Dig Me Out - The 90's rock podcast show

Dig Me Out - The 90's rock podcast

Summary: The 90's rock podcast. We dig deep with weekly episodes featuring album reviews, artist interviews and roundtable discussions.

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Podcasts:

 #402: Mellow Gold by Beck | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 37:35

We revisit Beck's major label debut Mellow Gold, was it a warm-up for the multi-platinum Odelay, or is Loser the only worthwhile nugget?   Songs in this episode: Intro - Loser 12:54 -Soul Suckin' Jerk 17:58 - Beercan 26:28 - Truckdrivin Neighbors Downstairs (Yellow Sweat) Outro - Sweet Sunshine   To support the podcast, join us at Patreon for bonus content and more. Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 Patreon Preview: Power Pop in the '00s Discussion | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 05:08

Wondering about our exclusive content over at Patreon? Here's a sample of the first five minutes of our extended twenty minute discussion on Power Pop as we chat about the 2000s. Hear the entire bonus content, be eligible for quarterly contests, vote in our polls, and support the podcast at patreon.com/digmeout.

 #401: Power Pop Of The 90s | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:10:22

For a lot of people, the rock music subgenre known as "power pop" is one of those "you know it when you hear it" situations. However, over the years many have tried to describe and dissect what makes power pop unique from musical cousins such as pop rock or jangle pop. Like the 70s and 80s before them, 90s power pop bands put their own spin on the sound, adding a little more guitar crunch while incorporating the hallmark harmonies, British Invasion influenced melodies and arrangements, and other key elements, thanks bands like Sloan, Jellyfish, Teenage Fanclub, Superdrag, Fountains Of Wayne and The Posies, and artists like Matthew Sweet, Tommy Keene and Jason Falkner. With our panel, we dig into the sounds, the songs, the albums and the artists of 90s power pop.   Songs in this episode: Intro - Sick Of Myself by Matthew Sweet 32:14 - Buddy Holly by Weezer 37:05 - Bottle Of Fur by Urge Overkill 46:17 - Money City Maniacs by Sloan 52:41 - What You Do To Me by Teenage Fanclub Outro - Red Dragon Tattoo by Fountains of Wayne   To support the podcast, join us at Patreon for bonus content and more. Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #400: Half Dead and Dynamite by Lifter Puller | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 46:30

Craig Finn is best known for his distinctive vocal and lyrical style thanks to The Hold Steady in the 2000s. But while that band channeled Bruce Springsteen, The Replacements and The Band for musical inspiration, his 1990s outfit Lifter Puller took a decidedly more angular approach with nods to Television, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and Pavement. Digging into 1997's sophomore released Half Dead and Dynamite, the drugged up and drunken stories familiar to Finn fans are there, but the band backing him presents a different sonic approach, eschewing bombast and power chords for jagged rhythms and Radioshack keyboards. Intro - The Gin and the Sour Defeat 10:45 - Half Dead and Dynamite 17:03 - Nassau Coliseum 21:18 - I Like The Lights 29:17 - Rock for Lite Brite Outro - The Bears Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #399: Pack Up The Cats by Local H | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:12:32

Concept albums are as old as albums themselves, though defining what exactly qualifies as a concept album is flexible. The 90s were no different, as many bands and artists took loose ideas and strung together narratives and themes to form a cohesive idea. Of all the bands you were probably expecting to do so back in day, Local H was probably not high on that list, but songwriter/guitarist/singer Scott Lucas has dipped into the concept album well often during the past several decades, first with their 1996 break-through As Good As Dead, and then the 1998 follow-up Pack Up The Cats. Lucas and drummer Joe Daniels weave a tale not unfamiliar to rock fans - the rise and fall of a musician, but with the decade specific twists and turns that make it a uniquely 90s affair, both lyrically and sonically, and craft a concept album worthy of the decades medium of choice: the compact disc. Intro - All The Kids Are Right 32:13 - All-Right (Oh Yeah) 34:49 - Cool Magnet 36:58 - Laminate Man 40:47 - Deep Cut 43.46 - Lucky Time 50:16 - Hit The Skids Outro - What Can I Tell You Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #398: Frosting On The Beater by The Posies | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 38:10

The 1990s are known as the grunge decade, but really Seattle's reign was contained to the first half, which is when The Posies power-pop tour de force Frosting On The Beater happened to be released in 1993. It's not hard to understand why this band from the Pacific Northwest struggled to find an broad audience - the singles are teeming with Big Star, Cheap Trick, The Beatles, and other classic power pop influence, and only Matthew Sweet was able to crack mainstream radio playlists and MTV video rotation with a similar but equally melodic approach. It doesn't help that in an era of Discman players and vinyl decline, Don Fleming's beefed up production truly only finds its sweet spot when the stereo speakers are pushing serious air, which we are happy to oblige. Intro - Dream All Day 9:54 - Definite Door 13:28 - Love Letter Boxes 19:51 - How She Lied By Living 29:37 - Solar Sister Outro - Flavor Of The Month Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #397: Side Projects Of The 90s | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:02:42

When musicians aren't busy writing, recording and touring with their main band, often times you'll find them in side projects, mixing it up with new sounds and new collaborators. The 1990s were no different, as folks from the biggest bands to lesser known indie artists often found a new creative outlet outside their main gig. But what exactly makes it a side project, as opposed to just putting out a solo album, or recording with a fabled "super group?" We try to lay down some (admittedly) shaky criteria to figure out what makes a side project, revisiting those that worked, a few that didn't, some that left us scratching our heads and some that left us wanting more. Intro - Side Project Medley (Friends Of P by The Rentals, Hunger Strike by Temple Of The Dog, Tipp City by The Amps) 7:17 - That's Just How That Bird Sings by The Twilight Singers 20:06 - Gimme Indie Rock by Sebadoh 26:48 - Wasting Away by Nailbomb 40:57 - Song For A Dead Girl by Three Fish 46:54 - 20th Century by Brad Outro - Yoo Hoo by Imperial Teen Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #396: Into The Pink by Verbena | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 45:27

After Nirvana exploded in the 1990s, bands across the globe got signed for sounding just enough like the Kurt, Krist, and Dave, an inevitable result of major labels hoping to find "the next Nirvana." It was also inevitable that young artists would be influenced by the band dominating radio and MTV, and so began the delicate balance of imitation and influence, recycling and reinterpretation. On their sophomore album Into The Pink, Verbena had a lot to shoulder. With the multi-pronged assault of electronica, nu-metal and manufactured pop, some decried the end of rock'n'roll in the later half other decade, and searched for a savior. With a single that tipped a nod to Cobain vocally and Nirvana sonically, and with Dave Grohl onboard as producer, the hype machine declaring Verbena to be "the next Nirvana" was in full swing, coloring the band before most got to hear the record in full. We try to get beneath the marketing and figure out what really worked, what didn't, and why rock music fans in general are so intent on tearing down the latest thing. Intro - Into The Pink 15:09 - Baby Got Shot 19:06 - John Beverly 24:41 - Monkey, I'm Your Man Outro - Pretty Please Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #395: Tin Cans With Strings To You by Far | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 45:37

On their 1996 major label debut Tin Cans With Strings To You, the Sacramento, CA band Far find themselves at an interesting crossroads. By this point in the decade, grunge is well past its expiration date, so how do you describe a rock band that can synthesize New York City post-hardcore and Washington D.C. emo, with hints of the burgeoning San Diego screamo scene? Thanks to our Patreon patrons suggestion, we revisit a record that on the surface hits all of our respective musical sweet spots, but gave us some some head scratching moments as well with regard to production choices and track list order. Intro - Love, American Style 13:14 - Girl 22:30 - Celebrate Her 36:25 - Joining The Circus Outro - Seasick Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #394: Interview With Jonny Polonsky | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:05:10

For the tens of thousands of bands who signed to a major label, put out a record, scored a minor hit and disappeared, there just as many divergent stories of what happened after the temporary spotlight dimmed. In the case of Jonny Polonsky, his tale started in the suburbs of Chicago, home recording cassette albums as a teen in his bedroom and dialing up famous guitarists for feedback, which lead him to move to Boston, the support of Frank Black of the Pixies, and a deal with Rick Rubin's American Recordings. His 1996 debut Hi My Name Is Jonny scored a college radio hit with "In My Head," but like so many in the mid and late 90s music industry machine, the churn happened quickly and soon after he find be looking to new outlets for releasing music and relocating to Los Angeles to start anew. There is a chance you've heard or seen Jonny in the 2000s without even realizing it, playing on records by Pete Yorn, Puscifer, Neil Diamond, Johnny Cash, Minnie Driver and more, while hitting the road with many more. Jonny shares with us his story, his approaches to songwriting, recording, learning new instruments, his love of David Bowie's side-project Tin Machine, and much much more. Intro - In My Mind Outro - Love Lovely Love Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #393: Prick by Prick | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 39:30

When an established name like Trent Reznor shows up in the credits of a 90s industrial album, the natural starting point is to compare it Nine Inch Nails. But what about when the artist is not a contemporary or disciple, but a predecessor? That's the case with Kevin McMahon, veteran of new wave group Lucky Pierre going back to the 70s, and where the Reznor connection occurs in the late 80s. Thanks to having over a decade worth of experience, on the 1995 eponymous debut by Prick, Reznor acts as less an overwhelming force upon McMahon and his band and more of a slightly different flavor. It's not hard to pick out which tracks Reznor had a hand in, but compared to the majority of the album, they pair nicely with the overall experience rather than stick out like the proverbial sore thumb. While so many industrial acts can either get weighted down by lyrical dreariness, musical repetition or underwhelming vocal performances, McMahon uses his new wave background wisely, crafting melodic hooks and not losing the rock aspect of industrial rock thanks to some well-produced guitar riffing. Intro - Animal 9:36 - Tough 12:19 - Crack 14:44 - Other People 18:12 - No Fair Fights 25:42 - I Apologize Outro - I Got It Bad Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #392: Origins - Spoon In The 90s | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:09:47

In the first of a new roundtable series, we're taking a look back at the 90s origins of Spoon, and how they went from devotees of Frank Black and Robert Pollard, to one of the most consistently interesting and successful bands of the 2000s. Britt Daniel and Jim Eno, the core singer/songwriter/guitarist and drummer/producer of Spoon, have been at it for almost thirty years. In the 2000s, starting with Girls Can Tell, and up to their most recent release Hot Thoughts, the band has managed to expertly toe the line between slick songwriting worthy of radio, television and film placement, while keeping a shape-shifting edge that expertly slips back and forth between minimalist and embellished production, tied together with Daniel's emphatic but easy on the ears delivery that manages to inhabit Ray Davies, Tom Petty and Prince all at the same time. But before they began their run of successful 2000s releases, the band was almost another tragic tale of the 1990s major label signing frenzy, bouncing between taste-maker Matador for their debut Telephono and EP Soft Effects, to then jump to the majors on A Series Of Sneaks at Elektra that saw them dropped four months after their sophomore release. Like so many before that have carved out long careers, the early years of Spoon reveal a band struggling to channel their influences into something wholly unique while Daniel's begins the process of finding his own voice. Intro - Utilitarian (A Series Of Sneaks) 14:42 - Theme To Wendell Stivers (Telephono) 18:54 - Nefarious (Telephono) 22:43 - Mountain Of Sound (Soft Effects EP) 33:49 - The Minor Tough (A Series Of Sneaks) 47:39 - Metal Detektor (A Series Of Sneaks) Outro - The Agony Of Laffitte (Laffitte 7" single) Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #391: Six by Mansun | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 47:18

Let's get this out of the way - thanks to the ridiculous nature of regional rights and legal mumbo-jumbo surrounding album releases, we are occasionally stuck reviewing the edited and inferior US release of an album rather than the original UK or Australian version that the artist intended. That's what happened when one of our Patreon patrons selected the sophomore album Six by Mansun for us to check out. The original 1998 UK release features extra songs, a different track list and mixes, and is overall considered to the superior to the chopped-down and rearranged US version released in 1999. Back in the day, we would have made a visit to the local Virgin Megastore and dropped twenty to thirty bucks on an important version, but that option is long gone, so we're playing the hand as dealt. While the band made no secret on their debut Attack of the Grey Lantern that straight-up Brit-pop was of no interest, the band managed to craft radio-friendly pop melodies with twisted instrumentation and odd embellishments. Six takes it one step further, honing the pop songs while doubling-down on the twisted and odd, taking long divergences into instrumental passages, drastic tempo shifts and, uh, The Nutcracker? Intro - Six 14:23 - Negative 20:23 - Legacy 26:06 - Anti-Everything 34:48 - Being A Girl Outro - Fall Out Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #390: The Infotainment Scan by The Fall | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 40:16

Mark E. Smith of The Fall was a divisive character, turning people on or off with his kinetic one-note, occasionally slurred, stream of consciousness vocal delivery. After a decade and a half of abrasive post punk, line-up changes and restlessness led to a stylistic change, accounting for several electronic and IDM influenced albums. 1993's The Infotainment Scan falls into this era, while still featuring a jagged guitar line, clean (or sterile) production on programmed drums and synth keyboards dominates the overall sound, featuring odd cover song choices and sonic stretches that left us scratching our heads. There's a lovable cantankerous aspect to Smith's vocals that endears us to his limitations, but hearing the band go full rave seemed to a bridge too far. Intro - Paranoia Man In Cheap Sh*T Room 14:17 - Glam Racket 19:30 - It's a Curse 28:44 - Ladybird (Green Grass) Outro - Lost In Music Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

 #389: Foma by The Nixons | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 49:33

The story of The Nixons is not unlike a number of 1990s bands. Record some demos and release them on your own, find a small regional label to release your first album recorded on a shoe-string budget, get some buzz, the major labels swoop in, offer to re-release the album with a few new tracks, new cover art and a fresh mastering job, then throw out a single or two in hopes of a "next big thing" hit, only to see the follow-up album a year or two later (if they got one) get lackluster promotion and be promptly dropped. If bands like this were lucky, they managed one single that made an impression. With their 1995 album Foma, The Nixons managed just that with "Sister," which finds itself at the perfect crossroad of early Pearl Jam earnestness and Matchbox 20 radio pleasantry. What struck us and our guest about Foma was not the second wave of grunge sound that pins it so specifically to the decade, but the unexpected amount of social and political commentary in the lyrics that come across equally daring and off-putting. Listeners can still hear "Sister" on alternative rock radio stations across the country today, but thanks to a sound that covers all the 90s alternative rock touchstones, do they even know their listening to The Nixons? Intro - Sister 17:37 - Sweet Belief 30:45 - Drink The Fear Outro - Happy Song Facebook / Twitter / Instagram   Zazzle Merch Store   http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com

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