Elizabeth Nelson returns to discuss the Paranoid Style and their new album, Known Associates, life near Washington D.C., a recap of our recent discussion about the Replacements’ Let It Be reissue, a brief overview of American paranoia, her penchant for wordy lyrics and how that impacts her as a singer, some of her favourite sincerely humorous songwriters, Scott Joplin’s “The Entertainer” and Bob Dylan’s “Love and Theft,” her love of musicals and nodding to other people’s songs, why I think she might dig Carolyn Mark, playing rare shows, other future plans, and much more.
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Related episodes/links:
Ep. #1040: The Replacements’ ‘Let It Be (Deluxe Edition)’ with Peter Jesperson, Jason Jones & Elizabeth Nelson
Ep. #1034: Sean Wilentz on Bob Dylan’s ‘Through The Open Window’
Ep. #1026: Tortoise
Ep. #963: Destroyer
Ep. #951: Mark Ibold, Scott Kannberg, Jeffrey Lewis Clark, Jed I. Rosenberg & Brian Thalken on ‘Louder Than You Think: A Lo-Fi History of Gary Young and Pavement’
Ep. #924: Lance Bangs and Bob Nastanovich on ‘Pavements’
Ep. #895: Al Tuck
Ep. #894: “Weird Al” Yankovic
Ep. #646: They Might Be Giants

