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May 13, 2025 by Baby Robot Media

Listen: Captain Americana playlist for 5/13/25

Yasmin Williams, Dom Flemons - Cliffwalk single art
Single art: Yasmin Williams, Dom Flemons – Cliffwalk

Listen to this week’s Captain Americana Spotify playlist featuring:

Dave Murphy – Josephine
Neil Young – Captain Kennedy
John Calvin – I Can Make Your Heart Mine
Charley Crockett – Lonesome Drifter
Schmoon – Wait for the Mystery
The Lumineers – Same Old Song
Sloppy Scales – When I Was 13
Sierra Hull, Tim O’Brien – Come Out of My Blues
Annie Bacon & Her Oshen – Mist
Valerie June – Joy, Joy
Parker Smith – Mothers
Courtney Barnett – Lotta Love
Gileah Taylor – Still Here
David Quinn – Mr. Bossman
Jason Isbell – Bury Me
Will Stewart – Late for the Banquet
Larkin Poe – If God Is a Woman
Bonnie & the Mere Mortals – When She Whispers
Kyle Daniel, Rhiannon Hill – Can’t Hold Me Back
Daniel Nunnelee, Katiee Pruitt – Pick and Choose
Sabrina Carpenter, Dolly Parton – Please Please Please
Sam Outlaw – I Never Saw Him Cry
The War and Treaty, Billy Strings – Drink From Me
Cody Jinks, Edward Spear – Put the Whiskey Down
Lucius, Madison Cunningham – Impressions
Hurray for the Riff Raff – Pyramid Scheme
Patterson Hood, Waxahatchee – The Forks of Cypress
Drayton Farley – Something Wrong (Live Acoustic)
Katie Toupin, The Jenkins Twins – The Greatest Lie
Vinnie Paolizzi – Family Tree
Anna St. Louis – Everything (Demo)
Nefesh Mountain – Regrets in the Rearview
Heather Maloney – Exploding Star
The Kearns Family – The Old Days
Yasmin Williams, Dom Flemons – Cliffwalk
Wyatt Flores – West of Tulsa (Live at Cain’s Ballroom)
Anna May – Elegy

Filed Under: Playlists Tagged With: Americana, Spotify

May 12, 2025 by Baby Robot Media

Listen: State of the Art Spotify playlist for 5/12/25

Shilpa Ray - Portrait of a Cat Lady
Single Art: Shilpa Ray – Portrait of a Cat Lady

Listen to this week’s State of the Art Spotify playlist featuring:

Austin Gatus, Sophia James – Don’t Want This to Change
Ben Kweller, Waxahatchee – Dollar Store
See Night – Just Another Life
Bon Iver – Everything Is Peaceful Love
Schmoon – Wait for the Mystery
Beirut – Guericke’s Unicorn
Parker Woodland – Makeup
mclusky – way of the exploding dickhead
John Calvin – I Can Make Your Heart Mine
Bob Mould – Neanderthal
Sloppy Scales – When I Was 13
Destroyer – Hydroplaning Off the Edge
Trabants – Surfers on Acid
Horsegirl – Switch Over
Jordan Maye – Tuesday
Immaterial Possession – Naked When You Come (Fire Records)
Annie Bacon & Her Oshen – Mist
Gileah Taylor – Still Here (Velvet Blue Music)
Gringo Star – Blood Moon (Dizzybird Records)
S.LaBate – New Year’s Dissolution
Red Fang – It’s Always There
Madchild – Kerosene
Wu-Tang Clan – Mandingo
Sleepy Hallow, Doechii – Anxiety
Mekons – War Economy (Fire Records)
Shilpa Ray – Portrait of a Cat Lady
Annie DiRusso – Leo
Hemlock – circles again (nov four)
The Weather Station – Window
lots of hands – rosie
Fine China – Gonna Need a Vacation (Velvet Blue Music)
Momma – I Want You (Fever)
Sunday 1994 – Doomsday
The Taxpayers – At War With the Dogcatchers
Car Seat Headrest – Gethsemane


Filed Under: Playlists Tagged With: playlist, Spotify

February 11, 2025 by Baby Robot Media

Listen: Captain Americana playlist for 2/10/25

Sunny War, Valerie June - Cry Baby single art
Album art: Sunny War, Valerie June – Cry Baby single art

Listen to this week’s Captain Americana Spotify playlist featuring:

Dave Murphy – October Skies (feat. James Maddock)
Wilco – The Late Greats
John Calvin – Rest of My Roads
Dawes – I Love L.A.
Schmoon – Sadly County Fair
Sierra Ferrell – The Garden
Sloppy Scales – I Shagged a MAGA
J Mascis – Breathe
Annie Bacon & Her Oshen – Secret Broken Heart
Waxahatchee – Mud
Parker Smith – Air Stream
Rhiannon Giddens, Justin Robinson – Hook and Line
Gileah Taylor – My Vision is Coming Back
Sunny War, Valerie June – Cry Baby
Charles Wesley Godwin – It’s the Little Things
Lucero – Diamond State Heartbreak
Bonnie “Prince” Billy, Tim O’Brien – Our Home
Lilly Hiatt – Hidden Day
Zach Bryan – Blue Jean Baby
Alison Krauss & Union Station – Looks Like the End of the Road
Thee Sacred Souls – Live For You – A Colors Show
Wilder Woods, Anna Graves – Offerings
Katie Pruitt – Blood Related
Joe Ely – Today it Did
Ken Pomeroy – Stranger
Horsebath – Never Be Another You
Zack Keim – Better Days
Sean Thompson’s Weird Ears – Head in the Sand
Kassi Valazza – Weight of the Wheel
The Doohickeys – Can’t Beat My Ol’ Beater
Miss Tess – Louisiana

Filed Under: Playlists Tagged With: Americana, Spotify

February 10, 2025 by Baby Robot Media

Listen: State of the Art Spotify playlist for 2/10/25

Album Art: Niambi – Taboo

Listen to this week’s State of the Art Spotify playlist featuring:

See Night – LA Traffic
Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory – Indio
Parker Woodland – Just In Case
Labrini Girls – Company Culture
Schmoon – Sadly County Fair
Lucy Dacus – Ankles
John Calvin – Rest of My Roads
Father John Misty – Being You
Sloppy Scales – I Shagged a MAGA
Japanese Breakfast – Orlando in Love
Jordan Maye – Deranged
Franz Ferdinand – Audacious
Trabants – “Mantra”
FKA Twigs – Childlike Things
Annie Bacon & Her Oshen – Secret Broken Heart
Julien Baker, Torres – Sylvia
Gileah Taylor – My Vision is Coming Back
Mogwai – Lion Rumpus
Black Country, New Road – Besties
Sunflower Bean – Champagne Taste
illiterates – Kingpin of Lost Souls
Charm School – Debt Forever
Errol Eats Everything, Isaac Sawyer – Don’t Matter None
Gabe ‘Nandez – Semtex
Niambi – Ain’t Shit
Fines Double, billy woods – Levant
John Glacier, Sampha – Ocean Steppin’
Glixen – all tied up
she’s green – Graze
Mamalarky – Feels So Wrong
A.L. West – Nothing at All
High. – In a Hole
Ethel Cain – Punish


Filed Under: Playlists Tagged With: playlist, Spotify

See Night

Linda Sao of See Night press photo by Evelyn Shafer in Los Angeles 2024 for album Just Another Life
Linda Sao of See Night. Photo by Evelyn Shafer.

LINKS
Website * Instagram * Facebook * YouTube * Bandcamp * Soundcloud * Spotify * Apple

 

See Night – Just Another Life LP

Los Angeles-based See Night’s new indie-rock album Just Another Life (out Feb. 28) is a shoegaze / dreampop / psych reflection on the lives we lead and ultimately leave behind to start fresh. And like that dynamic between its contrasting themes of leaving and homecoming, the tracklist itself is an ebb and flow—from the garage-rock fuzzy guitar opener, through two piano instrumentals, to the romantic orchestral shoegaze of “Sober & High,” and finally to the lo-fi acoustic outro song. It’s a moody meditation on ever-changing relationships and life chapters. It’s a treatise on a wanderlust that was stifled during the pandemic lockdown and the driving urge to be a touring musician.

See Night is the project of guitarist and singer-songwriter Linda Sao, who tours with an incredible band (drummer Cory Aboud, guitarist Patrick Andrews, and bassist AJ Marquez) known for an explosive live show, and also solo in the U.S., EU and UK. See Night has shared stages with Bonnie “Prince” Billy, Widowspeak, Matthew Logan Vasquez (Delta Spirit), Lady Lamb, John Vanderslice, Rogue Wave, The Pack a.d., Sunwatchers, David Dondero and more. The 7-inch single “Eloquence” was personally handpicked by Pavement’s Bob Nastanovich and put out on his Brokers Tip Records. Sao is also an official Anderson Guitarworks artist alongside James Iha, Hannah Wicklund and Graham Nash.

The majority of the new songs were recorded over three days with co-producer Tres Sasser in his Tresland studio in Nashville with Joe Costa (Ben Folds, Elizabeth Cook, Lyle Lovett, Sara Bareilles) engineering and mixing, with an additional session at The Bomb Shelter (Alabama Shakes) in Nashville with Jack Tellman engineering and drummer Aboud. Sasser brought in a stellar collection of musicians to realize Sao’s vision, including drummer Brad Pemberton (Ryan Adams & the Cardinals, Willie Nelson, Steve Earle and The Dukes), Grammy and Juno award-winning violinist Tania Elizabeth (The Avett Brothers, Mary Gauthier, The Duhks), and guitarist Chris Tench (Liam Lynch, The Sifl and Olly Show, Matthew Ryan). The album was mastered by Brian Lucey (David Lynch, The Black Keys, Ghost, Cage the Elephant), who’s worked on multiple Grammy-winning albums and singles.

“Tres and Joe have become my go-to studio team of incredibly talented friends,” says Sao. “They’ve both worked on the previous See Night releases. And just like with my bandmates, I have to feel emotionally safe with the people I work with because both recording in a studio and performing live onstage are incredibly vulnerable things. I want good people to infuse good energy into what I consider personal heart songs.”

The album kicks off with the driving indie-rock “Being Good Is Supposed To Be Easy,” about the passing of Sao’s father. Its foreboding shoegaze instrumentation is energized by big, layered distorted guitars, a hooky melodic bassline, and propulsively dynamic drums. Everything drops out in the verse to emphasize Sao’s ethereal vocals. They have a solemn air as she lyrically tackles universal themes of reconciling with death, adult struggles with one’s parents, and the simple desire to be a good person. It’s a song of generational trauma, of timeless debts that can’t be repaid, and wanting to be the person that breaks that cycle.

Relationship love song “LA Traffic” and the title-track “Just Another Life” both reference driving, and would be great during long car rides. The simplicity of the distorted guitars of “LA Traffic” weigh heavily on Sao’s visually poetic lyrics of driving in the slow lane on a Los Angeles highway. It’s also an overt nod to her new home of Los Angeles and of her new life there. She takes this thing, LA traffic, that everyone hates, and turns the tables with a different perspective. She wants more of it. She’s in a car, on a pre-dawn morning, with someone that she may not see again. Is this moment the last time they’ll enjoy each other’s presence? “Not even the sun knew we were done,” she sings as she embraces the end of things and yearns for more time together.

The poppy indie-rock title track “Just Another Life,” also about leaving old lives behind to start new ones, was written in the throes of pandemic isolation. Sao was planning to return to tour the EU when the pandemic hit, and those dreams were suddenly halted. It’s a song that begins with a catchy, astral, nearly new wave hook, before building into a massive, pounding bridge that feels like time travel. There’s a loneliness to this song’s sense of nostalgia, even as it looks toward the future. Now she’s been back on the road, taking this song on tour.

“I was a solo traveler even before I played music publicly,” says Sao. “That was fate training me to be a DIY touring musician. My happy place is in the window seat on a train. Traveling is freedom, a way to seek optimism and hope because you never know who or what’s behind a door. Monotony gets me down. Touring has been my cure.”

The mournful and atmospheric “Gravity” is a shoegazy ballad about letting go, moving on from the past while being called into the future. Its sad dreampop composition is carried forward by finger-picked electric guitar, reverb and drums with a heartbeat cadence. The bass and otherworldly guitars move in the background like a wistful fog. “The gravity of tomorrow / Pulls yesterday to sleep / But you were immovable like a chess piece,” she sings. It’s a song about the comparing mind and a painful longing that resolves with newfound clarity.

The hopeful and romantic “Sober & High” embraces that feeling of love’s earliest days, when there’s nothing else in this world except for you and that other person—a feeling so intense that you feel high even when sober. It’s a sonic love spell that Sao casts through gentle labyrinthine guitars, Tania Elizabeth’s celestial violin, and with just the right amount of sparseness left for her vocals to bewitch you. There’s also a warning intertwined here, of not letting your mind spiral or allowing self sabotage to seep in, as she sings, “Say no more, I know more than enough / To go forward, not backward down into my mind.”

Most of the album was written during Sao’s pandemic isolation in San Francisco and were intentional homecomings to her core singer-songwriter styles. Perhaps the sense of homecoming is most embodied by her instrumental cinematic pieces “Piano No. 1 (Morning)” and “Piano No. 2 (Night),” titled to pay homage to Chopin’s “Prelude Op. 28, No. 15”—the last song she studied on piano as a teen. Both songs were improvised in the studio and turned into segues, gluing the album together. “Piano No. 1 (Morning)” has a light, veil-like feel to it, like the sun cutting through a romantic grey fog rolling in from the San Francisco Bay. While “Piano No. 2 (Night)” bookends the album with drum heartbeats and stacked violins that move like stormy waves in the witching hour.

We finish the album with her alone on her bed recording the solo acoustic “NYC Coats” as an iPhone memo. A raw and quiet resolution to the 8-track journey. It’s an acoustic lo-fi bedroom indie-folk song about waking up in the morning anticipating a farewell to someone leaving for tour. It captures a vividly filmic moment of a goodbye that’s naturally expected and accepted by both people, but of not wanting to leave their heavy embrace. Along with “LA Traffic,” it comes back to the subject of ephemeral love as a touring musician.

“I heard that first, casual iPhone recording and I knew that this was it, that this was the take,” says Sao. “Simple and foundationally singer-songwriter, flaws and all. No break or bridge. No reverb or vocal mic. It’s a poem. I wrote it right after playing in Brooklyn for the first time, and so a NYC winter was on my mind.”

Just Another Life is a calculated album that should be listened to as a whole. It’s intentional. It’s orchestrated. The songs connect with each other in a visceral way. From the big rock guitars of “Being Good Is Supposed To Be Easy,” to the dreamy enchantment of ”LA Traffic,” “Gravity” and “Sober & High,” to the cinematic piano interstitials, to the delicately intimate bedroom recording of “NYC Coats,” the themes of love, loss and moving on to a new life shine through. Close your eyes and allow this album’s sonic representations of human emotions to wash over you—to move you with the cyclical universality of metaphorical death and rebirth.

–

Sao is a Vietnamese-American whose parents met during the Vietnam War. The band name pays homage to her family history and, specifically, to the Sea Knight helicopter her father flew during the war as a U.S. Navy pilot. Her father passed away last year, and this album connects directly to him.

In 2024 Sao participated in a music and book tour alongside author Christian Vo in support of Vo’s intergenerational memoir with her own father, My Vietnam, Your Vietnam. Together they shared personal stories, readings and music that reflected their shared family histories and human connections.

Sao studied classical piano from the ages of eight to sixteen. This album comes full circle to her childhood with the piano interludes “Piano No. 1 (Morning)” and “Piano No. 2 (Night).” It’s another way that she “goes home” to her family and adolescence. You can feel the excitement and pride in these songs. “These two songs are a way to connect with my parents, their influence and the sound of my house as a child,” Sao says. “It’s a way to connect with my core self from long before the idea of performing onstage, or for other people, was ever a thing.”

Sao was always a writer and poet, but she fell in love with the acoustic guitar when she was 18. Her early twenties were spent discovering and honing her craft as a solo acoustic singer-songwriter who played a few times a year. She eventually picked up an electric guitar and moved to San Francisco with the intention of starting an indie-rock band and formed See Night. See Night now tours in the U.S. and Sao has toured Europe solo every year since 2018 (minus the 2020 pandemic). Drummer Aboud, guitarist Andrews, and bassist Marquez fuel an energetic, emotive live show with their nuanced power and additional songwriting prowess.

Sao moved to Los Angeles in early 2024 to be closer to family, and continues to tour. “Similar to the aliveness I get from touring,” says Sao, “moving to L.A. has felt like a new adventure unto itself. I’m walking around with a wide-eyed sense of exploration. As a musician new to this big, intimidating city full of talent, I’m both incredibly nervous and exhilarated. It’s recharging me with both self-doubt and inspiration.”

The band’s debut EP Where Are You (2014) was recorded in three days in Oakland. “Chasm” carries the heaviness of classic heartbreak with indie-rock guitars and orchestral flourishes. “Banking on Things” utilizes lyrical imagery like “a gun ready to speak,” but the metaphor is Sao craving a new life to begin, with songs inside ready to take flight. It’s a collection of songs that uses a longing for love as a metaphor for wanting to play live music and tour. It’s about yearning for a future that Sao has since manifested.

The melancholy shoegaze of the EP You Are Us (2018) established See Night as a live band to reckon with. They started touring the West Coast culminating in an epic album release show at the legendary Bottom of the Hill in San Francisco (where they’ve had every album release show). It’s an album that toys with gritty near-instrumentals, to post-rock ballads, to the dreampop of “Eloquence,” which was rereleased as the title track of the 7-inch on Bob Nastanovich of Pavement’s Brokers Tip Records.

“I had just gotten back from playing NYC a month before the pandemic hit,” says Sao. “My friend Daniel had a last-minute extra ticket to a screening of the Pavement documentary Pavement: Slow Century at San Francisco’s Roxie Theater where Bob did an in-person Q&A after the film. After the event, we went to the bar next door for a night cap. Bob randomly walked in and my friend, after fanning out, introduced us. I asked Bob the name of his nonprofit label he’d mentioned during the Q&A and he invited me to send him my band’s music. Of course, I didn’t think he was serious at all and figured he was just being nice. But I sent it to him that night, and the next day he wanted to do the 7-inch. I’m so thankful, not only for that vinyl release, but what’s most surprising has been his continued genuine kindness and support ever since.”

Just Another Life was mostly written during the pandemic in San Francisco in isolation, with the exceptions of “Gravity” (written during her solo acoustic days, then resurrected and reimagined in the studio), and “LA Traffic” and “Being Good Is Supposed To Be Easy” were written in 2024 after her move to Los Angeles. “Inherently there was no band practice during the pandemic,” says Sao. “I felt myself going back to a more lyrical place. These are all heart songs. I was also writing on my piano as I revisited my old sheet music I dug up from when I was a kid. I’m writing like a rubberband, expanding and contracting, playing with the dynamic of heavy rock and empty space.”

In Just Another Life, Sao confronts her place in this new life that she’s built for herself, the loss of her father, moments of longing and leaving, and—ultimately—moments of feeling at home with a person or place.

“Throughout the pandemic, all I wanted to do was tour again,” says Sao. “I’ve lived many lives and I’ve now moved to L.A. for family reasons, which was a huge leap…leaving a whole life behind. My father’s passing was another part of my life that was lost, and it marked a new reality. This album feels like I’m stepping into a new light.”

Track list:
1. Being Good Is Supposed To Be Easy
2. LA Traffic
3. Just Another Life
4. Gravity
5. Piano No. 1 (Morning)
6. Sober & High
7. Piano No. 2 (Night)
8. NYC Coats

Album Credits:
All songs written by Linda Sao
Co-producers: Tres Sasser and Linda Sao
Engineer: Jack Tellman (tracks 1 & 2) at The Bomb Shelter in Nashville, TN.
Engineer: Joe Costa (tracks 3-7) at Tresland in Nashville, TN.
“NYC Coats” engineered by Linda Sao on an iPhone voice memo in a San Francisco, CA bedroom.
Mixing: Joe Costa
Mastering: Brian Lucey

Linda Sao: vocals, guitars, piano.
Chris Tench: guitars on tracks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7.
Brad Pemberton: drums on tracks 3, 4, 6, 7.
Cory Aboud: drums on track 1.
Tres Sasser: bass on tracks 1, 3, 4, 6.
Tania Elizabeth: violin on tracks 5, 6, 7.

Schmoon

Schmoon. Photo by Bret Woodard. Portland, Maine indie folk singer-songwriter and filmmaker Matt Cascella who's releasing his new album Pretty Darn Pretty under the moniker Schmoon.
Schmoon – Matt Cascella. Photo by Bret Woodard.

Schmoon – Pretty Darn Pretty

Portland, Maine indie folk singer-songwriter and filmmaker Matt Cascella is releasing his new album Pretty Darn Pretty under the moniker Schmoon, his childhood nickname. Appropriately, the new LP taps into innocently playful vibes while capturing the fuzzy nostalgia of growing up. This is an album of characters, some are bad and some slightly better, but pieces of Cascella shine through with each song. He delves into the celebratory joy that comes with time-worn memories, our present anxieties and the legacy of our unknown futures. Cascella’s work has been featured in Brooklyn Vegan, Hollywood Reporter, Glide, Americana UK, KLOF Mag and more.

Cascella cut his teeth in the New York City indie scene with his band Brooms, while also recording solo under the name Owlbiter before moving to Portland, Maine during the pandemic. He went back and forth to producer, engineer, and mixer Brendon Thomas’ studio in New Hampshire and together they experimented, tried different tempos, different keys until each song had felt like fate had bound them together.

Pretty Darn Pretty kicks off with the reflectively weary and wary folk tune “Sadly County Fair,” a tragic portrait of modern America written after Cascella’s strange visit to his local county fair. It’s a beautiful song that has a wry observational humor akin to Randy Newman. The acoustic guitar rhythmically chugs along with a percussion of brushes on a trash can. Otherworldly ambient electric guitar textures, reminiscent of John Cale or Big Thief’s Buck Meek, underscore this uncanny anthropological study of humanity. We’re given a peek into Cascella’s mental state while writing this song when he sings, “Cause when you’re sad / Sad places only make it worse.”

“There was a sadness to this experience, and I found it fascinating,” says Cascella. “Spending five dollars to take one shot at a basketball hoop. That’s America. I’m perplexed about our obsession with the American flag. I’m more and more confused about this country and my place in it.”

The bittersweet track “Wait For the Mystery” highlights our collective fragility following a global event like the pandemic days of the early 2020s, particularly as we all work to focus on what’s important to us. Here, our protagonist is waiting to feel excited by life again. He ponders mundane moments of aging, parenthood and domesticity, along with problems that feel too big for individuals to fix, like overpopulation and wildfires. Cascella wields his gentle voice against even bigger guitars as each refrain of the song’s title climaxes.

The country-leaning Americana rocker “Bowlegged Rider” has a Hank Williams meets Dean Martin vibe that hits that same honkytonk hipster sweet spot as Ween’s 12 Golden Country Greats. The song introduces us to the “Bowlegged Rider,” a cartoonish analogy to the toxic people in our lives who damage everyone around them. Through washed-out guitars and moseying drums, it’s a funny and fun jab at the cancerous people in our orbit. “So the chip became a chunk / On his shoulder that very eve / Must be how wounds become marquees,” he sings.

The indie-folk “Made It Up” comes across like Tom Petty’s Wildflowers album processed through bright, sludgy, chunky guitars and big bombastic drum hits contrasted with sparse choruses. It’s the song of a recluse leaving their agoraphobic stronghold to venture across the yard to the mailbox only to find that the wildlife has taken over. It’s a spiritual successor of The Beatles’ “Eleanor Rigby” in its depiction of loneliness even when others are around, and it’s unspoken longing for connection to other humans. “I want to be active socially and see friends,” says Cascella, “and I want to retreat at the same time. There’s a conflicting feeling in this song of someone who wants to participate in their neighborhood, but doesn’t.”

The old-timey cowboy folk tragedy “Not a Girl” is a tale of domestic violence. The song plays with narrative perspectives and points of view through this chorusless slow waltz — occasionally sung from a female perspective, and occasionally from the brute with lyrics like, “Hey baby this is what love is.” This terrible person’s wretched spirit decimates this poor woman who’s working overtime on justifying the violence.

The whimsical and dreamy “Birthday Pancakes” is about ruining the nice things you do for your partner by keeping a mental tally, only to use them as argument fodder during heated moments. It takes all of the protagonists’ bad traits and puts them front and center, accompanied by a playful glockenspiel, banjo and accordion. “You love those pancakes on your birthday / I’m such a wonderful guy,” he sings. “Birthday Pancakes” almost works as a quasi-interlude, adding an exciting element to the tapestry of Pretty Darn Pretty.

The folk-punk tinged “Danny Friend” weaves propulsive percussion through exciting finger-picked banjo accents and a distorted electric bass guitar lead, both played by Thomas. The song is a fantasy about living off the grid with your best friend. “We could live on canned beans / Fish in the creek, one pair of jeans /That’s all I need,” he sings. It’s a song of longing for the freedom of not needing to have a job, told through a selfish character who’s trying to manipulate Danny to take him away. The song explores untraditional primal sounds through established folk-rock amalgamations while following a path blazed by genre outsiders like Tom Waits and M. Ward. The song ends with a swirling chaos, into a field-recorded jumpcut of Cascella singing and gurgling in the shower that his wife recorded.

The Brazilian groove and Herb Alpert horns of “Table for One” has a 1950s’ crooner-pop vibe. It’s the song of a man going out to eat alone on his birthday who isn’t comfortable in his own skin. It bothers him, but he’s pretending like it doesn’t. The ethereal piano ballad “To a Butthead” is a message from Cascella to himself about his own fear of death. “Live every day like it’s your last / Golly gosh that sounds exhausting,” he sings. Both of these songs would feel right at home in a Pixar film with their observational oddities.

The album closes with the title track “Pretty Darn Pretty,” a song that revels in the nostalgia of the ‘good ole days.’ It’s thesis is that it’s nice to get that dopamine surge from reliving the hits of your past, but it becomes sad to wallow in your own history without looking forward. The refrain of “go back to the good ole days” repeats like a hypnotic suggestion, luring you into embracing a past that may have never existed at all.

Cascella started playing drums in a band in high school in Connecticut, then moved to New York City for college. There he explored language and words and began singing and writing lyrics, while continuing to play drums in different projects. He put out his first solo record, Black Crackers (2010), under the name Owlbiter. He recorded fast with his buddy James Downes. “It had a hurried sound,” says Cascella, “recorded like I was going to die in a couple days. That’s the difference between Owlbiter and Schmoon.”

He linked up with keys player Brett Crudgington and created the whimsical piano-pop project Brooms, writing and recording songs that were fun, off-kilter and intimate. Cascella was living in a factory converted into artists space near Prospect Park where he could play drums at all hours, and Crudgington lived just on the other side of the park. They practiced four days a week.

Brooms’ debut album In the Backyard (2012) tapped into the sadness and general crumby feelings of young men, delving into unrequited love while exploring cool textures that included brass and string arrangements and reed instruments. Fuzzy Waters (2013) comes together like a cohesive film with a beginning, middle and end — filled with characters that you can identify with. Their album Brooms Blooms (2015) is a bigger album, crunchier, more rock with harder hitting drums, but the band was going through a bit of dysfunction and wouldn’t make another proper studio album. Cascella moved into “a normal apartment with walls and heat.”

Cascella found himself inspired by “demo-sounding albums.” There was something about this particular moment that he needed to capture. He recorded his solo album Stud Farm (2018), again under the name Owlbiter and engineered and produced by Downes. Their keep-it-simple approach brought together an album full of gently plucked acoustic guitars and ukuleles, drowsy brass and the occasional keyboard atmospherics, with lyrics that leaned into humor before hitting you with pathos.

Even before the 2020 pandemic hit, Cascella was feeling burnout from the city. He, along with his old Brooms bandmates, compiled recordings that hadn’t gone on proper releases. This became the album Call Me Anything You Want (2020). It was the height of the pandemic and music venues didn’t know if they’d be able to weather this storm. They donated all the money from that record to Williamsburg venue Pete’s Candy Store, a place that they’ve played at regularly throughout his time in New York.

“It was a good way to close that chapter in my life,” says Cascella. “I was spoiled in the 2010s by good friends. Things were manageable budget-wise, working and playing shows in Brooklyn. I kinda threw a dart at a map, and now we’re in Maine. It was a good transitional city, smaller than New York obviously, and we have more room.”

He tracked some of the songs from Pretty Darn Pretty just before the pandemic with the intention of making a country album. When the move happened, he put them away to focus on filmmaking, and made his debut feature film Hangdog (which became available at streaming on Oct. 25). It was co-created with his wife and soundtracked by Walter Martin of The Walkmen. Loosely inspired by his fear of accidentally killing their dog, the film follows anxiety-ridden Walt (played by Desmin Borges) who embarks on a desperate quest through Portland, Maine to retrieve his stolen dog before his girlfriend returns from a business trip, or risk losing them both. Cascella has previously worked as editor & director for the likes of HBO, National Geographic, The Museum of Modern Art, American Museum of Natural History, Buzzfeed, Vice, CNN, The Huffington Post, and Maysles Films.

Then, he felt compelled to revisit those songs, and new songs kept coming to him until he found a front-to-back cohesion for Pretty Darn Pretty, exploring different parallels with Thomas. “I’m less bothered on this new record,” says Cascella. “There’s less agitation and urgency. I’m more observational. Owlbiter felt worn out, like it was the 23 year old version of me. So I shed that skin to embrace Schmoon. Instead of lamenting the sad parts of life, my favorite stuff is looking at the domestic details of life, and finding interesting ways to talk about them. Literally going to the county fair here and transcribing the things I witnessed.”

This is a record of dark characters searching for the bright spots in a gloomy setting, yet the album musically never sets into that gloom. These characters resist the darkness, not allowing themselves to sink into a deep depression or throw in the towel altogether. Pretty Darn Pretty has a theme of capturing a spectrum of emotions that teeter on giving up or sulking in indifference, but it always finds the childlike wonder and positive sheen that the world has to offer.

“Brendon and I had fun making this record,” says Cascella. “I’m trying to enjoy the process of making art and having fun. It can be frustrating, jamming yourself up and being in your head, when it comes to recording. Now I’m open to not controlling everything. These days I just want to make things with the people I care about.”

TRACK LIST:
01  Sadly County Fair
02  Wait for the Mystery
03  Bowlegged Rider
04  Made It Up
05  Not a Girl
06  Birthday Pancakes
07 Danny Friend
08  Table for One
09  To a Butthead

10 Pretty Darn PrettyALBUM CREDITS:
Matt Cascella – songs, voice, drums, acoustic guitar, glockenspiel, breadsticks
Brendon Thomas – electric and acoustic guitar, banjo, keys, bass, background vocals, harmonica, wine glasses
Christy Thomas – background vocals on “Sadly County Fair” and “Not a Girl”
Sam Kyzivat – effects, additional keys and voices on “To a Butthead”
James Downes – acoustic guitar on “Made it Up”
Brett Crudgington – additional keys on “Pretty Darn Pretty”
Jeremy Fink – horns on “Table for One”
Jessica Richards – birthday singing on “Table for One”
Jen Cordery – birthday singing on “Table for One”
Bean Friend – accordion on “Pancake Birthday”
Lizzie – fart
Engineered and Produced by Brendon Thomas
Mastered by Dave Downham

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