WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 1669 - Neko Case

Episode Date: August 14, 2025

After recently releasing her memoir, The Harder I Fight the More I Love You, and finishing her eighth studio album, the upcoming Neon Grey Midnight Green, Neko Case is drawing a lot of conclusions. Sh...e tells Marc that animals and nature are more consistent and reliable than people, that she’s at peace with knowing her parents didn’t want her, and that she’s more comfortable choosing her own family. Neko and Marc also talk about her songwriting process, her pro wrestler great-aunt, and The New Pornographers.  Sign up here for WTF+ to get the full show archives and weekly bonus material! https://plus.acast.com/s/wtf-with-marc-maron-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:01:27 can be okay. You can be okay. Don't let it collapse your brain. Do not let the world burn hotter than it already is in the machine you're holding in your hand. Don't let the interface between you and the machine you hold in your hand break your brain into thinking everything is immediate and in your yard. It's just in your hand and you can put it down. Put it down for a minute. Huh? this feels like some sort of like, you know, a motivational talk. I feel like I'm some sort of Eckhart Tolly of put the machine down. It's like put the gun down, take it out of your mouth. Put the phone down.
Starting point is 00:02:12 Take it out of your head. Do it. It's where we're at. And I just want to say something about thinking about certain things. You know, I'm kind of coming down from a publicity tour and, you know, say in my mind. speak in my mind in ways that I do, but I still live a pretty small life in a lot of ways, and it's just the way my brain works.
Starting point is 00:02:35 You know, I don't spend a lot of money. I fester about simple things. I think about ways of looking at things, but I'm starting to realize something about sort of thinking about who you are and where you come from, on all levels, in a non-nostalgic way. I just had this weird,
Starting point is 00:02:57 thought, but I'll get to it in a minute. Today I'm going to talk to Nico Case. She's a singer-songwriter known for her solo work as well as being part of the new pornographers. She's got her first album in seven years coming out next month called Neon Grey Midnight Green. She also just released her memoir earlier this year. It's called The Harder I Fight, the More I Love You. And it was a great book. And I generally don't read the books that people are coming on to promote if it's a memoir because I find I know too much whether that was the case with this conversation or not I don't know I have my feelings but I couldn't put the book down because there was something poetic and emotional in terms of what made her what made her who she was and what makes her
Starting point is 00:03:45 who she is in relation to the incredible sort of kind of poverty and insanity that she grew up up with. And it really made me reflect on myself because there were some similarities, even though we don't come from the same stuff. But emotionally, sometimes doesn't matter what the surroundings are. Emotions are emotions. Parenting is parenting. How you sort of claim yourself in the midst of chaos or neglect is sort of the groundwork for who you become and how you enter the world. And as time goes on, you, you kind of chip away at that if it's faulty and you make different choices for yourself against your instincts, which are sometimes not great. And that's the sort of struggle of a traumatized person or I like to say broken, but some people are like,
Starting point is 00:04:39 we're not broken, we're flawed, or, you know, everyone's got trouble. But I say broken and in the purely poetic sense, you know, from broken things comes the process of, restoration into a new thing that was sort of the theme of my last special that's out now on HBO panicked in terms of how we design the set and what inspired it the art of kensuki i don't know if i'm pronouncing that right the restoration of broken ceramics with gold and that's a beautiful metaphor for anybody who's doing the work is you know not only making yourself better but making yourself stronger and making yourself uniquely beautiful in and in how you're you present who you are publicly and who you are, you know, from the inside. And I've been thinking
Starting point is 00:05:27 a lot about some of this stuff in, in the sense of like, you know, there is, how do you comfort yourself in the midst of American authoritarianism? And what are you really doing? Is it nostalgia? Is it relief when you kind of dip into classic movies or old movies or music that moved you when you were younger or reconnecting with old friends or or or or or or thinking about uh you grew up and who you grew up with and all that stuff is it nostalgia or or is it really kind of you know reaffirming to yourself who you are you know there's something about you know containing or controlling your emotional reactions or or through things that are comforting from different points in your life or just you know maybe
Starting point is 00:06:19 be, if it's not just Pablam or just, you know, garbage you're kind of engaging with as a distraction, which I rarely do because I just have high expectations. I don't, I don't really allow myself just to be jerked around emotionally for the sake of distraction. I need there to be some meat there somehow. But the thought I was having today was really about how much of that, How much of what you could call nostalgia, and depending how old you are, I think nostalgia, in a real sense, really kicks in, you know, probably after 40. You know, before that, it's just memories, you know. But after 40, you know, on upwards from that, depending on what your life was, you can kind of see the sort of periods of your life of almost specifically different lives that you lived. And I think that's sort of true.
Starting point is 00:07:16 I think that, you know, in the way that we change as people, in the way that we change our environment, in the people that we move through or stay with, there are these changes that happen. And I just got hip to this idea, a new psychological idea called internal family systems. And I'm waiting for a book to do a little more research on it. And this kind of posits the idea that we are several different selves that, you know, we kind of maintain within us. and how you treat them or what part they play in your life, you know, become sort of something to be worked on or a choice to be made. Like if there's some part of you that you shut off years ago
Starting point is 00:07:53 out of fear of pain, rejection, or just, you know, the terror of vulnerability, that there's a way to sort of like get that guy up to speed, get that woman up to speed, whatever it is within you. You know, you were built. We are all sort of built through influences. And I think right now,
Starting point is 00:08:12 you know, the way that technology and just the sheer kind of force of the propaganda and, you know, content-driven garbage that we let, you know, pound into our mind has an influence, but it's very visceral. It's very, it just taps into kind of raw emotion and dopamine and panic and all that lizard brain bullshit. But when you kind of take time with things that mean something to you, whether it's, you know, music, you know, film, whatever arts you're involved in, writing, whatever that stuff is, and also people that I think you're kind of reasserting for yourself, you know, who you are in the world. And I think that it might be helpful to look at it like that. You know, then when you play that old record, you watch that old movie, that you're not just being nostalgic or, or trying to distract yourself, but you're literally checking in with, you know, who you are and what
Starting point is 00:09:10 made you. And I think that anything that you engage with along these lines, that's a piece of you from whatever self it represents in your history of you, that you are kind of reasserting yourself to yourself, reaffirming that you were built from something that means something to you. Even if it's parents, if you have that kind of relationship with your parents, and even if it's negative things, I think there is an element that maybe, and there's just an idea I'm putting out there that you can trivialize as nostalgia, but there's something about engaging with the stuff that moves you because it has a place in your life, that that stuff kind of is part of your design. It's part of what made you who you were, whether it inspired you or it brings back feelings
Starting point is 00:10:02 or represents a person or or you use it as a foundation for your creativity or or how you move through the world and that you know reconnecting with that stuff is not it's it's not an act of self-help it's not an act of nostalgia it's an act of always reintroducing yourself to who you are and what made you and strengthening that and reaffirming that in real time in the midst of uh you know forces that are constantly ripping apart at our senses of self at our sense of is a principle and who we are and just, you know, you know, leveling us to fear and panic. So don't just, you know, think about it as nostalgia. You know, deepen your level of awareness of engaging in the things that mean something to you
Starting point is 00:10:50 because they mean something to you because they're part of your makeup. I'm starting to sound like some sort of motivational speaker, but I just found this like people in your life, think back at them, people you lost, people that said things that changed your life forever. People that showed you things that, you know, set you on your trajectory to be who you wanted to be and do what you wanted to do. You know, reflect on them with some depth and some meaning and not just sadness and not just nostalgia. You know, be grateful for the things that impacted you to make you the person that you are today in the midst of this annihilating psychic force that's going on. So you can kind of hold onto yourself. And I think if you look at it,
Starting point is 00:11:29 those things with that kind of depth, it'll work that way for you. And it might save your sanity and might save the sense and the reality of who you are, you know, both for good and bad. But I mean, don't just, you know, write it off as nostalgia. It's life-affirming shit. If you have some kind of issue that needs attention in your life, is it better to address it before it becomes a problem or after the problem has already happened? And of course you want to deal with it before, which is why we recommend SimplySafe,
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Starting point is 00:13:12 So it took a while for us to get this together. Her new album, Neon Grey Midnight Green, comes out September 26th. You can pre-order it now and go to nicoase.com for her upcoming tour dates and her book, her memoir, The Harder I Fight, the Marjor I Fight, the Marjor. The more I Love You is a beautiful book. And this is me talking to Nico Case. The twisted tale of Amanda Knox is an eight-episode Hulu original limited series that blends gripping pacing with emotional complexity, offering a dramatized look as it revisits the wrongful conviction of Amanda Knox for the tragic murder of Meredith Kircher and the relentless media story. that followed. The twisted tale of Amanda Knox start streaming August 20th, only on Disney Plus. I think we're okay. You sound okay to you? I do. Good. Good. Perfect. Have you dealt with these kind of problems before?
Starting point is 00:14:28 No. Yes, every, every day of my life. The sound? Yeah. I'm pretty obsessed with it. Yeah. And the edges of the sound, especially. Yeah, like, oh, because you can hear just static.
Starting point is 00:14:47 I can hear electricity. Yeah. I have a lot of high-end hearing that I can, that drives me crazy. Yeah. A lot of people, I really hate auto-tuned. because people often mix it and put compression on it in a way that makes the edges of it like the rippled edge of a tin can in my ear. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:09 And it's just like, gh-oh! Yeah. I don't hate the sound of it as much as when it's just like, no. I don't even know what that stuff is. Like, you know, I don't, but I'm pretty limited. You know, I'm just looking for tone. I'm trying to figure out, you know, how to write songs. it's kind of tricky isn't it
Starting point is 00:15:30 it's pretty tricky yeah the best way to start is to not know anything about it yeah and just start but like how do you like I mean I don't mean to start like this but like I've recently
Starting point is 00:15:42 because this podcast is wrapping up and I've been playing for years so I start playing with people and it was never something I did much of as a kid and I was always terrified of singing and I just I realized you know I've been playing alone
Starting point is 00:15:55 for my entire life and I'm okay okay at it. But like, you know, the rubber meets the road when you get on stage with humans. So I've been doing that. And I don't like the idea of writing a song for myself. I did once after my partner died. And I thought it was pretty good. But the validation necessary to really make you believe it's good is too much. Well, that's why you have to just decide that you are the valid, like you are the judge. And it took you a while, didn't it? It did take me a while. But I also So I kind of just realized fairly early, like, nobody gives a fuck what a girl thinks.
Starting point is 00:16:34 Yeah. So nobody's going to notice what I'm doing. Right. So the freedom in that is pretty large. Yeah. Yeah, that's true. I mean, I rarely read the whole books because sometimes I think it'll affect the conversation. But I read your whole book in like one sitting.
Starting point is 00:16:52 And I think it kind of had a life-changing effect on me. Really? Yeah. Oh, that really means a lot. Thank you. Yeah. Because it's, you know, it's kind of a rough time. And then in the arc of your rough times, the sort of movement of self-discovery and where you landed is an inspiring thing.
Starting point is 00:17:13 Thank you. Yeah. And I read Kathleen Hannah's whole book. And that was, did you read it? That book was fantastic. Yeah. It's crazy. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:20 But both of you are very, you know, kind of clear on the life. Mm-hmm. And the sort of having no choice but to live it, the life of rock and roll or music or whatever. And both of your pasts are pretty harrowing. But I couldn't put that book down either. I think I read Kristen Hirsch's too. I haven't read that yet, but everybody says it's fantastic. It's on my list of things to read.
Starting point is 00:17:50 Well, we can start with this. I underline things in books. I do that too. A lot of dog earring. Yeah, but like I don't, like in the moment, I don't know why. But, you know, I do it because as an effect, I guess it's in looking back on it, I'm like, well, why did I do that one? But this one's pretty, pretty easy. I trusted animals so much more than people.
Starting point is 00:18:12 I wanted only to love them. When it came to liking another human, I was perplexed as to why I would want to give my attention to something so unknown, so unpredictable. Right? Yeah, you don't know what they're going to do. And all the things that they teach you that are supposed to happen, don't happen. The societal kind of politeness or what have you. It just doesn't exist. Well, that's like that line from Michael Clayton, which I quote all the time from Sidney Pollock, you know, after a guy supposedly killed himself but didn't.
Starting point is 00:18:43 But he said people are fucking incomprehensible. But doesn't it happen on kind of a spectrum of stuff? I mean, you don't have very much control over anything, right? No. And you make assumptions about people based on you being one. Mm-hmm. And then all of a sudden it's like, what the fuck is happening? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:02 Why isn't this working is what I would think a lot of the time. Why isn't this working? Yeah. Am I invisible? What's happening? Yeah. Are they talking to their idea of me? Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:19:14 That's the... I just was like, what's wrong with me? Yeah. Because, you know, being a girl in the 70s, like, it just, I had no value. So I just immediately was like, okay, I'm doing it wrong. Yeah. Whatever's happening right now. Right.
Starting point is 00:19:27 I'm the problem. Right. And with animals, like, you know, they're unpredictable, but it's within the spectrum of that animal brain. They don't lie. Yeah. They just don't. Yeah. They could be having a crazy day and they'll act crazy.
Starting point is 00:19:40 And you don't have to wonder. I mean, you do wonder why they're acting crazy, but you know what they're doing. And you've had a lot of dogs and cats and horses now. But don't you project onto them? horses made me stop projecting because horses are very they're deep
Starting point is 00:19:59 and they there's a real safety issue there like you have to be able to understand what they're thinking about you or just getting stepped on can kill you you know like horses are and that was the other part of it
Starting point is 00:20:15 is that horses are not horses could just be killing the shit out of us all the time. And when you think of the history of people and horses, horses should have made us extinct based on what we do to them. And they could have done it. But their brains are not wired to attack and kill things or to be vengeful or seek retribution. They are into the safety of the moment and feeling comfortable and levels of anxiety. Like they read you. They read your body, your heart rate, your temperature, your anxiety. And so I had to really. just try to see it from their point of view. And, you know, I had a lot of friends who really understood horses. And I have this one woman in my life named Haika, who's German, and she would say things like, you can't expect them to not be a horse. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:06 They're not a cartoon. And so I took that very seriously. And now I really try to, like, figure out what the cats and dogs are thinking from a cat and dog perspective. And our communication is much better now. Yeah. And it's a lot easier. Yeah, because a lot of times I, like, I've been having this trouble with my cats and, like, it unravels my life.
Starting point is 00:21:33 Mm-hmm. Because I have so much invested. Yeah. Like, I have to constantly be told, like, no, Charlie's fine in the room. He's not up there going like, why am I in the room? You know, I'm sad. This is horrible. It's fine.
Starting point is 00:21:46 And I got to try and get out from under that. Yeah. Yeah. He's having his own issues. Maybe he's got a health thing. Maybe he's got urinary track problems that you don't know about yet. They act out for weird reasons. I think he's jealous and spoiled and... Jealous? I have one of those. Yeah. I have a similar problem. You do. But my cats go outside because we live in the country.
Starting point is 00:22:09 Where do you live? I live in rural, rural, rural Vermont. Really? In the Northeast Kingdom. So you stayed up over there? How far from Burlington? hour and a half. Really? Everything's an hour and a half from Burlington.
Starting point is 00:22:21 Yeah. It's so tiny. It's so pretty up there. It is. It's ridiculous how pretty it is. Yeah. So I guess we can kind of talk about what resonated with me in terms of how you were brought up. Because your parents didn't want you.
Starting point is 00:22:38 No. No, they did not. And that was a parent both verbally and just in vibe. Yeah. Yeah, it was a lifestyle, for sure. Yeah, but how old were they? They were young. They were like 17 and 18 or 18 and 19, I can't remember.
Starting point is 00:22:58 They were definitely below 20 years old. That's so crazy. They were children. When you think about it? Yeah. I mean, when did you realize growing up that they were young? It was pretty young just because, you know, that was one of the reasons that they would give me for having being divorced by the time I was five is that well we were really young when we got together and
Starting point is 00:23:21 yeah and you know I understood that as a young person it made sense yeah but the sort of ongoing revelation of how broken they were mm-hmm it it's sad but relieving right well it is yeah and and there's when you figure out how much of the fantasy quote unquote you are helping perpetuate and you you can go, oh, obviously my mother didn't have cancer ever. When she disappeared. Yeah, she didn't want a kid. That is so crazy. I did not realize how crazy that was until I told somebody when I was in my 20s.
Starting point is 00:24:01 So your entire family played along with this. Yes. Some knew, some didn't. How old were you? I think I was in third grade, so I don't remember what age that would make me. And your parents were already split up? They were already split up. up, and my stepdad was in the picture by that point.
Starting point is 00:24:19 Was him Will? Billiott, Bill. Yeah, Bill. I just called him Billiam. His name's William, but his name's Bill. Yeah, Bill. And he's still around. He's awesome.
Starting point is 00:24:26 He's fantastic. His whole family are. The anthropologist? Yeah, he's archaeologist. And he, his whole family, the 14thi family are, they've always treated me like, like gold. They're wonderful people. Yeah. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:24:38 So what happened exactly? She pretended to have cancer. But you never saw her sick. I never saw her sick. And she wasn't living with you. No. Right. But apparently she was getting sicker and sicker.
Starting point is 00:24:52 And so I was at my grandmother's, my father's mother, one day. And my dad came to pick me up and he was crying, which was terrifying to begin with, because my dad never showed any emotion. Right. And he was like, your mommy's dead. And I was like, what the, what? Yeah. And, you know, I just, it was really shocking. and it's not something you can comprehend.
Starting point is 00:25:19 It takes a long time to comprehend that somebody's dead. Especially as a kid. Yeah. And, you know, you could see somebody die in front of you. And it takes like years to understand that they're dead. Yeah. And so I just went into this weird depression hallway based on nothing that I understood. But they told you, he drove you and you went to like a funeral, like a memorial?
Starting point is 00:25:44 Well, a little while later, we went to a wake for my mom at my grandmother's house, her mother's house. Right. And there were people there and, you know, jello salad and all that. And nobody seemed really as sad as I imagine they should seem. Yeah. And I was really sad. And, you know, the only person who seemed like they kind of didn't understand what was, or were on the same level as me as my uncle's wife. My aunt Sue, he was an incredible person.
Starting point is 00:26:17 She seemed sad. And I think she was sad for me. But when you look back at that, did they all get on board for your sake that they thought somehow it was better that you thought this? I guess so. I mean, I still don't really know exactly what happened. My family are pretty tight-lipped and most of them are dead now, so it doesn't. Well, it must have known that she was, like, in trouble and chaotic and was leaving the country and she was running away. And as opposed to tell you that, I just can't, like, even wrap my brain around the logic of it, that everybody would be on board with this heinous lie for your sake.
Starting point is 00:26:59 It's, it's as, I always describe it this way. It's like you cut yourself in the kitchen and then you build a rocket to go to the moon to get a band-aid and come back. Right. Yeah. It's so bizarre and around the bend. And that's, you know, that's the kind of, the way my mother was warped as a young person was pretty classic patriarchal American and, you know. You mean the trauma, the child of immigrants, you know, being raped as a young person and all those other things and, you know, not mattering. But you didn't find that stuff out till later that, you know, she was raped in anger, which I guess all rape is by your own dad.
Starting point is 00:27:40 Yeah. That's punishment. And, you know, what's interesting in the book is that as you find this stuff out and the pieces start coming together, I mean, you can, you know, find bits and pieces of hope and also explanation, but it doesn't reverse the damage. It only informs it, right? Yes. Yeah. So, like, after that, you're just kind of left with your incommunicative dad, but it seems like you had family. That was good.
Starting point is 00:28:08 Yeah. Like, my, my grandmothers were really wonderful people. My grandfather, who was my step-grandfather, who was married to my mom's mom, was wonderful. He also was very incommunicative, though. He was just a really quiet. The cancer guy? No, he, he was a farmer. Is that Clyde?
Starting point is 00:28:31 Clyde, yes. He raised organic beef. And he couldn't eat his own cows because he was so soft. So he would just buy crappy beef at the supermarket. Because he was attached to them? He was attached to them. He was like, oh, I can't eat them. But lovely human being, like lifelong volunteer firemen, just a really good person.
Starting point is 00:28:50 That's on your dad's side. On my mom's side. Yeah, that was the person that my grandmother married after she left my super abusive Ukrainian grandfather, yes. But who was the one dying in the chair? That was my dad's father. He was kind of just one of those dad joke kind of telling grandads. He was nice to us, but I made the mistake of reading like the Korean War diary that his troop wrote. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:24 And I was just like, this is horrifying. That's a bloody war that no one knows about. I know. And the way that they were taught to view people. In order to kill them? Yes. And just the most racist, misogynist, reductive evil. And I just was like, I can't trust anything.
Starting point is 00:29:47 Yeah. Yeah. Nothing. And you're alone. And you've been moved around to different sort of versions of squalor with your father and at least some order with your mom and will, but just isolated. No siblings. No siblings, no.
Starting point is 00:30:09 I think the thing that resonated with me and it's something I keep trying to build on in my own sort of life. Because my parents were, you know, they had money enough to live, but were also had me when my mom was 22. I know you're still a little kid then. Yeah, totally. Yeah. And, you know, there's, they just weren't ready for it, and they had no capacity for selflessness in terms of parenting. And I've always built on this thing that I read in this guy, Firestone's book, that if you have parents that are emotionally abusive or neglectful, that when you feel uncomfortable because of that, not knowing what that discomfort is, you're going to blame yourself. And you're going to implant a parent inside your mind that tells you your fucking garbage.
Starting point is 00:31:10 Yep. Right? Yeah. And I think that, you know, your book is, in terms of that and moving through that, is like what that's about. Mm-hmm. Right? Yeah. And I think that there were times that, you know, I think fundamentally, like my biological father was a really sweet guy.
Starting point is 00:31:30 Right. Really gentle, really, he loved nature, he loved animals. But then there was this weird, like, macho military guy that lived in there. And I remember. Is that his brother-in-law or something? No, just him. Oh, inside him. Like, just the guy that he thought he was supposed to be, you know, the picture of manhood in the 50s and 60s.
Starting point is 00:31:49 And I remember one day he said to me, and he said it a few times after, he said, if I say black is blue, it's blue. Uh-huh. And I was like, you can't make black blue. Yeah. So, like, I wasn't. understanding the, you know, the, you do it if I say it part. Yeah. I got that, but it was also, he kind of sold himself out because I knew he couldn't
Starting point is 00:32:13 make black into blue. Right. So on this other contextual level, I was like, I can't trust him because that isn't real. Well, and I think that having that experience as a kid kind of informs your entire position about, you know, what we're supposed to do and what we're not supposed to do, right? If you had to live the life of what society means to be a good girl, you might as well just hang yourself from the shower curtain rod because there's so many passion engines inside of you that are going to try to, you know, move you to places that are really wonderful.
Starting point is 00:32:57 Yeah. And if you have to choke those out, it would just be the most painful. What's the point? Yeah, because you can feel it choking from inside of you. Yeah. I literally sometimes feel like I'm being strangled from inside myself. And I always, when I think about why wouldn't I let go with that, I think it's because I spent so much time unsupervised in nature.
Starting point is 00:33:23 Yeah. And I saw how nature functioned. Yeah. And there wasn't punishment for things. There were consequences for different things and, you know, cycle of life and all that. But nature just didn't act the way God supposedly did. And so there was a big contradiction there. But nature was consistent in its strangeness, whereas adults were just always trying to make some sort of damn around things.
Starting point is 00:33:56 Yeah. You know, their boundaries were outsized and kind of ridiculous. Yeah. Well, I think that's probably the gift of having, you know, irresponsible parents in that way. Yeah. Like in terms of like, you'll be okay at the house for a day or two. I know so many people of Gen X and older who, you know, are kind of glad for being raised that way, but also feel completely neglected at the same time.
Starting point is 00:34:29 Or just the kind of danger that you could be in. Right, but like if you think about it, if your parents aren't going to help you, you know, by creating an environment or support so you can develop who you're supposed to be, it's better that they don't hammer it out of you and just not be there in some ways than hammer it out of you.
Starting point is 00:34:55 Exactly. I mean, it leaves it sort of an open container of, you know, you're kind of too open and, you know, again, you're going to, you know, kind of judge yourself really harshly, but at least you can kind of get a sense of the world that's honest to you. And I think that it seems like those times where when you go back in your memory and really think about the impact of nature or what you were doing and even the patterns of behavior just out of boredom, And also the manifesting of horses, whatever that was, you know, early on, that it gave you some kind of, you know, need to have a poetic sensibility. Like it kind of unharnessed your imagination to make sense of the world. Yeah, the manifesting of horses, maybe it was just coincidence. What was that story? What did you?
Starting point is 00:35:51 Well, I was so in love with horses from the time. Like, I remember the first time I ever touched one. Yeah. I was still a baby, but I remember touching it and just feeling transported and just, you know. Yeah. But I didn't have anything else to compare it to. So I just thought, this is the world. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:12 This is the world. The world is great. A horse. Exactly. And so I was sitting on the side porch of our house in Bellingham, Washington, which was still pretty small at that time. Yeah. And there was an alleyway. that went past the back of our house, and I wanted to see a horse so bad.
Starting point is 00:36:30 I just wanted to be near one, and I thought, okay, I'm going to see a horse. I closed my eyes, and I said, I'm going to see a horse right now. Yeah. And I opened my eyes, and I saw a white horse, and it was coming toward me. And next to it was a brown horse. And there were two young women riding these horses up the alley. And I was just like, yep, there we go. Magic.
Starting point is 00:36:54 Magic. or just the way the world should be, you know? Like maybe that's not even magic. Maybe that's just something I should feel entitled to. Yeah, women on horses. Yeah, here they come. Of course they are. Yeah, I'm just glad they're here.
Starting point is 00:37:07 Yeah. Yeah. I mean, some of the stuff you write in the book about, you know, your dad's house and him just, you know, disappearing into a bong in a place with, like, no furniture and the salt on the floor and all that shit. I mean, was that for years? Years and years and years, yeah. I don't really understand how you came out with any sense of self at all.
Starting point is 00:37:34 I often don't either. I mean, like I said, my dad, he had his moments. When I say black is blue, it's blue. That would come out now and again, but it was like some other thing was making a voice come out of him. Like I knew that wasn't really his heart. And I was always trying to reach the person who was at his heart and I never could. Because you can feel the weight of it not being there because you know it's in there. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:58 Right? Yeah. And, you know, I didn't know that my father had been horribly sexually abused. Both your parents. Both my parents. And, you know, I didn't know what he was suppressing. Yeah. I just knew that he was, and, you know, I didn't know he was, I don't know if he was bipolar or just depressive, but he was very depressed my whole life.
Starting point is 00:38:22 And drank. Later. Oh, yeah. That was later. Weed was first. Weed, yeah, weed was just, like, constant. I do not remember a time without, like, weed smoke in the house. And this is all in Washington?
Starting point is 00:38:34 Yeah, Washington State. Scary place. Yeah, it's a really scary place. Rural Washington State? Well, that was, like, Vancouver, Washington, Seattle later. But the really rural places I lived with my stepdad and my mom. And that was safer anyways. Way safer.
Starting point is 00:38:56 Yeah, because of them. Mm-hmm. Yeah. And nature, which wasn't out to get me. And that was in Vermont, mostly? It was eastern Washington, a little bit of western Washington, Vermont. Yeah. All over the place.
Starting point is 00:39:09 Like, wherever my stepdad's assignments were. Yeah. I think why the book helped me is that you're very able to identify through sort of feeling. but a few sort of actions that your mother resented you. Yes. And I think it's important to identify that, and I don't know if it's easy. I think that I had been dealing with it for so long. It didn't hurt more.
Starting point is 00:39:40 Yeah. Like, I've done so much talk therapy and also, you know, I'm a really open book with my friends. Yeah. Like, my friends know these stories. Yeah. So she was just so bizarre for so long that I just kind of had to figure out what I was helping as far as the narrative by thinking, oh, no, she didn't want me to see her die. So she left. She didn't want me to see her die of cancer.
Starting point is 00:40:08 Always caring for you. Because she loved me so much. And it's like, no, she didn't want you. And that's nothing personal. Like, I've been a young woman who was pregnant before. Yeah. Like, it's not, she should have had an abortion. She should have gotten help.
Starting point is 00:40:25 She should have had her own life. And I'm sure she never felt like she chose her own life. Yeah, but I think there was a generation or a certain type of person that doesn't see those options. No. And, like, there's so much of that that, you know, I have so much compassion for and forgive her for. What I didn't forgive her for was the fact that she would keep coming back. And she would pretend to want to have a relationship with me And then she would just pull the plug
Starting point is 00:40:54 I don't know where That's almost like torture It is, it was torture and it was extreme cruelty Yeah And you know there would be little signs That she just didn't Didn't like me Yeah
Starting point is 00:41:08 I never did Yeah And then it doesn't really end well for her No I mean I don't know I, I, I, so when you cut off, but is she still alive? I have no idea. You really don't know.
Starting point is 00:41:23 I don't know. Huh. And it, that doesn't bother me. Yeah. I don't want to know. Like, I just don't, it just, it doesn't matter. Yeah. You know, it's already happened and nothing will change.
Starting point is 00:41:38 And, you know, I don't know if you have this, this kind of thing where you choose your own family and you find people who are really reliable and close. When you have that, it doesn't matter what biological happenings have done in a way. Well, I always frame my parents as, you know, I don't really see them as parents. There's just these, you know, people I grew up with that had their own problems. So I don't have the connection that most people do. And now my dad has dementia. But there was no malice there. You know, they're still around and they're okay.
Starting point is 00:42:12 But I don't feel that, you know, I would never go to them for advice or, anything. Right. Ever. Right. And it's so crazy to think about them as younger people and and imagine the absolute vacuum of education about like, okay, we're going to talk about feelings or this is what it's going to mean to be a parent. It's literally they're pushing you to just have a baby while you're still a child. Yeah. Our society is. Yeah. Or was then. I don't know if my parents were pushing me for much of anything with any consistency, you know. And I feel like, like, I don't like when people say that their parents did the best they could because they didn't.
Starting point is 00:42:56 No, mine didn't either. But people always fall back on that as some sort of path, portal to, you know, acceptance that they did the best they could. And I'm like, I don't know. They could have done a little more work. Yeah. They could have thought about, like, what it, what? They could have thought about maybe having a kid before they had a kid. Sure.
Starting point is 00:43:17 Kind of a thing. Yeah, totally. But, you know, they weren't taught to do that either. I know. So it's kind of like, God. You got to let them off the hook a little? I let him off the hook for that. Just the continued damage?
Starting point is 00:43:30 No, I don't. I thought at some point in the book, I wanted to bring it up when you weren't developing as quickly as other girls. Do you think you were malnourished? Probably. You know, because when you talk about what you're eating, what was, I was like, Of course she wasn't growing, right? She wasn't eating anything. Well, oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:43:49 I mean, I just thought everybody was different. So, you know, eventually I was kind of a late bloomer. Right. Like one day I was totally flat-chested and then the next day, it's like when I turned 17, I suddenly had huge boobs. It just happened. Yeah. And boys at school were calling me the shelf. And I was like, what the fuck just happened?
Starting point is 00:44:10 Yeah. And then also, you know, the sort of not struggle, but, you know, how long it took for you to acknowledge or understand that you were raped? Yeah. That because you had this untethered wild child in a way, that there was this assumption, well, that's the way it happens. I think there's that, but then there's also what we were talking about earlier where you just decide it's my fault. Right. So clearly I should not have taken a ride home from my friend's brother because I'm just telling him he can have sex with me.
Starting point is 00:44:43 Right. Which is not at all what I was doing. And did you, was it therapy that started to reframe your thoughts around this stuff? Or did you figure it out? No, I just, just one day I just finally said it in my 40s. I was like, no, I was raped. Yeah. And made to feel really bad about it.
Starting point is 00:45:06 Bye. And just by, I really worshipped, this guy was 19. And I knew him because I was friends. with his sister at school. And she was 17, and she was this really beautiful, cool, new wave girl. And she loaned me her Nina Hagen record. And I was just like, I can't believe she's talking to me. This is so cool.
Starting point is 00:45:26 And then, you know, I'd met him through her somewhere. I remember where. And then I was in Seattle and ran into him. And my friends wanted to go somewhere. And I needed to go home. And he said, oh, I'll give you a ride home. And I thought, oh, I can trust this person. Yeah, his sister's cool.
Starting point is 00:45:43 Yeah. And then so when I came back to school after being raped by her brother, she acted like I was a non-entity. And because I brought her record back to her and she just kind of ripped it out of my hand and was talking to her friends like, and I tell my brother to stay away from idiot little girls and stuff like that. And I was like, oh, I really did fuck that up. Wow. Because, you know, she was a big deal to me. And yeah, you wanted acceptance. Exactly. So there's just like, it's just like there's no end of the heartbreak. Nico, of your life?
Starting point is 00:46:16 Well, I think it's probably most people's experience, to be honest with you. I don't know any women who haven't been sexually assaulted or had dudes drive up in their car jerking off at them. Or I just, I don't know any. And the more I get close to other people, like, I don't really know any men. like a lot of the men I know had the same experiences. Yeah. Like there's just this this absolutely unacceptable sickness around children
Starting point is 00:46:53 that people take for granted like, oh, you know, so I don't, I don't know. It's just, it's so wrong and gross. And obviously the current climate of our country is, you know, people just don't. care of women get raped. Yeah. They just don't. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:12 And we're kind of finding out that they don't really care if children get raped either. Right. Like, it's supposed to be our great moral compass as Americans that we really, we wouldn't have that. But we don't really have a moral compass. That's true. We're just kind of comfortable and gross. Yeah, more gross. Well, white people anyway.
Starting point is 00:47:31 There are plenty of uncomfortable people now. Yeah. But the dominant forces, doubling down on, you know, horrific. immorality. Yeah. So when does music become the salvation, though? I mean, because it, like, you went to art school, but it didn't seem like you were moving towards that. It seemed to happen kind of like, bam.
Starting point is 00:47:54 Well, music was always there, and I always loved it. Yeah. And singing along with things. I was always alone, so I could do that. And I just loved playing in bands. I was a really butch little kid. But you remember these moments where rock and roll kind of blew you away? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:14 Music. Yeah. Back in black. That's a good one. Yeah. Just the feeling of the whole room and, you know, just watching every kid in the room just be like, yes, this is great. And some kid just brought it in? Yeah, Rudy.
Starting point is 00:48:28 Yeah. You need Rudy's. Rudy was the best. And Rudy made a great memory that day. Yeah. It's a good record. It's such a great record. I still listen to it all the time.
Starting point is 00:48:40 I heard some of it yesterday. It just came up on some. I listened to Black Sabbath, and then the phone just kept picking things. And it came up, and I was like, all right, I'm kind of a Bon Scott guy, but I'll take that album of Brian Johnson's. We can have both. Yeah. We can have both. But I don't find myself engaging with the catalog post back in black.
Starting point is 00:49:00 Not so much. A couple songs here and there, but not so much. But I'll go back and listen to high voltage daily if I could. dirty deeds yeah that's a good one so good so but in terms of women in rock you know because i i felt like in kathleen's book there was you know a void there and also you know what you dealt with there's also this you know fuck you there's also the mailness of the whole world of music but what was the time i know you talk about in the book meeting the one of l7 Right.
Starting point is 00:49:38 Yes. And you felt small. I felt small, but in a way that it was weird because it was jealousy. And so I didn't want to meet her. But not jealousy because you did the same thing, jealousy because you hadn't, you couldn't do it. I felt like I want to be as great as you, but I'm not great yet. So fuck you. It wasn't, I resented the situation.
Starting point is 00:50:06 Oh, okay. Yeah. But I'm sure I did resent her, too, because, like, I wasn't, like, developed enough to understand the difference between the two things. It's just, like, feeling bad feeling. It's her. Yes, her. Right. You know what I mean? Yeah. So it was a little more caveman than the way I understand it now. Right. But it's interesting to me that, because I didn't come up in music, but it just seems like a lot of people, like, when you were in Vancouver in college, that there are people that aren't necessarily good musicians. But they want to play, so they figure it out. And I find that to be impressive because you weren't, I mean, you played drums.
Starting point is 00:50:48 Yeah. But you weren't necessarily a drummer until you decided. No, I really wanted to be a drummer. And it's really, like, I really put my identity there. Yeah. But I couldn't separate my hands from my feet. Oh. And I still can't.
Starting point is 00:51:02 With the, oh, so everything happens at the same time? So, like, I couldn't, you know. separate and so there was no you know offbeat or it just didn't work right I'm great when I don't have to use my feet right but it worked good enough to be in a band that won a prize in college yeah and it was really fun
Starting point is 00:51:22 yeah and great exercise and touring was was what I needed to learn about and that got me there yeah like when does that start though because it seems like you had the desire to do it no matter what and you kind of innately knew that that's how you were going to get good. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:40 Yeah. And, you know, just it was part of music, was going on tour, and all my friends were doing it. Yeah. And I was hoping I would get my chance. And finally, being a drummer, made that possible. And I toured with a band called Cub because their drummer couldn't go. Yeah. And we went on a couple really long, really amazing tours, and I just took to it like a duck to water.
Starting point is 00:52:04 I just, I loved the lifestyle. I loved, you know, the adrenaline and the long hours and the driving from place to place and seeing new things. Like, I was seeing the world. Yeah. Places I'd never been to. And then when you walked into, through, you know, connections with, you know, different musicians and different people at studios and producers that you had a community, it seemed, in Canada for a minute,
Starting point is 00:52:31 that you got an opportunity to, uh, you know, do a solo project, and then you were kind of, you know, the life was dangled in front of you and then taken away. Yeah. I had the great fortune of not being signed to a major label. But after they put you through the whole, like, you're the one. Oh, yeah. You're going to be great. Yeah. You know, and they would buy me stuff and take me out to dinner and fly me to L.A. And I thought I was pretty cool. And then they didn't. And then after that, was that the first real kind of breakdown? Well, I had been dumped by my boyfriend, who I'd been with for quite a long time, I thought, and dumped by his family also.
Starting point is 00:53:19 And so I was just like, fuck. Yeah. You know, I'm really fucking up. Like, I must be a bad person. Like, this is, you know, I must be a shitty musician. and I must I just but the way the people
Starting point is 00:53:35 from the record company handled it they handled it so badly that I didn't trust that either so I'm kind of glad they did handle it badly they just kind of ghosted me and so I just kept going because I didn't know what else to do
Starting point is 00:53:49 yeah you kind of were committed to the life and you chose country initially I did because I loved it and I grew up it and you know country music there was something in it that was so much more punk rock than what was going on yeah in punk rock right like it was all dudes at that point and they were all saying the same shit and yeah you know it right it was really boring but it's interesting on this record on the new record i think it's um the rusty mountain it's
Starting point is 00:54:24 interesting because when i think of love songs of any kind mm-hmm a lot of them are country, like the real ones. Like, I think that the punk rock element of country is the humanity of the feelings expressed. Yes, exactly. And that's been beaten out of country music. Sure. It's been beaten out of most things. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:43 You know, it's not, it's almost like an angry acceptance of the fragility of life, right? You know, like it's not quite the blues, but it, in the sense that that was kind of a different life but it seems like country it was just par for the course that you know someone's going to get murdered someone's going to leave you someone's going to fuck your friend and it was just that's the narrative it's it's real human and in that song though i noticed that there there is this sort of idea that you know love songs aren't really enough not at all they're usually they usually fall pretty short of the mark but it doesn't mean that the really good ones aren't really good.
Starting point is 00:55:32 Well, I mean, just like, even if you just go, you know, back to like that, you know, whatever that kind of minimal catalog of Hank Williams, you're like, it's sort of, most of it is there. And it's true. And it's simple. And it's like, you know, Johnny Cash can do it too. And you go, and the Carter family can do it. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:55:54 And so good, right? Yeah. And everybody. wants to do that. Yeah. And it's like, no, you got to do your own love song. That's why it's not working. Yeah. Right. And your love song, maybe your love song is like a chair with two legs on it. You know, you gotta just, you got to get in there. Because throughout your story, there's an influx of different art. Mm-hmm. You know, both musically, visually, whatever. There's an
Starting point is 00:56:21 education going on there that comes from being around creative people. That, you know, whether it's punk rock or or or women doing their you know kind of personalized version of whatever it is they're going to do that's outside of mainstream kind of guy rock and then just visual arts and other kinds of things because it seems at some point like what was that early live record which one was that furnace which is the one oh the tigers was spoken yeah because like i listen to that i'm like and you're fucking on fire and it's so clear that you know when i read the book that all that energy, you know, that converges in confidence of delivering those songs, that, you know, you had a sense of what it takes to get people, you know, paying attention
Starting point is 00:57:05 on the dance floor, coming to see you, and just rocking the fucking head off, right? And that was important. Yeah. And that was important to me. And I might not have had the kind of self-confidence to do that yet. And that's what the Sadie's brought to that record. is I knew that they were undeniable. They were absolutely undeniable in their talents.
Starting point is 00:57:32 And you felt carried? I felt carried. I felt like part of the gang that I wanted to be a part of. Like I never, ever at any time, like I had the kind of the opposite experience of you. Like, I didn't really play by myself. I didn't enjoy it. I wanted to be in a gang. And you had to figure out how to play.
Starting point is 00:57:49 Yeah, you had to figure out how to play guitar. Exactly. And that took a while and I kind of did that a little by myself. What does that guitar you use? It's a tenor guitar. I never knew what they were. I never knew about them. I didn't know about them until I was 30.
Starting point is 00:58:02 So believe me. I was dumbfounded and excited and just like, okay. What's the tuning? Is it like a ukulele? It's like, I think the standard tuning for it is like a mandolin, but you can do it like the high strings of a guitar, so DGBE. Right. So you can play, if you learned chords on a regular guitar in that standard tuning,
Starting point is 00:58:22 you can play it easily. Just play the bottom. Yeah. And it does the job, and my tiny little fingers were able to get around. And now that I've played that for a long time, I can actually play a full-size guitar. But it took a long time. And I just was an impatient, ADHD kid, and the amount of discipline and practice that it would have taken to play a six-string guitar, I did not have it. I did not have that focus.
Starting point is 00:58:47 Yeah. And so. I guess I did. You didn't seem to love at the beginning. I love doing it. It was the passion of the doing it, the feeling of doing it, because it felt like you could just levitate off the floor while you're doing it. When does, because the albums do get more sophisticated musically,
Starting point is 00:59:09 at some point do you make a conscious decision to kind of move away from the confines of country? Do you remember the records you did that with? It was more that I wasn't just a musician. when I was a producer. Yeah. And I was very much in love with ideas. And ideas make ideas. They breed like rabbits.
Starting point is 00:59:31 Yeah. And the rabbit holes are so worth exploring. Yeah. And I wanted all the sounds that there could be. Yeah. And I was really interested in Eastern sounds and specifically Bulgarian singing. And there's something about the drone that gives you whiplash. You're like, what does that sound?
Starting point is 00:59:53 Humans make that sound? Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's an arresting sound. Totally. And when I found that music, I suddenly, you know that Disney cartoon of the ugly duckling where the duckling is all sad? And then this one comes along and kind of pokes it and then it feels better. I felt like that little duckling because I have a very nasal voice. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:18 Um, and I never felt like I sang pretty, you know, and, and that didn't bother me, but I, I, I never knew where I fit in either. Like, I didn't understand what my voice was for. Yeah. And then when I heard these ensembles of women making these sounds and each of them, minus say Georgieva in Bertrille, Burgarca, they, they have very nasal voices. And that is their strength is they just project this laser sound. out of their foreheads. Yeah. And I was like, wow, that is so ancient and so arresting. And I wonder if it was weaponized in ancient cultures, like to scare people because it's terrifying. Almost like a magical power. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:01:03 Yeah. And, you know, that is our magical power. It's one of our magical powers as human beings. Like, you know how you might love to watch Planet Earth and David Attenborough is talking about cheetahs. And he's, you know, talking about how wonderful they are. Like, if there was a show about humans like, you know, that, harmony singing would be one of those things.
Starting point is 01:01:21 I think I see it in sumo wrestling. Sumo wrestling? Yeah. The grunting, sort of the physicality of it, even though it's, you know, it has rules and a sport, but there is something that I think really shows the human animal element. Yeah, the kind of feral part. Yeah, yeah. I know, that's so cool.
Starting point is 01:01:42 Or the dances that the natives of New Zealand do, that kind of aggressive, like, you know. kind of aggressive like the haka yeah yeah that's powerful stuff yeah yeah and you know harmony singing would be one of those things or you know how when a big group of people who can't sing sing at the same time yeah like you feel like you want to start crying yeah that weird like like you catch your breath like that's one of the things we can do that's absolutely magnificent oh anytime harmonies happen or musicals happen or anytime there's a lot of people singing all at once. I can't help it like tear up. It's fucking nuts. And I love it. Yeah. It's like I'm still a human animal. I love this feeling. So that kind of reconfigured the way you approached
Starting point is 01:02:25 music? I just felt a little more confident. Like, you know, I follow a lot of indigenous people who talk about their spirituality and, you know, their view of the world. And, it's kind of the closest thing to like old Ukrainian stuff. Yeah, which is where you come from. Yeah, and a lot of people, especially people who are indigenous, talk about the importance of ancestors. Yeah. And I don't have any ancestors.
Starting point is 01:02:58 I'm a settler. Yeah. You know, I'm a child of immigrants and I'm an invasive species here in North America. And so many people have this background here where you're just cut off from your ancestors, especially because we came in the era where, you know, you're not supposed to publicize your ethnicity. You need to blend in with America right now. Right.
Starting point is 01:03:22 We're Americans now. We don't speak Ukrainian. We don't talk about it. We don't, we're Americans. And so I had no ancestral support or foundation whatsoever. But in finding Trio Bulgarka, I felt like I had an ancestor. And I felt legitimate somehow. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:45 And then you found your great aunt that was a wrestler. Yes. So those two things. Absolutely. Aunt Ella. How did that happen again? It was the craziest story. My friend Ruth, Ruth, Laitman, she was making a movie called Lipstick and Dynamite
Starting point is 01:04:02 about kind of the four runners of the females in wrestling, the women in wrestling. And she sent Kelly Hogan and I some footage so that, because she wanted us to be part of the soundtrack, and I was watching it. And my aunt's like the third person who comes along. She's like, my real name is Elsie Shepchenko, from Costa Washington. And I was like, that's my last name. And I was like, we were the only Ukrainians there. And my grandmother, luckily, was still alive at the time. So I called my grandma.
Starting point is 01:04:36 I'm like, Grandma, do we have a wrestling? rail to him. She's like, oh, yes, Elsie, she was quite famous. I'm like, why would you never tell me this person? I don't know, you didn't ask, you know. And so. You could have a hero. Well, she's kind of, she's definitely one of my heroes now. Yeah. And I did get to meet her. And it was really lovely. And I got to know a lot more about her through my friend Ruth, who's very generous. And I told me a lot more about her. But what, what years was the wrestling? Was it spectacle wrestling? It was like 50s and 60s.
Starting point is 01:05:12 So she started as a roller derby person, and then she made her way into wrestling. And then she accidentally in a match killed her opponent. And it wasn't her fault. There was something going on with the woman. And so she was made to be this horrible villain and a horrible person. And she actually felt really terrible. Right. It wasn't something that was meant to do.
Starting point is 01:05:43 But, you know, wrestling is very physical and dangerous even if you aren't doing it. Right. Even if it's spectacle wrestling, it's still super dangerous. Oh, no, it's real, it's real, it's real sport. Mm-hmm. Yeah. And when you met her, did you see yourself in her? Well, I saw myself in her when Ruth told me that she's really a softie.
Starting point is 01:06:08 And she really likes to write poetry. Uh-huh. And I was like, oh, it was super butch, like, poetry writing ding-dong. Yeah. And, you know, I did. I felt really validated to know that Elsie Chavchenko, like, who goes out to become a wrestler in the 50s when you're a woman? Yeah. Yeah, like, who does that?
Starting point is 01:06:33 Well, I mean, the same kind of person that goes into rock and roll. I suppose. Like, rock and roll is basically mainstream compared to being a wrestler in the 50s, though, as a woman. Like, that's... It feels like roller derby was pretty something. Yeah. And I think wrestling was always something because it was always happening to the side, but it was kind of a thing. I mean, I remember growing up in New Mexico, and I did it.
Starting point is 01:06:57 I was on the show, Glow, the gorgeous ladies. I did. I watched that. Yeah. And, but before that, I just remember growing up and there was always a local station that had wrestling. And it was just Unitards and, you know, dudes. And I remember those wrestling magazines. So it's always been sort of a fairly, at least marginally popular American spectacle.
Starting point is 01:07:20 And I remember Roller Derby, too, and that was always women. So it was kind of like the companion to male wrestling must have been this roller derby world. Yeah, because they did have male roller derby, but it wasn't popular. Right. Only the women's events were popular. Yeah. Which is kind of, you know, the opposite of how things usually are. So I guess somebody at some point said, like, you girls are tough.
Starting point is 01:07:44 Mm-hmm. Let's try this wrestling thing. And they figured it out. Yeah. And my aunt grew up farming, so she was pretty buff. Pretty tough. Yeah. So, like, when you look at the arc of, like, the records that got you here, I mean, how do you feel your songwriting is different now?
Starting point is 01:08:01 Do you, like, because, you know, it seems like through the book, you landed a place of, you know, wisdom, and a certain amount of confidence in how you're interpreting your life, how is it different for you? I question myself a lot less. As far as my intent, but the little things, like the technical things, I'm always working on those, and I question myself on those things. In writing a song? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:32 Like, once, I usually start by singing into the air or writing. lyrics first, but sometimes I'll start on a guitar. How does melody happen? I just sing that into the air. Really? Yeah. Huh. I was one of those kids who was always singing.
Starting point is 01:08:48 And just kind of riffing, making it up? Yeah, just making it up. And then, you know, now I just kind of sing it into my phone. And I don't have musical education, so I can't, I know some chords on a guitar. And I know things about engineering and I know things about production. But if I were to go, I'm going to play every single chord that could happen underneath this particular line. I couldn't do it because I don't have the chops at all. But luckily, I have a great friend named Paul Rigby, who is a trained jazz musician who loves nothing more than to tell me which, like, could play me every single chord that could go under a certain part.
Starting point is 01:09:26 Oh, wow. And so we have this nice partnership where I'm like, Paul, this isn't working. What's every single note that could go under there? Yeah. And so we figure that out. Or I'll have two kind of disparate pieces, and I want them to go together. Yeah. But I don't know how to put them together.
Starting point is 01:09:42 Yeah. I'll be like, Paul, how do we do this? Right. And he's a problem solver, and that's like what gives him his music boner, for lack of a better term. Yeah. And so it's a really fun, collaborative thing. Yeah, and I think it seems like, you know, once you locked in with that original band, you certainly appreciated collaboration, and that just probably expanded. as you get older.
Starting point is 01:10:07 Yeah, and I thought for a long time, like, if I didn't write the song by myself, I was not a legitimate songwriter. Yeah. So I wrote songs by myself. It was lonely. Yeah. I didn't enjoy it as much.
Starting point is 01:10:19 Yeah. So I, like, I always wanted to be in a gang. Like I said, I didn't want to be alone. Sometimes you'll come in with lyrics and just bang it out with him. Yeah. Or I'll just, like, sing it into my phone and go, what, what keys this in? Right. You know, I can figure that out myself, but.
Starting point is 01:10:34 And how did the pornographers help? The pornographers was a masterclass in singing and odd melody and harmony. I somehow kind of missed the impact of them and I listened to it recently. And it's just like wild, powerful pop stuff. You kind of got thrown into that? Well, I was going to school in Canada and playing in a band with my two friends, Karina and Toby. We were a band called Mao. And everybody knew each other because Canada, though it may be the largest country in the world, it has one of the smallest populations.
Starting point is 01:11:18 And so it was absolutely opposite of what America was like. America looked at music like sports and being competitive. Whereas in Canada, it was like pot luck. Yeah. It was like, okay, if we're going to have a big. band, and we're going to ask this person to be the bass player, we're going to have to accept that they're already in three other bands. Right.
Starting point is 01:11:37 Because there's just not the personnel. Like, the personnel pool is very limited. Yeah. But it was really a great way to learn things. And the sense of community from it was amazing. And I'm so glad I unlearned the American way of doing things. Oh, yeah. So that freed you.
Starting point is 01:11:54 So freeing. And being able to accept other people and being happy for other people when they would be successful. You know, those things are really. important if you want to grow as a human. Yeah, Canadians are pretty good at the, there's a ceiling, you know, that it's not Americanized in that greedy, competitive kind of, you know, fucked up way. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:12:13 I've noticed that across the board. I mean, there are, there are people there like that. Sure. But, you know, this was, this was very practical and very, very friendly. Yeah. And great. And it gave you like a sort of an education in possibilities, but also confidence in singing, I imagine. Yeah, and I was, you know, Carl, the main songwriter, he, he was in a band called
Starting point is 01:12:37 Zampano. Yeah. And before that, a band called Superconductor. And both of those bands were so huge for me. I was so into them because Carl could really sing. Yeah. And at that time, a lot of bands were not interested in melody. It was mostly about being punk rock and tough and all this other stuff. Whereas, like, Dan and Carl, they would openly admit to liking things like poetry in interviews and I was just so blown away because nobody was man enough to say that they like poetry oh wow they just were not and so I was they kind of threw me for a loop but the melodies were so undeniable yeah and so wonderful and I was such a fan of both of them so when Carl asked me to be in the band I was really taken aback yeah and I felt very special
Starting point is 01:13:24 that's great they're great records you know what other song I like on this one that like struck me was the spider one, Little Gears. Yeah. I like that song. Thank you. It's almost like a Leonard Cohen song. Well, I noticed that you notice all the little ecosystems going around your house too. And it's like when you're a person who notices things, you have a connection to your world.
Starting point is 01:13:48 Yeah, yeah, but also like to sort of kind of expound on it and metaphorize it. It's good. Yeah. If we can't take lessons from Little Spider. I know. I know. Yeah. We're not that important.
Starting point is 01:14:02 I know. It's all so heartbreaking, though, sometimes. I know. It is. But when you realize how small you really are, it's so comforting. Oh, God. It's so nice. Well, it's good talking to you.
Starting point is 01:14:14 Nice talking to you, too. You feel all right? I do. I have to tell you a story about a dream I had about you. Really? Yeah, it was the nicest dream. Oh, good. So I had this dream that I was late.
Starting point is 01:14:28 for something. Yeah. And I was going to miss this thing, or I was going to this thing that was really, really, really important. Yeah. And it meant the world to me, and it would mean
Starting point is 01:14:38 that I did something good or something. So I was at like this weird gymnasium or something. Okay. And I went into the gymnasium and nobody was there. Yeah. I had missed it and I walked into the middle room
Starting point is 01:14:50 and I was like, oh, it was like a dance or something. And then you were there. Yeah. And you were like, oh, hey, I think you missed it. And I was like, yeah I can see that and you were like ah that sucks
Starting point is 01:15:03 I was like yeah and you were like you want to dance and I said yeah and so and it was one of those moments like there wasn't like sexuality behind it right it was like true friendship like a non-gendered beautiful and and we dance we slow danced to it was a combination of twilight time by the platters and if I could be with you by Louis Armstrong. Nice. And I felt so much better.
Starting point is 01:15:34 And then I woke up and I felt really good. So thank you for that. I'm glad I showed up in the dream. You did. You totally showed up for me. I appreciate that. Yeah. And the book, too, those dreams that you recounted at the end were great. Dreams are great if you can hold on to them.
Starting point is 01:15:47 Yeah. And then the whole sort of, you know, the finishing, the finishing of the arc of this sort of putting horses and women into context was pretty great. Yeah. like we don't want to fuck horses we just want to be horses man all right thanks for coming you're so welcome thanks for having me yeah there you go and just if you if you're curious and you want to know what's up with nico you can go to nico case dot com for her tour dates and to order her new album neon gray midnight green you can also get her memoir the harder i fight the more I love you, wherever you get books.
Starting point is 01:16:26 Hang out for a minute, folks. The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox is an eight-episode Hulu Original Limited series that blends gripping pacing with emotional complexity, offering a dramatized look as it revisits the wrongful conviction of Amanda Knox for the tragic murder of Meredith Kircher and the relentless media storm that followed.
Starting point is 01:16:52 The twisted tale of Amanda Knox Start streaming August 20th, only on Disney Plus. Hi, I'm Yer Rahman. I cover money in retirement at the Globe and Mail. Every day, I talk to Canadians making big financial decisions, from affording a home to caring for aging parents, and a lot of them feel overwhelmed. That's where I come in.
Starting point is 01:17:14 I help make sense of personal finance with real stories and no jargon. My goal is to help you retire rich, in dollars, and in purpose. If that's journalism you value, head to globe and mail.com slash subscribe. Hey, people, we did a bonus episode for full merit subscribers this week covering the making of my four comedy albums from 2002 to 2011. It's a good one. Final engagement, which, all right, this is going to sound dark, but if you had died before WTF, you would be remembered. remembered for this album like it would be one of those things that people talk about that are like that guy he burned hot and fast and that was the end of him but man that you got to listen to that
Starting point is 01:18:03 fucking thing like it would be one of those legendary things yeah and i think only the fact that you have a different story in your life now that happened you know by way of the podcast and by way of just your growth and everything it does not become a defining point in your legacy but look i just listen to it again it is bracing like and i will still i've said this to you before it's got absolutely some of your best stuff in it's got some of your wrongest stuff in it for sure but that part about how racism is just about fucking yeah white racism is founded in a fear of fucking white racists are paralyzed with fear that brown people without fuck them and surround them and make them powerless and that's just a horrifying nightmare
Starting point is 01:18:51 to them. But on a deeper level, white racists are afraid that brown people will fuck them and make everybody brown. And then they won't know who to hate anymore. And that's a deeper fear. Because you can brown up white in one generation. You understand that, right? All it takes is one brown load to make white brown. And a white racist knows that it takes eons to unbrown white, if that's even possible. To get every bonus episode and all episodes, episodes of WTF ad-free, sign up for the full Marin. Just go to the link in the episode description or go to WTFpod.com and click on WTF Plus. And a reminder before we go, this podcast is hosted by ACAST. This is a one-take guitar riff. I'm in a hurry. I got to go
Starting point is 01:19:37 the doctor. I'm not you're I'm trying I'm I'm I'm I'm
Starting point is 01:19:59 I'm I'm I'm I'm know I'm and I'm
Starting point is 01:20:07 You know, I'm going to be able to know, I'm sure, I'm I don't know.
Starting point is 01:20:15 I'm going to be able to be. I'm going to be. You know, We're going to be. I'm going to be able to be. I'm going to be. I'm not I'm going to be able to
Starting point is 01:20:33 I'm going to and I'm going to I'm a lot of I'm my and I don't know.
Starting point is 01:20:47 I'm going to be able to I'm going to I'm going to I'm going to I'm I'm going to I'm going to be.
Starting point is 01:21:00 I'm I don't know. I don't know. We're going to be able to be. I'm going to be. I'm going to be. I don't know. Boomer lives, monkey and lafonte, cat angels everywhere.

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