Tag Archive for: featured

Song We Like: Can’t Do Drugz by Megative

Song We Like: Can’t Do Drugz by Megative

Sorry, we’re cooler than you because we found this band before you did. Ha. (Featured on our #42 podcast)

Song We Like: Wales by Voodoo

Song We Like: Wales by Voodoo

Our first Costa Rican band brings you a great, great, great song to lie down on the floor to. Not that we’ve tried lying on the floor and listening to it. But if we had, we could attest that it is a nice experience. Set it to repeat and let it last an hour, like it should. (Featured on our #42 podcast)

Song We Like: Obnoxious Gas by The Satanic Togas

Song We Like: Obnoxious Gas by The Satanic Togas


Honestly, having a farty-sound on the song is not enough to make us like it. (Yes we like the farty sound, who wouldn’t. But it’s really good music too.) So much screeching, so much fuzz, so much enthusiasm, so much melody, so much farting. (Featured on our #42 podcast)

Song We like: Fall Into You by Fox Grin

Song We like: Fall Into You by Fox Grin


This song is indie-indie music. (Indie-indie is a term that we just made up. You’ll know it when you hear it.) And this song right here is the apotheosis of indie-indie music. We adore it. (Featured on our #42 podcast)

Song We Like: Get it On by Pinky Doodle Poodle

Song We Like: Get it On by Pinky Doodle Poodle

These two Japanese kids are embracing American culture so hard that they spend their whole lives touring around small clubs in the southeast. From what we’ve seen, their show is even better than their sound. Here’s the itunes link to Get it On. Check it out. (Featured on our #42 podcast)

Rome Widenhouse of Thresher has played every guitar at Guitar Center

Rome Widenhouse of Thresher has played every guitar at Guitar Center

Rome Widenhouse is the guitarist/singer/songwriter of Asheville band Thresher. Thresher has just released their first EP as a quartet, called Equinox. We featured their song “Velcro”, which was from their EP before that, on our #40 podcast.

My favorite musical instrument or item that I purchased recently is:

A Supro Hampton Guitar. For years I’ve played on whatever equipment I could afford (usually $200 Pawn shop guitars). I found myself frustrated because I was constantly fighting my equipment. Early in 2018 I finally decided I would make an investment in a really good piece of gear. I played almost every guitar on the wall at Guitar center, and this one really sounded the best. I felt an enormous amount of guilt for spending what was essentially a month rent on myself, but I’ve come to really appreciate the investment every time I play it.

It’s a very lot of guitars

The musical instrument or item that I really really want is:

A 60’s Fender Jazzmaster. Kevin Shields, Thurston moor and Adam Franklin are all artists I admire who used the Jazz-master to create these enormous walls of sound. Also they look pretty awesome.

The artist who has influenced me most is:

In 2011 a local group called Elkmont Place. I was at an impressionable age and was staring to write my own songs. Watching them was when I realized that songs can have a narrative arc and can end in places nothing like where they began. This is one of the tenants that i really try to push in my own work. This is a quality by no means unique to this group, but thats when that epiphany reached me.

Something I wish I’d known before joining a band:

You have to love making music for the experience alone.

I live in Asheville, NC. I’m actually an Asheville native.

The general vibe of this city is

Polarizing. There is a huge divide between those who live and work in Asheville and those who come to visit. This applies to music culture and food.

My favorite local band (aside from my own):

Im really excited about Rye.

I collect:

I Make my own mixtapes… on cassette. I’ve been doing this since highschool, and have built up my collection from then. Each tape is for a particular mood. I’ve become pretty obsessive compulsive about this collection, agonizing over track order and the perfect transition. This isn’t an effort to be hip or anything, I play em in the car or while i work. It’s a labor of love just for myself and I come by it genuinely.

When people look back on our culture in a hundred years, they’ll say:

“0100110101001011001101”. We’ll all have uploaded our conciseness to instagram by then probably.

My favorite thing to watch on tv is:

“Whose line is it anyway?” I enjoy low commitment dumb tv. I find the recent trend of serialized ongoing narrative in the Netflix/ HBO era of “Television” (it’s all online  for cryin out loud), to be exhausting. When I watch tv i want to think about nothing not be caught up in some kind of impulsive binge. I have my cassettes for that…

Editor’s note: The eponymous band Butthole, featured on our #15 podcast, has a song that’s all about how much they love Wayne Brady. Check it out.

In my fridge you’ll always find:

New Belgium beer. I made a pact with myself not to drink lite beer ever again.

The last music I downloaded was:

The English Beat. I’d never heard it until I found this mixtape of my dads a few weeks ago. It’s a kind of music I feel has been utterly lost to time, and will never truly have a resurgence. Ska gets a bad rap but the English beat is pretty Fantastic and I’m not afraid to say so.

in my heart I wish I was:

An Independent Filmmaker. I will be one sooner than later. I’m kind of a know it all when it comes to film, and it’s time to put my money where my mouth is. It’s been a lifelong passion of mine.

My personal analysis of the current state of the music industry is:

I think Rock music is in a great place right now specifically because it is so outside the music industry. There are no trends to follow, so you can be yourself and people will respond to that without judgement. You have to work your ass off to get your music out there but that just means other musicians you encounter will be as gracious and hard working as you.

The best place to eat breakfast in my city is:

Homegrown. Excellent farm to table food. pretty fast too!

My favorite websites or apps are:

Sound-hound is pretty awesome. It’s a mobile music encyclopedia. great stuff.

When people come to visit me, particularly if those people are cooler than I am, I take them to:

Lexington Ave downtown. Everyone on Lexington is way cooler than me. You got static age, and hi Voltage record stores, Hay-day guitar shop, downtown book and news, Wasabi, Izzy’s and Mela. And theres the Cherry st. free parking! you don’t even have to mess with parking downtown. Very cool.

Asheville downtown

Favorite seasonal beverage:

Cold hand pressed cider. it’s nostalgic I guess. Something unique to that time of year (autumn)

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This Electric Reptile Interviews Himself Yet Remains Totally Enigmatic

This Electric Reptile Interviews Himself Yet Remains Totally Enigmatic

This Electric Reptile’s song Bombay Sapphire was featured on our #40 podcast, in which we reported everything we know about this artist (nothing). John speculated that he might be a deeply-undercover member of Roxy Music; evidently this or some other nefarious deception is true, because in this interview, This Electric Reptile goes on to reveal approximately nothing about himself:

My favorite thing to wear onstage:

Jackets

Why

Girls like it, don’t they ? Crap ?

My favorite musical instrument or item that I purchased recently is:

Old japanese Epiphone Casino

Tough to play. Doesn’t stay in tune.

I love it because:

It’s tough to play and doesn’t stay in tune

The musical instrument or item that I really really want is:

Gibson ES 330

Why

It’s easy to play and stays in tune

The artist who has influenced me most is:

That’s a tough one ! There were so many ! Basically I went back all the way to the country blues from let’s say 1930’s onwards. I made all the way to the now and then and hoovered up everything along the way. I like 70’s Rock, 80’s Disco, 90’s Crunch etc.  To make a long story short, any sound I ever heard influenced me in one way or another. I’m a musical hoover

Editor’s note: One thing of value from this response. Americans don’t say ‘hoover’. That isolates the artist’s location to anywhere but the USA.

Something I wish I’d known before joining a band:

No cashflow

I live in this city:

Gotham City. The general vibe is Mayhem. Some examples of that vibe include my neighbor’s apartment.

Pictured here is the Gotham City ride from Six Flags over Texas

The best place to SEE music here is

Rehearsal places. They’re close and intimate

When people look back on our culture in a hundred years, they’ll say:

Colorful, crazy, upside down ,mystic, superficial and dangerous

My favorite thing to watch on tv is:

Don’t have a tv ! Prefer a book. It goes much deeper, where the real beef is…and if you don’t like it you can throw it in the corner always

The last music I downloaded was:

Believe it or not I still buy albums. I like the haptics of it and reading all the information printed on there even if it’s useless.

Editor’s note: According to wikipedia, Haptics is any form of interaction involving touch. It can refer to: Haptic communication, the means by which people and other animals communicate via touching. Haptic perception, the process of recognizing objects through touch. What you see here is the gold record featuring Sounds of Earth that went up in Voyagers I and II. It probably had great haptics.

In my heart I wish I was:

Elvis

My personal analysis of the current state of the music industry is:

That it is starting to evolve and that I probably won’t live long enough to see what  it’s goin’ to be like in the future. I mean it’s really hard to tell in a few words !!

When people come to visit me, particularly if those people are cooler than I am, I take them to

I can’t think of anyone cooler than me right now

Favorite seasonal beverage:

Water. Cuz I drink it all the time any season

Give me a super-brief summary of your current musical status, in a bio kind of way:

Desperate

Podcast 42: Unembarrassed

Podcast 42: Unembarrassed

We do a lot of work this week in figuring out the modern music economy, including offering an extremely helpful Star Wars metaphor, and John makes up a song about Audiotree, and we figure out what Sofar is, sort of. Also this week – really incredible bands from Japan, Australia and Costa Rica (and Nashville. And New York):

Thank you to Foot Gun for providing our theme song. (Please take a second to like Holy Crap Records on Facebook and friend us or whatever on Twitter.)

Episode 41: The Revolütion Will Be Puppetized

Episode 41: The Revolütion Will Be Puppetized

Yacht party with Duran Duran. We plan our local tv access show, as well as our upcoming fake trip to SXSW. John analyzes various Finnish dialects. We add unnecessary umlats to metal bands of our acquaintance, and Bad Banker grows increasingly nervous about our upcoming performance. And of course the music is excellent:

Thank you to Foot Gun for providing our theme song. (Please take a second to like Holy Crap Records on Facebook and friend us or whatever on Twitter.)