Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Rhett Is Going Solo | Ear Biscuits Ep. 341
Episode Date: July 18, 2022What happens when you give a guitar to a man on a journey of spiritual deconstruction? Rhett and Link discuss Rhett’s new solo project, James and The Shame. Rhett shares his inspiration for the proj...ect and the how it came to fruition. What else can we expect from this new endeavor? And what does this mean for Rhett and Link? Plus, they give you a sneak peak of the first single, "Believe Me”. To check out the rest of the EP, go to Spotify, Apple Music or wherever you stream your music and follow James and the Shame. Get your tickets now for Good Mythical Evening 2022, exclusively on Moment House! Click here to find out more: https://mythic.al/EBGME And be sure to check out the new season of Best Friends Back, Alright! on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow so you don’t miss an episode! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast where two lifelong friends talk about life for a
long time. I'm Rhett.
where two lifelong friends talk about life for a long time. I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
This week at the Round Table of Dim Lighting,
am I talking to Rhett?
I don't know, am I talking to somebody else?
Am I talking to an alter ego?
I don't know because we're about to get into,
this is like breaking open the seal on something
that you've been keeping
under wraps, my friend.
There's parts of this that we're gonna discuss today
I'm excited about because I think we're gonna discuss it
on a level that we haven't.
Well, here's the interesting thing is that
by the time this podcast,
now we're recording a little bit earlier
because we're about to do some traveling.
And I have talked about this
like on my personal social media, right?
By this point. By this point.
But I haven't seen any of that yet.
But as I'm talking right now,
so few people know about this.
It's just kinda, it's weird to be talking to you,
Ear Biscuteers, about it because- And it is it because I've been thinking about it for a long time.
What?
I have been working on a solo music project
under a name that is not Brett,
but is still kind of my name
because my middle name is James,
is called James and the Shame.
And it is a country music project,
essentially an album with some singles.
The first single dropped on Friday called Believe Me.
And we're gonna listen to that.
Yeah.
And talk about it on this episode.
Another single coming in August.
And then there's another single and the album coming
in September.
And this is a, for lack of a better word,
is a concept album.
What's the name of the album?
Well, that's interesting
because am I committing to it right now?
What do you mean?
You don't know?
I have something. Okay, save know? I have something in me.
Okay, save it.
I have something in mind, but I'm gonna,
I might know by the time this goes live,
but I haven't fully committed.
I wanna discuss that.
You're playing the marketing game with me.
I don't know the name of the album.
No, I have a name in mind.
Okay, but you're not gonna say that,
you're not gonna release the-
Because I might change it slightly.
You're gonna release the track list like a...
I don't know.
But anyway, it is a-
That's what artists do, man.
I'll get into the,
I'm gonna get into all the details of why this is happening,
how this happened, how long it's been, whatever.
Who the features are.
Yeah.
Also who the features aren't.
Yeah.
But what I will say is that-
What I'm saying is I'm not featured.
It is a-
We'll talk about that.
It is an exploration of my spiritual deconstruction
through the means of country music.
And so I tried to come up with a cool way to describe that,
like deconstruction and country,
but all I came up with is de-country,
which is not great.
So.
You're still trying to figure out
how to talk about this project.
This is the interesting thing.
Because this is not like, this isn't my day job.
My day job is what we do.
This is my hobby and my side gig.
Interestingly, you've got this new crazy watch
that you're wearing for the first time
and it's making all kinds of light.
Oh, it's analyzing everything.
But it's like almost, it's so loose, right?
Why is it so loose?
Because it's so loose when you go like this,
it's shining in my eye.
I'm sorry, Christy said the same thing.
I gotta figure it out.
I gotta figure out if I wanna tighten it.
Christy said it was too loose?
She said it was shining in her eyes too.
It's like, it's like
It's like talking to a robot.
Well it's analyzing like my biometrics.
But it needs to be tightly analyzing it,
not like from a distance.
But I feel like if it gets too tight,
then my hand will fall off.
Well that's, well let's do it.
That's a whole nother episode.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm not making this about me.
But so, but what I'm getting at is this isn't something
that I've been like scheming and thinking about
in a really strategic way.
It's a very organic thing that just,
so this is actually a lot of the things
that I'm saying right now,
first time I've thought about them.
First time I've thought about like, oh, how do you,
and I actually made the commitment to myself,
like last night I was like,
should I think about what I'm gonna say?
I was like, no, that's what this forum is for,
is like, I'm just gonna think about it out loud
because I've just been focusing on getting the music done
and being happy with the music
and a couple of the things that you have to do,
like, well, you gotta have album art, okay, you know,
and that kind of thing.
But I haven't been thinking about this from a,
how am I gonna talk about this to people
who aren't already our fans and already Mythical Beasts?
Somebody who's like, I'm just a person
who listens to country music and there's a new artist
out there and I'm gonna check them out.
Well, they're not listening to this.
So this is different.
Yeah, well, we'll talk about that,
who I think it's for.
Yeah, but we know who's listening to this.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, just Mythical Beasts.
If I may make a suggestion about formatting of this thing,
I would like to talk about the project
and really get into the details of it
and kind of to the point we were just making
for this audience and for this venue,
what I don't wanna do is I don't wanna start making it
about like what does it mean for us first?
But I would like to get into that.
Yeah, we'll talk about that.
I think that listeners will be interested in like,
how has this played out in terms of our dynamic
for you to be doing this solo project?
Yeah, because this is-
Rhett going solo, what's my take on that?
What are both of our experiences with you doing
the first bonafide solo project,
even if it is a side project and a hobby thing,
I think that's something for us to work out,
but not work out, but something for us to just talk through.
Yeah.
We talked through it a little bit,
but I think that would be a good edifying conversation.
And it might answer some questions that people have,
like what is it, if you,
cause I'm sure, I mean, actually,
that wasn't one of my worries in doing this thing.
We'll talk, well, you know, we'll talk about that.
We're gonna say, like you said,
you're gonna save that for the second half
of the conversation.
Let's talk about how this happened.
That's exactly what I'm saying.
Let's save it for the second half of the conversation
after we've just talked about the project in and of itself.
Okay.
You know, so.
Okay, so how did this happen?
How did this happen?
And can I just make a quick plug?
Yeah.
Because it's very timely.
As of the release of this episode, I'm doing an AMA.
Every month we do an AMA on the Mythical Society.
It's on Discord.
But you're going solo for this AMA.
I'm actually going solo,
but I'm bringing on another guest, Lily.
So Lily, my daughter and I are doing an AMA
on the Mythical Society today at, what is the day's date?
Today is July 18th in the year 2022.
Yep.
At 3.30 Pacific, 6.30 Eastern
on the Discord of the Mythical Society.
We're doing an hour long AMA.
So tune into that.
And if you're listening to this later,
all the AMAs, the ones we do every single month,
and the one I'm doing with Lily today will be archived.
So you can like read through all the questions
and our answers and that's today.
So let's get into it, James.
Should I call you James the rest of today?
I mean, call me what you want to. I say yeah.
James is the name I use when I order food from any place,
including Starbucks,
because it's a name people can understand.
But now it's your-
But now it's my, I wouldn't call this an alter ego,
because an alter ego is you purposely tried
to disassociate yourself from,
and this is just like, Rhett James McLaughlin, who is me,
has a solo music project that is called James and the Shame.
I'm still working on the best way to explain that,
but we'll talk about why I'm not just,
hey, why aren't you just Rhett McLaughlin?
We'll get to that.
So how did this start?
So obviously, you know, I have a guitar.
Let's start there.
I don't think I know the answer to this, by the way.
Yeah, so. I'm very,
very interested.
So the two of us have written and recorded,
I actually, it's funny,
because I was putting together the bio
that's gonna be like on Spotify, et cetera.
You and I have written and recorded over 100 songs.
Easily over 100.
It might be close to 150, but like,
Wow.
And so, because I wrote something like,
a stark departure from his over 100 multi-genre
comedic songs written and recorded
as part of the duo Rhett and Link.
Should've said Lonely Island.
It would've helped you.
I think we've written and recorded
way more songs than Lonely Island.
Maybe not as good, but a lot more.
We're more prolific in certain ways,
in terms of the number of tracks.
But we've written a lot of music.
And the majority of that music was written in a way
where it was like I had a guitar somewhere
and I would like come up with some rhythm and structure
and just like put it in a voice memo and then show up
and we would write to it, right?
So it has been a habit over the past 20 years.
I've got a guitar in every place that I go.
I've got a guitar in the office,
I got a guitar in my bedroom.
But we tend to get really busy with things
and I'll go months without picking my guitar up.
And we just get so deep into some new project
that may or may not have music.
And if it doesn't have music, it's just like,
I'm not picking my guitar up.
My fingers start, I was like,
ah, I don't have calluses anymore, they wear off.
But I think it was 2019 and my guitar is in my bedroom
and I pick it up and I'm kinda like just diddling around
on it and the next thing you know, I'm beginning to write,
now this is unusual because I've never done this.
In the past 20 years, if I start playing something
and start singing something and start writing something,
it is always exclusively
what I would call a business decision, okay?
It means I am writing this song as part of
the mythical thing that me and you have built together
and it is obviously going to be for the purpose,
it's a comedy song.
It's, oh, we could use this in something or whatever,
or I need to write a song for Buddy System soundtrack
or something like that, right?
Right, which I think is the last time
we were really intensely writing songs
was Buddy System season two and it was so-
Well, actually it was the music for the tour.
That's right.
We wrote, we came back and we wrote.
The few new songs that we, like Why I Travel, Kyle,
the shirt song.
Which interestingly enough, so Buddy System season two,
it was very collaborative, it was very last minute
to the point where we were going on separate vacations
right before filming
and we had to divide up songs,
something we had never done.
Yeah, because we were so under the gun.
We were so under the gun, I had to write one song,
you had to write another song and we had to commit
that we were both gonna bring them back basically done.
Yeah.
Which was unusual.
And then for the tour,
which was unusual. And then for the tour,
the Rhett and Link live tour in 2019,
you wanted to start playing piano
and so then you were like,
you made yourself write Why I Travel on the piano.
That really wasn't,
I didn't add too much to that song as much as I recall.
I don't recall doing much to it.
And then in the other ones like Kyle,
that was a little more collaborative.
And then the shirt song just isn't memorable.
I mean, it had a memorable scene when we were fighting.
The shirt song is performance art.
It's not really a song that you wanna listen to.
Yeah.
It's a song you might wanna watch happen.
You just kinda went away and wrote those
because again, we were in this divide and conquer mode
and music, you know, and the tour was kind of like,
get in where you fit in kind of thing.
Yeah.
So there was a little bit of, even in that,
yeah, you started more and more initiating
Rhett and Link songs on your own.
But this time in 2019, you sat down,
you weren't thinking about a business move,
you weren't thinking about an obligation,
a creative obligation.
I was like, I've got this idea,
and really it wasn't like,
I'm going to sit down and write a song,
it was like, I'm playing the guitar
and I kinda like what I'm hearing here,
and I'm just starting to kinda sing a melody,
usually I'll sing a melody that is nonsensical,
words that just sound good and I'll make a voice memo
just so it's just like, oh, I wanna remember this melody
that I came up with and you sing words that sound good
that don't make sense, right?
It's just a very common songwriting technique.
And so, but I was like,
I was saying words that did make sense
and I realized that I was writing a song to God, okay?
Was writing a song to God.
Oh.
And when I say writing a song to God
as someone who doesn't necessarily believe in God
at this point, I was writing a song to the idea
that I had of God in the past. I was writing a song to the idea
that I had of God in the past. And you know, basically writing a song,
like I had a relationship with you.
So if you don't know-
Do you remember the first line
that kind of came out of it?
I still remember when we used to talk.
You never said much, but I knew what you thought.
Hmm.
So that was the first line that came out.
And so I was like, oh, this is kind of like,
if you're not a Christian or a former Christian
or a spiritual person, maybe you wouldn't pick up
on the thematic imagery here and you might think
I'm just writing a song about a lost love because it's about a relationship
that you had and like being like,
I've got these old, it's called old letters.
It's like, I've got these old letters that you wrote to me
and I sit down and read them the Bible.
You know, I don't like giving all the,
I want you to listen to the music
and interpret it for yourself,
but this one's pretty obvious, I guess.
But I was writing it and I was like,
I don't know who this is for, I don't know why,
I don't know, I'm not like, I'm writing a song
because I'm going to have a music project one day.
It was very much just like, oh, this is coming out of me
in a very easy way, and I'm not, it's interesting
because I'm not trying to be funny.
There's no jokes in this song.
It's very serious and it's very sincere.
And it happened very quickly. That's one of the things about
almost all, there's 11 songs on the finished album and all of them,
you know, the process between beginning to write and then record
or fine tuning the lyrics, that may have been a months long process
but with rare exception, the writing of the music and the first pass
of the song
is usually something that happens when I just sit down
and do it in about one to two hours.
And then you go, I've got a song, right?
I'm gonna come back, I'll change that lyric,
I'll work on that, whatever,
but they usually come out really easy.
If I sit down and it's hard, I'm like,
I'm doing this for fun, it's not a business decision,
it's not a job, so there's no forced creative.
So this first song, Letters,
it came out, it pretty much came to,
it formed in that sitting, and then what?
So I sat down and recorded, I recorded a demo of it,
but I wouldn't have called it a demo.
I was just like, oh, I'm gonna record this.
And I actually recorded it in the Evernote audio recorder.
I don't know if you've ever done this,
but Evernote has, you can press add audio
and it's so low quality.
It sounds like something out of the 20s
compared to if you just do a voice memo and attach it.
Interestingly. And I was just like, okay, I did that. out of the 20s compared to like if you just do a voice memo and attach it, interestingly.
And I was just like, okay, I did that.
Now this is 2019.
At some point after that, I would say months after that,
I just kind of told my therapist about it.
I was like, yeah, I wrote, we were having lots-
Can you pull it up, play a little bit of it?
I don't wanna do that.
Cause that's not the single.
That's not the single.
Okay.
It's actually the last song on the album.
Okay.
Maybe I'll play that when,
cause you can see how different
the final version ended up being.
Or maybe I'll play it once the album comes out.
But I'm talking to my therapist about it
and we were having a lot of broader conversations
about me getting into a place where I was in creative flow
and him just recognizing like,
seems like when you are in, you're healthy
and you're thriving and you're experiencing joy
when you're in a creative flow.
Now obviously, I'm in a creative flow a lot
with what we do for a living
because this is a creative business,
this is a content business.
So I'm doing lots of writing,
I'm doing a lot of creative things,
but it's also a very sophisticated business
with a lot of moving parts.
And those business parts,
which I do think that both of us are really good at,
isn't necessarily life-giving
and doesn't breathe a lot of joy.
It's kind of like, well, if you wanna do this right,
you gotta do this right.
So you gotta answer these business questions,
et cetera, et cetera.
For other people, business can get them in the flow,
but that's not really our thing.
Yeah, and so my therapist,
without getting specific, was just like, saying like, yeah, you should just, my therapist, without getting specific,
was just like, saying like, yeah, you should just,
you know, I'm telling him about writing this song,
he's like, when you talk about that, you know,
I kinda see you light up a little bit.
So I would just encourage you to continue to just,
you know, express yourself creatively as a,
and move towards things where you can
express yourself creatively. He wasn't move towards things where you can express yourself creatively.
He wasn't being like, go do an album.
So, you know, it wasn't like I was like,
okay, yes, I'm gonna do that.
It was like, yeah, yeah, I really enjoyed that.
Maybe I'll do it again.
Pandemic rolls around, 2020.
And our lives changed drastically like everyone else's.
We were obviously still really busy.
We were doing everything that we were doing with Mythical
and trying to keep all our content streams going.
But you know, less travel, more time at home.
I got this guitar in my bedroom.
I got a guitar at the creative house.
I got a guitar here.
I got guitars everywhere, right?
And so I just found myself as a way of sort of like
passing the time, picking up my guitar
and beginning to play.
And I just started finding that every time I did that,
a song would come out of nowhere, right?
And so then before I knew it,
I had written a song to my parents.
I had written a song to my children.
I had written a song to my children. I had written a song to my wife.
You know, I talked about the song
that I wrote for Valentine's Day
that we talked about on the podcast
that I played for her,
which is a song that I ended up writing for her.
Oh yeah, you're not talking about when you were dating,
you're talking about like-
I did it when I was dating too,
I'm talking about like you were dating, you're talking about like 20. I did it when I was dating too, I'm talking about like.
You did a 20, 20.
It's probably 20, 21 Valentine's Day
is when I probably talked about it.
Okay.
But what was happening was,
is without any real calculation,
all the songs that I was writing were more like,
it was a cathartic sort of therapeutic way
of thinking about my deconstruction.
So I point out those songs and one to my parents,
one to my kids, one to my wife,
as what was happening with me is
I've had this very long process of deconstruction.
And as I've talked about many times,
my spiritual deconstruction on its surface, it was a very intellectual thing, right?
I wasn't wronged by someone emotionally.
I didn't have a pastor do me wrong.
I wasn't like, I didn't have the rug pulled out
from underneath me.
It was just a very slow process of access
to new information that was increasingly more difficult
to reconcile with my Christian worldview,
to the point, to the breaking point, right?
But that doesn't mean that there weren't
incredibly heavy emotional things happening,
relational things like deconstructing from a faith
that your parents gave you and they still have.
Being a father to kids when they were born,
you're taking them up in front of the church
and dedicating them to God.
And then no longer believing in that God in the same way,
and no longer adhering to a biblical or Christian worldview
and still wanting the best for them.
Like what is that?
So what I would find is that the way for me to process
all these emotions was to write a song about it.
So I started talking more and more to my therapist
about this and he was like, this is bringing something out in you. Like, and just started talking to song about it. So I started talking more and more to my therapist about this and he was like,
this is bringing something out in you.
Like, and just started talking to Jessie about it.
She was like,
it's not, you know, anyone who knows me well
knows that it's, you know, I am a very emotional person
but on the surface, you don't see that.
But there's a lot going on.
You gotta kinda tap into it, and it has to come out
in a certain way for you to be like, oh shit,
this dude was feeling a whole lot of things.
And so I just kept going and going, and again,
the thought as I was writing these songs was like,
this is a therapeutic cathartic process.
Now, of course, I am a full-time entertainer.
And so as I'm getting to like the third and fourth song,
I'm like, I'm making something here.
Yes, I'm doing this for myself.
Yes, it is a therapeutic process.
Yes, I do feel like there's like an emotional release
every time I do this, but I'm making something here.
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It's kind of, you know, yeah, it's this,
there's a tension of, I mean,
yeah, you're doing something for therapy,
but then you're also, you're not just a creative person,
but you are an entertainer.
And so, I mean, there's echoes of the conversation
that we had about like why you're growing your hair out.
Like this, it originated in therapy and you were like,
it was a therapeutic exercise, but at a certain point,
you're like, I actually think I will look good
with my hair like this.
I think my wife will like me better.
I think that this fits into my brand.
You know, these things are things that you can't help
but think about because of the position that you have.
Well, and not just that, it's also my personality
as an Enneagram three, which I don't, you know,
not everybody, some people get tired of hearing
about the Enneagram, I get it.
But the Enneagram three, just think about it this way.
It just means you're performance minded.
It means that you find your value and your worth
in what you can perform for people in winning, right?
Right, so there's-
And it's very unhealthy.
It can be very unhealthy.
And it goes with you into every endeavor,
even like something that,
like nothing for anybody is like absolutely pure.
It's like we're not, you know,
but that doesn't mean you can't be aware of it
and still have, like, I believe that this can be
a relatively pure endeavor.
Well, it's funny,
because I have a song that I've already written.
I've written multiple additional songs
that are not on the album that I guess will be
for something in the future, but one of them
is about this exact process.
Huh.
You know, that talks about,
I ain't sure what I'm trying to prove
or who I'm trying to prove it to.
You know what I'm saying?
Like that's the treadmill that the three is on constantly,
which is really, I wrote it when I finished the album
and I'm thinking about this process that I'm in right now,
which you know, because I've been telling you about it.
It's one thing to write the music
and I love the process of writing.
I love the process of recording.
I love the process of collaborating with talented people
who make what I wrote better than what it would be
if I was the one in charge from the beginning to the end.
I love all that.
But as I get into the process of like,
okay, well you have to like have a bio
and you gotta have like, you gotta get pictures taken.
Once I started beginning to do these things
that feel very performative and marketing oriented
is when I started thinking about the built-in irony
of doing something that is personal, cathartic,
therapeutic, beneficial to me,
and then turning it into a consumable product,
which is checking all the three's performance boxes.
So I wrote a song about that,
but it's not on the album because it's about the process
of doing this, right?
So, but just to go back, so at a certain point,
you had amassed a number of songs,
like what was, you made a decision
that you were gonna make this an album?
Well, when I got to like four songs,
I was like, ah, two more songs and I've got like an EP.
I mean, you can do a four song EP,
but I was like a six song EP.
Like that's respectable, that's something.
I can write two.
So, but that process was very much, it wasn't calculated.
It was like, as I would keep talking about this stuff
with my therapist and with Jessie, I'd be like, you know,
I feel like these songs need to be released into the wild.
They need to be put into the world.
And here's my thinking on that.
So you know that I'm a big fan of David Bazan,
Pedro the Lion.
He's probably even more known for his band, Pedro the Lion.
That's his band name.
So he is a guy that grew up in a Christian home
and was very much a strong, very similar story.
And then he deconstructed,
and he was actually making like Christian music,
I think back in the day with Pedro the Lion.
And then of course he deconstructed and it kind of,
his music evolved with his worldview,
but he made an album probably in the late, the alts, like 2008, 2009,
called Curse the Branches.
Is it Curse Your Branches or Curse the Branches?
And it was essentially his deconstruction album, right?
And it was a little bit of an angry album
in that he was kind of like, he was a little bit angry at the world that he had come from,
but also it was just deeply, it was so thoughtful
and so like specifically connecting to what I,
now I wasn't listening to it in 2008, 2009 when it came out.
I listened to it probably almost 10 years later.
Yeah, I listened to it once.
And it just, yeah, it was a bit of a downer.
Yeah, but I was just like, man,
this is so meaningful to me
because of my particular experience.
Yeah.
And I was like, you know,
I'd love to make the album
that I would want to listen to, right?
Yes, I've heard that before.
Write the book that you would want to read.
I was like, okay, I'm gonna make this music,
it's the music that I would want to listen to
as someone who's kind of been through
or going through what I went through.
And so then it was like, this could be a gift
to those people who can relate to this story.
And not just people who, again,
this is a super niche thing, again,
it's very much a country album,
which is not necessarily like
the most popular genre of music,
but it's the genre of music that I can
personally write and sing in a credible way.
Let's get more into that after listening to it.
But it's also personally my favorite type of music.
But the subject matter is very,
at least for this album, is very specific
because every song is related to that process.
And again, that's when it became this thing like,
well, this should be something that is released
because it's so deeply personal and emotional.
And I know that there's so many people out there going,
this is a cultural movement.
We talked about it many times.
People reevaluating their traditional worldviews,
whatever your traditional worldview,
doesn't have to be Christianity specifically,
but like we're in an era where you're bombarded
with so many perspectives and so much information
that it's becoming increasingly difficult to hold on
to any traditional view that requires putting your blinders
on and blocking out everyone else's perspective.
And so this is a cultural upheaval,
which I think ultimately will be for the best,
but so many people can relate that I hope that regardless
of their circumstances, it'll be like, ah, you can many people can relate that I hope that regardless of their circumstances,
it'll be like, ah, you can connect with this music
and it can be a gift to people, you know?
So that's when it became like, I'm gonna release this.
But that was all that happened.
And, but of course I hadn't recorded anything beyond demos.
And so this is the second piece of the puzzle
because I didn't know how it was gonna become a thing.
We developed a relationship with Derek Furman
who was Britain's producer on your cousin,
Britton Buchanan on his stuff.
And he ended up-
Started producing our music
for the Mythical Society.
The Lionel Richie stuff, the Brooks and Dunn stuff,
the Hazel, the Hazel project.
Yeah.
And just love the dude and just love the way
that he commits to a project and is super technical
and just like really gets involved
and can execute very well in a number of genres.
So I was just like talking to him and I was like,
I got these songs that I've been writing.
I was just like talking to him and I was like, hey, I got these songs that I've been writing.
What would it look like if you recorded and produced them?
And of course he was like, I love this idea.
And so getting someone else involved in the project,
that lights a fire and then you begin moving forward
and it moves from just being a hobby and a pastime
to being something that- A production.
This is good, this is gonna be a thing.
Again, from a timeline standpoint,
I made that commitment last year, so that was 2021.
I was talking to him about it in the middle of the year
and I was like, I don't know when this is gonna come out.
Probably 2023, that's what I told him.
I was like, I don't want you to prioritize this.
I cannot prioritize this because I can't work on this
because I'm, it is very, very busy,
have a lot of other things going on.
This is a nights and weekends thing for me.
And if you want it to be a nights and weekends thing for you
then I was like, don't stop working on something
to work on my thing.
But if you, I'll send you things as I have them,
send you demos,
and then, so that was kind of the process.
But he would like turn something around and like,
I'd be like, man, that sounds a lot better than my demo.
You know?
And I kind of got addicted to the process.
And I was like, well, why am I gonna do six songs?
I got more songs. And I was like, well, why am I doing, I'm gonna do six songs, I got more songs,
and I was like, there's a lot of different,
the thing that sent me to 11 songs was trying to cover
the breadth of the experience.
I was like, well, there's this other aspect
that I really wanna talk about.
And then I was like, also, I kinda feel that there needs
to be like a thesis statement that is sort of the beginning
of the album is the first song, which is the first single.
And that's Believe Me, which was one of the,
was written pretty late in the process
because it was stepping back and looking at what I had done
and thinking about, ah, this would be a good thesis
statement, a good opener to where I'm gonna kinda
take you through conceptually on the album.
And so that's how I ended up getting to 11 songs.
Okay.
And the last thing I'll talk about
before we actually listen to the single
is why it's called James and the Shame, right?
Why is it not Rhett McLaughlin?
So at some point early on,
I had this idea that,
well, what if this was like a covert thing
that I didn't even talk about, but I just put out there.
And then I started thinking about the fact that so much of,
if the whole point of this thing is to connect with people
who are experiencing something similar or can relate,
well, one of the things that has been such a,
has brought those people out of the woodwork
is me sharing these things through the public forum
that I have as the public person that I am.
Yeah.
And so I was like, it doesn't make sense
to not talk about it or try to make it seem like
there's just some new country guy
who's talking about spiritual things.
And if you wanna know about it, you can.
But I was like, but I don't want it to be Rhett McLaughlin.
I don't want it to be my name.
I want it to be something that is like,
hey, this is something outside of everything else
that this guy does.
When you hear the name Rhett McLaughlin,
you think Rhett and Link, comedy.
I'm not supposed to take this seriously.
When is the joke, when was the first punchline coming
in this song?
Right.
And also, I don't-
It becomes pretty obvious pretty quick.
And I didn't want it to be a distraction
for somebody who stumbles across it in a playlist
or something on Spotify to be like, Rob McLaughlin,
if what I have put out into the world professionally,
which is a bunch of lighthearted silly stuff
to take your mind off things, isn't your cup of tea,
I don't want you to not wanna listen to this
if this would actually be something you'd be into.
So that's where James and the shame came from.
James and the shame, not only does it rhyme,
is it kind of roll off the tongue,
but again, shame is the dominant sort of emotion
of the Enneagram three,
of someone who is performance minded.
So the twos, the threes and the fours in the Enneagram
are all in the heart triad.
the threes and the fours in the Enneagram are all in the heart triad.
And that means that there's a whole lot going on in here
that they try to deal with in certain ways
and the way the three deals with their shame
is to try to keep performing for you.
Don't, just keep watching me do cool things
and you won't have to know who I really am
and who I'm ashamed of.
And so that whole idea of James and the shame
is like obviously the shame means two things.
Number one, this was not a, it is a solo project.
I wrote all of the music and all of the lyrics,
but the final production includes
some other very talented musicians
who played different instruments.
And so I guess in some ways that represents
the other people who collaborated
to make these final products.
But also more so than that,
it's the shame that follows me around wherever I go.
It's like you got James, you got the shame too.
But let's listen to this song, man.
Okay.
But first let's do a quick plug.
All right.
Stevie's podcast comes back.
We wanna show some love to Best Friends Back All Right,
her and Nagin.
Their friendship is-
Blossomed. It's happened.
And now they're branching out into other things.
I'm told that they're gonna be getting Nagin's sister
who's a gynecologist on an episode.
Yeah.
So it's, you know,
I can always learn stuff from a gynecologist.
They're not just talking about, you know,
their high school days now,
now that they've rekindled the friendship
they're moving into,
that's just things they wanna talk about.
So check out Best Friends Back All Right,
wherever you get your podcasts.
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All right. You ready to play this thing?
Yes.
Okay, so this is...
When you played it for me,
I listened to it, I think, three times in a row,
and then at a different occasion, I heard it again.
I've only heard this song four times,
and I've only heard another song once.
There's only three songs that are mastered right now.
Okay.
But yes, this is-
I'm told there is an album, I just don't know.
So this is the first single, it's called Believe Me.
It was released on Friday the 15th,
so you can go to wherever you listen to music
to listen to it, but we're gonna play it right now as well. I think you want an answer I'm not prepared to give
Cause the one I gave you said that that ain't it
Must be something that I want Fame and fortune or at least a little don't
It may seem too cut and dry
But I just found some things I could not brush aside
Now if you love life
I don't think it's true
I'm not asking you to agree
I'm just asking you to believe me
You say my heart is never true
That might say more about you
I know it shouldn't matter If you take my word
When I say I didn't leave
Cause I was hurt When I say I didn't leave cause I wasn't
But there goes my pride
With this refrain that I be seen as justified
That I be seen as justified Likely nothing I could say
And I'm not sure you would care for me
To explain
Sure you can pray
But I don't think it's true
I'm not asking you
to agree
I'm just asking you to agree I'm just asking you to believe me
You say my heart was never true
That might say more about you I love it, man.
The first time you played this song for me,
I was blown away.
Like, I don't know what the look on my face was, but...
You started smiling really early.
I mean, yeah, right at the beginning,
because, like, you know, I'm a sound guy before a lyric guy.
Right. And so,
I was just relieved that it was really good.
What did you think was what it was gonna be?
Because I was telling you about it,
but I was, and this is,
we can kind of start getting into the dynamic
of like how me and you related about this,
because I was very much, I didn't want,
I wanted to have something to show you that was done.
I think that was, I'm glad that I didn't hear anything.
I mean, hearing what you just played is the first thing
that I heard of it specifically.
No demos, no sneak peeks, no nothing.
Right.
But I mean, the production, I mean,
I knew Derek was great
and I knew he was gonna do something great with it.
And you had told me that he was hooking you up
with like studio musicians, some in Nashville,
some in LA, right?
That were adding, they were adding,
I mean, they were adding their stuff and sending it in.
Yeah, well, so,
not that we thought we were gonna go Nashville
because we knew we needed a Pedal Steel.
But then, he was like, hey, I got this guy I know,
Alex Strahl, who's in LA.
And he's like a multi instrumentalist.
And he can play a mean electric guitar,
but he also can play the pedal steel,
he can play the mandolin, he can play the banjo,
this dude can play anything with strings.
And so that pedal steel is Alex's,
it was passed down to him.
He's got all these instruments that were passed down to him
that are so old.
Such a great move to have.
And so it has that old school feel,
which was very important to me.
I mean, this song,
I mean, it definitely has this kind of Lord Huron vibe,
which I absolutely love.
And then, so like from a production instrumentation
standpoint, and having heard another song from the album,
I know that it doesn't just stay squarely in this place,
which is also exciting.
But so I'm just talking about this song, not the album,
or the other song I've heard.
But that is true, the album in itself,
that this is, there was a reason that this was,
again, I wrote this song after I had written
almost every song, I think I only wrote
one more song after this one.
So it's more.
And it was like, I want this to be
the thematic and conceptual introduction
to what the album is about,
which we can get into in a second,
but probably more important,
getting to what you're saying is,
I want this to be a sign to people
who care about this type of music
that this is a serious endeavor.
And it, yeah, mission accomplished.
I think it sounds great.
I mean, it's definitely something that
if I stumbled on this song, I would be like,
what the hell, I'd have to send it to you.
You'd send it to me, right.
Again, that was the thinking.
So that's the-
This is something that we would be-
In terms of a genre like indie Western folk,
like which that Lord Huron pocket,
there's not, you know, there's other people doing it,
but they're my favorite.
I didn't say the word country,
but then your vocals come in and I'm like, oh shit.
The first thing I thought with the very beginning
of this one, and I don't like drawing comparisons,
but I was like, this is a 90s country vocal delivery.
I was like, this is a 90s country vocal delivery.
I definitely, like in the opening line, I was like, I hear Alan Jackson.
And I'm like, I knew neither one of us
are huge fans of Alan Jackson,
but he's so squarely 90s country vocal
that like, and something about your tone
and the melody of that first line just evoked that,
not a specific song, but him as an artist.
And then the whole song is not an Alan Jackson thing.
It goes very much into, okay,
this is a really good choice.
It's a really strong choice for you to say,
I'm gonna sing as a country, I'm gonna sing as a country,
I'm gonna sing country.
I'm gonna sing country vocals.
And the juxtaposition of that over the production
is really cool.
And it's, I mean, it's not a Sturgill Simpson thing,
which like some people might try to draw that comparison
or whatever, because the vocals are so 90s.
That I just think that it's like a really strong, smart,
it's, I almost said fun choice, but like, yeah,
it's exciting.
It excites me because I feel like it makes it more unique.
There's people, I'm not following country music
that closely right now,
but I know that like the 90s movement
that happens in fashion, it's happening in country music.
There's like current stars.
You played a song for me of a current up and comer
who then played a song that was like very 90s intentionally.
You talking about Luke Combs
doing the Brooks and Dunn thing? Oh yeah, that was it, Luke Combs. I think it's a little bit more
of a classic.
I think it's a little bit more
of a classic.
I think it's a little bit more
of a classic.
I think it's a little bit more
of a classic.
I think it's a little bit more
of a classic.
I think it's a little bit more
of a classic.
I think it's a little bit more
of a classic.
I think it's a little bit more
of a classic. I think it's a little bit more of a classic. I think it's a little bit more of a classic. I think it's a little bit more I really like that kind of slinky,
it's kind of a sly melody. What key is it in?
That song is in G.
I love G.
I don't know.
Something about the melody line of the verse is like,
I love it.
Well, it's funny because, you know, again,
very little of this was calculated, right?
So.
But you had to make a choice to sing country, right?
So basically, so this is how that happened, right?
So with that first song that I wrote,
that the old letter song,
So with that first song that I wrote, the old letter song, if you take the accent
off of the, out of the lyrics,
and I don't sing with an accent,
then you would be like, okay, this could be like
Gregory Allen Isaacov, like folk.
But your demo had the country inflection.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
So from the get-go, you were just singing country.
You were writing a country song.
Well, I'm talking about the old letter song.
Yeah, the demo, the first demo you recorded.
Yeah, yeah, but I made the decision, I was like,
first of all, there's a little bit of country
in just the way that I talk,
and so there's a little bit of country
in the way that I sing,
but you know how you usually translate
and you make a different decision,
I'm trying to embody a certain character or whatever
and you gotta have a sound.
And so.
Cause that's what we do.
I mean it's something that we very calculated say,
okay, I don't wanna sound like Weird Al in this song
or I don't wanna sound like a redneck.
That was one of the craziest things in recording
is that in making the decision to be like,
how do I deliver this is,
me and you have recorded so much music
in so many different genres.
It's like, okay, this is a rap song,
this is a country song, this is a hair metal song,
and we always just adapt to whatever the genre is
and we're very good chameleons.
Then you have to be like, well, I gotta,
that's what every artist is ultimately doing.
They're like adopting, you know,
you love cocaine and rhinestones and now I'm gotten into it
and this fascinating hearing all the stories
about George Jones trying to figure out
how to sound like George Jones.
Right.
And you find yourself doing impersonations of other people.
Oh, I really, I'm trying to sound like the Avett brothers there
without thinking about it.
And there's an exercise of trusting yourself to be like,
no, I don't have to try to sound like anyone.
And so what is the natural melody and the natural intonation
and expression that comes from me?
It is a culmination of all the music that I've consumed
and sung along with all those years.
And that's why when I started singing country,
so much 90s melodies come out
because that was when I was coming of age.
And it's a safe choice, I feel like,
in terms of like, if you're gonna get a comparison,
if you're gonna get analyzed, it's an exciting choice.
So I'm really glad you made it.
It's not, you know, there's things that people-
Well, I guess what I'm saying is it wasn't a choice.
People might, okay.
Cause it's like when you started saying 90s
and Derek started saying 90s, I was like,
you know what, you're right.
I was just like, I want this track to sound
as old school as I can.
It's got, in terms of core structure,
it gets into a little more,
it's almost like gets into like Roy Orbison type,
you know, cause the way you-
That's what I was really getting at
with the key question.
The sevenths kind of drop in there
and stuff like that, which I love.
There's sevenths all over this album.
That's it.
That's what I was trying to get at with the G.
And that's not something that you hear a lot
in just your average country song, right?
And so, and then there, you know, it's got that.
And then Gunner who did the percussion for this,
who's like an incredible, incredible musician,
kind of brought in that like shuffley rhythm,
which is not, when I write it, when I send a demo over,
it's me and a guitar.
Yeah, like a little thing. You gotta find the groove.
Like in the woodblock over, it's me and a guitar. Yeah, like a little thing. You gotta find the groove. And the woodblock stuff, and it's great.
So anyway, those choices, and we're gonna talk,
we'll do another podcast in the fall
once the whole thing's out to kinda talk more
about the music, but ultimately what I'll say at this point
is that it was calculated to a degree,
but most of it was just like, what do I naturally hear
in this and what sounds good to me,
and how do I wanna sing this naturally
with as little sort of acting attached to it as possible
and it turns out that that is sort of this mix
of old school and 90s country.
And then lyrically, you know, I'm not asking you to agree,
I'm just asking you to believe me, you know?
And then, I mean, it's very, it suits country
because it's kind of matter of fact, you know?
Yeah, yeah, it's very sincere.
You know, there's a sincere, it's there, it's not,
you know, you can really read into your experience
because it's kind of on the page in a lot of ways,
but it's, I'm not saying that as a critique.
I think that fits country music really well.
And I think it also just-
Even though I don't, by the way,
I wouldn't call it a country album,
I mean, based on this song.
So it's like, I don't know what I'm gonna call the album.
Well, that's the genre that I checked
in the distribution box because it's- Yeah, that the distribution box because it's only one you can check.
Yeah, that makes sense.
And then maybe like Americana as a secondary genre.
What was the last thing that filled you with wonder that took you away from your desk or your car in traffic?
Well, for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you, that thing is...
Animal Bay! Hi, I'm Nick Friedman. I'm Lee Alec us, and I'm going to guess for some of you, that thing is...
Anime! Hi, I'm Nick Friedman. I'm Lee Alec Murray. And I'm Leah President. And welcome to Crunchyroll Presents The Anime Effect. It's a weekly news show with the best celebrity guests
and hot takes galore. So join us every Friday wherever you get your podcasts and watch full
video episodes on Crunchyroll or on the Crunchyroll YouTube channel.
So lyrically, I mean,
you're really putting yourself out there.
It's not, this song is not veiled.
Very few of them are.
And I think that comes from the fact that it's like,
all right. Sure you can pray.
I like, that's the first time I heard that line.
You know, and I know your experience,
but I just think it's, I mean,
obviously I relate to it so much.
So I just think it's nice.
I do think that people,
having shared our deconstruction stories,
I do think that this will be a source of comfort to people.
Absolutely. I do think that this will be a source of comfort to people.
Absolutely. Like that's powerful.
The conversations that we've had at this table
about our spiritual journeys,
I've just been blown away by how it's helped people.
And so it's so cool that this is gonna do that too.
And it's gonna do it in a way that,
it's gonna do it in a different way.
Music is so powerful.
It's powerful in a totally different way than podcasts.
That is,
I keep saying exciting,
but that's just what I keep going back to is that like,
you know, I'm just celebrating the fact
that you're putting yourself out there,
you had enough experience to know that like,
how much of a risk did this feel like for you
and on what area?
Because when you, this song at least
is something that you've already said
a number of times I've felt like.
So where is the risk?
Where's the fear?
Well, I mean, I think there's,
it doesn't stay this tame.
There are some what you might call angry songs where I'm just letting my emotions and the way I feel about this tame. There are some what you might call angry songs
where I'm just letting my emotions
and the way I feel about the church.
Are you yelling?
Not really yelling.
In hypocrisy that I see
and those things that get me kind of worked up.
Garth Brooks yelled in Shameless.
He did.
I'm shameless!
Yeah, and I don't want any Chris Gaines comparisons.
I appreciate you not doing anything. I'm shameless! Yeah, and I don't want any Chris Gaines comparisons. I appreciate you not doing anything.
I didn't say it.
So I think that there's a little bit of that,
but I think people know where I stand.
I guess it is, you know, every once in a while,
I toss a little bomb out into the pond,
you know, whatever the analogy, that's not a good one.
I stir things up, I kick the hornet's nest a little bit
for those people who care to feel offended
by the things that I say.
Let me ask you this.
It's gonna stir that up a little bit.
Have you felt like it was a bigger risk creatively
to like put yourself out there
like it was a bigger risk creatively to like put yourself out there
as by doing this project than what would,
or is it what you're saying in the lyrics?
Is it the message that you're getting across?
Because there's a creative risk involved in saying,
hey, I'm one half of Rhett and Link,
this is what you know me for, I'm a comedian.
If it were me, I would have to get over this hurdle
of embarrassment that would be like,
is there risk there, is there fear there?
Has that been part of this?
Is there fear there? Has that been part of this?
For better or for worse,
I just always approach things just believing
that I'm gonna find some way to pull them off.
And it's probably a misguided self-confidence
that yes, I can do this and I can make an album
that I would actually, if I were not myself, enjoy and like.
Well, I'm not embarrassed for you now that I've heard.
I'll say that.
But I mean, I guess-
But yeah, that moment when you're like,
for the first time here and on GMM when you're saying,
I've released a country music, you know,
there's a little, there's album.
There is there a sheepishness there?
Is there like-
I think from a creative standpoint,
when one of the things you're most well known for
is like being on your knees and having your best friend
pee chocolate into your mouth from a fountain
that is next to his penis.
I just don't think there's a lot of things you can do
to creatively embarrass yourself, honestly.
In one sense, I think that gets into one of the
sort of unrealized motivations to do something like this
is, you know me, I talk about it all the time,
is that I do have this chip on my shoulder creatively.
There's lots of things that we want to do collectively
to show people what we are capable of creatively.
And I think there's always an element of that
in everything that I do.
And so I can't, I'm not gonna be dishonest with you
and tell you that I believe in what I've created here
and I think it's good and I think other people will agree
and there's a part of my ego that wants you to agree.
Okay, well then I've struck your ego enough,
but I also think I'm projecting, I guess,
in that if I were in your shoes, that's how I would feel.
So instead, I think it's something that's inspiring
about the fact that you have this confidence,
maybe it comes from a chip on your shoulder or whatever,
but you wanna express yourself in this way
and you go for it.
And that's something that I could do more of.
So if I am to make this about me for a second,
I do feel like, oh, I would be embarrassed at every turn.
You know, even the thing about talking about like
being a DJ, I had to make a decision to say,
you know, this is kind of a, this is not, you know,
I had to decide what my posture was gonna be about it.
Right.
You know, it's like, yeah, this is something that I'm into.
And I'm not gonna be sheepish or apologetic or embarrassed
by having some sort of, you know,
creative outlet or aspirations.
So I think that's where that question was coming from.
It's more about me than you, but.
No, but I have thought about it
because the worst case scenario is people are like,
this YouTube guy thinks he's a musician now.
Who cares?
Okay, I've lost nothing.
If you already see me as that,
if you see me as this YouTube guy, this hack,
that just stumbled into fame and isn't really talented,
then nothing, if you already think that,
then you thinking that again is not a problem for me.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, so what is the,
there's bigger risks content-wise in other songs.
Yeah, it gets more explicit, literally.
There's a few F-b F bombs dropped on the album,
to give a hint of that.
Are you nervous about any of the specifics coming out?
I mean, what? No.
Where's your?
I'm not, no, no.
I mean, you said you wrote a song to your kids,
you wrote a song to your parents.
Well, yeah.
You wrote a song to your parents.
Well, yeah.
I don't know how much I wanna talk about the, I mean, I have a great relationship with my parents,
but the thing that I am conscious of is that
because they are still very much strong Christians
and I'm very much a public figure who has stated
that I am not and that I'm critical of Christianity,
that makes their life more difficult
than I would like it to be, right?
Because of the way people in the church are, you know?
And so, and just the way people in general are,
I'm not dissing a lot of people in the church,
it's just if somebody that you're related to
is talking shit about what you're all into,
then they become a little bit of a scapegoat.
And so, you know, I'm sensitive to that.
And that's in some ways,
that's kind of what the song to them is about.
Well, we can leave that part at that.
Cause I do think I would like to,
I'm gonna hear the whole album at some point.
And then if we can kind of, I'm sure we'll revisit this.
But you know, in terms of when we started talking about it,
I was trying to remember when that was.
Do you remember?
Because I think there were like hints of,
I'm writing some songs and I just remember
the first time it kind of registered was,
maybe you had mentioned it a few times,
but you had mentioned an EP.
I think that's the first time I was like, what?
You just, you're gonna, okay,
so you're not just writing songs,
you're gonna release songs.
You know, like, what were you thinking there?
Because again, it's like,
what you just told everybody for the past hour
was not the entry point for our conversation.
We never sat down and you said, you know,
hey, you gave me this whole story.
So to me, my experience was, oh, he's doing this thing
he doesn't wanna talk about,
but then he feels like he needs,
apparently it's gaining momentum
because he's talking about making an EP,
so now he's mentioning it to me.
And I respect that, like I have an appreciation for it now,
given what you've said, it's like,
it's a deeply personal exercise that is an application
of therapy that then you would obviously talk to Jesse
about, you know, in the same way that there's plenty
of stuff in my personal journey, in my heart, in my therapy sessions
that I process myself, first of all.
And then there's much of that,
the vast, vast majority that I'll bring,
that Christy and I will discuss and I'll bring her into.
And then, so I recognize that then there's certain things
at certain times
that I'll bring you into it and it's not even a calculation
of I'm keeping things from you, it's just that like,
you know, there's only so many hours in a day
and even though we spend the majority of them together,
we're always occupied with the things that we're doing.
Jessie asks me multiple times a week,
did you talk to Link about so and so?
I'm like, baby, no, because we talked about
every other thing, you know what I'm saying?
But-
Because we're constantly doing other things.
I recognize all that.
Yeah.
But my experience with it was,
it was just a little thing here, a little thing there,
an EP, an album.
a little thing here, a little thing there, an EP, an album.
And so I'm like, without having the full story,
I think there was a lot of, well, I'm just left to like, okay, how am I gonna respond to this?
Yeah, and again, none of that was calculated.
I mean, if I think back and try to figure out
why that was the way that it happened,
I think there's a part of me that believes,
and this is just kind of the way my brain works,
is like sometimes talking about something,
the only thing that is good
that comes from talking about something
is talking yourself out of it.
And so I don't like to talk a lot about things.
I just like to keep doing them.
So you're saying if you would have talked to me about it,
you would have talked yourself out of it?
I think that, again, I haven't thought about this at all,
but I think that there's a fear that like,
because this doesn't make any sense,
because I don't have time for this,
because this is not necessarily a good business decision,
if we start talking about it to then like talk about it
from a strategic standpoint or a positioning standpoint,
it may just float away, it may just not be a priority.
But for me it was, this is a personal thing
that I'm like, I'm revisiting on my own time.
It was up until very, very recently,
I never did any of this during work hours.
This past couple of months,
there's been a couple of days where I was like,
I have to go record this or I have to do that.
That's kind of gotten into my regular schedule.
But because it was very much something
that I just kept pushing forward in my free time,
so to speak, free time, air quotes,
I think it was, there was just this unspoken,
I don't wanna sit down
and have a real serious conversation about this
because I don't wanna slow it down
because it's gaining so much momentum personally.
Not that I thought that you would talk me out of it.
That's not really what I'm saying.
But I hear you saying that if we talked about it,
it would very quickly get to like,
what is the feasibility of this?
There's not a lot of positives to it in terms of like
mythical unless you're really talking about,
I wanna do this as a solo artist and this,
if it became some mythical endeavor
from a business standpoint,
there's a lot more questions that all feel like roadblocks
to this personal project if we had that conversation.
And that's why I did,
that's why I took a long time. From a business standpoint.
I didn't talk to anyone here about it for the longest time
for the same reasons.
It was like, guys, you may interpret this as a selfish act
if I start talking about it.
And you're like, well, we're all working so busy
and you're off making your little album.
So you didn't bring it up because it could be perceived
as like a threat to the business. I bring it up because it could be perceived
as like a threat to the business. Yeah, now I firmly believe that it is not
and I have a lot of reasons for believing that it's not.
I mean, I think that the way I kind of analyze that
is it's funny because what we have is incredibly unusual.
is funny because what we have is incredibly unusual.
I actually can't think of a entertainment duo where both people are qualified entertainers
and literally every expression of that
is only in the context of that.
Almost every duo that there's an example of
is just like, oh yeah, and he does his little thing,
his little side hobby thing, it's like super common, right?
And, but then, oh, but the main thing they do
is the stuff that they do together.
I always thought that the reason that
that hadn't been the case up until now is twofold.
Number one, it's like we just never have time for anything,
and number two, it just two, I never had an idea
that it made sense to go and do by myself until this.
So it isn't like I've been sitting around thinking,
I find it unusual that we haven't done anything solo,
independently of each other for all these years.
But I also find it, it kind of makes sense because
there hasn't been, neither of us have had something where it's just like,
I've gotta get this into the world.
This is the first thing that came along.
To me, it doesn't feel like a threat to what we have.
If anything, it feels like, because it's not a replacement
of anything that we're doing, in some ways it feels like
another facet to the Rhett side of Rhett and Link.
Do you know what I'm getting at?
Yeah, I think that there was,
so was this a threat to the business strategy
of what we're doing?
But then there's another part that's like,
if I bring this up,
will Link perceive it as a threat to our creative partnership?
And I thought that-
Or more, or our friendship, I don't know.
Well, and again, while it wasn't calculated,
if you were to ask me like, okay, well, all right,
we're gonna have to have a really long conversation
about this that is going to, again, I didn't think this,
but I may have been thinking it subconsciously.
It's just like, okay, if we have a conversation about this
at a really early stage, it may really just get bogged down.
You know, because now in my mind,
what went from being this thing that was gaining momentum,
it's so difficult to get things to happen
and bring things into the world.
We know that, right?
And when I subconsciously perceive
that there might be a conversation or some point
that becomes a point of impasse,
I'm like, I don't wanna have that.
I don't wanna do that.
Like, let's let this actually begin to become something
and then we can have a conversation about it
versus having a conversation about it a year ago.
You know?
Not that we didn't talk about it,
not that you didn't know about it,
but it wasn't like, hey, let's sit down
and really hash this thing out.
Because in some ways, the other part of my brain
was thinking, there's nothing to hash out.
Like, I'm doing this thing, if you were doing this thing,
I'd be like, that's awesome, that's cool, man, do it.
Now, if suddenly we can't do something that we wanna do
because you're doing this, then we can have a conversation.
But if that's not the case, just keep going.
You know, if it's making you a better, more fulfilled person, then that makes you a better, more fulfilled
comedy partner, business partner, and friend.
If you're pursuing your passion and doing something
that's bringing you joy in life.
So I think that that's how I feel about it.
Honestly, that's why I feel like it's a healthy thing
for me and ultimately for us because anything that's healthy for me
is healthy for us and vice versa.
Anything that's helpful for you is healthy for us.
Yeah, I mean, when I hear that, I'm like, is that true?
There has to be an exception to that rule, right?
It's like, could that just be true across the board?
I actually, that's my gut reaction to that statement.
I think that, you know,
my preference would have been to talk about it earlier,
but I think it's, again,
this is more about me than it is about you.
It's not like,
so because I think that that's true,
because there's, you know,
yeah, it's like, if I hear you're making an EP
or doing this thing, the first thing I'm gonna think,
the first thing I did think was not,
I'm so excited for you, I want to celebrate this.
It's like, what does this mean for us?
Yeah. You know?
And it taps into some insecurity.
And I know that there's, you know,
I don't wanna overblow this whole abandonment issue thing,
but it's there, right?
So it's, you know, that's part of my process,
but I mean,
we had had conversations about this related to other stuff.
So actually this project didn't bring this to a head
as much as like, we don't have to get into the details of it
but my response to this project, this album of yours,
was shaped by the experience that we had on Ronstadt.
Because that was, the genesis of that project was messy.
Right, like literally like the first email and slacks
and stuff that was going around about analyzing
the opportunity to partner and work on Ronstadt
and be attached to it.
You know, the way that that started was just messy.
And it was something that then, you know,
there were, we had to work through it, right?
Well, meaning that when we were first approached
about that, the ask was, can Rhett play Ronstadt?
Which was not a thing that we had.
Like we don't go out pursuing opportunities.
Now we may do, we both, we don't have it done a lot lately,
but we both audition for roles that if we were to,
we'll never get one, but we do it kind of for fun
and maybe one would come and we,
oh Link's gonna be on this show
or Link's gonna make a guest appearance
and he's not going in as Rhett and Link
is going in as Link and vice versa.
So that's been a conversation,
but that was being brought into Mythical
as a Mythical project.
Be like, oh, Mythical's gonna actually help produce this,
but the ask was for Rhett to play Ronstadt,
and so how do we make this a Rhett and Link thing?
And that became the conversation,
as opposed to, oh, it's gonna be a Mythical thing
that Rhett is doing.
Yeah, and then the way that it became a conversation
was just not smooth, you know?
Yeah.
That we've talked about it and we have learned
that we would have done things differently, right?
Yeah.
So I don't wanna, you know,
I just feel like that gives context to this
because I feel like by moving through that
and growing through that,
we were able to articulate our desires.
Like you were able to articulate some of your desires for,
well, you know, it's,
do we have to do every single thing together?
You know, we started having conversations about this.
I think there's a whole other podcast in here.
I'm just gonna allude to it.
And then, yeah, and then I'm bringing to the table,
well, you know, very early on,
we made this choice that we weren't gonna,
everything we're gonna do, we're gonna do together.
So it's like, okay, now are we revisiting that?
And what does that mean?
And how far does that go?
Well, it turns out it's still, it's not that drastic.
It's just that because of my makeup
and what I'm bringing to the table, it's scarier for me.
And I think there is, you know,
in me giving off that energy,
I think when it comes around to this project,
I mean, you're probably gonna have this sense
that I'm gonna be more concerned about it
than excited first.
But we benefited from going through
getting on the same page on the Ronstadt project,
getting on the same page about just our approach
to things at Mythical and how, you know,
there's so much in this that I just,
I know I'm flirting with it,
but I guess the point I'm making right now is that
we really had a series of good conversations
that got us more on the same page.
You know, having the mantra of saying,
when in doubt, talk it out, you know,
is something that we really benefited from.
So when, and ironically,
a lot of you doing the songwriting and stuff
was happening in parallel to all this,
but when it came to a point of,
you were ready to talk about it,
then I was in a much better place to receive it.
And that was even without the benefit
of the entire backstory that you just shared
or like the personal process of it.
But seeing it as like,
not seeing it as a threat
to what we're doing is something that I can say
with, to the 98th degree that I can, you know?
And that's saying a lot.
And I do think that it's,
if it hasn't been obvious up until this point,
so this is not me saying that I want to go
and be a full-time musician.
Right.
I'm not touring.
I don't have time to tour.
Even if I wanted to go around playing these songs.
I'm not saying I'll never play these songs for someone,
for a crowd, I'm just saying that that's not,
the intention isn't like now I'm a musician
and that's what I do.
It's more like hey, this has always been
very much a hobby of mine and it'll be cool
to have this sort of ongoing thing
because I expect to release more music
because it's like hey, I wrote a song,
let's record it, let's release it.
It's something that I can responsibly fit into my schedule
and not drop the ball with what we're doing here.
But just that this isn't like I'm going to pursue a career
as a musician and that's what I do.
It's more like, well, I was already a musician
and now I'm releasing some music that is just mine.
Yeah, and I also started to realize
that over the course of the pandemic,
when I started the listening party broadcast on Instagram,
to take my personal creative outlet
of listening to music, making playlists,
and turn that into something that involved our audience,
it was something that involved our audience.
You know, it was something that I didn't calculate. And then at the moments when I talked to you about it,
I had that sheepish, like, this is not really a thing.
Cause it, first of all, it wasn't,
but I felt like we didn't have like
just a clear conversation about it.
It was more like, I'm doing this thing.
It'll be fun.
Oh, I'm gonna do 21 of these, as it turns out.
And I think you're different than me in that I do think
you were more inclined to be encouraging about it
because you were doing other stuff too.
You saw a parallel.
I mean, did you?
I mean, I-
I see a parallel now and that's helpful for me.
I guess ultimately what I'll say is that like,
a lot of these things don't cross my mind
unless someone else brings them up.
Okay, yeah.
You know, it's just my disposition is different.
And so like, I haven't thought about the fact
that you're also doing your own podcast.
Right, and you know what?
You saying that doesn't hurt my feelings because I know you.
Yeah.
But I think there was a point
when it could have hurt my feelings
and it might've just been two years, three years ago.
You're saying that the fact that it doesn't cross my mind
that you're doing a project.
Yeah, because it's like, right. Yeah, because. Because you're like, well, I would care that you're doing a project. Yeah, because it's like, right.
Yeah, because.
Because you're like, well,
I would care if you were doing a podcast.
Right, right.
Yeah, and I think ultimately, for me, it's like,
I know that we both have so many independent interests
and desires and things that we want to do and accomplish
that if those things can happen and not sacrifice
all the things that we want to do together,
then that's a beautiful thing.
I mean, these things are, this is different
because your podcast with your dad
is a mythical production.
Well, I was talking about the listening party.
Yeah. Which I think the thing that's the same is also like me
saying, oh, you know what?
I'm pursuing the skill of being a DJ.
If that means I'm gonna actually get a gig
being a DJ somewhere sometime, you know, on my own time,
I'm sure it'd be something that you would celebrate
and you wouldn't think twice about it in the way
that I might have thought twice about your album.
Because it's just like, it's a hobby, it's an outlet,
it's a side project that who knows,
still might lead to something.
I do think we can talk about that.
But the thing about,
just to put a finer point on me being inspired
by your exercise is that in a way that we're different,
like I haven't given myself permission.
Like you say, we both have all these aspirations,
but we do not have them to the same level.
And that's something that I am drawing inspiration from
that I could grow in that area.
Like the podcast with my dad is a great outlet.
Like it's been a highlight of my week
whenever we get together and do it.
It's a creative outlet.
It is part of Mythical.
It's something that we are doing that, you know,
we split it down the middle, you know?
Well, but it wasn't my idea, you know?
As far as I can recall, it was Stevie's idea.
And I was like, well, this sounds like a great idea
that I'm never going to do, was my first reaction.
And then when she kept talking about it,
definitely you, then my next reaction was,
this still sounds like a decent idea
that I'm never going to do.
You had to be kind of dragged into it.
Yeah, and even, you know, it's like when,
even once my dad was on board and it was happening,
like I was like, this isn't really,
we're not really gonna do this.
It's like, I didn't give myself permission to say,
do I wanna do this?
Or I do wanna do this.
And it might fail, we might fall flat on our face,
but I'm gonna do it because I'm excited about it.
You know, that's a, I think your encouragement
and like following this journey for you has been,
it's gotten me, it's gotten me off the dime a little bit.
Not in a, oh shit, if he's gonna do something,
I gotta do something.
But actually in a, oh shit, if he's gonna do something, I gotta do something, but actually in a creative outlet,
just tapping into my desires kind of way,
in like a mostly pure motive kind of way, you know?
It's not like a tit for tat thing.
So I'm actually like listening to that song
and like being able to celebrate it
and celebrate what's happening
with this project is something that I'm proud of for me.
So it's not something that I'm conjuring anymore
out of some sense of obligation.
Right, well, and to clarify,
the James and the Shane project is not a part of Mythical,
but the reason that it's not a part of Mythical
is because I did not want to make anyone here
have to work on it.
Cara, our personal assistant, has been helping,
but beyond that, very few people have been involved
and every single expense has come out of my pocket,
which I am reasonably certain I will not make money from this project.
Yeah, you didn't want me to lose money.
But then, hey, if this gets wildly successful,
like, I mean, you probably gonna have to cut me in somehow.
We'll have to talk about it.
Yeah, so that's the only reason,
and it's also, this is not a core,
a funny podcast with your dad is a part of the core
sort of focus of Mythical.
A serious country album about deconstruction is not part of the core sort of focus of Mythical. A serious country album about deconstruction
is not part of the core mission of Mythical.
So there's a number of reasons
that it's not a Mythical thing.
And that also is one of the reasons
that I don't really work on it here
or with the people at this company
and I work on it outside of my normal responsibilities here.
But we're at a point in our career
when we can do things
that are associated with our careers
that don't involve the other person,
but will be a part of Mythical.
Of course.
Like, so Dispatches from Myrtle Beach
is a great example of that.
Yeah, and I mean-
And then, you know, there may be other things.
There should be other things.
Well, so one of the things we haven't talked about,
I know we're going a little bit long, but it's fine.
I think that there, I mean, I'm interested
how you feel about dispatches from Myrtle Beach
in regards to this because one of the things,
first of all, I get so creatively frustrated
because as much as we put out into the world,
there's a lot more that doesn't make it out into the world
because of limitations, because we're conceptualizing things
that need to be greenlit by people
and they need to be financed
and they have to go through pitch meetings,
et cetera, et cetera.
And some of the ideas that I'm most passionate about
that I feel are most representative of us creatively
are things that we can't just put out on YouTube for free.
They have to be financed and it's a different model.
And very few of those things have made it
to where people can enjoy them.
Yeah.
With music, it's no one else,
like if I can get somebody to,
I don't even have to get somebody to produce it.
Like I could just record it, you know,
at the Creative House and release it.
Like it, and you can just go through Spotify
or what, you just distribute your music.
There's been something so freeing and life giving
in just something happening, like having an idea
and then it can just be birthed and given to the world.
But part of that has been doing it independently
and it not being a collaborative thing.
To me, there's been, it's made me appreciate
the things that are collaborative.
And I've also just, hey, this is on me.
Like I gotta finish this.
I have to be the one to make the call.
I've got to make these decisions and move this forward.
And then also like do a bunch of things
that I haven't done in years.
Like I did the, I designed the artwork for the,
for the first single.
I don't design artwork.
Yeah, I was very surprised.
But I was like, I don't wanna pay somebody else.
I'm paying so many people to do so many parts of this.
I don't wanna pay somebody else to do this.
It feels like I can figure this out.
But there's been something very rewarding
about just conceptualizing and executing something
and putting it out into the world on my own.
I haven't done that in so long.
Yeah. There's been something
personally rewarding in doing that.
Not because it's like,
oh, finally I get to do something on my own.
It's just like, oh no, I made a decision to do this
on my own and it's been life-giving
in a different way than a collaboration.
Yeah, I think that fans of ours,
mythical beasts will ask,
yeah, but I mean, why, I mean, there's backup,
there's harmony.
Why didn't you get him to sing some,
why didn't you get him to sing some harmony on that?
And that was very specifically a calculated decision.
Talk about that.
Because we haven't talked about that,
but I'm reading between the lines and I-
Yeah, because when I sing melody and you sing harmony,
that's a Rhett and Link song.
That's a Rhett and Link song.
This isn't a Rhett and Link project.
And I don't want people to think that it needs
to be its own thing, right?
It doesn't need to be like,
oh, Rhett and Link also made a country album.
Right. No, no, no.
It's not a Rhett and Link thing.
It's a Rhett thing and that's okay.
And you know what?
That's good is what I'm saying.
Sure, you would've been great at it.
You know, I think that,
but even from a sonic standpoint,
I want it to feel like its own thing.
Me and you singing together is a very specific,
great and beautiful thing, but it's a Rhett and Link thing.
I don't wanna take the Rhett and Link thing
and spread it over into this.
That cheapens the Rhett and Link thing
and it cheapens the James and the Shane thing.
You know?
And so I want this to have a signature sound,
so like in that song that we listened to today,
that's Derek singing, he's a great vocalist.
That's him singing the backup lyrics,
but there are songs where I sing my own harmony,
when it makes sense thematically.
There are songs where Jesse sings harmony,
where it makes sense thematically.
But the thing that, if I had a song about you on the album,
then it would make sense for you,
you know what I'm saying?
Then it would make sense for you to sing the song.
It was like, to me it was about theme.
Unless it's about me being dead.
And standing on its own.
And it was like, hey, like I,
at one point it became almost out of principle.
Like I don't want Link to hear this until it's done
because it's not a Rhett and Link thing, not out of spite,
but because of all the reasons that we just covered.
And it's like, I don't wanna complicate that.
I don't wanna complicate that and muddy that.
If it really is a Rhett thing, then let it be a Rhett thing
and something that then I can just kinda present to you
and you can enjoy.
And honestly, I've been treating Dispatches from Myrtle Beach
the exact same way.
Like I haven't, I am, at the time that we're recording this,
the first episode's about to drop
and that's when I'm gonna listen to it for the first time.
I'm gonna listen to it as a fan
of listening to you and your dad talk,
not as somebody who's a producer
and is gonna be like,
well, let me give you some feedback on that.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
And to me, there's something healthy about that separation.
I respect that.
I understand that.
Is there anything else that you wanted to share?
I don't think so.
I mean, obviously I'll use this time to say
that I am genuinely interested
in a lot of people hearing this.
So it gets to the people who it will impact
in the way that I would like to see them impacted.
So do all the things that you do with the musicians
that you like, you know, listen to it.
Follow me on those places.
I'm not, I am creating like.
I think you should refer to a third person.
I'm creating James and the Shane profiles
in different places, but only as placeholders
so people don't steal them.
But all updates about this are gonna come through
all my initial social channels.
So you can go follow those accounts over there
just so somebody will be following them,
but it's primarily gonna just be done through all my stuff.
But I would like, it would do nothing,
it would do my heart very, very well
for somebody out there who likes this,
the only reason they're listening to what I'm doing
is because they like the music.
And then they're like, this isn't,
this guy's not singing about the stuff
that I typically listen to in country music.
This guy seems to be challenging some of the things that-
It would be cool if it developed a life of its own.
Yeah, and so, and that again is,
that's my desire is that this thing has a home
in people who will relate to the story that I'm telling.
And so if you think you know somebody who is like,
never sent anything to this person
because I know they're not gonna like X, Y, and Z
that these guys have done.
If you're like, oh, they might like this, send it to them.
So that's what I would ask the mythical beast
is just like, give it a chance.
Don't see it as a threat.
Hopefully what we've talked about today has,
if that was your concern,
that you understand that this is about personal expression
and ultimately a healthy thing that is not an existential threat to mythical
or anything red-linked, if anything, an enhancement to what we're doing here.
But also share it with people who you think might like it.
That's all I'll say.
Awesome.
All right.
I think you're supposed to have a wreck.
Are you wrecking your own single?
Man, I can't.
It seems like you kind of have to.
Just do it.
Just wreck your own single.
Yeah, yeah.
I recommend that you go over.
What's it called?
It's called Believe Me.
And at some point, I am going to have,
there's going to be some James and the Shame merch. I don't
know if that'll be the case by the time this goes up, but there's gonna be some of that as well.
So you can spread the word. G-strings.
I'll just say, just follow me where you listen to your music and listen, put it in a playlist, whatever you do with music.
All right.
Next week, we'll talk at you.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
Excuse me, sirs.
Where is my Ear Biscuits this week?
Where's my Ear Biscuits this week?
How am I supposed to function without my Ear Biscuits this week?
Thank you, bye.
Hey, Red Link.
It's your boy, Sean, here.
We are currently stuck in some random-ass town in Montana,
right near Yellowstone,
because the only roads out are currently flooded in a flood that they've never seen before ever here.
We just happen to be here at the right time.
We're doing it.
I saw the tweet and I just wanted to say
I was today years old when I learned that
Jack and Rose from the Titanic aren't real people.
They're made up characters, they don't exist.
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click on the playlist on the right.
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click on the playlist to the left.
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Thanks for being your mythical best.