EP 27: Carol Lipnik is a Coney Island Mermaid!

Visit the beautiful decay of Coney Island with me and songwriter Carol Lipnik. In this chat, we walk through pulling song rabbits out of hats, the metaphors of roses, throwing out the instruction manual, and finding our inner clowns.

Carol Lipnik's music does more than evoke a shadow-world of mysterious, often misunderstood creatures, from sideshow freaks and b-movie monsters to love's obsessive victims. It creates that world, bringing it into audible being through her stunningly versatile four-octave voice and expressive, impeccably crafted songs. Her live shows draw audiences in with an intimacy and intensity that is both theatrical and deeply musical. Whether performing as a duo with pianist Matt Kanelos or with a full-band version of "SPOOKARAMA" (named for Coney Island's iconic dark ride) with music director, Dred Scott, and featuring some of New York's most inventive players, her repertoire - ranging from mad, carnival-ride tangos and waltzes to dramatic Bowie-esque rock and intricate, semi-acoustic art songs is unified by the singer's visionary commitment to the beauty of strangeness and the strangeness of beauty. Carol Lipnik's songs and performances are, in the truest sense, enchantments.

Carol Lipnik, grew up in Coney Island in the midst of its long decline. Her earliest memories are of shyly pedaling a blue banana-seat bicycle around the abandoned amusement park (especially off season) and staring up at the totem-like, decaying rides. After studying fine arts at Pratt Institute and The Art Students League, Carol opted for the immediate, emotional gratification of singing, and found that she had a knack for it -- as well as a seemingly limitless vocal range. She drew from her visual arts training to create a singular cinematic style rooted in Blues, Pre-War Berlin Cabaret, Folk, etc., as filtered through her very own carnival and psychedelic sensibilities.
Carol’s popular weekly performance residency with Matt Kanelos on piano at the East Village Boîte Pangea has repeatedly been a featured top cabaret critic’s pick in Time Out. Carol has built a dedicated following through performances at Joe’s Pub, The Rose Theater at Lincoln Center, The David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center, The Abrons Arts Center, the Hudson Opera House, the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, The Ancram Opera House, and The Spiegelltent at Bard. She has released six CDs on her Mermaid Alley Music label; the latest, “Almost Back To Normal”, was funded by a grant from the Peter S. Reed Foundation. She has collaborated with and composed music for performance artist John Kelly's latest work “The Escape Artist” and these songs are included debut CD recording “Beauty Kills Me”, She was a recipient of the Kimmel Center Theater SEI Residency Program with Mexican composer Tareke Ortiz (in collaboration with The Joe's Pub and the Public Theater). She is a three time artist-in-residence at the Yaddo Art Colony in Saratoga Springs, NY.


EP 26: Paul Brill is a Powerline!

In this episode, film composer Paul Brill and I talk about the current landscape of film composing, the residue of design, the imagery of powerlines, and the unswerving punctuality of chance.

Paul Brill’s compositions for numerous award-winning films, TV series, NPR program themes, and several acclaimed CDs of original and innovative songwriting show that youthful adventures as an herbal smokes salesman, street performer, valet, corporate errand boy, and a marine biology instructor can serve the creative spirit well.

Paul has received 3 EMMY AWARD nominations for his scores for the films, “Full Battle Rattle” (National Geographic), “The Devil Came on Horseback” (Break Thru Films), and “The Trials of Darryl Hunt” (HBO), which was hailed by Variety as “memorably chilling, sounding notes of purest dread.” Young American Recordings notably released the Hunt soundtrack, curated by Brill, featuring selections from his score and original contributions by Andrew Bird, M. Ward, The Last Poets, Dead Prez, Califone, and Mark Kozelek among many others. Paul won the first-ever Best Music Award from the International Documentary Association for his score for the film, “Better this World.” He was recently nominated for a Golden Reel Award for his work on the hit Netflix docu-series, “Bobby Kennedy for President.”

Brill collaborated with Rock legends U2 on the HBO film, “Burma Soldier,” composing a new string arrangement for an acoustic version of their classic song, “Walk On.” He scored the hit documentary, “Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work,” the Emmy Award-winning “Page One: Inside the NY Times,” as well as Christy Turlington Burns’ directorial debut, “No Woman, No Cry,” on which he collaborated with songwriter Martha Waignwright, and the film adaptation of the best-selling book, “Freakonomics.”

His recent work includes the Sundance Festival-winning films, “Gideon’s Army,” “Trapped,” and “Love Free or Die,” and the Emmy, DuPont and Peabody Award-winning, 6-hour PBS documentary, “The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross,” with noted historian Henry Louis Gates and additional musical contributions from Wynton Marsalis. He scored Abigail Disney’s directorial debut, the Emmy Award-winning, “The Armor of Light,” Liz Garbus’ Peabody Award-winning HBO documentary, “A Dangerous Son,” and wrote the Theme and incidental music for the much-celebrated, Peabody Award-winning NPR Podcast, “Believed.”

He is also the composer for dozens of TV series, specials and films for Netflix, HBO, Showtime, AMC, A&E, MTV, CNN, History Channel, National Geographic, The Sundance Channel and ESPN, among others
. Brill recently made his Off-Broadway debut, composing the score for Gabriel Jason Dean’s “Terminus,” which featured stage legend Deirdre O’Connell and premiered to great acclaim at The New York Theatre Workshop, and his music was performed and featured by Phoenix Chamber Music Society in the Spring of 2018.

EP 25: Debbie Deane is La Dee Da!

Debbie Deane is a neighbor of mine. More importantly, she has a new album out that will make you sing La Dee Da for days. We talk about school music committees, the importance of friends, telling our inner critics to take a hike, and living joyously!

Debbie Deane hails from a musical world without boundaries, where singer-songwriters and top-tier jazz musicians breathe the same creative air. Born and raised in Brooklyn, Debbie grew up listening to Carole King, Stevie Wonder, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, and Steely Dan. As a teenager she explored the fertile ground of the Great American Songbook. Introduced to folk, funk and fusion by her older brother, she studied the great divas of the jazz and pop worlds developing an intense interest in jazz harmony. Music was the ultimate refuge.

 After earning a degree in English Literature from Harvard, Debbie embarked on a career in music. She studied jazz intensively at Boston’s Berklee College of Music, honing the piano skills that she continues to display as a singer-songwriter. At first her songwriting and singing came as an afterthought, but then took center stage.

 In her performing and recording life, Debbie had the good fortune to work with  acclaimed jazz musicians who share her interest in quality songwriting — people like drummer Brian Blade and the late, great bass player Jeff Andrews.  Moving back to Brooklyn, she lived in a “jazz den” with some of the city’s most promising jazz musicians, including saxophonists Seamus Blake and Terry Deane, drummer Marc Miralta and pianists John Stetch and George Colligan. “Everyone came through our place,” says Debbie. “The people I’ve played with, they’re all my friends and they’ve known me, they’ve been my roommates and people I went to school with.” Their presence on Debbie’s recordings and at her live shows is a powerful endorsement.

 Debbie continues to gig extensively in New York and beyond. She is proud to be a part of Brooklyn Above Ground, a diverse music collective that has donated proceeds from its compilation CD to the grass-roots organization World Hunger Year.

 Debbie’s songs have appeared on TV’s “Party of Five,” on Jennifer Love Hewitt’s album Let’s Go Bang, and in a number of films. In addition, she is a cast member of the Great American Pop Show: the History of American Popular Music, which tours elementary schools in and around New York City. Teaching music is a big part of her life.

 “I wish all debuts could be as strong as this one. And it’s not due just to the the stellar sidemen...it's the heart and soul of the artist's music and vision. In a word, soul,” wrote Mike Bannon in Jazz Review.com about Debbie’s self-titled debut CD. Produced by bassist Jeff Andrews and featuring Wayne Krantz, Joshua Redman, Brian Blade, Phil Markowitz and more, the album was licensed by ESC Records and released in Europe in 2005. She was featured on Radio France, and on Lufthansa Airline's Inflight program in 2006. The label also honored Debbie by including her rendition of “Any World (That I’m Welcome To)” on the 2006 compilation Maestros of Cool: a Tribute to Steely Dan.

​In June 2007, Debbie released her second album, the richly rewarding Grove House, on RKM Records, a label run by the illustrious jazz saxophonist Ravi Coltrane. Once again, she brought warmth, sophistication and rock-n-roll edge to the table, leading another cast of fine musicians including RIchard Hammond, Robin Macatangay, Tony Mason, Chris Cheek and her husband Jim Whitney. Selections produced by Elie Massias and Dan Stein, the album features songs of love, ambivalence and freedom.

EP 24: Michael Harren is a Bee in a Beautiful Bonnet!

Michael Harren, songwriter, teacher, and animal rights activist, sits down with me to discuss our analysts, the nature of cats, being OG podcasters (remember Adam Curry’s Daily Source Code??) and deflecting our inner saboteurs.

Brooklyn-based composer and performer Michael Harren combines elements of classical composition with experimental electronics and storytelling to create hypnotic and boldly intimate work that walks the line between Laurie Anderson, Peter Gabriel and Dead Can Dance. He is artist-in-residence at Tamerlaine Farm Animal Sanctuary where he created the solo multi-media theater pieceThe Animal Show, which premiered in New York City in 2016 and continues to be performed in venues throughout the United States.

In his first solo show, Tentative Armor, he combined piano, synthesizers, various electronics, and live musicians with his unique storytelling, resulting in a deeply moving, highly entertaining performance. Through his resonant, powerful, very personal stories, Harren envelops the audience in a funny, poignant, highly intimate tour of his own self-discovery through spirituality, sexuality, and grief. Music, text and photos from the show were released in an album and book of the same name.

Michael Harren has toured as pianist with Sandra Bernhard, is the musical director for Cabaret for a Cause, and has performed at Dixon Place, (le) poisson rouge, Joe’s Pub, Judson Memorial Church, Manhattan Theater Source, The Duplex, Don’t Tell Mama, The Laurie Beechman Theater as well as numerous venues around the country. Michael is a Moogfest artist who presented No Permission Needed: Create with Senator Jaiz at Moogfest 2017.

EP 22: Greta Gertler Gold is Filling Her Trunk!

Join Aussie singer/songwriter/composer Greta Gertler Gold and I as we talk musical theater and Moonfish, carving out personal space as we parent, showing ourselves grace, and being healed by Abbey Road.

Greta is a composer, lyricist, performer, and producer who writes songs that have been descibed as "hoped-for revelations that all too infrequently emerge from the never-ending pile of new releases." - Vin Scelsa, WFUV, with a "peculiar and exciting alchemy of accessible but avante-garde pop." - Elizabeth Nelson, NPR.  

A 2020 Jonathan Larson Grant Finalist and upcoming resident at Yaddo, as well as recipient of City of Sydney Cultural Award and Create NSW grants to develop a new musical with playwright Hilary Bell.   

Greta has worked on many creative projects in the USA, Australia, and Europe.

Greta leads a band called The Universal Thump with her husband, drummer-producer, Adam D Gold. In 2012, they released an 'epic art-rock' double eponymous album inspired mostly by a whale-less whale-watching expedition and a little by Melville's Moby Dick. Stew (Passing Strange, The Negro Problem) writes: "'Grasshoppers' is one extended outbreak of goose-pimples after another. Were it a drug I'd be shooting it." The Universal Thump's follow-up EP 'Walking the Cat', recorded at famed Abbey Road Studios, was released in 2015 after a successful Kickstarter campaign and European tour.     

Greta has twice been featured on NPR's 'Song of the Day'. In her native land, she was awarded an Australia Council for the Arts Grant to tour in support of her concept album, "Edible Restaurant". She is also a multi-platinum-selling, ARIA Award winning songwriter for other artists, having co-penned the hits, 'Blow Up the Pokies'  and 'Charlie #3' (performed by rock band The Whitlams). Her songs have been performed at the Sydney Opera House by The Whitlams and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, and featured in the score of musical Truth, Beauty and a Picture of You (Hayes Theatre Co, Sydney 2014).     

In 2019, Greta composed music for and musically directed a musical adaptation of Shaun Tan's The Red Tree at the Sydney Opera House and Arts Centre Melbourne, originally commissioned and produced by the National Theatre of Parramatta, Australia with collaborator, playwright Hilary Bell. Greta and Hilary were also recently awarded a City of Sydney Cultural Grant to develop the children's book Alphabetical Sydney (by Hilary Bell and Antonia Pesenti) for the stage. 2019 also saw the first NYC production (in concert mode) of Greta's musical Triplight for which she wrote music/lyrics and collaborator, playwright Alexandra Collier (book/lyrics) were awarded residencies at UCROSS Foundation (Wyoming), Rhinebeck Writers Retreat and SPACE at Ryder Farm in 2012-2013, and workshops/ readings at The Tank (2017) and New Georges (2014).   

In 2015 she was granted a residence at The Orchard with Stew, to develop their musical / song cycle Anna Hit. She was accepted as a composer in Ars Nova's Uncharted Program 2015-16, to work on musical The Real Whisper with playwright Akin Salawu. The Real Whisper was subsequently featured in the Polyphone Festival in Philadelphia in 2017. In 2014, Greta was accepted as a composer into the BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theatre Workshop in NYC. Greta also participated in the Public Theater's first composer/playwright meet-up. Subsequently, Greta began working on The Real Whisper with playwright Akin Salawu. Twelve of Greta's songs are also featured in Jack Feldstein's cabaret-musical Une Parisienne in New York, in development at Dixon Place and Workshop Theater Company, NYC.    

Greta has also composed and produced music for numerous films, TV shows and ads, such as short films Teeth (2019) and 'US: A Family Album' (2012), which was selected for the San Francisco International Film Festival, NY Shorts Festival, Coney Island Film Festival and Seoul Film Festival. Greta recently directed the music video for Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter Alice Bierhorst's song Not Like the Movies and also produced her orchestral pop album 'The Beacon' with Adam D Gold.    

She and Adam (The Universal Thump) produced and performed as house band for The Seder-Songwriter Project at Joe's Pub, NYC (2014 & 2015) and George Harrison's 'All Things Must Pass' 40th Anniversary Benefit Concert at The Bell House, Brooklyn (2010).   

Please contact info@gretagertlergold.com for more information or fill out the form below.

EP 21: Karen Dahlstrom is No Man's Land!

“There’s something about high desert,” Karen Dahlstrom says. I’ve known Karen forever. No, really! We hail from the Gem State (IDAHO!), played together in the 7th grade talent show, went to the same (Mormon) college, moved to NYC, and are both songwriters. We also left the church of our youth, which was, shall we say, intense. And we get INTO it. Crooked landscapes, crooked patriarchies, crooked tunes. Be not afraid! The truth will set you free! (Also-let the Ewoks have their celebration, for crying out loud!)

KAREN DAHLSTROM is a performing songwriter based in Brooklyn, NY. Her original songs are rooted in traditional folk and Americana styles. Karen performs both as a solo artist and as a member of the alt-folk band Bobtown. She’s won songwriting awards at the Mid-Atlantic Song Competition and is a two-time finalist in the prestigious Kerrville New Folk Competition. Her debut EP, Gem State, includes songs inspired by her home state of Idaho. Her 2019 release, No Man's Land, is an intimate collection of songs recorded with just voice and acoustic guitar.

EP 20: Donny McCaslin is Getting Uncomfortable!

Composer and saxophonist Donny McCaslin is perhaps best known for his work as the bandleader on David Bowie's final album, Black Star. We talk about what it was like collaborating with a musical icon (Bowie's advice: it's good to be uncomfortable), tips on working with different producers while maintaining one's voice, embodying the authentic self, and readjusting after trauma.

ays before his January 2016 death, David Bowie released his final album, Blackstar. While the record represented an endpoint for the legendary artist, it also marked a new beginning for jazz lifer Donny McCaslin who, armed with his saxophone, defined Blackstar's visionary stylistic fusion.

Now, two and a half years after Blackstar's release, McCaslin returns with a new album, Blow., a new definitive statement that fully realizes Bowie's influence and McCaslin’s evolved artistic direction. "Before working with him, things like this didn't seem possible to me," McCaslin says of Blow., the most daring work of his two-decade, GRAMMY®-nominated career – set for October 5 release on Motéma Music. "The affirmation of that project and how wonderfully that turned out artistically — I feel like anything is possible now."

Despite McCaslin's extensive, acclaimed career — he grew up gigging with his father's jazz ensembles in Santa Cruz, California, attended Boston's esteemed Berklee College of Music, and began his recording career in the late '90s — collaborating with Bowie altered how he approached his craft. "His aesthetic in the studio was, 'Go for what you're hearing, don't worry about what it's going to be called or categorized as,'" McCaslin recalls of the late icon. "'Let's have some fun. Let's make some music.'" With the expansive, diverse Blow., McCaslin takes Bowie's philosophy to heart.

McCaslin hinted at his new direction earlier this summer with the release of the project's first single "What About the Body," a sizzling cut that blends alt-rock, jazz, and politically suggestive lyrics from singer-songwriter Ryan Dahle (Limblifter, Mounties) for a potent product — but it's just one of the many flavors he explores on the diverse record.

Supported by a top-notch cast of musicians that includes Sun Kil Moon's Mark Kozelek, Blackstar bandmate Tim Lefebvre, and fellow Bowie collaborator Gail Ann Dorsey, McCaslin applies his jazz roots in thrilling ways throughout Blow.'s hour runtime. "The idea was to just really go for exploring these collaborations and documenting everything," explains McCaslin, adding that the project had a "good gestation process" and developed "in a way that didn't feel rushed."

McCaslin emphasizes Blow.'s "wide range of moods," and some of them — like the driving, 10-minute instrumental "Break the Bond" or the chaotic and appropriately titled "Exactlyfourminutesofimprovisedmusic" — will sound familiar to longtime McCaslin fans. Others, not so much. "Tempest," a searing blast of prog-punk, clocks in at only 79 seconds and features off-the-cuff vocals from Jeff Taylor. Dorsey's soulful pipes complete the downtempo quiet storm of closer "Eye of the Beholder." And Kozelek — who McCaslin met and performed with when their tour itineraries recently intersected in Australia — delivers a hyper-detailed, characteristically batty narrative on "The Opener" to accompany an instrumental influenced by Beastie Boys and A Tribe Called Quest.

Naturally, McCaslin's horn unites Blow.'s disparate elements, though not in the way one might expect. Thinking back to the Blackstar sessions, McCaslin remembers how Bowie urged him to manipulate his instrument's sound, to create "different loops and textures" while improvising. "That really stuck with me” says McCaslin. "It’s such a big part of what I'm doing now, how I integrate the electronics and the saxophone.”

According to McCaslin, the "natural progression" that led to Blow. began with 2016's Beyond Now. Compromised of originals written after Blackstar's recording but before Bowie's death, as well as covers of Bowie, Mutemath, and Deadmau5, the record contains what McCaslin describes as "the seed" that grew into Blow.: His moody, electro-tinged rendition of Bowie's "A Small Plot of Land." "That's the connecting point for what I'm doing now," he says.

But because McCaslin recorded Beyond Now nearly immediately after Bowie's death, it didn't capture Blackstar's full influence on his playing and writing — it took months of relentless touring for those lessons to seep in. "I was hearing something different and trying to explore what that was," he reveals. "The direction of this record is something I wouldn't have imagined myself doing 10 years ago. But having the opportunity to play so much and then see where my creative imagination would go, and to be in that space for a lot longer, led me down this new pathway." Adds McCaslin: "Because we had been playing so much, it felt pretty natural just to go into the studio and do this."

Once he got down to business on Blow. pre-production in the fall 2017, McCaslin says producer Steve Wall (Lucius, Tall Heights) began to conceptually tie the album's many diverse styles together. “He’s very methodical and deliberate. I give a lot of credit to Steve," McCaslin shares, “he had a vision for this album from the beginning and was right there working with me as the music developed. He’s a unique talent and he does it all; engineering, mixing, song writing, producing, sound design.”

Vocals also play a crucial role on Blow., in ways that they haven't previously in McCaslin's career. "There's so much that's possible," he realized after the Blackstar sessions. "Why don't I make a vocal record?" Besides his fruitful collaborations with Taylor, Dorsey, and Kozelek, McCaslin teamed with Dahle on "What About the Body" and three other tracks — "New Kindness," "Club Kidd," and "Great Destroyer" — that constitute the album's emotional core.

"There's some social commentary" on "New Kindness," says McCaslin, likening the song's themes of partisan polarization to those on "What About the Body." "At least from my perspective, we're in a really f---ed-up time in this country — sorry for the French," he notes wryly. "What's going to get us out of this? Maybe it's new kindness. I think that's something that's really timely and really powerful." "Club Kidd," meanwhile, unites two unlikely topics — bee migration and McCaslin's own experiences as a college student going to club shows — for a unique, intricate result.

Ultimately, McCaslin returns repeatedly to a specific phrase: "new territory." Along with his bandmates, he's propelling his music to places that seemed unreachable — to the extent that he'd even conceived of them —just a few years ago. And Blow. isn't the endpoint. "The live show is really evolving," says McCaslin, thrilled to share his fresh material with audiences around the world. "It's going to continue to evolve and we have this vision of how it's going to evolve. It's going to be much different from what it has been." Recent years have been a whirlwind for McCaslin, but Blow. proves he's ready for his next chapter: "Going all in with new territory is really stimulating to me."

EP 19: Abby Ahmad is a Benevolent Funhouse!

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Join me as I chat with vocalist and songwriter Abby Ahmad about benching our judgment, being a translator for one's instrumentation, the poetry of our youth, and breaking through the walls of resistance.

Abby Ahmad is an acclaimed singer, songwriter, guitarist, actor, and voice/yoga teacher residing in Brooklyn, NY.

With edgy, intelligent lyrics and hypnotic melodies, her music is as passionate as it is profound. Bridging genres of folk-rock, blues, and alternative, Abby's percussive guitar style, thought provoking lyrics, and arresting vocals both captivate and challenge her audiences. Emotionally-charged, yet playful, she is at once in your face and in your heart.

Abby has recorded & toured internationally as a solo artist, backup singer, and with her band Fife & Drom. Her original music has been praised both critically and commercially, having been featured in major motion pictures (The Guardian) as well as being honored by the Independent Music Awards.

In addition to her music, Abby has also garnered praise for her theatrical work, being named "Actress of the Year" by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette for her work in the regional premiere of Heather Raffo's gripping one woman show, 9 Parts of Desire.

As a voice and guitar teacher, Abby has been a trusted source of guidance and inspiration for students in the tri-state area for the past decade. Her vocal coaching and unique exercises have been utilized by major artists in preparation for festivals (Coachella) and late-night TV (The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon).

EP 17: Francois Zalacain is a Champion Curator!

As the head of jazz and world music label Sunnyside Records, French-born Francois Zalacain has championed many young, modern New York jazz composers and songwriters. Join us for a conversation about the unlikely birth of his iconic record label, what makes a great song, and how Sunnyside has thrived for 40 years (and counting). Celebrate with us!


EP 15: Michael Bacon is a Spigot!

Film composer, songwriter, and cellist Michael Bacon (yes, one of those Bacons!) contacted me a few years ago to play keyboards for a large family Christmas concert. We talk about the conception and performance of that concert, growing up in Philly with a family who prized creativity over grades, the differences between songwriting and film scoring (and arranging and orchestration), and what it’s been like for Michael to collaborate with his brother Kevin for 25 years. (Hint: they have a huge amount of respect for each other). 

Find Michael:

https://baconbrosmusic.com/

EP 13: Rebecca Pronsky is a Singing Forager!

Rebecca Pronsky and I started making music together after the 2016 election to heal. Our chat covers pizza, Bach choir, our Hillary Clinton musical, Candidate Jams, dark matter, and emerging from the pandemic chrysalis.

Rebecca Pronsky is a songwriter, singer, producer and music concept artist based in Brooklyn, NY. She graduated from Brown University where she studied Ethnomusicology. She subsequently spent a decade touring as a singer songwriter in the folk and country scene. During this time, she released four critically acclaimed records, including 2013’s Only Daughter which made the “Top Ten Country Albums of the Year” list in the UK’s The Telegraph.

In the wake of the 2016 election, Rebecca turned her focus toward satire and political comedy, writing a concept album and feminist cabaret show about Hillary Clinton’s inner world. The piece was performed at the NY International Fringe Festival, as well as at many fundraisers for Democratic candidates seeking election in the 2018 midterms. In 2019, Rebecca moved onto writing and recording a series of one-minute songs for each of the candidates seeking the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.

In the spring of 2020, as the Covid virus surged in New York City, Rebecca wrote and produced a documentary podcast following the lives of three households through a challenging, months-long “stay-at-home order.” She also began a more lighthearted video project of edible plant jingles, combining her love of foraging with singing. Rebecca’s holiday single “The Last Season” closes out 2020 with a wish for us all to find strength through these last, darkest months of Covid.

Find Rebecca:

www.rebeccapronsky.com

EP 11: Jean Rohe is the Sound Within the Songness!

Photo by Krysta Brayer

Jean Rohe writes one-of-a-kind narrative songs, concerned as much with the internal world as with the external. Her latest record as a bandleader, Sisterly, is a collection of songs about communication and missed connections, and tackles topics from love, lust, and longing to prisons, police violence, and migration. - “remarkable in so many ways I can think of no comparison” Elmore Magazine

On a rainy day in Brooklyn, singer and songwriter Jean Rohe (my colleague at Carnegie Hall’s Lullaby Project) and I sit down to talk about group music making, surviving as a woman in jazz school, justice, and how sound can transcend language. 

Check out the songs from the episode:

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EP 10: Rob Jost is Going to Finish His Songwriting Assignment!

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photo by Peter Gannushkin

Rob Jost can be found playing bass for Sesame Street, Dear Evan Hansen, Amanda Thorpe, and in collaboration with Tony Scheer and Ursa Minor.

Jost and I met at jazz camp! Banff Centre for the Arts, to be exact. We chat about what it's like to play bass for Sesame Street and Dear Evan Hanson, and move on to discuss minidisc players (remember those?), how songwriting isn't a zero sum game, and generous friends.

Find Rob:

Dear Evan Hansen (Original Cast Recording)

Ursa Minor Sian Ka'an (new album)

Songs:

On the Radio

Wide Eyebrow

Circle (Deidre Rodman Struck)

Resources:

Reply All Podcast (NOT Radiolab, as I had thought): The Case of the Missing Hit

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EP 9: Elizabeth Ziman is Not a Placebo!

photo by Seth Caplan

photo by Seth Caplan

Musings on loneliness, revising lyrics (spoiler: Elizabeth’s parents are involved), the nature of performing live vs streaming, and porgs and bunnies. Elizabeth and The Catapult will astonish you.

Years of performing in New York City clubs and touring internationally have honed a natural ability that brings Elizabeth Ziman’s colorful imagination, smart lyrics and catchy melodies to life -- a testament to why this singer-songwriter, who performs as Elizabeth and the Catapult, is often found collaborating -- most recently with Sara Bareilles on Apple TV's "Little Voice" and with Paul Brill on award winning documentaries.  

Elizabeth and the Catapult's fifth studio album was born out of a need during the pandemic shut down to cope with the breakdown of communication. It was recorded in her living room during quarantine and is her first fully self-produced album. 

sincerely, e is a comforting salve - to soothe and nourish listeners and lovers of music - after a most confusing and emotional year. sincerely, e was released March 2021 to great critical acclaim.

Find Elizabeth:

www.elizabethandthecatapult.com

Songs:

Pop the Placebo

hope, my sometimes friend

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