17 Burst results for "Perry Farrell"

Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
"perry farrell" Discussed on Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
"They were opening for Aerosmith and Deep Purple and it was a giant stadium. It was where they filmed the second half of the Paradise City video, the color half. And they come out and they're all cocky. And some people are like, he just started saying, some of you don't like us and go home. And then that's when they, you're the opening band. And he's giving us the finger. So I was like in a third row and I just went like that. He looked at me. He pissed me off. He pissed me off. You're opening. Come on. Yeah. On July 18th, 1991, Perry Farrell, right? Perry Farrell, the failed kind of trick of a name. It's supposed to be peripheral. That's why he called himself Perry Farrell. He thought it was, but he stuck with Perry Farrell. Nobody got it. Perry Farrell cat, you know. Launches the first Lollapalooza tour as a farewell of his Just Dissolved band, Jane's Addiction. Other acts appearing on the tour include Susie and the Banshees, Nine Inch Nails, Rawlins Band, Fishbone, and Rage Against the Machine. So he used to do them in one spot. Now it's a traveling thing, isn't it? No, I think he used to travel. Now it's in Chicago. It's permanently in Chicago, right? Yeah, it's hard to travel. Let's see. I'm going to talk about that in a little while. Pearl Jam releases 10, right? Nirvana release Smells Like Teen Spirit. Guns N' Roses released their first, and it's going through a little. Let's see. No, they released Tease Your Illusion 1 and 2 that year. Yeah. Getting into October through December. I'm almost done here, gentlemen. Then we can kind of start tearing it up. Let me see. So on November 3rd, a free tribute concert is held at Golden Gate Park in memory of concept promoter Bill Graham. How did he die? Do you remember? Helicopter. Wasn't clapping, he almost got on the helicopter? No, that was the Stevie Ray Vaughan. That was the Stevie Ray Vaughan one. And I always said Jack would just fucking shake his head in cringe when I said, I kind of wish it was Eric Clapton. If I had my choice, I'd keep Stevie Ray Vaughan. I'd keep Stevie Ray. I remember coming to work that morning, and there was a helicopter crash, and people at first said it could be Eric Clapton. At first I was like, oh my God, but you know what? The guy had a long career. At least he had a good career. And when you found out it was Stevie Ray who just sobered up and everything. So he raped his wife, you know? Come on. What? He admitted to it. Abusing Patty Harrison. Once all these things came out, you're like Jesus Christ. He's no angel. You got away with a lot of shit. Eric Clapton is not God. He's the devil. He's the fucking devil. He's the devil. I think when he drinks, that's his problem. Yeah, when Stevie Ray died, I had a date with this girl, hot little thing. And I canceled it. I'm like, I don't care. She's not worth it. I'm just going to drink all night now. Stevie Ray died. I'm going to drink all and just listen to Stevie Ray all night in my dorm. I was a big fan. I played a Stevie Ray song at the actual guitar bar two weeks ago. There was a cold shot. Ah, that's a cold shot, baby. Don't let your love go cold, baby. Let's see. What do we got here? In November 14th, the new Michael Jackson music video Black or White, premieres simultaneously. See, fucking great marketing. Great marketing. Premieres simultaneously in 27 countries to an audience of 500 million people. Controversy is, yeah, that's all. Controversy is immediately generated by the video's last four minutes in which Jackson smashes windows, vandalizes a car, and causes a building to explode. Wait a minute. Was this done in 2020? And he grabbed his cross. Was he predicting the summer of 2020? And he grabbed his cross. He grabbed his cross repeatedly for dinner. So again, the only thing he didn't do was rob a Nike store. Because, you know, when somebody dies in Minnesota, people in New Jersey have to get new Nikes. Gotta have Nikes. Remember, that's what that was all about. Capitalism at its best. Anyway. And when that premiered, remember when MTV would have the video premiers? There was a bunch of them. Yeah. I have to watch this. This is his worldwide hit album, Dangerous. It comes four years after Bad and goes on to sell more than 32 million copies. Imagine that. 32 million, and that's not the most, like, that's his, like, fourth. Yeah. Like, highest grossing album. 32 million copies. Gee, poor seller. Okay, so we have November 30th. Following the steps of the Billboard 200, which I skipped over earlier, the Billboard Hot 100 also begins a new era incorporating and merging electronically measured sales and airplay data from SoundScan and BDS, respectively. So, whatever that means. Yeah, it's before downloading, too. Yeah, yeah. December 1st. George Harrison plays Yokohama, Japan. A brief Japanese tour with Eric Clapton marks his first set in Japan. A formal concert performance since 74. One of the reasons he went over there, he wanted to quit smoking. I don't know what going to Japan would do. Evidently, there's a ban on smoking in Japan. Who knows? Unless you're Yakuza. Yakuza. Yakuza, you have to smoke. Every movie, there's smokers. Yakuza smokers. Like the Deer Hunter, too. Yeah, smokers, then Yakuzas. Here we go. So, on December 4th, the Judds give their final concert performance as a duo. And on December 31st, the 20th annual New Year's Rockin' Eve. It was 20 years old at that time. Wow. As on ABC with appearances by Boyz II Men, Simply Red, Vanessa Williams. Yeah. Another bad creation. Restless Heart. Michael Bivens from Bell Biv Devote. And New Edition. And Barry Manilow. Wow. Also in 91, these are side notes. Aerosmith signs a deal with Sony Music worth an estimated $30 million. Rolling Stone signed a new contract with Virgin Records. Country music legend Kenny Rogers starts his first chain restaurant. Kenny Rogers Roasters, which went on to ruin Kramer's life for an episode of Seinfeld. It's the Red Planet, Jerry! It's the Red Planet! Did you ever hear... Jerry goes and stays in the room, stays in the apartment. And then at the end, you hear this running across the room. He goes, Mr. Chuckles? Kramer had a vent with his doll. And he fucking ran across the room. Mr. Chuckles? What were you saying, Mark? If you ever went to Kenny Rogers Roasters, you had to wait in line forever. And my yard was Lady, Ruby Don't Take Your Love To Town. What condition, my condition. Yeah, it was a three song loop that just went over and over. She believes in me? No, I didn't hear it when I went in there. They had one in Miami, right over by Miami International Airport, U.S. Customs. It was just U.S. Customs back then. When we were the best in the world at what we did, which was finding drugs, they had a 50% discount for police officers. Oh, wow. And they literally put the thing out of business.

Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
"perry farrell" Discussed on Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
"An unknown to her, and remember, deckers wrote about her financial difficulties and a suicide note. Unknown to her, the Belgian association that collects royalties for songwriters awarded her $300,000. That's fucked. That's bad fate. That is fucked. See, see, it's not worth it, people. Keep waiting for that 300 grand. That's the moral of this story. That's right. Look before you leap. And I think we talked about this song once before. You were you born. 63. So that's someone came out in 60. That song was the number one song in the country. I think the week you were born. I think that was your birth zone. Hey Mark, are you there? Me? Yeah. 'cause I see both of you guys frozen on my screen, but I can see you hear us. Everybody looks fine over here. Okay. You're looking good. We're almost done. Let's see. This day in 1980. I get no Internet. Jesus Christ. I don't know what the fuck, I mean, I see you guys in the green room. You did the show for three years, or whatever, with no problems, all of a sudden you have in these problems. Yeah. Yeah, I think it's when someone's residency started. I don't know. It's the AI. Yeah. Let's see, Pink Floyd's dark side of the moon album spent 303rd week in the U.S. album shot beating Carole King's Tapestry. On this day in 1979, after attending a dire strait show during their residency, at the Roxy in Los Angeles, Bob Dylan asked macho and drummer pick withers to play on the sessions for his next album, slow train coming was the album, recorded in muscle shoals in May of 79. Jerry Wexler producing. Dylan had his first head first heard Dire Straits Mark knopfler when his assistant at the risotto played him the single sultan of swing. On the state of 1978, David Bowie kicked off his low slash heroes, 77 date world tour at San Diego sports arena. In 1975, Labelle went to number one in the U.S. single shots with lady marmalade, the group's only number one British act all saints had a UK number one with the same song. You know, Patti LaBelle's two sisters both died at breast cancer. Yeah, that's tough. Who wrote lady marmalade? Oh, bob crew, he was a producer of the four seasons. He co wrote a lot of those four season songs. Love his big hits. How do you know this shit? Because I read it somewhere. I read it somewhere. I retained it. Read it in a book. I don't retain shit. Goes in one ear and out the other. On this day in 1975, Led Zeppelin saw all 6 of their albums in the U.S. top 100 shot at the scene in the same week. Alongside their latest album, this is 75 physical graffiti at number one, physical graffiti had has now been certified 16 times platinum. U.S. sales excess of 16 million. On this day in 1973, doctor hook and the medicine show got their picture finally on the cover of Rolling Stone. Yep. Yep, according to the members of the group, they really did 5 copies. They did buy 5 copies for their mothers. Then they became like a disco act. They had like disco Y songs. Yeah, yeah, they did. Yeah. They jumped on the wagon. On this day in 1969, John Lennon, and Yoko Ono, Black Sabbath, the crazy world about the Brown, curved it, JJ Jackson's dilemma, shy limbs, spontaneous music ensemble, sunflower brass band, and toe fat, all toe fat. What? All appeared at the London free Easter festival in bethnal, green, London, England. Ladies and gentlemen, toe fat. So fat. Wow. On this day in 1967, working at Abbey Road studios, The Beatles finished recording good morning, good morning. They then started to work on a new song with a little help from my Friends originally titled bad finger boogie. Really? Recording ten takes of the rhythm track that Ringo overdubbed a double track lead vocal. On this day in 1966, The Rolling Stones Mick Jagger was injured during a gig in Marseille, saw the France after a fan threw a chair at the stage. Jaggery style required 8 stitches to cut. Let's see, born on this day in 1959. Yeah, fuck the French. American singer songwriter and musician periferal is real name peretz Bernstein from Jane's addiction. And by the way, like I've always said, Perry Farrell was supposed to be pronounced peripheral. And that's not his real name. I didn't know that. Peretz Bernstein is his real name, but he tried to be this cool peripheral. So I'll call myself Perry Farrell. And no one ever got it. It jokes on him. Damn it. Nobody knows. Let me see. One on this day. In 1956, patty Donahue singer from the experimental post punk band from Akron, Ohio, the waitresses. Telling you, you look at the watch that video for Christmas wrapping, she looked just like my mom. Oh, really? Amazing. Looks just like my mom. If you watch that video, look just like my mom. I always looked and that's what's the beauty every time that song comes on around the Christmas time. I always think of my mom. I see the video and I'm like, it looks just like her man. It's just like a waitress. What's that? Did your mom was cute? Yeah, yeah, she was. My mom was a good-looking woman. Waitress is best known for the 1988, that's why I am a good-looking man. I look like. Of course. Anyways. 1982 hit Christmas wrapping. Unfortunately, Donny died of lung cancer on December 6th, 1996. And you'll see her in the video. She smoking too, I believe. Oh man. Yeah. On this day and night, born on this day in 1949, Dave Greenfield, keyboards are the English rock band, the stranglers. Born on this day in 1949, Michael brecker, Becker brothers brothers. He was either trumpeter? Notable Joe's in rock collaborations included work with stereo. Didn't we talk about them too much? Yeah, they played on a run. It's one of the best jazz musicians ever. Worked with Stanley Dan, James Taylor Paul Simon Lou Reed, Donald fagan, Dire Straits Joni Mitchell, Eric Clapton, Billy Joel, John Lennon, Aerosmith, Dan Fogelberg, Frank Sinatra, Frank Zappa, Bruce Springsteen, Roger Daltrey, and parliament funkadelic. Now that is covering a lot of fucking bases. And probably a thousand more. On January 13th, 2007. Very young. He died at the same disease, my mother died of. Yeah, he was less than he was in his 50s.

Stuff You Should Know
"perry farrell" Discussed on Stuff You Should Know
"Mitchell, not Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. She wasn't there either, David Geffen was her manager and said, nope, you can't go, you have to be on Dick Cavett on Tuesday and I'm worried you won't make it back in time. Which is crazy. It would have been amazing at the concert, but they released that recorded version within a month of each other, which I never knew. Just about 6 or 7 months after or 8 months after the concert. I didn't know there was another version released also that same year from a British band called Matthews, southern comfort. Boy, they really had some bad names back then. And I just listened to it and boy, they really take all of the passion out of it in that version and they skip they just completely wholesale skip the coolest line, I think, in the song, which is they just say we are stardust. We are golden, and we've got to get ourselves back to the garden. They don't have that lyric in the middle. We are billion year old carbon, which is so hippy dippy and amazing. Oh, I never noticed that. It's true though. They're right. Joni Mitchell was right. They just skip it, and it's just very mellow and lame to my ears. It's like shoe gaze, drone. Yeah, I don't know. Apparently that was the biggest hit out of all of them, though, which I no way. Maybe in England, I don't know. Okay. Thumbs down for me. Yeah, same here. I haven't even heard it, but it sounds sucky. Yeah. So we are talking about Woodstock. And I think it's one of those things. I'm probably in the majority for our age group. I've heard of it. I've got images of the film in my head. Sure. I have a general. I could rattle off probably four or 5 people or bands that were there that played. And it was muddy and there was brown acid and all that stuff. The thing is, is when I was researching this, I was like, this really was like a really interesting event. Yeah. And it's not necessarily because it was just so culturally significant. Although it turned out to be, or that it was just such a special magical cosmic moment, which I'm sure if you were there, there were a lot of people who believe that. But more that it was just an exercise in putting half a million people together. Outdoors, over three days, throwing as much drugs as you possibly can into the mix. And then just seeing what happened and what happened was really impressive was very peaceful, basically worked. Really communal. It was a really, it was a cool thing. So out of all the stuff from the 60s that like all those oldsters are saying like, hey, you know, the 60s you had to be there. Sure. This does seem to have some chops in that respect. It does seem to have been significant. Yeah, it was one of those moments in time for sure. And if you believe max yasgur, who we'll talk about quite a bit here and there, he was his farm, very famously in bethel, New York, that hosted this concert, but when he takes the stage and makes and speaks to the crowd, which is a very fun thing to watch on YouTube, or if you watch the whole movie, he claims and it might have been true at the time that it was the largest grouping of human beings ever in history in one place. I've seen that in places too that that's entirely possible to tell you the truth. Yeah, I mean, between four and 500,000 people, that's you didn't get crowds like that back then. No. And I mean, I can't think of one instead of now, yeah. The thing that sprung to mind was I think Mecca gets pretty crowded on certain holy times. Okay. It's possible that rivaled that before in the past. Or even contemporarily, I don't know, but yeah. We'll put Woodstock and Mecca together. How about that? Yeah, but he even you're right though, when you think about the biggest outdoor even there are no outdoor arenas that hold anything close to this. But even when they say like, all right, we're going to take over this part of Central Park or whatever, or just this area. It doesn't really a couple of hundred to 300,000 people is like a huge, huge deal. So this is four to 500,000. I mean, the biggest hugest college football stadiums in the United States, maybe crack a 100,000. And those things are just massive. So imagine four or 5 of those filled the capacity, all dumped into just one of them. That's just amassing. On acid, yeah. Pretty neat. So yeah, let's start talking about this because there is a pretty cool story. I say we start at the beginning. How about that? Okay. And then pepper in some stuff because Ed helped us with this one. He really laid a bunch out in his intro and I think we should kind of salt and pepper it in instead. All right, yeah, I think I know what you mean. Okay, cool. Let's give it a shot. We do this on the fly, everyone. After all these years, we still do it the same way, just so you know. We like to go surprise. So Woodstock, and this is something Ed post was, you know, we were talking about the four to 500,000 people. Why? What made it special? Why were that many people? And one of the first kind of boring reasons is just the mere fact of where it was. It was in bethel, New York, and that was within a 6 to 7 to 8 hour drive of New York City, Philly, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, D.C., buffalo, Boston, like within three or four hours of a lot of those. It was located in a place where and it was held over the course, as you'll see supposed to be three tight days, but it veered into the morning of the fourth. But once word gets out, that there's this free show happening, you could miss Friday and show up halfway there on a Saturday and still see a lot of the performers, you know? Yeah, and I don't think you would have missed a whole lot missing Friday, frankly. Yay, Richie havens. Okay, that's it. I'll give you an amazing performance. For sure, I agree. I said miss much. I didn't think this nothing. All right, all right. So yeah, that was a big part of it. It was in bethel. It wasn't in Woodstock. What stuck is like 60 miles away from bethel, but the reason that they named it Woodstock and hung onto that name for everything they had was because Bob Dylan had put the town of Woodstock on the map when he moved there. It was like his little hideaway mountain, I guess, retreat. In the 60s and it just kind of became like a cool countercultural town. So the name itself would stock like men a lot to the people who actually went to the Woodstock festival in 1969. Yeah, and before people start screaming at you and me, especially it was famously where the band lived, one of my favorite, if not my favorite group from that era. And this is where Dylan and the band recorded the basement tapes. Outside of or in the basement of big pink, the house that they rented. And I finally made my trip to Woodstock last year for a show. At levon's barn, which I might have mentioned at some point in one of our episodes. But that town is still holding on to that and not in a bad way. It's still embodies I should say that feeling and that artsy community and it's just it's this magical place. I went in the dead of winter and there was hardly anyone there. And me and my buddy Justin, you know, just like walked around Woodstock, a lot of this stuff was closed in the winter. But it just had this feeling there. That is undeniable. Around Woodstock and bethel and Socrates were our buddy Joe garden lives, by the way. I don't know if you. I didn't know that. Shout out Joe garden. Yeah, we went to Joe's house. He's all right there together. It's a beautiful, beautiful country. So, okay, so there's where the name comes from, even though the whole thing was it held in Woodstock. And it was already kind of following in a tradition that was fairly new at the time. Like we think of music festivals. You're like any day of the week you can find a music festival somewhere in the United States, right? Yeah, for sure. It was actually still pretty new when Woodstock was held. The jazz festivals of the 50s and really starting the early 60s were the ones that had established festivals, right? Because everybody knows, even the greatest jazz performers can't draw a huge crowd so you have to put a bunch of them together, hence jazz festivals. Right? Yeah. Yeah, they were sort of the foundation and I think the big, the big one that kind of put these kind of festivals on the map, the first one was the Monterey pop festival. Right. In 67, and I would argue that it sort of went away after the altamont debacle with the murder at The Rolling Stones concert. And I think kind of, I'd have to look it up. I'm sure there were some festivals here and there, but I think Perry Farrell and a lot of the palooza brought it back. I think it was down for a couple of decades. You're absolutely right. I can't think of anything in between that was significant. There might have been something, but definitely like lava pleases what really kickstarted the modern era the festival. And like you said, now they are just all over the place all the time. Yeah, and I should say there are plenty of jazz festivals. There was New Orleans jazz fest kept going on didn't really Perry Farrell in his aspirations. But yes, for the pop culture, it was definitely Lollapalooza. I couldn't agree more. Yeah, yeah, boy, I'm glad you said that about jazz fest. I would have gotten smoked in the emails for sure. So the festival craze was like peak, the first wave of it, I should say, when Woodstock came, which was another thing that kind of helped make it such a legendary thing. And the whole thing was founded by two guys, arty cornfield and Michael Lang, two guys put on Woodstock and they did it with the backing of two kids. One of which came from a very, very wealthy family, a pharmaceutical dynasty, John Roberts, and his friend Joel rosenman. They bankrolled this thing. And they actually were looking for interesting countercultural investments. So much so that they actually advertised in The New York Times that they had a bunch of money and they were looking for interesting investments. And yeah, it turned out already cornfield Michael Lang already knew Robertson rosenman, and they had built like a recording studio together. And that kind of gave blossom to this whole Woodstock idea. Initially, it was going to be a one night benefit concert in Woodstock with Dylan as the headliner that's Bob Dylan, for those of you who aren't in the know like me, right? And it was going to pay for a music studio that they were going to build in Woodstock. That was the first idea of Woodstock. And then all of a sudden, they're like, well, who else could we have? And who else could we have in all of a sudden the music festival became way more important than the music studio that it was originally intended to help build? Yeah, absolutely. And then once they had this idea, they started searching around for a place. And they tried Woodstock. I think probably first because, like you said, the cultural significance. And then they moved on to Joe garden's house in Sagar teas. And then just say, get off my lawn. All right, not this place, I guess. Was it quite big enough? Although just house is great. It's like a little museum. So you can imagine. I've seen pictures. And then wall kill, which is nearby as well. And they all smartly were like, no, we can't host something this big. Have you ever been out here? It is, you're out in the middle of farmland and forest, and we can't hold a concert here. And this is when a gentleman named max yasgur, who was portrayed by Eugene Levy in the movie, what was the movie? Was it? Oh, you're serious. Oh yeah, yeah. I thought you could say he portrayed him in the documentary. No, not finding what stock, but something Woodstock. I think that was the name of it. But when you look at max Asgard, he looks a lot like Eugene Levy. So it was great casting. But he was a guy that was a farmer. And I think it like a dairy farmer had about 6 to 700 head of cattle and was the largest dairy farmer in the county. And he was not some hippie sympathizer. He, by all accounts, was kind of the opposite of that was what you might think he would be as a farmer in upstate New York, which is very straight laced, very Republican, but apparently he also kind of liked to thumb his nose at the man a little bit. And when the locals started hemming and hauling about having a concert in bethel, he was like, screw you guys. You can have it in my farm. Right. He was back in the 2000 aughts what you would have called the libertarian. It probably so. So he also was one of those people I get the impression he knew spunk when he saw it and he liked it. Yeah, I think you're probably right. So he really took a shine to cornfield and Lang. I think I've been calling him cornfield. That's okay. I don't know if you noticed or not. But I meant cornfeld in Lang. And so he helped him get this pushed through because they were, like you said, turned down at town after town after town in the area. And so yasgur finally kind of got bethel to well, at least with his support, bethel was a little more accommodating a little more allowable. But the way that these guys got this incredibly huge music festival pushed through, city councils got permits and all that stuff was by lying, lying lying. Yeah. They agreed to anything that the city council's asked for, including they agreed to hire a 150 off duty police officers. I don't think they ended up hiring one. They said that they expected 50,000. They expected actually 200,000. The 400 to 500,000 even them by surprise. But they were still expecting about four times more than they told the bethel city council they were. And they just basically said whatever they wanted to, whatever they thought they wanted to hear and finally, like you said with the Asuka's help they got it. They got to push through and they had a home. The problem is they had a home now for this festival, just 5 weeks before the advertised date. That's right. And I think it's a great cliffhanger. So we'll come back in a moment and see if the Woodstock concert even happened. You know everybody, the year goes by pretty fast, especially if you're a business owner. So it's never too early to start planning. Even January. That's right, because 2023 is well underway and you don't want to wait any longer to level up that small business of yours. You can do it all with stamps dot com, isn't that right? That's right. Stamps dot com lets you print your own postage and shipping labels right from your home or office and it's ready to go in minutes so you can get back to running your business sooner and planning for the future. That's right and postage rates just increased again. So luckily stamps dot com is there because they have the best discounts in the industry. Yeah, with rates you can't find anywhere else like up to 84% off USPS

TuneInPOC
"perry farrell" Discussed on TuneInPOC
"What I meant. Things started to look up once rivers got a job, a tower records. Whereas taste began to stray way beyond metal. I was such a devout metalhead, but somehow it was okay to for me to listen to pop radio and like Tiffany and Madonna at the same time. I was just aware of it. It was I maybe there was a sense of irony, but I definitely enjoyed the music. But I think my education and my transformation can be credited to one source, definitely more than anything else, and that would be tart records. My job there. Because that was 8 hours a day of listening to really good music from all different genres and time periods and being schooled by the senior people there. At first, I was like, just could not get into any of it. It all sound like garbage to me. Velvet Underground or pet sounds was reassured around that time. 13th floor elevators, pixies, Sonic Youth. That all sound like noise. How could none of this is melodic or catchy? But over the course of the year and a half that I worked there, I came to love it all. One band changed everything for him. I remember the first time I heard Nirvana too, it must have been a year before that, and when I was at tower, this very knowledgeable guy there Herald said, you should check out this band Nirvana. I think you'd like this. And he put on sliver and I remember just like walking around in circles around, they had this island in the center where it's like an info desk at tower sunset. And I just listened to it like walking around, putting away CDs, walking around. It's like, oh my God, this is, this is so beautiful to me, and I identify with it so much. And that was really the song. In a way, that's my teen spirit. I think for a lot of people, teen spirit is the song that changed the course of their musical life. And for me, it was sliver and hearing, hearing him sing about mom and dad and grandpa Joe and these personal family issues and a really heartbreaking kind of innocent childlike way over these straightforward chords in the major key, but then the distortion kicks in. They start screaming. Shit. That's what I want to do. Nirvana even influenced his look. Original weezer guitarist Jason cropper told me they in bloom video, where Kurt Cobain wears thick glasses. Help Cuomo feel comfortable in his own eyewear. At tower records, Cuomo met a punk rock dude named pat Finn, who connected him with a drummer. Patrick Wilson was an endearing goofy fan of they might be giants in Van Halen. And he had serious drum skills. Cuomo moved in with Wilson and his friend Matt sharp. An Artie brandy dude with gothy angle file tastes. And then we are dyed rattail. Sharp had his own musical projects, but that point he was just a roommate. With a remarkably lucrative day job, telemarketing, upscale dog shampoo. Cuomo and Wilson started a band called fuzz. Enlisting a young woman named Scotty Chapman on bass. Cuomo's first song writing efforts included the answer man, which sounds like a grungier Jane's addiction. Cuomo is obviously trying to sing like Perry Farrell. It's solid though. You could imagine this band getting signed. After one or two fuzz shows, Chapman quit. Eventually going on to star on the show MythBusters. Patrick Wilson told me she quit because she quote realized we were nerds. After fuzz came 60 wrong sausages, with Cuomo, Wilson, and Finn on bass, along with a second guitarist, Jason cropper cropper was a California native. A chill, cheerful guy. Cuomo wasn't the focus of 60 wrong sausages. It was more of a collective, and it didn't last long. After so many failed bands, Cuomo decided he would write 50 songs in a row before allowing himself to form another one, or even play live again. He moved to Santa Monica, started attending college there and recorded demo after demo, on an 8 track cassette recorder. He only got to 30 or so songs, not 50. But among them were undone the sweater song, and other future weezer tracks. Cropper says that around this time, Cuomo also made it an entire rap album that he never released. There was a record that he had made called the vegetarians. And we were just going to lifelong vegetarian for the most part. And that comes from as Hindu roots and Buddhism and stuff like that and the way it was raised. And zoom in its record type of vegetarian and it was awesome like in the style of public enemy meets EPMD and run DMC like hard hitting wrap from the 80s like America KKK's most wanted style. Badass stuff. About being a vegetarian. The only evidence of this period is a striking demo of Cuomo covering ice cubes the bomb, like a one man Rage Against the Machine. Met sharp had moved to the Bay Area, and was going on these aimless weeks long Amtrak rides. On one of those trips, he listened to a tape of Cuomo's new songs that Wilson slipped him. When he heard sweater song and the breakup lament the world is turned and left me here. Everything changed. Cuomo was profoundly affected by sharp enthusiasm. I think Matt called me and said, you're a genius. And this is going to happen. I'm going to move down there. I'm going to be your bass player. We're going to, we're going to be a band, and this is going to happen. Feeling Matt's reaction to the tape was like the greatest boost of confidence I'd ever felt in my life. It confirmed all my greatest hopes for myself. It was just like this big brother to me and knowing that he felt so strongly about the songs was like all the confidence I needed..

Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
"perry farrell" Discussed on Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
"Type of crazy offer as many people are getting these days. Well, I mean, but he couldn't do it. He couldn't do it. 1500 albums, I mean, I know I have a thousand. Yeah, close close too. I know you do. I'm probably at 1500, but I have to tell you, I probably moved 800 into a storage space recently because they were just sitting here. Yeah, yeah. I mean, you can almost kind of see it behind me that there are actually empty cubes behind me that weren't empty previously. You know, they were just sitting here. You know, so there are, I've gotten to the point where there are some music that I'm fine playing on Spotify or Apple music or iTunes or any of the streaming services is fine. And then there's some things that I just absolutely have to listen to on vinyl. And the things that I think that I can listen to on Spotify and one of the streaming services. I moved up into the attic. Like, I don't need to have an air Clapton album in my room. I needed to just clear some space and whatnot. And that's okay. Yeah, absolutely. I do have an issue though with you and bob and how you display your albums. Spine first is just so lame. Spine for us is so lame. What are you talking about? So there's two ways to display albums, right? It's spine first, right? You see the spine of the record. But you don't like with little beady fucking letters that you got to kind of, or like my setup, like the record store, the face of the cover is facing you. And you yeah, but it's all depending upon you set up. I mean, do you have space in on? I don't necessarily have space because I have my records in the same place that I have my art and my painting equipment and all of that stuff. I don't have the luxury of being in the vast estate, the Mar-a-Lago north that you live in. Marla, wait a minute, Mar-a-Lago is north of me. The Mar-a-Lago of Boca, we'll say. Well, I mean, I just never really liked them that way no matter what. I never really liked them. No, hey, I would love to be able to do that, but I'm in a hundred year old house. Well, that's your choice. That's by your case. It is my, I don't have to live here. I'm a high Po insurance executive, but I love the people around me. I know. They don't make fun of the way that I store my albums. So Taylor Hawkins. Oh my God. What a shame. Yeah. And we were just talking about him like two weeks earlier. Two shows earlier. You know, such a talented guy and not an original member of the Foo Fighters. You know, for those people that don't know, Taylor Hawkins actually came from Alanis Morissette's band. And he was playing with Alanis Morissette back at her touring band, her touring. Yeah, you know, when jagged little pill was just a phenomenon. And by the way, that is a great fucking still is. It does hold up. That is one of like the flawless albums of all time. I mean, just absolutely absolutely brilliant. Props to her. But he wanted to be in a band. Yeah. And he wanted to he wanted to join the Foo Fighters and, you know, Dave Grohl if he watched any of the documentaries or interviews that he's done. He's actually said, are you sure that you want to join the poof? I will plan like little theaters and stuff like that. You're in the biggest band in the world right now. But he wanted to be part of it. He wanted to be part of the unit, and he elevated the Foo Fighters so far beyond where they were. And I think it was a matter of wanting to belong. When you're touring musician, I'm not one. I've never been one, but I can only imagine. When you're touring musician, once the tour is over, you've got to look for another tour. Or you're getting recruited to go on another tour. You're almost like a lone wolf, right? And he probably he wanted to be in a pack. So he found the right band to go to, you know, and they took him in and he flourished. I would flourish. He never would have been this popular. He never would have been this rich. God rest his soul. You know, his influence is growing up where Stuart Copeland, Phil Collins, and Roger Taylor, from Queen. But the one person that he really modeled himself after was the drummer from Jane's addiction, Stephen Perkins, Steven Perkins was great, drama. Yeah. Yeah, he still is, he's alive. I don't mean to make it in past tense. And by the way, I'm just going to insert this rehearsal. Jane's addiction, one of the most underrated bands of all time. Absolutely. Absolutely. That group right there is so much better than the fucking Red Hot Chili Peppers. They're more talented. I like their music better. I like the whole style better than the chili peppers. I think the chili peppers were this kind of cool name and they jumped around a lot and Anthony key this did that shit with his arms and I was trying to rap. You know, they go after groups these new metal groups like corn and the death tones and groups like that because they would incorporate a DJ in them, right? And sometimes they were kind of rap like Limp Bizkit. Well, no one ever said shit about the Red Hot Chili Peppers, the Anthony key is what could down the street looking in my feet gotta say you're gonna go eat some meat worse fucking rapper in the history of rapping. And this dude is like, oh, looking at the key to see so cool, he's got his long hair when he runs around. Look at the muscles and he can rap, he's a white rapper and he's with the bed. Do you feel better? James addiction is so much better. Back to my point. By the other way, you know, so Jonah Jane's addiction, and we've talked about this numerous times. For those of you that are listening right now, if you have 45 minutes to kill, I don't know what the exact time of it is. But the album, nothing shocking. Which is their really their debut album. They put out a couple of like EP things prior to that. The album, nothing shocking is a musical journey. It's heavy. It's funky. It's cool. It's a little quirky. The greatest album covers ever. Yeah, yeah, designed by Perry Farrell or Pharrell. Well, the story behind that, you know, his name is something else. What's his real name? Oh, God. Yeah. Yeah. So he tried to be, he tried to be cool with the name, right? So he says, I'm gonna be Perry Ferrell, meaning peripheral, right? But it never caught on. Nobody got him very. So he got back with Perry for it was supposed to be peripheral. Nobody got it. You know what that one gets? That one gets a. But that album, summertime roles, standing in the shower thinking, mountain song, ocean. In my girlfriend..

Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
"perry farrell" Discussed on Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
"Anyways. Anyways. Yeah, so then we move on to the final inductees, the Foo Fighters. Well dessert, well deserved. Yes, yes. Well deserved. So let's listen old guys like you and I. Do you still kind of think of the Foo Fighters as a new band? I don't look at them as they're that old, no, I don't. I don't, that's funny. It's amazing. They've been around, you know, since what 95? 94 95, 98. Yeah. So they were the ones that I bought tickets to today. They're, you know, amazing performance and, you know, Dave Grohl is sometimes dismissed because he's too prolific. He's everywhere. He's also worth over $250 million, by the way. He's put out a new book this year. He put out a Bee Gees tribute record this year. Yeah. You know, he's producing, you know, you know, rocky entries. He's putting out new records. He's everywhere. Yeah. He's he's almost too much. I'd be remiss to not go back to Jay-Z and if you get a chance to watch The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony on HBO. Dave Chappelle gave one of the best induction speeches that I've ever heard. He was just so smooth and so real. And he said one thing in that, he says, American pie ain't made apples. American pie is made of whatever you can get your fucking hands on. Makes all the sense in the world to me. Yeah. And that's why that's what Jay-Z did. He got his hands on everything. He's a billionaire now. Yeah, so the foo fight is well deserved. Well, there's George ruthenberg. George ruthenberg. Yeah. I don't know. Who's George ruthenberg? Pat smear. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Now say his name fast. Pat smear, pat smear, pat smear, pat smear. So he got that little play on words. Jack almost knocked as Mike over, so. He had that little play on words, and it didn't really translate just like Perry Farrell from Shane's addiction. It's supposed to be peripheral. He called himself very Farrell and no one ever got it. So pat smear, I don't think it ever really. Sometimes those things don't work out, right? Bono vox. Yeah, to stick to Bono. Yeah. Yeah. Hey, what's your favorite food fight a song? God. All my life is definitely one of them. And I, you know, I know it's kind of a cliche because it's one of the more popular songs, but I still love times like these. I like these. I just think it's such a great song, you know, great energy in that type of thing. But you know I love the pretender or I love white limo, I love I love so many of their songs. I just think they're a great band. I love one of the songs I love is getting the best of you. And they sang that. They actually sang. They did. But my favorite right above that and it's just such a great song is.

Rock N Roll Archaeology
"perry farrell" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology
"See what's under that so say yes. Yeah no i. I think it's more like sort of micro communities rather than macro community hot. Maybe she just talked briefly about some to chen just because well. I'm very fond of sunset. Chen and also. I should mention the connection. What we just what you were. Just saying mall simon's but rex romania which was such a great I think if sunset jan and the way a little bit in the Reminded we've we've added this piece euros about must've the earliest pieces Observe when fox based alpha was about come on. You mentioned that earlier. And it's just the i mean. I love the sort of details. The bulb signing pete wiggs had known each other since the age of two and it's been had been fantasizing about making pop music almost since then and then say they they play instruments so they hung melodic ideas into tycoon. Gather a few records beats all sounds that they want to sample and then going to the studio and the record i remember. I like many people because this is what they did. Neil young song. Only love can break johar with sarah senior each according to you. It took two hours recording. Eighty pounds cost eight pounds. And it's just it's a fantastic record and they made a number of these just wonderful singles and you locate them in you know in the sorts of pop tradition. You mentioned jerry may go. They mention joe. Make and bob says we like pop because it's fast instance glamorous rock groups like with doors lack huma and suffered delusions of messiah-like. Grandia i mean. I still toronto rock ism reborn. Isn't it absolutely i. I i thought was based on the same interview longer. Introduced for manatee mike. They were really deepens. And i felt like i got the key to paris as it was when they said they just didn't understand What was to be enjoyed about it. That they don't like is messy and they're always like northern soul. And this french. Go pulp of this extent. Dane t- classically stretching. Anything kind of you know. I mean i think the doors have love humor at at glorious sound awful delusions of grandeur but it does delusions grand. I'm thinking of like perry farrell. You took me see jane's addiction at brixton accountability Go into neo. Can it was a sort of messiah kind of a false messiah because we also went soliloquies right into the first pleasure in new jersey. Exactly exactly but i love what science at an and he will sustain this piece to something very english about them despite the inferences inspector Lavar i was thought they were like to better session of what britain Was than there was the way it was world waste early pulp essien and had a much wider. It was like an englishness. very english. Started lights you know. Like the continents writes things from france and boston over ecuador's and and you know it wasn't doggedly stuck on this kinks beatles vices slate kind of matrix brit pop and lots of lots of really lovely songs. I mean nothing can stop us is is. I love the way that's put together anyway. They have a new album out. I think next week cool. I've been trying to tell you. Have you sort of kept up with them through that many records now i think the last one i heard was the one that has the song is out a of celebration of life three music on the loretta. The records that you might have liked and memories of seemed that she's been off stops the opening song. I kept telling him since the first two ones very Knows the records. The sound of wolves Which adult grown up in. I loved that record. I mean how we used to live. The on on the record is like nine minutes. Long tons of this really sorts of rapturous. Kind of. don't see saying that the end isla are very very fond of them. In a pantheon of unlikely. Popstov i think bob stanley you know As done sounds very high. And i hope to be on the something about sarah cracknell very well. They're very unique.

WHAS 840 AM
"perry farrell" Discussed on WHAS 840 AM
"Like Cypress Hill, huh? That's good. So you go and Thrax now we're cooking a gas baby, because you're old bear tooth. Seven dust knocked loose and then it goes on and on and on and on from there. Let's go to Friday. Que the Metallica. Oh, I just put him away. Metallica is Friday night. Metallica is Friday night. Oh, well, I'm you have not been to a concert until you've seen metallic alive. I've seen him in a couple times for good, but Still not that gigantic hole of metallic so they're no Saxton. Let me tell you they should be there. By the way. No, I was hoping we would see Saxon on this play, but nobody nubs. Next. It's this name snip nubs next year. Loves next. Sit me next to him. Could you all please? Just He said, No. I'm not playing that one for the love of Pete could just give you one day where you don't We're not playing this week alive Freight train to take us to the stage or need enjoy it. Bird holding onto a steering wheel steering wheel. Make it as a bald ego. Actually, I actually almost wore that shirt Friday, divert all because you were there, Uh, for my sex, assuring them like you know what? I'm not gonna give him the pleasure. So I think nuts, nephew drooling. It's next nips Nips. Anybody knows No Noble of Liberty, but they did. Okay. On Friday night, you got Metallica. You got Jane's addiction That's really cool, Right Love Jane's addiction. Kill switch Engage Rise against turnstile memoir Still the A turnstile from Broad ballerina Do brand new one allegedly only had 400 people go through Go Is a very fair was in the lead singer die in this man. Thanks. So what? Maybe No, he left a porno for Pyros, right? Oh, that's right. I thought he hung himself. I was doing that. No, no, that was in excess, Michael, huh? I hope I was thinking of. I can't think of the name of the band now Blind melon. Oh, blind melon that you just lost a bunch of weight. I thought he died died. Oh, you guys got in front of blackmail? No, no, You're right. I'm sorry. I'm taking up. Which is the big guy that you said the heart horror. That was John Popper. Blues travelers traveling. Yeah, Here's the thing, though. Little known fact, Perry Farrell from Jane's Addiction was actually cousins with Jimmy Swaggart. I heard that Tell coming together now it's by the way, That is a thing that's going to happen for the rest of this shows like he's ahead of me, and he was getting wait a.

Taking Her Lead
"perry farrell" Discussed on Taking Her Lead
"I think i was too naive. I gave a lot of things. We out any confirmation. So i've learned about that but it didn't make me sad. Suspicious of people was not about. That was just you learn better to make it in a better way next time. So that's what happened. So i had the support for from friends and family. I had a lot of faith. I pray aloft. They talked to. God's a lot about it and i was humbled to jobs back and to get the i needed to work so i got a on calls and night shifts in the perry farrell hospitals. That i was not working that anymore. But it does okay with humbleness and okay. Let's do the best on that hospitals as well so it was something that was difficult. But i was able to chew overcome. And i i think i got batter and the other thing and unexperienced that i want to share about the time about the pandemic so everybody was thinking about what you do to spend how we are going to just survive in both medical education. We use it to go to the conferences. And how it's going to be so. During this pandemic we started an amazing thing. That is hard to candy me. So we provide the education All over the world when we start so for Who doesn't know who it is what it is. Its own line of educational platform that we make webinars with estate of our of our field a lot of nice speakers and and we recovered a lot of fields. We did eight t webinars during this pandemic so it was really her and the webinars around three hours each one so It was tough work and but re it feels my heart because when we started congenital heart academy meal dr gilbert novice can a thirty agassi from an at Give us an sachets from italy. One we started with thought that we are going to make some webinars some events. Why are we were not able to meet again in conferences. But in the end congenital heart academy in became a resource for people for our colleagues who were never able to go trying to national conference. I had to go a lot of this word. A word conferences were congresses. I had this privilege but not a lot of people can do that. And we realized that when we got our feedback on emails on surveys about congenital heart academy colleagues from sudan from venezuela colleagues from vietnam strong eat on they said we were never able to go to international conference are because they didn't have the financial resources or because one of them told me i'm the only cardiac surgeon in the in the two hundred kilometers. I can't leave. You can only if. I have to stay so even if it had the resources to go. He couldn't leave because there was no one to replace him why he was away. And a lot of fellows on a lot of residents and and junior staff they were never got the chance and to listen to this. Very skilled people who we are able to get together for the webinars and we have a very relaxed atmosphere. Different from the conferences that sometimes i really formal so people felt very very comfortable to make questions. So you see you know the fellows that would never stand up in a conference type in their questions on the qna box and being answered by a the leaders on that field. So this is something. That's a really Excited us and something that was away with creativity again and to see outside the box to to make out of this pandemic something very nice. This phone power is beautiful. We've ring one hundred twenty-five countries.

KCRW
"perry farrell" Discussed on KCRW
"30 right here on KCRW. Those golden night eyes and pretty smile. I'm needed beautiful alone. May I mean fall May I'm n repair. And I can't say but my e needed you, me e media into phone. I mean, it's beautiful. Because we don't want to child. So Sure. Yeah. Strong. Sure. Sure. Oh, sure. Oh, Why have you called for me? Yeah. Keys, head. Okay, because From Yeah. Yeah, me from Yeah. Mm hmm. Yeah. Don't Don't. Yeah. She lived in the age in which Take it with you. She can expose me. Genes, So thank you. Tell me, you think Okay, just like this place. Just tell me one That's right. You Time to smile. Probably one of my favorites. Recent track releases. This is from Perry Farrell from Jane's Addiction Getting a Groove Armada remix of the song Shit, Kina. Love its new Perry Farrell. It's Metropolis on KCRW. Also in the sets new one from sewn in. It's called Titan, Ben Bomber in Tin Liquor, teaming up for runaway Yes. Ian and Oracle from angina deep and began to set with Yod 02 new one. I want you to Metropolis Saturday nights. 8 to 10. Right here on 89.9 KCRW following Metropolis. Henry Rollins will pick things up. Take it from 10 until 12 midnight. Stay close. It's 89.9 KCRW. I'm.

KCRW
"perry farrell" Discussed on KCRW
"Tennessee standing there. The evening side of bond your hair covered up with Godard. Judgment glance you tell Musker And I said Sir. Morning. Go wake up. Look like my name. I have a cousin or my skin, my head up like a lion's made Because it's nice of nice and pain. Diamond. Suppose it feel all right when I see you standing there. Even got a on your hair. Covered up with God under just went dancing time Master And I said In the skies, Stars and night fashion line fine. Musical flight musical flight is our song. Wait. I love you. Sure Metropolis It's KCRW. Have Jason Bentley with you Saturday nights. 8 to 10 music to open from avalanches new album. We will always love you. That song features Perry Farrell. It's called Oh the Sun Way, have another track from Perry Farrell's new solo project, remixed by Groove Armada a bit later in the show tonight, so stick around for that. Also in our opening sets Nicholas Jar with as I say against all logic, which is also Mr Nicholas Jar, if loving you is wrong, Rasheen Murphy getting the soul wax remix of something more. Fontaine's D. C. Also enjoy a soul wax remix of the single Ah Hero's death and began with some Elektronik atmosphere from Seoul Wax and their E. M S. Cynthy 100 Project that's called Movements three. Well, one set down much more to come. It's Jason Bentley Metropolis on KCRW. Santa.

The Bone 102.5
"perry farrell" Discussed on The Bone 102.5
"Do that you're done. Done, like done done. Done like you've got no radio play. You've got no record, You know deal anymore it because of that, when in the same world, A guy has made millions in his beloved forgetting white people to say the n word, it all sorts of different ways as his career. So when you just look at the balance, it does feel like the it is definitely swinging in. In one certain way. They're probably different. They're different. They're without a doubt. Well, yeah, but You just said something that that really resonated with me. Quentin Tarantino writes the end word for Samuel L. Jackson to say. White dude is writing in a screenplay. The N word and not the Samuel Jackson has any problem, saying the word it seems to roll off of his tongue, But other black actors I don't know if Pam Grier had to say it and Foxy Brown and underrated Classic by the way, Rob Jackie Brown. I'm sorry and underrated Classic. But If we're going to say things are quote unquote racist. Is there really anything more racist about the white boss man Making the black actor or actress save the n word so that they can have a job? It's kind of crazy, and if this gets in that's entertainment, well, this gets into the fantasy land, but just to keep it to try to keep it in the same room. Imagine the Morgan Wallen thing didn't happen. But Morgan Wallen wants to release Ah, full length like Michael Jackson style music video about a song that he made and in the opening part of the video. He Says the N word in enacting form No way in hell. Does that fly, so it does seem that it's now we're talking about a fantasy, but I would say that certainly other some people's creativity and art is held above others At the very least. Are you familiar with the sly and the family? Stone song called? Don't Call me No, Whitey. Oh, don't call me. Don't call me blank, Whitey. And those are the lyrics. No. Well, it was redone. By James Addiction Where Perry Farrell and iced he did that song. Wow, and we obviously can't play on this radio show or station. But We've gone I don't in knowing what direction where The utterance of that word with your friends. Like it or not. Can take away your livelihood can take away everything and Not that it should be done retroactively, and not that I want to see everybody canceled. But I played a clip for you before the show of Justin Bieber, which, if you don't know that it exists. He's singing the song where he drops the n bomb like five times and makes a reference to the KKK. And laughs about it. And it was racist like it was the very least a racist joke. And it just that that was never enough to catch up to him. So is it. Society decided anybody who uses that word after this date is canceled. Anybody who used it before this day we're going to forget it ever happened. I just like to see everybody. Held to the same standards. Maybe, and and I don't know that there are the same standards. But in case you didn't hear Justin Bieber, here's what he said. One lesson. One less Loman. One less lonely. He's got everyone list. If I tell you, I'll be part of the K. J. K that they'll be oneness alone. L meant having one less than That's Justin Bieber as a kid, laugh it on camera. And saying something about the cake and killing a black person and using the N word repeatedly, and I mean he was a kid, but he was also well into his career. I mean, I believe Is that? Is that his song? I don't know. I think it may be his song that he's singing. Yeah, one less lonely girl by Justin Bieber. So he's singing his own song and replacing the word with the n word And it's just and and and he's OK today. True. Gotta live alone. Who are you? And maybe when this amount of time passes for Morgan Wallen, Maybe he'll be okay. I don't know. Maybe it won't even be that long. Maybe in two years he goes to like one of those racial diversity universities. And and betters himself and comes back a changed man. I don't know. I don't know, even know what's in his heart. Hi, sir. How are you? Well, how you guys good, Good. Thanks. So much for calling. Just that it's slippery slope is a double standard for a white person. And I get exactly where you guys were coming from. We'll give you another example. Just let me let me put you on possible quick. It's not a double standard for white people. That word carries different impact when white people use it versus when black people use it. That doesn't make it a double standard. It just means that that word has a different impact. You can complain that it's unfair if you want to. It's not But black people using that as a term of endearment, whether you like it or not, has a different impact on the black people that are using it than a white person using that word in any capacity. Just so, you know. Huh? My statement. Being a double standard was more lepers how it's treated once it's done. Let's look at the Justin Bieber thing that you just played. And did we hear anything about that? No crickets reported. Everything will be okay..

KCRW
"perry farrell" Discussed on KCRW
"L. A U. S C, and the UC system for 30 straight years. The classes you need with flexible schedules are now open for spring semester. Make your future a brighter one at Santa Monica College. Learn more at SMC dot e. D u Trouble this. Hello and welcome. I'm Jason Bentley, your host from 8 to 10 Saturday nights with And inspired well, hopefully, mix of progressive dance music. Coming up. Perry Farrell gets a blissed out remix from Groove Armada. We'll check out biceps. New Album, Isles Latest from James Levels, Uncle. Soul claps New world deep, also something new from Vancouver's pat lock, and we'll get started in the mix with crack and smack remixed by Arrow plane. Glad to have you along. Stay with us. Saturday nights. Metropolis son, Casey R W. Swinton going? You're I don't know who insisted. I can't seem to find Wake me from the D O D. Yeah. Wow. Way across that take it to trial. Devils. Just today Another time for us to play. So take goddamn some paint promises with key.

Newsradio 700 WLW
"perry farrell" Discussed on Newsradio 700 WLW
"Him up at 7 11 today way are awesome. George Bogart on the way by the house one blue bourbon or Scotch into beer. One of the very first pieces out of the color verse, right that I did for You got some really good ones. Quite a few. He's gamble. I'm Finn. Yeah, I do. Ah, little rock and roll or just music and rock and roll this early music based Painting and put a few of them up today it shake it. Records added to the collection. If you want to go check him out. Album covers in the was called the Cover verse. But, yeah, the bourbon is conscious of beer was the The song he wanted, and it was one of the first experimental pieces I did and quickly you know, I like that show the big interview with Dan Rather which he interviews a lot of different musicians. I gotta tell you, dude, Jack White. That that guy you were with a capital W the capital were Oh, my God. I listened that a new one. You episode He has Jack white. I watched the first two questions and I'm like, I can't watch this. His answers were just bizarre. I mean, he asked him something about How do you write? How do you write songs? Do you just, You know, Do you do block out time and or do you just just come to you? Whatever. He went into something about the truth, and I'm like what? Well, that's I think a lot of that's just Quotable jump, because clearly the guy's a good producer. I mean, he's produced long run a land talent and a handful of all, I'm not a big fan of the white stripes. I don't think there's a lot going on there, but good producer but then and one of the other ones I saw and I don't know his name. But he's the lead singer for Jane's Addiction. So Perry Farrell. Thank you. Yeah, He's another one. He's a piece of work, huh? He got avoiding compared to I do. I do think that 20 plus years of drinking and drug and I just think it turns your brain to mush well, especially when you're really starting with mush. And so now he's now he's like fail. He was a heroin addict front. That's what I mean. I mean, it's just but, man. Oh, man. Well, you know what you brought up something. And I've spoken to a few people. I know that Aaron Band successful and otherwise and guys that have turned song writing into You Know, maybe a gig doing jingles but still have written songs. Rob Fetters is a guy that one of the most is maybe one of the best guitar players I've ever seen in my life from right here in town, from the Bears, and while the raisins and psycho dots and bears one of them he still has some stuff going on on YouTube. That's pretty cool that You can kind of watch him do some different things. He's got a new video out or not, but he also parlayed into working in the advertising industry. Um Jason Fallon felt helps another guy like that. I wrote the Waffle House songs with I was just kind of one officer, but until I sat with him and wrote those songs Don't understand the process of how like you just said he asked Jack White. How do you write it? So we should probably get somebody on her a couple of people musicians when they can come in and talk about that, because it is that the music first and then the lyrics because you look at rush and Always talk about. Neal wrote the lyrics big on Rand fan and all that. It's just first of all, You have to be incredibly gifted to do it, and I don't care what genre you're talking about. In some cases. I mean, in some cases, you can just take a dump on a piece of paper number one, but I mean for music that that is truly That is really more talent based. Yes, I don't get it, And I think you either have it or you don't look, a band like Rush is a great example. You know, he wrote the lyrics, and they're very heady. There is an executive very similar, but there's a lot of there were based in the Tolkien and the mythology that sort of thing, but Neil Pierre would write their lyrics. And then they would say, get it within. Take it and figure out that he and Alex would figure out the music and whatever and do but you figure Getty was singing, playing the bass playing the foot pedals. Well and pulling all of that off and still remembering the lyrics, which weren't standard lyrics. I just You know what your brain has to be. Have you have you really different? There's a number of shows called classic albums. Have you ever seen those there 30 minutes in length I have and basically and I was watching one the other day with deep purple machine head and I mean, it's just All these musicians or so just to hear how they talk about that go through, like where they weren't recording and how they did this song and that song where it came from Those I love those shows. Well, I find myself because I love good rock and roll and that to me was, you know, I think that's what's so disappointing about a lot of times we look and we see now things that were just completely created in a computer. He was looping stuff. Right? Auto tuning your thrown down a beat your sampling and you're done and that's it. And and boy, I go back to the dark side of the moon. For instance, people And they showed them in the studio reporting that like the change at the beginning of money getting thrown in the dish and then recording that hard, hard effects, you know, practical effects and They couldn't get the timing together for something. I forget what it was. They were running tape around the room around. Mike stands to get back to the to the reels in a certain sink, and I mean, that's just It's just insanity to me that your brain even thinks that way to pull that off. I'll never remember which baby because I just saw this within the last couple weeks. Welcome to covert 19 e think I've been watching every one of these. I think I've seen every album that's been made made, but they were talking about how they recorded in this old like English house. And when they listen to it, one room and then they had executive side now somebody else it wasn't sampling. But they had to go outside and my nose deep purple. It was and they had to go out in the rain to this complete. I just don't. I don't want Zeppelin did this, and I think there's a couple of p of bands that have used this same Formula or maybe even the same house because even on a lot of it is the same house they were talking about how Bonzo was. They had him set up in the hallway because he got the best drum sound in this hallway, which is at the bottom of the Stairs or whatever..

Decorating Pages
"perry farrell" Discussed on Decorating Pages
"Well i have the classic Half i was a business major and so you go right into entertainment. I you know. I i think when i was probably it was like my senior year in college One of my roommates. My buddies who i went to high school and college with was christillin kevin the omens brother and always very intrigued by the entertainment industry and stuff like that and we shot some like commercials for school for my business for marketing. You know yeah. I remember one of the commercials that i've shot Was two girls out in the cloud. Doing homework and a construction worker goes over. A coke machine grabs coke and takes off his shirt and drinks it and they watch it. And i remember like five or six years after that. That was the biggest commercial and coke commercial. Do you remember that. Two girls in the office looking out at a construction worker. Dan office shirt. Yeah it was like a token commercial. I was convinced my teacher stole it from me and sold it to. I'm sorry. did he probably anyway. But you know so we. I liked doing that. And chris and i were talking about moving out to california in. We're like we've got your brother's house to stay at. And so let's do it so i figured i would give the entertainment industry try. I mean i mean. I i i had never done any so We packed up bags. Move outs and i- chef for the first year because that was the only i knew i needed a job so and i cooked all through high school and college so i cooked for the first year until i got a job at a house and but but was it that you had to click on some sort of direction like to post house like i would never. I never thought about going to be honest with you. The manager of the restaurant. That i was working at she. I was dating her and she used to work in this post house and i told her that the reason amount here's to get into the entertainment industry. I'm not out here to be a chef. Not out here to do any of that. And she said the only connection she had was this post house if if she wanted me to get her in inter you know get me an interview and so i said yes and You know that's how. I ended up editing because is my first or foray into the entertainment industry was Post production and impose house. You're working on like multi. The people or the editors are working on like multiple things that shows are sending in their product to be edited in audio and is opposed if the house. It's like machine of they don't they don't exist in this capacity really anymore. Monday was a huge place. That did everything from transferring fill to graphics to just offline and online editing and My first job. There's i walked around with a tray and went into every ruinous people walk. It was janet jackson putting music video with guy. Sunday can get you something to drink. And the next one was guns n. Roses in the next one was perry farrell and it was like it was great to the long music videos. I thought you were like a tray. A coke anybody wanna line whenever you want. Knock on the door. They said go away then and not now but you know. I basically made cappuccinos. I got people food. That's what i did. And then like my next level up. Was i got to work in what they all eight ball where all of everyone's materials or store so you'd come into continue working on a music video. I give you all your stuff. And then they would bring to the or we would bring it to the machine room. Whatever you know. And so. I i did about a year and a half there and one of the clients. There was a company called river street. Productions and tracy michael great friends with today and and they hired me as a production assistant so then i left that company and you know when you a production assistant epa small company. You're basically agenda baltra here everything whatever you can do so i kind of got my hands dirty in all these things in all aspects of it and you know i was kind of like well. You don't let a writer and directing is feels like. I have to do a lot more to get to directing producing socks. It and editing good in the group if we had just a couple of avid i i learned on a non linear system or on a linear system and then they bought abington. I learned on non linear. And so that when i finally i stayed there for four years and did a ton of i think some of the first things i cut was car racing where that they would like indycar and all the stuff but then they have these little light races like toyota atlantic in indycar lights. And espn didn't wanna play a three hour race so you had to cut the rates down to twenty four minutes and single. I remember someone telling me once. It was like well stories. They're just goes around. And you just have to cut out the garbage and a twenty four minute and it ought be use the equipment and all that kind of stuff and then we started doing like promos for the wb and you know all that kind of stuff. So i learned. I learned how to edit while i was there little bit of very little a I feel like still learn how to edit and You know after four years. I just took air entire rolodex called everybody i said i'm i'm going freelance. Who wants to hire me as an editor cow. And you know. And i and i got a job. Do you know build around from chainsaw. No it sounds familiar. He owns one of the only mike or used to own one of the only a oast houses left it was bought by a large company and stuff like that but he still edits their instill runs it and i remember calling him saying hey are you looking for an editor is start your trailers of and and that's when through him is where i got into behind the music which i i know i talked to you before about this but like the stories of behind the music that you cut out probably phenomenon this that the you get all the good ones like if there is anything crazy that's bats that's a you you have to capitalize on all people's misfortune on those shows. Yeah so I guide stuff. I got the best behind. The music i ever saw to me was fleetwood mac. That was that was like. Because i didn't really know them. And i watch. And i was like what happened to these people drug addicts and sleeping when each other in my. They're.

WSB-AM
"perry farrell" Discussed on WSB-AM
"Ridiculous. He said Something along the lines of we are the people. We've been waiting for something along those lines like Oh, wow. So you're the savior were saying what saying We are the people we've been waiting for? And I have to, I sadly had a great Christmas vacation. And wonderful Christmas Day, But I have to report to you that I am the D bag that I warned you about because I think my wife doesn't know what to get for me and she got me an Apple watch. How long have I been saying? If you want to find out if there's a d bag in the room, find the guy with the apple Watch sellout, So I must sell out. I opened the president. The President open the present, You know, And so now I'm desperately. I'm wearing it. Of course it Z gift. And I am trying to figure out things to do with it. But I'm trying to rationalize that the phone's not enough and then I actually need this and it's very, very difficult. But I will tell you this man, it's I had to turn off all these things that just it's designed to nag you. Get up. Walk around. What's up on vacation? But have you voted bridge? Yes, that too, and breathe the hell you tell me to breathe. Yeah. Hey, you need to get up. Breathe if I forgot to breathe than the apple Watch. Can't tell me anything, Cause I'm dead. And you know what if if I have a habit of forgetting to breathe, I've made it 56 years with these habits. I don't need my phone is that I told him you want to know she wanted to know your blood oxygen level. No. No, I don't. I don't wanna be in the Miller having a nice great day, You know, Kick back Enjoy with friends that my watch is like, Hey, your blood oxygen levels low. I don't think Don't want to This'll leads to neurosis, doesn't it? Narrow sis is thinking about thinking. And so you started how? Oh, my goodness. I mean, like my heart's been beating ever since the day I was born shortly. How could you just keep thinking about stuff? How could you not be neurotic? If you have your phone? Your watch set to everything that monitors everything is going on in your body and tells you about it all the time. You know what if I feel sluggish? I'll go to the doctor yesterday into the bathroom. Eric bladders full. Yeah. Hey, lazy. Go ahead. You will reach true D bag status. If you go in the store, and you're talking on speakerphone, your apple that dusty back sounds like Dick Tracy in 1940. Yeah. Checking in. All right, Uh, e heard. Let me have that some open mikes, Z. Let's do some open nights. We've been gone for a good long time. Yeah, these are all from the WSB radio app the soap. Would it be weird if they came from like 11 alive? WSB for having sex? How did we get those? Yeah, the so called call violated President Trump's rights. You have to have consent by both parties in the state of Georgia in order to record a call. Well, you sound like a barrel of laughs. Yeah, that's first of all. That's the truth. Yeah. Now. Is that the truth? Yes, we back in Parrot Land. Jimmy Buffett fan. You're back in parrot land where I heard somebody say that on my you know the screen that I like to watch Get my world views from And so now I'm repeating it was there any in between? I'm gonna check on this because I absolutely don't Google. It definitely don't Google it because you'll find the opposite of what I said. Well, Google, Google is run by people who hate Trump. So forcing thank you. I'll take my answer off area. Can you just stop listening off there? It's not too much of a request. Hey, listen here. It's a free country you could do. You could do what you like. But we checked it on Google, and that's not the ultimate source of everything. So I'm not going to say that's the fine, AL it E of it. But a Google search says it's a one party. Yes, state In terms of whether or not you can consent right to being recorded so and I think the president kind of knows they're always recorded. Doesn't everybody students reported? That's why you had that whole Ukraine thing happened, right? I never received anything. Never assume anything. You don't wanna make it ass out of U and me What What? That's what I was thinking. That's why you wouldn't want to assume you have another open mic. Hey, gang. We could really use some parody songs today, please. Are we going tomorrow? 2021 Novelty parody songs. That zone we're gonna do. Well, hell, yeah. Erich von Hester didn't like him. Well, you know, Trump. He's busy, and he does all our parody songs. I know you're busy right now. You tried, but I've been working on one. But like I said, I've been very busy trying to stop this deal. Because you know that steals. I mean, look, it's crazy. They stole it right there in Georgia, but got a couple like working on the yellow Oh Televen line. That's good to know that one Give me those. Well right now been caught stealing down Georgetown. They work. They need work. So you like Jane's addiction Big fan of Jane's addiction. Look who doesn't like them. I mean, I'm a bigger fan of the project that Perry Farrell did after. I mean, they were great will make great pets and all that. Remember that son. I forget what they would call it, but He had a lot of good hits. But you know what was that? What was that Call? What's the band called? But we make will make great pets Don't know zoo something I don't know. Skinny guy would look 8675 give me those votes. Well, you consider working on it. Call me on the line. Coming coming. Give me 11,780 votes. That's all you want. Right? Right. That's one more than you haven't I wouldn't be five million more zits. All this focus on George's, but let's say that Somehow they just turned everything around. Said You Know what? Trump won Georgia She still doesn't win the presidency right Career well called Pennsylvania 6 5000. Yeah, There's always There's always a plan. I gotta give you that plan. A plan B Pensees Plan Z. You seem to be down the plan to see at this point plan a Okay. All right. You're you're on sub plans at this point. Anymore open mikes, or should we turned to more relevant issues and topics? Let's turn the more relevant issue because we have the mail bag coming up in the bottom of the hour, which we know how much you love the mailbag. I do. Well. Hey, what do you say He loves the male back male. I have been a fan of mail bags for long, sir. Problem, Winston. I like to forget and go back and forth. Yeah, There's something wrong with engaging right you you engage. With others through the mail bag in my right or no, you're not wrong. You're doing great. Thank you. You started. You know what young lady but I get you are starting autumn. It started the year correctly, She might just get a raise. Young lady. I think you could get 0.5% raise this year point. That attitude 0.0.5 Percent zero Wait, 00.5. 0.5 A half a point, however, that website a half a half a point percentage rate races. What you're gonna get me Oh, All right. What do you have for me there, Jerry? You know Greta, fun's fun. Berg turned 18. So that's big news. You know, she's a big hero. You know, If you noticed this, I noticed this well watching football game because that's what I get exposed to. The popular culture. This is e. No..

Talking Tech
Pandora: more music features and podcasts
"Hiring is challenging, but there's one place you can go. We're hiring is simple. And smart that place is ZipRecruiter. Where growing businesses connect to qualified candidates. Try it for free at ZipRecruiter dot com slash tech talk. Ziprecruiter, the smartest way to hire. Have you checked out Pandora recently? The longest running streaming music service has recently added some bells and whistles to the personalized radio format. Let me tell you about them on today's edition of talking tech. I'm Jefferson Graham with USA today. First of all know that Pandora now has a new corporate owner, Sirius XM the company dust known for bringing satellite radio cars serious spent three point five billion dollars on adding pin door to its portfolio in his looking to expand beyond just music to bring in sports and talk podcasts as well. Those of you familiar with Pandora's radio rules. No that while you can create stations based on your favorite artists or songs, you only get five of them per hour, and you can only skip six of the selections. However Pandora is now pushing it's ten dollar monthly service as an alternative for on demand music. A new option is on-demand song requests in exchange for watching a thirty second ad. I am game. One new Pandora. Music feature is called stories where musicians tell about their music in between the playlists cuts artists who've signed up include John legend, it Perry. Farrell. There's also a Pandora hosted story exploring love songs that really aren't love songs with stories from two chains. Rob Thomas and more subscribers to Pandora premium streaming service get to hear the stories for free while those of us who don't pay can listen after watching the ad overall. The plan is for Pandora to begin producing podcast using material from some twenty Sirius XM shows additionally while serious and Pandora will remain separate according to billboard listeners could start hearing from serious hosts like Jenny McCarthy and Ricky Jay base hosting Pandora produced podcast soon. Now, you may have heard the news that big media has discovered the power of podcasting Pandora rival. Spotify recently snapped up Gimblett, the producer of shows like start up for two hundred and fifty million dollars to beef up its podcasting plans. But you know, if you wanna hear a podcast on Pandora, and I hope you do don't go searching for them on the computer because you're not gonna get very far you'll have to have the Pandora mobile app. Open to find podcast tab. Please do and make you talking tack on Jefferson Graham, we'll be back tomorrow with another quick hit on the latest in technology. Listen to the show on Pandora, right? Apple podcasts or wherever you listen online audio and please drop me a line on Twitter. Let me know what you think the show, I'm at Jefferson Graham. Thanks, everyone. For listening. In need of great talent for your business but short on time. You don't have to get lost in a huge stack of resumes. Defined your perfect hire. You just need the right tools smarter tools with ZipRecruiter you can post your job to over one hundred of the web's leading job boards with just one click then ZipRecruiter. Actively looks for the most qualified candidates and invites them to apply. So you never miss a great match. No wonder eighty percent of employers who post on ZipRecruiter get a quality candidate through the site in just one day. Find out today why ZipRecruiter has been used by businesses of all sizes and industries to find the most qualified job candidates with immediate results right now. Talking tech listeners can post jobs on ZipRecruiter for free. That's right free. Just go to ZipRecruiter dot com slash tech talk. That's ZipRecruiter dot com slash. Tech talk. One more time to try it for free. Go to ZipRecruiter dot com slash tech talk. Ziprecruiter, the smartest way to hire.