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๐ง This episode of Whatโs the Reason for This? Kodi and Shay drop back into the dungeon with Tonewood String Band for a no-holds-barred, laugh-heavy, deeply honest conversation about what it really takes to make a debut full-length album โ from crowdfunding stress ๐ ๐ธ to studio self-doubt ๐ง ๐ตโ๐ซ to finally holding the finished record in your hands ๐ฟ๐.
Fresh off the release of Heart of the Pretender, the band reflects on a nearly two-year journey ๐๏ธ๐ฅ that began with a Kickstarter, rolled through 60 hours in the studio โฑ๏ธ๐๏ธ, and ended with a record theyโre genuinely proud of โ scars, growth, and all ๐๐ฑ. The conversation pulls the curtain back on the realities of modern bluegrass bands trying to level up without losing themselves in the process. ๐ชโก
The band digs into: ๐ถ Why they chose to crowdfund โ and how much work actually goes into a Kickstarter ๐ช๐ต ๐๏ธ Recording at Swingfingers Studio with Aaron Youngberg โ and why working with someone who speaks bluegrass makes all the difference ๐ป๐๏ธ โฑ๏ธ Tracking live in isolation with click tracks, layered takes, and producer Tyler Grant steering the ship ๐ฆ๐ง ๐ง The mental battle of studio perfectionism โ self-doubt, breakthroughs, and learning when to trust the take ๐คโก๏ธ๐ ๐ฟ How songs evolved in unexpected ways once recorded โ including tracks that nearly didnโt make the album ๐ณโจ ๐ Why pre-saves, singles, playlists, and algorithms matter more than fans realize ๐ค๐ฒ โ and how the โwaterfall releaseโ strategy actually works ๐ค The wild contrast between sold-out theaters ๐๏ธ๐ฅ and nearly empty bar gigs ๐บ๐ โ and how the band stays grounded through both
The episode also shines a spotlight on the unsung hero behind Tonewoodโs visual world ๐๐๏ธ: Silver โ the bandโs manager, merch wizard, and resident artist. She shares how the album artwork was inspired by the title track, Bob Dylanโs โLily, Rosemary and the Jack of Heartsโ โ ๏ธโค๏ธ, and grew into a full playing-card theme across singles, posters, and merch โ all screen-printed by hand ๐๏ธ๐.
They also revisit the bandโs Kickstarter cover-song rewards ๐๐ถ, where fans funded the record by commissioning custom bluegrass versions of everything from Gordon Lightfoot ๐ to Sly & The Family Stone ๐บ๐ โ essentially creating a second album while finishing the first. Absolute chaos. Absolute magic. โจ๐ช
At its core, this episode is about commitment, community, and creative honesty ๐พ๐ค โ learning when to push harder ๐, when to let go ๐๏ธ, and how much independent music depends on fans showing up, buying merch ๐๏ธ, pre-saving records ๐พ, and spreading the word ๐ขโค๏ธ.
๐ง Tune in for the laughs ๐, stay for the real talk ๐๏ธ, and remember: support the bands in the trenches โ thatโs where the magic lives. โจ๐ช
By What's The Reason For This Podcast5
1212 ratings
๐ง This episode of Whatโs the Reason for This? Kodi and Shay drop back into the dungeon with Tonewood String Band for a no-holds-barred, laugh-heavy, deeply honest conversation about what it really takes to make a debut full-length album โ from crowdfunding stress ๐ ๐ธ to studio self-doubt ๐ง ๐ตโ๐ซ to finally holding the finished record in your hands ๐ฟ๐.
Fresh off the release of Heart of the Pretender, the band reflects on a nearly two-year journey ๐๏ธ๐ฅ that began with a Kickstarter, rolled through 60 hours in the studio โฑ๏ธ๐๏ธ, and ended with a record theyโre genuinely proud of โ scars, growth, and all ๐๐ฑ. The conversation pulls the curtain back on the realities of modern bluegrass bands trying to level up without losing themselves in the process. ๐ชโก
The band digs into: ๐ถ Why they chose to crowdfund โ and how much work actually goes into a Kickstarter ๐ช๐ต ๐๏ธ Recording at Swingfingers Studio with Aaron Youngberg โ and why working with someone who speaks bluegrass makes all the difference ๐ป๐๏ธ โฑ๏ธ Tracking live in isolation with click tracks, layered takes, and producer Tyler Grant steering the ship ๐ฆ๐ง ๐ง The mental battle of studio perfectionism โ self-doubt, breakthroughs, and learning when to trust the take ๐คโก๏ธ๐ ๐ฟ How songs evolved in unexpected ways once recorded โ including tracks that nearly didnโt make the album ๐ณโจ ๐ Why pre-saves, singles, playlists, and algorithms matter more than fans realize ๐ค๐ฒ โ and how the โwaterfall releaseโ strategy actually works ๐ค The wild contrast between sold-out theaters ๐๏ธ๐ฅ and nearly empty bar gigs ๐บ๐ โ and how the band stays grounded through both
The episode also shines a spotlight on the unsung hero behind Tonewoodโs visual world ๐๐๏ธ: Silver โ the bandโs manager, merch wizard, and resident artist. She shares how the album artwork was inspired by the title track, Bob Dylanโs โLily, Rosemary and the Jack of Heartsโ โ ๏ธโค๏ธ, and grew into a full playing-card theme across singles, posters, and merch โ all screen-printed by hand ๐๏ธ๐.
They also revisit the bandโs Kickstarter cover-song rewards ๐๐ถ, where fans funded the record by commissioning custom bluegrass versions of everything from Gordon Lightfoot ๐ to Sly & The Family Stone ๐บ๐ โ essentially creating a second album while finishing the first. Absolute chaos. Absolute magic. โจ๐ช
At its core, this episode is about commitment, community, and creative honesty ๐พ๐ค โ learning when to push harder ๐, when to let go ๐๏ธ, and how much independent music depends on fans showing up, buying merch ๐๏ธ, pre-saving records ๐พ, and spreading the word ๐ขโค๏ธ.
๐ง Tune in for the laughs ๐, stay for the real talk ๐๏ธ, and remember: support the bands in the trenches โ thatโs where the magic lives. โจ๐ช

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