The Greatest Non Hits

Edie Brickell & New Bohemians: Shooting Rubber Bands at the Stars

January 15, 2024 Chris & Tim Season 3 Episode 3
Edie Brickell & New Bohemians: Shooting Rubber Bands at the Stars
The Greatest Non Hits
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The Greatest Non Hits
Edie Brickell & New Bohemians: Shooting Rubber Bands at the Stars
Jan 15, 2024 Season 3 Episode 3
Chris & Tim

Text us, and Rock on!

Have you ever found yourself lost in the rhythms of a forgotten tune only to have it transport you back in time? That's the magic we unearth as Tim and I, your hosts, reminisce about Edie Brickell & New Bohemians' seminal album "Shooting Rubber Bands at the Stars." Join us for a heartfelt expedition through the origins of this iconic band, as we salute the late Brad Hauser and bypass the hits to spotlight our personal favorite deep cuts. We'll explore the rich tapestry of folk, rock, and pop that catapulted Edie and the gang to stardom, all while Tim's guitar strings echo the soundtrack of our musings.

As the strumming continues, we weave a vibrant discussion that transcends mere music critique and delves into the philosophical and cosmic connections that tie us all together. This episode is an eclectic cocktail of culture, laughter, and introspection, garnished with a twist of whimsy. From comparing music to the unassuming grin of a dog to contemplating our shared stardust heritage, we invite you to ponder the profound and chuckle at the absurd. Be ready to get a glimpse of Edie Brickell's life post-New Bohemians, interspersed with references to the ever-quirky "Zoolander."

Closing out the show, we discuss the yin and yang of musical moods and the importance of variety to cleanse our auditory palates. Whether you've spent your week with the grunge of Pearl Jam or the progressive tunes of Yes, we're here to ease you back with something a little more soothing. Our conversation is a reminder of the rejuvenating power of music and its ability to guide us through the ebb and flow of life's moments. So, as you step into the upcoming week, take a moment to refresh your playlist and your soul with the eclectic sounds we've celebrated today.

Support the Show.

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Text us, and Rock on!

Have you ever found yourself lost in the rhythms of a forgotten tune only to have it transport you back in time? That's the magic we unearth as Tim and I, your hosts, reminisce about Edie Brickell & New Bohemians' seminal album "Shooting Rubber Bands at the Stars." Join us for a heartfelt expedition through the origins of this iconic band, as we salute the late Brad Hauser and bypass the hits to spotlight our personal favorite deep cuts. We'll explore the rich tapestry of folk, rock, and pop that catapulted Edie and the gang to stardom, all while Tim's guitar strings echo the soundtrack of our musings.

As the strumming continues, we weave a vibrant discussion that transcends mere music critique and delves into the philosophical and cosmic connections that tie us all together. This episode is an eclectic cocktail of culture, laughter, and introspection, garnished with a twist of whimsy. From comparing music to the unassuming grin of a dog to contemplating our shared stardust heritage, we invite you to ponder the profound and chuckle at the absurd. Be ready to get a glimpse of Edie Brickell's life post-New Bohemians, interspersed with references to the ever-quirky "Zoolander."

Closing out the show, we discuss the yin and yang of musical moods and the importance of variety to cleanse our auditory palates. Whether you've spent your week with the grunge of Pearl Jam or the progressive tunes of Yes, we're here to ease you back with something a little more soothing. Our conversation is a reminder of the rejuvenating power of music and its ability to guide us through the ebb and flow of life's moments. So, as you step into the upcoming week, take a moment to refresh your playlist and your soul with the eclectic sounds we've celebrated today.

Support the Show.

Speaker 1:

How are you taking all this tension?

Speaker 2:

It's a lot of fun. Since the security get to do what you want to do for a living, it feels good. It's a lot better than what we were doing. Which is what people told you to do. Being a frustrated employee is working for frustrated employers. Yeah, I'm sure.

Speaker 7:

Alright, thank you for listening to the Greatest Nine Pets. I'm Chris, and playing the guitar riff from what I Am is my co-host, tim, and thank you so much for listening. This is going to be a fun episode because the subject matter of today's episode is going to be an album called Shooting Rubber Bands at the Stars, which is the debut album for Edie Beckel and the new Bohemians who formed in 1985 in their neighborhood in Dallas, texas so, I'm sorry, mid-80s, like 85 around that time and it was this particular album and the song that Tim's playing that really brought them to huge popularity, and this album, I think, sold a couple million albums at least. So Edie Beckel, I think, went on to marry Paul Simon four years later when they played on SNL, and I think the rest of the band members continued with music, the great musicians, in my opinion I love the music on this album. Shout out to all of those, the gentlemen members past and present, even I mean up until a couple of years ago I at least saw on their website that they had been touring, but I think with some of the past band members, I believe it's Brad Hauser, a bass player, who passed away, I think months ago, back in July of 23. So thoughts and prayers go out to his family, who might be saddened by that loss, in which case, if it's any I mean for any, you know any support that we can give a great musician, and he left a legacy that we're going to appreciate today.

Speaker 7:

There's also past band members or current members. I think it's Brandon Alley he was on this album Edie Beckel, kenny Withrow and John Bush I think Kenny was a guitar player, brad Hauser bass he started off as a Vibraslatt player, something of that nature, and I think Brandon Alley played drums and John Bush percussion. So that rounds out the lineup from the day. There were several hits on this album Actually two, I shouldn't say seven. What am I thinking? What I am, of course, was the big one and then a follow-up single by the name.

Speaker 7:

Circle. I think it was more of a actually a slower ballad from what I am, so those two songs will be excluded from what we're going to be voting on, which are the three top non-hits.

Speaker 7:

We listen to all the songs on the album. We'll make our three non-hits, as we always do. So if you're new to the podcast, welcome. And if you're one of our avid listeners, thank you and continue to listen. It's so well appreciated by both of us. So I would say the band's sound is characterized by a blend of folk, rock, pop elements. You know there's all kinds of different styles. They're from Dallas, texas, so you can hear the southern draw. They're kind of hippies, but they're sort of not. They're Bohemian, the new Bohemians.

Speaker 7:

She has also a very distinctive song, very poetic lyrics. I think they released a few more albums after this debut album in the early 90s. I think they had gone on hiatus at times. Maybe I don't know if she ever did a. I mean, I think that it just sort of fizzled out. They reunited in the late 2000s, I think, and had really some music and performed live around that time, I think all the way up. Like I said, I'll wait until like 2021, like after the pandemic. I think it was like the last of their more recent gigs and then, as I mentioned, Brad.

Speaker 7:

House were passed away July of 23. So what the future has, you know, in the cards for them. We'll wait and see. But they made a lasting and a huge impact on the alternative rock scene. And think about this it was 1988. This was August of 1988, just when I was transitioning from high school to college. I remember this being played a lot by my very first semester of college, now that I think about it. So nobody disliked this. It does it, Rick. It rips, it rips, it cooks. We dig it. Like I said, we got a lot in store for you. We've got a lot of funny sound clips. You know from movies, I think in 1988, there's a movie called Moving that came out.

Speaker 8:

I was like stand a car. No man, you can't talk to Brad. I can't talk to Brad. No one knows who Brad is, me. So anyway.

Speaker 7:

That's Dana Carvey playing a schizophrenic who his name is Brad, but he gets hired to move a guy's car across the country. He didn't realize he was schizophrenic, and so the different personalities took over and was driving the car and went all over the place. It was hysterical. I guess probably trends in line with when this came out as well. So I think like the main thing, though, is that it kind of has an alternative feel to it, and it's before. You know the nineties, you know the grunge scene, so I mean, we went back for this one. I know we're in season three now and the rule of thumb is to go with the nineties album. We're bucking the trend a little bit. It's at the end of the eighties and it had lasting popularity in the nineties, and it kind of sounds like a nineties song. So I think it's. I think it's good. That was awesome. I love that, yeah, so you know you're you're playing is starting to get. You're taking it to the next level.

Speaker 3:

I mean, you know, you're way down.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, you're going deeper and deeper, so, oh, so how you been bud.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I'm good, you know you know what I mean.

Speaker 7:

I'm not sure if I do know what you mean but yeah, I know what you mean.

Speaker 1:

If you know what I mean, yeah you know I know what you know.

Speaker 9:

I'm not sure I do know what you mean.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, okay, yeah, see Jerry's, jerry's in agreement.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, listen, this is great. Yeah, glad to be here.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, I love that song.

Speaker 1:

No, it was good. It's a good noodle. Um, with Rose got it going on with these catchy songwriting abilities and Edie's voice is great.

Speaker 7:

And yeah, they kind of came into the band afterwards. The other guys were actually, I think, the core and yeah, in the interview that we played, that clip that we played, she goes on to say that it's the other guys and the but she and with Rowe kind of came into their band.

Speaker 1:

Right, they, she worked up the courage. Yeah, exactly, and a shout out to Jack Daniels, I guess, for helping facilitate this band's existence as well.

Speaker 7:

Yeah exactly Like cause, I think like the core of the band were playing and they met at a bar late at night. They were like, you know, they're hitting it off, you know. And then, yeah, she had another shot of Jack and she went up on stage with them as they were playing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the rest is history. Two in the morning, something like that, exactly. So I also did a little bit of album cover drawing, trying to replicate the album cover. It seems like I could draw it. Give me some time I can get some color pencils out. Have a good little drawing.

Speaker 7:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Well, it's one of my favorite album covers of all time.

Speaker 7:

This looks like something that would be on your wall. It's pretty awesome. Yeah, your place.

Speaker 1:

It's very artsy, you know, it's palm tree. A cat with lips like human lips.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, it looks like it's been drawn by a third grader. Stars, with all due respect, I mean I appreciate your art Artistic abilities.

Speaker 1:

Third graders are the best artists. You know who said it. But Pablo Picasso Something, something challenges. You know creating art like a child or something I don't know. You know what I mean? Okay, yeah.

Speaker 9:

So, you know what I mean? Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 7:

Well, let's get into it. You ready? Yes, Because, we're going round and round, there's a lot of circles.

Speaker 1:

There's a lot of circles here. Well, there's a lot of supernovas.

Speaker 7:

There's, like talking about circles and relationships, a blade of grass as Walt Whitman said, is the journey work of the stars Okay.

Speaker 1:

A little.

Speaker 3:

Carl Sagan here.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, let's crank it up a little bit. Is that a little bit better, you like that? Yeah, that's good. All right, I like that lights.

Speaker 7:

Philosophy is a talk of serial lines. Religion is the smile of a dog.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

She's a.

Speaker 3:

You know what I mean.

Speaker 2:

You know, oh gosh Deeper and deeper.

Speaker 3:

Way down.

Speaker 10:

You know what I mean. You know what I mean.

Speaker 1:

Was that Trey Shout out to Specimens of Beauty?

Speaker 8:

You know what I?

Speaker 1:

mean, I love these lyrics. These are, oh it says, swag. You know what I?

Speaker 9:

mean Supernova explosion.

Speaker 7:

Shout out to Sagan.

Speaker 2:

The best.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I think she's poking fun of shallowness, but doesn't want to get too deep. She's right in the middle, you know.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

She's living in the now Getting the net. All right A what or what or what A right already. All right, yeah you know what I mean?

Speaker 7:

Let me just choke me in the shower. Shout out to Charity Brown's mom. She's like wah, wah wah, wah wah.

Speaker 1:

This is a very like. Do you feel how I feel? Kind of so, exactly. It's a little framped in me Need a Viberslap.

Speaker 7:

It might need a little Looked crazy train style. I think cause Howzer went pro in that Before this band.

Speaker 11:

Oh, don't get me started on that whole EDE thing.

Speaker 1:

No, no, some Jerry Garcia effects here. The whole EDE thing. Yeah, the band was the new Bohemians and it was the trend to put the female singer in there, and she even admitted that that was like the trend.

Speaker 7:

And kind of interesting. Yeah, more attention.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

She's got an interesting name, ede, like Edith Edith Brickhill.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, steven Edie Amin. What the hell are we doing here?

Speaker 3:

Let's see.

Speaker 11:

The whole.

Speaker 2:

EDE thing, no, no.

Speaker 11:

They said Steven Edie. I said Steven Edie Amin. Who the hell am I working with?

Speaker 1:

Don't get too deep.

Speaker 3:

Or what.

Speaker 9:

It was generated long ago and far away in Red Giant Stars.

Speaker 1:

Shootin' rubber bands, like we have some rubber bands. Hold on, that's a guy playing rubber bands on YouTube.

Speaker 7:

Okay, those are the rubber bands being shot up at the Carl. Sagan Stars. Thank you too.

Speaker 1:

Well, they're shot at us because we are stars. You know we're star people, we are the cosmos.

Speaker 7:

Okay, All right, next song yeah, let's get you on the road. This is Little Miss s. Technically, I think this is like a single that was released, but we're putting in the non-hit so we can. We can vote on this one. Up for voting.

Speaker 2:

Chunk in the bathroom. Oh gosh making it with.

Speaker 7:

All right, drug reference is right off the bat.

Speaker 10:

Very sad of a shop, rocker.

Speaker 7:

This is a lot. This is barbershop. This is A little bit.

Speaker 1:

We're doing it in their weird little Indie Texas.

Speaker 2:

Electric.

Speaker 7:

This is pretty. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, you're like the screw in a round. These are like sad lears I know, but it's a little there. Got to get living man.

Speaker 11:

You realize that someone loved you.

Speaker 8:

One love to you. That means, someone can love you again.

Speaker 1:

This is a love song. Yeah, I love a song.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, I feel like I, If I'm in the right mood, I could like this song, but like two to three times out of every ten times I listen this I could probably right like it. Otherwise it just feels like it's.

Speaker 1:

It's calm. It's calm. It's falling a little flat, yeah, but it's supposed to be about.

Speaker 7:

It's really for self-reflection people who've gone the wrong way in their life.

Speaker 1:

Yeah and I mean, and for that it's a good song.

Speaker 7:

But I think the people who it's it should be for won't listen to the song. It's probably gonna be like this song sucks Right and they're not gonna take the message in it. Like it needs to be a little bit more down and dirty. This is a nice person song.

Speaker 3:

Okay, okay, little piano there.

Speaker 8:

What is this?

Speaker 7:

Okay, all right. What movie is that? Is that from a?

Speaker 1:

Zoolander, zoolander, that's right. Tiny school for ants, yeah.

Speaker 7:

Okay, this is the third song. Era of December.

Speaker 3:

Come on, do it.

Speaker 7:

It's really just like a a non this is non-barbershop.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, yeah, it's good.

Speaker 3:

Something.

Speaker 11:

Yada, yada, yada.

Speaker 7:

Let's get the wind chimes.

Speaker 1:

A little vibrous lap.

Speaker 7:

We have to put the lad one in there. That actually sounds pretty good. It sounded pretty good. It was well placed. Good job, that was 10. Try it. Well, just like fine places to add the vibrous lap.

Speaker 2:

That was pretty good.

Speaker 1:

That was a, that was a chilly vibrous lap right there. That's where I remember it. I remember it that way, brad, do you remember that?

Speaker 5:

No, man, you can't talk to Brad. I can't talk to Brad.

Speaker 8:

No one knows who Brad is man.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I like this one. This is good.

Speaker 7:

That was us, Not the song. We're like we're we're ruining the song. No, no, no, no.

Speaker 1:

With rose crushing it on guitar again here with that minor chord. Yeah, he was.

Speaker 7:

I mean, I like the percussion in the back.

Speaker 1:

Does it feel a little bit.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, there's filling in some holes with the do a really good job.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so I have to brand it Allie Branding. Allie has a website, check them out. Get drum lessons? Oh yeah, and where?

Speaker 7:

are they now? Well, edie Burkele is married to Paul Simon, right, that's right. That's where she is.

Speaker 1:

I met on SNL How's her? She was 25. He was 50.

Speaker 7:

Oh yeah, that was kind of weird. Yeah, it's a little age difference.

Speaker 1:

Oh, Robin the cradle.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, they have like kids and stuff.

Speaker 1:

Three kids Need to do multi-pass.

Speaker 7:

I wonder if they were asked by the grandpa on Paul's side? Yeah, he would be 141 right now.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to the pink champagne drinkers out there Little Hibiscus, little Hibiscus in there. Pinky's up right there.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, pinky's up, if you have Hibiscus in your champagne.

Speaker 1:

Get that Pinky up, all right.

Speaker 7:

Brad, if you have Earl.

Speaker 1:

Gray in it. Little Earl Gray Shout out to Baskin Robbins.

Speaker 8:

That's right, I'm like Baskin Robbins you get one free taste and you got to buy the scoop.

Speaker 7:

They're going to be stars, Okay one more Vibrous Lab again Right now. Oh yeah, I'll try to find another place for it. That rubber band thing might sound good, right.

Speaker 2:

It does sound good.

Speaker 1:

It's like another part of the percussion. It sounds good. Holy crap, I know.

Speaker 7:

We're just like changing the song Little rubber band right yeah.

Speaker 1:

Should we get a little Big Bird palette cleanser here? Yeah, in the interim.

Speaker 11:

Okay.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, that was a Tim thing.

Speaker 9:

All right, a blade of grass, as Walt Whitman said, is the journey work of the stars.

Speaker 7:

Thanks for taking us out of that one. That was good, all right, this is the wheel, this next.

Speaker 1:

Where are they now?

Speaker 7:

Yeah, who are we on anyway? Edie Pekele and Paul Simon Hauser passed away, john Alley Brandon.

Speaker 1:

Drum Brandon Alley, john Bush, oh, john Bush I think he's still kicking it somewhere.

Speaker 7:

He's still a professional musician, okay.

Speaker 3:

Something like that, with or without.

Speaker 2:

With or without?

Speaker 7:

yeah, round and round here we go, just go round and round.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, around the block they come back, they go round again.

Speaker 7:

They just go round and round, round and round you know, Sit out to the Truman Show Jim Carrey oh oh, ho-ho-ho, oh, oh, oh.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, I love the television. Daddy Me, daddy Hi what? Have you got.

Speaker 1:

Tracy, oh, they come back they go around again. Go around the block. There's a little Raga.

Speaker 2:

Here I'm a shop Raga, I'm a little bit out of the sun that I've just begun to fear.

Speaker 7:

Back and forth and back and forth and back and forth around the. So it gets solved. That's why I don't know, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

This is a world where nothing is solved. Okay.

Speaker 7:

Okay, Matthew.

Speaker 11:

Thank you, come again and have a nice day.

Speaker 7:

I just don't understand. What are we supposed to do with it?

Speaker 10:

Saying let it out, Give it some air man. Saying let it out. Give it some air, man Play with it, take, take.

Speaker 11:

I'm changing.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I love this. This solo is good.

Speaker 2:

That was good Go around the block, go around the block. Nothing's disturbing Consequence.

Speaker 1:

Little action.

Speaker 2:

They come back they go around again.

Speaker 5:

They just go around and around, back and forth and back and forth around the. They just go around and around, round and round. You know.

Speaker 7:

Alright.

Speaker 1:

That was nice, that was a good one. Wow, time is a flat circle. Okay, shout out to True Detectives.

Speaker 7:

Okay, this is Love, like we Do.

Speaker 1:

Love Like we Do we do.

Speaker 7:

I think I'm going to make this a hit. I've heard this on the radio before.

Speaker 2:

Okay, love is better than the days behind. What's mine is yours and what's yours is mine.

Speaker 1:

No aggravation that we can't Just do what you're told. I didn't like the way that interviewer was like you just did what you were told.

Speaker 7:

Huh yeah, it's like well, yeah, but Well it's kind of like what the guy from Daisy Confused was saying Matt Spikani's character. Oh yeah, there are rules setters, people who are always like asking you to follow rules.

Speaker 3:

Tell you this older you do get, the more rules you're going to try to get you to follow.

Speaker 7:

That must suck living in Texas, because it's like from that standpoint where it seems authoritarian, Like you're always like supposed to obey, Don't mess with us, kind of.

Speaker 1:

Only if you put on the glasses will you see the obey sign. Yeah, what's that movie?

Speaker 7:

What's the line here?

Speaker 1:

I don't know. He puts on the glasses and you can see like the aliens and the obey and the oh yeah. Like.

Speaker 7:

Terminator, I don't know, I don't know, something like that. I think, yeah, no, it's not that.

Speaker 10:

We'll get it later. Barbershop Raga.

Speaker 1:

Barbershop Raga. Hey sir.

Speaker 3:

Hey guys, let's get out of here. Let's get out of here.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, that movie is called they Live.

Speaker 1:

They Live yeah.

Speaker 7:

It came out in the same year, 1988.

Speaker 1:

What? Oh my gosh.

Speaker 7:

Shout out to.

Speaker 1:

Rodney Lover. Good little solo here.

Speaker 10:

Say and let it out, give it some air.

Speaker 1:

Come on, let it rip.

Speaker 7:

Very melodic. Hey sir. It's a dejected Brad Hamilton putting his pirate uniform back on after poor guy.

Speaker 1:

Well, do we want a word from our sponsors?

Speaker 7:

Yeah, yeah, it's okay, all right, yes, shout out to Esenel Happy Funball Still legal in 16 states. We love that ball. That's right. It's our favorite ball, our favorite circle. All right, this is a circle. I think this one, this is a hit too right, yeah?

Speaker 9:

Your world frightens and confuses me.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, because in the caveman days I don't think they had a circle of friends.

Speaker 1:

A mass text? Yeah, they didn't have text. Hey, what is everybody doing?

Speaker 7:

You've been noticing you haven't been replying to our group chats.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, lol, just getting groceries Trying to. You know, unwind from getting told what to do all day.

Speaker 7:

Hashtag F you guys.

Speaker 1:

Hashtag salt bath. Hashtag cleanse.

Speaker 7:

And shout out to the hashtags.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to the people by themselves Having some alone time with us. We appreciate it.

Speaker 7:

All right, I'm gonna start getting my class. Talk to us yourselves.

Speaker 10:

I'm just a caveman. I fell in some ice and later got thought out by some of your scientists.

Speaker 1:

So much feeling. Even a caveman can comprehend this. This is good for us. This is good for us, Edie. We need this. Don't do that.

Speaker 2:

No. Stop.

Speaker 10:

It's just key Rock you're honoring.

Speaker 1:

Best way to be? Just a minute. Somebody knock God Just when I'm all alone. It's the best way to be when I'm by myself. Nobody else can say.

Speaker 3:

What I don't know.

Speaker 7:

Okay, what kind of a circle is that? Anyway, I hope they're not doing anything.

Speaker 10:

Brad Hamilton style Say and let it out, give it some air, man.

Speaker 7:

Play with it, not that circle of friends, I mean. You do it on your own time as your business. I pass on that. Let's bring it to Happy Fun Ball yeah that's right Again, sponsor, thank you Happy Fun Ball. It's happy, it's fun.

Speaker 9:

We're gonna have that on pause. Happy Fun Ball Still legal in 16 states. It's happy, it's fun. It's happy, fun ball.

Speaker 11:

Thank you, come again, have a nice day.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 7:

Okay.

Speaker 11:

Wait, just a minute.

Speaker 7:

This is just Every song we're turning into that. This one is called Beat the Time. It's called Beget. That is not Tim's pet name for his genitalia, it's just Beat the Time.

Speaker 2:

No comment.

Speaker 1:

I think this is App Time. It's just got the child's names of Paul, simon and Eve. They have Lulu, yeah.

Speaker 3:

That's wrong.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, who are they? Lulu, and what I?

Speaker 1:

don't even remember, lulu yeah.

Speaker 7:

So I mean he was 15, she was 20, she was 25. She's got to be like 57 or 58 now.

Speaker 3:

So that was like.

Speaker 1:

So he's like 80?.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, he's kind of in his 80s.

Speaker 2:

I don't know.

Speaker 1:

They're like it's not my grandpa, yeah it's like You're too.

Speaker 7:

I don't know if you're too young to be my grandpa, but you're old to be my dad at the same time.

Speaker 10:

You know what I mean.

Speaker 7:

Did they take their dads last names?

Speaker 1:

No, they saw it.

Speaker 7:

Hi, I'm Lulu Bercel. I'm an Uber He-Man.

Speaker 8:

I mean, you know what I mean.

Speaker 10:

Say it and let it out, say it and let it out, say it and let it out.

Speaker 2:

We can't leave these problems behind. We can't leave these problems behind.

Speaker 1:

Yes, you can Leave them behind. Go, run away. This is a world where nothing's solved.

Speaker 3:

Open your mama-mama-mama, mama-mama-mama. Yes, sir.

Speaker 11:

Thank you, come again and have a nice day.

Speaker 7:

Alright, that was a good beat of the time.

Speaker 1:

This one's called.

Speaker 11:

She.

Speaker 7:

We're really moving along here.

Speaker 1:

It is Now there's.

Speaker 7:

And that was a nice song, it was good.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we ruined it Sorry, no, we do.

Speaker 7:

It was fun, it was.

Speaker 3:

La, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la la.

Speaker 1:

Really easing into this one here. This has a sound sound guy left.

Speaker 7:

for a little bit it was like it has like a Snow White and a seven dwarfs kind of a vibe to it. La, la, la, la la la, la la la la. Or like Disney.

Speaker 1:

I like it All right.

Speaker 7:

So far, so good.

Speaker 1:

Kind of builds up. I like the tactic.

Speaker 2:

She goes around you like the moon. She smiles at her reflection in a spoon. She reads expensive magazines. She sees herself in everything. You can't judge her for that.

Speaker 10:

It's just key. Rock your honor and yes, I'm ready. Thank you, she knows where her head is at. You can't judge her for that.

Speaker 1:

Can't judge her. She knows where her head is at. She knows where her head is at Good sustain on there. Yeah, the guitar. Yeah, it's kind of overdubbed you two guitarists Right Tangled up in blue.

Speaker 2:

She's got a ladder to the sky.

Speaker 1:

That's too high. She's got a mad.

Speaker 10:

Look in her eyes. It's just key rock.

Speaker 1:

Mad.

Speaker 4:

look, you can't judge her for that she knows where her head is at. You can't judge her for that.

Speaker 10:

Your honor and, yes, I'm ready.

Speaker 1:

Thank you this kind of has like a little bit of a widespread panic, yeah panic Riff thing going on.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 7:

It's kind of acoustic. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Triumphant. Oh. I'm liking this one the most out of the non-hits, for sure. Kenny Withrow on guitars.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, yeah, that's his.

Speaker 1:

Guitars plural. So he is doing both Right, that's unheard of. Oh, shout out to Terry Robertson who did the CD design.

Speaker 7:

OK.

Speaker 1:

Gabrielle Romberger, art coordinator.

Speaker 2:

You can't judge her for that. She knows where her head is at. You can't judge her for that.

Speaker 7:

Maybe this song should have been bigger than it was. She knows where her head is at.

Speaker 1:

She'd call her home. Maybe it's just a little too long, maybe.

Speaker 7:

That's probably what it was. They couldn't sell it to a radio Radio station wouldn't play it.

Speaker 1:

It was too long. It means five minutes, but still the whole world is not at home. When there's nothing left room for you, ga just has to play it. I don't understand the length of the song argument. I guess commercials or whatever.

Speaker 7:

Yes, because commercials at the time is shorter songs that kept people's attention.

Speaker 3:

Sweet sweet, oh sweet, oh, La, la, la, la, La, la, la la.

Speaker 9:

Surely you can't be serious. I am serious and don't call me surely La, la, la la.

Speaker 3:

La, la, la, la, la, la, la, la All right, you got a little vibroslap.

Speaker 7:

All right Nothing.

Speaker 1:

You're done. Very sweet, so sweet Sweet crooning Not now, can't be yet anymore.

Speaker 2:

What's funny?

Speaker 8:

It's stinging me like crazy.

Speaker 3:

You're OK.

Speaker 1:

Just rub some sand on it.

Speaker 8:

Wait, I got hemorrhoids Anything.

Speaker 2:

Nothing I don't want to know.

Speaker 10:

Nothing keeps me up at night.

Speaker 2:

What's wrong with you? I toss and turn over nothing. What's wrong with you? I toss and turn over nothing.

Speaker 8:

Hey, what's the matter? What's the matter?

Speaker 2:

What's the matter with you? Hey, what's the matter? What's wrong with you?

Speaker 3:

What is this? What's the matter with you?

Speaker 8:

I got hemorrhoids dead. What's the matter?

Speaker 3:

What's the matter?

Speaker 9:

with you. Surely you can't be serious.

Speaker 8:

I have warts all over my ass and genitalia.

Speaker 7:

Damn, I didn't want to be your best friend.

Speaker 1:

It's all. It's all about the best. He's on our show. He's guesting on our show.

Speaker 8:

What's funny? It's stinging me like crazy.

Speaker 3:

Come on, do it.

Speaker 2:

Nothing keeps me up at night.

Speaker 1:

I hate tossing and turning. It's the worst. It's the worst, you just can't sleep. It's not good to go to bed angry at your partner. Okay, work it out, talk it out. Okay, just sit him down, pour a beer. What's the matter? And say what's the matter.

Speaker 2:

What's the matter with you?

Speaker 1:

What's the matter with you? Like don't do the dishes fast enough and the compliment has? Laundry smelled To notice that I moved to plant from the living room to the bedroom.

Speaker 7:

Uh oh, that feels like you're going into like a familiar like a familiar place.

Speaker 1:

Yeah it's getting too real now. It's fake.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

I'm sad. Ugh Talk amongst yourselves.

Speaker 7:

My roommates don't like my plants and all the plants have fungus nets. But I love them to death.

Speaker 1:

They're like family to me. Even the nets are like family. I love those nets. I realize that someone loved you.

Speaker 8:

And that means someone can love you again.

Speaker 7:

Can human and net love exist?

Speaker 3:

No, Come on, do it, lay it out right here, do it.

Speaker 7:

Do it. Yeah, there's a G and H exclusive right there. Tim Tim loves ants. All right. Nats Nats, All right.

Speaker 8:

Chinese Senate for ants.

Speaker 7:

He said ants, I love Nats. All right, this one is now. This has a Far East, has a far East aesthetic. He does.

Speaker 9:

Supernova explosion.

Speaker 7:

Something that's this pick, something I'm picturing in my head.

Speaker 10:

Wow.

Speaker 1:

Oh God.

Speaker 7:

This kind of sounds like ship of fools from Robert Plants, now in Zen album. That's what I'm picking up here.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's what I was yeah.

Speaker 7:

And also your mouth. He read this is what I was picturing.

Speaker 1:

The cat has read Red mouth as well.

Speaker 7:

It's an affliction Red mouth. It sounds like a chewing tobacco.

Speaker 2:

Red mouth.

Speaker 1:

I'm picturing it hanging down a picture and going on yeah, do you? Do you see the picture?

Speaker 9:

No, I'm not sure I do know what you mean.

Speaker 7:

So, Okay, this is a Interesting Time. Signature change.

Speaker 1:

Core change.

Speaker 7:

Is that a core change?

Speaker 1:

Your magnetism breeds.

Speaker 2:

It's in the quiet breeze that's circling me.

Speaker 3:

Little circle Right now. I want to be with you now, right now. Gotta keep living man. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Oh, the drums on this are excellent. I can keep you with me.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, it's like the drum percussion thing between ally and.

Speaker 1:

And Bush, bush, bush ally.

Speaker 7:

The Bush ally.

Speaker 3:

Partnership. I think about you all the time.

Speaker 2:

I can hear you say to me that you want to be. You with me oh.

Speaker 7:

I've been a great song like a psychological thriller from the late 80s, like on the key of sunrise or something You're mine.

Speaker 2:

I'm fine.

Speaker 1:

Let's get out of here. The cameras are all around. They're like I just liked, brad, let's get out of here. It's like can you go now? Or it's like actually.

Speaker 11:

Wait, just a minute.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, we're kind of mixing up scenes. That last one was when he was in the bathroom. You're in the bathroom, he's gratifying himself. And then the other one. This one is Yep, those are the two guys in the In the restaurant. It's like a Long Island era, long John Silver kind of a place, and he's like in the bathroom changing for like to deliver a takeout order. Yeah, because he's like how do we do it? He's like I'm just changing. He's like no, yeah, where the uniform? I'm changing.

Speaker 7:

He's like oh, I, I, sir. He's like where you're where, where are you pride?

Speaker 1:

Come on, this is a world where nothing is solved.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, this is. I mean, I'm just like all over the place right now. What's going on here?

Speaker 1:

This song rocks.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, I like you know it's got better now, chica, chica, chica.

Speaker 3:

Chica, chica, chica.

Speaker 7:

I mean this would be perfect. The one thing that he should have done is put a Vibra slap in there at the very end. That's right, I'm like basking Robbins.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 7:

Keep coming back.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, this is.

Speaker 7:

This is really country and western. This is like Texas.

Speaker 8:

I got hemorrhoids dead. What, that's Zablinny what.

Speaker 7:

What.

Speaker 1:

Loves never easy to lose, my friend.

Speaker 7:

She's like having a manic episode. I kind of like it Just try to get him out of his mind, get him out of her mind.

Speaker 1:

Supernova explosion Definitely definitely, definitely, or death desperately.

Speaker 3:

Back, back.

Speaker 10:

Say let it out.

Speaker 3:

Keep coming back, back, back Back.

Speaker 10:

Give it some air, man Lay with it. Take, keep, just Keep, just Keep it back, keep it back. Yes sir, yes sir.

Speaker 7:

What do you think Brad would say right now? Something to be effective.

Speaker 11:

Thank you, come again and have a nice day.

Speaker 1:

Keep coming back. Look at those fish and chips, ah.

Speaker 3:

Finger painting the world.

Speaker 7:

Taking it down a little bit here.

Speaker 2:

Ah Filling in the negative space with positively everything.

Speaker 3:

I do I do, come on, do it.

Speaker 2:

All because of you. I do, I do, and it's all because of you.

Speaker 3:

Lay it out right here, do it? Just coming back, you look pretty. What did you say? I said you look shitty.

Speaker 2:

Good night, denise. It's not the motion that I want from you. I want someone to follow who doesn't lead the way.

Speaker 1:

What I want someone to follow, follow, but doesn't lead the way, or lead the way what I say. I just repeated what you said. Yeah, it's not me, no, it's not I've been having a hard time.

Speaker 2:

Everything.

Speaker 7:

Following this, I do.

Speaker 2:

I do, and it's all because of you. I do, I do, I do, and it's all because of you. I do, I do, I do, I do, I do, I do, I do, I do, and it's all because of you. Hmm, that was nice.

Speaker 7:

Delicate yeah.

Speaker 1:

So delicate.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, all right, man, that's the end. Oh man, wow, that was a good one Little palette cleanser. It's a little ebriquel from the next album.

Speaker 1:

Sitting on the front porch.

Speaker 5:

On the shop. Rocker Go around the block, they come back, they go around again, they just go around and run, run and run.

Speaker 1:

You know, Okay, so, so we gotta go on.

Speaker 7:

We gotta do our top three man. What are we looking at here?

Speaker 1:

What's your?

Speaker 7:

number three you, uh, you need a second to compose yourself.

Speaker 1:

Keep coming back is a solid track, uh huh, and it's got a ripping solo and the bands in the pocket, so I'm going to keep coming back.

Speaker 7:

For number three, yeah, well, that's a good one, because it's the music and it's a country and western kind of thing, which is a departure from everything else that they were doing here?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm getting into that. You know, sean, or more, and they do it well.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, well, yeah, and without it being like their, their bread and butter. So yeah, I was thinking about that as one, but it was just a little bit on the fence for me. Um, and then my number three is I do nice that last one. I thought that was, it was beautiful and it was uh, it was uh, it was just something, something about it that, uh, it gets me right there, kind of a thing.

Speaker 1:

It was a Right in the middle.

Speaker 7:

It's a very sweet sentiment, but it's like a moving on from the relationship. Yeah, it's a. It represents I can fill in the spaces now I can. I can function as a human being without you in my life.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, once again, it's a kind of thing, it is a very touching stuff, lifting in that way. Yeah, I'm going with the the bangers on this one.

Speaker 7:

With number two number two.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm not, I'm really doing any. There's their quiet songs, but um, I'm going now.

Speaker 7:

Now number two. That was a good one.

Speaker 1:

That's a good spell on the album the now and to keep coming back. Right, keeps you coming back. It's on. It could be Really good exercise music, really good in the background music, for sure.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, keep coming back, and now we're strong and.

Speaker 7:

I don't want to take anything away and at any given day those proud, those two tracks in my mind could be. Probably I could probably like them more than my number three. Number two I'm gonna go with she nice. She was a good one because I mean at all of these, like all four of these that we've done so far, because you've got yeah now and Keep, keep coming back. She and I do for me, nice are a couple that I just thought that this, the guitar solo on that one, was really oh yeah that made it, and so it's got to be up there.

Speaker 1:

It's a little longer. Yeah, it's a little bit longer and I like that same sheet, number one, definitely, yeah, honorable mention for air of December. But I think Actually some of the later tracks on this one are better Surprising yeah, yeah, no number air of December was my number one.

Speaker 7:

Nice I just thought it was. I can understand where you're coming from. With Down the road, I think the music is more impressive. I keep coming back as well as she. But yeah, there was something that I liked about, like the subtlety and the timing of how the song all comes together. It for effect and yeah, it's got a really just kind of like a chill kind of a vibe and but it was warm and it was. They use a good, good use of the bass to fill in a lot of the air.

Speaker 1:

Definitely so. I like air songs that kind of come go flat or little miss s mm-hmm Love like we do and beat the time and not and nothing. Those kind of fell flat for me. But the solid album all in all, very, very tasteful, tasteful More tasteful than us, that's for damn sure.

Speaker 7:

Hey, that's glad. The guy bless you if you're still listening.

Speaker 1:

Thanks, we're trying to, just, you know, take the tracks down. We're just crowbars on this one, but it's just because, sir, we have a hardened shell we need to that's right.

Speaker 7:

Let it in and you know this is a great album to listen to all week, you know, just as a palette cleanser for the last couple between Pearl Jam and yes, exactly yeah, we're gonna get back into the hard stuff, yeah, um and docy-doe with the back and the soft and hard and to sort of Keep ourselves, you know, on our toes I guess exactly yeah, or just keep ourselves entertaining, interested, you know yeah, so we can change exactly. All right man, all right man, we're gonna put a bow on this.

Speaker 1:

Let's, let's.

Speaker 7:

Put a bow on it. All right, man, all right. Shout out to all of our listeners.

Speaker 1:

Thanks so much, and. And enjoy your next week.

Speaker 7:

Enjoy your week, take care.

Speaker 11:

Thank you, come again. Have a nice day you.

Edie Beckel's New Bohemians Album Discussion
Musings on Music and Existence
Musical Commentary and Lighthearted Banter
Favorite Album Tracks Discussion
Album Discussion and Farewell