Field Dispatch
Matt Connarton Unleashed 2-10-24, first hour
Game Plan
Did you know mary Anne? Before the worst speaking there she she was in
self. Love was back again. That's why you oriels you in light the
room to the balm forever more will stay friends, but we'll have other plans
for love. Love still. I wish that i'd expressed that more help we
felt always love you as if time stood still. When light the room to
the realm, now rosing in the moment, Where are you when I want
the now feel yours in the gold? I yes that I'll have to add
him. Jos Cour Well, I've loved you since very Firstly, let me
bed to ride and a boolie, Well, what a beautiful song. Welcome
everybody. It's Matt Connorton Unleashed and we are live from the studios of wm
NH ninety five point three FM and Glorious Manchester, New Hampshire. We are
not, by the way, we're not streaming live on Facebook this morning.
We are having a little bit of an issue with Facebook as Facebook will be
Facebook. But of course you can stream the show from anywhere if you go
to Wmnhradio dot org and click listen live, or you can always go to
my website Mattconnorton dot com. For all your live streaming options, social media
links, contact info, show archives, etc. Etc. Today is Saturday,
February ten, twenty twenty four. We have a stacked show for you
today. I'm going to in just a couple of moments, I will introduce
Tyler Allgood, the gentleman who is responsible for that beautiful song that we just
heard. And and then in the second hour we have our friend Ray Coates
skyping in from the UK. He's got a bunch of new music and I
always love talking to Ray. And in the third hour the band Vice's Inc.
From Portland, Maine. They are traveling all the way here to sit
down and uh and talk with us in studio. So really looking forward to
that. So we have a we have a busy show, as we do
on Saturday mornings. And speaking of busy Saturdays too, I want to mention
this Jenny's not here with me this morning. She's uh, she's home resting
up. She's got a big it's a big day for Jenny. She's got
the the art show today. So I want to for people in the area
who want to come check this out. It is of course open to the
public. Actually, I'll take this right from Jenny's social media post you're are
you are invited to the opening reception of the All Hearts Statuses exhibition at the
Mosaic Art Collective. That is today from four to eight pm. I am
honored to have one of my pieces of one Heart on display. So this
is very proud of her. You know, Jenny has just come along way
with her art and gets a lot of great feedback online and it's pretty cool.
You know, at home, we've got art all over the place and
it's it's really remarkable. And this is a big deal because this is her
first time having a piece showing at an art studio and an actual uh at
an event. So she's she's excited and nervous and and uh but it's it'll
be it'll be fun. So that's today from four to eight pm. Mosaic
Art Collective. It's right above, right above the Palace Theater, Yes,
trying to remember which theater on Hendover Street, so very very easy to find,
but it's on the second floor. That's a beautiful building if you've never
been inside there. But Mosaic Art Collective, of course, we've had them
on the show a couple of times and just just a great place, really
really cool, and we talk about them a lot because we them. But
yeah, Jenny has a piece that will be on display today at Mosaic Art
Collective, as well as a lot of other I don't know how many artists
are participating, but here's a little bit about the event. Mosaic Art Collective
is thrilled to present All Heart Statuses, an enchanting exhibition that invites you to
explore the diverse realms of human emotion, whether you're a fervent admirer of love
or navigate the intricate pathways of heartache. This showcase celebrates the myriad expressions of
the heart, from vibrant displays of passion to introspective reflections on solitude. All
Heart Statuses is a testament to the intricate beauty of human connection and the complex
nature of our emotional landscape. So that'll be so. The exhibition dates are
February five to twenty eight, but the event is today and oh, actually
it says you're located in the Daily Mirror building. Maybe that's an easier way
to find it instead of the Palace Theater. I don't know, but sixty
six an over Street is the event and as sweet two o one, So
uh do join us if you're in the area. It's gonna be fun.
Jen. Like I said, Jenny's nervous. This is our first one.
This is a big deal for her, but we're all very proud of her.
So and let me give the studio line because we've got a great guest.
I'm gonna introduce in a moment and you might have questions for him.
Six oh three two five oh six oh seven six oh three two five oh
six oh seven. You can also contact me during the show if you uh,
or anytime really, but if you contact me during the show via social
media, I'll try to read your comment or question. I'm on social media
at Matt Connorton. You can text me at six one seven nine one seven
four four seven six, and you can email me Matt at mattconnorton dot com.
But the best course of action so that we can hear your Dulca tones
is to call the studio line live at six oh three two five oh six
oh seven and without further ado, our first guest today on this morning,
we have Tyler all Good in studio with us. How are oh wait wrong,
Mike, I'm still getting used to the new setup here at our new
Canal Street studio. I think I got the right one, Tyler. How
are you very good? How you doing? Man? Welcome, Welcome,
and uh, that is a beautiful song we opened with. I loved it
so much. I didn't even play my normal show intro because I didn't want
to kill the vibe. Well, I have an intro that's very uh metallic
for lack of a better term. But no, but I just the song
is so beautiful and that's kind of a hit for you on YouTube. Right,
You've got a quarter of a million views on the video. You've got
a very cool video that goes with it. Yes, yes, I was.
I was blessed to do some amazing work with some amazing people and just
so happened that the universe had it lined up that way. Tyler. I'm
sorry, Tyler, can you can you either? Yeah? Just pull that,
Yeah, just pull it closer. It's whoops, having a hard time,
Yeah that that might be the issue. We'll just get that. Get
that nice and close, Okay, thank you? Yeah again. We're still
getting used to our new environs here at the beautiful Canal Street studio. So
everything's everything's set up well, actually, I shouldn't say everything set up different.
It's this part over here is the same where I'm sitting, but everything
else is a little different. Yeah, now that I get the impression from
the lyrics of that song, it's it sounds like it's a very personal song,
like it's it's about a specific person. It sounds like, Yes,
a friend of mine had passed on a couple of years ago, and we
had had some really special time together some years before that, and it wasn't
in the cards for us to spend our lives together, but we were really
close afterwards, and she was really dear to my heart and so so yeah,
so that's that's where the song goes. Yeah, no, it's it's
it's really beautiful. And what can you tell us about the video for that
too? Because I want to encourage people to what's the name of the song
again? Light the room to the brim. I want to make sure.
Yeah, I wanted to let you say the title because I was afraid I
would screw it up because it's it's a lot. Let me ask you this,
what's the meaning behind the title of the song? Well, the meaning
behind the title of the song is that somebody like mckela coming into coming into
any room, any put in. You know, these special people when they
come into a room, they just amplify, bring out all of the all
of the love and all the highs and and that joyous feeling. And so
when she would enter the room, that's what that's the feeling you get because
because she's a special person. Yeah, you'll often hear people describe that way,
but you know, you know something about this person, They just light
up the room when they walk in, and that's yeah, that's Uh.
What can you tell us about the video? Because the video is very cool
and obviously it was professionally done and it looks it looks amazing. The I
mean it's you know, some music videos they don't necessarily have to suit the
lyrics of the song. You can apply all kinds of creative license when you're
making a video. There's no rules. But I feel like that video,
you know, it really captures the vibe of the song. At least that's
that's how I felt watching it, Like it's just it. What can you
tell us about the video? And who did you work with on that?
So my friend who passed away, her older sister, Danielle's to Tuto.
She does work for Netflix. Oh okay, so she asked it was her
idea to put this video together, and she's in La so she wasn't able
to be here. So we hired somebody that was close to Peterborough and ended
up having landing Joe Plant, who's a really special guy and his videography work
is amazing, and so we teamed up together. Joe and I did the
big eight hour day. It was around this time of year. It was
like January eighteenth, twenty twenty one. It was like eighteen degrees. Yeah,
it looks I think. I think if I remember correctly, you can
see your breath and at least one of the scenes. Oh yeah, yeah.
Yeah. It was a cold, long shoot day, but it was
really fun and Joe's a professional like no other. Yeah, and we hit
it off. He's one of my one of my great friends now excellent,
excellent, Still working with him was phenomenal and having that and then Michaela's sister
Danielle also phenomenal. So I was just blessed to be able to showcase my
work like this. Yeah excellent. Now we should also mention too, and
we're going to play it in a little bit, we're gonna go. We'll
hold off, kind of tease people with it. But you've got a brand
new song. We have a world radio premiere. That's right, so we'll
we're gonna do that in a little bit. But uh but before we do
that, did you want to you brought your guitar? Did you want to
play something live for us in studio? Sure? I should, And let
me pull up that pull up that other mic. There, we got a
separate mic on the guitar. We'll see. Uh oh, you know what,
I have to turn this on. See, we got new we got
new stuff, which is fun. It's fun when you have new new toys
to play with, but there's also a learning curve. M hmmm, yeah,
that sounds pretty good, all right, Tyler. I think we're I
think we're we got the MIC's uh set sounds good whenever you're whenever you're ready
to go for it, my friend. Mm hmm. A woman is a
beautiful thing. Give her what she needs, even when your thoughts are to
pleaded, give her what she needs. A woman is a delicate thing.
Only pluck with care. She blue wooms with or without you. Only pluck
with care. A woman is an artistic thing with the brush so long,
go lightly with your strokes. Her map is not drawn. The mother is
the most precious thing. She takes it all. She'll give, van give
and give when she's gotten none left at all. Woman is a scary thing.
Herbite so strong, Remailber. She's the contender in a world that fall.
Wish that I knew anything about it, so I could take on anything
truble your mother, Remailber. She's the contender in beautiful. What is that
called? That's called a woman? A woman? A woman. That's a
much shorter title than the uh than the other song. Very good, very
very nice. If you're just joining us, we have Tyler all Good live
in studio with us here on Matt Connorton, unleashed on this Saturday morning.
Uh, kind of mild Saturday morning. I guess it's going to be a
very warm weekend. Uh. My sinuses have indicated an early spring, so
forget about the groundhog. This My sinuses tell me it's spring now pretty pretty
much. Yeah. Absolutely. If you have any questions or feedback or anything
at all for our guests, uh, six O three two five oh six
oh seven, the studio line is open. Six O three, two,
five oh six, O seven. Do you play out a lot, tyler?
Do you do a lot of shows? I do ye? And is
it always solo acoustic or do you ever play with a band or what?
For the most part, it's solo acoustic. I've been doing this for five
plus years. Yeah, I've played with various bands and done plenty of that
over the years. Yeah. I play bass and sing in a bluegrass band.
That's a whole nother thing. But that's a lot of fun. We
play a lot of the same places too. Oh, very cool, very
cool. What's the name of the band? That's White Mountain Rounders? Okay,
okay, yeah, bluegrass is my my impression. I've I've never played
in a bluegrass band, but obviously I've seen bluegrass bands and to me,
it looks challenging. I mean, is a challenging playing bas in a bluegrass
band. It can be yep, yeah, playing and singing at the same
time, for sure. Yeah, but it's a lot of the boom boom
boom boom. Okay, yeah, because I'm a bass player myself, but
I've just I've just played in bands where I didn't have to be particularly technically
proficient, So we saying, but bluegrass is always look kind of challenging to
me. Very cool. Now as far as your so your solo material,
do you do you prefer that to being then because you mentioned you've been in
a lot of bands before, I mean, is it is it kind of
liberating to be able to do your own thing. You know you don't have
to. I mean, collaboration is nice, but getting to express yourself solo
must be nice too. It is. It's it helps to have it directly
only my energy whatever, And so I had I went through some things with
that when I was doing my original music, trying to find the right members
and trying to to find the right pieces. And I had a really special
band called band Band where we were doing lots of original stuff and unfortunately that
came to an end. But what I had to do was learn how to
do all the insweration. I had to be able to get everything out of
my head into my recording. And I feel that that's finally coming coming together,
especially on this new third album. But it has been slowly manifesting into
everything I need. While I play the piano and write the horn parts,
play the drum parts, do all the things right so yeah, I was
reading online. So you're you're a multi instrumentalist. You're one of those people
who I'm always so jealous. You're one of those people who can play a
whole bunch of instruments. I play bass on that song. I can play
a little bit of guitar, but that's that's really it. But so on
your on your albums, are you doing everything? Yes? Wow? Yeah,
my last two this, yeah, on all three albums? Okay,
Well, what was your first instrument? First instrument was guitar, okay,
yeah, and then and then from a guitar, you started what was what
was next? I played bass, and I think I messed around with the
drums a little bit, and then I've only been playing piano for about five
years, but it was a dream of mine to always be fluent on the
piano. Oh, no kidding. And so I had a major spine surgery
and it was getting too too painful to practice guitar all the time. So
I took that opportunity. I got a keyboard, put it up on my
dresser, and taught myself how to play. Wow, no kidding. So
you had spine surgery? Yeah? Wow? Did do you mind if I
ask what happened. Or I had an accident when I was eighteen, construction,
kept working, kept skateboarding. By the time I was twenty eight and
had gotten sober, so I became aware of everything going on in my body.
Yeah. I was in extreme agony every day. Wow. My thirtieth
birthday I had I had fusion surgery. Oh wow. So leading up to
that, so when you had the accident, was it just kind of vow,
you know, I'll just want it off and you just kind of put
it off. Or I was stuck in an old man position, hunched over
for about three weeks. Wow, So that's when the doctors think, that's
when the inconsistency happened. Okay, and just being young, not have the
surgery then just fight through it. Yeah yeah, because when you're young,
you're invincible and you know, even if something horrible happens, I'll just walk
it off. I'm on. Yeah. Yeah. You learn later that,
well, you got to take care of your body. So the lesson from
that being, if you have a spinal injury, don't don't wait years to
deal with Yeah, just slow down a little bit, slow down and listen
to your body. Don't listen to people who are telling you to overwork yourself.
Just slow down, listen to your body, listen to your soul.
Now, what was the recovery like did it? Did it take a long
time to recover from that? Yeah? It was miserable. Wow, yeah,
put it had to be done right. Yeah, So I but I
took I played a gig the night before my surgery. Actually, yeah,
I figured I'm in pain, I'm going to get this surgery. Why not
just push it? Push it? And so played a gig before the night
before surgery, and then I was back to gigs after four or five months.
But it was really challenging, and I wasn't doing much other work.
So I was blessed to be able to kind of take things slow. But
it's it's been almost five years and it's still healing. There's still things that
are that the muscles are getting stronger, yeah, and so it's been a
long process. Do you still have lingering pain from it? Yeah? I
have bad days, But for the most part, it was a success.
Good because I was I was in complete agony every day. Oh wow.
Yeah. It did that sort of inform your songwriting at all? That it
did or your general approach to music? Being in pain all the time.
So yeah, absolutely, I wrote some really good stuff from that. I
think what what I've done for years and years is right from my pain.
And I've had a lot of trauma as I was younger, and addictions and
and all sorts of issues, and I just it all goes back to that
pain, you know, and it's been my release, my therapy to write
from that space and honest and vulnerable in that space. Well, it's like
I always say, and I mean it's not an original thought. I think
everyone kind of realizes this. But you know, if you if you are
able to take things that are traumatic or painful, be it emotionally or literally
physically painful, if you can take that and and do something constructive with it,
you know, create art with it or from it, or inspired by
it, you know, then at least it's you know, you're you're taking
it and turning it into something positive, you know, to the to the
extent that it's possible. I you know, I've never experienced that kind of
chronic pain, so I you know, I mean I've seen it up close
because Jenny, you know, she has a CRPS, and you know she
deals with it every day. So but but I you know, I can
only imagine. But you know, but you've got a You've got a lot
of great music from it. Uh, no doubt about that. So,
and I'm glad it's getting better. So yeah, thank you. Yeah we
should uh yeah, before it gets too late. I want to share the
new song with everybody, and I'm sure you do too. Now this is
so. This is a world radio premiere of of your new song. And
uh, what's this called? This one's called nothing but Cry? And anything
you want us to know about this before we hear it. No, that's
okay, we'll talk about it after all right, all right, it sounds
good. This is really good. Uh this is Nothing but Cry from Tyler
All good the world radio premiere here on Matt connorton Unleashed. Check this out.
Whoops, except remember the thing I said about I'm still getting used to
the new environs. I should probably turn up the fan. Here we go.
Nothing but Cry wrong that I can't do nothing but cry. I can't
do nothing but cry. Waited all my life to feel somethin right. What
right is so Watrow? What does it take solo to understand yourself? With
your heart on the shelf? Because we held each other last night. We
cin to lie. Now all is sor I've done something so for me,
I've got in hide. That's what I've seen it through. Always drown in
the blue. I can't do nothing good. Cry, I can't do nothing
good. Cry waited, oh my life to feel something right? What's right?
What's mhmm? Love it? Nothing but cry from Tyler Allgood and Tyler
all Goood is here with us live in studio this morning on Matt connorton Unleashed.
Great song. I love that, very catchy. One of the drum
kicks in too. It's it's impossible not to kind of move to it,
you know, really really good. And that's and that's brand new. That
is brand new. That is not even up on the socials yet, but
it is getting published and sent by the end of the month or the beginning
of March. Outstanding, Is that on an album or an upcoming album that
you're working on? Okay, Yes, this is part of that's the first
song off of this is my third album, okay, and so it'll slowly
release over the next couple of months. Outstanding, Yeah, yeah, where
do you record this is? Actually give a shout out to Charlie Kronopolis.
That's a name I heard on the show. Yeah, Charlie is a great
guy and just an amazing musician. So he's also a recording engineer and he
has a studio in Wilton. And I went to Charlie to produce this work
because we're in the same genre, we're in the same field, and I
knew that there was something really special also that he could do pedal steel for
me. And so you actually hear Charlie's pedal steel playing on that as well
as he did the drums for that one. I did the drums on the
rest of the album. So it was it was an amazing experience, and
he and I are very close now and it's it's very special. What what
about previous material that you've done. My second album, Through the Empty I
did with Ben Rogers in Jeffrey and that was also that was incredible. Yeah,
a great project. My first album I did with Ryan Gardner or Ryan
Reminis as his stage my stage name might say Yea, And I loved every
you know, working with three different people on those, it's been it's been
great, Yeah, excellent, excellent, And now what's uh, tell tell
us a little bit about the new song in terms of nothing but cry,
in terms of like, what what's it about? Is it about something specific?
So the album is called of Love, and it's just it takes on
the whole perspective of this relationship that had a really hard time evolving and becoming
something and and it was it was very it was very painstaking, and it
brought up pretty much every emotion and every event possible for me. And yeah,
so this it's not always an easy thing to talk about because obviously,
you know, your songs are very personal. You know, this one's very
vulnerable. But and you'll hear some blame in anger and grief and and really
I don't think there's anything bad to say about one person, you know.
And there was a lot to be learned. Yeah, I got to learn
a lot about myself and and I still love that woman dearly, so but
I had to write through those differences, and I had to write through that
pain because I had no other, nohere, the place to go. Yeah,
yeah, do you want to play another live one for us? Yeah,
if you're just joining us, we have Tyler all Good live in studio
this morning on Matt connorton Unleashed. We are, of course in our Canal
Street studio and uh loving it. And Tyler is going to play play another
one for us, and uh, what's what's this one called, Tyler?
This one's called can we have that day again? Oh? Okay, can
we have that day again? This is part of this, this new album
of love, just like a woman was as well, and you kind of
see a beautiful story and then unravels the grief and the loss that starts to
happen. Okay, all right, very good. Whenever you're ready. You
wait next to me, glad to know your eyes say it's okay your way.
Did you only have the day? So we put the coffee on and
not waste our time, feel the lie and down the trail we go up
the ridge to a private pond. Since I never felt so full the rais,
kiss your hair and I blurred out all my stuff and I always go
to fall. Now see the bitter end. We would need that day again
just to hold my my best friend. Can we have that dick again?
Can we have that dick again? Just to hold my best friend? Just
to hold my best friend? Can we have that dick again? M beautiful?
If you're just tuning in and you're wondering who that amazing voice is.
That is Hyler all good and also quite quite the guitar player. Do you
always fingerpick? Yeah? I stopped using a pick a long time ago at
this right now, what what was the reason why? Like why did you
phase out using a pick? I think I always wanted to be a finger
picker, and then at the same rate, it just became a more natural
place. And I don't do anything conventional. I'll use the I use my
fingernails in a flamenco kind of style. I'll pick and pluck sometimes, or
I'll just kind of use my thumb if I need to play softer. Yeah,
so I it's kind of a mixed style and I couldn't do it with
a pick, and you don't have to worry about dropping your pick right where?
What was it challenging to make that transition or what? It was a
natural? It was a little bit challenging, But what happened was that it
was when I finally got over the hump, it was so natural that it
was after a little while it was easier to sing without the pick. It
was really here to play in this kind of loose hand format and just kind
of let it ride. Yeah. Now when you play out, is it
always just you and the guitar? Or do you ever because you mentioned you
know, you played learn to play piano, do you ever bring a keyboard
with you and play that too? Or I have brought my keyboard to a
few gigs. It just there's just too much set up. But it'll cumbersome.
Yeah, just too much gear because I love playing piano and I do
need a little more experience doing that live. But there's just so much gear
pain, no doubt, no doubt. How many how many original songs do
you have? Because you strike me as somebody who's probably always writing. I
would imagine you always have ideas. Yeah. So I was talking to a
friend, Kate Durman. Actually I think you know Kate. Yes, Actually
she was commenting on social media, by the way, how much she loves
that song that you displayed. H Yeah, love Kate. She's a wonderful
person. Yeah, and she's been a great support over the years. Yeah.
It does a lot for local music. Yeah, absolutely so, Hi
Kate, Yeah, all the love. Yeah. We had we had her
on not too too long ago, a number of months ago for Darlene hill
Or Project and yeah, just amazing. Yeah that is incredible. Yeah,
really good. Oh yeah, yeah, so wherever you forgot? What was
I asking you? Oh yeah, I was asking you if you if you
have an idea of how many original songs that you've written. So it's I
think it's somewhere around one hundred of us. Oh, it's quite a few.
Yeah. I write when it, when it happens. I try not
to force it. Yeah, and sometimes I go through six or eight months
without writing something really yeah that happened last year. But what it gives me
time to kind of produce and write the instruments for the songs that I have
written. Oh okay, so there's always always working always, So so you
don't worry about it when that happens, right, because because some people do.
Some people they get into their own heads about all, what do I
have writer's block? Why I don't have any ideas? Right, But but
you use the time productively. I do. I Mean, sometimes it bugs
me and it feels like, oh, I'm not doing my purpose, I'm
doing my thing right, And but I've learned to accept everything as it comes,
you know, That's what kind of Yeah, just trying to accept the
universe for what it gives. Yeah, yeah, do you want do you
want to do one more for us live? Sure? Yeah, we have
time and yeah, yeah you sound great. Thinks sound really really good.
If you're just joining us, we have Tyler all Good. He is here
with us live in studio. We just did a little bit ago the world
radio premiere of his new studio track nothing but Cry. But he's also played
some live ones for us today and what are you gonna play for us?
This is hasn't been released yet, oh hasn't been produced, but it's a
favorite of mine and some other people. This is called Fisherman's All Right,
Fisherman's Blues. Tyler Allgood live in studio. His name is George. He
heads out Sunday morn for the weed. He says, I can't talk right
now, and most days I don't even like to speak. I've got my
fishing rods and my buddy gun. What else do I need? Coolers in
the back, so the front is reserved for we take that weed down the
river. At home. He is the king of the block, king of
the blog. A burly man he stands, but inside he is wickedly soft.
He says, A long week on the coast. I am dreaming of
my throne, my gal and my dog says, I don't mind the drives,
but these nights are getting lost because at home he is so he's on
the clock. He likes to feed the folks with his cross in a town
between the Cave caught in Maine, he helps the working mine through the day
because at home he is so hes on the clock. He likes to feed
the folks with his crops. In a town between the Cape Caught in me
he helps the working mind through the day to keep the busy bringing at baby
outstanding Tyler all Good live in studio. It's been it's been wonderful to have
you here. This is great, great meeting you and I love your stuff
And where where should people go online to keep up with everything that you're doing.
So my website is Tyler Allgod dot com. Nice and simple. Yeah,
and all good is spelled exactly the way you would expect. Yes,
yeah, I was blessed with a great last name. That is a great
last name. I just used it, you know. Yeah, So Tyler
Allgod dot com. I just released a new live studio video from Clarksville,
Tennessee on my YouTube. Oh I saw that. Yes, so I released
that. It's kind of like I don't have the spot if the new album
up quite yet? Yeah, so I got you guys can have that for
now. Yeah yeah, but so YouTube following me there, Spotify the website
will let you know where my dates are. I'm playing all around New England.
You had anything this uh this weekend? You want to plug? You
had anything tonight? Nope, not this weekend. I'm trying to think.
Actually I've had I have a show in Francistown, New Hampshire on Valentine's Day.
I'll be playing. It's a local spot called toll Booth Tavern. Where
is I'm embarrassed to say, where is Francis Town. I'm not even sure
I've heard of it, but I can't picture it geographically. So there's you
know, Peterborough. Yeah yeah, yeah, so if you get on the
other side of Peterborough Francis Town. Actually I go through Francistown when I come
to me. Oh gotcha. So it's like kind of close to Golf's Town.
Oh, okay, in a way if you keep going, Oh,
I'll be damned. Okay, I'm sure I've driven through it at some point
and just never realized. Yeah, yeah, So it's a cool little tavern,
great food, great people. Been playing there for about eight or nine
years. It's close to home. Yeah. But I'll be in Rochester at
Porter's Pub on February twenty fourth, and the bluegrass band is playing at Pinucci's
Conquered on two seventeen and back Ats Holebooth on twenty three. Excellent, excellent,
All right, Tyler, this has been wonderful, the great Tyler,
all good, and thank you for sharing the new the brand new single with
us too, Nothing but Cry, great great song that will be in our
that will be in our rotation here on the show. Yeah, thank you
for having me, absolutely and very good. So we've got coming up in
the second hour we have Ray Coates is going to be joining us via Skype
all the way from the UK. And then third hour today we have the
band Vices Inc. From Portland, Maine. But we're gonna take a break,
show some love to our amazing sponsors and when we come back, Ray
Coats will be with us and Tyler all good, Thank you again, thank
you you got it. Come on down to the Hop Knot at one thousand
Elm Street, Manchester's premiere Kraft Beer and Gourmet Pretzel Bar tell us more Trudy.
We make our dough fresh every day. We make a variety of styles
of pretzels and serve craft beer, cocktails and a few bottles of wine.
We do the traditional pretzel and we have multiple flavors for that. We also
do stuffed pretzels, pretzeler sandwiches, three dessert pretzels, and pretzel knots.
The howk Knot and the Brady Sullivan Plaza at one thousand Elm Street. I'll
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We're on the web at Queen citycabinat Tree NH dot com. Come see the
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A names include containing a nay ninety nine a nat
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