Man Man New Album Set to Release After Seven Year Hiatus

When it comes to songwriting, Ryan Kattner – aka Honus Honus, front man for the boisterous rock band, Man Man – subscribes to the Nick Cave mode of operations. Namely, Kattner errs on the side of perspiration directing his creative output, not capricious inspiration. For, as Cave put it, “’Inspiration’ is a word used by people who aren’t really doing anything.” And Kattner, who remains hard at work daily despite dealing with creative doubts, will display the fruits of his efforts this spring with the release of his anticipated record, Dream Hunting In The Valley Of The In-Between, out May 1st. 

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MARC MARON ON DATING, THE DEVIL, AND THE END OF THE WORLD AS WE KNOW IT

Marc Maron, host of the widely popular WTF podcast, is easy to talk to. Perhaps that should be obvious, given the comedian has talked for thousands of hours to everyone from President Obama to Pete Davidson. Nevertheless, in conversation, Maron is considerate and generous. He’s also got a wealth of opinion. Talking with him at times feels like clicking a mouse cursor on a desktop file, opening a host of files and documents at the ready.

Maron’s recent Netflix comedy special, End Times Fun, which touches on everything from public health scares to the devil’s penis, has been a saving grace for many in this era of social distancing. The 73-minute special was directed by the filmmaker Lynn Shelton, who was present in the background of this interview, and is also Maron’s new romantic partner (more on that news later). Shelton has also directed Maron in Netflix’s GLOW, in which he plays a wrestling promoter.

We caught up with Maron and asked him a series of questions, cribbed from Glenn O’Brien’s infamous 1977 interview with Andy Warhol, to find out his thoughts on masturbation, whether Harvey Oswald acted alone, and non-dairy milk, among other things.

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Soccer star Alexi Lalas on his love of guitar: "I’d always considered myself a performer, as an athlete and a musician"

It’s often said that most professional athletes want to be musicians and most musicians want to be professional athletes. That’s essentially the premise of the annual Celebrity Game at NBA All-Star weekend, for example.

Of course, both vocations share an idea of performance and audience adoration. Though even when you’re at the top of your game, the grass can always seem greener elsewhere. But what about those rare folks who are both professional athlete and musician? Can such a thing even exist?

Soccer player Alexi Lalas has felt the hot lights of the World Cup and the Olympics. The defender, who grew up in Detroit, Michigan and attended Rutgers University in New Jersey, was a breakout star in the 1994 World Cup with his long hair and red beard. Later, Lalas played abroad in a prestigious Italian league before starring in the MLS.

Every step of the way, though, he carried a guitar with him. The instrument, he says, helped with personal and creative expression in times of transition and it acted as a social icebreaker.

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Ben Gibbard and Other Pacific Northwest Artists on Weathering the COVID-19 Quarantine

The city of Seattle is many things. It’s a hub for tech companies, food and drink establishments, and, perhaps most importantly, music. The lineage of Emerald City greats pushes well into the past and continues with standout after standout today from Pearl Jam to Death Cab For Cutie to Thunderpussy, The Decemberists, Car Seat Headrest, and The Black Tones. But, more recently, Seattle and the Pacific Northwest at large have been Ground Zero for the dangerous and deadly COVID-19 coronavirus. In Washington alone, there are nearly 3,000 confirmed cases of the virus with well over 100 deaths. Those are scary numbers. Yet, what the region is maybe most known for - music - continues to persist.

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John Oates Finds Silver Lining In Coronavirus Outbreak: Relaxing

Guitarist and songwriter, John Oates, one-half of the multi-platinum-selling duo, Daryl Hall & John Oates, has seen almost the entirety of rock and roll history transpire during his lifetime. Oates, who was born in 1951, came of age as Chuck Berry and Big Mama Thornton were changing the way people thought about sound. Over the decades, Oates devoted himself to music, contributing to one of the greatest-selling bands in pop history. But today, Oates, like much of the world, is going through new chapter: life in the era of the Coronavirus. 

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Jake Blount Discusses, Makes Inspired Black Roots Music

Providence, Rhode Island-based songwriter, Jake Blount, is a tailor of musical traditions. The banjo and fiddle player, who cut his teeth playing in funk and metal bands at 12-years-old and has since evolved into a scholar of traditional forms, dives headfirst into sonic histories and lineages each time he picks up an instrument. Blount, who will release his forthcoming LP, Spider Tales, on May 29th, has created a collection of folk songs that reach from Appalachia to Africa, pulling and plucking from some of the genre’s most timeless melodies and heartfelt tales.

From the moment Blount heard the album, Barton Hollow, by the Civil Wars in high school, he decided to drop everything and buy an acoustic guitar. From then on, he was hooked on traditional music. But as he got deeper into understanding the histories behind the traditional songs, Blount realized how closely and poignantly they started to relate to and intertwine with his own life. Growing up black and queer in America, Blount says, there was much in the cannon of folk music that resonated.

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Musicians share their experiences dealing with the impact of coronavirus: "I don't know when we'll get to play again"

For the members of Los Angeles-based rock band, Wallows, right now nothing is certain. The band, which released its latest single, OK, on Friday, had planned for mid-March to be a joyous occasion, one in which the members could connect with fans, enjoy the creative synergy that comes with a new release and bask in the glow of a job well done.

But for Wallows, and thousands of bands like it around the world, spring of 2020 - otherwise known as the era of the dangerous Coronavirus - is as uncertain a time as the group has ever experienced.

To date, hundreds of people around the world have died from the Coronavirus, with more expected. Thousands are sick and filling up emergency hospital beds. Cities around the globe are on lockdown. To help offset the disruption in normal life, musicians in many areas have offered a reprieve with digital concerts and song releases.

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Tame Impala: Filling the Void

Mick Jagger said he would call at 8 p.m.; the phone rang right on time. Kevin Parker, also known as the mastermind behind the Perth, Australia-based pulsating rock ‘n’ roll project Tame Impala, answered. Without even an assistant to formally introduce the two, there was Jagger’s voice – and the legend it belonged to was ready to discuss a remix for a song on a recent solo record.

“It was surreal,” Parker says. “But (Jagger) made it easy for me because he was so nice. We talked about the song and how he wrote it and we talked about what I could do with it. We had a couple of phone calls. I was expecting someone to connect the calls but it was just him, like, ‘Hello!’”

Parker highlights the uncommon interaction on one of the more poignant tracks from the latest Tame Impala record, The Slow Rush, released on Feb. 14. The song, “Posthumous Forgiveness,” is about his deceased father, who first introduced Parker to music, playing guitar around the house and listening to favorite artists during car rides. The track represents the two sides of Parker’s relationship with his dad. One side of the song is drenched in remorse and the other settled, resolved.

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Death Cab for Cutie’s Ben Gibbard Gives a Quarantine Q&A

For everyone in the U.S. and for many more abroad, the past weeks dealing with the deadly Coronavirus have felt like a fever dream. Most of the Western world has shut down, with only hospitals, pharmacies and grocery stores open to the public. For musicians, tours have been cancelled and plans for festivals and new releases have been put on hold.

Many songwriters, as a result, have turned to digital shows for both a creative release and as a means to interact with fans. One such prominent name to throw his hat into the digital arena is Death Cab For Cutie frontman, Ben Gibbard, who has pledged to play live every day for two weeks. And Gibbard’s shows are popular, with each garnering hundreds of thousands of views from fans.

We wanted to catch up with the Seattle-based Gibbard to talk about his relationship to the recent public health crisis and how he’s tried to cope through music.

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Lauren Ruth Ward Prepared to Share Personal Journey on ‘Vol. II’

Los Angeles musician, Lauren Ruth Ward, belts a poignant lyric on her recent single, “Wise Gal,” from her forthcoming record, Vol. II (out March 16th), singing in reflection of her past, “I asked for sugar when I should have been making bread.” So much of what Ward stands for today as an artist is captured in that one line. The artist, who grew up in and around Baltimore, Maryland, has been on a continuous personal transformation ever since she put pen to paper to write her first chorus. 

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Yuuki Matthews Re-Releasing ‘Teardrops,’ Discusses Relationship With Richard Swift

Multi-instrumentalist Yuuki Matthews remembers talking with his dear friend and fellow musician, Richard Swift, on iMessager years ago. Matthews had just ended a stint on the road with Sufjan Stevens. Feeling bummed and unsure of his next move, he explained his situation to his friend. But, as was usually the case with Swift, he had an answer. He had just run into James Mercer, front man for The Shins at a wedding, who said the band was in need of a keys player and bassist for the tour. All of a sudden, there was hope. Soon Matthews and Swift were on the road playing with Mercer and The Shins.  

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Sea Wolf Discusses Songwriting For New Album, ‘Through A Dark Wood’

As a boy, Alex Brown Church, front man for the L.A.-based indie rock band, Sea Wolf, wanted to be a writer when he grew up. And while the musician is clearly talented, Church could never quite wrap his brain around composing lengthy novels or screenplays. But when he began to write songs, the contained brevity the style offered intrigued and inspired. Now, Church is set to release his sixth album, Through A Dark Wood, on March 20th to significant anticipation. 

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Thunderpussy Debuts “Powerhouse” Specially For Super Tuesday

For some, the band name “Thunderpussy” is hard to swallow. Some commercial radio stations, for example, won’t play songs from the Seattle-based rock ‘n’ roll band because DJ’s won’t say the name on-air. In fact, the four-piece has a case pending in the United States Supreme Court to determine whether or not the name is obscene and therefore not trademark-able. Nevertheless, the ladies of Thunderpussy persist on their musical trek, releasing new records (and music videos) and touring relentlessly.

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Kassa Overall Celebrates Songwriting on ‘I Think I’m Good’

New York City-based musician, Kassa Overall, knows what it’s like to feel trapped. The artist has spent two stints in a mental ward as a result of serious manic attacks. Ever since, he’s had to maintain vigilance over the highs and lows. But thanks to songwriting – a talent he’s made supremely mobile (more later) – Overall has found an outlet for his energies and better modes to understand his brain. And all of this is on display on Overall’s latest solo record, I Think I’m Good, out Friday. 

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Greg Dulli on “Random Desire”

Greg Dulli, frontman for The Afghan Whigs, has just released his first-ever solo record, Random Desire, via Royal Cream/BMG. The 10-song album, which was written and recorded almost entirely by Dulli, features his signature beseeching, powerful voice and the songwriter's intellectual heft that comes along with it. Random Desire, which is comprised of tracks that feel both forlorn and triumphant, is reflective. Solemn piano playing blends with howling vocals, snare hits and flashes of electric guitar. The album, which follows The Afghan Whigs' latest release, 2017's In Spades, distinguishes Dulli as a solid solo performer while also adding two handfuls of well-crafted songs to his long catalogue of heartfelt, personal music. We spoke to Dulli about the writing and recording of Random Desire, as well as the surprising influence of Bob Fosse.

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Q&AJake UittiUnder The Radar