Field Dispatch
Matt Connarton Unleashed 6-7-25 hour 2
Speaker 1: H M is a time. Where's the way enough to say?
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Speaker 16: Lead with your hall heart loves well it all big games.
Speaker 4: Let's stand to gather.
Speaker 7: And learn to love.
Speaker 16: Fuck.
Speaker 5: That is a very very cool song. Everybody's changing, and
Speaker 5: let's let me get that mic up and I'm going
Speaker 5: to ask I'm gonna ask him to so I don't
Speaker 5: screw up his last name. Welcome, how do you? Okay,
Speaker 5: go ahead and introduce yourself, Sarah, let me get these
Speaker 5: make sure this mic is working here, Go ahead and
Speaker 5: introduce yourself.
Speaker 7: My name is Stephen de Keir. Stephen de Keure, local
Speaker 7: musician from Nashvilla, New Hampshire. I played full time all
Speaker 7: around New Hampshire in the Massachusetts area. Tonight I'll be
Speaker 7: in York, Maine, York Beach playing from seven to ten pm.
Speaker 5: Okay to the show. Very cool, very cool. Yeah, So
Speaker 5: Stephen de Kure, Yes, that's what I said, okay, very good,
Speaker 5: very good, because you're I'm curious if your name ever
Speaker 5: gets messed up on.
Speaker 7: A poster, gets messed up all the time, all the time. Yes,
Speaker 7: got that.
Speaker 5: I'm gonna get this camera on you here so people
Speaker 5: can see who are watching online if you are just
Speaker 5: joining us. Matt Connorton Unleashed. We have entered our number
Speaker 5: two New Marrow dose here on this Saturday morning, and
Speaker 5: Steven Dick here is with us, and he brought his guitar.
Speaker 5: He's gonna play. He's gonna play for us in just
Speaker 5: a moment. But I love that song. So where was
Speaker 5: that recorded? Where did you do that?
Speaker 16: So?
Speaker 7: I've been recording with Charlie Brusso over at Woodshot Productions
Speaker 7: in Atkinson, New Hampshire. Okay, he's worked with like God,
Speaker 7: Smack and run DMC over the years, some pretty prominent names. Yeah,
Speaker 7: he's good friends of mine, a few of my other friends.
Speaker 7: So I've been working with him and I've been working
Speaker 7: on this EP coming out now on almost two years now.
Speaker 7: I've been working on it.
Speaker 5: Oh wow, yeah, Now how did you how did you
Speaker 5: come to work with him? Because obviously you know he's
Speaker 5: worked with some heavy hitters. I mean, how did that
Speaker 5: come about?
Speaker 10: So?
Speaker 7: Just mutual friends of my mom and dads and friend
Speaker 7: music friends of ours that I've known throughout the years, uh,
Speaker 7: you know, put me in touch with him, and I've
Speaker 7: been working with him ever since.
Speaker 5: How many are you putting out an EP or how many?
Speaker 7: Just an EP? It's my very first EP, so it'll
Speaker 7: be six songs. Oh wow, song EP.
Speaker 5: Very cool, congratulations on that. Who else is on? Who
Speaker 5: else is working?
Speaker 14: Like?
Speaker 5: Is it all just you?
Speaker 7: It's mostly just me. I have obviously Charlie producing it.
Speaker 7: He's putting most of it together for me. But I
Speaker 7: also have Jeff McGinnis. He's one of my lead guitarists
Speaker 7: on the on the track on the album as well.
Speaker 7: He was guitarists on Everybody's Changing as well. Oh okay,
Speaker 7: and he's super super talented, super super talented guy, really nice.
Speaker 7: He actually owns the Mojo's music.
Speaker 5: Oh yeah, ye oh very cool.
Speaker 7: Yeah, So that's what I'm working with on on that,
Speaker 7: and getting some other people in for bass and things
Speaker 7: like that, and usually I just do it myself though.
Speaker 5: Yeah, well do you want to play something for us?
Speaker 5: You got your guitar, let me turn that turn that
Speaker 5: guitar Apierroy've got the right. Oh that sounds nice. That
Speaker 5: sounds nice on the headphones.
Speaker 7: Yeah, all right. This one's called quiet moments. This is
Speaker 7: an original. All right, quiet.
Speaker 15: Moments all the long.
Speaker 18: Hours Friday, my beIN.
Speaker 4: So fill these patures.
Speaker 7: In the stories, arrange them your homeway, sing them for me,
Speaker 7: looking at my window as the sun creets the day, birds.
Speaker 4: Of singing, clean tree zoo.
Speaker 7: Tree writing songs come suweesally surrounded by me ches beudy play.
Speaker 7: The skits are day and tun high, create the fire high.
Speaker 3: I know you like.
Speaker 18: Fill these pages.
Speaker 7: Charble store horries, arrange them your home way, sing them
Speaker 7: for me.
Speaker 4: Looking down my window is the clouds over the day
Speaker 4: window is blooring meaning song its way.
Speaker 7: Writing songs come surreeasonly, surrounded by knee chous beauty, quiet moments.
Speaker 1: All along.
Speaker 18: House is empty. No once, Fill these pages.
Speaker 7: Lonely stor homies, range them your hollway. Sing for me.
Speaker 7: Quite a moment's a little rough, but you know a
Speaker 7: little rough, dude, that was beautiful.
Speaker 5: That was beautiful. Welcome everybody, if you are just joining us.
Speaker 5: We have Steven Dekire here with us. Alive in studio
Speaker 5: and that's that sounded fantastic.
Speaker 7: Thank you.
Speaker 5: How long have you been? How long have you been
Speaker 5: doing that?
Speaker 7: So have you been? No, I have been playing.
Speaker 8: Uh.
Speaker 7: So I started playing guitar when I was seven years old.
Speaker 5: Okay.
Speaker 7: My uncle got me an electric electric guitar. So I
Speaker 7: was playing you know Metallica, Iron ma it In, you
Speaker 7: know all the Mega Death, you know, Green Day. And
Speaker 7: then when I was freshman in high school, I had
Speaker 7: to do a guitar class, so I had to get
Speaker 7: an acoustic guitar because I didn't have enough for all
Speaker 7: the kids. So sure I had to go buy one,
Speaker 7: got one, never looked back. So I've been playing since
Speaker 7: I was like seven, and I've been doing like full
Speaker 7: time gigging for about a little over ten years.
Speaker 5: Oh, excellent, excellent.
Speaker 7: Wow.
Speaker 5: Where are you from?
Speaker 7: So? I was born in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Okay, moved to
Speaker 7: Nashville when I was about six years old. So I've
Speaker 7: been in Nasha since about two thousand and two thousand
Speaker 7: and one.
Speaker 5: Okay, Okay, Now how did you how did you when
Speaker 5: you were starting out? I mean, did you always do
Speaker 5: a solo acoustic thing or did you play a band?
Speaker 7: I've always done solo acoustic over the years. Now that
Speaker 7: i've you know, I've been doing it for a while,
Speaker 7: I've been trying to work more with like, you know,
Speaker 7: bands and like get up on stage with bands and
Speaker 7: as far as that goes. But I usually just do
Speaker 7: it solo.
Speaker 5: It's easier, right, I mean it's you know, you know,
Speaker 5: depend on anybody else for yeah, their availability and in
Speaker 5: terms of rehearsing and playing shows and all.
Speaker 7: That, exactly exactly. It's it's a it's a little bit
Speaker 7: it's a little bit easier to go about a business wise.
Speaker 5: Yeah, yeah, no doubt. Do you do covers as well?
Speaker 7: Or do do covers as well?
Speaker 5: Yeah?
Speaker 3: I do.
Speaker 7: I do mostly covers even at all my shows. Yeah,
Speaker 7: Like I said, this is the first EP I have
Speaker 7: coming out, So these are my first original songs that
Speaker 7: I have. Yeah, and so I mostly do covers and
Speaker 7: things like that.
Speaker 17: Yeah.
Speaker 5: How many originals do you have at this point? Would
Speaker 5: you say? I mean, can you even put a number
Speaker 5: on how many songs you have?
Speaker 7: I have about like six or seven, okay, Okay, I said,
Speaker 7: I rarely just started writing about maybe a year or
Speaker 7: two ago, okay, and moved back into you know, my
Speaker 7: parents and stuff, and yeah, my dad's been helping me
Speaker 7: a lot with you know, the writing and oh good,
Speaker 7: help me put together the music and things like that.
Speaker 5: What is it that motivated you to want to start writing?
Speaker 7: I've really just want to get my own music out there.
Speaker 7: I mean, I play, I do all the covers, I
Speaker 7: play live full time, and you know the next step
Speaker 7: is to get onto my own stage hopefully, you know
Speaker 7: what I mean, and have people come and see my music. Yeah, yeah, exactly,
Speaker 7: you know, put music out there that you know can
Speaker 7: help people along the way. And yeah, the ways that
Speaker 7: music's held me along the way.
Speaker 5: You know, you want to play another one? Yeah, of course, yeah, yeah,
Speaker 5: if you're just joining us, Stephen the Cure saying it right?
Speaker 7: Yep?
Speaker 5: Is he is here with us in in studio. Sounded amazing.
Speaker 7: Yeah, that's correct.
Speaker 5: And hear another one? Does that?
Speaker 11: Ever?
Speaker 3: Does?
Speaker 15: Uh?
Speaker 5: I I assume, like, what what's the I'm just curious
Speaker 5: what what's the most unusual, shall we say, pronunciation? You've
Speaker 5: heard of your name?
Speaker 7: I mean I've had I've had, I've had the queer,
Speaker 7: I've had the choir, I've had, I felt a lot. Yeah,
Speaker 7: declare declare mind better.
Speaker 5: How did you say it? I don't remember. He is
Speaker 5: for my blue Oh yeah, there you go.
Speaker 7: That sounds I've had people put a queue in front
Speaker 7: of it.
Speaker 5: Oh really yeah, yeah yeah, I can imagine, scarious. What
Speaker 5: are you gonna play for us next?
Speaker 7: I'm gonna do so, I'm actually gonna do a cover
Speaker 7: for you. This is a rail of Montane's empty.
Speaker 5: Nice nice.
Speaker 7: M gless screwed up to your knees, walks through the
Speaker 7: garden rooms with the bedfielder, never learned to come back.
Speaker 7: This seems choosing stair too dwel in.
Speaker 19: My sirsters.
Speaker 7: Walk on down the hill through the grass g joll
Speaker 7: and brown. Still it starts.
Speaker 19: Amount to that go of life, babe.
Speaker 7: I'm best Busty back there holding Rusty gotta like that
Speaker 7: sinks into this field collecting ray.
Speaker 20: Willow ways feel this way. So see so wes strange.
Speaker 7: Enoughty's got the busted sunsets. He's called the damn baden mornings.
Speaker 4: I use can field.
Speaker 7: Through market and Dusty. I'm still leaves and spoke. These
Speaker 7: words are alloud.
Speaker 4: No one hear me.
Speaker 7: L flowers across the chair, bid four flowers from your
Speaker 7: hair and gets me with a country mouth, sore playntside
Speaker 7: the rain and stamping on the leaves. To me, it
Speaker 7: sounds like they're up blooding us quite love with me.
Speaker 20: Willow ways feel this way? Soe so wess Strange.
Speaker 7: Well love looks my team means in the slip in
Speaker 7: my chest said to your best to destroy me. You see,
Speaker 7: I've been in the hell lay back so many times.
Speaker 7: My stadn't really kind of poor me. There's a lot
Speaker 7: of things I can give the man. There's a lot
Speaker 7: of ways to die. Yes, since I am ready there
Speaker 7: to walk side me, And there's a whole lot of things.
Speaker 4: I don't understand why so many people lie.
Speaker 7: Let's not hurt you, ounfuse the fir inside me will always.
Speaker 20: Feel this way. So so wiss strange.
Speaker 5: Steven Deckurrer here with us live in studio. That was amazing.
Speaker 5: That was a Ray Lemming I can't say his name either. Song.
Speaker 4: That was gorgeous.
Speaker 5: Yeah, that was really a beautiful light. That was really good.
Speaker 5: That was really good.
Speaker 7: So much.
Speaker 5: Is Is there anyone that you covered that you found
Speaker 5: challenging to do, like vocally.
Speaker 7: Or Steely Dan Amy Winehouse really Yeah, Yeah, vocally they're
Speaker 7: pretty challenging. I mean some of the new Benson Boone
Speaker 7: songs that I've been working on challenging as well.
Speaker 5: Now, what is it about so somebody like I'm curious
Speaker 5: that somebody like Seely Dan for example. Yeah, what is
Speaker 5: it that's that's challenging about that?
Speaker 7: Oh my god. They are such nerds when it comes
Speaker 7: to the musicality of it. Yeah, pronunciation of when when
Speaker 7: you know you're singing. And I mean Michael McDonald did
Speaker 7: an interview about how when he was recording PEG with
Speaker 7: Donald Fagan, Yeah, and how he was very that's the
Speaker 7: word I'm looking for. He wanted it perfectly. He wanted
Speaker 7: it perfectly every single time. So this pronunciation with his words,
Speaker 7: how he was pronunciating it, I was singing it everything.
Speaker 7: It took him like seventeen to eighteen takes no can
Speaker 7: do the harmonies on PEG or whatever he goes. It
Speaker 7: was one of the hardest things I've ever read to do.
Speaker 5: Oh wow wow.
Speaker 3: Yeah.
Speaker 5: Is it important to you when when you do these covers,
Speaker 5: is it important to you to sing them as closely
Speaker 5: as possible to the original.
Speaker 7: I like to bring a justice but also make it
Speaker 7: my own. Yeah, give it my own twist on it
Speaker 7: in a way, so it's not, oh hey, he's just
Speaker 7: you know, like the other everybody else the run of
Speaker 7: the mill, right right, Yeah, stand out a little bit.
Speaker 5: So yeah, no doubt, no doubt. What are do you
Speaker 5: have a favorite? Like, do you have a favorite cover
Speaker 5: that you do? Is there one that really kind of
Speaker 5: stands out of something to every show?
Speaker 7: I just I went over this. I get this question,
Speaker 7: actually asked a lot. Yeah, it's hard to say. I
Speaker 7: have like almost two hundred songs that I play off
Speaker 7: to my head, so yeah, it's hard to like pick
Speaker 7: and choose. It's usually ones that like I'm like just
Speaker 7: learning or you know what i mean, just getting out
Speaker 7: there to play. Yeah, as of lately it's been NOA
Speaker 7: Kn's Dial Drunk. I really enjoying playing that one out lately.
Speaker 5: Yeah.
Speaker 7: Yeah, it kind of always fluctuates for me.
Speaker 10: Yeah.
Speaker 5: Yeah, what's the longest show you've done?
Speaker 21: Oh?
Speaker 7: Man, the longest show I've done, I think was like
Speaker 7: seven and a half hours.
Speaker 5: Oh my god, Okay, tell me about it. Way seven
Speaker 5: and a half hours.
Speaker 7: Yeah, it was a private pool party.
Speaker 5: Because usually when I ask people this question, I'll get like, oh,
Speaker 5: you know, we did a five hours like seven and
Speaker 5: a half. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 7: So like I did like a lot of like the
Speaker 7: shows like l Street Tavern last year, and yeah, there
Speaker 7: was a couple of times like that. I had to
Speaker 7: do both of the shows because you know, one of
Speaker 7: the guys canceled. Yeah, so I had to go in
Speaker 7: there early, play from like three to three thirty to
Speaker 7: seven thirty, then play seven thirty to midnight or wow.
Speaker 7: Yeah it's rough. It's rough.
Speaker 5: Yeah yeah, but why we do it?
Speaker 7: You know what I mean?
Speaker 5: When you do something like that? Do you do anything
Speaker 5: special for your voice too?
Speaker 7: I really just drink tea and lemons. Oh that's really
Speaker 7: all I do. Especially, I didn't drink any today. I
Speaker 7: was running late this time.
Speaker 5: Oh you sound great, now you sound great? And yeah,
Speaker 5: but pretty unusual to sing this early, probably right.
Speaker 16: It is for me.
Speaker 7: Usually usually I'm waking up at like three really yeah, yeah,
Speaker 7: getting ready to go to work at six.
Speaker 5: Yeah, there you go, there you go, yep. So And
Speaker 5: as far as playing, I mean, obviously, with what you do,
Speaker 5: you're able to play. You know, you can play just
Speaker 5: about anywhere, but just about like do you get out
Speaker 5: of do you get out of New England?
Speaker 14: Much?
Speaker 5: Or do you kind of stick to.
Speaker 7: I Actually I haven't played. I play in Massachusetts a lot, Yeah,
Speaker 7: do like Brownies Pub. I usually do Muddy Waters where's
Speaker 7: that that's in Methune as well. Oh okay, yeah, and
Speaker 7: then a few other places that I've played, But other
Speaker 7: than that, I usually stay in New Hampshire, no kidding.
Speaker 5: Yeah, yeah, well yeah, I mean it's remarkable with you
Speaker 5: do a lot of breweries. I assume I do a
Speaker 5: lot of breweries.
Speaker 7: I do, so I work with not so costly productions.
Speaker 7: Oh excellent, Dmitri, no wonder you're so busy.
Speaker 5: Yeah, yeah, yeah, they do a great job.
Speaker 7: Yeah, so I work with them. I've been working with
Speaker 7: Paul Costley and Dmitry for over god, probably about eight
Speaker 7: years now.
Speaker 5: No kidding.
Speaker 7: Yeah, I'm working with them for a long time.
Speaker 5: Outstanding.
Speaker 7: Yeah, They've been nothing but good to me. And they
Speaker 7: helped me out with shows and you know, and and
Speaker 7: I booked myself as well, and some other people or
Speaker 7: whatever that I know through the industry.
Speaker 11: Yeah.
Speaker 7: Yeah, it keeps me busy.
Speaker 5: Yeah, no, that's fantastic.
Speaker 7: Out of Trouble, Yeah yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5: Do you want to play another one for us? Yeah,
Speaker 5: of course, trying to hear you play another one selfishly
Speaker 5: if you're just joining as we have Steven de Cure
Speaker 5: here and he sounds it sounds amazing. Yeah, level up
Speaker 5: on that guitar.
Speaker 7: What would you like to hear another cover original?
Speaker 5: I'm gonna leave that up to you. Okay, I'll leave
Speaker 5: that totally up to you.
Speaker 7: Let's do another original?
Speaker 5: All right?
Speaker 7: So this uh, this is the first single that I
Speaker 7: released off the EP, and I got it released on
Speaker 7: ninety two point five The River in Boston.
Speaker 5: Oh congratulations, Yeah to me.
Speaker 7: I was very excited about that. And it's called Towards
Speaker 7: the Sun goes like this all right, it's so well.
Speaker 7: We talked for hours seeing nothing else. Indor do stocks sweet.
Speaker 21: Yzaging bound, do things sweets.
Speaker 4: Sit in non nacking sheep.
Speaker 7: Shipping stand from a cool blass shop, Zaga. When I
Speaker 7: opens the sound sack down, wanna open bottom.
Speaker 4: Ferns and dave free time that we fall now will shoe?
Speaker 4: I had new car. You took those.
Speaker 7: Slave street two mouth face not out, No another slap
Speaker 7: in the fees.
Speaker 4: And now we it's stand believe in your please, I said,
Speaker 4: he a long write his song in pain?
Speaker 7: Canzack own wanna open sorts of Sun czack gown, wanna
Speaker 7: open bottom fun cauza own, wanna old bye sorts of
Speaker 7: Sun gazack gown, wanna old bun sords A son zack
Speaker 7: o wanna old bun sords A son zack O wanna
Speaker 7: old bun botsome fun zack O wanna old bye order
Speaker 7: sign Zach down out o.
Speaker 18: Sorts of Sun.
Speaker 5: Towards the Sun by Stephen Dick Heure Live in Studio, Fantastic, fantastic.
Speaker 11: What do you?
Speaker 5: I feel like I feel like your songs are pretty upbeat? Like,
Speaker 5: what do you What do you like to write about?
Speaker 1: Uh?
Speaker 7: You know, I really like to write about, you know,
Speaker 7: things that people can relate to. Yeah, and they can
Speaker 7: you know, take from their own lives and you know,
Speaker 7: either use it to help them with whatever they have
Speaker 7: going on. I mean Towards the Sun for instances essentially
Speaker 7: about you know, no matter where you are in your
Speaker 7: life that you're happy, down, sad, you know, depressed, whatever
Speaker 7: it is, there's always you know, look one eye towards
Speaker 7: the Son. There's always something better. No matter where you are,
Speaker 7: if you're in a good spot, you can always be
Speaker 7: doing better. Yeah, you know what I mean, just try
Speaker 7: and stay positive. Yeah, yeah, you know, yeah, very good,
Speaker 7: try and send other positive vibe.
Speaker 5: I just noticed your shirt too. I didn't notice it
Speaker 5: for a honey DiFranco. Yeah, I met her probably she
Speaker 5: Oh my god, it's more than twenty years ago now.
Speaker 5: She was playing at a show in Providence, Okay. And
Speaker 5: at the time, I was working for a promoter, Joe Fletcher,
Speaker 5: who's he's not here. He's on the West Coast now,
Speaker 5: but he used to. He used to have big world
Speaker 5: productions here in New Hampshire, and so he was he
Speaker 5: was putting on shows around New England and he did
Speaker 5: a bunch of shows with her. But yeah, that's that's
Speaker 5: how I met her. And yeah, she was fantastic.
Speaker 7: She's absolutely incredible. So I just went and saw her,
Speaker 7: first time I've ever seen her. I used to watch
Speaker 7: her show videos all the time. My mom got me
Speaker 7: into her. Yeah, I had front row seats with her
Speaker 7: and I called out. I yelled at shame play shameless
Speaker 7: her never And it happened to be the last song
Speaker 7: that she was going to play that now. Oh wow,
Speaker 7: she goes, Oh, you got lucky. I have a video
Speaker 7: of it. She handed me the set list. Oh no, Okaddy,
Speaker 7: Yeah it was really cool. Oh, very nice, definitely awesome.
Speaker 7: She's incredible.
Speaker 5: Yeah, my favorites, yeah absolutely, Yeah.
Speaker 7: Was that recent or very recent? It was at the
Speaker 7: oh She's it was? It was in April nineteenth, Yeah,
Speaker 7: April nineteenth, I believe it was.
Speaker 5: Okay, where did you hear her.
Speaker 7: In Somerville Summerville is Aville Theater?
Speaker 5: Yeah, yeah, I haven't. I haven't kept up with her unfortunately, so,
Speaker 5: but I assume she's still putting out. Uh does she
Speaker 5: still have her label? Do you know Righteous Babe?
Speaker 7: Is that still yeah? Righteous Spabe Records?
Speaker 5: Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's one of the cool things
Speaker 5: about her too, is you know, not only uh did
Speaker 5: I always love her music? But I shouldn't say past
Speaker 5: tense because she's obviously still active, but but I always
Speaker 5: thought it was cool that, you know, she she started
Speaker 5: her own label. She started that indie label at a
Speaker 5: time where like, like today, it's not even a big deal,
Speaker 5: right because of the Internet, anybody can can start a
Speaker 5: lay you know, quote unquote right, but she but she
Speaker 5: did it at a time when it was unusual, and
Speaker 5: you know, I I know she's talked in interviews about
Speaker 5: how you know, she faced a lot of headwinds doing that.
Speaker 5: People didn't necessarily believe in her, give her a chance.
Speaker 7: They were like, I think, uh, she's done a lot
Speaker 7: for the women of the you know, yeah community.
Speaker 5: Oh totally absolutely, Yeah, yeah, because I remember one interview
Speaker 5: I read with her, she was saying, like, you know,
Speaker 5: people just looked at her like, who is this chick
Speaker 5: who thinks she can do this?
Speaker 22: You know?
Speaker 5: But but she was determined to do it, and she
Speaker 5: did it.
Speaker 7: Give somebody an opportunity. If they have the drive and
Speaker 7: the hunger, they'll they'll make it happen.
Speaker 5: Yeah, yeah, one who So obviously she's a big inspiration
Speaker 5: to you.
Speaker 7: Yeah, very big inspiration.
Speaker 5: Like who else? Who else?
Speaker 7: You gotta throw the Beatles in there? Yeah, the Beatles
Speaker 7: are number one for me.
Speaker 5: Yeah.
Speaker 7: Huge Jim Crochey fan, are you?
Speaker 5: Yeah?
Speaker 7: Huge Jim Croach fan. I just saw his son play
Speaker 7: Croachy plays Croachy.
Speaker 5: Oh no, kidd see, I didn't even know that was
Speaker 5: the thing.
Speaker 7: Yeah, yeah, he does it at two plow.
Speaker 5: What's the son's name?
Speaker 7: Oh interesting, it looks just like it said. Oh yeah, yeah,
Speaker 7: so I saw him My front Road tickets to that
Speaker 7: one too. My friend Liz also Scott does for me.
Speaker 7: Oh excellent, very nice to her, very nice her. Yeah,
Speaker 7: And so I met him after the show. Okay, talk
Speaker 7: to him. I always open up every show I usually
Speaker 7: do with uh, don't mess around with Jim.
Speaker 5: Oh really.
Speaker 7: My dad always laughs at me for it. He's like,
Speaker 7: you gonna open up until mets around with you. So
Speaker 7: I met him and talked to him for a few minutes,
Speaker 7: showed him my tattoo. Yeah as much as dad, you know.
Speaker 7: It was a big inspiration to me. And I'm glad
Speaker 7: that he's carrying on his legacy.
Speaker 5: Oh yeah, no, that's extremely cool. That's extremely cool.
Speaker 7: Yeah. So you know the Croaches, Steely, Dan Simon and Garfunkle. Yep,
Speaker 7: I'm an old soul. I really like the old school,
Speaker 7: the classics. Yeah, the music that lives on you know.
Speaker 7: Sure that's meaning you know what I mean? Yeah, I
Speaker 7: can still relate to it nowadays.
Speaker 5: Yeah, yeah, absolutely absolutely. Do you want to play? Do
Speaker 5: you want to play one more? We have time? We
Speaker 5: will play one more live one you if you're just
Speaker 5: joining us. Stephen da Ciros here with us live in
Speaker 5: studio on this Saturday morning, singing much earlier in the
Speaker 5: day that he's used to. But he sounds he sounds great.
Speaker 7: We'll try this one out.
Speaker 5: This is a cover, right, something's uh that's doing that
Speaker 5: cord might have been loose. Yeah, try that again. It's
Speaker 5: it's almost like I wonder if your arm was hitting
Speaker 5: the cord going into the guitar, it might have been
Speaker 5: what it was I was hearing. Yeah, I was hearing
Speaker 5: something like uh, percuss. Yeah, that's much better.
Speaker 23: Yeah.
Speaker 14: Cool.
Speaker 7: So it goes like this from the stupaka, you know,
Speaker 7: but it's raining from corn and drawn from mid surrounding
Speaker 7: your perspective of sween zeging before.
Speaker 4: My oudience still my happy man. I used to be
Speaker 4: a dowbting forget about it whatever, And it's all the
Speaker 4: same many ways. And now you back forth to bunch
Speaker 4: that throne in the name of someone long and all
Speaker 4: fort she will be young.
Speaker 7: Junkin lorn drap advancing his shins, being a radio. And
Speaker 7: now I don't knock you in they do me in
Speaker 7: the corn. Heck, even name is my emergency phone call, honey,
Speaker 7: ringing ring, even the COPSATCHI rover raining and now telling
Speaker 7: chunk countside chunk outside you monteto and from bots.
Speaker 4: To me and recognize from charming too alarming.
Speaker 7: In seconds, I'll be betrid and now let the pain matastasize.
Speaker 4: But next morning I'll forget it. In the time, it all.
Speaker 3: Is all.
Speaker 1: And now you bad all.
Speaker 7: To punch yourself a throne, win the name of someone
Speaker 7: now a long and a.
Speaker 4: Ford sheam of being young, junkin.
Speaker 7: Alone, traffic lancing is transmining radio.
Speaker 4: And now I don't knock you in they do me
Speaker 4: in the corner.
Speaker 15: I gave your name.
Speaker 7: Is my emergency phone call, honey, ringing ring, even the
Speaker 7: cops that you rover.
Speaker 4: Raindow and that time Chunk got time, Chunk got time
Speaker 4: for you, and no time for you.
Speaker 7: And I beg you surger stayed my car, took give
Speaker 7: you my blood alcohol. I'll ride on with the pronouncing seal,
Speaker 7: and I'll change my faith out.
Speaker 4: Pray it's a flag. It's sweet.
Speaker 7: I sass your call me back, some of you danger
Speaker 7: to yourself, help me.
Speaker 4: Surch to stay in my car to give you my
Speaker 4: blood out call.
Speaker 7: I'll ride on with the pronouncing seal, and I've changed
Speaker 7: my faith out.
Speaker 4: Kiss the bads. It's sweet.
Speaker 7: I swiss you call me back. Somebody do you do
Speaker 7: this to yourself?
Speaker 4: And I said, and now you proud all two punches
Speaker 4: down the throne, win the name of someone now no
Speaker 4: longer nor for the shame of being young.
Speaker 7: Junk in alone, drift the lights in the strings in
Speaker 7: the radio.
Speaker 4: And now I don't like you an need to you
Speaker 4: mean the call.
Speaker 7: I gave your name is my emergency phone call, honey
Speaker 7: and ring and ring eving the cops. Thatt you for
Speaker 7: ring you know not time chunk countdown, chunk countwn for you.
Speaker 5: Mm hmm. Gorgeous, gorgeous, just gorgeous than you. Absolutely very nice,
Speaker 5: very nice. Stephen Deakira here with us live in the studio,
Speaker 5: sounding amazing. We should remind people. So so the do
Speaker 5: you know when the EP is going to be out?
Speaker 7: So I'm hoping the EP is going to be this July.
Speaker 7: That's what I'm hoping for. I go back into the
Speaker 7: studio on Father's Day, finish up the last song on there,
Speaker 7: and then I just want to add some finishing touches
Speaker 7: and mix some master it and get it out to
Speaker 7: the people. Man, it'll be a nice big weight off
Speaker 7: my shoulders.
Speaker 5: Yeah, no doubt, no doubt about that.
Speaker 3: Huh.
Speaker 5: Very cool. And then where are you playing this weekend?
Speaker 5: Do you have anything to plug this weekend?
Speaker 7: So tonight I'll be York Beach, York, Maine end the
Speaker 7: York Beach in and then I'll be doing that from
Speaker 7: seven to ten pm.
Speaker 5: Okay.
Speaker 7: And then tomorrow afternoon I will be at the Portsmouth
Speaker 7: Gaslight Deck two to five pm.
Speaker 5: Okay, very good.
Speaker 7: Yeah, and then I have like a couple of days
Speaker 7: off and then back at it again.
Speaker 3: Yeah.
Speaker 5: Sweet?
Speaker 3: Uh?
Speaker 5: And where is the best place to go online for
Speaker 5: people like keep this book?
Speaker 7: Is the best place to go online? And check me out?
Speaker 7: Stephen d Kere. You can add my main profile page.
Speaker 7: You can add my music page of just Stephen ded
Speaker 7: Cure music.
Speaker 5: We should probably tell people how to spell your name too.
Speaker 7: Yes, it's s t E p h e N. My
Speaker 7: last name is d E c U I r e yes. Yes,
Speaker 7: and you pronounce it d q d cur yes.
Speaker 5: Excellent, outstanding, outstanding, I think. Uh So. Another studio track
Speaker 5: that you sent us is this Quiet Moments. Yes, you
Speaker 5: didn't play this one right?
Speaker 7: I played that? That was the first one I played.
Speaker 5: Oh, that was the first one you played. Maybe we
Speaker 5: shoul should maybe we should replay the one we opened with.
Speaker 5: Then yeah, well that's okay. Actually, now we'll let people
Speaker 5: hear the studio version of Quiet Moments. Yeah yeah, yeah,
Speaker 5: Maybe I'll play the other one again afterward, though, because
Speaker 5: I really like that Everybody's changing. I really I really
Speaker 5: like that one a lot. Thank you. That's excellent, outstanding, outstanding.
Speaker 5: Uh So, if you are listening live, by the way,
Speaker 5: is Katie here? She is in the billion Katie Dobbins
Speaker 5: is coming up in the third hour, so it'll be
Speaker 5: nice to see her and I get to hear her.
Speaker 5: And did she bring her guitar? Good? Okay, And we
Speaker 5: will close out this segment with this. This is called
Speaker 5: Quiet Moments. Stephen de Cure again, thank you so much.
Speaker 7: Thank you so much.
Speaker 3: Quiet Moments.
Speaker 15: All the long.
Speaker 22: Ice ride day, my pan and Sloan. Fill these pages.
Speaker 3: With the starries.
Speaker 15: Arrange on your.
Speaker 19: Way, sing for me.
Speaker 7: Looking out my window as the sun reads the day,
Speaker 7: birds of singing, laying tree to tree.
Speaker 12: Right, adding songs come Soweely, surrounded by me.
Speaker 3: Just beuy, play the kids.
Speaker 4: Day and to night, create that bar hide.
Speaker 12: I know you lie.
Speaker 4: Fill these pages.
Speaker 19: With Joe boot Store Harris. Arrange on your away, sing
Speaker 19: for me.
Speaker 15: Looking out my window.
Speaker 11: Is the cloudscoover of the day.
Speaker 4: The wind is going ringing song dance way.
Speaker 12: Writing, songs come sweets, so writing by magues.
Speaker 23: Beardy, quiet moments, a long houses sempty.
Speaker 15: Nor once on.
Speaker 4: Fill these pages.
Speaker 11: With long star hurries, range of your own way, seem for.
Speaker 24: Me bally living thing.
Speaker 3: Dier sit in here.
Speaker 15: In the chairs things again, wand then wear hair. This
Speaker 15: world's school.
Speaker 16: Socks of wool, horror, all low round, watch these buildings,
Speaker 16: grumble to them, Graham.
Speaker 1: Bo these change.
Speaker 7: Children, mountains, not the s.
Speaker 24: It's change.
Speaker 25: Waiting, waiting, waiting when.
Speaker 15: We see this hay.
Speaker 20: Spreading through the crowd.
Speaker 15: Affoording boots are a long boy.
Speaker 16: No two parties, says Star, designed to divine.
Speaker 15: Friends and family.
Speaker 25: But she on shibody, change joins the change.
Speaker 15: Wheny waiting wait wait.
Speaker 16: Balla chest shunts holding all those strings. We're just ball
Speaker 16: bits in this bullet go rain, lead with your hall
Speaker 16: hoar loves wear it all bigs.
Speaker 4: Let's stand to gather.
Speaker 15: And learn to love fucka.
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