboard, drums)Chris Deaner (drums, sampler, banjo, clarinet, vibraphone, video production)
platform of choice via Wavve.Episode 158 of Look At My Records features an interview with Philadelphia indie-rock quintet Goings. This emo and math rock-influenced group got their start in drummer Chris Kearney’s grandmother’s dance studio while it was vacant in the winter of 2017, and they emerged with a batch of rhythmic, toe-tapping tunes that make up their debut, “It’s For You.” Released this past November on Know Hope Records, the album mixes vibrant synths with quirky beats and flowing rhythms for a sound that recalls bands like Motion City Soundtrack and The Dismemberment Plan. Tune in to hear all about the band’s early practices in the aforementioned dance studio, their highly collaborative songwriting process, how they’ve been spending their time lately, and a whole lot more. This episode features records from Donovan, The Zombies, Destroyer, The Dismemberment Plan, Crumb, and Cymbals Eat Guitar. Follow along with the band’s record pick through the official playlist for Episode 158!You can purchase a copy of It’s For You on vinyl via Know Hope Records. The album is also available on Bandcamp and Spotify. Keep up with the band by following them on Instagram and liking them on Facebook. You can purchase a copy of It’s For You on vinyl via Know Hope Records. The album is also available on Bandcamp and Spotify. Keep up with the band by following them on Instagram and liking them on Facebook.
John T. Drake (VP Biz Dev and Licensing for Games at Disney, fmr. PlayStation and Harmonix) joins Matt and Jason for a crazy specific episode of CrossFade! Where vocalist Travis Morrison looks inward on The Dismemberment Plan’s “Change,” Ziggy St--erm, David Bowie looks to the skies on “The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars” – but both tell their own specific stories. John regales us with some positively wild tales from his Harmonix days (warning: discussions of blood, T. Pain, Pete Wentz, and a disappointed Beatle) and more in our community questions segment before Brittany Howard’s “13th Century Metal” takes us out, courtesy of MinnMax supporter James Burkett. Thanks to James and everyone who asked questions and threw songs our way! To jump to a particular discussion, check out the timestamps below… 16:55 - “Sentimental Man” 20:19 - “Come Home” 23:38 - “Superpowers” 29:30 - “The Face of the Earth” 32:53 - “Automatic” 34:38 - “Time Bomb” 41:35 - “Ellen and Ben” 47:13 - David Bowie: The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars 54:32 - “Ziggy Stardust” 58:35 - “Five Years” 1:03:37 - “Moonage Daydream” 1:07:45 - “Starman” 1:10:10 - “Star” 1:13:29 - “Hang on to Yourself” 1:16:16 - “Lady Stardust” 1:20:11 - “Suffragette City” 1:29:22 - “Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide” 1:35:41 - Community questions 1:59:29 - John’s wildest stories from his time at Harmonix 2:18:33 - Community song (“13th Century Metal” by Brittany Howard, suggested by MinnMax supporter James Burkett) Sign the petition to pass legislation protecting live performance venues during COVID-19 at https://www.saveourstages.com/ Follow John on Twitter at https://twitter.com/johntdrake Support MinnMax on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/minnmax/ CrossFade Episode Playlist: https://spoti.fi/2vgqfvK
In some outtakes from last week's episode on the Dismemberment Plan, Jon, Harrison, and special guest Glenn Case chat about some of the Dismemberment Plan's later work, social anxiety, karaoke, how Gen-Z has claimed the word "Oof," and Glenn's arm tattoo, depicting the cover art from Emergency & I. They're some fun, if disconnected, pieces of conversation, and we hope they tide you over until next week's episode on Jane's Addiction! Come join us for an hour of thoughtful and good-humored commentary, and we'll catch you on the B-side! The spreadsheet Request Lottery picks and their associated numbers can be seen here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1xOiYNZduLxz7L2CtNUPK1YOu63ni2XTWpcy1cdB6EQw/edit?usp=sharing You can get your request on this list by donating to our Patreon account at the $5 level or above. Support us on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/PlayDiscPodcast Follow us on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/PlayDiscPodcast/ Follow us on Twitter! https://twitter.com/PlayDiscPodcast Email us at playdiscpodcast@gmail.com This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Special Guest: Glenn Case.
Independent musician Glenn Case is back, this time on an album discussion episode! After winning the PLAY DISC Request Lottery at the end of last episode, Glenn agreed to join us for the discussion on The Dismemberment Plan's 1999 album Emergency & I. OVer the course of our conversation, we discuss... Glenn's occasional correspondence with Dismemberment Plan frontman Travis Morrison, including Morrison's reaction upon learning we were doing this episode Jon and Harrison's difficulty in trying to identify any preceding influence that might explain this album The multiple songs on this album that have odd time signatures, and the one where it was most noticeable ("Is there such thing as seven-and-a-half over four?") The relationship between computer coding and writing these types of songs The early articulation of the idea of "emotional labor" in "Memory Machine" Some discordant vocal melody choices and how they lead to "breakthroughs" as the songs evolve The album's themes of loneliness, struggle, isolation, desperation... The human condition Comparing the hormonal libidinous "Girl O'Clock" with Joe Jacksons' hormonal libidinous "Pretty Girls" Harrison finds an unlikely point of comparison in an anime (who had that on their Bingo card?) "I Love a Magician" and the Turd in the Caviar (https://music.avclub.com/the-turd-in-the-caviar-24-songs-that-almost-derail-gre-1798223671) Our key tracks and a preview of next week's episode! Come join us for an hour of thoughtful and good-humored commentary, and we'll catch you on the B-side! The spreadsheet Request Lottery picks and their associated numbers can be seen here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1xOiYNZduLxz7L2CtNUPK1YOu63ni2XTWpcy1cdB6EQw/edit?usp=sharing You can get your request on this list by donating to our Patreon account at the $5 level or above. Support us on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/PlayDiscPodcast Follow us on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/PlayDiscPodcast/ Follow us on Twitter! https://twitter.com/PlayDiscPodcast Email us at playdiscpodcast@gmail.com This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Special Guest: Glenn Case.
New to InObscuria? Typically what we do is exhume obscure Rock n' Punk n' Metal in one of 3 categories: the Lost, the Forgotten, or the Should Have Beens. In the case of this particular episode, we are leaning towards the LOST. Although there is a definite audience who follows this genre and it’s sub-genre counterparts, Math Rock bands are mostly lost on the general music consuming public… Hope you dig!Songs this week include:Minus The Bear – “The Fix” from Menos El Oso (2005)The Dismemberment Plan – “Gyroscope” from Emergency And I (1999)Brazil – “Io” from A Hostage And The Meaning Of Life (2004)Protest The Hero – “Moonlight” from Scurrilous (2011)Enemies – “We’ve Been Talking” from We’ve Been Talking (2010)Shudder To Think – “Chakka” from Pony Express Record (1994)These Arms Are Snakes – “Deer Lodge” from Easter (2006)Please subscribe everywhere that you listen to podcasts!Visit us: https://inobscuria.com/https://www.facebook.com/InObscuriahttps://twitter.com/inobscuriahttps://www.instagram.com/inobscuria/Buy cool stuff with our logo on it!: https://www.redbubble.com/people/inobscuria/og-shop
Time to wrap this arc up! We've talked about the Whitney Bros, we've talked about Steinway and the Rapid Transit Commissions, we've talked about Boston and digging up old graves, now it's time for the big one: New York City, the IRT, and the creation of the Subway in Manhattan. It's a wild one, you better strap in.Special music shout-out goes to 65daysofstatic, whose unlicensed remix of 'Face Of The Earth' by The Dismemberment Plan makes up our intro/outro music for this four episode arc. We love you, 65dos. Stumble.Stop.Repeat.Donate to the Lebanese Red Cross: http://www.redcross.org.lb/Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/DepartureBoardFollow us on Twitter: @DeparturePodEvan's Twitter: @not12xDylan's on IG: @DylDraws4WhiskeyRobby's on IG too!: @RobertJMartineau
The penultimate episode of our first multi-episode arc covering the creation of the first U.S. Subways. Boston's got a real Tragedy on the Common as the oldest public park in the United States gets torn apart to lay what would become the oldest subway in the United States. Plus, too many people get on board a streetcar. All this, and more!Special music shout-out goes to 65daysofstatic, whose unlicensed remix of 'Face Of The Earth' by The Dismemberment Plan makes up our intro/outro music for this four episode arc. We love you, 65dos. Stumble.Stop.Repeat.Donate to the Lebanese Red Cross: http://www.redcross.org.lb/Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/DepartureBoardFollow us on Twitter: @DeparturePodEvan's Twitter: @not12xDylan's on IG: @DylDraws4WhiskeyRobby's on IG too!: @RobertJMartineau
Part Two, baybee! Our first multi-episode arc covering the creation of the first U.S. Subways. This time we talk politics and pianos, covering everything from the Great Blizzard of 1888 to John 'HoneyFitz' Fitzgerald to William Steinway. There's some good meat on these wings, let's dig in.Special music shout-out goes to 65daysofstatic, whose unlicensed remix of 'Face Of The Earth' by The Dismemberment Plan makes up our intro/outro music for this four episode arc. We love you, 65dos. Stumble.Stop.Repeat.Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/DepartureBoardNot A Boss? Join the One Big Union! www.iww.org/membershipFollow us on Twitter: @DeparturePodEvan's Twitter: @not12xDylan's on IG: @DylDraws4WhiskeyRobby's on IG too!: @RobertJMartineau
On this episode the boys discuss the 1999 album "Emergency and I" by The Dismemberment Plan. nottherockpod.com Jason's Links: Instagram - @hessisbest.com Website - hessisbest.com Alpha Bravo Charlie - abcwilco.com Josh's Links: Instagram - @grenadesohio Favorite Band - https://tinyurl.com/ydb7vbzlOn --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nottherock/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/nottherock/support
A GAFFE ISN'T A BUG, IT'S A FEATURE!Part one in our first multi-episode arc covering the creation of the first U.S. Subways! Today we lay some groundwork talking about Henry and William Whitney, two brothers you probably didn't know about but who both individually shaped their cities in dramatic ways. Also: Evan screws up a bunch, everyone laughs at each other, and holy shit Grover Cleveland really loved his nepotism.Special music shout-out goes to 65daysofstatic, whose unlicensed remix of 'Face Of The Earth' by The Dismemberment Plan makes up our intro/outro music for this four episode arc. We love you, 65dos. Stumble.Stop.Repeat.Assata's Daughters can be supported here: https://www.assatasdaughters.org/Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/DepartureBoardFollow us on Twitter: @DeparturePodEvan's Twitter: @not12xDylan's on IG: @DylDraws4WhiskeyRobby's on IG too!: @RobertJMartineau
Greg was invited on the Tuning Fork podcast, a show where they discuss albums that the indie tastemaking site Pitchfork has given extreme high or low scores to. Greg demanded justive for Travistan, the first solo record by Dismemberment Plan frontman Travis Morrison, which was given a cruel 0.0 score. Hear him and hosts Dave and Matt defend this solid slice of indie rock. Subscribe to Tuning Fork wherever podcasts are found!
In the latest Like This Pod Mini, Jacqueline and Meghan react live to songs their significant others think they’re going to like. Songs:Love Me Dead - Ludo (T.J.)Farewell Transmission - Songs: Ohia (Matt)Rich Kids - New Medicine (T.J.)Absinthe Party at the Fly Honey Warehouse - Minus the Bear (Matt)Imaginary Days - Mark Morton (T.J.)Time Bomb - The Dismemberment Plan (Matt) Follow I Think You're Gonna Like This Podcast on social media:InstagramFacebookTwitterWebsiteJacqueline InstagramMeghan Instagram If you like the podcast and want to support us, click here.
This week the Moonlight Mile Music Club decides to forgo reviewing albums in favor of discussing an interesting question and one we invite you to answer as well:When was the last time you heard an album that truly floored you?Songs sampled:The Dismemberment Plan – “The City” from Emergency & I (1999)Gene Clark – “Some Misunderstanding” from No Other (1974)XTC – “I’d Like That” from Apple Venus, Vol.1 (1999)Fantastic Negrito – “Hump Thru The Winter” from The Last Days of Oakland (2016)Mark Knopfler – “Postcards From Paraguay” from Shangri-La (2004)Lyle Lovett – “I Can’t Love You Anymore” from The Road To Ensenada (1996)Local Natives – “You & I” from Hummingbird (2013)Whiskeytown – “Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight” from From Stranger’s Almanac (1997)Ryan Adams – “Harder Now That It’s Over” from Gold (2002)K.D. Lang – “Sugar Moon” from Shadowland (1988)Nick Drake – “Which Will” from Pink Moon (1972)Big Thief – “Century” from U.F.O.F. (2019)Adrianne Lenker – “Terminal Paradise” from Abysskiss (2018)
Our tenth sad song (the recordings of eight and nine are in need of remastering, so are pending) is 'Spider in the Snow' by the Dismemberment Plan.
On this episode of The Greatest Thing You've Never Heard, Mat and Ben discuss their love of The Dismemberment Plan's 1999 classic, Emergency and I. This is the first episode where both Mat and Ben were familiar with the album in question ahead of time and the result is an overstuffed commentary where both hosts delve deep into the record's inner meaning.
In this first standalone Next Time On segment, Mat and Ben discuss the albums they're currently listening to and introduce the subject of the next full episode - The Dismemberment Plan's Emergency and I.
Well, *sigh*, things sure have changed since we last caught up with Anne, Caroline, Gale and Producer Lisann. Since O,Miami's annual April festival went O,nline, we gathered via Zoom at 3:05 PM on April 11th, 2020 for our first "live" episode of Now That We're Friends. We went through a few listener questions about life in quarantine. We read our favorite isolation poems and played our go-to lonely jams. We speculated on how we'll react to each another once we're all out in the open again. And we talked about how we're essentially in a time portal right now. So hop into the time portal that is this episode, where your new friends will great you on the other side with the best recs! Our Quarantine Recs: - 30 Rock "100" episode Gale - Don't Let Me Be Lonely: An American Lyric Book by Claudia Rankine Gale - "Are You Alright" by Lucinda Williams Gale - "Nick and the Candlestick" by Sylvia Plath Gale - Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, Gail Honeyman (novel) Anne - Emergency and I, The Dismemberment Plan, (album); "The Jitters" (song) Anne - Midwinter Day, Bernadette Mayer (poetry collection) Anne - Age of Miracles by Karen Thompson Walker (novel) Caro - "The Lean Reward" by Cherry Pickman (poem) & "Movies of Myself" by Rufus Wainwright (song) Caro - The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (novella) Caro - Westworld (tv series) Lisann - Devs (tv series) Lisann - Acoustic covers of pop songs Lisann “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” Greg Laswell or Finn from Glee “Dancing On My Own” Calum Scott - Poems from Anne, Gale and Caroline. Lisann [In this small tent men pound] by Gale Thompson Ten of Spades by Caroline Cabrera Poems from "Dead Year" by Anne Holmes - You've Got Mail (film) Lisann - Plays where people are stuck together. Lisann No Exit Bad Jews
You Have To Hear This! is hosted by Ryan Terry and Lucas Cottet and produced by Fredonia Radio Systems. Aired February 17th, 2019, on 88.9 WCVF. This week, Ryan and Lucas are joined by a special guest Dennis McAndrew to discuss A Boat On The Sea by Moron Police, Emergency & I by The Dismemberment Plan and White Men Are Black Men Too by Young Fathers. Next episode will feature special guest Evan Donnelly and we'll be discussing the albums Skiptracing by Mild High Club, Silent Shout by The Knife and Two by Unknown Mortal Orchestra. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/youhavetohearthispodcast/ Ryan's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rterry11558/ Lucas' Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/__lucasc__/ Dennis' Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jesus_the_frog42/ Podcast art by Emilia Laraiso. Music by Evan Donnelly. Ryan is also on the show Terry Talks Podcast, and similar shows worth listening to are You Have To Watch This! and Stories Worth Sharing, hosted by Clayton Terry. Songs Played: The Invisible King by Moron Police, What Do You Want Me To Say? by The Dismemberment Plan and 27 by Young Fathers. Thank you to Anchor for making this podcast possible.
You Have To Hear This! is hosted by Ryan Terry and Lucas Cottet and produced by Fredonia Radio Systems. Aired February 10th, 2019, on 88.9 WCVF. This week, Ryan and Lucas are joined by a special guest and lead singer of Beach Tower Cascio Fonseca to discuss Separation by Balance and Compusure, Transatlanicism by Death Cab For Cutie and You're Gonna Miss It All by Modern Baseball, as well as discussing the albums we are most looking forward to this year. Next episode will feature special guest Dennis McAndrew and we'll be discussing the albums A Boat On The Sea by Moron Police, White Men Are Black Men Too by Young Fathers and Emergency & I by The Dismemberment Plan. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/youhavetohearthispodcast/ Ryan's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rterry11558/ Lucas' Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/__lucasc__/ Cascio's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cascio.fonseca/ Podcast art by Emilia Laraiso. Music by Evan Donnelly. Ryan is also on the show Terry Talks Podcast, and similar shows worth listening to are You Have To Watch This! and Stories Worth Sharing, hosted by Clayton Terry. Songs Played: More To Me by Balance and Composure, Transatlanicism by Death Cab For Cutie and Mass by Modern Baseball. Thank you to Anchor for making this podcast possible.
As 2019 winds down, SportsAlcohol.com is looking back... to 1999 again! In a series of shorter, sweeter mini-episodes, we're dedicating individual discussions to some major albums from 1999 that mean a lot to us, then and/or now. First up is Emergency & I, the classic third record by the Dismemberment Plan. How did we love this album then and how do we love it now? Listen and learn, indie rock nerds!
On this third transmission of Songs From The Farside you'll hear music from and learn about Throwing Muses, The Smoke, The Stranglers and The Dismemberment Plan.
Without the influence of J. Robbins, the indie-rock landscape from the 90's through today would be missing a specific tonality, seeped heavily in both nuance and bite. From his songwriting and musicianship in bands like Jawbox, Channels and Burning Airlines to his production/engineering work with The Promise Ring, Jets to Brazil, Texas Is The Reason, Shiner, The Dismemberment Plan and a slew of others, he's a widely respected architect of the sound we know as post-punk. Hot off the recent announcement of Jawbox's upcoming summer tour (the band's first in over 20 years), J. discusses his early love for orchestral soundtracks, how he feels the Jawbox of 2019 can be a better band than they were during their initial run, and why his one-off collaboration a decade ago with Death Cab for Cutie's Chris Walla for NPR remains one of his lifelong favorite experiences. Online, you can visit www.jawbox.band for their schedule, social media, merchandise and discography, as well as jrobbins.bandcamp.com.
Sun Monkeys played a blend of rock, go-go, jazz, hip-hop, and punk that was, "funkier than James Brown's socks." This group spawned out of a jam session by kids that went to both South Lakes and Osbourn Park High Schools in Northern Virginia, and the lineup that recorded their landmark album, Brotherhood, featured Zack Larkin on vocals, Aaron Platt on bass, Thomas Brady on guitar, and Pete Van Allen on drums. They went through many different lineups during their years booking every show they could get, from DC Space to Dharma Coffee House, but especially as the nominal house band at Bender's/The Cave in Manassass. Other members include: Ari Kirschenbaum, Tom Young, Matt Goodspeed, Lara Platt, Stevie Treichel, Josh Scalero, Rashaad Jones, Mike Margolis, and Crick. Their second album, Love American Style, expanded their sound, with keyboards, samples, and a more laid-back style. They were known for their sexually explicit lyrics and posters, original artwork designed by percussionist Kirschenbaum, and lengthy sets filled with exuberant, sweaty dancing. Sun Monkeys were contemporaries of and played shows with bands such as AVAIL, Mary Jane, Vehicle Birth, and Dismemberment Plan.
Chris Jackson liked to play guitar riffs at an early age, from the Peter Gunn theme to Day Tripper, and made a musical career out of them with the rock band The Vehicle Birth and later Cracktorch. He opened the Dharma Coffee House in Fairfax with his friend Christian Yavorsk years before anybody in the area heard of Starbucks in order to have a place that served great coffee like they did in Europe, but also to give high school and college kids a place to hang out and listen to live music and poetry. Dharma hosted bands such as The Dismemberment Plan, Frodus, and the Sun Monkeys along with Jackson's own band, as they competed to be the best group in the area. The Vehicle Birth then moved to Boston to go to college, only releasing three singles and an LP called Tragedy on Crank in 1998. They went on a cross-country tour to support the album in 1999, but broke up on their way back home. Jackson then went on to form Cracktorch, who released the album Tonight the City in 2005 and went on to tour for the next decade. Visit https://www.facebook.com/pages/category/Musician-Band/The-Vehicle-Birth-165595246822653/ for more information on The Vehicle Birth or https://www.amazon.com/Tonight-City-Cracktorch/dp/B001P2TID2 to purchase the album by Cracktorch.
Mike Davis learned guitar from his neighbor Steve Niles, who went on to play in Gray Matter, and formed his first band, Pudwak, with Sean Philpotts and Dave Allen, who later played in Branch Manager. They recorded one cassette album with Mike Clayberg from Malefice. They then added Davis White, also of Malefice and later Repercussion, on drums, renamed themselves Foundation, and recorded two albums with Don Zientara at Inner Ear Studios. Mike went on to work at Inner Ear himself as an engineer and producer and helped record albums by Dismemberment Plan and the Goons among many others. Along the way, he helped connect Dag Nasty with their first vocalist and played with other members of the band in Los Vampiros. He also played in the eclectic NOVA band The Iceboxers and on albums by the Blood Bats, featuring Charles Bennington of Bloody Mannequin Orchestra. Suffice it to say, Mike helped establish what would come to be known as the Reston Hardcore scene and had a Zelig-like ability to cross over with virtually everybody making great music in Northern Virginia at that time. His guitar sound is an indelible part of numerous stellar records from the 80s and 90s as well as his recording techniques.
This Week Paul gets worried for his life on the London Overground & Dan recalls when he fell in love with Metallica, Canvas & The Blood Brothers. Fuelled by... RAW MAGAZINE Issue 108: October 1992 FRACTURE Issue 13: September 2000 BANDS DISCUSSED: Call Off The Search . Morass Of Molasses . Alice In Chains . Jesus Piece . Frontierer . Rush . Ohhms . Deep Purple . Metallica . Body Count . Temple of the Dog . Pearl Jam . Nirvana . L7 . Ghost . Kreator . Sonic Youth . Mudhoney . Therapy? . Bon Jovi . Ugly Kid Joe . Pantera . Bikini Kill . Megadeth . Sunfactor . Elliot . Rydell . Starmarket . DS-13 . Black Sabbath . Hepcat . John Holmes . Canvas . Dandeleon . The Blood Brothers . The Dismemberment Plan .
Every decade of rock music and its various sub genre offshoots has produced oft-debated lists of notable drummers, and the 1990s is no exception. From the jazz-influenced speed of The Smashing Pumpkins Jimmy Chamberlain, to the technical progressive prowess of Dream Theater's Mike Portnoy, there is drummer for every style and flavor. Rather than discuss "the best," we're talking favorites, both well known and not-so-well known. Who gave us fills we still air drum to at our desks? Who pounded rhythms that make us shake our heads in awe? Whose beats influenced the next generation of drummers? From the groove metal of Pantera's Vinnie Paul to the skittish bounce of Dismemberment Plan's Joe Easley, we're scratching the surface and a bit more to get the conversation started on drummers of the 1990s. Intro - Drum Medley (I Am One by The Smashing Pumpkins / Pacific 231 by Burning Airlines / Jesus Christ Pose by Soundgarden / The City by Dismemberment Plan) 8:04 - Rhinosaur by Soundgarden 18:34 - Would? by Alice In Chains 34:37 - Hello by Oasis 41:32 - Wiser Time by The Black Crowes 58:06 - Puppets by Hum 1:02:30 - Andalusia by Shiner 1:15:07 - Milwaukee Sky Rocket by Braid Outro - Enjoy The Silence by Failure Facebook / Twitter / Instagram Zazzle Merch Store http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com
Every decade of rock music and its various sub genre offshoots has produced oft-debated lists of notable drummers, and the 1990s is no exception. From the jazz-influenced speed of The Smashing Pumpkins Jimmy Chamberlain, to the technical progressive prowess of Dream Theater's Mike Portnoy, there is drummer for every style and flavor. Rather than discuss "the best," we're talking favorites, both well known and not-so-well known. Who gave us fills we still air drum to at our desks? Who pounded rhythms that make us shake our heads in awe? Whose beats influenced the next generation of drummers? From the groove metal of Pantera's Vinnie Paul to the skittish bounce of Dismemberment Plan's Joe Easley, we're scratching the surface and a bit more to get the conversation started on drummers of the 1990s. Intro - Drum Medley (I Am One by The Smashing Pumpkins / Pacific 231 by Burning Airlines / Jesus Christ Pose by Soundgarden / The City by Dismemberment Plan) 8:04 - Rhinosaur by Soundgarden 18:34 - Would? by Alice In Chains 34:37 - Hello by Oasis 41:32 - Wiser Time by The Black Crowes 58:06 - Puppets by Hum 1:02:30 - Andalusia by Shiner 1:15:07 - Milwaukee Sky Rocket by Braid Outro - Enjoy The Silence by Failure Facebook / Twitter / Instagram Zazzle Merch Store http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com
Return to form! Still kinda sick, but it’s getting better every day. This week, I decided to leave it all on the court and write my first, legit, noise rock song. I listen to a lot of noise rock; The Paper Chase, Dananananaykroyd, Dismemberment Plan, Future of the Left. These...
Jason Caddel of indie-rock band Dismemberment Plan joins this weeks episode of Foreign National.
On the TFT Podcast we listen to and discuss “Emergency & I” (1999) by The Dismemberment Plan. Episode 304: 30-Something Sunday Vibes originally appeared on Overthinking It, the site subjecting the popular culture to a level of scrutiny it probably doesn't deserve. [Latest Posts | Podcast (iTunes Link)]
Come one, come all as we descend into the wonderfully weird pop world of the Dismemberment Plan! We're joined by Adam Schneider of Big Time Kill as we discuss how the D-Plan may have been soothsayers, are not actually a metal band, and have the best rhythm section of all of late 90s indie rock. We also manage to talk about the album here and there.
Tom sits down with Nick and Pat of Atlas Engine to talk about the recording process for the latest single, Shadow Dancer. Tune in to hear a preview of Shadow Dancer, along with their picks from Tom's record collection. Both dudes are pretty fond of the Dismemberment Plan. Atlas Engine will be playing with Loose Buttons on Thursday July 20th at Mercury Lounge.As usual, Tom also has great tracks from Wild Maker, Wilsen, Dentist, Loose Button, Evolfo, and XTC!
Podcaster Jim Hanke (vinylemergency.com) makes his second appearance on the podcast to help Brian and Bill talk about Pearl Jam's Yield (1998, Epic). Coming off a bit of a downturn in their career, some would say creatively as well as commercially (but not us), Pearl Jam went into the studio looking to use each member's songwriting contributions and came out re-energized with one of their best albums. Jim talks about the ubiquity of the band's music in his life before Bill, Brian, and Jim then discuss how Bill and Jim are mirror images as PJ fans, ripping off Led Zeppelin, Eddie Vedder getting precious lyrically, Brendan O'Brien's excellent production, the Dismemberment Plan, and much more as we make our way through the album track by track!
Ryan Matteson is the former editor-in-chief and founder of the popular music blog Muzzle Of Bees and he's currently employed by C3 Presents, where he manages a wide-range of bands including The Mountain Goats, Bully, Toro Y Moi, The Dismemberment Plan and Strand of Oaks. Both a devout Milwaukee Brewers fan and native Wisconsinite like myself, Ryan and I discuss how he went from blogging to artist management (with a few years of public relations work for Milwaukee's renowned Pabst Theater in between), as well as his vinyl white whales. We also delve into how we both personally held the birthday cake featured on the cover of Wilco The Album, how complete luck snagged him one of the rarest Pearl Jam vinyl releases there is, the thrill of booking bands on late-night TV, and lots more! Our winner for the Jay Ryan poster contest is also announced, and I discuss a bit of cool news about the podcast! Be sure to follow Ryan at twitter.com/muzzleofbees, and follow Vinyl Emergency at facebook.com/vinylemergency and twitter.com/vinylemergency
The debut episode of "Critical Karaoke," hosted by Steve Hayward, Idris Goodwin, and Ryan Raul Bañagale. Original air date: March 13, 2105 on KRCC. The subject of dance emerges frequently in this episode, which covers a range of musical genres and periods from from Michael Jackson's posthumous “Love Never Felt So Good,” to mid-90s hip hop with “T.R.O.Y.” by Pete Rock and CL Smooth, to Duke Ellington's legendary performance at the Newport Jazz Festival to a recent release by The Dismemberment Plan, and some Japanese experimental electronica (Onkyo) by Sachiko M. Visit us on the web at CriticalKaraoke.org
This week, I'm joined by Peter Hassett from the hockey blog "Russian Machine Never Breaks", who's talking about The Dismemberment Plan's album "Emergency and I". When he told me this was the album he wanted to talk about, I looked into it and immediately kicked myself for never having listened to it sooner, it's just that good.
Greg welcomes the recently re-formed Washington D.C. indie band The Dismemberment Plan to the Sound Opinions studio. Then they review the new album from Broken Bells, the collaboration between Shins frontman James Mercer & Danger Mouse.
Part 1 of my conversation with guest Brian Salvatore as we look back at the music of 1998. I've also got music from Johnny Foreigner, Fuzz and The Dismemberment Plan. Show notes: - Recorded via Skype - Check out Brian's comics podcast The Hour Cosmic - The Pixies' ongoing bass situation - Brian: Zwan was underrated - Pixies have become the butt of jokes - In 1998, Jay was 30, Brian was 16 - We both had just started dating the women we would marry - In '98, being eclectic became cool - JK: Was getting into more funk and soul - Big year for pop - TRL started in '98 - Lots of one-hit wonders: Eagle Eye Cherry, Chumbawumba, New Radicals - The New Radicals featured former child actress in band - JK: Saw Fastball open for Matthew Sweet in a tiny pub in Portland, Maine - Semisonic's drummer wrote book about the record industry - The MP3 revolution began in '98 with MP3.com - MP3.com got sued by the labels before Napster - BS: Beginning of Latin influence and the height of the short-lived swing dance craze - The Titanic soundtrack was huge - Aerosmith had big hit with "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" - Pop country was big: Shania Twain, Faith Hill - Rap metal was a lowlight: Korn, Limp Bizkit, Kid Rock broke through - Sugar Ray had a DJ named Homicide - The year of Van Halen III: The Gary Cherone era - BS paid 8 cents for VHIII - To be continued Music: Johnny Foreigner - Le Sigh Fuzz - Till the End of the Day The Dismemberment Plan - The Ice of Boston Completely Conspicuous is available through the iTunes podcast directory. Subscribe and write a review! The Johnny Foreigner song is on the album You Can Do Better on Alcopop! Records. Download the song for free at Soundcloud. The Fuzz song is on the 7-inch single L.A.M.C. #10 on Famous Class Records. Download the song for free (in exchange for your email address) at Bandcamp. The Dismemberment Plan song is on the album The Dismemberment Plan is Terrified on DeSoto Records. Download the song for free (in exchange for your email address) at Noisetrade. The opening and closing theme of Completely Conspicuous is "Theme to Big F'in Pants" by Jay Breitling. Find out more about Senor Breitling at his fine music blog Clicky Clicky. Voiceover work is courtesy of James Gralian.
The lead singer of the Dismemberment Plan makes some pretty solid arguments in favor of getting Bob Mould to appear on The Simpsons. And with that you know pretty much everything you need to know about this conversation.
Radio Dale: Music, Musicians and the Canadian Music Industry
Imagine a world where your website, a social forum to find other musicians, and sell your stuff were all in one place. IMAGINE NO MORE! Roo talks to Travis Morrison, one of two Travis' involved in the development of Shoutabl, a new website...well, web-service...for artists! Radio Dale is the podcast for independent musicians and people interested in the Canadian music industry from our unique perspective at the Dale Speaking offices. We help bring indie and established acts to radio, and spread the word online, as well as develop their careers in today's ever-changing music business. This podcast gives away some of our best information for free, and serves as the 'radio show' to broadcast the ideas, observations and insights we discover every day working with Canadian and International artists. PART ONE: This Week In Music History, three days in 1990...and a hyperactive trio talking about them! http://thisdayinmusic.com This Week On The Charts, Eminem, not M&Ms! INTERMISSION: Danish band Thee Attacks is about to hit the road with Hamilton rockers The Reason, and have a new single, 'Rock Bottom.' We feature it! PART 2: Roo talks to Travis Morrison of Shoutabl about his upcoming public release of a site designed to be your website, a place to network and meet other musicians, and sell your stuff. Hear Travis talk about sharks with lasers, the 'origin story' and his own band, The Dismemberment Plan! THE MUSIC: Thee Attacks - Rock Bottom (Feature) Web: http://www.theeattacks.dk Polite Fiction - Come A Little Closer (Intro/Outro music) Web: http://politefiction.bandcamp.com Gloryhound - Let You Down Again (behind This Week In Music History) Web: http://gloryhoundband.com Toob - Sweet Harmony (behind This Week On The Charts) Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/toob-music Elise LeGrow - No Good Woman (First segment of opening theme) All music is used with permission from the artists! RADIO DALE LOGOS courtesy of /r/picrequests on Reddit. This version came from /u/Tracy_Mapes FIND RADIO DALE & DALE SPEAKING ONLINE: Web: http://dalespeaking.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/dale_speaking Facebook: http://facebook.com/dalespeaking Email: radiodale@dalespeaking.com (please include the Episode Number in the subject line!) For every iTunes Rating and Review that Radio Dale receives, Paul McCartney's 'Christmas Time' will be played one less time this holiday season!
Autotomy: Nature's Dismemberment Plan: When threatened, some species of lizards simply jettison their own twitching tails form their bodies. It's grisly but effective. In this episode of Stuff to Blow Your Mind, Robert and Julie explore the science of autotomy in both the vertebrate and invertebrate worlds. Plus why can't humans do this? And how might it benefit regeneration science? Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
To wrap up our Fall of New Releases by 90s Bands schedule, we revisit the 1999 album Emergency & I by Dismemberment Plan, who recently reunited to release the new album Uncanney Valley out this week. Emergency & I combines a whole bunch of alternative rock royalty, like the Pixies, Pavement, Talking Heads and Gang of Four just to name a few, and produces a wholly individual sound. One of us is on board the D-Plan's ride, the other wants to get off after just a few stops. Yes, it's disagreement time!Songs in this Episode:Intro - Gyroscope2:30 - History of the Band11:50 - What Do You Want Me To Say?15:59 - A Life of Possibilities20:40 - I Love A MagicianOutro - Back and ForthFollow on Twitter / FacebookRequest A Review
To wrap up our Fall of New Releases by 90s Bands schedule, we revisit the 1999 album Emergency & I by Dismemberment Plan, who recently reunited to release the new album Uncanney Valley out this week. Emergency & I combines a whole bunch of alternative rock royalty, like the Pixies, Pavement, Talking Heads and Gang of Four just to name a few, and produces a wholly individual sound. One of us is on board the D-Plan's ride, the other wants to get off after just a few stops. Yes, it's disagreement time! Songs in this Episode: Intro - Gyroscope2:30 - History of the Band11:50 - What Do You Want Me To Say?15:59 - A Life of Possibilities20:40 - I Love A MagicianOutro - Back and Forth Follow on Twitter / Facebook Request A Review
On today's show we talk to musician Darwin Smith. Originally from Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Darwin moved to New York after attending Wesleyan for a short time and began playing in indie rock bands like The Creaky Boards and eventually his own group Darwin Deez. Their first self-titled album made a big splash in 2010, and they're second album Songs for Imaginative People came out earlier this year. It's pretty darn sweet.Check out the website for Beginnings, subscribe on iTunes and see some live dates: the next live episode will be October 1st at UCB East with Eugene Mirman (Bob's Burgers), Guy Branum (Totally Biased), musical guest Travis Morrison of The Dismemberment Plan, and guest co-host Elliot Kalan of The Daily Show and the Flop House Podcast!
On today's show, I talk to comics writer Fred Van Lente. Originally on the path to be a professor, Fred sold his first comic script about a decade ago and moved to New York City. Since then, he's written on a number of fantastic titles including Amazing Spider-Man, Marvel Zombies, Incredible Hercules, and most recently, the incredibly funny Archer and Armstrong relaunch for Valiant.Check out the website for Beginnings, subscribe on iTunes and see some live dates: the next live episode will be October 1st at UCB East with musical guest Travis Morrison of The Dismemberment Plan, guest co-host Elliot Kalan of The Daily Show and the Flop House Podcast and more!
You can download the episode by clicking here Ryan and Alex take on The Dismemberment Plan's The Dismemberment Plan is Terrified and the new album from The Jimi Hendrix Experience People, Hell, and Angels. This episode also had some sweet sweet bonus content. You can get to it here
You can download the episode by clicking here Ryan and Alex take on The Dismemberment Plan's The Dismemberment Plan is Terrified and the new album from The Jimi Hendrix Experience People, Hell, and Angels. This episode also had some sweet sweet bonus content. You can get to it here
You can download the episode by clicking here Ryan and Alex take on The Dismemberment Plan's The Dismemberment Plan is Terrified and the new album from The Jimi Hendrix Experience People, Hell, and Angels. This episode also had some sweet sweet bonus content. You can get to it here
Tonight's Jonah Raydio has musician and animator MYKE CHILLIAN joining the boys with songs from his band THE MANX, and selections from Anxiety Machine Records ( anxietymachinerecords.bandcamp.com ) such as Gay Kiss, Dogbreth and more! Also joining the gang is Adam and Kali Kazoo! Also, buy our new JONAH RAYDIO shirts available now from Blue Collar Distro! Artwork by Dana Lechtenberg, a DISMEMBERMENT PLAN parody. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Guest DJ: Travis Morrison (The Dismemberment Plan, Travis Morrison Hellfighters) | Playlist: ... Amadou & Mariam - La Réalité | Prince - Cindy C. | Arctic Monkeys - Dancing Shoes | Morphine - Super Sex | Jamie Lidell - When I Come Back Around | Smart Went Crazy - Con Art | Ska Cubano - Soy Campesino | Clara Ward - I Got Shoes | Camp Lo - Swing | Marvin Gaye - His Eye Is on the Sparrow | Ghostface Killah - Kilo | Michael White - The Land of Spirit and Light (Part 2) | Sam Cooke - A Change Is Gonna Come | Poison Clan - Jeri Curl | Amerie - One Thing | Etta James - Fool That I Am |
[Show Notes Link]Direct Download Link | | Direct download link For the month of August, the Six(plus one) Song is here for your listening pleasure. The day started off rough, and with no bandwidth to speak of until this afternoon, I felt like kicking out the jams and rocking out. The only real theme to today is that all of this music is played with direct, artist permission. Please check out the links to the artists and help them out with your support! Nada Surf – blankest yearVoyager One – salvationLocal H – california songsPretty Girls Make Graves – if you hate your friends, you’re not aloneTravis Morrison – what’s your fantasy? The Dismemberment Plan Shiner – semper fi [thirdgearscratch.com – fan site] The Life and Times Sebadoh – i smell a rat Lou Barlow Folk Implosion 34:21 minutesradiozoom.net Subscribe: RSS Podcast Feed Subscribe on iTunes © Copyright Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0), RadioZoom (John Bollwitt)