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August 31, 2016

This Song: Kevin Morby // Margaret Glaspy

By: Elizabeth McQueen

In this episode we explore the life changing power of indie folks songs.  First, singer songwriter Kevin Morby expounds on how the raw beauty of The Mountain Goats made making folk music seem both accessible and punk. Then Margaret Glaspy explains how Vic Chestnutt’s unflinching take on life and and Elliot Smith’s use of metaphor influence her as a writer.

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Watch Kevin Morby perform “Destroyer” on Vuhaus

Listen to Kevin Morby’s Studio 1A Session

Watch Margaret Glaspy perform “Emotions and Math” on Vuhaus

Listen to Margaret Glassy’s Studio1A Session


Episodes

September 14, 2016

This Song: Thor // Misimplicity

Thor Harris takes Elizabeth on a brief tour of progressive rock and gives a shout out to Yes and other stalwarts of the genre and describes what music inspired his new, hypnotic project, Thor And Friends. Then Grace London and Zoe Czarnecki from the Austin band Misimplicity describe how Elliot Smith and a bass concerto by Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf have helped them find their musical ways and climb musical mountains.

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September 8, 2016

This Song: Mike Olson of Lake Street Dive // Jane Ellen Bryant

Lake Street Dive’s Mark Olson found that Willie Nelson’s version of “Song for You” helped him deal with these complexities of being a musician on the road and helped his art along the way. And Austin newcomer Jane Ellen Bryant describes how Shawn Colvin’s “I Want It Back” is the perfect example of how to write, arrange and produce a song.

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August 31, 2016

This Song: Kevin Morby // Margaret Glaspy

Kevin Morby expounds on how the raw beauty of the Mountain Goats made making folk music seem both accessible and punk. Then Margaret Glaspy explains how Vic Chestnut’s unflinching take on life and and Elliot Smith’s use of metaphor influence her as a writer.

Listen

August 24, 2016

This Song: Dion // Amanda Cevallos

American rock and roll icon Dion describes how he, one night, heard the soul and rhythm of Hank Williams drifting out of his family radio and was forever changed. Later, Austinite Amanda Cevallos talks country with Elizabeth (who can talk some country) and they bond over their love of Waylon Jennings and Texas dancehalls.

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August 17, 2016

This Song: The Octopus Project // Jane Weaver

The members of The Octopus Project explain the impact of how the Guns n Roses’ Appetite for Destruction, the theme song from 2001: A Space Oddysey and a live show by The Jesus Lizard. Along the way, the they end up talking about abandoning the trumpet, the connection between music and emotion and the difference between going to a show in 90’s versus today. Then Jane Weaver shares her experience of seeing Kate Bush performing Wuthering Heights on Top of the Pops when she was just five years old, and how Bush’s look, dance and singing style still influence her work today.

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August 10, 2016

This Song: Sean Bonnette of AJJ // The Grifters

Sean Bonnette from AJJ (formerly Andrew Jackson Jihad) talks Violent Femmes, naturally distorted acoustic guitars and literature as sources of his inspiration. Then Scott Taylor and Tripp Lamkins from Grifters have a little listening party starting with songs by Deep Purple and ranging through 80’s alternative music from Skinny Puppy to Black Flag to the Cure.

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August 3, 2016

This Song: Leon Bridges // Gary Clark Jr.

We’ve taken two previously-aired interviews from Leon Bridges and Gary Clark Jr. and put them together to draw a direct line of influence from one artist to another. Leon Bridges explains how hearing a Gary Clark Jr. song inspired him to pursue music, and then Gary Clark Jr. describes the impact of Tupac’s “Krazy.” Expect an “epic flow chart of inspiration” sometime in the future.

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July 27, 2016

This Song: Sunflower Bean

Members of Brooklyn-based Sunflower Bean explore the music that inspires them — from Brian Wilson and Devo to Beach Fossils and Tonstartssbanht — while also talking about club scenes with a social conscience, what makes a perfect combination of art and commerce, and the attraction of listening to a musical genius’ decent into darkness.

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