One Song - Introducing "Diallo & LUXXURY Talk About Music" on Patreon
Episode Date: April 23, 2026Hey One Song Nation! We're bringing you a special episode pulled from Diallo & LUXXURY's new Patreon. In this episode, the guys talk about Coachella, break down the viral KEXP performance from Angine ...De Poitrine and react to some new music by Earl Sweatshirt. For more bonus content from Diallo and LUXXURY, go to patreon.com/dialloluxxury and subscribe today! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey guys, welcome to One Song, and this is actually a very special episode because Luxury and I talked,
and we thought, hey, why don't we take an episode from our Patreon and bring it out from behind the paywall and drop it into the feed here so you can get a sense of what kind of things we're talking about over at the Patreon.
I'm talking about Music Discovery.
You know, Earl Sweatshirt just came out with a new song.
We talk about it.
We talk about Cochella, give our thoughts on that.
We even have my man talking about the interpolation that goes on on the song Apotech by Bruno Mars.
And Rose. So there's a lot going on.
That's right. So check it out because we are finally doing live hangouts.
We're doing a Discord. We're turning this podcast into a community.
We've wanted to do it forever and we've finally done it. So please go over and join now.
It's patreon.com slash diallo luxury. That's right, patreon.com slash diallo luxury.
And we'll be back next week with a brand new episode. But for now, enjoy this.
One of our first episodes over at the Patreon.
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luxury. This week we're talking about Coachella
Weekend 1. We're going to have
reactions to a divisive, or perhaps
a divisive, new band.
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All right, first up, we have to talk about Coachella Weekend One luxury.
You'll be there next week.
I'm so jealous because I don't think I'm going to make it out to the desert this year.
Did you watch any of the performance this weekend?
Are you going in blind?
Like, hey, come on, surprise me.
Well, it's impossible to go in blind.
It's across my feet, little bits and pieces, little clips and chunks.
But for the most part, when I see something, I swipe away.
I swipe right away.
But I have heard.
So I'm definitely going Saturday.
I won't be able to go Friday.
And then if Saturday just is too much, it was too much fun, I'll go Sunday.
But Saturday, I'm definitely excited for the strokes.
Like, that is a reason to go on, period.
Interpol, Boys Noise, and frankly...
I love that Interpol is back.
I saw Interpol when they did it like in 2004, somewhere like a long...
2003, maybe a long time ago, back when it was still like, I think, $50 a ticket.
I've never seen them, so I can't wait to finally see them.
It'll be amazing.
Wait, I take that back.
I think I might have seen them at an earlier hotel.
I'm at the age where the brain fog is like, did I watch a video of that or was I there to see it live?
I'm not only sure anymore.
You know, that makes sense.
back when it was just a one weekend affair.
Right, right.
I saw them perform on a Sunday,
and, you know, to hear, like, you know,
turn on the bright lights on a Sunday
as the sun was going down.
Hell.
And the desert was, like, really, really beautiful.
But, you know, that kind of reminds me
how much Cochella has changed.
I've said many times, I was at the first,
I was there from 99, the very first year,
all the way through 2005.
Yeah.
And 2005 left me a little disenchanted,
so I felt no pressure to go 2006.
We know that's the year thatapunk came out.
And I was there and you would have met me.
And life had to have changed forever.
I know.
We would have somehow found each other in the crowd.
But that's the difference between then and now.
I also noticed that, you know, like when Billy Corrigan came out as a surprise guest during Somers.
And I really like Sommers.
That's from Smashing Pumpkins.
Yes.
Yeah, Billy Corgan from Smashing Pumpkins.
I really like SOMBers music.
I think 12 to 12.
Great song.
Saw for the first time on SNL this year.
And I was like, wow, this is a.
It's a good song.
And he was really excited to see Billy.
The crowd a little less so.
You know, maybe we can play a little clip of it.
I just, the same thing happened to blur last year.
Like, you know, you got to realize most of the people.
Yeah, they only knew TikTok snippets, the younger crowd.
It's a generational thing.
Like, the people who would get excited about blur aren't at Coachella anymore.
They're at home, you know, stuck in their ankles, you know, trying to get their joints to hurt less.
I'll be honest with you.
I might not go where not for the fact that I'm not, you know,
Not to brag too much, but I do as a KCRW DJ, get the free tickets and the free parking hookup.
So I was like, okay, it's making it easy and I can take my sign.
Wow.
That's like the entire compensation package at this point.
Basically, it's what I'm earning from KCRW.
No shade.
But basically.
No, I mean, listen, that's like a $5,000 free parking and co-in-chella?
Honestly, that is what is pushing me to go.
Plus, being able to share it with my son that Nikki and I are going to go.
That's awesome.
And we're going to go see Pink Panther us together because we're both fans.
of that. The concern that I have...
Let's go. Oh, my God, I cannot wait.
The concern that I have is if I drag him
successfully to something like the strokes
that he's like, eh, whatever, and they don't
deliver, which the rumor has it,
they semi-delivered, then he's going to be like,
dad, thumbs down, you lose points.
Like, you know what I mean? Like, it could backfire in terms of his
look, not his taste. His taste is
inniculate, but there are great
bands that don't always deliver, right?
That's just the way it works. And I don't want him
to be unsold for a great
band like The Strokes, one of my all-time favorites.
I can't wait. I've never seen them. This will be the first time I get to see the strokes.
Are there any other people that you haven't ever seen that you think, oh, I'm going to
try and pop my head.
Well, there's two artists that are up and coming, kind of lower in the bill. And then there's
one that's high up on the bill. I'm stoked. So Lambrieney Girls, that's a band that I've played.
Yes, you've mentioned them on the show. I've done a one more song with them. They're great.
They're kind of like, yeah, yeah, yeah, as meets. I like a lot. What do they call it? Oh, my God.
I'm facing on the Australian punk rock girl's name.
Amel, Amel and the Snifferes.
They're kind of like a cross between those two.
It's like that edge where punk starts to get into stoner rock,
a little bit of metal, a little bit of extra crunch.
But the delivery is very shoddy, shoddy.
I fucking love Lambriny girls.
And Echo Vandal, who is also a recent discovery.
So I'm going to check both of those artists out with my son, hopefully.
And then I got to say I'm kind of pumped for Bieber.
I'm kind of pumped for headliner
Justin Bieber.
Like that's kind of dope.
That's kind of dope to me.
Well, do you know what he's been doing?
Have you seen what he was doing?
Yes, yes.
He's been on stage with his laptop
and pulling up the early videos and so he.
I bet you he does something different week too.
This is one of those things
that's actually kind of crazy about
because all the press
and a lot of the tastemakers
and influencers
they go the first weekend.
But increasingly people are changing it up
that second weekend.
They're doing something different.
I wonder if you'll still do the YouTube thing on the second one.
For those who didn't watch it, he pulled out his laptop and he sat up there.
I love Katie Perry's comments.
They're like, oh gosh, he doesn't have ads.
Great.
We don't have to sit here and watch the ad.
It's like YouTube premium or Twitch.
Yeah.
He's basically like Twitch streamer.
He's like, you know, W and chat.
Like it's all kinds of chat streaming.
He's Kai Zanat on stage.
And you just feel like you're in a basement hanging out with Justin Bieber while he's just like
surfing.
the whole show, though. That's not the whole show, to be fair. But I think it's just a chunk of it. It sounds kind of fun.
That was the part that got people talking. I guess some people didn't love it, but to a person, people said that they thought that they had never seen that many people gathered at the main stage for anybody. They think that it literally had reached, you know, this breaking point of, not breaking point. That sounds bad. But like, they've just never seen that many people try to get to the main stage.
And I think that's part of what happened with the strokes set is that they're sharing the stage.
There's what, what, five, six, eight is, I forget.
But, like, there were people camped out for Bieber, like, in advance, and they were not interested in the strokes.
And Julian Casablancus felt that energy or the lack thereof.
And I think that led to what I've been hearing is, like, a lacklester performance.
But it's a give and take things like you were saying.
If the energy isn't coming from the audience because they're all believers who are uninterested in the strokes,
that sucks. It sucks to be the strokes.
So I'll be the strokes fan in the front row going,
yeah.
Just like that's one. Yeah. I think
like it's the same thing that happened. I think there was
somebody who went on right before Katzai in one of the
tents and the Katzai fans were all crammed into the tent
before then. Can I just say
let people see the artist who they came to see?
I mean, I know that, you know, again, it's generational.
I would be one of those strokes fans like,
oh, that's too busy over there. I can't see this.
I don't know how much I want to.
to push through because there's going to be well the thing is I was going to say there's it's not
Bieber is like 30 something now so his fan base isn't exactly like Gen Z.
They're not whippersnappers but they're still young enough to be there they're the youngest
yeah they're millennials I think there's like technically the youngest of young young millennials in
gen Z but at least they're not the TikTok generation for whom they only know 10 seconds of every song
like it's not that bad like there might be some actual strokes fans but anyway we'll find out
when we get there. I'm stoked for that. I'm kind of stoked for, I mean, I'm very stoked for
David Byrne, big talking heads fan. I hear that's a great show. I hear that he has some amazing,
you know, some amazing visuals. One group that I think we share that if I was going, I'd definitely
check out is a nine-ish noise. Oh, hell yeah. Wait, what night is that on? Because I can't
remember, I remember wanting to see it, but I don't know. Thought that was Saturday? I'm the wrong
person to ask. I'm looking at the bill right now. It's boys noise is on the bill for
Saturday. Oh, 9-inch noise is
Friday. I don't think I'm going to make it.
I don't think I'm going to make it Friday. That's
Sabrina Carpenter, the XX
9-inch noise. I mean, look, it's turn
style and disclosure. It's a great
lineup. Like, I should go.
Turnstile and disclosure? What a
freaking cool. I still have dreams
that one day we will
you and I will end up somehow
together in a tent
on stage at Coachella
or maybe one of the offshoots. I still
fundamentally believe that. It's not over. It's not
over.
It's not over.
Maybe we'll be doing
Bob Baker's
marionettes next year.
We'll have the puppet
rave, go.
Yeah, yeah.
I'll say the most
embarrassing thing I felt
for Billy Corgan
was when he came out
and someone was like,
it's Billy Corgan
of the smashing pumpkins.
And Billy did
the Jesus hands out
like, here I am.
Yeah.
And like, the response
was muted.
Oh,
poor Billy.
And he stood there like,
you know like jack like he was expecting a big jesus moment yes like he's jack standing at the bow of the
titanic it didn't really uh i was picturing giant jesus at the top in rio de jrano like that
he did that pose and you know it's it's classic billy if you listen following this show have a lot of
empathy for a bigoregan segment every single time i think there's so much to break down with billy he's
really what he embodies is really important for people to understand and maybe to eternally never
fully understand. But his need for attention is understandable and normal. But like it doesn't match
the success that we see him having. It's like, well, you would think that with the amount of success
and kudos and record sales. And the amount of talent and great songs, great, great songs, primarily
from the 90s, but great songs. But there's still a neediness that we pick up on. Yes. Yes. You know.
You get the sense that he still wants to be that guy.
And it was very funny.
Go back and watch it.
It was pretty hilarious.
But, Billy, we love you.
There's enough love for you.
Billy, come on the show.
We will give you the attention.
Not only is there, oh, my God, not only did we need...
We might give you a hard time, though.
You said some stuff.
We might give you a hard time to you.
Not only did we do a loving tribute on the episode.
We did go back and check the one song archives.
We did...
What do we do?
Cherab Rock.
But that was the origin of us
Our dispute, which between the two of us
A loving dispute, what song we should do,
led to like, okay, let's start doing two-parters
or let's start doing the same band twice.
So we will do a 1979-1979-1979 episode
one of these days.
Because that is Giala's favorite song.
We will get to it, we promise.
Oh, my favorite smashing is still tonight, tonight.
Okay, maybe we'll do three.
I would do that.
Maybe it'll be that one.
Maybe it'll be the big hit.
Maybe it'll be 1979.
and I, we will see.
But Billy, James,
any of the other members of the group,
we'd love to.
By the way, do you think that Billy Corrigan
is actually the long-lost brother of Bill Burr?
Bill Burr, I mean,
they don't seem to dispute it as much
as you would think, so who knows?
I can't tell if it's a put-on or not,
but when they're in the same room,
doing what was,
it does seem like it was set up as a joke
when they're reacting negatively
to the situation.
But them together, like,
oh, wait, that makes a lot of sense.
visually, the abrasiveness, right?
The dates kind of line up.
The caustic abrasive rage for no real reason.
Like, with all the success.
Our dad was a vampire.
Yeah, no, I do it.
All right, next step, we're going to talk about
interpolation.
How have I not done that yet?
How have I not done that yet on the Patreon?
Well, here it is the debut of the Patreon
Interpolation Conversation.
We've been wanting to talk about this for
some time, and that's part of the fun of this Patreon. All the things that didn't fit on the other
show we do, we can finally have a home for. One of them is to go deeper on some of the silly
rules about the Grammys and some inconsistencies. And one of those is, well, let me just start
with this. The past year, Rose and Bruno Mars were nominated for a Grammy for their song,
Apita. Not Apatatat. Not APT, but Apatat. Which is a great tune, by the way. It's so catchy,
so hooky, the world loves it to the tune of, I don't know how many billions it's up to now.
But it interpolates very clearly, Mickey, and for those of you who don't know,
oh, Mickey, you're so fine, you're so fine, you blow my mind.
It was originally, it was recorded by Tony Basil in 1981, but it is itself an interpolation
of a song called Kitty by a band called Racy, which doesn't sound right, but that is the name,
R-A-C-E-Y.
And so R-A-C-E-Y-O-O-P-E-Y. So R-E-E-Y-O-O-E-E-Y, and. So R-R-E-E-E-E-E-E-D-E-E-E-E-E, and so
Racy did Kitty, but Tony did Mickey.
Right.
It's so funny.
I mean, and it's virtually a cover to the tune of Mickey being 100% credited to Chapman and Chin, the 70s songwriting and production do, who did a lot of, like, hits for a lot of the glam rock bands.
Yeah.
I think they also worked with.
You can hear the glam rock in Mickey.
It's a lot of glam rock.
Boom.
Yeah, boom.
That's a very 1974 kind of groove.
Yeah.
But the point of bringing all.
of these artists and writers up, and in this case, it's just the two writers, is that when the
song Apata was nominated for a Grammy, Mickey co-writer Mike Chapman wasn't included in
the nomination because of these convoluted rules about the Grammys, which arbitrarily
limit the writers, those who are considered writers, to those who are part of the new song,
the newest iteration in this case of a song that's had three lines.
So it's crazy that they cut out the songwriter who's in the publishing credits.
It's not like there's no like secret that Mike Chapman, that Chapman and Chin in this case were participants in these three hit songs.
But by the time it gets to these most recent Grammys, they're dropped kind of from history.
They're sort of erased from the story.
Right.
Which I have a problem with.
Well, I think it's also like this gets a little bit into inside baseball, but that's one of the things that two music nerds like us like to do is get inside the machine.
and see how it works.
I feel like this is one of those Grammy rules
that needs to be updated,
but the Grammys is not known to move fast, nor...
You know, like, it's basically, like,
for a long time, interpolation was more seen as, like,
sampling and more a thing that hip-hop did.
Over time, pop started doing it more.
Right.
And you see it in so many pop songs.
We've talked about this, you know,
in relation to how Beyonce and other all,
artists will sort of go out of their way, even if they're writing sideways from somewhere else,
they'll go out of their way to reach out to the songwriters.
Exactly.
And almost over-credit them just to make sure, yeah.
If you think for even a second that that person might think that we were thinking about
their song, we're going to reach out in advance and just go on and head you off at the
past there, yeah, for sure.
Yeah.
And because the song of the year category is for songwriting, it just seems really weird to us
that for some reason you would leave the people who came up with the original idea.
Right. It doesn't make any sense at all.
It doesn't make any sense at all. Yeah.
I don't think it makes a lot of sense.
What is it, is the logic behind it? Is it to conserve statuettes?
Like, they only have so many to give out.
There's only so much gold.
Right. There's only so much.
We need away from the gold standard during the Nixon years.
No, but, you know, somebody says something really interesting about this.
his name is Justin Chukot.
I think I'm pronouncing his last name, right,
but he's president of a music publishing company
called Primary Wave, and he said that the reason why
this needs to be changed
and why you have so much interpolation going on now,
not just in hip-hop, but in pop music, and sort of all
across the musical spectrum is that the way
that we are consuming content
is changing.
So now, you know, it used to all be radio
and hard copies of, you know,
final and CDs, but like now it just might be a 30 second snippet that you hear on TikTok
and you want to have something familiar pop up at the, you know, listener right away.
So I think that all songwriters and all composers and all artists are a lot more prone
to using an interpolation just to hook the listener.
Sure.
So that it really makes an impression a short amount of time.
Yeah, that's been the trend for the past, at least 10.
years. Now, it's now a new thing that they have these things that publishers often set up called
Flip Camps, where you get some of the top songwriters and some up-and-coming ones, and they'll literally
go off for a week or a weekend or whatever the duration is, and they are given free reign to kind
of access that publisher's catalog to come up with something, to flip it, to flip an old hit.
Let's find a new version of something familiar to radio listener ears for many years and write a new
composition from it. And the advantage
to the new producers
and songwriters who are doing this is that they know
in advance that it's pre-cleared. They know
in advance that they're going to have permission. They're going to give up
a percentage to the publisher,
to the old, to the original writers, of course.
But it reduces
some of the friction involved in the uncertainty
of like, well, I don't know if we're going to have to clear this, how much
we're going to give up, if they're even going to do it.
So this has become very common.
And so this is an example.
I think, I'm actually not sure if this particular
song was done that way. And in fact,
I think it was after the fact that they sought permission to their credit.
I think Bruno Mars in his camp did the flip on their own,
and then they're like, well, we'd better clear this.
And Primary Ways and the writers gave them, gave them the thumbs up.
So credit to them for doing that.
The credit to them.
We're always, I always say that we're sort of, you know,
fans of the way that I think Bruno and Anderson Pock and other people do business.
And I actually want to give props to the publishing companies,
like Primary Way for sort of making sure that the artists, you know, these,
Because think about it, sometimes you're interpolating an artist who never saw big money.
It might be like some old black blues guy or some guy in a funk band who didn't get a lot of love.
This is a way to show them love.
Get them into the credits.
They might have given up on the Grammys 40 years ago.
But this is an opportunity for their genius that went less recognized back then to get some recognition now.
Yeah.
And Chapman and Chin, like we say, go back and check out their catalog.
They're on a whole bunch of hits from the 70s and 80s.
They're on a bunch of blondie songs.
So, like, these guys, they're still alive.
So, you know, they could be writing more hits potentially.
So there's a lot of reasons that credit matters.
It's not just the money because they're getting the money.
This is just about the name and the recognition.
And the trophy.
This is about some recognition, man.
Yeah, exactly.
And the statuette, which apparently they only have so many of to give out.
So unsung heroes, I guess you could say, unsung heroes,
the not always recognized songwriters who had the original thought.
Absolutely.
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All right, so we've been getting a lot of requests to talk about this next band,
the French Canadian math rock duo Angine de Poitrine.
Or, I mean, that's the French pronunciation.
I don't know how do Americans say it.
Engine de Poitrine.
I think it means chest pain or chest.
It's like, it's kind of an ailment, which is funny.
I'll be honest.
I've seen this band.
It's a little frightening.
I thought it was AI generated.
I thought it was AI Slop, but then I found out.
No, they actually have those costumes on in their, can we show the people a little bit?
Yeah, let's watch a little bit of their viral K-E-X-P performance.
Let's see a little bit of that.
And then we'll break it down.
It's so rad.
So for those of you who aren't watching, there are two performers, drummer, and a bass and guitar contraption.
It's both.
So he is using loop pedals to lay down a bass line and then play guitar on top of that.
And soon he will be reversing the formula so that you'll just hear the looping guitar as he changed.
the bass line. Oh, now he's adding another layer of guitar, I should say. So all three
musical lines are coming from the one guy as loops that come and go. And it's crazy.
I mean, it's basically Prague funk. Progressive funk with some jazz chords and scales.
So now he's playing the bass line live
With one of the guitar loops still in the mix
And they just look insane
Because of their
Costumes
There's so much to unpack there
I hope some of my explaining the video
As it was going was useful
But even that I don't feel does remotely justice
What there is on display here
The first time I saw Reggie Watts perform
Great comparison
The pedals
and doing the loops and stuff.
So, you know, the technical part of it is amazing and, you know, really, really cool.
And I love it for being openly and you could say aggressively artistic.
It's aggressively artistic.
It's aggressively artistic, right.
I got to say, it's still a nightmare fuel for me.
Like, there's something about the appearances and the noses.
like it's all, it's, it's going to haunt my dreams.
There's no way that I can watch too much of this because maybe I'll get used to it.
It still frightens me.
I think the game that they're playing, which as a musician and, you know, maybe dormant,
but I guess I had a single that I put out a week ago.
So as long as I keep putting, you know, dropping singles for the rest of my life one or two a year,
I can still arguably call myself an artist and musician.
But my point is they're backstores.
story is that they were doing it for years and not breaking through. And as soon as they thought,
listen, we need to not just be great musicians. We need to figure out how to get attention.
And we're many years into this dilemma, but it's still important to remind people that it used
to be, if you were a musician, there was some percentage of your time you could spend being a
great musician and writing great songs and being a great performer. And in theory, you come up
with a great promoter or manager, or maybe you get lucky, or maybe you're just young and cute. But
the getting attention part. That's what I got by with. But the getting attention part had something
to do with the music more directly. And you didn't have to spend as much time as much time. It's
never been zero. But you didn't used to have to spend as much time marketing yourself,
getting yourself seen. And now the thing has flipped. Most artists I know, look at me. Like,
I'm spending 90% of my time, maybe 99, not being a musician, right? I mean, I'm in extreme
case because I maybe have pivoted careers, you could say at this point.
But I think most musicians are divided in a way they never have in terms of how much is about songwriting and craft and performance and how much is just getting people to notice.
I think that that is not even just music.
I think that is definitely art worldwide in the sense that, like, you know, I've had two different TV shows that I created get 100% rotten tomatoes.
That's how much effort and energy we put into them.
And we still had to struggle with the marketing department.
to try and get people to actually watch them.
To break through to get seen.
With the explosion of everything on streaming,
and you still have cable and traditional broadcasts,
and you still have people's phones,
and just like the fact that they don't always have to turn to a TV show
to laugh, they can pull up, you know, TikTok and follow Drewski, who's amazing.
I can't stop watching Drewski clips.
That's their 30-minute commitment.
They'll just watch Drusky clips for 30 minutes.
We're all trying to break through the video.
clutter. And I don't think it's ever been harder. So yes, you know, I think I see two men in this
video. We don't even know if it's a, if it's a man or a woman or anything. We just, we, they're
anonymous musicians. And where are they from? You know that they're Canadian. Oh, they're,
Canadian. For some reason, what? I was going to say, for some reason, I thought they were French.
And then I was like, oh, right, because they are. Quebec Guillaume. That would explain everything.
That explains a lot, actually.
Listen, I love the absurdist look after daupunk.
There are always going to be musicians who wonder,
hey, should we just be anonymous and let the music speak for itself?
I think there's another example of that without so clearly aping daampunk
as some other people have, I feel, you know, sort of aped things very similar to the robot helmets.
But listen, I think the other thing is that like, do you like prog rock?
I think you love prog rock, wouldn't you say?
Here's the tricky part, part two of the tricky part, is you do break through, and then there's the sort of then what, because I enjoyed watching this video, and then I don't need that much more of this.
And, you know, because there's only two individuals and they look the way they do, so you're not seeing their human faces emoting, there's a limit for me to how interesting this can be over time.
And it's not to say that they won't have a second hour.
and figure out how to build on their breaking through, right?
But just personally, I enjoyed this.
Kind of like goes back to what we were saying about the Bieber,
the Gen Z generation.
Like, I enjoy this as a 15-second clip,
maybe as a one-minute clip.
And I'm not sure how much more of it I need.
Even though I enjoy the music,
that might be good enough.
You know, I kind of think of bands like Wolfpack
who have a wide audience.
And, like, it's just kind of, I love,
I'm so impressed by their musicianship.
And I'm so impressed by their building
an audience by cutting through the clutter. They were early to understand short-form video and
the YouTube. And I respect them immensely, but it's just not interesting enough for me to go back
to and listen to frequently. But again, top of the, top of the game with their chops.
And it's kind of like this Berkeley school of musicianship where it's like very technically
impressive, but like I'm good with the clip and then I'm going to find a song or then I'm going
to find a groove or something else. So that's just me. I think it's interesting. I mean, like,
I don't know what necessarily.
defines Prague rock. This might be
math rock, but the idea that
I hear, like, a lot of
changing time signatures, like, this is
not for on the floor, you know,
neo-disco. Like, this is very,
like, sort of, you know, interesting.
It's almost like Rush, which I guess is classic
Prague rock, you know, in the
sense of, like, the time signature
is a little intentionally
wonky. Yeah, I haven't listened to you enough
of this band to know if they, and that's a
great question. When does it become Prague?
I've seen them describe as math rock, and I think that's right.
Sort of speaks to that.
The line between math rock and Prague is very fuzzy.
I think math rock is intended to update Prague and be more modern,
to not be the 70s Rush or yes or Genesis or whatever.
I think it's to intentionally draw a line and say,
well, we're not like your dad's version of this similar music.
And it's also post-punk.
It came after, it's what if Rush had started in 1978 instead of 1970.
But I would say that these are,
guys are doing kind of a math rock thing. It's maybe less of a time signature shift than it is
that there's a lot of coordinated, well, it's coordinated because only one individual needs to
decide musically what to do because he's playing all the parts. So that's an interesting kind
of phenomenon. But anyway, I think they're super interesting. Yeah, I think we support this.
Yeah, yeah. And the concern that I would have for them is how do you follow it and build a larger
audience by having the songs start to become more important than the visuals.
Purple polka nuts.
No, don't listen to me.
You guys are doing something right because, like I said, you've cut through the clutter,
and that in some ways is job number one for all artists these days.
All right.
And last up, we've got a couple new songs we want to share with each other.
You know what?
I'm loving this segment because I'm genuinely learning new stuff.
I recently have had much less time to dig into the new music Friday.
So this segment is literally me learning about Slater.
And then like a week later, it's like they're at Coachella.
Like I showed a note about them.
And then you could impress your friends by being like, hey, guess what?
I'm going to be checking out Slater right now if you want to come with you.
Did you ever have that phenomenon maybe when you were younger and didn't understand how the industry work where you'd hear something?
And then it would be on the radio like maybe the next day or TV.
And then you'd be like, hey, I discovered that.
It's on the radio because I know about it.
I used to think, I remember, I remember there was a record, a man at work record, and there was a song on it, like they had a hit with, you know, land down under. This is how long ago that was. And there was a song in that record called Be Good Johnny. And I bought the record and I loved that song. And that was their third single. And I was convinced that they released that as a single, because I was telling all my friends in like third grade, how great a song it was. I influenced the marketing strategy of an Australian band.
Yeah. They're like, all right. Who's our in in San Francisco? Is this kid?
This eight-year-old.
All right, this first song is Runway by Lady Gaga and Dochi.
It's all about that half-step.
It's all about that half-step. That's really sexy. Whenever we go.
That's a hit. That is a hit. First off.
Little Frigian-esque. It's making.
it's sexy.
Yes, I would agree with that.
But just taking a step back, that is a hit to
my ears. Like, that is,
if you're like, Dochi's going to be on the song
and she's going to be with Lady Gaga, you know, like, sometimes
your two favorite artists get together, they come up
with something, you're like, ah,
I don't know what that was. That's not what I wanted
to hear from them. This is exactly
what I want to hear from.
You were born on the, you were born for the runway?
Like, what a great,
everything works for me.
The fact that it sounds like an early
disclosure track, but it's got
Dochi doing her thing, rapping,
and then Lady Gaga coming in and sounding like
Gaga, like, I've got
no nose for this. This sounds like
a potential song
of the spring, if not maybe the song of the summer.
I just looked it up. It's in the
Devil Where's Prada sequel.
Like this feels positioned
to be a big, big song
that we were here. That is so interesting.
I love it. I love it too.
And it's funny you mentioned disclosure because we are
out of point now where, I mean, genre has been meaningless for some time, but genre is so
meaningless because we are, the layers of origins of where the music comes from. Yes, it definitely
is important to point out that it is house music. It is from the ballroom scene in New York,
in the early 80s. And it comes out of Chicago, like, that lineage is really important. And I
don't want it to get lost. So let's remember that. And let's also add to it that by the early 90s,
this was the sound of, you know, besides it still being underground house, that becomes more mainstream, as we've talked about on our, you know, Madonna with Vogue and we're in 1990, and that goes into 1992 with Show Me Love. All of that is in this song. The history of house music, the history of dance culture is there. But it's also a little bit RuPaul, right? I'm also like hearing a little bit of RuPaul.
Oh, absolutely. My first thought was, this is drag.
It's very drag.
Yeah.
I think that's why I'm thinking of the ballroom stuff where it has its origins.
But then you mentioned disclosure because that was an earlier revival and it wasn't that long ago.
It's only about 12 or 14 years ago.
But it was also 14 years ago.
So now we're getting these recurrences of sound that come even more frequently.
I've lost track of how many time periods I just mentioned, maybe four or five.
Because I think it's continuous.
I think it is never like completely broken off.
Like, you know, when I was first starting to DJ outside of the world of hip hop, everybody would call this, you know, some form of deep house, you know what I mean?
And then, you know, around 2007, 2008, because of the chorus.
The chords are so sexy and they're dripping in this.
Oh, I love it.
I just, I love this track so much.
I happen to look it up.
Andrew Watt is the guilty party here.
He co-produced this track alongside Bruno Mars Circuit and Dernst DeMille Emil Emi.
the second. So shout out to that
a plus team.
It's a hit making crew, yeah.
That is a hit making crew. This is a great
song, and I think we're going to hear a lot of this
in the spring and summer. Andrew Watt
is one of the hottest producers of the past
decade, for those who don't know. He was producer
of the year in
2021, and he was nominated in
2025 for Best Original Song
for a
film John song, it looks like. But he's worked
with Bieber. He's worked with Post Malone.
Miley Cyrus. Let's see the Stones, Paul McCartney. He worked with Ozzy. I remember seeing
footage of him working with Ozzy and feeling like, oh man, this guy is the greatest,
greatest life. He's got a great career. That he is working with Ozzy and Iggy Pop, two of my
heroes and two episodes that we did last year ago and check those out. But hats off. Are you going
to check out Iggy Pop and, are you going to check out Iggy at Coachella? He's there. Is he on Sunday?
I can't remember. I of course want to. Like I think he's on Saturday, actually.
Are you sure? Let's see. I think he's Sunday. No, he's on Sunday.
Oh, is he Sunday? Okay. I hear it's a great show.
Literally, he is why, if I'm not too burned out from having gone all day, because we're going to drive there and drive back.
If I have the energy to drive back, I might have to even do it by myself, but I might have to do it just for Iggy Pop on Sunday.
He's like 78, right? He's like, he's 78.
And he still puts on a hell of a show. Like, he's moving. He's on stage moving.
We did that episode this year, and Iggy Pop has been my kind of hero in the background for a while.
I've always been like, well, Bowie's my guy and Prince is my guy.
I've kind of had these, you know, prominent figures that to me are like the be all and all.
But after we did that episode, I realized, man, Iggy, he's kind of my guy.
He's up there.
Maybe Iggy's my guy even more than the others because he just, he is 78 and still going.
Like, that's really incredible.
Like, he is so, it's in his blood being a musician, being a performer.
And I just hope that we all have the capacity to keep emoting,
and creating into our late 70s and early 80s the way he is.
Yeah.
Him and Cher, can you imagine?
They have more energy than most 20-year-olds.
Didn't you see?
You saw Share perform right at SNL-50 and you would not think that was a 70-year-old lady at all.
We didn't think so watching it at home on TV, but was, did you feel the aura and the charisma
and the room in a different way?
It wasn't like in the front row or anything.
I was like halfway back in the theater and everybody was just like, that's a star.
That's a star.
A star is shining.
Right.
How old is this year now?
I think she's 78.
That's what made me think about it.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
She's about age.
Oh, right.
They're in good company,
and isn't Chuck Schumer almost also 78?
Where are we talking about 78-year-olds the other day?
Chuck, keep your shirt on.
Chuck, keep the shirt on.
All right, and let's do one more.
This is The Earth by Earl's sweatshirt.
It's a little more than I want than I leave it.
We go tell the time and I'm going to leave him.
I'm a fold of my thumb on the crease.
Wake up a wonderful to see me.
Make a bowl to crumble the pieces.
So here's the thing.
I always feel a little bit like the old guy in the room when it comes to Earl because I think that, like, on the one hand, if I'm driving down the street, why is driving?
I think it goes back to the fact that I got my driver's license early on.
And really, my car was my music box, like no matter whether it was my old beat-up Honda as a teenager or whatever I drive now.
but like it's always my area you can zone out.
I feel like driving in traffic and in the shower are the two places you can zone out
and really just focus on music in a weird way.
Just vibe.
Just like embody the emotional content of what music is.
A hundred percent.
A friend of mine once said that it's where the conversation is complete.
You know, like it's the car?
Yeah, because the windows are rolled up or maybe they're rolled down.
But like there's nothing going on except for the music.
and you and the road ahead.
And in that sense, I love this song.
I can't wait to get out and play it when I'm in my car,
when I'm driving.
That said, I always felt like a little bit of an older guy
because, you know, I'll put it to you basically like this.
When I saw the movie Spring Breakers,
it was the first time that I saw people party on a beach.
If you remember that movie,
it starts with a drum and bass song.
I think it's a...
Harmony Curran movie.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, I remember that.
That was great.
It starts with the Skrill X song, and the kids are on the beach, and it's in super
slow-mo, and they're all, you know, freaking each other and dancing.
I remember that was the first time.
It's a vibe, right?
It's a vibe.
It was the first time I ever saw something like that and didn't think, oh, I want to go there,
but instead thought, man, where are their parents?
Like, that was the first time.
That was when I crossed the rubicon of age in terms of stuff.
You went somewhere different with that, yeah.
Yeah, when I hear this music, on the one hand, I'm like, this is cool, but then I'm also thinking, you know what, I'm too old for this because I, you know, like I would be, if I was living in the environment and in the vibes that he's creating, I'd be like, dude, where are your children and why are you not at work?
Like, it's just a certain level of like, I'm just a little too old to participate. It's a matter of a participation.
I can do it in my car when I'm driving and I'm viving out, but I can't do it.
If I was at a party in this song was on,
I'd be like, it's time to go home.
I totally get what you're saying.
To build on what you're saying,
I hear two things also.
Where I thought you were about to go is,
first of all, the song is more of a vibe,
and I think vibiness has been around for a long time,
like mood, music, or, you know,
maybe it would have been the Brian Eno in the 70s kind of ambient,
like the idea of sound being more prominent
than direct lyrical storytelling
or even rocking out or even dancing,
Like this is more, there's a story being told, but you're talking about driving with your car,
and I totally get it, because you're kind of awash in what this, you're being bathed in the sound.
I feel like we had an episode where you described, we had a guest and you were describing like a warm sound bath, right?
Do you remember that?
It's probably Lil John or one of the episodes with an Atlanta producer because there's something, it might,
it could have been Brian Alexander Morgan and one of those producers.
But there's something about like R&B.
It's just a sonic experience.
And 808, it's almost like, I joked that it was the black man's massage.
Because like, you can literally turn up that bass enough where you just feel like, oh.
And how is that, that feeling?
It's hard to find language, but that's fun.
It's fun that it's hard to put your finger on it.
Maybe we don't need to.
Because I think the musical experience, as you're describing it, and as I'm hearing this, it is more about a vibe than it is.
And that's enough.
Like, it's giving you an emotional umami a little bit.
You know what I mean?
Like, it's good, it's bad, it's happy, it's sad, but it's feeling.
And that's coming from the wash of sound.
It's obviously got a very minimal beat.
It's got progression.
There's no progression.
It's just a one bar,
a loop of sound that's hypnotic as a result of its repetition.
So it's really putting you in kind of a trance.
And then the second part of what you were saying about maybe feeling like a generational
divide, right?
Or feeling like,
and I totally get,
that's a great example.
Spring Breakers,
I remember watching and seeing,
like,
if I had seen that five years earlier,
I would have been like,
this looks fun.
You know,
let's go fuck shit up.
And then I was watching it and I was going like, I'm afraid of the future.
Like, I'm afraid of the young people where things are going does not look good.
It's like watching euphoria, right?
So like that, you're like, oh man, things are not looking good for the future.
So I totally get what you mean there too.
The kids are not all right.
And also, we're living, we've lived in different times because, you know, I came up during the era of the chronic,
which probably drove my brother, who's more of a grass era, you know, pot in the
enthusiasts. You know, the idea of smoking, you know, strains of marijuana that were, you know,
could be labeled the chronic was probably insane to him. Similarly, these kids are growing up at a time
of essentially legal marijuana. And so I feel like they are, they're just in a different place
than I typically am when I come for music, which is why I gravitate towards sort of more, you know,
I guess you'd have to call it mainstream hip hop for, you know, to a certain extent, more mainstream.
more mainstream pop sounds, experimental dance sounds, but still within sort of a pop framing.
You know, I'm not looking for necessarily the same kind of thrills that Earl is looking
for it because he's probably 20 years younger than me.
You know what I mean?
So like it's just...
That's a really interesting point about the marijuana factor, right?
The legality, the weed factor.
Legal marijuana, I think, has totally changed the way people consume hip-hop.
We were talking a little bit earlier on this Patreon about how people consume.
music. Let's talk about how they consume just the genre of hip-hop. It's so different. Just the idea of, like,
sitting in home and completely maxing out in an ethnically diverse setting. Like, that wasn't really what,
I mean, like, hip-hop was in my era more about, like, going to the club. There was still tons of
weed smoke, but, like, you know, building in the basement was more for the artist. I'm getting a little
bit into sort of like the south versus the north and the east versus the west. But, yeah, I think
that I think hip hop as a genre has been greatly affected by the proliferation of states that have
legal marijuana. And it's led hip hop creatively in a direction that I don't necessarily follow
because I don't smoke that much. And there's obviously there was, you know, there was the chronic,
there's the drait, there was the be real, there's the cypress. There wasn't an absence of marijuana,
but it was a different energy maybe and a different equity and a different legality. Different strains of the
drug. Yeah. Absolutely. That's so interesting. Wow. I like that.
Where is my Lipitor rap? That's what I want to know.
Well, look, that's all for this week.
Again, thank you for subscribing to our Patreon.
And please share with all your friends and your fellow music nerds.
Every subscriber helps us bring more stuff to y'all.
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And keep your eyes peel for an announcement very soon for our first ever hang out with Patreon subscribers.
And if you want to join the hang, subscribe to our $10 tier, $10 tier.
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We'll be back next week with more news, more music, and more breakdowns, and feel free to drop
into the comments if there's anything you want us to cover or if you just want to weigh in on how we did.
All right, guys, thanks for joining.
We will see you next week.
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