Last Day Deaf talks influences and axes with MOTORCADE

INTERVIEW

More with MOTORCADE over at Last Day Deaf!

Drummer Jeff Ryan reveals his preference for using a single bit or double bit axe when chopping wood in response to their "9+1 Q&A" column. Also mentioned: Echo and the Bunnymen, A Clockwork Orange, Roxy Music,  Wire, and Sleepaway Camp

New album 𝘚𝘦𝘦 𝘠𝘰𝘢 𝘐𝘯 π˜›π˜©π˜¦ π˜•π˜°π˜΅π˜©π˜ͺ𝘯𝘨 out now on Idol Records. The band plays a Record Store Day set at Good Records in Dallas on Saturday, April 23 at 5PM CT.

Mark Bryan tells Goldmine about 10 albums that have changed his life

FEATURE


Loving what writer Lee Zimmerman says today at Goldmine Magazine in his intro to Mark Bryan’s "10 Albums That Changed My Life,” for which he actually wanted to name 20 (including Tom Waits, XTC, The Ramones, and The Replacements, along with other usual and essential suspects).

"It seems inevitable that Bryan will forever be associated with the band he helped found, Hootie and the Blowfish. Regardless of any popular perception, Bryan boasts a stellar solo career... the ever-emphatic π˜”π˜ͺπ˜₯𝘭π˜ͺ𝘧𝘦 π˜—π˜³π˜ͺ𝘀𝘦𝘭𝘦𝘴𝘴 establishes a new high bar as far as his individual achievement."

Glide Mag continues to support Gregory Ackerman by posting "All This Thinking"

PODCAST INTERVIEW

Much appreciation to Glide Magazine for the continued support of Gregory Ackerman, this time by sharing 𝘚𝘡π˜ͺ𝘭𝘭 𝘞𝘒π˜ͺ𝘡π˜ͺ𝘯𝘨 𝘚𝘡π˜ͺ𝘭𝘭 track β€œAll This Thinking.” Gregory tells us that he wrote the song during β€œa period of extreme anxiety” and that it helped him find β€œa way out.” As with all the songs on the new album, β€œAll This Thinking” is a great listen for unburdening the mind.

Gregory Ackerman, whose Still Waiting Still is out today, guests on the Stereo Embers Podcast

PODCAST INTERVIEW

Gregory Ackerman’s much-anticipated new LP Still Waiting Still is out today (listen here), and he’s also received the podcast treatment from Alex Green of Stereo Embers.

Some great intro words from Alex, as usual: β€œThe album is as breezy as it is riveting–it’s a brilliant meditation on the quotidian life and its daily comforts and disruptions. Ackerman’s work is intimate and confiding and played with the kind of commanding interior strength that gives it an instantly timeless quality. It's a rich and seamless collection of woebegone West Coast loneliness that perfectly contrasts the sunrises and sunsets of Southern California with the corresponding highs and lows of the human heart.”

New Noise premiers J Hacha De Zola's Subharmonic City-produced video for "Which Way"

VIDEO PREMIERE


"I was angry when I wrote it," says J Hacha De Zola. The video for "Which Way," the song of which he speaks, is playing today over at New Noise Magazine. Check out the Subharmonic City-produced clip now!

J explains, "A dear friend, just someone who I really loved and thought the world of, was taken from us by COVID. When that happened, it made the pandemic real to me. That’s where the song came from."

"Which Way," from J's stellar new album 𝘌𝘒𝘴𝘡 𝘰𝘧 𝘌π˜₯𝘦𝘯, is streaming everywhere and anywhere here.