TWILIGHT SINGERS INTERVIEW | GREG DULLI
Posted by mommaty on
September 29, 2009
So I find myself sitting on a toilet in an East Village bar called DBA (the watering hole of my husband's single days). I look around for some toilet paper and low and behold - what do I see? Poetry all over the walls written by hundreds of women during their powder room romps. As I'm reading away, one thing just pops out. DULLI YOU SEXY MOTHERFUCKER! and DULLI RULES! I laugh mainly because I agree and I had just talked to him a few weeks before for this article.
When I get back out to meet my friends, guess what's playing in the background? Right after hearing all of Radiohead's new Kid A, on comes the entirety of TWILIGHT as played by the TWILIGHT SINGERS (a.k.a. Dulli's side project). I go up to the bartender and say, "You've got a real Afghan Whigs following here huh?" And he says, "You better believe it." I tell him about my interview. He gives me a free drink. I love this job.
The album starts with one of the most beautiful songs of the year: the twilite kid. Dulli's breathy voice really gets to shine here and the emotions he's able to explore through it really touch the listener.
All of Dulli's work with the Afghan Whigs have been very emotional and sexy, but there is definitely something that smells of things like unrequited love, passionate nights (check out the orgasmic moans in track #3 called Clyde), yearning and loneliness in these songs. It's a mature album from a maturing Dulli. Twilight is clearly a labor of love. And from talking to Greg, he confirmed that in his thirties, he's slowing down a bit, with less womanizing and getting into trouble. I suspect the drinking is down too. Somehow, I think the music is going into a better direction, perhaps because of this.
It seems that Greg is looking to be saved. It seems that love is the only thing that can do this. Maybe I'm reading into the album too much, but Greg is looking for redemption through this emotional spewing... possibly trying to purge the lonely demons he's been heralding for too long. Is Dr. Freud in the house?
save me save me either way i wanna be your baby
The brooding melodies are triumphant in that they truly utilize Dulli's talent at crooning, seranading, and making everyone feel warm and fuzzy inside. Many of the climactic highs of the songs feel something like mental breakthroughs and some even make you want to dance. This is a beautiful album which only gets better and better the more you listen to it. Barry White's got some competition here..
We'll miss the hedonistic, drunken partyboy, but somehow, he seems even sexier now. As a man. Would you ever have believed it? I think Greg's all grown up!
-Ty Wenzel
Q&A
T. How did Twilight come about? And are the Whigs still together? There are rumors floating around...
GD. We're recording a new album. Twilight Singers came about by me writing material that wasn't rock material. And basically you know... I decided to have a musical affair with other people.
tags: A T. How, afghan whigs, album, Angelo, Badu, Barry White, beautiful songs, Bob, bob pollard, breathy voice, Greg, John Curley, love, material, mature album, Minneapolis, music, relationship, Rick, romps, something, T. Did, toilet paper, twilight, twilight singers, twilite, twilite kid, Ty Wenzel Q, watering hole, Whigs
No Comments
THE DELGADOS SUBLIME INTERVIEW
Posted by mommaty on
September 29, 2009
Stewart and Alun of The Delgados (photo by Ty Wenzel)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| I met up with The Delgados at their final show in the states. They recently completed a grueling tour covering major cities and seeing the real and not so real America. I’ll explain later. Guillermo Nanni and I headed for The Knitting Factory in Tribeca, quite excited to talk with the most talked about band from Glasgow, following the great success of their newest release, The Great Eastern. We sat in the café waiting for the big van to show up, drinking way too much coffee. Foreshadowing the chatty state I was to be on for the interview, I had no time to come down when we soon found ourselves upstairs during soundcheck with Stewart Henderson (bass) and Alun Woodward (vocals/guitar), Radiohead blaring in the background. Both boys were endearing and totally different in every way except for the thick Scottish brogue that made it vital to listen closely. I found myself laughing once or twice, not because I thought the comment was funny, but because the simplest words sounded so foreign that I struggled to keep up. And words like Shite and Arse were from "Trainspotting" and couldn’t believe people really talk that way. I’ve got to get out more. Alun’s quiet charm was alarming and enigmatic in the way that Jimmy Stewart was. Shy, smart and mysterious. That may be because Stewart’s bombastic lovability really steals the spotlight. His enthusiasm is contagious and ambitious. Despite the personality disparity, we found them finishing each other’s sentences and casting each other’s convictions into clear focus. The Delgados formed a little over five years ago. They consist of front man and woman, Alun Woodward, Emma Pollock, along with Stewart Henderson and Paul Savage on drums. They debuted their first single, Monica Webster / Brand New Car (Melody Maker Single Of the Week) in 1995. After a few singles, came Under Canvas Under Wraps, which lead to a tour with Elastica. Then came Domestiques, Peloton and the rest is history. Here we are celebrating the wild success of The Great Eastern, nominated for the UK’s Mercury Music Prize, losing out to another Privy fave, Damon Gogh (Badly Drawn Boy). In addition to their flourishing musical successes, they also own their own hugely successful indie label, Chemical Underground, based in Glasgow. Their label has discovered the likes of Arab Strap, Radar Bros, Magoo, Mogwai just to name a few. They have the golden touch it seems. Alun and Stewart have known each other since they were nine. Alun explains, "We played in another band when we were younger. They threw us out and we started another band... Emma joined. The thing that fueled us at the start was the pure hatred of these individuals." (They laugh nostalgically). We ask what that band is doing now, and Stewart laughs and is quick to say, "Serving quarter pounders." I say what a great thing that they were thrown out of that band. They, of course, agree. The boys popped open a few beers and I lit a cigarette and we really got into it. Stewart immediately bummed a smoke and we laughed a lot in the following hour. Their North American tour consisted of Toronto, Chicago, Minneapolis, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York. They had really gotten a kick out of the mid-west, comparing the West and East coast "in some respects very European... but the mid-west is a different country." Citing video games where you shoot deer and being able to buy guns at the local Wallmart. Stewart thinks it’s getting more and more like the Simpsons. "It’s getting like that." I agree, after all it’s Bush country, white trash America. When I ask him what he thinks about New York, he’ll take the tourist route. "It’s kind of like stepping inside a television. The first time I came, I thought I could live here, but by the third time, it’s like it’s a nice to visit for fuck’s sake!" We all agree, it’s a young person’s place. Alun can’t believe the expense of living in New York. "You’re spending a lot to live in a hovel." He’s right. I’m sitting in one right now writing this article. There is something I noticed about the show that evening, that Stewart had confirmed for me earlier. They are a quiet band, meaning their audience isn’t exactly moshing, but their fans are devoted to them. The boy’s enthusiasm is fresh and well deserved. They fucking sell out every night and even though their audience are well behaved, as Stewart says, "they’ve been talking about the show for a week before! Toronto was our first show on this tour and I couldn’t believe how great it was!" He seems astounded, but it’s sinking in. It’s particularly expensive for a small label to tour a band with six extra musicians as well. They brought along a string section, because that’s what they used on The Great Eastern. Alun claims that there’s no point in making a record if it’s not going to sound like that live. Stewart admits it’s a financial drain but well worth it. "You have to be long term-ist about it. If we were on a major label it would be costing us 5 times as much as it has for this tour." But they’re entrepreneurs. They own their label and this reality makes them think of the commerce of it all. They have to think this way to survive. And it’s not like they haven’t been invited to sign with the big boys. When asked why torture yourselves this way, they say it’s because it was a time when there weren’t that many good record labels, "we just wanted an idealist thing, to do what we wanted to do." But then, the truth blurts out... of course, through Stewart, because Alun is now sitting in the corner of the couch quietly contemplating. "Looking at it retrospectively you have to put it in the context that no one was fucking helping us, we didn’t come from another successful band, no one gave a fuck about us, none of us had done it before but I can remember the scale we started with was very small. It slowly became more of what it is now through the years. We thought at the start we’d try, but if it didn’t work, at least we tried." They started finding bands. And the bands became successful. And some have left, but it’s still a credit to them, to have discovered bands that the majors discover through Chemical Underground. It was through the success of their bands that The Delgados came through and vice versa. Stewart is thrilled that they all helped each other in this way. He knows how fortunate they are. But how can owning a label not interfere with the creative process? How can they not start thinking like a fucking cubicle huddling corporate freak, when there are so many lives and money at stake? They’re humble and modest about this point. "It’s become a lot easier. We’ve been asked about joining a major label... I can’t imagine the necessity of moving to another label. Money and being comfortable and having enough money to live on is nice, but anything beyond that is a bonus. As long as we can live in a manner that we’re comfortable with, which we’re managing to achieve a little bit just now, I’m happy. It was getting hard the last year... We were wondering if we could go on the way that we had, but thankfully The Great Eastern being received the way that it has, it’s great. I couldn’t imagine any reason to leave Chemical Underground," says Stewart happily. There are drawbacks. There’s always a price to pay, isn’t there? The cost has been their former tight friendships. After all, they’re business partners. Anyone’s who’s ever worked with friends, relatives or lovers will understand the strain it can put on their relationship. Stewart explains, "Working together, it’s difficult. When we tour it’s like how we used to be, it’s more like a friendship thing, we drink and laugh, but in Glasgow it’s like we’re colleagues, you know, it’s like, I don’t want to go out and have a drink... I just want to go home. Alun, Myself, Paul and Emma don’t go out drinking anymore. In some respects, the success of the band has sacrificed our old friendship. Paul and I used to be very close, but since the business, we’re colleagues. We’ve all got a lot of people we could go out to have a drink with on a Saturday night." I catch a hint of sentiment in Stewart’s eye. Alun too, for that matter. "I think at the end of the day, the four of us wouldn’t keep doing this if it wasn’t working for us. Even though we argue, The Great Eastern proved it, and I was the most skeptical about it, about the status of the band on a personal level, whether we wanted to do it, but the fact that we managed to make that record, shows to me really, no matter how much we argue, we can make a good record." Alun sums it up. "We’re four thirteen year-olds, brothers and sister. That’s the relationship we have,... sometimes we despise each other, it’s the same as the relationship I had with my family... like the worst Christmas morning sometimes." ‘Nuf said. I ask about the name. Where the hell did a name like The Delgados come from? It’s not nearly as exciting as you would think. Apparently they all liked cycling quite a lot. And even though Alun says it was a "shite idea" they all thought cycling was a cool sport. "It looked great. Tour-de-France is a brilliant thing to watch. Pedro Delgado was a cyclist we all knew. We called ourselves The Delgados because we thought cycling was a slick sport.." But Chemical Underground was inspired by Alun’s former DJ jobs... sounding quite club like, catchy to the scene, even though they don’t produce dance records. The Great Eastern as a name is an engaging story. It’s named after an old textile mill that was converted. "We knew the place, and found out it was called The Great Eastern, and at that time we were looking for an album title. There wasn’t a great deal of effort put into it. It was more the sound of it than anything else. The name seems to hold a lot of despair." He bums another cigarette. I gladly leave the box on the sofa arm and tell him to help himself. After the years of struggling, both with the band, personally and with working on the label, they’re thrilled finally over the success they’ve finally achieved. It’s been called the record of year in a lot of circles. But Stewart was on the fence about his future before The Great Eastern. Perhaps they all were. "I’m glad that they recognize the record for what it was. If this album had collapsed I don’t think I could have continued. So yeah, it’s great... if people think it’s the album of the year then...fucking great!" Balancing their family life hasn’t been easy. Alun has a three year old and he had missed his first jump and when he formed his first sentence. Stewart has a six year old step-daughter. But they’re realistic. Fame comes with a price, again. "It’s a dream to me. In some respects, there’s the pain of being away but then I have to put it into perspective. It’s my livelihood, and it seems glamorous, hedonistic, to go off on tour, but if you look at it colder, it’s my job. Touring and promoting the record." Alun says the best part is going home. And besides, "You get to miss them. It makes you appreciate them much more." What are they listening now? You’d be surprised. In addition to some of the more modern stuff, Alun’s into the new Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson. Stewart is listening to Magnetic Fields’ 69 Love Songs. Oh, and Queens Greatest Hits. Who doesn’t own this? He laughs and somehow I can see him rocking out to Bohemian Rhapsody. Napster came up and it’s always an interesting topic because bands are so passionate about their response. But The Delgados have an interesting take on this. They’re a record label and also the artist. Their response surprised me, but got me thinking. This is where they were not bohemian in any way. And I respected their position. Woodward clarifies, "I think the internet is great on one level. It’s hugely liberating for people. Your money goes a long way on the internet. People want to get free things from Napster. From my point of view, if you want to get the new Arab Strap album for free from Napster, then please please don’t complain to me when Arab Strap can’t make another album because they don’t have the money and Chemical Underground goes bust because everyone got the records for free. It’s starting something but it’s ending some things too. We invest in one end, and we have to get that back, and if we don’t then..." Stewart is equally passionate. " It’s one thing for Chuck D to say how great Napster is, that’s fucking fine. But you’ve made your fucking millions. But if you’re from Glasgow, like struggling hand to mouth and trying save bands and release cds, one cd downloaded is like $6 that we can have in the bank. Not for us to like buy a yacht or go sail in Monaco, but for us to release another record." I ask about the artists who feel thwarted and screwed by the major corporate labels, and their plight. Stewart sympathizes but also says, "I understand why they feel oppressed by the corporation, and I can understand that. But if you sign with them then be aware of that." "We were offered major deals, but we couldn’t agree on it creatively," Alun says, "Everyone has a choice to some extent." Stewart recalls, "Radiohead was so pro-Napster... ‘fuck the man’ stuff, ‘no corporate sponsorship’, until people started downloading Kid A a week before it was released, then they slap an injunction on them, because they weren’t happy about it anymore. Maybe I’m talking out of my arse, but it’s a difficult thing... the internet has exploded very quickly and it’s taking corporations by surprise." I guess I hadn’t thought about it that way. It’s important to keep indie labels afloat because that’s where all the good music is coming from and I’m grateful that they sacrifice so much to keep it going. Suddenly, the band is called and we had to get to our place for the show. I give Stewart the rest of my Marlboro Lights and get up. He’s grateful for it. We thank them and later see them hanging out on the balcony while the opening band, Interpol, played. They greet friends and industry and watch Interpol closely, especially Alun. I hear they’ve just signed them to Chemical Underground. Last week’s Time Out/New York said that this particular show was one of the top ten best shows of the year. Another Best of. They get a lot of that. I, myself, am partial to rock out till your guts fling out of your head kind of shows (Guided by Voices for example), but I was immensely touched by Emma’s voice, her raw rocker attitude, and her exquisite guitar prowess. Let’s face it, she’s there to rock. The girl probably doesn’t own a mini-skirt, doesn’t wear make up and clearly couldn’t care less about fashion (she’s a t-shirt kinda’ gal), so we have to surmise that she’s the antithesis of the Courtney Love bull-shit image cliché. Emma’s about the music. I wish more women were. Somebody in the audience screams, "Limp Bizkit Rules!" The Delgados look confused. They’re naive cocoon has protected them from the MTV crap of late and have no idea what this moron is talking about. "Biscuit? Did you say you want a biscuit?" The audience laughs and our hearts are warmed by the fact that they haven’t fallen prey to the mainstream American mediocrity that has taken over the world. Alun is sexy as ever. His effervescent voice reaching angelic new heights and even sitting for a song or two, didn’t matter, because their music warrants a composed atmosphere, despite it’s sometimes upbeat moments. They harmonize, creating a beautiful voice. And they drink beer. That’s the only thing they have in common with Guided by Voices. Stewart is the jester on stage. He is jumping around, making people laugh, clearly the one that keeps it light. It would be too serious a show without him waving to people and chugging the bottle between laughs. He’s the one, obviously, who knows all the dirty jokes. Paul is rocking out, with strings all about him, violins and cellos. Together it worked like a tight orchestra. And it occurred to me then. Alun was right. For the first time in a long forever of a time, it was a show where the music sounded exactly like the album. Some bands say things that never ring true or really ever happen. "The Great Eastern is a swirling symphonic opus of such glorious, ear-shattering confidence" is a review I read. It’s exactly also what I saw in person. A truly memorable show. Stewart, I don’t think you’ll be flipping quarter pounders anytime soon. Get ready to become a rock-star. -Ty Wenzel
|
Photos by Ty Wenzel Special Thanks to The Knitting Factory, NYC |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rob Schnapf Interview Resurrected from Privy Magazine
Posted by mommaty on
November 24, 2008
On Election Day, I was on my way to the West Village to cast my vote when I stopped by the studio where Guided By Voices was recording their upcoming release, Isolation Drills (due to release April 3rd/TVT Records). After our last interview, Bob Pollard had become a pal and so I’d wanted to drop off a gift for him (I had missed his pizza and unlimited beer-fest on his real birthday - on Halloween, fittingly enough.) When I gave it to him he was happy and sweet, as always, when someone popped out of the recording area and plopped himself on the couch with an air of boyish intensity. Bob and I talked for a minute - actually I was badgering him for not voting - when he introduced me to the guy on the couch as a segue out of his cornered situation. He introduced him as Rob, "our producer". I guess I was taken aback, since most producers I’ve met have a George Martin-esque affectation (self important with the cork in too tight), or on the other spectrum, a kind of sleazy casting-couch demeanor. Rob Schnapf on first impression is a guy you want to get a beer with. No airs, no bull, and a keen listener. I had heard about him mostly in connection with Tom Rothrock, whom he’d collaborated with for a decade on producing the likes of Beck, Foo Fighters, Moby, Richard Thompson, Mary Lou Lord, Elliott Smith and Wool, to name a few.
Rob with Elliott Smith
They were revered as the Duo that had the golden touch. Tom and he were working at the Record Plant as janitors. The hierarchy was you came in as a janitor ("they called it that to keep it as humiliating as possible"). Whenever the upstairs studio, called the Micro Plant, was free, the manager let them use the equipment and soon they found themselves dragging bands up there regularly. The demos they were recording were soon put to vinyl. "If you put it on a 7" that’s a record. It’s not a demo." They’re credited as having discovered Beck. "Beck was a 12'." They were about the music, and the people who worked with them knew that. "With Rob and Tom, any sense of commerce pretty much stops at the studio door," says Luke Wood, an A&R executive at DreamWorks Records. "They look at it from the point of view of the musician writing songs, not the record company guy eating at the Ivy."
The artists feel the same way. Richard Thompson said it best, "They're very musical kind of producers. For me, the final product is kind of a transparent record in the sense it seems like my record without any filters. There doesn't seem to be anything between the music and the intention, which is high praise. It's a very straight-ahead production, it's just live recording, 'bang.'" That is high praise indeed, with today’s mass-market music at such a high, dulling our senses, it seems a gem to find producers who can let the artist be an artist.
Rob says of working with Thompson, "It was two hours of just talking. It was easy and natural. People talking. It was weird because he was one of my guitar heroes. 15 years ago, when I was the aspiring musician, he was one of those guys, the golden chalice. It was a really great experience."
Elliott says of working with Rothrock and Schanpf, "I’ve been thinking of them as sort of my band. It’s the best metaphor I can think of. We are like-minded in terms of approaching each song as a separate thing and not trying to make things more cohesive than they really need to be."

Rob with Tom Rothrock
As I was leaving to cast my all-important vote, I asked Rob if he’d like to do an interview. He didn’t hesitate and said, "Sure." That made my day and off I went. A few days later I found myself at GBV’s "listening" party, which consisted of a dozen people to rock out to the completed album, Isolation Drills. It was there that I found out that Rob was going back home to Los Angeles the following day. Who could blame him? He missed his little boy. We arranged a phoner and I talked to him a few weeks later.
On producing, Rob is not one to "browbeat" artists into his vision. He claims you have an intimate relationship with them, understanding what they’re trying to go for and he doesn’t impose himself on their vision. Because of this understanding, they’re able to put the "train back on the track when it falls off." It’s "subtle guiding and fence building... focusing. Trust and having that kind of relationship."
One artist that has really gotten to trust Schnapf is modern day balladeer, Elliott Smith. They’ve worked on three records to date and they’re in talks for a follow-up to Figure 8. "If you work with somebody who’s really good, it makes you look good," says Schnapf. Figure 8 is winner of Privy’s BEST ALBUM OF 2000, and my personal pick. So, needless to say, I’m waiting with bated breath for a new Smith album to daydream to.
Elliott was nominated for an Oscar for Miss Misery, off the Good Will Hunting soundtrack when they were in the middle of recording XO. "It shocked everybody. It became a distraction in the middle of making a record. All of a sudden you have all this international press. You know, the Oscars are big! Everybody was like ‘Elliott who?’"
When we talked in New York, I asked Rob how he could have made such a brilliant album that was so long. I mean, just try to find a mediocre song on Figure 8. It’s impossible. This is how he explains it, "The whole thing is collaborative. Elliott will come up with a sequence and you go I like it up to here but this part seems like we got stalled or something. You offer an opinion if you have one. If you don’t have one, you don’t offer one. What was really hard with the sequence was when we tried to keep it more succinct it would get un-weighted, you know. It took all those songs to complete the big picture. You didn’t get a bunch of little pictures." Not a fan of long records, he just wants it to say what it’s got to say and then move on. He was, however, the one to suggest they make it as long as it has to be. He figures they can always subtract later on.
Rob is clearly organized. He thinks before he speaks, so the interview is full of pauses, but again, his perfectionist vision comes through. For him, I think it’s a natural process, whether it’s giving an interview or making a record. The "organic" process is important to him. "When you have a really good song, you get the vibe. The good taste. It just happens automatically."

On working with Beck, he said it was a lot of fun. Mellow Gold was "completely made not for the music industry. It was made just for fun. Most of that stuff was done before anyone knew who he was. Completely in the vacuum."
Schnapf was a fan of Guided by Voices long before producing them. He’d "bought tickets" and owned "the t-shirts". I was pretty shocked by this, I guess, thinking that GBV was more obscure than they really are. Asked what it was like working with Bob, Rob gets serious. "Bob was really cool. I think he trusted me, because it was sort of like, I told him what I wanted to do. He was down with that approach already. We were working on the same page."
One of my fondest GBV moments will always be at that "listening" party, when I glanced over during the track Chasing Heather Crazy blasting from the right, low-and-behold, there was Rob rocking out! I mean mouthing the lyrics, eyes closed, head bobbing, totally getting into to the sound of the song he produced. One would think he’d have been sick of it. Not Schnapf. It was, once again, like he was one of the band. "I like to rock. I play guitar. I like to turn it up and rock."
The greatest thing about Isolation Drills is that it brings back that good old GBV vibe. Do the Collapse, produced by Ric Ocasek, felt over-produced with the Cars influenced keyboard loops that didn’t feel right intertwined with Bob’s bombast and Doug’s biting guitar licks. Teenage FBI sounds very pop but live it rocks like anything off Alien Lanes. What Rob managed to do with Isolation Drills was to give GBV their much-needed production value without losing the raw feel of the band. That couldn’t have been easy to do. They also brought in Tobin Sprout and Elliott Smith to play keyboards on the track, How’s My Drinking. Actually, Rob tells me that Smith plays on three tracks. "To me, even when I saw them from their lo-fi stuff, I always felt they were a rock band. I just wanted to make a big loud rock record."
He goes on to praise Bob’s talents, discounting my claims that he’s such a simple, nice guy, albeit a genius (I’ve told this to Bob to his face), but he says Pollard knows exactly what he’s doing. As far as Bob’s talents, he continues, "Not to demean the music part, a lot of people can come up with melodic music. The hard part is good words. That’s what separates the good from the mediocre. And Bob’s got really good words."
He can’t answer who his favorite band to work with was, since he’s been so selective, he finds it always so "rewarding." On the other side of the pendulum, at home he’s been listening to Rachmaninov. I guess that was interesting coming from a man who just produced Bob Pollard. "All good music is good for a reason. It strikes some primal chord in you. It doesn’t have to be primal music to strike that primal chord. That’s what makes all good music good."
The internet seems entertaining to Schnapf. He’s learned a lot through surfing, following his hobbies and keeping in touch with people. It’s a form of communicating to him. "I’m in touch with people I would never ever call," he laughs. I’m glad I’m one of them. On the Napster debacle he says, "The thing that bothered me... I like records. I like albums. I like the album from top to bottom. This promotes not records but songs. There’s nothing wrong with trading music, I think that’s cool, but, that’s the other side of it. You don’t get the breadth of an artist that way. Taking things out of context."
The interview took an interesting turn at this point. That’s the thing about Rob Schanpf. You think he’s this really quiet, professional, all about the business, then he unfolds like some kind of crazy flower. It’s a tight little ball at first, very organized and perfect, then it unfolds slowly into this crazy, super-scented huge flower that’s almost alien. That’s Rob. He’s not at all what you think he is and the first impression that Rob makes is not necessarily the one with the most impact.
I won’t get into the conversation, but Rob is a lot more than producing records. A lot more than music and rock stars. He’s in love with his son. He’s into some really interesting stuff. And what was really cool was that he asked questions too. A lot of questions. Again, observing and taking in. You get the feeling that he’s probably a very valuable friend to a lot of people. It’s funny. He probably learned more about me than I did about him that day. And what it left me with was, what a great listener he is. And that’s what makes a producer great. Listening.
-Ty Wenzel
| GUIDED BY VOICES, ISOLATION DRILLS, NEW CD | ![]() |
![]() |
US $16.19 | 12d 22h 46m |
| ISOLATION DRILLS By GUIDED BY VOICES CD - New | ![]() |
![]() |
US $9.71 | 23d 12h 55m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES Isolation Drills (CD 2001) NEW SEALED | ![]() |
![]() |
US $9.95 | 29d 11h 16m |
| CD: GUIDED BY VOICES Isolation Drills DIGIPAK | ![]() |
![]() |
US $8.50 | 29d 2h 1m |
| Isolation Drills (JPN CD) - Guided By Voices | ![]() |
![]() |
US $29.80 | 26d 20h 38m |
| Guided By Voices Poster Promo Isolation Drills | ![]() |
![]() |
US $99.99 | 26d 13h 11m |
| Guided By Voices - Isolation Drills LP Sealed Mega Rare | ![]() |
![]() |
US $24.99 | 24d 12h 38m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES Isolation Drills CD Robert Pollard | ![]() |
![]() |
US $12.99 | 19d 6h 18m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES "Isolation Drills" LP Pavement | ![]() |
![]() |
US $18.99 | 18d 21h 50m |
| Isolation Drills - Guided By Voices (CD 2001) | ![]() |
![]() |
US $8.99 | 18d 2h 45m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES - Isolation Drills LP Sealed Mega Rare | ![]() |
![]() |
US $24.99 | 16d 10h 22m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES: Isolation Drills (rock & pop LP) | ![]() |
![]() |
US $15.00 | 16d 7h 43m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES Isolation Drills Bob Pollard rock CD | ![]() |
![]() |
US $7.95 | 12d 19h 53m |
| Isolation Drills [ECD] by Guided By Voices NEW CD | ![]() |
![]() |
US $10.00 | 12d 9h 41m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES - ISOLATION DRILLS - CD NEW | ![]() |
![]() |
US $16.09 | 10d 10h 32m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES isolation drills Japan Robert Pollard | ![]() |
![]() |
US $24.99 | 2d 21h 29m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES - ISOLATION DRILLS - CD NEW | ![]() |
![]() |
US $11.11 | 2d 6h 17m |
| GUIDED BY VOICES ISOLATION DRILLS CD -NEW | ![]() |
![]() |
US $11.53 | 25d 14h 6m |
| Guided By Voices-Isolation Drills Album SIgned | ![]() |
0 Bid | US $10.00 | 2d 10h 8m |
Incy Wincy Spider – Nursery Rhymes With Lyrics
Posted by mommaty on
August 29, 2008
http://littlekidscraftsforallseason.blogspot.com/ Click Above Now Stop trying to craft with your little kid the hard way... "Here's How You Can Quickly and Easily Get Simple High Quality Little Kid Crafts Guaranteed To Ignite Your Child's Imagination and Thirst for Learning Without Pulling Your Hair Out!" Discover the Secret Weapon Used by Parents and Caregivers All Over T...
| CHILDREN'S ROOMS STOCKHOLM - Interior Design Book | ![]() |
![]() |
US $36.95 | 20d 4h 32m |
| THE BIG BOOK OF LOFTS architecture interior design | ![]() |
![]() |
US $14.95 | 29d 17h 8m |
| Pahlmann MID CENTURY MODERN Interior Design 1955 Book | ![]() |
![]() |
US $17.99 | 4h 40m |


Stewart and Alun of The Delgados (photo by Ty Wenzel)

















