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Ep. #1105: Hamilton Leithauser

Hamilton Leithauser returns to discuss growing up in D.C. and being influenced by bands on Dischord Records, working as recording engineer Don Zientara’s assistant at his Inner Ear studio while Fugazi was recording Red Medicine, recalling how Roy Orbison helped him find his singing voice, getting into home recording, having restraint and foresight as a one-man studio band, pondering the tenth anniversary of I Had a Dream That You Were Mine while avoiding nostalgic pats on the back, digging into songs like “The Bride’s Dad” and This Side of the Islands “What Do I Think,” embracing midlife, how voices like Bob Dylan’s seem imbued with American history, getting into soundtrack and film scoring work, opening for the Strokes, other future plans, and much more.

EVERY OTHER COMPLETE KREATIVE KONTROL EPISODE IS ONLY ACCESSIBLE TO PATREON SUPPORTERS STARTING AT $6/MONTH. This one is fine, but if you haven’t already, please subscribe now on Patreon so you never miss full episodes. Thanks!

Thanks to Blackbyrd Myoozik, the BookshelfPlanet Bean Coffee, and Grandad’s Donuts. Support Y.E.S.S., Pride Centre of Edmonton, and Letters Charity. Follow vish online.

Related episodes/links:

Ep. #1085: Richard Reed Parry
Ep. #1034: Sean Wilentz on Bob Dylan’s ‘Through The Open Window’
Ep. #1004: Liz Pelly
Ep. #986: John Congleton
Ep. #935: Elijah Wald on ‘A Complete Unknown’
Ep. #900: Fugazi and Jem Cohen
Ep. #834: J Mascis
Ep. #821: Kurt Vile
Ep. #496: Iggy Pop
Ep. #223: Ian MacKaye & Steve Albini (Part I)
Ep. #111: Hamilton Leithauser
Ep. #26: James Williamson of Iggy and the Stooges
Ep. #4: Jim Guthrie band D.C. road trip featuring NPR’s Bob Boilen and Robin Hilton

Categories
News Podcast

Ep. #968: Kerosene 454

Erik Denno and brothers James Wall and John Wall discuss their work together in Kerosene 454 and the Solid Brass reissue of their second album, Came By To Kill Me, the band’s history, the roads that brought them from Arizona to D.C. to California, getting into punk rock, touring with Hoover and filming some of their sets, the connection between their album art and the film The Crow, how they relate to the music and lyrics they created decades ago, whether they might play together again, other future plans, and much more.

EVERY OTHER COMPLETE KREATIVE KONTROL EPISODE IS ONLY ACCESSIBLE TO MONTHLY $6 USD PATREON SUPPORTERS. Enjoy this excerpt and please subscribe now via this link to hear this full episode. Thanks!

Related episodes/links:

Ep. #966: Regulator Watts
Ep. #921: Tsunami
Ep. #900: Fugazi and Jem Cohen
Ep. #891: Bed Maker
Ep. #878: Ted Leo
Ep. #849: Jim White and Guy Picciotto
Ep. #835: J. Robbins
Ep. #819: Scream
Ep. #745: The Casual Dots
Ep. #732: Soulside

Categories
News Podcast

Ep. #828: ‘Bob Dylan: Mixing Up the Medicine’ with Mark Davidson & Parker Fishel

Mark Davidson and Parker Fishel discuss their work on the essential new book, Bob Dylan: Mixing Up the Medicine, its fascinating essays and notable contributors and their access to almost any of Dylan’s manuscripts and lyric notebooks at the Bob Dylan Center that they asked for, clamouring for mythical material by Dylan, Charlie Parker, and Fugazi, why it feels like Dylan is telling us he’s retiring, the latest on the Bob Dylan Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, other future plans, and much more.

Supported by you on PatreonBlackbyrd MyoozikPizza Trokaderothe BookshelfPlanet Bean Coffee, and Grandad’s Donuts. Support Y.E.S.S. and Black Women United YEG. Follow vish online.

Related episodes:

Ep. #826: Steve Albini and Fred Armisen
Ep. #821: Kurt Vile
Ep. #793: Ray Padgett
Ep. #761: Jokermen
Ep. #749: Daniel Lanois
Ep. #686: Bob Dylan Center’s Mark Davidson & Parker Fishel
Ep. #648: Lee Ranaldo
Ep. #634: Richard Thompson
Ep. #522: Destroyer
Ep. #450: Jeff Tweedy
Ep. #395: Robert Hilburn
Ep. #223: Ian MacKaye & Steve Albini (Part I)
Ep. #222: Peter Guralnick
Ep. #27: Greil Marcus

Related links:

Bob Dylan and His Band Took Toronto to Unexpected and Rewarding Places Massey Hall, October 26
Last Night in Toronto (by Vish Khanna)
In Review: ‘Fragments: Time Out of Mind Sessions (1996-1997) – The Bootleg Series Vol. 17’ by Bob Dylan
In Review: Bob Dylan’s Rough and Rowdy Ways