Tag Archive for: her pilots

Ep 111 – ‘Ch-ch-ch-changes’ With music by: Her Pilots, Broken Robots, Dude Babe, Scout Harris, Human Torpedo, Top Nachos, Weekend Lovers

Best of the underground, week of June 23, 2020: All your questions answered! John explains how his brain works, and Cinnamon explains how everything in the universe works. Also, tons of great music. (All podcasts and reviews are on www.hlycrp.com, and you can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, and Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.)

This week we played:

    • Cool Little Ghosts by Her Pilots (prerelease)
    • Dimes and Quarters by Broken Robots
    • Clean by Dude Babe (prerelease)
    • Gone Numb by Scout Harris (prerelease)
    • What We Got by Human Torpedo

    • Frens by Top Nachos

    • Baby by Weekend Lovers

Ep 87 – `2020 Baby’ FEAT: Stevie & the Sleaze, Her Pilots, Gäk, Don Babylon, Gabriel Bernini

Best of the underground, week of Jan 7, 2020: Is John going to hell? Find out here! Also, Cinnamon learns to breakdance, our experience with raw-foodism, and other useless items. Plus all this MUSIC, including one song that’s 9 minutes long. (All podcasts and reviews are on our website, www.hlycrp.com, and you can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, and Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.) Artists! We like you, good work. 2020. It’s here, phew 💪

Album Review: All I Can Ask by Her Pilots


Sturdy, straight-up rockers from a band of Greenville, SC all-stars. They also like to dress up like pilots. Awesome. Our favorite song: All I Can Ask. (Reviewed on our #22 podcast, a Bag of Dix.)

Podcast 22 – A Bag of Dix

What a bag of dix looks like. Cinnamon’s list of lucky things. Theremin, as imported from Waconda. John exposes both anarchists and satanists as being “kind people.” Julie Shuchard of Tricycle Records offers a bunch of good advice that you should probably write down and hang on the fridge. We also have excellent music:

Let’s talk about feelings! We discuss ways in which artists are crazy, and then explore Cinnamon’s catalog of very young obscure rockers, and then we listen to doom rock for a long time. Eventually we figure out what grad students are for, and discuss the national feeling of bobsledding. David Lee Macrae of Aesoterra reveals how psychedelic metal can heal you. We also have excellent music: