Field Dispatch
Matt Connarton Unleashed 6-8-24 hour 2
Game Plan
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believe you want your f fetee. The two gone face another tree, not
today fifteen The two ste based another stream. No where you s say to
the sky we look the mor We'll find a way refine every day, listen
a way to go back and say all the things you wanted to say.
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be I'll be this way to win and it makes me break down the car.
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the time. Take some time to judge your friends, resent your mom beside.
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today spent produce no face of the sea nowhere. So you are no come
now was come to me your soories line lies snail line our sense where from
the grand can't guess? Yeah? Or called woodburg No not two day,
called woodburger, No not tew day. Oh boy bird no not two days
boys bird, No not two days. So jeans get spend trying to holler
at the time, and don't wasting time as I mean my shell all die.
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to four? Never would last? Take some time to change your friends,
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the juice of face another stream. No, so take to the sky.
We love thee well fine, no way by every I love everything about that
song that is called Face of Death. The band is More in the Light
and I believe we have members of More in the Light with us on the
phone. Hello, welcome, Hey, yeah, you doing good? Good?
Who do we have? Who's who's on the line with us? This
is Dwayne from More in the Light. Dwayne, what do you do in
the band? I'm the original founder of the band. Play guitar, do
some vocals, write a lot of the music. Well, I have to
tell you so, I love that song and I love the other one too.
We're gonna play the other one at the end of our conversation. But
that is great stuff, man. I love everything about it. And you
know what's kind of cool about it too, is and I'm sure I'm not
the only one to make this observation. And I don't know if this is
your intention was your intention when he wrote it? But you know, the
title Face of Death, you know, you think it's gonna be something kind
of, you know, foreboding and really dark, but then you listen to
it. The lyrics are are quite optimistic and positive and and it really just
kind of gets you going. The adrenaline of it is remarkable, and I
just have everything about it. It's like the perfect song. Man. I
love it. Oh thank you? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. See it's
kind of like the overall theme of a lot of the lyrics and stuff that
we do. You know, like, basically, life can get you down,
but you know there's some great things about it too, so you know
you just got to stay positive. And yeah, oh I love it,
man, I love it. Yeah, the image, even the name more
in the light. You know, you see moren in the name of the
band and you think it's going to be something darker, but no, the
message is great. How long has more in the Light been a band?
How long have you guys been around? I started the band in late twenty
seventeen, I think. Okay, we started as a three piece and then
quickly became a four, and then a five and now a six. No
kidding, Wow, yeah, you do have a I guess I'm not completely
surprised because you have a big sound, But six guys in a band that's
a lot. So do you do you have like a triple guitar thing going
on there? It's two guitars, bass, keyboards, drums, and singer.
Okay, okay, yeah? Is that challenging? See I've been in
a lot of bands, but I think the biggest band I was ever in
was with a five piece. But I would imagine like having six guys in
a band, it must be challenging in terms of rehearsal and booking shows,
working with everyone's schedules or maybe not, I don't know. It's a little
challenging, especially because there's some distance between a couple of the members in the
band. Because we're spread out from you know, we've got a member in
the South Shore, a member up towards you guys, and then the rest
of us spread out in Connecticut. So we don't end up in the same
room as each other very often, but we talk every day. We share
files, we share ideas, and we get together when we can, and
when we've got gigs coming up, we try to get in the same room
and prepare for it the best we can. But we COVID kind of during
that time, kind of talk us how to basically be able to exist this
way because we were forced to do it this way. Yeah, through that
and it just ended up clicking and working for us, and we found,
you know, ways to continue to be productive throughout any of that, and
when we can't be together, we still find ways to keep moving and doing
things. You know, that makes sense. And that's a subject that's come
up a lot on the show over the past couple of years, is how,
you know, the pandemic was awful, but we have to find those
silver linings where we can. And one of the big silver linings seems to
be that it really kind of forced people to be in terms of being creative,
not only was there a spike in creativity generally because a lot of people
suddenly found themselves with a lot of free time on their hands, but also
in terms of learning ways to be creative and to collaborate with other people,
you know, like the ability to email files back and forth. Obviously we've
had that for a very long time now, but with the pandemic, people
really kind of took it to a new level in terms of collaborating virtually,
and we saw all kinds of interesting Yeah, we really we just found ways
to that It worked for us in the time, and we had in experimenting
to find ways to make making it work and stuff like that. We just
found a formula that really did work, and you know, we just kind
of have run with it and we've continued that. We're in the middle of
recording recording our brand new full length album too, and a lot of that
is is the way we're doing it is a result of the way we did
our first full length during COVID and stuff. So we just have a process
that really seems to work for everybody, and now we're all a little more
experienced with it, so it's it's flowing you better now. That makes sense,
and obviously so twenty seventeen. So the band's been around for a little
bit. Has it been the same lineup this entire time? No? Like
I said in twenty seventeen, it started out with me on guitar and vocals
and a friend of mine on drums and a friend of mine on bass,
right, and it was just a trio. But when we wrote the first
EP, I realized that I wasn't going to be able to perform at live
singing yea and playing the way I would like to. So we auditioned vocalists
and that's when we brought in Andrew. We became a four piece. And
then my original drummer relocated his family down to North Carolina at the time right
before our debut show, and Kyle, who's our drummer now filled in and
then eventually end up becoming our full time drummer. Yeah. And then when
we recorded the debut full length album, I did so much hard work on
it, layering and all that stuff that we realized that we were going to
need another guitar player to pull the stuff off live as well. And Kieran
is a friend of ours in the local metal scene, and so he came
in and we became a five piece, and we had keys, as you
know, we had guest appearances on keys and had keys in our music,
but didn't have a full time member. But now Autumn is our full time
keyboard player and we're a six piece and it's a really big, full sound
and it's been pretty good. But yeah, there's there's been some lineup shifts
and stuff and a change in the sound. From the beginning, it was
definitely a more stripped down, doomier sound. Yeah, and and it's kind
of morphed into a more traditional metal type thing, but with the doume element
still there and the lyrical theme still pretty much the same for the most part.
Yeah, as the founder of the band, is it when you when
you have to make these decisions about expanding the group itself, bringing in more
members as you've had to do incrementally over the years, is it difficult to
do that or because I would imagine maybe there's a part of you that feels
like because you started this project, is there a part of you that feels
like, geez, I don't know if I want to keep bringing in more
people because I don't want to get away from my original vision or or does
it just seem such like such a natural, inorganic thing to do in order
to further your vision or what what's kind of the thought process like that.
I think everything that we've done, as far as the members, it's been
really kind of a like perfect. It's just worked out really good. I
mean, everybody that's in the band right now at such a big element to
the sound that the way the way it fills up. I mean, Kyle's
an excellent drummer, and you know, Bill, our base player, just
really fills things out, and then the keyboard over the top of that.
Everything just mixes really well together. Everybody that'shes the two guitar sound with me
and Kieran, the ability to do more lead work and not have anything drop
out, it's been really good too. It's just it's just made us a
better band and we continue to grow and we never write the same song,
which is really fun too. And that's one of the main things in this
band. When I started, it was I'm going to do a band that's
no compromise on my sound. I've been in bands over the years that it
was always compromising and whatever, and that I just wanted to do what I
wanted to do and I didn't want to be boxed in. So you know,
we write what we want to write, and and we don't let any
kind of you know, genre definition or anything like that, you know,
keep us. We just just do it and make it our own. Yeah.
Yeah, I'm curious too about your live show because obviously the kind of
songs these songs are so I mean, they're just big and uh, you
know, they have an epic quality about them. I would imagine that lends
itself to some theatrics or maybe not. Maybe I mean, I mean you've
got a lot, you know, with just six people in the band,
You've got enough to contend with with that, So I don't know. I
mean, do you introduce any any special effects or theatrics in your live set
or do you just get up and play or I imagine I imagine it's very
high energy regardless. Yeah, we don't really, it's not really like any
kind of a theatrical presentation, mainly due to the fact that, you know,
most of the places we player have just pick enough stages for all six
of us to sit on them. Yeah. No, that makes sense,
that makes sense. Yeah. So yeah, we just we just come out
when we try to play the songs you know, and present them as true
to you know, the way we recorded them. No, no, no,
no gimmicks, no tracks, no nothing. We just come out and
we just play our songs and then that's just a real, real, more
in the light sound. Yeah. Yeah, oh that's cool. Yeah.
Do you play out a lot? Are you doing a lot of shows?
You're calling us from the road now right, Well, not not quite yet.
I'll be getting the road this afternoon. We're going to do show up
in New Hampshire in nashuat Terminus to We'll be debuting our new singer. Oh
yeah, we have a We have a new singer that this just came about
about a month ago or so, and this will be his first show with
us. Oh cool. He's been a friend of mine for a few years.
He's got a great voice, he's a he's a great fit. Working
on the new music with him and everything sounded really great and I'm pretty excited
about it. We just have this show right now and then we're in Cambridge
on July nineteenth. We've been limiting what we book because we're trying to get
this album and focus on uh, you know, all the recording and getting
this album done before we start, you know, doing a bunch of live
stuff again. So maybe later this year you'll start to see us a little
bit more often by cool cool. Do you have any kind of an eta
on the album? Well, we just uh, we're we're working on our
first mixes of the first single now, but we still have a lot of
work recording wise, uh, with vocals and keys and and some bass.
Uh. So it's it's gonna take us definitely a couple more months to get
everything completely uh, recorded, mixed, mastered, the whole nine yards,
and then and then figuring out exactly what our plan is. So it's gonna
be a little while, but uh, we plan on releasing something fairly soon,
uh to give people a taste of the uh the new vocalist and what
the new album might start to sound like. Sure. Sure, So these
tracks that we're hearing today, these have been out for a bit, right,
So these are what the previous vocalist obviously. Yeah, the one that
you just played, a Face of Death, was on our last EP,
which we put out about a year and a half ago. Okay, and
then I believe we sent the other song we sent is when the Fear subsides,
and that was on the first full length, which came out in twenty
twenty one. I believe, Okay, okay, yeah, that's a yeah.
I'm looking forward to playing that one too. Just just really really good
stuff. Is it when new members come into the band, which obviously you
know you've you've had to do a number of times, especially as the band
has expanded, is it does it take them a while to learn these songs
because they're they're pretty complex, and you know, even even just the vocals
are on a face of death, there's a lot going on there. I
mean, I would imagine it takes new members a little while to get acclimated.
Well, the way it's happened, honestly, hasn't been like Andrew came
in right away, right at the beginning, so he was our original singer.
Yeah he was. He was kind of with us the whole time,
so it wasn't like coming he was coming in and learning like three songs at
the time when the person is because that's where where we're doing as our first
demo. And then Kyle came in real early too, and we didn't have
a lot of material, so he's been there through the whole process. And
then you know, most of the live shows that we play are somewhere between
a thirty and a forty five minute set in most cases. So anybody that's
coming in new, like like when Autumn came in and now Andy, that's
the you know, they're they're learning, you know, somewhere between thirty and
forty five minutes. And with us and our song length, that's that's typically
about six songs, So they're not it's not like too overwhelming. I mean,
it's definitely a lot to learn, and uh Andy the new singer has
done prepared for tonight a very short amount of time, so it's it's definitely
a lot, but we're not whiting off too much. And that now once
we get these two shows out of the way, that Andy can focus more
on the new material and learning all of that and getting that recorded. It's
a process, but the way it's worked it, I don't think we've ever
overloaded anybody. That's good. That's good. It seems to work out pretty
good. Yeah. By the way, any special meaning to the name more
in the Light doesn't have any any special meaning to you. I just when
I years and years before I even started this band. I just I had
that name for a song I think in a previous band or something I was
writing, and I just really like the name. And uh, I think
it conveys basically what I write and stuff like that. Like I said,
you know, it's it's dark music, but there's there's a light there and
no. Absolutely, I just felt right, you know, yeah, and
uh, I think it's a pretty good name. It's it's pretty unique,
and it conveys what we're it matches the music. Yeah. Yeah, Like
I was saying, you know, if you pay attention to the lyrics,
there's there's actually a lot of positivity and optimism there. It's it's pretty cool.
It kind of it kind of sneaks in there, you don't. You
don't necessarily expect it, which I like. So we're going to play this
other track when the Fear subsides in a moment again, really really good.
I love the I love that big epic sound. Man. You guys got
a great thing going here, So I know you got the Yeah, absolutely,
man, absolutely, I know you got the show tonight at Terminus and
Nashua. So, uh, good luck there. That's that's a really cool.
Jenny and I have been there. I don't know if you've actually physically
been in that room yet, but I tell everybody it's like I haven't when
you when you walk into it, it's like another world, that's all I'll
say. It's really Yeah, I'm looking forward to it. I've heard good
things. Oh yeah, yeah, No, they're doing a great job there,
absolutely so. Uh so we'll let you go. I'm again, I'm
a big fan. I love your sound and have a great show tonight,
and uh we will uh you know, when the album's coming out and everything.
We'll definitely have you back and definitely want to have you back and uh
and play some of the new stuff and talk with you some more. So.
Dwayne from More in the Light, thank you so much. Thank you.
All right, man, Tank you a good one. All right,
you too, Bye bye. All right. That is Dwayne from the band
More in the Light. We're gonna play this track when the fear subsides,
and then when we come back, we're gonna play something from our friend Dylan
Reynolds and we'll have him I think he's joining us via Skype and we'll talk
with him for a bit. Really looking forward to that. But uh,
here it is this is when the fearsome sides the band is more in the
light. We should have seen the side it was also clean. Now it's
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dreams and all the two. First allis we won't ever rise again. If
bega leady go past the hid, then it's got two p J. How
would be even so five? But good things we did not do. We're
dying and there's nothing we can't breaking full a chance to read the gap burning
full under beging God cats took out the gold. We're always at each other's
school. We can't up on a stage at all days. A bow to
those walls. We will never rise again and again will pass beh itil it's
got too. However, been so bad back and the chagomon gold, and
we've always at each other's good. That's a more extichon all all dreams about
until those four pies. We won't ever rise again. And against the basket
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morning. We are witness to an unprecedented trophy as a check over nuclear power
plant in the Ukrainian SSR was drawn apart by a cataclysmic explosion, and,
as your report suggests, has reacting them before, suffered a catastrophic meltdown,
triggering a blast of bio natural force as certain the facility's containment structures. Eyewitnesses
described a scene of apocalyptic horror as flames lick the sky, casting an eerie
glow over the stricer plant. Widespread pan ecrips the region as residents flee for
their lives, desperate to escape the looming specter radiation. We the nightmare desmit
mayor. Disturbing accounts are emerging of grotesque mutations among both humans and wildlife in
the vicinity and the disaster zone. Reports speaking to form reaches the bodies warped
by the invisible hand of nuclear fallout, haunting the desolate life escape flout,
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accent in the setting up all kils we all where they are. Hey,
everybody, this is Matt Connorton unleashed. That is uh pripiet. I'm not
sure I'm saying that exactly correctly from Dylan Reynolds. Uh, that is from
his album so well, his EP I should say, called Radiation Sickness.
Dylan is supposed to be with us. He was going to either be calling
or skyping in and uh, we haven't heard from him today, So I
hope everything's all right. He's not someone we'd snow casually. He's a friend
of ours and a friend of the show, so so he definitely, Uh
it's not like he forgot so something. I hope nothing's wrong. But we've
uh, Jenny and I both tried to reach out to him, and you
know, he had told me the other day he was excited about coming on
this morning. So I just hope everything's all right. But I do I
do recommend that you check out Dylan Reynolds. It's called Radiation Sickness. It's
a full EP and it's about the Chernobyl nuclear disaster that happened in year was
that nineteen eighty six, So I'm old enough to remember, and I wanted
to talk to Dylan about this, but maybe he's running late. I don't
know. We'll see what happens. But I remember coming home from school that
day and that was the big story on the news, and I was I
recalled being very worried, like I was scared, Yeah, because I didn't
know. I didn't know what was gonna happen, Like, was there this
cloud of radiation that was going to drift across the world and eventually reached the
United States and just poison and kill us all. And watching the news though,
actually made me feel a little bit better because no one on Like I
remember watching Peter Jennings on ABC because my routine at the time was I'd get
home from school and I would turn on General Hospital at three o'clock, so
I had ABC on. Yes, I watched General Hospital when I was a
kid. No, a lot of us, but a lot of us did
anyway, So I would turn on ABC and Peter Jennings was talking about the
Chernobyl nuclear disaster. So obviously General Hospital wasn't on that day. It was
preempted because of the news. And like I said, I was worried.
The news had already broken while I was still at school. So when I
got home and I turned it on, I was like, oh no.
Now for me, it was a little bit different because I was in Plymouth,
Massachusetts, and back in the eighties, the Pilgrim Nuclear power Plant did
not have a good reputation and was in the news regularly, oh for issues.
So having that happened, really I actually got really scared at all.
Yeah, and wondered, are they going to bring out those pills they were
talking about, because at one point in Plimit they actually gave out iodine pills.
Yeah, they actually gave them out at one point. Yeah. So
it was because it was kind of nerve wracking to live so close to a
power plant. Yeah. Well, I remember watching on the news and I
became less worried about how it was going to affect us, because everybody who
was talking about it, you know, there was some concern about nuclear contamination,
you know, like a cloud of radiation kind of traveling with the jet
stream and eventually reaching the United States, but the concern about that seemed to
be minimal. People didn't seem to be too worried that that that was actually
going to happen, that that cloud of radiation might travel a bit, you
know and contaminate the region. But it wasn't. But it wasn't as though
it was going to. I mean, I don't understand the science behind it,
but I remember someone explaining that there was no way that that radiation could
that cloud could sort of hold together, for lack of a way of putting
it again, I don't know the science for it to actually you know,
travel to another continent and uh and affect anybody. So then I felt better.
But I remember going home from school, walking home from school that day,
thinking, you know, are we all going to get this cloud of
radiation? But uh so then I felt better. But it was it was
fascinating. Nothing like that had ever happened, nothing on that scale had ever
happened before or since. But uh yeah, so that's what that's what Dylan's
EP is about. It's called Radiation Sickness, and it's about the uh it's
about the Chernobyl disaster. But uh yeah, but he uh, I don't
know. I don't think he's gonna make it. I think something must.
Maybe he doesn't have power where he is. Maybe there's a storm that's moved
through the area and I knocked out his internet. I don't know. We
will certainly reschedule because we love Dylan. He's a great uh, very very
talented gentleman and uh and a great friend of the show and uh, you
might even I didn't even hear him on the show a little more than he
realized. Who knows, But is one of our favorite artists. Yes,
yes, yes, well we'll just we'll put it that way. Yes,
we do love to feature his music in all of its forms. Anyway,
if you know, you know it's a little inside, it's very inside.
But if you know Eric Pilcher is listening or Billy Painter, they know what
we're talking about. But yeah, so hopefully he's okay. I think I
might. I really like this project, so I think I might play one
more track from Radiation Sickness, and then we'll hit our commercial break, and
of course coming up in the third hour, we've got a great band coming
in studio almost honest, we'll be here with us, so really looking forward
to meeting them and talking with them. But we'll play another one from Radiation
Sickness. Let's play the title track. This is our friend Dylan Reynolds Radiation
Sickness out now. This is the title track called Radiation Sickness. Check it
out. The fires are started in these any streams, and the screens of
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