Category: Video

  • Band of Strangers

    Band of Strangers

    A Night at the Grape Room Jam

    In April, 2022, the world was opening back up. Although The Grape Room was a music venue that I was able to go to in late 2021 without covid restrictions, I only made it there once, I think. And their weekly open jam was not back in effect.

    Eventually though, in March they reopened the jam. I learned about it in April, attended, and was extremely grateful that this thing existed. I needed to play with other musicians and didn’t find my scene yet. I was rough on the drums, but I’ve gotten substantially better since then.

    One year later, almost to the week on April 12, 2023, I was producing the stage recordings for this documentary. The interviews all took place from that day though August. The sound check intro was recorded April 19. I did a little bit of editing trickery there.

    Ethan Cain and Ryan Daugherty are the current co-hosts of the jam, alternating from week to week. I make it look more like they co-host together every week, because they often attend each other’s nights.

    This is about the jam and the experience of being in that room and on that stage. I wanted to capture the experience of the jam and overlay it with the thoughts of musicians and audience members.

    At first, the idea was to be a chronicling, perhaps with multiple nights of stage recordings, and a focus on the history of the jam, the hosts, and the venue. But that seemed too obvious, and frankly, laborious.

    My music scene is varied (because I like creating and listening to a wide variety of music) so there isn’t really a single place for me anywhere. The closest I can get to is this jam. Admittedly, the players who come here aren’t very experimental. My identity formed around that notion of always pushing boundaries. Thankfully, that artistic ego is more fluid now.

    Usually someone brings a riff, but I’m much more into it when someone just messes around until I can provide enough beat to build on, and it goes somewhere. Whenever someone brings some progression, it gets stuck there. Very hard to break out of a box when you start with one, easier to remain fluid when you start that way.

    This idea is streamlined, it’s one night of stage recordings, in fact, just 90 minutes of what is usually three hours, all condensed into a mashup of less than 10 minutes.

    I asked everyone a few simple but open ended questions, to allow them to riff on ideas. What is improvisation? What is the difference between an open mic and an open jam? How has the jam impacted you as a musician? Then some follow ups like why it’s important to them, when did they start coming or hosting? I improvised my questioning after the first two.

    The result, I admit, is fluffy. This is a zero drama story. What works though is the tension and release within the music. There is a tiny bit of tension in the narrative, but it basically just remains positive. I knew this could become an infomercial.

    This is not objective in that sense. It’s a place and a community that I care about, so I did my best to convey that while remembering this is a film for the public to enjoy. It has to be good for everyone.

    It’s also G-rated material. Super family friendly content.

    I’m proud of Band of Strangers. And THRU Media is my baby. I’m using that brand to publish content again, and I’m brazenly moving forward on a value-for-value basis. It’s an experiment. If people join the crew, it will be successful, but if it remains myself, it’s not going to work.

    I can always keep publishing under the brand, but I really want to make it a unique, artist-driven company, as it was always envisioned.

  • To Be a Troubadour in a Pathless Land

    To Be a Troubadour in a Pathless Land

    Last week, I had the pleasure to sit down with Chico California-based artist, Jake Nolen. He is a music producer and singer-songwriter. His newest full-length album is called Too Late to Party, available just about wherever you stream music.

    This episode title is named from the concept that he is a man without a country. Raised religiously Christian, he busted from those norms only to return from his own path.

    Modern music and art scenes are overwhelmingly progressive, and the social pressure is strong, so that it almost seems like there is a cause-of-the-month, every month. Each cause can contradict the other, but in the realm of psychological conditioning, this is fine.

    Before diving into these issues, we focus on the creative and technical process of making a record. Jake performs every instrument on his new record.

    Today’s production tools are so prevalent that it’s not just the Stevie Wonders and Princes of the world who can go into a studio and perform every instrument. Still not an easy thing to do, it requires great talent, and patience.

    For me, it’s always a natural direction to go deep into the artist’s life, to help see what is driving them today.

    Raised conservative, he rebelled only to run up against those contradictions, and now explores the space between, because the values of progressivism are good, and true. But the strategy doesn’t work, and we go back and forth pretty much in agreement about that in the final segment of the show.

    Enjoyable talk, good man. I hope he blows up.

    Check out his various stuff here.

  • Quincy Johnson

    Quincy Johnson

    I Would Drive Five Hundred Thousand Miles

    To kick myself up and find some steam for The Not-a-Podcast Show, I thought Quincy Johnson would be a good guest. He lives to demonstrate that it’s possible for anyone to take their life and make the very most of it.

    Neither of us planned for a certain docking situation to go sideways and throw off the first stream. That was Tuesday this week. But we jumped in anyway and started getting into it. A couple of Twitter mutuals jumped into the chat as well.

    Streamed Tuesday, August 1 2023

    We came back Thursday and I just let it run. This time he was in a quiet location, his day off, and we could get relax.

    Streamed Thursday, August 3, 2023

    Most days, with Twitter being his social media of choice, you will find updates from the road, daily exercise routines from the truck or the gym, cigars, steaks, as well as more mundane things from a man who drives constantly and whose community is online.

    He’s pushed an income that is on the high end for employee truck drivers. He drives well more than 100,000 miles to earn $100,000 per year. Considering he is living affordably, if drives 500,000 miles, then he might have earned and invested enough to semi-retire.

    We casually discuss these things as well as other topics like the Hotep Nation, dating women, Detroit, Killdozer, the awkward relationship with patriotism, and stuff.

    Find him on Twitter @NotABBWLover.

  • Can’t Stay Away with Christian Rickets

    Can’t Stay Away with Christian Rickets

    On this episode of the Not-a-Podcast Show is San Diego based comedian Christian Ricketts. He was on a roll in Portland, Oregon when I lived there and dabbled in comedy. I quit for good, but some years later he took a break. I have taken a break from music, but I had to come back to it. Comedy, not so much. For Christian, it’s in his gut. That is why he cannot stay away from it, nor myself music.

    We are the same age, haven’t started families, we are both inclined toward Buddhist thought and practice, and grapple with the idea of the ego of the artist, trying to focus on the creative process rather than the outcomes desired.

    There does come a time in which your calling is more than your desire. It can be very difficult to decipher between a clear signal to do a thing and the fantasy that ego builds up around it. Sometimes ego can build so much around it that the signal, or the creative process, is blocked. With great art, the heart and mind needs to be open to allow the process to unfold from the gut.

    This is Christian’s second appearance on the show. It was about a year ago and he was just reentering the comedy scene. Since then, he has featured numerous showcases and is back on a roll.

    Immediately following this interview, I had to take a break. I went back to visit Portland and came back needing to focus on money. I continue to question what I am truly called to do.

    Nobody rewards me for doing this show, and guests can be very annoying to deal with, especially when they turn scheduling into a game.

    However, I genuinely like people. I enjoy talking with and learning from people. I hope to demonstrate on this show what it looks like to listen to people and not be another echo chamber. It is kind of an echo chamber because my viewership is so low, not because I repeat empty ideas endlessly.

    Hopefully this show carries on, it’s something I actually enjoy doing, but nobody is banging down my door about it, and that is one measure as to the difference between ego and need. If I can’t stay away from it, then I’ll do it no matter what.

    I practice value for value in life and in digital content. Please consider offering a contribution relative to your means.

  • A Nickel Back of Funk with Kyle Matovcik

    A Nickel Back of Funk with Kyle Matovcik

    Kyle Matovcik plays guitar with the band A Common Crown and hosts the podcast In Liberty and Health. He is a mechanic from North-Central Pennsylvania. His Twitter profile @KyleMatovcik is also growing, offering a young voice among the conservative Libertarian crowd.

    I called this episode “A Nickel Back of Funk” because I remembered a tweet in which he talked about the post-grunge rock band in a respectful light. I want to make fun of the stereotype. Some people see a white dude with a guitar and backwards hat and they think Nickelback. Maybe even “white privilege.” I want to make fun of it off the bat and then see how the image is challenged from there.

    He was raised by a single hard-working mother with no substantial advantages, was moved around too much to establish a consistent social life, challenging a number of assumptions about white privilege. A blue collar mechanic today, working his way up by the sweat of his brow, his worldview comes from a place of direct cause and effect, action and consequence.

    We talked about music and specifically metal for a while before I got into his background. I favor that classic, shredder metal, whereas he’s from a later era, for example I would rather listen to Metallica’s Kill ‘Em All than the Black Album, for him the reverse. Topics discussed include unions versus cooperatives, the shades of libertarian, potential resistance presidential candidates, and other contemporary topics.

    Sometimes I think I don’t go hard enough in the paint. When I talk to socialists, I disagree, when I talk to libertarians, I disagree. Lacking an ideology to defend, I just try to find common ground in the facts, not so much in what should be. When we talk about what should be, idealistically, we are always wrong.

    There is what is. Then there is what we can do to shift outcomes in a direction that is more favorable to the people. Those who cannot budge from what should be are most disagreeable people.

    In my conversation with Kyle, I felt that we were able to discuss the pros and cons of things, and the problems presented with our more idealistic positions. Examples being cooperatively owned businesses versus unions. We agree that unions are too corruptible but I pushed back on his view that cooperatives are “silly.” He advocates for no minimum wage, and to some extent even child labor laws, so I presented the challenges of preventing exploitation without liberal laws, even while agreeing that the existing complex of employment has rendered the situation worse for many.

    I enjoyed the conversation. I simply hope that by bringing on opposing voices that I can learn and become a more thorough thinker, while humanizing guests who would otherwise be seen as enemies to one another.