Ringo, the banjoist/guitarist/vocalist from Kill County, went on an Ann Arbor, Mich., radio station on Saturday. Here is the music.
Ringo, the banjoist/guitarist/vocalist from Kill County, went on an Ann Arbor, Mich., radio station on Saturday. Here is the music.
Lincoln's music scene lost a beloved member on Saturday, and KZUM's grindcore, thrash and doom metal radio show pays tribute in this two-hour show.
"I am the first person to say that Austin is kind of just like a big Omaha. But ... it seems like the bars a little more generally and genuinely appreciate musicians."
In 10 words: "We make some good tunes for driving around the world."
"I could never find the right 'darling,' and then I found Matt. ... And then we were like, 'We need drums.' So we found Robert at Ted and Wally's (ice cream shop). Ice cream brought us together."
"[The cello] just feels so right. You know, it's big and warm, but it's dark, too. It's not a simple instrument, but it is a beautiful one."
"We’re kind of playing of the girly thing. ... It is unabashedly feminine. Even the songs where I write from the perspective of a dude, they’re special, because they’re sung by a 26-year-old female."
"I've always noticed that there's (never been) a whole lot of real prominent women in music in Lincoln, in particular, and I actually think that's changing, especially in the last year."
"I think the ladies are finally realizing that it's OK to not be Christina Aguilera, it's OK to not be Siouxsie Sioux and the Banshees. It's OK to just be a girl with a ukulele who sings some folk songs."
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I know these gents'll be rockin' the world...Go, Go P&N
Luv
Papa Q
this is amazing. my name if Brandon Curtis, and this is about my dad. i can't wait to show him the article when i see him this...