Guide Two Nickels for a Dime: A Historical Romance Novel Set in the 1960s

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Talk About the Passion is a podcast where I will be talking with folks about their passions in creativity. There's a slight slant towards people from the punk and hardcore scenes, but of course I'm open to anyone. James is one of the original members of the band and in this episode we talk about the long history of the band, from the formation in the 80's to what the band is up to now.

James is a great storyteller and has some cool stories about growing up outside of Boston and how he found music and the journey it took him on including a great story about showing up at Boston singer Brad Delp's house as a teenager, becoming friends with Brad Whitford's of Aerosmith's mother and some great touring stories. James is extremely passionate about music, and made the perfect guest. We talk about his time in that band as well as how a couple of upcoming reunion shows came to be. Jeff grew up north of Boston and talks about getting into music at an early age, his first time at a hardcore show and everything else that happened in between.

Like all of my guests, Jeff's story takes a similar path Although I don't think Kiss was mentioned once! This was a great episode to record and it was great catching up with an old friend. Episode 46 is a deep and long dive with my co-hosts Brian Smith and Guy Weatherbee about live records. More than just a discussion of our specific favorite live records, we get pretty loose and open about the live album as an archive of a band at a certain point in time, infamous "fake" live recordings, and we somehow manage to cover everyone from the usual suspects like Rush and Kiss to artists like Dave Brubeck and Sammy Davis Jr.

This was a lot of fun to record and there will most likely be a volume two to this one.


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Episode 45 is a conversation with Chris Giguere. Chris plays guitar in the band Conclave, he has also done time in Tenebrae and Panzerbastard. As the title indicates and as a good amount of these episodes go, Kiss is an early influence on Chris so we of course talk a bit about them, as well as other heavy music, classic rock music and everything in between. Chris made a great guest, he and I have a lot of the same ideas and opinions on music and life so this conversations is natural and sounds like I'm talking with an old friend, when in fact we had just met.

We share our experience first hearing them and what they meant to us early on and what they mean to us now.

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We talk about their legacy on pop culture, underground music, and hip hop. Going through most of their catalog album by album and song by song, this is a bit of a deep dive but also a loose episode that meanders a tiny bit but mostly stays on course, just like their discography, as we discover here.

Join two friends talking about one of their favorite bands. Episode 43 is a conversation with Daniel Brockman. This episode, recorded over the phone, is named after The Stooges song of the same name, the nature of this episode is indeed pretty loose. We don't really get into Dan's former Boston area bands Medea Connection and The Hidden at all but instead focus more on his experiences writing about music, interviewing artists from Danzig to Robyn Hitchcock.

Daniel has some unique and fascinating takes on music and I've always enjoyed talking to him about music.


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His writing has appeared in such places as Vanyaland, Spin and Rolling Stone. Five minutes before we hit record we each wrote down five Rush songs and we would then go around the table and talk about the songs, why we picked them, some we gave a little background and history.

Electric Reads Set in the ’60s

We get deep enough that long time Rush fans should enjoy our takes on these fifteen songs but never too far out there that a non fan won't appreciate the conversation and hopefully track the songs down themselves. This is the first round table episode with Brian and Guy and we look forward to doing many more like this as well as other subjects and formats.

He got into radio at a very young age, listening to and eventually working in radio in Maine where he grew up. We talk about his time as a DJ and how he eventually made his way to Massachusetts and everything else in between. Duane is a great storyteller and has some great stories about everyone from Stephen King to Nirvana who this episode is named after. Duane has a current radio show called American Debauchery and also authored a book called Hang the D. Episode 40 is a conversation with Kevin Norton.

Kevin played bass in the excellent Boston hardcore band Eye For an Eye and now he's still playing music with his current band The Eulogy based out of Southern California. We talk about growing up in Lynn Massachusetts and what it was like getting into metal and hardcore in the early and mid eighties when metal and hardcore were regularly crossing over.

Kevin has never stopped and his passion for music make him a perfect guest for this podcast, his work in the labor movement is discussed as well and Kevin talks about how being involved in the hardcore scene has informed his career and work ethic. Episode 39 is a conversation with Brian Smith and Guy Wetherbee. Brian and Guy are lifelong friends and also collectively have a group called Four Way Anal Touchfight. They talk about the origins of that project here. We spend over two hours talking music from their formative years, sharing music with each other and by the end of the episode you'll understand why the title "Chemistry" after the Rush song is so fitting.


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As we talk about in this episode Brian and Guy will be appearing on some future episodes as well. Episode 38 is a conversation with Kevin Grant, this first episode of is a long episode and it covers a lot of ground. Kevin talks about Fall River, MA where he is from, what it was like growing up there. We talk at length about his experiences singing in a number of bands including The Hidden, Gaskill and his latest project Wire Lines.

Kevin has some fascinating ideas about music and what role it takes in his life as well as to people in general. Kevin is an intense and intelligent guy, his ideas on hardcore music and what it means to him are very much in line with myself as well as most of the guests I've had on, he was the perfect guest for this podcast. Episode 37 is a conversation with Randy Larsen. You may know Randy from his band Cable who have been putting out good quality heavy music since the 90's and are set to release a new record next year as he explains late in this episode. We talk about how he got into music, other musical projects he's been involved in as well as his guest hosting on the Everything Went Black and Metal Matters podcasts.

Randy was a great guest for this podcast, his enthusiasm and humble, down to earth personality made this feel like I was talking to an old friend. Episode 36 is a conversation with Mark Vieira. Originally from Massachusetts and now on the west coast we talk quite a bit about his time getting into music on the east coast. Mark has been around the music scene in various roles for years, currently he manages a number of bands including , Ringworm, Tombs, The Atlas Moth and The Casualties among many others.

Mark has some great insight on the music scene, not just the heavy music scene where he works, but the music industry in general. He knows his stuff and has a lot of great opinions and ideas on music. Mark is a great story teller, his enthusiasm is infectious and he was the perfect guest for this podcast, especially when it comes to passion. Episode 35 is a conversation with author Michael T Fournier.

Historical Romance Recommendations

We talk about growing up in New England and getting into music, his writing both fiction and writing about music. Michael is a great writer and made the perfect guest for TATP, his enthusiasm and knowledge of music is extensive as shown in his writing, so it was great to be able to sit down and talk to him in person. Episode 34 is a conversation with Boston area author Brian Coleman. In this section of the book, John Perry the writer is present and accounted for as the descriptions are vivid and his firsthand accounts of Hendrix shows he attended are fascinating.

What follows is an excruciating account of chords, techniques, and gear, with snippets of analysis and interpersonal drama tossed in for good measure. In other words, Ott manages to buck the trend and tell us about Joy Division and Ian Curtis without sensationalizing either. I wanted to clear that up. Griffiths makes many astute observations and thoroughly describes how the album sounds and works, but he never provides any insight or analysis into why the album works, what its workings mean, or even why we should care about how the album works.

Pushed for time? In these moments of interaction between the young Meloy and pop culture, Let it Be is a smashing success. Meloy seems so intent on making his book universal that the day-to-day experiences of his youth come across as generic—there are mean jocks and embarrassing sports moments and stuck-up popular kids, and etc… etc… In these moments, the book frustrates through its familiar generalities, especially when Meloy devotes entire sections to mundane events from his life just so he can tell us that, at the end of the day he listened to Let it Be and fought back tears.

He never gives into the mysticism, but examines the meanings generated within and by that mysticism.