Andy Frasco's World Saving Podcast - Marc Brownstein of the Disco Biscuits Responds to Former Drummer
Episode Date: March 10, 2026Mark Brownstein joins Andy for a candid conversation about the recent Disco Biscuits split with their drummer, Allen Aucoin, and the public fallout around it. Mark shares his perspective on how things... unraveled, including communication issues inside the band, the challenges of long-term creative relationships, and the business realities that can complicate everything even more. Andy also connects it to his own recent breakup with Shawn, so the episode turns into a broader discussion about conflict, friendship, and what happens when personal and professional relationships stop working the way they used to. It's an honest look at how one side is processing it in real time. The conversation touches on band dynamics, touring, money, resentment, and the hope that eventually people can move forward with some respect for what they built together. A thoughtful, and very real conversation between two good friends and colleagues. NOTE: Subscribers may have a duplicate version of this episode. The first ad read was muted in the previous upload. #DiscoBiscuits #MarkBrownstein #JamBand #MusicIndustry #BandBreakup
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's crazy. I'm on vacation.
I love that, dude.
Yeah, I'm like trying to.
Well, thanks for me for me.
I appreciate that.
Last minute, you know.
We're live, dude.
It's an emergency pod with my buddy Mark.
Yeah.
What a fucking week, dog.
What happened, dude.
What a week.
I was on the plane.
I was on a plane.
You know what I mean?
So I like came off of a flight, you know, when like big news happens when you're up on
the flight and I just like came off of the flight.
Yeah, came off of a flight.
It was actually I found out about it.
It was like in my like, I put up in Facebook or Instagram post of like me on the plane.
Like, hey, I'm heading to my mom's house, you know, Florida to play DJ show.
And then there was like, I like just like got some notifications and like the comments.
And I just read it.
And I was like, okay, what is going on here?
What happened?
And so what happened, I'm sure, you know, you know what happened at this point, which is Alan went on to do an interview.
And I guess the interviewer asked some questions about the disco biscuits.
And, you know, he went off, you know.
And so.
Was there like a non-disclosure or any of that?
Or was it, what was going on?
No.
There was no non-disclosure.
You know, everybody can just say whatever they want to say, you know, at this point.
I mean, that's respectful.
A lot of people will fucking hush it out.
So, like, I mean, your story about this, you know?
Listen, if everybody, if this went in a different way, like, you know,
it doesn't matter if it's the music industry or whatever industry.
when you have a split in any business or whatever it is,
and then you have a lawyer working out the details of settlement or whatever with another lawyer,
it's always based off of NDA.
Like it's the whole premise of that is like, hey, let's all leave and not go and
trash each other.
We've been together for 20 years.
we can all trash each other.
There's plenty of stuff to say,
after 20 years, not anybody.
It's like the premise is let's leave amicably and gracefully
and move on, you know,
into new relationships, you know?
Yeah, I mean, I'm dealing that with Sean, man.
Me and Sean broke up after 15 years, you know?
You guys did?
I did not know that.
Yeah, we just broke up, yeah, like two weeks ago.
So it's like, I'm very curious about, you know, it's like, it's, however way you shake it, it's not, it's just, it's like any breakup, you know?
So I was like, you know, like this ending peacefully.
And then Barber throws the fucking disc track in there.
Yeah, I mean.
So it starts off fucking spicy.
Yeah, well, that was like a response.
The disc track, by the way, the disc track.
By the way, the disc track, obviously, you know or people know, I think, that it was written
it 15 years ago.
Like, he didn't, like, sit down and work on this thing and, like, at 4 p.m. on the day before,
like, no, I can tell by the drum beat.
I could tell by the drum beat that was a 15-year-old drum song.
Exactly.
It was a 2011 song, you know, it's like, so the, the, I think early,
in that morning people had gone online from Alan's
group of friends, you know, his wife's group of friends and started spreading
rumors that, you know, the band had fired Allen over money.
And it was, it was, the response to that
before we had a chance to ever say anything, we were hoping to have an
amicable split.
You know, we had the announcement was set together for the next day.
It was like a Saturday and we were announcing it like Sunday.
Our lawyer and his lawyer were like literally working out the very final details.
And it was and we were like, okay, we're going to get through this.
And then all of a sudden, same thing as like the other day.
It's like all of a sudden something starts blowing up online and we're like,
whoa, what happened?
What happened?
And we traced it back to that.
And, you know, and that like immediately had to get addressed.
not by the band members,
but all of a sudden, like, the lawyers had to address that,
you know, they're talking to each other.
They're trying to have, like, a settlement,
and all of a sudden all this information starts getting spread around, right?
So it just, it was just, like, ugly, you know?
And then, like, yeah, yes, the district.
It was, it was probably, you know,
there's better ways to have expressed,
what was trying to be said there.
But I think, you know, what was trying to,
and I'm not apologizing for the way that it came out,
but what was trying to be said,
or I'm not not apologizing for it.
I'm not like, you know,
I just am acknowledging that that was what happened,
but what was trying to be said was this is deep-rooted.
This is not about, this isn't about like a break,
this isn't like one-
day you think about breaking up a drum. This must have been kind of a thing you guys have been
thinking about. Well, you know, Alan said in his interview the other day that this came out of
nowhere. Like, he was surprised that it happened. And I just, like, feel like, I'm, like, shocked at that
because of what happened. And it's like, people are like, the fans, I guess, are due an explanation,
you know, which is that this didn't come out of them.
nowhere. There was a lot of issues, creative issues and personal issues that were coming out on
stage, backstage, offstage, you know, in all different kinds of ways. But the bottom line of it was
that the communication just was broken down on stage and off stage. Our communication was broken.
In Summer Tour in Indiana, we were backstage and sat break. And I know that you know, I know that
you know exactly how this is.
You come off a stage, the set didn't go the way that you wanted it to go.
And sometimes, like, maybe at set break, you try to, like, talk about it and see if we could,
like, get on the same page.
Like, we have another set coming up.
So we just want to get on the same page.
And John tried to, like, do that with Alan.
He, like, I was in the room.
It was we, John, Allen, and our monitor engineer were sitting in this room together, four of us.
and John said, hey, Alan, like, I'm, my ideas are getting cut off.
Whatever it was, it was a total, it was just one of those things.
Like, maybe it's not great to talk about music at SEP break or talk about it right after the show
because it's easy to get defensive.
But.
Yeah, it's so emotional, man.
I mean, this is like your fucking art in your life.
And, like, you know, you can't have great shows and great gigs all the time.
I mean, you know.
well what happened was
it's so hard to say it because it's like I don't like
I didn't want to be on the end
you frasco podcast talking about the breakup of the disco
you think I want to interview Mark Brown
and I'm on vacation this is and what
yeah I'm on vacation I was at Universal today
like I came out and just like I'm on Hagrid
going backwards an hour ago and now we're here
talking about this
but Alan started screaming at John
at the top of his love
lungs. It's like it was it was truly remarkable. I was it was scary. I was scared and and he of like eventually
the conversation it doesn't matter like the details don't matter right but like the conversation got to like
this disagreement over like listening on stage and I just finally after saying nothing which is not
like me but I said nothing because I don't want to be in a fight out I go through a whole tour is now at
age. I used to fight all the time. I want to talk about that a little bit too.
Now I'll go through whole tours and I'll just watch all of the stuff, like all of the little
like things that boil up happen. But he, they were screening each other. Finally I got it and I was
like, Alan, come on, dude. This isn't a conversation. What you're talking about is not is not a conversation.
And he turned to me and he basically was like in his, and is close to these.
words as possible. Fuck you. I fucking hate this band. I fucking hate being on tour with you. I quit.
You get a new drummer for the weekend and just stormed out. Now, I want to just caveat.
This is what I was going to say. I am an extremely emotional person who was terrible at taking
critical
constructive criticism
earlier in my career
to the point where I like went to therapy
to work specifically on this one thing
being able to interact with people
in a creative way
so then I didn't destroy my whole musical career
because the whole thing is based
creatively has to be based on being able to
listen to people who know
probably a lot more than you about music
and taking it in and just trying things out and being open to ideas.
And like, so I definitely spent a lot of time working on that.
And so I definitely have a lot of empathy and understanding for what it's like to, you know,
not like being told what to play or how to play or what tempo to play or what feel to play.
like her but um it it wasn't a conversation that ever could ever happen ever every single time
it was like this but this this time he said i quit and then he walked out he came back so
was that the first time he ever tried to quit yeah nobody he's never said those words before
in 20 years you know and it's like listen there was a lot of he he said in his interview that
doesn't know what creative differences we're talking about.
It's like, dude, we like, literally him and I could not even agree on what genre the band was in.
Like, we were like, I'm like trying to talk about how to peak confrontation.
I want to like just work on making things the best that they could possibly be.
Going back, listening to old versions, listening to what the tempos were of versions that are widely regarded as great.
Like, listening to the way that the drums were played in very early.
versions that are like widely regarded as great of songs and and then trying to translate that to 2025 because um
you know it's like as a composer i'm just trying to make the songs what they are and these the conversation
would like devolve to we're not a jam band like we're not a jam band like we don't i don't
I don't need to do that because we're not a jam band.
I was like, so, like, the idea that he doesn't know what creative differences we had,
like, there was constant issues with, like, how to perform these songs, you know.
And, like, you know, like, me going into therapist mode or whatever, like, going into that type of mode,
because my band's called Andy Frasco, and I get these a lot with my band.
You felt like he was actually a true member of the band?
That's why he was outlashing.
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Yeah.
Well, first of all, yes.
Like, there's four members of disco biscuits from 2006 until 20206.
And I'm always listed, you know, as John, Mark, Aaron, and Allen.
those are the members of the disco biscuits you know and um that's yeah of course we're all
those are those are the members yeah well i'm saying like emotionally you know like whatever it is
is like if you guys can't communicate like i was having hard time communicating with sean yeah and
stuff and then things would just fester up we wouldn't say anything until the last fucking minute
then everyone's having this big fucking blowout it's like well that's things definitely faster things
definitely faster. But listen, if you quit, if you quit the band, I want to just say,
I'm the only other person that ever got fired from the disco biscuits for what their behavior
was on tour. I quit the band in the middle of a tour in 1999, and then I kind of hope that
everybody forgot that I quit the band and got to New Year's of 1999. We played like this crazy
4-set, like 1231-99 at the TLA four-set show until 7 in the morning.
And then, like, on January 3rd, Barbara came over to my place and was like, thank you.
Here's your cut from New Year's.
The band has decided to move on without you.
And I was crushed.
I was so crushed, like crushed to beyond belief.
Like, it was my whole life was the disco biscuits.
I wrote half of the songs.
I was like a founding memory.
that wrote all of these songs and like the community, like was building this community.
But also I was like kind of like having a hard time getting along with people and like getting
into fights and saying I quit the band. And like so from like looking back on it was like what
the hell was I doing? Like what kind of behavior was I exhibiting? I was young. I was 23 years old
and I was doing a lot of drugs and I was in a band for the first time in my life. And like we were
doing well. And I fucking blew it.
I literally blew it, dude.
And my biggest regret in my whole career is this.
And we'll tie it back to what's happening now.
But my biggest regret in my career is that I didn't fucking walk away gracefully.
I tried to turn the fans and disco biscuits on the three of them.
I like hat.
I just like it's my biggest regret.
I feel like I look back on how I handled myself after getting let go for my own behavior.
and I didn't take any accountability for it.
And I just tried to tire with the fans on the biscuits.
It was bad character.
I exhibited bad character, you know?
And it's like, I recognize that.
I've, like, worked through all of these things
because I wanted to be able to have longevity in my career.
I wanted to be able to be with John and Aaron 30 years down the road.
You know what I mean?
That's what I wanted.
I empathize.
Like, I feel what he's...
Like, I truly know what he feels.
He's so mad at us, obviously.
He's so mad.
He said, like some of the things he said, you know,
it's hurt so much to read what he said because, like, I just like put my whole life
into the disco biscuits and the community, the disco biscuits.
And it's like, and trying to make these things work,
despite all of the hardships of being in a band with four people for decades.
Like, there's ups and there's downs and there's issues, like personal issues and private issues.
And I just want to, like, refocus for a second.
If you, like, when I quit the band, I didn't apologize.
But, like, this is where we're at now.
It's, like, this summer, like, next night was Columbus, and we all showed up and nobody said anything.
Like, there was no apology, no, like, hey, guys, I'm sorry.
like I said some shit last night that I really didn't mean like you know I don't quit the band like I love this band like there was none of that there was nothing we didn't like we played the show it was actually the best show of the of the whole tour Columbus because there was like that energy of like we're not talking to each other and like you know we may as well just fucking play it as excuse me as hard as we can and we did we played this crazy cyclone and just crazy jigsaw I was such I
It's my favorite show of the tour.
I loved it so much.
I had so much fun there because it was like such a release after this very dark thing that it happened.
And really, at this point, the three of us are talking, like, is he going to say something or apologize?
Like, he quit.
Like, he actually told us to get a new drummer right tomorrow.
He showed up today.
Is he showing up tomorrow?
Do we really need a new?
Like, I legitimately didn't know what to do.
And we've showed up.
Friday and Alan was there and we finished the tour and he never said anything about it.
He never said anything about it.
And when we got to the end of the tour, our manager reached out to him and was just like, you know, what happened in Indiana?
Like we need to talk about that.
The band came to me and told me that you quit the band.
and like they're they still don't know what happened like you said some you know you said you
said you hate the band da da da and um they they had a they had to talk about it and then then like the
next thing that happened was our manager like reached back out to him we like quick we went back
out played our next like two little runs of shows which is pine creek to michiwaka
and then Mishawaka was over
and there was like some tearful goodbyes there too
like some people reached out to me and said what's going on
they like they
crew members reached out to me at Mishawaka
was like is Alan leaving the band
like his goodbye was different
he was like gave like a tearful long goodbye
like it's like and I was like I
we all didn't know
The crew knew that he quit the band.
They knew that there was these long, tearful goodbyes at Michiwaka.
And they were reaching out to me to be like, do you know what's going on?
Like, what is going on?
And I was like, I don't know.
But like, you're the fourth person who told me about, like, this long goodbye.
And then we reached out to him again after that.
And his response was, dude, I fucking hate this.
Like, I really genuinely hate talking about, like, what happened?
he said she said like but the reason that I'm here is because there's con like this is the context
behind um the message that he said which was out of the blue my lawyer got a letter that I was
terminated like and I was so shocked and surprised and that's like this narrative and that and I haven't
been paid and like they and I was never valued and it's like oh that's a little
lot to hear when when a lot of process man especially when you've been living with each other forever well especially
when like so we reach we reach back out to him through our manager um communication is completely
broken down like you know you couldn't even call him text him nothing i mean he listen i will i like
i'll answer anybody dude people come to instagram i'll fucking answer anybody like like you
Get me up, dude.
I answer every single message.
I see you in those chat rooms.
Every message that gets sent to me.
You know why?
Because once I was on an interview with BB King, and he was like 88 years old, and he said that he answered every piece of fan mail he ever got in his whole entire life.
It influenced me.
So I was like, wait a second.
B.
K could answer every single piece of fan mail he's ever had.
And I can't take two seconds to answer each and every message that I get from a fan mail.
And so that's why I started doing that.
That's like why I started to like get involved with the fans.
I was like, man, I can do that.
I can answer people.
I have the time to sit down and say hello to them.
And so my point is like, dude, yeah, if Alan texted me, I would be elated and I would immediately answer him or call.
If he called me, I would answer him for him every single time.
Like we don't communicate that way.
Yeah.
It's not like.
he's he wasn't you know like he really wasn't the most responsive like in that way like you know
he just wasn't the most responsive email he was a little bit better on email phone he was very hard
to get in touch with very very hard and so at some point you just stopped trying to communicate with
somebody that way i would email him if i had things like for set lists and stuff i would email or
he was also in like band text like the band text like here's the set list goes to every
everybody in the band. I don't know if he gets it or doesn't get it, but like it also goes
in email. But like, no, it was like, you know, I don't know. Like, we didn't have that, like,
just like that wasn't how it was. But when our management reached back out to him, his answer was
at this is now after Michiwaka, it was like, and the question was, hey, can we get back on the
phone? Like, can we just find the time to get back out on the phone and finish our talk
from like the last talk we had
which was about what happened
in Indiana and Alan said
all future communication
for me will be handled by my lawyer
and oh man that must have been
heartbreaking
well it must have been heartbreaking
so it's your friend you know I had to
it was heartbreaking
it was like it's your fucking friend that you
fucking went to war with
but here's the thing like I'm reading his
hit what he said and it's like
To him, we weren't reaching out to him.
And to us, he wasn't reaching out to us.
Like, you know, it's like, to me, he's not calling me.
It's like, it's a two-way street.
And he's like, right.
He's saying in his interview, like, nobody reached out to me.
I'm like, that's how I feel.
Like, I'm waiting for the guy to reach out to me from Indiana to through the end of the tour
through one way or another just to say, hey, dude, like me and you are pretty close.
Like, me and Alan had a pretty good relationship.
like hey I'm sorry about what happened there like it takes 10 seconds but I do also know how hard it is to do that like it's hard to muster up the the will to have that kind of courage whatever it is to have that kind of a conversation with somebody close to you these are hard conversations and communication there's no difference between a divorce with a wife when it's the same thing man we've been in together for 20 years whatever how long it's been yeah it's communicating
starts becoming poison because you're afraid how the other people are going to react
towards the communication.
But I'm going through a divorce with somebody that I was married to for 22 years right now,
and it's we're friends, and we know how to communicate, and we're co-parents and, like, we're
still very close friends, and we're doing the process of splitting up amicably, you know,
And I just like, that's what I, so I just wanted that to happen because I was not happy.
Alan clearly was not happy.
If you get to the point where you're just like, I hate this band, I hate you, you're not happy.
And it was coming through on stage.
The communication was, I heard in the tapes like earlier in the summer.
I'd like sat with my manager listening to like a whole entire show to like talk about like how,
how to communicate better with Alan, like how I could.
link up what I'm trying to do and get him to come and,
and, um, and do like, just like syncopation stuff with me or whatever. And so,
the communication had, had broken down offstage, on stage, all those places. And then it's like,
talk to my lawyer. So that's it. I mean, like, it's just like a big piece of like a little
thing that's omitted from the story that like, you kind of just has to,
be told at this point.
Do you ever think about, like, tax of them,
say I'm sorry how things went down?
Yeah, of course.
You should, man, why not?
He's your brother.
I was like, I'm coming out to DJ in Colorado this weekend.
I'm playing with Adam Dege two nights.
And, like, I was talking with somebody who works in Denver.
And, like, I said, like, I was like, man,
I wish I could get to the point where I could have Alan be the drummer that comes out and plays with me and this thing.
I feel like we had a pretty good relationship.
I hope that at some point it could be that way.
You know, like, yeah, it's fresh.
Like, the wounds are fresh.
Like, he's like, they're, like, fucking trash talking us and saying a lot of personal shit.
So with Barber.
Yeah, I mean,
it's like here's the thing you can go for everything that happened there's something to happen right before
it that caused it to happen or or had some sort of energy of effect to make that happen and you could
keep doing that all the way back to our first rehearsal together as the four of us it just goes all the way
back. There was a huge fight in our first rehearsal now. I think everybody knows that. It was our
first rehearsal. And it was a huge, huge fight with Alan. He like got really aggressive with us.
And it was like, we were like, oh, what the fuck was that? You know what I mean? And it's like,
here's a thing. I had such a bad temper when I was younger. So I have like a really like long
leash for like other I have a high tolerance for other people like screaming and and me not being
like I can't do this like that's it like I have a very high tolerance like that's that feeling
you dog like you scream and like it's okay like I get you like I hear you like a lot of people
don't hear you when you're screaming like they stop hearing what you're saying they only hear how
you're saying it. Not me. I hear them. I heard them. But like still, it's hard to get yelled at
and right from the very beginning. We saw this thing that I don't think a lot of people got to see.
And it's like, that's how it is in a relationship. People see every side of you.
Publicly, we're public figures. Publicly, people might only see, um, a certain one side, you know.
But that's no one's business besides y'alls. Like, why do we have to feel we have to blabber
a whole fucking business out on people when all we are is just making art man like why do we need
to have the drama why do we need to do all this shit and we have to promote the drama i think this
is what's so fucked up about this industry i don't want the drama people just i mean yeah i mean of
course like it's all it is is y'all didn't like each other and it it was time to fucking end it
well that's thank you for saying that and as somebody who's going through a breakup like you know
sometimes it just gets to the point where that's it.
Like it can't go on the way that it is anymore.
You have to like make a very hard decision.
This is what we have to do now in order for this to even continue.
In order for us to even continue on, something needs to happen here.
So, you know, I don't think like Alan is like a bad guy.
I think he's like a good guy.
Like we all have, we're all good guys, I think.
and we all have our faults, you know?
And like sometimes, you know, it's like comes down to being a band.
Being in a band is really hard.
It's so fucking hard.
Being in a band with the same people for 20 years is almost impossible.
You're marrying them and you can't fuck them.
They say that.
I've heard it said many times.
You're married to four dudes.
You can't fuck them.
You can't have sex to relief the pressure.
You're married to four dudes.
did and and and everything that comes along with that, you know.
But, you know, sometimes those relationships do, you know, come to an end.
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All right, goodbye. Enjoy the interview.
Can I ask you like an existential question?
Like an existential question?
And then we can leave it in there.
I know it's a hard thing.
First of all, I love you, Mark.
This is a tough topic.
Thanks for being vulnerable.
And you know, like I said, this is about brothers.
This is a brothers thing.
This isn't about pointing the finger.
It's just more about the chain reaction of it.
And you telling your story about this is probably going to give some people some clarity.
But, you know, as like a 20 year of band members, 20 year being in a band,
Do you think money fucks up the relationship with a band?
I really don't think that it has to do that,
but it's a very complicated situation,
like when, like, it's always been complicated.
It was complicated before Alan was in the band,
because, you know, like, you have one guy that does,
writes most of the songs and does most of the work,
and, like, how, but we're jamming, like, how do you make,
from day one,
we said
that we're going to find ways
to acknowledge and compensate
the songwriters of this band
for the work that they put in outside
because it's just as an incentive
to get songs.
And so, you know,
yeah, like it's hard.
You have like one song that gets a sink
and it's written by one guy and all this money comes in and it doesn't, you know, it's like,
how do you split it up to?
Yeah, it's got up your relationship a little bit.
We never really, you know, let that happen.
We've been in the band for 30 years.
Like, we acknowledged on day one that there's going to be times where songwriters make a little bit
more money because they wrote the songs.
You know, we have a complex formula and disco biscuits for how that gets.
basically like disseminate.
And this is just industry standards.
It's not just you guys.
Everyone does this.
It's all.
Thank you for saying that.
People who don't know how business,
music business works.
That's just basically always like that.
It's always like that.
Yeah.
And like here's the thing.
I want to address something.
Alan said that like he hasn't been paid all of his money from
Thumbentor.
And like a lot of fans have been like coming at me
like saying like Alan,
Hey,
out for the shows that he played and I just want to like clear something up.
He's been paid for every single show that he was played that was played because that
like that is how we pay him, right, through the show grosses.
But he's right when he says that he hasn't been paid for some of the sum of the tour stuff
because as you know, like streaming and like merch and stuff like that gets settled up months
after the fact, especially streaming,
stuff comes in way after the fact from third parties
and then has to get disseminated.
And so when I read that,
I like went to our manager and business manager.
It's like, is this true?
Like, do we owe, is like, is there any truth to what he's saying?
Like he's saying he hasn't been paid for summer tour.
Like, what does that, like, how can that be?
Pay him for summer tour?
Like, literally was my text.
It was like, what do you?
Like, if this, if he hasn't been paid, you need to pay him right now.
Like, and basically in the morning, because that was like Sunday at like 9 p.m. or something, right?
The morning, they reached out to me at a normal time.
And we're like, dude, he's been paid for everything for summer tour.
Like, except for this, this and this, which nobody's been paid for yet.
You know, you guys are also waiting on that money.
But like, it's, it's coming soon.
and like this is how much it's going to be and I was like okay
good like so I just want to say like he's right
he was paid for every show all of that like that deal from us
yes but he still owed some money so like I like I don't want to like
I'm not like out trying to be like Alan's lying like he's like
you're not saying like Shug Nied him I'm no like he's saying
oh no dude I know like
that's what I mean people think they
think you're a gangster or something like you're not going to pay you know the protocols there's a bus
how much you spend on buses how much you spend on hotels everything gets paid i mean like people don't
realize the business of fucking music and this is what frustrates the fuck out of me dude like
calm down i don't know dude i'm sorry i'm sorry i'm gonna be i'm gonna be the therapist now
i'm gonna turn it to me being a therapist it's okay andy it's all the business is you know
part of the issue is that the business is upside down from where it was 10 years ago.
It's just the economics are different.
So like if you're getting paid on the gross or percentage on gross,
it's like how that all boils down is different 10 years.
Yeah, managers get their cuts, business manager gets their cuts, agents get their cuts before we even touch money.
So, you know, it's like.
Well, he said that he hadn't gotten a.
raise in however X many years but like he was on a percentage of he had like a percentage of
gross so like the raise is the band getting bigger like the growth going up that's like where all
of our raises cut when you're like when like you can't have it both ways you can't want to have
a cut of the gross rather than a salary but then then also want a raise it's like one or the other
And like it goes with with the bands, grosses goes your pay when that's how you get paid.
And that's how all of us get paid.
Right.
Right.
Like that's how you get paid.
How are we supposed to profit when everyone's inflating our prices?
Like the bus drivers are inflated in their prices.
The tour buses are inflating their prices.
So like they think we're making more money than we are.
But really, we're still getting paid the same guarantees.
So it doesn't, it's not like we're profiting.
We're just fucking floating on a boat with maybe a.
little hole in our boat into the fucking Pacific Ocean, dude.
Yeah.
Well, and like part of the thing is that it's like people don't understand exactly
what you're saying.
Like people don't understand that that's true.
And I think that sometimes like within the business,
people don't even understand that that's true.
You know what I mean?
It's like not their job to look at the expenses and know what's left over after
the day.
It's like our job to ensure that our business is profitable.
It's our job to make sure that we can like turn the lights on at the end of the day.
But it has gotten harder and harder to do that.
Like I'm talking pre-Allen leaving the band.
It's like, you know, like going from, you know, just and not the disco biscuits.
Everybody.
Like, what's the girl's name from Garbage?
Shirley.
Yeah, yeah.
Shirley McLean is it?
Whatever it is.
The girl from Garbage, did you see her speech that?
gave it the mission ballroom at the end of their tour.
She gave a speech basically and it was like, we're done.
Like, it was like the mission ballroom is back to the gills and she's and she's like,
this doesn't work anymore.
Like this is not affordable.
It doesn't work.
Like the business is like the business of music for bands even at that size.
She was like, we can't tour in the United States anymore because it just doesn't make
sense to go out and do it. And it's like, we're making it work. Like we're, we're like working our
asses off to like to make it work to like to find ways to find ways to make it work like from,
you know, just like sometimes the crew goes in a bus and we drive an SUV from from Seattle,
Washington all the way to San Diego, you know, from stop to stop to stop. And we're like driving with
with a crew member and the rest of the crew is on the bus.
And that's because two buses isn't doable.
We were doing two buses, but it's not doable.
And we, you know, we see what the numbers are.
And we're like, all right, we'll just give us a GMC, Yukon or something.
And we'll drive ourselves to all these shows just to make it work.
Like, whatever.
Like, we do things to try to make it work.
Like, we're really like, we want this to be sustainable.
Like we really want the disco biscuits to like survive, you know?
It's like we're everything that we're doing over the last bunch of years is about survival.
We want to be here for, we want to be here.
We want to get better.
Like we want to rehearse.
We have Marlon.
Like having Marlon in the band and he's in Philadelphia and like the ability to be like, hey, on a Monday night, like, hey, do you guys want to get together like tomorrow after you?
and go over a couple songs,
and everybody's like, yes,
and we're at John's basement,
working on songs the next afternoon,
is, I mean, we practiced more in the last,
as well we should.
We have a new drummer,
but we have the ability to practice
and have practiced more in the last couple months
than we had in 15 years all combined.
Because all you guys live in Philly, right?
Yeah, and all four of us are in Philly now.
And it's, you know, it's, that's great,
because, you know, having four of us in a room working on shit together is what we're doing.
And that's what we want to do.
And that's like what the future is going to look like for us is like four of us in a room,
working like as a team creatively to try to make the music the best that it could possibly be,
to make it to keep it around for as long as it could possibly be.
Well, keep it around, buddy.
I appreciate you being honest with me, you know.
It's tough stuff.
I know you last thing you want to do is talk to me on this podcast publicly.
I love talking.
I love talking to you so much, but I'd rather it would just be us catching up his friends.
Getting drunk and talking about this, not having to make a fucking public statement, but I hear that.
Well, you know, just, you know, my, you know, set like as a sendoff for us growing as people for the future, you know, when the dust settles.
And I'll do the same with Sean.
When the dust settles, you know, maybe just shoot a text saying, I love you, brother.
I'm sorry it didn't turn out the way it was supposed to.
I'm sorry, this escalated the way it did.
Because at the end of the day, you know, business aside, they're still our brothers.
It's the best advice anybody's giving me in five months.
You know, through this whole thing, it's the best advice anybody's given me.
It's just let the dust settle and say, I love you.
You know, I'm sorry.
It's didn't work out.
Tell them you love them, you know.
Yeah.
Because, you know, it's, you know, all money aside and fuck the money.
It's about fucking having your brother and, you know, someone you could call when you're
seven years old and say, you know, what a wild time I had.
You know what I'm saying?
I hope that's how it could be.
Like, I really do.
It will be.
Let the dust settle.
But you're the one who's got to initiate it.
I love you, man.
I'm sorry how this was approached.
And let's just grow as people.
and hopefully you could forgive me
and hopefully I could forgive you
and we could just move on to just be friends, you know.
Yeah, I agree with that, man.
I agree with that.
Well, I love you, Mark.
Get out there.
Go enjoy your vacation.
Thank you.
Have some fun.
Epic universe tomorrow.
We're going to Mario, Super Mario, Nintendo World,
and like Donkey Kong World,
Donkey Kong Country.
Yeah, tomorrow's going to be wild.
Today was crazy.
We'll get out there and...
Harry Potter's World of Wizard.
today it was the bad dude it's yeah
huffle puff
no huffa puff
that's just crazy they were taking mushrooms and just
fucking roamed around those theme parks
are kind of fun maybe
maybe I have
well get out there buddy go enjoy your vacation
I love you I'm thinking about you
love you too thank you
shit keep going keep fighting
I know deep down you're a good person man
and I know you think Alan's a good person
it's just I do think
He's a good person.
Yeah.
I really do.
It's like,
we're just,
you both are scorned.
That's all.
And I hope the same.
I hope everything goes with you and Sean and you guys are able to do this in an
ambicable way and just get past it and be friends.
That's what you need to be.
Yeah, that's all we're trying to do.
You know,
I just,
you know,
we forget that we're human.
We're not perfect.
And we,
and sometimes we don't know how to react to emotion.
And we just got to take a step back from ourselves when the time's ready.
to humble ourselves and just say,
brother, you're my brother, and that's it, you know?
I love it. I love you, buddy.
All right, talk there.
Go have fun. Talk soon.
Hey, everybody, it's Nick.
You just listened to another great episode,
hopefully featuring me of the World Saving Podcasts
with Andy Frasco.
Also produced by him.
He wanted us to say his name twice.
It's also produced by Joel Angel Howe and Jack Gold,
and it's edited by the very attractive Brian Rowe.
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