Field Dispatch
Matt Connarton Unleashed 2-22-25 hour 2
Game Plan
American Radio Premiere of "Not the Same" by John Denton
Speaker 1: Welcome back, everybody. This is Matt Bonnard.
Speaker 2: The Novels.
Speaker 1: We are live from the studios of WMNH on this
Speaker 1: Saturday morning, February twenty second, twenty twenty five. You know, Jenny,
Speaker 1: it's kind of funny. We were talking earlier about Kendrick
Speaker 1: Lamar in the track not Like Us. We got a
Speaker 1: American radio premiere for a track called not the Same,
Speaker 1: and this is UK artist John Denton. John Denton's going
Speaker 1: to be joining us soon on the show, so we're
Speaker 1: going to play this. This is the first time. He's
Speaker 1: already making waves in the UK, but this is the
Speaker 1: first time this track has ever been played on American radio.
Speaker 1: This is the American radio premiere of the new John
Speaker 1: Denton track. This is called not the Same.
Speaker 3: That's a place where.
Speaker 4: The bottles are down, and then that's me.
Speaker 5: I'm from all of the site. People try to remoud
Speaker 5: you how we're so lok go for water and all
Speaker 5: our food.
Speaker 6: Every day.
Speaker 5: People fall abut the.
Speaker 3: Well see it all the time.
Speaker 5: But I don't care. I don't care.
Speaker 7: I don't care what I'll say because I'll do it
Speaker 7: in my own work. I've nice people on the street.
Speaker 8: Sir, night you jill you to.
Speaker 7: I'm not al right down on the on the side.
Speaker 7: We're all down and out. Oh everywhere the people said,
Speaker 7: why oh why should I really check your this? Jo
Speaker 7: Stover say that's a place where the storm goes down,
Speaker 7: and don't go.
Speaker 4: Well, I won't know where we're at, but I'll.
Speaker 3: Be fine in my mind trying to make.
Speaker 9: All those word right.
Speaker 7: Ignore it on the outside once again.
Speaker 10: Me and I'll be in the back.
Speaker 4: Of her, just messing up about doing what I dont.
Speaker 5: I'm ask befu on the streets, and I kill used
Speaker 5: to go home. I'm not a right down on the
Speaker 5: other side of the folly.
Speaker 7: Oh that ring where we got you guys. But while
Speaker 7: should I really check your this? Joe stop say.
Speaker 4: Last people in the STA said that killed us to go.
Speaker 7: Down on the other side with folly.
Speaker 6: We got chilled, so really kick kouss.
Speaker 4: Juice snop sa.
Speaker 6: Me me at the boardwalk over on Main Street. We
Speaker 6: can walk downtown. Let's see who we may.
Speaker 9: Sitting in the summertime.
Speaker 3: On a local brew or class.
Speaker 6: Su high Now like a summer night in Maine, Just
Speaker 6: another summer night in Maine, Just another summer night in May,
Speaker 6: just another summer night in May. Yeah, just another summer
Speaker 6: night and May. We can't sit back campire that we
Speaker 6: made on the beach with a night like this. Nothing's
Speaker 6: out of reach from the forest to the ocean, and
Speaker 6: never seems the same. Nothing like summer night in May.
Speaker 6: Just another summer night in May. Just another summer night
Speaker 6: in May, Just another summer night in May.
Speaker 11: There is nothing like summer night in May, Kay, summer.
Speaker 3: Night May.
Speaker 5: Bad.
Speaker 1: That is cool. Welcome back, everybody. We are well in
Speaker 1: our number two New Marrow dose of Matt Connorton Unleashed
Speaker 1: and we are live from the studios of WMNH ninety
Speaker 1: five point three FM, Inglorious, Manchester, New Hampshire. Of course,
Speaker 1: you can also stream the show online for all your
Speaker 1: streaming options, just go to Matt connorton dot com slash
Speaker 1: live to find out how you can stream and interact
Speaker 1: with the show. And of course if you are in Manchester,
Speaker 1: New Hampshire, you can listen on your FM dial go
Speaker 1: to ninety five point three FM. Today is Saturday, February
Speaker 1: twenty two, twenty twenty five. Jenny is here of course
Speaker 1: at the news table, present account of and let's see
Speaker 1: let me get those mics up here. We have joined
Speaker 1: us live in studio. The man who performed that song
Speaker 1: by the way, another summer night in Maine, which is
Speaker 1: very very new. Sean Manchester is here with us. We'll
Speaker 1: test these mics out. How you doing, Sean, Yes, thank
Speaker 1: you for having me. I can barely hear you, which
Speaker 1: is why I need to turn this up.
Speaker 12: Check check.
Speaker 9: Oh there there we go.
Speaker 12: Yes, thank you for having me. I'm excited to be here.
Speaker 1: Yeah. I love by the way. So that song we
Speaker 1: played it during the first hour, Broke Man's Dream. Yeah,
Speaker 1: that was the first song of yours that I listened
Speaker 1: to and I just love it. That is that is
Speaker 1: so cool. And uh, let me put the camera on
Speaker 1: you for those watching online. Oh, actually, before we go
Speaker 1: any further, let me put the camera back on me
Speaker 1: for a second, because I want to show people for
Speaker 1: those watching live, if you're watching on YouTube or Facebook
Speaker 1: or LinkedIn or wherever. So, Sean, you brought us. Now
Speaker 1: people will often bring us CDs and stuff like that.
Speaker 1: You brought us. So these little, these little bags, I'm
Speaker 1: gonna hold this up on camera.
Speaker 13: Yeah, little grab bag, little Sean manch grab bag. My
Speaker 13: last name is Manchester, but yeah, you know.
Speaker 12: For stage purposes, it's easier for people to.
Speaker 14: Chant Sean Manch, Seawan Manchin. That makes Sewan Manchi. Yeah,
Speaker 14: that makes sense. And in this so this is a
Speaker 14: cool concept. You've got a USB drive with your album. Yes,
Speaker 14: which is that song Another Summer Night in Maine. That's
Speaker 14: where that that's where we pull that from. Yep, So
Speaker 14: thank you for bringing that.
Speaker 13: And you get a little a little glow in the
Speaker 13: dark three D printed Sean Manch key chain exactly. Yeah,
Speaker 13: and that's actually a pick as well, say, very cool printed.
Speaker 12: Oh glow in the dark.
Speaker 1: Oh outstanding, yup, got a pick in there, a little
Speaker 1: custom grab bag yeah, very cool, very cool, and and
Speaker 1: also a sticker which is nice. Jenny loves stickers, so
Speaker 1: as you can see from the per computer, definitely, so
Speaker 1: you brought one for each of us. So thank you
Speaker 1: very much, John, very welcome. That is that is very cool.
Speaker 1: And I love that song broke Man's Stream and uh
Speaker 1: you are I'm dying to hear you play live. You
Speaker 1: want to strum that guitar a little for me and
Speaker 1: we'll see, uh see see. Oh yeah that sounds nice, perfect,
Speaker 1: that sounds nice. Pull that pull those other mics up
Speaker 1: a little bit, make sure we got the cahone.
Speaker 13: Yeah, playing the drums with my feet while singing and
Speaker 13: playing makes a nice full arrange.
Speaker 12: I like to have that little bit of rhythm with it.
Speaker 1: You are a one man band, Yeah, that's that's for sure.
Speaker 1: Is it difficult to learn to do that? Or does
Speaker 1: that come naturally? Because most people tap their foot anyway
Speaker 1: when listening to music, So does that just kind of.
Speaker 13: That definitely helps you know a lot of times, if
Speaker 13: I'm just practicing without any drums or anything, just tapping
Speaker 13: my feet and I was I thought that was just
Speaker 13: a natural way to keep time. Might as well add
Speaker 13: some drums underneath the tappen and see how it goes.
Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, no, that makes sense. That makes sense.
Speaker 13: I'm left handed, although I play a right handed guitar,
Speaker 13: So yeah, the ambidexterousness I'm sure helps with that independence instrument.
Speaker 12: Yeah.
Speaker 1: I have a theory that we're all ambidextrous. We just
Speaker 1: don't know it. Because you learn to play a musical instrument,
Speaker 1: you're using both your hands.
Speaker 13: You are exactly exactly Yeah, sometimes your feet.
Speaker 1: Yeah exactly right, exactly. Yeah, especially like if you're a drummer,
Speaker 1: you're using all four of your limbs and doing some
Speaker 1: complex stuff and that.
Speaker 13: That helps you because I play, you know, piano, drums, bass,
Speaker 13: the instrumentalist as well. That's what helps me record the
Speaker 13: full band sound with a lot of those songs.
Speaker 1: Oh okay, So on your studio tracks, is it all you?
Speaker 12: Yeah?
Speaker 13: All me playing all my writing and nice all self
Speaker 13: recorded and produced in my little shack and mane.
Speaker 1: Oh, that's fantastic, that's fantastic. Uh, what are you gonna
Speaker 1: play for us?
Speaker 13: I'll start out with Broke Man's stream awesome.
Speaker 1: I love this song. Thank you, I love the song.
Speaker 1: If you're just joining us, Sean Manchester is here with
Speaker 1: us live in studio, A.
Speaker 6: Cat, sixteen bucks, gotta make it to Friday, trying to
Speaker 6: do right?
Speaker 9: He going my way? Money suit tie?
Speaker 2: What can't I say?
Speaker 6: I'm living on Brooke Man's dreams, run on gas and
Speaker 6: no won't last.
Speaker 9: A couple of gowns.
Speaker 2: Cat through the week, keep my head.
Speaker 9: And I anatn't knowing why when the fire's a running
Speaker 9: down on me.
Speaker 6: I got sixteen bucks, gotta make it to Friday.
Speaker 9: And trying to do a righth ain't going my way?
Speaker 6: Money suit tight What can't I say, I'm living on
Speaker 6: a broke man sixteen bucks and I'm making to Friday,
Speaker 6: trying to.
Speaker 15: Do a right?
Speaker 9: Ain't going my way? Money so tight?
Speaker 3: What gen I say?
Speaker 6: I'm living on a broke man's dreams? Now I find
Speaker 6: the sea that it ain't just a dream, making it
Speaker 6: half him today? Now keep on knowing and okay, moving
Speaker 6: shaw till it can finally say I half sixteen bucks
Speaker 6: and I made it to Friday. I finally do the righth.
Speaker 6: It went my way. Money's so tight?
Speaker 2: What can I say? I'm living a broke.
Speaker 6: Man's dream I've lived everything in between. You got sixteen bucks,
Speaker 6: gotta make it to Friday, trying to do right? Ain't
Speaker 6: doing my way? Money so tight? What can't I say?
Speaker 6: I'm living on a broad man sixteen bucks? Would have
Speaker 6: made it to Friday and finally did a right?
Speaker 9: It went my way? Money's not tight?
Speaker 6: What can't I say? I'm living a broad man's dreams
Speaker 6: and now I've lived everything in between?
Speaker 1: Oh I do love that song.
Speaker 9: That was awful.
Speaker 1: I do love that song. If you're just what we do,
Speaker 1: absolutely absolutely, if you're just joining us, Sean Manchester is
Speaker 1: here with us live in studio on this Saturday morning,
Speaker 1: and Sean, where are you from?
Speaker 16: So?
Speaker 12: Originally Massachusetts, Attleborough?
Speaker 13: Okay, you know I have family that's still lives down there,
Speaker 13: but I currently live up in Clinton, Maine.
Speaker 1: Is it must be cold there, imagine?
Speaker 12: Oh yeah, tongues of snow these past couple of weeks.
Speaker 12: But yeah, springs right around the corner.
Speaker 13: I mentioned to get into some of the springtime gardening
Speaker 13: and all that. I live off grid in a little
Speaker 13: tiny house, you know, all solar Oh, no kidding, Yeah,
Speaker 13: because on main Street, which is convenient. I can walk
Speaker 13: to everything I need if I need to, no kidding,
Speaker 13: but enough in the woods that I have the privacy,
Speaker 13: you know. Yeah, it's a good balance of that.
Speaker 1: Oh that's really cool. Are you Are you a minimalist?
Speaker 12: Yeah, I like, you know, to not keep it not
Speaker 12: very materialistic, you know.
Speaker 1: Yeah. I admire that a lot. That's that's very cool.
Speaker 1: I mean life is simpler that way, right.
Speaker 13: Exactly, as long as I can go outside and enjoy
Speaker 13: the sun and a hammock and have a campfire, yeah, guitar,
Speaker 13: a couple of friends.
Speaker 12: Yeah, yeah, that's the beauty of life right there.
Speaker 1: What's what's the scene like there as far as are
Speaker 1: there a lot of places where you live to play.
Speaker 13: Or yeah, it's uh, you know, I did the cover
Speaker 13: for a long time in the local bar kind of gigs,
Speaker 13: and there's a lot of local breweries and yeah, you know,
Speaker 13: so if you're trying to find somewhere to play, you
Speaker 13: might have to travel a half an hour in pretty
Speaker 13: much any direction.
Speaker 12: But you know, you can normally find a decent amount
Speaker 12: of gigs.
Speaker 7: Yeah.
Speaker 13: I'm focusing a lot on the original songs now, okay,
Speaker 13: and I'm gonna move more.
Speaker 12: Towards running my own shows.
Speaker 13: You know, rent a venue out and then do the
Speaker 13: promotion and that sort of thing more on my own.
Speaker 1: Oh excellent, excellent. Do you do some of that now.
Speaker 13: Or just starting out? I've done it in the past,
Speaker 13: just as kind of trial and or you know, half covers,
Speaker 13: half originals and see who shows up and it turned
Speaker 13: out pretty decent and hoping you know, the grab bags
Speaker 13: they'll sweepen the deals. Yeah, the first ten people that come,
Speaker 13: you know, get a gift bag or you know something
Speaker 13: like that.
Speaker 12: Yeah, and they'll be free shows. I'm just in it
Speaker 12: for the music.
Speaker 1: So gotcha, gotcha? Yeah, So you do everything so on
Speaker 1: the studio tracks, you do everything yourself.
Speaker 12: Yep.
Speaker 13: When all the mixing, mastering, no connuction. I use evis
Speaker 13: online called Lander and that so I'm on Spotify. It
Speaker 13: pushes it out to all Spotify, Apple Music, Facebook, all
Speaker 13: that stuff.
Speaker 1: So okay, excellent. Some musicians hate having to do that part,
Speaker 1: but you know the but you sound like you embrace it.
Speaker 12: Well.
Speaker 13: I way back when I was younger, I was a programmer,
Speaker 13: you know, web developer, that kind of thing.
Speaker 12: So I have a decent tech background.
Speaker 13: Yeah, and you know the arts c side, so I
Speaker 13: kind of just use what I've learned from that in
Speaker 13: business marketing and things, you know, and there you go,
Speaker 13: added it to the music to you know, enhance the
Speaker 13: hobby and just make it.
Speaker 12: Go a little bit further. It helps, Yeah, oh, I mean,
Speaker 12: and I definitely enjoy it.
Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, I mean it sounds like more than a hobby.
Speaker 1: I mean, you know, it's definitely a passion. Yeah, and
Speaker 1: you're accomplishing a lot with it, so that's great.
Speaker 14: Yeah.
Speaker 13: It keeps me busy too, you know, always always something
Speaker 13: to work on. And yep, then when you finish a
Speaker 13: song or a video, it feels like you've gotten something done.
Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, broke band stream is that? Is that based
Speaker 1: on real life experience because it's it's very relatable.
Speaker 13: Yeah, well, I'm sure everyone can relate, you know, trying
Speaker 13: to get to that Friday sixteen bucks in the account
Speaker 13: and trying to make it there.
Speaker 1: Yeah.
Speaker 13: Yeah, you know, starting out saving up for the land,
Speaker 13: and had had an old van down by the river,
Speaker 13: nice you know, nineteen eighty two Chevy G twenty conversion van,
Speaker 13: so I had everything, but yeah, my job paid for
Speaker 13: you know a lot rent, so lot rent.
Speaker 12: It was a parking.
Speaker 13: Spot, you know, the van there, and started out from
Speaker 13: there walking around to bars with my guitar and can
Speaker 13: I play a couple songs and put a tip jar out?
Speaker 12: And from there blossomed into all of this fun stuff
Speaker 12: going on now.
Speaker 1: So yeah, yeah, have you how long have you been
Speaker 1: really focused on that part the music career?
Speaker 12: Probably about the last four four or five years.
Speaker 13: Yeah, say about that. You know, I have kids, so yeah,
Speaker 13: spent a lot of time working on that. You know,
Speaker 13: kids when they were younger, you know, take a little
Speaker 13: bit more, yeah, changing diapers now that they're a little
Speaker 13: bit more self sustaining, a little bit of time for
Speaker 13: me yeah.
Speaker 1: Is it like living in a tiny house? Is that
Speaker 1: a big adjustment or did that come naturally?
Speaker 13: I love it, you know, I have plenty of space, especially,
Speaker 13: I mean the one that I built now has plenty
Speaker 13: of space. The first couple of tiny houses, you know,
Speaker 13: not a builder.
Speaker 1: Oh so it's not your first one, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 13: This one actually turned out really nice, you know. Okay,
Speaker 13: it was a learning curve, the first couple of tiny houses,
Speaker 13: trying to figure out how to build. I'm a musician,
Speaker 13: not a carpenter, so yeah, but this one.
Speaker 12: Yeah, it's so.
Speaker 1: You built these?
Speaker 12: Oh yeah, yeah, wow.
Speaker 13: And I prefer it, you know, the tiny living, less
Speaker 13: space to heat. Yeah, everything has a place.
Speaker 1: Ye so yeah, oh very cool.
Speaker 12: I enjoyed it, well yeah yeah yeah.
Speaker 1: How do the kids feel about it?
Speaker 13: They love it?
Speaker 1: Yeah.
Speaker 13: Well I got a frog pond too, so as long
Speaker 13: as you can go outside and catch frogs in the
Speaker 13: spring and summer, they love it.
Speaker 1: Oh that's really cool. That's really cool. Do you want
Speaker 1: to play another one?
Speaker 12: Yeah?
Speaker 1: I'm dying to hear more. If you're just joining us.
Speaker 1: Sean Manchester is here with us, live in studio and
Speaker 1: traveled quite far bit of a hall.
Speaker 12: Yeah, It was.
Speaker 13: About two and a half hours. Just a nice drive though,
Speaker 13: watching the sun come up.
Speaker 1: Yeah, trees, Yeah, cute little city here too, Yeah, oh,
Speaker 1: thank you, thank you.
Speaker 12: Wandered around for a little bit, driving and seeing all
Speaker 12: the sights.
Speaker 13: Nice architects, a lot, a lot of mill buildings.
Speaker 12: Yep. This next song, the wind between us, I'll play
Speaker 12: that one.
Speaker 1: Oh, very cool, very cool. We have Sean Manchester here
Speaker 1: with us, live in studio on this Saturday morning.
Speaker 12: You're on the program, and I do this one, just acoustic.
Speaker 17: Okay.
Speaker 9: I've seen the wind take it all the way, never
Speaker 9: had a.
Speaker 6: Chance reason to stay, this envisible steam.
Speaker 2: I hear the whisper of the.
Speaker 9: Wind through the years distance, like Raleigh's fears.
Speaker 2: I wish we could stay.
Speaker 6: Toom left. The wind never come between us.
Speaker 2: We will never be same.
Speaker 5: Thing.
Speaker 6: Through your heart and tone for copy to writhe the.
Speaker 9: Winds of change.
Speaker 6: And Dick, it's hard to matter what You gotta find
Speaker 6: the key to a tour like shut through away the us.
Speaker 6: Come for a minute, come for today, but don't come
Speaker 6: for long. Don't go to stay. Can't you hear me say?
Speaker 6: Doom Let no wind never come between us?
Speaker 9: We will never be same.
Speaker 6: Through your heart and don't forget.
Speaker 9: Me do right though winds of.
Speaker 18: Change, I've seen the one who take it away.
Speaker 9: I've never had a change.
Speaker 6: Reason to say it decent isn't stay.
Speaker 9: Doom.
Speaker 6: Let the wind never come between us.
Speaker 3: Will never beat seen.
Speaker 6: Thing real hard and too for Cavy too, Rato wins.
Speaker 3: Love change.
Speaker 1: Hm, I love it. I love it. Sean Manchester here
Speaker 1: with us live in studio. Yeah, I love your voice.
Speaker 1: Did how did you learn to singer? You self taught
Speaker 1: or did you take lessons.
Speaker 12: Or just all self taught?
Speaker 13: I mean, I think the earliest was when I was
Speaker 13: three years old, singing Run Joey Run and Billy Don't
Speaker 13: be a Heroes. Oh really, my mom had you know,
Speaker 13: some home tapes, you know, yeah, Marching Ben came down
Speaker 13: along Main Street. Yeah, early nineties or late eighties, Okay, okay, yeah,
Speaker 13: But then you know, really took it on, you know,
Speaker 13: in high school when I was probably seventeen Stary plays
Speaker 13: and then a couple of Battle.
Speaker 12: Of the Bands and when those went.
Speaker 13: To Belfast Area High School okay, yeah, in Maine, and yeah,
Speaker 13: so took it off from there though. I once I
Speaker 13: got on stage for the first time doing that it
Speaker 13: was all over from there, couldn't stay away.
Speaker 1: Do you do you ever? Have you ever played with
Speaker 1: a band or has it always been a solo acoustic thing.
Speaker 13: Yeah, I've done a lot, you know, jammed with different friends,
Speaker 13: had cover bands and stuff like that. And I do
Speaker 13: intend on getting a bassist and a drummer eventually, Okay,
Speaker 13: just probably sometime this summer kind of work on that.
Speaker 12: Oh okay, I've been doing the solo thing though a
Speaker 12: couple of years. Yeah, a little bit easier logistically.
Speaker 1: Oh yeah, you don't have to check with anybody about
Speaker 1: their schedule if you had live shows to play exactly,
Speaker 1: all that kind of stuff. Yeah, yeah, you probably You
Speaker 1: strike me as someone who's probably always writing.
Speaker 12: You have a lot of songs that you've written exactly.
Speaker 19: Yeah.
Speaker 13: I have a lot of stuff that I've recorded.
Speaker 20: You know.
Speaker 13: I like to just get it out of my mind
Speaker 13: and get it all recorded so I have at least
Speaker 13: some kind of demo and then I can come back
Speaker 13: to it, tear the song apart, and you know, figure
Speaker 13: out how I wrote it.
Speaker 1: Yeah.
Speaker 13: Yeah, So I'm always writing and picking and choosing what
Speaker 13: I want to you know, publish, and what might need
Speaker 13: a little bit more time.
Speaker 1: Doing all the mixing and mastering and everything. If you've
Speaker 1: done it that way from the beginning, like all doing
Speaker 1: all of it yourself. Yeah, that's awesome.
Speaker 12: Yeah, that's awesome. Yeah. I enjoy it.
Speaker 13: And it's come a long way, that's for sure. I
Speaker 13: listened to some of the stuff even just five years ago,
Speaker 13: and I can tell it's come along really.
Speaker 1: Yeah.
Speaker 13: Someday maybe I'll release it as like a gag track
Speaker 13: or something.
Speaker 1: Yea, here see you.
Speaker 13: Know it takes time to get there.
Speaker 1: Do you remember the first song you ever wrote?
Speaker 13: Actually, yeah, so I had started. Must have been like
Speaker 13: sixteen or seventeen. Yeah, yeah, I don't play it because
Speaker 13: it's so this is again something.
Speaker 12: People haven't heard. Okay, I actually do remember it.
Speaker 1: So oh okay, dreams.
Speaker 6: Everything looks per it seems everything is word that now
Speaker 6: I see.
Speaker 9: I'm the pain.
Speaker 6: I'm causing a dream of you and my heart ist puson.
Speaker 6: I'm moving on with about you. I'm moving on because
Speaker 6: you're run true. I'm moving on through this dark blue
Speaker 6: called you, all right, I like seventeen sixteen seventeen, started
Speaker 6: playing the guitar.
Speaker 13: That's why it's just.
Speaker 1: I'm GC and D I like it though. That's good.
Speaker 12: That's not a bad way to start write.
Speaker 13: Not a bad song for a first song.
Speaker 12: No, not, that's funny.
Speaker 13: I haven't thought about that song in a while.
Speaker 1: Oh really Yeah, yeah, no, I like it, I dig it. Yeah, yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 1: Who are some of your inspirations as far as songwriters
Speaker 1: and performers.
Speaker 12: It's gotta be a lot of class rock. Yeah, I
Speaker 12: like classic rock a lot.
Speaker 13: And then on the other side of things, I listened
Speaker 13: to a lot of like the Jason Maraz, John Mayer,
Speaker 13: you know, early two thousands kind of yeah, acoustic guys.
Speaker 12: Yeah, so a lot of that.
Speaker 13: But yeah, yeah, I'd say it's kind of a mix
Speaker 13: of that the classic rock, you know.
Speaker 12: I like a lot of Led Zeppelin and yeah.
Speaker 1: Yeah. Is there anyone who who inspires you in terms
Speaker 1: of because I love your voice, I mean, is there
Speaker 1: anyone you try to emulate vocally or or or who
Speaker 1: is uh influence?
Speaker 13: I'd say that like you know, Rob Thomas, that's another one.
Speaker 13: A lot of like Matchbox twenty Yeah, you know those
Speaker 13: kind of songs. Yeah, a lot of influence from that
Speaker 13: kind of stuff too, like that soft rock.
Speaker 1: Yeah. Yeah, but you've got there's a little bit of
Speaker 1: a rawness though that you have that a guy like
Speaker 1: Rob Thomas doesn't have. And I think that's what and
Speaker 1: I like that. I think that's why I like your
Speaker 1: voice so much. This, I don't know, there's a there's
Speaker 1: just a little bit of a there's a little bit
Speaker 1: of a rough edge to it that I that I
Speaker 1: really love.
Speaker 13: That kind of that kind of crunch, which yeah, took
Speaker 13: a little bit to be able to get, you know,
Speaker 13: really a lot of clean singing, so I used to
Speaker 13: do that, you know, very clean and crisp, but I
Speaker 13: like that kind of little rasp or crunch, you know,
Speaker 13: compression vocals. It comes from the like you know, I
Speaker 13: want a rock you know, oh yeah, that kind of
Speaker 13: stuff when you actually push yeah, you know, so I
Speaker 13: like a lot of that, like heavy vocals.
Speaker 1: So yeah, because for a song like broke Man's Dream
Speaker 1: that that really works well, yeah, that that vocal song
Speaker 1: like that, Yeah, it gives it a little little bit
Speaker 1: of that grit.
Speaker 13: I'd say honestly, a lot of it does come from
Speaker 13: like Dio and that kind of like Holy.
Speaker 6: Diver, yeah with the last in line, Yeah like that
Speaker 6: sort of Yeah.
Speaker 1: Well, because if you can sing that stuff you can
Speaker 1: sing anything right exactly.
Speaker 13: It makes it so I honestly have to like hold
Speaker 13: back from doing it too much when I play acoustic
Speaker 13: because I want to just go, you know, straight out
Speaker 13: with it.
Speaker 1: But yeah, you don't want to blow your voice out
Speaker 1: of the process. Yeah that ever happened, like, especially with
Speaker 1: this has been such a brutal cold and flu season.
Speaker 1: You ever have that happened to where your voice goes
Speaker 1: during the show or starts to.
Speaker 13: Yeah, definitely when I was doing the cover shows and
Speaker 13: playing you know, two or three shows a weekend. Yeah,
Speaker 13: by that ninth hour of singing, you know, in eighteen hours,
Speaker 13: it's like, huh, I need a throat laws and drinking
Speaker 13: honey straight from the jar just to soothe it all.
Speaker 1: No doubt, no doubt. Is it challenging at all singing
Speaker 1: this early in the day.
Speaker 13: You know, I thought about that on the way down.
Speaker 13: I was like, I never really sing in the morning.
Speaker 13: I mean, as long as I have some coffee to
Speaker 13: warm my voice up, it's normally not too bad. Yeah,
Speaker 13: that's for the listeners to decide.
Speaker 1: I get right, No, you sound great. You want to
Speaker 1: play another one?
Speaker 12: Yeah, definitely, I'll do.
Speaker 21: Me.
Speaker 13: I'll do one called tell me it's more of a
Speaker 13: softer song too.
Speaker 1: All right, all right, Sean Manchester is here with us
Speaker 1: live in studio.
Speaker 6: She said, tell me that you love me and I
Speaker 6: won't go. It's coming down in flames. Please love me, no,
Speaker 6: tell me it. Don't be too friend this time. Tell
Speaker 6: me it'll long turn out all right. And I said,
Speaker 6: dun't forgetbod I've told you.
Speaker 9: Due.
Speaker 6: Forget what I said through all of the years, in.
Speaker 9: The tears, how we've dropped.
Speaker 3: I will be there to me.
Speaker 2: Tell me that your.
Speaker 6: Love will never fade. Tell me that you always feel
Speaker 6: the same. Tell me that I'm crazy when may Tell
Speaker 6: me that you'll be there from me. And I said,
Speaker 6: don't forget what I told you to forget what I
Speaker 6: said through all of.
Speaker 3: The hears, sound, the tears.
Speaker 9: So we've jumped.
Speaker 3: Now we will be there till the end.
Speaker 6: Don't forget what I told you too, for Cat, I said,
Speaker 6: do all of it hears and the tears out, we've dropped.
Speaker 6: I will be there toov.
Speaker 1: I love it. I love it. That's my favorite. Oh
Speaker 1: I love that. Yeah, that's really good. That's really good.
Speaker 12: Thank you.
Speaker 1: Sean Manchester is here with us live in studio on
Speaker 1: the Saturday, if you're just joining us sounding great. By
Speaker 1: the way, I'm envious of your your ability to whistle.
Speaker 12: Thank you.
Speaker 1: That's something I can't. I can't do, which I guess
Speaker 1: is unusual most people can't. I can't whistle well.
Speaker 12: And it's useful too, you know, because I want to
Speaker 12: play some lead.
Speaker 13: I want to just you know, yeah, play a couple
Speaker 13: of solos over stuff. But if I'm playing rhythm, I
Speaker 13: can't really do that.
Speaker 1: So it kind of gives you an extra instrument.
Speaker 12: Yeah.
Speaker 13: I started to learn how to play harmonica and got
Speaker 13: some of that head gear.
Speaker 12: Oh and it goes pretty good.
Speaker 13: Yeah, I'm adding that to the whole Thing's just one
Speaker 13: more instrument.
Speaker 1: Do you do that live? The harmonica with the head
Speaker 1: Gary do that? That always impresses me too, because it's
Speaker 1: like you're because then you're literally you're playing two instruments
Speaker 1: and actually if you're if you have the cone too, Yeah,
Speaker 1: you're playing three instruments at once. You're really a one
Speaker 1: man band.
Speaker 13: At that point gets you get out of breath sometimes,
Speaker 13: you know, but it's worth it.
Speaker 1: Yeah, I wonder about the harmonica if that does that
Speaker 1: kind of come naturally to some extent, because you are.
Speaker 1: It's kind of like singing right well sense, and they're using.
Speaker 13: Your bractly and it's in key. Yeah, you know, harmonica,
Speaker 13: you can't really play a wrong note as long as
Speaker 13: you got the right harmonica for the song. Okay, okay,
Speaker 13: it's like you have to you have to carry around
Speaker 13: eight or you know, six or seven harmonicas. I didn't
Speaker 13: know that each one is a different key.
Speaker 12: I didn't see.
Speaker 1: I'm so ignorant about that. I never knew that. Yeah,
Speaker 1: so that makes sense though, now that I'm thinking about
Speaker 1: it logically, I'm surprised I didn't realize that, because that
Speaker 1: does make perfect.
Speaker 13: So they do have like one hundred whole harmonicas, but
Speaker 13: do they impossible? Really, that's too much.
Speaker 12: To think about doing all of it at once.
Speaker 1: But yeah, oh that makes sense though, that makes sense.
Speaker 13: Yeah. Yeah, I like to use a loop pedal a lot,
Speaker 13: where you know, just kind of the edge sheering sort
Speaker 13: of thing, play play a rhythm and then play some
Speaker 13: drums over it with the guitar, and yeah, it turns
Speaker 13: out pretty good.
Speaker 12: I like that because that allows me to play the lead.
Speaker 13: Oh okay, so that way I can just pick up
Speaker 13: a harmonica and not have to have it on that
Speaker 13: on the head gear or just play a solo you know.
Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, is is that challenging when you're first starting
Speaker 1: with the loop pedal or does that come pretty easy?
Speaker 13: It's definitely helped just with the experience as far as
Speaker 13: recording and playing to a metronome as long as you
Speaker 13: can keep that time.
Speaker 12: Yeah, you know, so it came pretty naturally.
Speaker 1: And I guess if you're doing it live and you're
Speaker 1: playing original music, it kind of doesn't matter if like
Speaker 1: if you if something isn't if you're looking something that
Speaker 1: maybe isn't quite what you intended, maybe you made a
Speaker 1: little bit of a mistake, but it kind of doesn't
Speaker 1: really matter, right because it's.
Speaker 13: Well and I prefer it that way.
Speaker 12: You know.
Speaker 13: I recorded backing tracks of drums, bass and guitar so
Speaker 13: that I could sing and play lead over it. Yeah,
Speaker 13: and you know, hit play play through the song. But
Speaker 13: it made it the same every time, Okay, so you
Speaker 13: know I was kind of against that. Rather I have
Speaker 13: it be dynamic, you know, and then if something cool happens,
Speaker 13: if I add some little like weird rosta part to
Speaker 13: one of my songs, right, you know, some kind of
Speaker 13: cool riff, you know, it just makes it unique. Yeah, yeah,
Speaker 13: I think that's something that, you know, maybe missing in
Speaker 13: some music. You know, Like I enjoy just how dynamic
Speaker 13: the loop pedal and the acoustic can be. I've been
Speaker 13: in cover bands where if you mess up one note
Speaker 13: on Sweet Child of Mind, everyone gives you a glare. Yeah,
Speaker 13: you know, I'd rather.
Speaker 12: Have it be dynamic where yeah, still haven't just having fun.
Speaker 1: Yeah, that's something about cover bands I've always thought it
Speaker 1: as interesting is that some people really do get like
Speaker 1: they want to hear the songs exactly the way they were.
Speaker 12: And a lot of people play them well you know, yeah, but.
Speaker 1: Which is cool and everything. But I kind of like
Speaker 1: it when there's something a little different. You know, It's
Speaker 1: like I already know how the original sounds, I want
Speaker 1: to hear your interpretation of it, you know.
Speaker 9: What I mean.
Speaker 13: I like seeing those you know, acoustic bands, you know,
Speaker 13: you have a couple guys of the Kahne and an
Speaker 13: acoustic and a base just doing covers like not near
Speaker 13: the Beach, that kind of thing, yeah, the summertime, and
Speaker 13: that it's a completely different feel when you have that
Speaker 13: kind of like acoustic band.
Speaker 1: Oh definitely, yeah, yeah, uhh we have time. You want
Speaker 1: to play another one?
Speaker 12: Yeah, let me I'll do one called feed. Let me
Speaker 12: just take this.
Speaker 1: Yeah, absolutely, if you're just joining us, Sean Manchester is
Speaker 1: here with us, playing live, sounding amazing, really enjoying this
Speaker 1: a lot, Thank you very much.
Speaker 13: Absolutely, this one's not normally an acoustic but well, okay,
Speaker 13: send it.
Speaker 12: What's it bound to be?
Speaker 6: Playfoolded and from the lies thout offending all this and
Speaker 6: cutting our ties.
Speaker 9: Can't take it anymore.
Speaker 6: I won't handle it this time, trying to breakthrough, no
Speaker 6: matter how.
Speaker 9: Hard to try.
Speaker 6: Everything that's tossed now, So Hi tried too many times
Speaker 6: to tell you why I'm stove hardening too fad we
Speaker 6: thout a fad.
Speaker 3: I'm starting to faith.
Speaker 6: Away, jem, it's coming in. I'm onto you taking in too,
Speaker 6: cutting straight onto. My brain is fassing with the time,
Speaker 6: and then this world will crumble down. Just roaming through
Speaker 6: this hopeless tworison without a chance for rhyme, stodartening till.
Speaker 2: Bade with down of bad.
Speaker 3: Stodarting till bad.
Speaker 1: Way nice. Nice. That's called fade, Yes, yep, very cool.
Speaker 1: Fade by Sean Manchester, who's here with us live in studio.
Speaker 1: This guy got kind of a little bit of a
Speaker 1: little bit of a grunge vibe there to that when
Speaker 1: I like that, Yeah, yeah, it runs me a little
Speaker 1: bit little bit nineties nineties, a lot.
Speaker 12: Of the early stuff.
Speaker 13: Well, so that's something I should have mentioned too, foo Fighters,
Speaker 13: you know, I like uh, Nirvana and Foo Fighters, mostly
Speaker 13: Dave Grohl being the multi instrumentalists. Oh yeah, I like
Speaker 13: a lot of that post grunge kind of. So that's
Speaker 13: one of the earlier songs that I wrote. So it
Speaker 13: definitely has those grungy vibes to them.
Speaker 6: Yeah.
Speaker 1: Yeah, your songs too, so I noticed that there there
Speaker 1: are they all your songs are kind of shorter than
Speaker 1: a lot of singer songwriters. Some some singer songwriters you
Speaker 1: know we've had on the got like these six minute songs,
Speaker 1: but yours are yours are kind of Yeah.
Speaker 13: I I normally, you know, if I have the loot pedal,
Speaker 13: that helps to make it a little bit longer. Yeah,
Speaker 13: but I like to keep them kind of short and
Speaker 13: sweet to the point, so you know, stay along with
Speaker 13: the song.
Speaker 1: Yeah, ye of it. Well, it's that expression, don't boris
Speaker 1: get to the chorus exactly exactly.
Speaker 13: Yeah, you know, so I do have a lot of
Speaker 13: it's it's very like pop, you know, radio music, that's
Speaker 13: very similar structure to that. Yeah, and you know, having
Speaker 13: a band or the loop pedal makes it a lot
Speaker 13: easier to do those intricacies because I have I love
Speaker 13: doing the yeah that riff and like I can layer
Speaker 13: it and the loop pedal makes it so much fun.
Speaker 1: Yeah. Yeah. How did you learn to play guitar? I
Speaker 1: know you're vocally your self taught? What about what about guitar?
Speaker 12: Same, just self taught. Looked up tabs too.
Speaker 13: What is the first thing I played? Chili peppers? That's
Speaker 13: another big influence. Oh really, sitting in my mom's basement
Speaker 13: when I was sixteen and got the guitar for my
Speaker 13: birthday or Christmas, one of those, Yeah, and I just
Speaker 13: looked up the tabs, started going to town and then
Speaker 13: the other one was shine down. Oh yeah, so just
Speaker 13: learning the yeah, learning the tabs and went from there,
Speaker 13: just kept with it.
Speaker 1: Yeah. Yeah, nice. Was that your because you're a multi
Speaker 1: instrument was that your first instrument? Guitar? Did you start
Speaker 1: on guitar?
Speaker 13: Yeah? Well, I mean i'd played piano, here and there,
Speaker 13: just when I saw one messing around, you know, so
Speaker 13: I had like, that's what kind of got it going,
Speaker 13: just seeing how much fun it was, And oh, I
Speaker 13: can create something out of nothing.
Speaker 1: That makes sense because I've heard so many music instructors
Speaker 1: and teachers say that ideally, if you start on a keyboard,
Speaker 1: that's the best way to start to learn, start to
Speaker 1: learn the fundamentals, and train your brain.
Speaker 13: It makes it a lot easier to apply the music
Speaker 13: theory just because all the notes are in order. So
Speaker 13: then when you look at a guitar neck if you see, oh,
Speaker 13: each frett is basically a key on the keyboard.
Speaker 12: Yeah, it helps for the visualization.
Speaker 13: Of it a lot. Yeah, I think that was the
Speaker 13: biggest thing really.
Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, yeah, I've heard a lot of instructors say
Speaker 1: that that that's that's ideal.
Speaker 13: I'm going to get a piano this spring or summer.
Speaker 13: Oh no, just got to find one of those ones
Speaker 13: that people have that are free, that they you know,
Speaker 13: like a full piano.
Speaker 12: Oh yeah, kidding. I'm gonna have a little.
Speaker 13: Roof over my campfire pit so I can have you know,
Speaker 13: a piano by the fire, keep it covered and do
Speaker 13: some like you know, outdoor saloon campfire jams with my friends,
Speaker 13: you know, have a couple of people on guitar or whatever, whoever.
Speaker 12: Shows up with.
Speaker 1: Oh, very cool and yeah.
Speaker 13: Whatever, make some fun jams. But I've always wanted an
Speaker 13: outdoor piano like that. I couldn't really beat that. You know,
Speaker 13: the sound of piano outside at night would be awesome.
Speaker 1: What do you do about that in the winter? You've
Speaker 1: probably already researched it.
Speaker 13: Yeah, well, I mean the piano is on its last leg.
Speaker 13: So what happens in winter if it's restorable, if it's
Speaker 13: some attitude tune junkie one that they're just going to
Speaker 13: toss anyways, you know, Yeah, I guess it doesn't matter, right,
Speaker 13: Maybe a bonfire for winter, Yeah, end up burning a
Speaker 13: million dollar piano?
Speaker 9: Uh?
Speaker 1: You wanna you want to seek in one more? We
Speaker 1: have We have time if you want to do one more,
Speaker 1: and then.
Speaker 13: I'll do a fun one. Okay it's called generic love song. Okay,
Speaker 13: now let me take these headphones off real quick, false
Speaker 13: start tell you.
Speaker 12: Know it's live.
Speaker 2: H come on over and oh sar and age you
Speaker 2: what do you like?
Speaker 9: What do you want to hear?
Speaker 6: A singing loud and me, your legs quiver, I'll lean
Speaker 6: in close and.
Speaker 9: Whisper in your ear.
Speaker 6: You just know, a generic love song, just something that
Speaker 6: I can sing.
Speaker 17: You know.
Speaker 6: We you'll be off my sat list now we'll miss
Speaker 6: sing thing. What's your name?
Speaker 9: Again? Sorry? My bad?
Speaker 6: You just another girl that I know won't last. But
Speaker 6: let's single, wong and not fun.
Speaker 9: Tomorrow morning, this will be done.
Speaker 6: You just another generic laugh song, just something that I
Speaker 6: care sing. In a week, you'll be off my setlist
Speaker 6: and now will miss a single thing.
Speaker 3: It's a single thing. It's a single thing. We'll miss thing.
Speaker 3: You just not a Janiaric love song.
Speaker 6: Just something that I can sing. You know, we kuby
Speaker 6: off my sat list.
Speaker 2: No, miss a single thing.
Speaker 1: That's awesome. What a great track. That's great generic love
Speaker 1: song by It's a.
Speaker 13: Little bit of a tongue in cheek song, right, Yeah,
Speaker 13: it's the most I love all my songs.
Speaker 12: Can't be heartbreaking, you know, Yeah I'm broken?
Speaker 1: Yeah, No, that's that is fun, have a little fun.
Speaker 1: That's awesome. Thanks Sean. What should people know about how
Speaker 1: to keep up with you online? Follow everything that you're doing?
Speaker 13: Yeah, if you search for Sean Manch you know Manchester
Speaker 13: abbreviated just on Google, Facebook, Instagram, all those places I
Speaker 13: keep up, YouTube, Spotify, so pretty much if you look
Speaker 13: for me there, hopefully I'm there.
Speaker 1: Yeah, you are very googleable.
Speaker 12: Which is good.
Speaker 13: Yeah, definitely, that's that be it. A programmer back in
Speaker 13: the day gives it handy, you know, search engine optimization,
Speaker 13: that sort of stuff, so exactly.
Speaker 12: Yeah, and if anyone wants to look me up, I
Speaker 12: appreciate it. Yeah.
Speaker 1: And do you have anything this weekend that you're playing?
Speaker 1: Got any shows you're planning you want to plug?
Speaker 13: Not anything? Right now, I'm going to start doing the
Speaker 13: ones that I run, and you know, focus on quality
Speaker 13: over quantity, you know, so I focus a lot on those.
Speaker 13: But if they follow my uh Facebook, that's where I
Speaker 13: definitely update the most, I'd say, And okay, make some
Speaker 13: Facebook events and yeah, yeah, going to be booking hopefully fairs.
Speaker 13: That's what I want to get into a lot of,
Speaker 13: oh really, fares and events like that, kind of get
Speaker 13: out of the bar scene with the covers and do
Speaker 13: more of the summers, bigger summer events.
Speaker 1: I was going to say, summer is strugbly your busiest time.
Speaker 13: Right well, and the fair ground in Clinton is right.
Speaker 12: Up the road for me. Oh okay, I started to
Speaker 12: become a part of the Lions Club.
Speaker 13: Hopefully that's a good play some of these songs.
Speaker 12: It would be a broke man's dream.
Speaker 1: There you go, There you go, There you go. I
Speaker 1: think we should end the segment with another track from
Speaker 1: your studio, your studio album. I'll let you tell me,
Speaker 1: I'll let you pick. That's a good Uh.
Speaker 12: I'm trying to think if there's one that I hadn't played.
Speaker 1: Yeah, did you.
Speaker 13: Oh, there's a one called Survive that's a Survivor one.
Speaker 1: Yeah.
Speaker 12: Yeah, that's why I hadn't played.
Speaker 13: I was trying to think of what was on there. Okay, yeah,
Speaker 13: self recorded, and that one's also only about a week old.
Speaker 1: Oh no kidding.
Speaker 13: I've been doing a lot of writing and recording, getting
Speaker 13: it out of my mind and getting it on the airways.
Speaker 1: Yeah yeah, no, that is excellent. Okay, yep, I've got
Speaker 1: it here perfect. So we will close out the segment
Speaker 1: with this. If you are listening live on Saturday, stick
Speaker 1: around at the top of the are We've got brand
Speaker 1: new the American radio premiere of Elijah Jenkins new track
Speaker 1: Stay Tonight. And then immediately After that, we're going to
Speaker 1: be talking to the guys from Iron Jaw about their
Speaker 1: new album Cursed. They're going to be skyping in from Texas.
Speaker 1: But we will close out this segment with Survive. This
Speaker 1: is Sean Manchester and Sean thank you again.
Speaker 13: Thank you very much, and have a good day at Manchester.
Speaker 6: Have you laid alone? And monstars go out to everyone
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