captain2man wrote:Greg is great and he did an excellent job....and yes...we certainly mentioned Where We Went.
Unfortunately, they already covered my favorite Revelation release....so....oh well for that.
Which release?
captain2man wrote:Greg is great and he did an excellent job....and yes...we certainly mentioned Where We Went.
Unfortunately, they already covered my favorite Revelation release....so....oh well for that.
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
captain2man wrote:lewdd wrote:Yeah, he's a good egg. I need to get down to Philly again to do some record shopping with him. I think I last saw him a few years ago at a Descendents show at the Fillmore.
Then come to New York & we'll all hang!
JGJR wrote:captain2man wrote:Greg is great and he did an excellent job....and yes...we certainly mentioned Where We Went.
Unfortunately, they already covered my favorite Revelation release....so....oh well for that.
Which release?
captain2man wrote:JGJR wrote:captain2man wrote:Greg is great and he did an excellent job....and yes...we certainly mentioned Where We Went.
Unfortunately, they already covered my favorite Revelation release....so....oh well for that.
Which release?
I like a LOT of Revelation releases...but....for me - Supertouch - 'The Earth is Flat'.
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
JGJR wrote:Interesting choice; I've only heard it in the last year and I like it quite a bit myself, but I need to spend more time with it. I described it to Greg as sounding like Vision smoking blunts all day while jamming Jane's Addiction's Nothing Shocking. That's a high compliment!
captain2man wrote:JGJR wrote:Interesting choice; I've only heard it in the last year and I like it quite a bit myself, but I need to spend more time with it. I described it to Greg as sounding like Vision smoking blunts all day while jamming Jane's Addiction's Nothing Shocking. That's a high compliment!
It's probably not an album a lot of people would call their favorite Revelation album....I mean - there are obviously some real heavy hitters on that label.
But I just love every song on that record - it has its own style and sound and is somehow post-NYHC if such a genre could even ever exist. Joe Graziano's bass playing on that album is absolutely sick....an amazing performance top to bottom.
It's an album that's been with me for almost 30 years - so - there's the benefit of time for it to impact me the way it does. In fact...I think I'm going to break it out right now.
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
captain2man wrote:End On End has hit episode #50!
And what better way to celebrate than to discuss Dischord #26 - Dag Nasty's 'Wig Out at Denkos'.
Guests are Dag bassist Doug Carrion, as well as Kevin Egan (Beyond, 1.6 Band, The Last Crime) and Dominic and Sam from the Bad Music Taste podcast!
https://www.buzzsprout.com/893587/82799 ... kevin-egan
scannest wrote:It's like a filmmaker saying "Spielberg is my idol. Every time I get behind the camera I think about how I can make my film as good as Hook"
gregpolard wrote:Honestly I think most days I prefer Wig Out to Can I Say.
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
gregpolard wrote:captain2man wrote:End On End has hit episode #50!
And what better way to celebrate than to discuss Dischord #26 - Dag Nasty's 'Wig Out at Denkos'.
Guests are Dag bassist Doug Carrion, as well as Kevin Egan (Beyond, 1.6 Band, The Last Crime) and Dominic and Sam from the Bad Music Taste podcast!
https://www.buzzsprout.com/893587/82799 ... kevin-egan
Playing this now. Jeff, I'm with you...my first exposure to the band was the twofer CD.
Honestly I think most days I prefer Wig Out to Can I Say. But sometimes I go the other way.
jaybird wrote:this album and Descendents ALL were two of my primary go-to examples to prove all my high-school hesher metalhead friends wrong when they used to rag on punk bands as a bunch of talentless hacks who "could not play their instruments".
scannest wrote:It's like a filmmaker saying "Spielberg is my idol. Every time I get behind the camera I think about how I can make my film as good as Hook"
gregpolard wrote:I hate to throw him under the bus but I'm going to let everyone know that JGJR legit told me that his favorite song on Wig Out is "When I Move". And we thought VS was the board contrarian!
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
jaybird wrote:Listened to about 3/4 of it the other night... Some good discussion and background info on the songs and the recording sessions, but I found myself in serious disagreement over how you guys ranged from nearly-scornful to general indifference regarding a lot of Brian's guitar work on this record... I've always thought that the guitar-hero fretboard wizardy on this record was what puts it over the top and sets it head and shoulders above almost everything else on the Dischord roster... this album and Descendents ALL were two of my primary go-to examples to prove all my high-school hesher metalhead friends wrong when they used to rag on punk bands as a bunch of talentless hacks who "could not play their instruments".
On a different note, during one of the brief side-discussions about Junkyard, I think one of you wondered in passing what could have been if Brian had done more of a speed-metal-ish type project instead of Junkyard's more Southern boogie-rock... I remember hearing back in the day that he was seriously approached to play guitar with Exodus in the late 80s, supposedly due to how impressed those guys were when they heard his playing on this album... does anyone else remember hearing/reading that back then?
Anyway, good podcast... Doug likes to talk.
gregpolard wrote:I hate to throw him under the bus but I'm going to let everyone know that JGJR legit told me that his favorite song on Wig Out is "When I Move". And we thought VS was the board contrarian!
captain2man wrote:jaybird wrote:Listened to about 3/4 of it the other night... Some good discussion and background info on the songs and the recording sessions, but I found myself in serious disagreement over how you guys ranged from nearly-scornful to general indifference regarding a lot of Brian's guitar work on this record... I've always thought that the guitar-hero fretboard wizardy on this record was what puts it over the top and sets it head and shoulders above almost everything else on the Dischord roster... this album and Descendents ALL were two of my primary go-to examples to prove all my high-school hesher metalhead friends wrong when they used to rag on punk bands as a bunch of talentless hacks who "could not play their instruments".
On a different note, during one of the brief side-discussions about Junkyard, I think one of you wondered in passing what could have been if Brian had done more of a speed-metal-ish type project instead of Junkyard's more Southern boogie-rock... I remember hearing back in the day that he was seriously approached to play guitar with Exodus in the late 80s, supposedly due to how impressed those guys were when they heard his playing on this album... does anyone else remember hearing/reading that back then?
Anyway, good podcast... Doug likes to talk.
Doug was a good guest. Very enthusiastic and....remembers stuff (you'd be surprised). I messaged him to thank him for his time and we had a really cool back & forth. Genuinely nice dude.
As far as Baker....it's funny.....because in recording the episode, I didn't feel we were all that critical of him. We're both huge fans of his work and his guitar playing. I think maybe (co-host) Brian wasn't a fan of some of his solos, but that was about it. I love his playing on the record....his riffing on "Trying" is nuts!
captain2man wrote:jaybird wrote:Listened to about 3/4 of it the other night... Some good discussion and background info on the songs and the recording sessions, but I found myself in serious disagreement over how you guys ranged from nearly-scornful to general indifference regarding a lot of Brian's guitar work on this record... I've always thought that the guitar-hero fretboard wizardy on this record was what puts it over the top and sets it head and shoulders above almost everything else on the Dischord roster... this album and Descendents ALL were two of my primary go-to examples to prove all my high-school hesher metalhead friends wrong when they used to rag on punk bands as a bunch of talentless hacks who "could not play their instruments".
On a different note, during one of the brief side-discussions about Junkyard, I think one of you wondered in passing what could have been if Brian had done more of a speed-metal-ish type project instead of Junkyard's more Southern boogie-rock... I remember hearing back in the day that he was seriously approached to play guitar with Exodus in the late 80s, supposedly due to how impressed those guys were when they heard his playing on this album... does anyone else remember hearing/reading that back then?
Anyway, good podcast... Doug likes to talk.
Doug was a good guest. Very enthusiastic and....remembers stuff (you'd be surprised). I messaged him to thank him for his time and we had a really cool back & forth. Genuinely nice dude.
As far as Baker....it's funny.....because in recording the episode, I didn't feel we were all that critical of him. We're both huge fans of his work and his guitar playing. I think maybe (co-host) Brian wasn't a fan of some of his solos, but that was about it. I love his playing on the record....his riffing on "Trying" is nuts!
captain2man wrote:Episode 51 of End on End has hit the airwaves.
This week we discuss Dischord 26 1/2 (split release with IG Records) - the second release from Ignition - the "Anger Means/Proven Hollow" single.
This week are guests are Mark O'Connor a/k/a Scrote (from the Daycare Swindlers) and Tim Green (Nation of Ulysses / Vile Cherubs / Fucking Champs) and we play a very rarely heard Doc Hopper cover of "Anger Means", recorded back in '93 for an aborted Suburban Voice Dischord tribute comp.
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
captain2man wrote:The newest episode of End on End podcast is now out. This week, it's DIschord 29 - Soul Side's 'Trigger'.
Interviews with 3/4's of the band: Bobby Sullivan, Johnny Temple & Alexis Fleisig.
Thanks to fellow Daghouser Greg Polard for pinch-hitting for me this week.
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/s ... 0523116144
scannest wrote:It's like a filmmaker saying "Spielberg is my idol. Every time I get behind the camera I think about how I can make my film as good as Hook"
scannest wrote:Ken Burns told the story of the Civil War in 11 hours and 30 minutes.
scannest wrote:Ken Burns told the story of the Civil War in 11 hours and 30 minutes.
Hal wrote:scannest wrote:Ken Burns told the story of the Civil War in 11 hours and 30 minutes.
I made it through 49 min. yesterday. Try to fit in another hour today.
xxxMidgexxx wrote:But perhaps I just love drone stuff in general.
JGJR wrote:Hal wrote:scannest wrote:Ken Burns told the story of the Civil War in 11 hours and 30 minutes.
I made it through 49 min. yesterday. Try to fit in another hour today.
Thsi is my approach as well. I feel like I've listened to an entire podcast archive, but I've only listened to the Embrace, Gray Matter - Take it Back and maybe one other episode lol. Not a complaint btw; just wish there were more hours in the day sometimes.
Hal wrote:scannest wrote:Ken Burns told the story of the Civil War in 11 hours and 30 minutes.
I made it through 49 min. yesterday. Try to fit in another hour today.
version sound wrote:I’m almost all the way through the Trigger episode. Good stuff, and it’s great to hear Greg podcast with someone with more reasonable opinions (sorry, Javier).
scannest wrote:It's like a filmmaker saying "Spielberg is my idol. Every time I get behind the camera I think about how I can make my film as good as Hook"
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