Share TapeMakers
Share to email
Share to Facebook
Share to X
By TapeMakers
5
11 ratings
The podcast currently has 13 episodes available.
The guys get back together and talk albums once again.
CW: Parental Death, Suicidal Ideation, Mental Health Struggles, Substance Abuse, Abuse
The First album is Sufjan Steven's Carrie and Lowell.
The Second album is Future Perfect by Autolux.
Theme Music: No Lagoon by Jared Richert
Hosts: Josh Dolar and Jared Richert
The List
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The guys start off this episode with some stories about buying rigs, places with good deals, and the frightening realities around car buying.
Then they start with the Bowie Classic Ziggy Stardust. A first listen through a bowie album for both of them. How did they interpret the glam rock/proto-punk/pop album that is considered by many to be one of the important and historical albums to have ever been released and cemented David Bowie as a mainstay of popular culture?
After the break, they dive into the 2019 solo album by Brittany Howard, Jaime. With this being the first non Alabama Shakes album from Brittany Howard how did the guys feel about her breaking off as a solo artist? Did her delving into funk, soul, jazz, hip-hop, and other genres work?
Theme Music: No Lagoon by Jared Richert
Hosts: Josh Dolar and Jared Richert
The List
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join the boys after an episode of less than stellar music in hopes that better music abounds!
They start off the episode with some NFT talk in relation to music and how it is actively hurting musicians before touching on the #cancelspotify movement spawned on by someone Sportify paid $100,000,000 to and has actively promoted anti-vax rhetoric and had over 100 episodes of their podcast removed for racist language.
The first album that they dive into is St. Vincent's MASSEDUCTION which is a bombastic look at success, love, and failure at the very top of society while being deeply emotional and semi-autobiographical. All while being wrapped in fantastic pop production and biting guitar work. Where do they guys land on the work of 2017 Annie Clark?
After the break, they get to talking about The Decemberists breakout 2006 record The Crane Wife. A band with folk instrumentation that is not afraid to mix up their sound and try something bold with a mix of folklore retellings, creating folklore songs for more recent events, and two songs close to 10 minutes long. How does this album stack up to the rest of what has been discussed so far?
And stick around for the end where they talk about the albums for the next episode and there is a special surprise if you listen all the way to the end!
Theme Music: No Lagoon by Jared Richert
Hosts: Josh Dolar and Jared Richert
The List
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The boys are back after a holiday break and some time on the podcasters' health and safety protocols list for a Friends and Family Episode!
The First Album they talk about was recommended by Josh's Dad and it is Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes by Jimmy Buffett. Josh relives childhood and Jared gets his first glimpse into the Man who created Trop Rock and from whom Yacht Rock was born. Are taken hold of the sounds of Margaritaville or does this laid-back album not offer what they guys are looking for?
After the break they dive into the album recommended by Jacqueline, Denis Was A Bird by Tom Rosenthal. This album is a pop album exploring the themes and emotions around the death of Tom's father. This album is a much more serious and "real" album from Tom compared to his prior work. Does this new direction work? Find out with the guys.
This is also albums #19 and #20 that they guys cover so they talk through where the full list is currently!
Theme Music: No Lagoon by Jared Richert
Hosts: Josh Dolar and Jared Richert
The List
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Happy day after Boxing Day! The guys are here for one last episode before 2022 comes to be our new reality and they got two wonderful albums to talk about.
They start off with some updates about why they both sound scattered and maybe losing their voice before diving headfirst into the early 90s with Loveless by My Bloody Valentine. How does the seminal ShoeGaze Album hit for them both? After the break, they then get into Feis's Let It Die, an intimate album that says a lot while doing little. Thank you all for listening to this show in 2021 and we are excited to see you all in 2022!
Theme Music: No Lagoon by Jared Richert
Hosts: Josh Dolar and Jared Richert
The List
Spotify Playlist
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
CONTENT WARNING:
1:06 till 2:21
religion, religious trama, misogyny, the 2016 elections, depression, anxiety, hopelessness, Dying, Death, Drug Abuse, Being Drugged Abuse.
STRAP IN for the longest episode yet! The boys start with some talk about Christmas Music, Adele, and the Beatles before getting into the lush and quintessentially British album Bonfires on the Heath by the Clientele. They discuss the merits of reverb, drug-inspired sounds, and the idea of the music being able to set a mood. After the break, they then go deep into the lyrically deep explanation of the current nightmare we all live in with Father John Misty's Pure Comedy. They touch on the dichotomy of the lyrical content and the music supporting the lyrics, How Josh Tillman uses his platform to talk about the state of the world, and they spend a surprising amount of time discussion the validity of a 10 verse, 13 minute long song with 6 chords.
Thank you for listening! If you are able to please rate and review the podcast and make sure to share it with a friend!
Theme Music: No Lagoon by Jared Richert
Hosts: Josh Dolar and Jared Richert
The List
Spotify Playlist
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
After a hotly contested week of controversial music takes, the boys are back! They talk about the weather and going to see bands play before the end of a multitude of things.
CW: Climate Disaster
They then get on to talking about the albums of the week! Starting with Timing is Everything by Voxhaul Broadcast, the guys talk about what works and what doesn't when it comes to turn of the decade indie pop-rock, recordings, and what does a band labeled as the "next big thing" sound like a decade later? After the break, they get into a deeply Oregon album, Eons by Mimicking Birds. This band focuses on environmentalism, existentialism, and nihilism in its lyrics. Do the instrumentation and lyrical content live up to the concepts of the band? And a shocking move on our list happens during this episode!
The List
Spotify Playlist
The Hosts:
Josh Dolar: Twitter, Instagram
Jared Richert: Instagram, Instagram
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to the 6th episode of TapeMakers!
Join Josh and Jared as they test the limits of their friendship over musical opinion. The first album talked about is I Go Missin In My Sleep by Wilsen. Do the boys think that this ethereal dream folk album delivers on the promise of the feeling of the hours before the sunrise or did they miss the mark with their indie-folk small sound? After that, they get HEATED over the album Razzmatazz by I Dont Know How But They Found Me. Who loves the synth-pop, new wave-inspired album of bops, and who thought it was an album that couldn't get out of its own way? Listen in and find out!
Thank you for listening. If you could leave a rating and review would really appreciate it and also tell a friend and share an episode!
Contact Us:
Hosts:
Josh Dolar (He/Him)
Twitter, Instagram
Jared Richert (He/Him)
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to our first-ever friends and family show! We review two albums recommended to us by you the listeners, and this week we have albums from our friends. Thank you, Jake Hammer and Mitchel Boaz for the albums!
We start off with the punk band Against Me! and their 2003 release As The Eternal Cowboy. We dive into the political and personal messages of this album, the intentionality of messiness as an artistic choice, and sidebar our way into American Geopolitics. After the break, we then go straight into Prog Metal, as we grasp with Intervals 2015 release The Shape of Colour. We talk about Djent, Metal, expectations, and using a guitar to replace vocal work and how instrumental music can achieve that.
Check out The List
Follow Josh: Twitter, Instagram, FIlm Instagram
Follow Jared: Instagram, FIlm Instagram
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Thank you for joining us for Episode #4 of TapeMakers!
We start off by talking about a live show that happened recently and how we are both on our #grindset. Then we pick apart the Industrial Metal/Orchestral experiment that is Big Mess by Danny Elfman. Did a whole career of working on scores affect Elfman's ability to write songs from a personal perspective or did his experience with orchestras lead to a perfect melding of musical identities? After the break, we get into the pocket with Vulfpeck on their funk album The Beautiful Game. Does this funk quartet have the jams and improvisation to make the funk fresh or do they fall into the trap of virtuosity being more important than musicality? Come listen and find out!
Please rate and review if you are able to on your podcast platform and tell a friend
Time Stamps:
Big Mess 8:30, The Beautiful Game 1:10:02, Next Episodes Albums 2:07:40
Hosts:
Josh Dolar (Twitter, Instagram, Film Instagram)
Jared Richert (Instagram, Film Instagram)
Show Links:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The podcast currently has 13 episodes available.