Field Dispatch
Matt Connarton Unleashed 8-2-23
Game Plan
It is a beautiful song. I always thought the lyrics were different, though
that's different than I remember it. Uh No, that was three times indicted
by Parody Project. Of of course, we opened the show with bleed lines
from our friends Sepsis Swarmy Fest. Two tickets are on sale for November fourth.
Welcome everybody. This is Matt Connerton unlead and we are live from the
studios of wm n H ninety five point three FM and Glorious Downtown Manchester,
New Hampshire. Also on Comcast ninety seven. If you're in Manchester and hello
to Oliver our online listeners across the nation and around the globe. You can
go to my website Matt Connerton dot com for all your live streaming options,
social media links, contact in folk show archives, etc. Etc. Today
is Wednesday, August two, two thousand twenty three. Welcome everybody. We
have a great musical guest coming up today in the second hour or whenever he
gets here. He might be here even sooner, we'll see. I'm really
looking forward to meeting him and uh when when Jenny first presented him to me
online, we were quite taken with his music. Um, a lot of
fun, really really cool lyrics actually very funny in some ways. But anyway,
Andy Klasensky is here. I'm not sure if it's Klesenski or Klezenski.
We will find out the correct pronunciation of his name, not the name he's
been using professionally as a musician. He was using a different name, but
he's rebranding. But looking forward to meeting him. I believe he is from
the Seacoast. Actually, I think he's from Dover, where my dad lives,
so my dad might have seen him live. It's funny. I got
a text message from my dad last night. I wouldn't normally read these on
the air, but this actually has to do with yesterday. On the show.
We actually had two musical guests. Yesterday we had Chris Stein from the
band from Starlight and then we had Jake Dollery from the UK, who's amazing.
But Dad texted me this last night. He said, Hey, Matt
terrific show today. I'm actually familiar with Chris Stein and the band from Starlight.
They have been played on UNH and also WSCA out of Portsmouth, New
Hampshire and get a load of this. I've been a fan of State Champs,
which is one of the bands that I think, I think from Starlight's
playing with tonight at that show in Allston. Been a fan of State Champs
for at least five years now, because Chris mentioned that during the interview yesterday,
I love that band. I knew they were from the Greater Albany area.
That's quite an area with Schenectady, Albany and Troy, I think the
most powerful area for music and Upper New York State. So um and uh
yeah. And he also liked Jake Dolery as well. But yeah, my
dad, you know, because he lives on the seacoast and he actually listens
to I always use him as an example of, you know, you don't
have to get to a certain age, because most people, you know,
they get to a certain age much younger than my dad. I think most
people. I don't think this happens with musicians, but with non musicians,
you know, they get to like thirty and then they just say that's it.
I'm done with music. I will like music only up to this point,
and any music made after this day I will dismiss as terrible. I
will only like music from a specific time period. And my dad's never been
like that. He's in the seventies and he's still to this day. He
loves hearing new stuff. He listens to college radio on the Seacoast like WUNH,
and he loves hearing new bands. You know, And he says,
we live in a golden age of music. And I think he's right.
You know, there's something out there for everybody, even you know, hey
listen, even if you only like music, like say, you grew up
on classic rock and that's the only music you've ever liked, there are new
bands. I promise you, there are new, young bands out there right
now making music that sounds like that. Don't believe me, Just give it
a couple of googles. You'll find. You'll find. I'm telling you anything
you could imagine. You know, there's God only knows how many thousands,
tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of new songs that are
being uploaded onto the Internet every single day. You can hear anything you want.
You can hear brand new music that's in that sounds like a barb shop
quartet from what would that be the forties, I don't know, the twenties,
whatever. But I'm just saying, anything you want for music you can
find. You just got to put a tiny bit of effort in you're you
know, you're not gonna hear it necessarily on the radio, but but look
for it and you will find it. And if you're like my dad and
you live near a college radio station like WUNH, it's it's that much easier
that you actually will hear it on the radio there. But um, but
yeah, it's uh. There's there's so much stuff And this show, by
the way, is proof of concept because every week we have we have great
new artists, some some very young just starting out, some you know,
like Jake Dollery, an older guy who we had on yesterday who's um been
doing it for several decades, you know. But there's just across the spectrum
of age and demographics and style and genre, there's so much stuff out there.
So um, you know, don't I just say that because I I've
met so many people and you might be someone who can who can identify with
this. Maybe you've met people who are like this, maybe you're like this
yourself. So many people who are just like Nope, I like the music
that I heard when I was sixteen years old, and anything beyond that is
crap. It's like, well, okay, but you have no idea.
I mean, you literally have no idea what you're missing out on. And
by the way, there's no excuse for missing out on it because it's easier
than ever. That's that's part of the irony of the time that we live
in. It's easier than ever to access anything you want for music because of
the Internet. And yet I hear I mean I see it on there's um
well, actually I won't say who it is, but I have a Facebook
friend. It's not somebody I've talked to in a long time, but a
political person who likes to post things. This is just an example. I
see this all the time, but this one individual. They like to post
charts like Billboard, you know, Hot one hundred charts from like ten years
you know, not no, not ten years ago, like twenty years ago,
thirty years ago, forty years ago, and say probably thirty years ago
on average. And we'll say, oh them, look at this, Look
at this chart. The music was so much better than compared to now.
It's like, do you have any idea what's out there now? I guarantee
you that same person never goes online doesn't have a Spotify account, probably never
actually bothers to look for new stuff. You know, it's a weird thing.
It's a very strange. I mean, there are theories about why so
many people are like that, And like I said, my dad's an exception,
and I'm obviously obviously an exception. My uncle is an exception to that
as well, my uncle Matt. So maybe there's something genetic there. I
don't know. But we just never we just the Connerton's, We never get
to that point where we just say, no, that's it. I only
like music up to this date, and anything after that I refuse to listen
to and enjoy. It just doesn't happen us. But I think, I
think what happens is people connect music with memories, and you know, if
you if you get to a certain point where you just, I don't know,
you just lose interest in doing that, like you've just and you've heard
all the music and maybe you've made all the memories you care too. I
don't know. It's almost like like maybe people sort of give up on life
in a certain way and that causes them to give up on music. I
don't know. I don't know why. Well, no, I don't Maybe
that's not it, because I certainly know people who live life and enjoy life
and have a lot going on, who for whatever reason, just you know,
they got to be like thirty years old and decided that anything any music
created after their thirtieth birthday was garbage and just intolerable to listen to. So
maybe that's not it. I don't know what it is. I don't know
what happens, but I'm glad that not everyone's like that, and I'm glad
that my dad's not like that because I'm not like that. And maybe,
like I said, maybe there's something genetic. That's why growing up, I
never had that thing with my Like you know how people have that thing with
their parents where you know, you have the music when you're a kid,
you have the music that you listen to, and your parents are like,
oh, why are you listening to that? You should be listening to this,
you know, that generational thing. I never had that with my dad,
because my dad always liked new music. Like the whole reason Kiss became
my favorite band is because and my dad wasn't like a big Kiss fan,
you know, just a casual fan, but I was. I still remember
the moment. I was on the living room floor after school one day when
I was a kid, watching MTV and the video for Tears Are Falling by
Kiss was on the television, and my dad came home from work and he
kind of poked his head into the living room and he said, Mattie,
what is that? Who does this song? Is that? Kiss? And
I said, yeah, it's Kiss, And he said, oh, I
really liked this song and I said me too. It's like my favorite song
right now. And apparently my dad made a mental note of that, and
sure enough, in my Christmas stocking was Asylum, which is the album that
that song is on by Kiss, and I listened to that and I fell
in love. Kiss was my favorite band ever since. But um, but
there's so much, so much great stuff out there, so don't uh,
I know, I know I go on on this sermon about maybe once every
six or seven weeks, but seriously, you know, I've even had people
say to me, oh, matt You've got all these great musicians on your
show, and uh, I just wish there was more good music out there.
It's like, but wait a minute, you just said I have like
these are original. I don't. It's not like I'm booking, you know,
or Jenny I should say, she does all the booking. It's not
like she's booking cover bands to be on my show. They're they're coming in
and performing original music. And then you say, oh, I wish there
was more new, good new music. It's everywhere. It's not hard to
find anyway. But yes, d Kleacenski will be joining us today on the
program. Really looking forward to that, and if you'd like to join us
in the meantime, if you want to get in with a call, the
studio line is open six zo three two five zho six z seven six zo
three two five zero six zo seven. You can also text me at six
one seven nine one seven four four seven six. I'm on social media at
Matt Connerton. You can email me Matt at Matt Connerton dot com, and
of course you can interact endo Pine in the Facebook live chat. But the
best thing to do so that we can hear and enjoy your dulcet tones is
to give us a call at six zo three two five zero six zo seven
six zo three two five O six z seven. Oh, by the way,
I should mention two, especially being this far into the show, Eric
Pilcher is not with us today. Eric Pilcher, of course, he usually
joins us the first hour on Wednesdays, my favorite Conservative. He is not
able to be here today. And no this time, John Hopwood did not
steal him away. No, he just had a schedule conflict, so he
won't be. He won't be on today, and no film review this week.
He's just got a lot going on, so he will be. He'll
be back in the mix next week. I'm sure. Um, let's take
a moment to say hello everybody in the Facebook live chat, and then we'll
we'll probably get into uh. I don't know if anything's seems like it's uh,
yesterday was a slow newsday. Huh, I'm kidding. I heard I
heard dogs barking outside. I usually hear horns and sirens at some point during
the show, occasionally somebody arguing about something. Uh no, no, it's
still there. Sounds like more than one dog. It sounds like a gaggle
of dogs. Wait, no, dogs don't. Dogs don't run in gaggles.
They run in packs, right, No a pack? No, no,
no, a pack would be wolves. A pack of wolves? What
what? What when you've got a bunch of dogs barking all at once.
What is that other than extremely annoying. I'm sure they're cute, though I
say they're annoying. If I went out the window right now and looked at
the dogs barking, I'd probably be like, Oh, I can't be mad
at them, They're so cute. Let's see Melanie Liberty from the Great State
of vermontoys in the Facebook live chat. Hello, Melanie B. Pinard joins
us and says a good afternoon everyone, Good afternoon, b. Mike from
Queen City Cabinetry in the historic sun Beam all one of our great sponsors here
at W ninety five point three, and I get to see Mike every Friday
night for Retro Spectrum Radio with Paul ec the honor and privilege of being one
of Paul's co hosts on that program along with along with Mike and of course
EJ. Steve Jenny is in the chat room, of course, and says
shalom peeps. Charles Richardson from the state of Florida joins us and says,
Oh my sweet cream butterstick, It's hump day. Greetings, peep holes,
greetings to you. Let's see Archer Flight joins us. In the Facebook lave
chat and I'm gonna go out on a limb here, and Gas said archer
Flight might in fact be from Greensboro, North Carolina. Archer Flight says,
good afternoon, hashtag Matt, we say good after new hashtag gen coffee.
We say, we say Chris Stein from the early days of the band Blondie.
No, no, no, different Chris Stein. Oh that's a good
reference though. No, no, no, Chris Stein from the band from
Starlight. But yes, there is a member of the band Blondie also named
Chris Stein. Fairly common name I would imagine. Charles Richardson says, iHeart
Napster. Ah, yes, Napster. I think that still exists, but
in a different form. I think you pay for it now. And he
says, what spot a fly? No, no, no, join us,
join us in the new century, Charles, Well, it's not that
new or what twenty three years in anyway, Melanie says, tell us who
it is, Matt, so we can find them and mock them on Facebook.
Oh the person who posts those those old billboard charts and says, look
how much better music used to be. I'll tell you why not. I
mean he's been on the show. He's a public person. He posts on
social media it's Greg Moore from Americans for Prosperity. I don't if he's still
with AFP. He used to be the New Hampshire chapter. Archer Flight says,
we say, who is your guest hashtag Matt Connerton? That is that
is uh Andy Klesenski. He'll be He'll be arriving anytime. Actually chatted with
him online earlier. He was just getting ready to leave. So and Archer
Flight says, good afternoon, hashtag Garrett Pilcher. We said to you from
us Archer Flight. Please you must pay attention. Eric is not here.
J FED says, good afternoon everyone, Good afternoon, j FED. Melanie
says it's that kind of unreliability that results in him not getting an unleashed shirt.
Well, I didn't want to say anything, Melanie, but might have
something to do with it. Might have something to do with it. You
gotta show up to get it. Know what I'm saying. Uh, let's
see. Archer Flight says, we say there are two Chris Stein's hashtag Matt
Connerton. Yes, yes, Chris Stein from Blondie and Chris Stein from from
Starlight. I would imagine there's probably many, many more Chris Stein. So,
like I said, probably a very common name. Let me give the
studio line one more time. Six three two five six seven six three two
six seven. Um oh, by the way, and uh, Charles might
find this interesting in Jenny two of course, just just quickly, Uh.
WWE's Vince McMahon hit with grand jury subpoena and search warrant by federal agents.
Okay, now they're going after Vince McMahon. And you know I'm a wrestling
fan. So now I say, you know what I think. It is
all the deep state. This, this is unfair. This is two tiers
of justice. Can't go after Vince, it says here. WWE executive chairman
Vince McMahon was served a federal grand jury subpoena and issued a search warrant by
federal agents, the company revealed today. In a regulatory filing this week,
WWE revealed that federal agents executed a search warrant on the company chairman in July.
By the way, I have to tell you, I'm one of those
people who whenever I hear certain phrases or words, I think of songs.
I connect everything to music in my mind. For example, whenever I hear
the word voodoo, I'm overcome by and urge to listen to the song Voodoo
by Black Sabbath. Whenever I hear the phrase or see the phrase federal agents,
because you know, that's a term we here quite a bit these days
in the news. I think of more Money Mo Problems by P Diddy.
I think he was going by P Diddy at the time. I don't think
he was just Diddy at Mace and notorious big. I think of that line
in the third verse, you know, federal agents mad because I'm flagrant tapped
the cell and the phone in the basement. That just pops into my head
every time I have to read the phrase federal agents. Federal agents executed a
search warrant on the company chairman in July, and that it quote has received
voluntary and compulsory legal demands for documents, including from federal law enforcement and regulatory
agencies, concerning the investigation and related subject matters unquote. The investigation in a
McMahon is ongoing, WWE says, but no charges have been filed at this
time. Look, I'm not a Let me just pause for a moment,
and Jenny and Charles, and some of you will understand what's about to happen
here and the rest of you. Easyg is in the chairman, he might
understand that the rest of you will be completely baffled. But but I'm going
to do this. Uh, just if you'll give me a moment of personal
privilege here, I just I need to have a little bit of a conversation
with somebody. And I don't to the chagrin of my father, I don't
do this very often, but I am gonna do this one. I'm gonna
break this rule. I'm gonna do this live on the air. I'm going
to pray. Let us, Dear God, please let Vince be too busy
to have anything further to do with WWE and put Triple H back in charge
of everything. It was so much better when Vince was gone and Triple H
was running everything. Please let that happen again. Amen, I have to
be honest with you. I don't know that. I don't know that the
big guy hurt any of that, but I tried. I'm doing my part.
I should have done that, you know. Uh. When I was
a kid, I used to watch all in the family and Charles Richardson says
amen. Matt Connerton and j Fed says amen, is it amen or amen?
I think Mike from Queen's City Cabinetry said ammen. Archer Flight says amen,
we say this is wonderful. We're all praying together. We should make
this U a show about you know, prayed. I don't know, but
I just I was thinking about when as a kid and I used to watch
reruns of All in the Family, an Archie Bunker who very rarely prayed or
went to church or anything, but he was always lecturing Gloria and Michael about
they should they should do those things, even though he didn't. But every
on the rare occasions that he did pray, he would look up at the
ceiling and he would say, Hey, Lord, a Bunker here. You
know, he felt that he had to identify himself to the Lord, although
he didn't feel strongly enough about it to actually say his full name, so
he just said his first initial, A Bunker, as an Archie Bunker.
Interestingly enough, though I don't remember an episode where Archie prayed for anything related
to professional wrestling. They should have done that, they should have made that
might have happened on Archie Bunker's place the or maybe one of the spinoffs mod
or something. I don't know. Let's see the investigation in the McMahon is
on going. Last year, McMahon briefly departed the company. That's what I
referred to in my prayer after the WWE opened an investigation that alleged the former
CEO paid a female employee three million dollars after a consensual affair from CNBC.
This is what they said at the time. WWE on Wednesday said that during
the three and six months ended June thirtieth, quote, the company incurred five
point three million dollars in seven point one million, respectively of expensive related Okay,
we don't need to get in all that. That's old that that part's
old news. But I will say the company does better when he's not around.
Let's let's just put it that way. Six three two five six seven
six three two six seven. Let's look at this because it's already almost four
thirty and we have a guest coming up. But the Hill dot com.
This is regarding what I referred to earlier five revelations from Trump's Jan six indictment.
And by the way, we should remind people too, it's the indictment
is not about It's not about January sixth specifically. That's a bit of a
misnomer. It's about efforts to overturn the twenty twenty election. Oh EASYG just
private messaged me and said, please God amen with the prayer hands emoji.
So EASYG also joining us in that in that prayer. Should I have asked
for other stuff? Well? Was? I was that foolish of me to
be so quick? I mean I could have asked for other things. I
don't know, like world peace or something, but that that would be a
good thing to have thrown in there. Uh, that's too late now.
Maybe in the second hour, we'll see how Andy feels about it. Melanie
law Liberty uh seems to agree in the chat room that that's a great reason
to pray, although she didn't put it quite that way. She says,
next time you pray, can you include a chicken sacrifice. I don't think
that's the same. I think you're you know, you're you're mixing up.
Look, I'm no theologian, but I think you're I think you're conflating some
things there, Melanie. I don't think we can do that. I don't
think so. Uh, oh, Scott Robinson says in the chat room,
I'm praying for Triple H and the Hulkster to be co presidents of WWE or
of the United States. I think either one would be fantastic. Let's see,
all right, five takeaways? Why can't I get back to the article?
Now? Here we go? Five takeaways? So so five revelations,
I should say, Oh, revelations. That does sound more dramatic. Former
President. This is from the Hill dot com. Former President Trump has been
indicted over his efforts to stay in power after losing the twenty twenty election,
with Justice Department detailing it's case in a forty five page document unveiled Tuesday.
While much of what is in the indictment was brought to the public's attention by
the House Select Committee investigating the Jan six attack on the Capitol, there are
several new details in the filing about Trump's conduct, actions taken by six co
conspirators in the case, and officials in Trump's administration in the weeks after the
twenty twenty election. Here are the five revelations. First, the six co
conspirators. By the way, can I just say this, I keep thinking
that the term co conspirator. Isn't that redundant? You need more than one
person for a conspiracy, So aren't all conspirators co conspirators. It's like when
people say past experience, It's like, yeah, I know, it's past
experience. Any experience you have would be in the past. You don't have
to say past experience, do you, unless you're a time traveler. Or
when people say growing up as a kid, yeah, I know you were
growing up as a kid. You could just say as a kid, or
you could just say growing up. I assume you didn't just enter the world
as a fully formed adult. Forgive me, I digressed, Okay. The
indictment lists six co conspirators and Trump's orbit following the twenty twenty election, who
are unindicted, unindicted and it feels so good, but could still ultimately face
charges. Special counsel Jack Smith said yesterday, quote, our investigation of other
individuals continues unquote. One is John Eastman, a central figure in forwarding memos
that spurred Trump's pressure campaign on then Vice President Mike Pence. Eastman's attorney,
Harvey Silverglade, really Silverglade, interesting name, confirmed as client is one of
the co conspirators. He said. He said in an interview, quote,
this is not a situation where we're running and hiding. I guarantee you if
it happens, if our client is indicted, which I actually don't think he's
going to happen. But if he's indicted, we're going to trial. If
convicted, we're going to appeal. There are no deals here. Unquote.
Other unnamed co conspirators appear to be Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, Jeffrey Clark,
and Ken chessterbro Cheesebro chesterbro Chesbro, based on descriptions contained in the indictment,
all were involved in various legal efforts to overturn the twenty twenty election results.
Contained in the indictment, Representatives for Giuliani and Clark decline to confirm they
are the co conspirators. Powell and Chesterbro's attorneys did not return quests for a
comment. Giuliani allegedly pressured state lawmakers in key swing states after the election.
Powell filed various lawsuits based on false claims of mass electoral fraud. More than
sixty of them, if you recall, all got tossed. Trump mulled appointing
Clark to lead the Justice Department to move forward the baseless fraud claims and Cheesebro
that's I've decided to go with that one because I enjoy cheese. Plus it
just sounds like it just sounds fun. It sounds like something you'd say,
like if I were going to share my cheese with a friend, I might
say, Hey, you want some cheese. Bro. I never say bro,
but I would in this instance. I don't actually share cheese with friends.
I want all the cheese for myself and very selfish with cheese. But
Cheesebro was involved in a scheme to submit fake electors. The indictment also lists
a six unnamed individual described as a political consultant who is not clearly identifiable.
The indictment alleges the consultant helped with the fake electors scheme and sent Giuliani contact
information for attorneys who could assist with the plan and US senators okay second revelation
DOJ official raises insurrection Act. One element of Trump's plan to remain in office,
according to the indictment, was putting pressure on Justice Department leaders the falsely
declare that widespread fraud occurred in the election and thus put the weight of the
DOJ behind Trump's claims. The filing alleges that Trump called for Clark, a
DOJ official, to take the lead of the department and back the fraud claims
Jeffrey Clark. Clark allegedly drafted a memo that he intended to be sent to
state officials in key swing states had decided the election that would claim the DOJ
had quote significant concerns about the validity of the elections in several states. Clark
was told on multiple occasions by Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen, Acting Deputy Attorney
General Richard Donohue, and Deputy White House Council Patrick Philbin that his claims were
false and the Department had not found evidence of widespread fraud. The indictment relays
a meeting between Philbin and Clark on January third, twenty twenty one, three
days before the jan six attack on the Capitol, in which Philbin tried to
persuade Clark to not become acting Attorney General as Trump had floated. Philbin reiterated
that widespread fraud had not occurred, and Trump remained in an office after his
term ended would cause riots in every major city in the country. Clarke allegedly
responded, quote, well, that's why there's an Insurrection Act unquote. The
Act, Clark reference, gives the president the power to deploy the military and
National Guard in times of rebellion or violence, or to enforce the law.
All right. The third takeaway Trump reinserts language into Jan six speech. And
by the way, there's a pattern of him doing that kind of thing,
apparently. But we'll look at this. The indictment lays out in extensive detail
how Trump repeatedly sought to pressure then Vice President Pence, both publicly and privately,
to overturn the election results, despite Pence making clear that he did not
have the authority to do so. One instance includes Trump defying his aids to
personally put language in a speech to supporters that called on Pence to overturn the
results. Yes, and we remember that, don't we, from his speech
that day. I hope he has a courage to do the right thing.
By the way, it turns out, Vice President Mike Pence did have the
courage to do the right thing. We might have different ideas, some of
us, about what the right thing was, but he followed the Constitution and
carried out his duty. That day. Prosecutors detail how on the morning of
jan six, Trump called Pence to pressure him to reject the results, which
Pence refused. The indictment reads quote Immediately after the call, the defendant decided
to single out the Vice president and public remarks he would make within the hour,
reinserting language that he had personally drafted earlier that morning, falsely claiming that
the vice president had authority to send electoral votes to the states, but that
advisors had previously successfully advocated be removed unquote. In his speech outside the White
House, Trump said he hoped Pence would quote do the right thing, and
argued, if Pence quote does the right thing, we win the election unquote.
The fourth revelation, and this one we didn't necessarily I mean, I'm
not surprised, but didn't necessarily see this one coming. Pence's contemporaneous notes the
former vice president plays a central role in the events of the indictment and prosecutor's
reference previously unreported. Hence why we didn't know about this. Contemporaneous notes Pence
had taken during conversations with Trump. By the way, quickside note about that
we could find a situation occurring where former Vice President Mike Pence, Trump's one
of Trump's opponents in the quest for the nomination, might also end up testifying
against Trump in court if he is called to testify, which would be fascinating.
So many things we've just never seen happen before. It says here the
indictment sites notes from January four meeting, Oh, I'm sorry. A January
four meeting among the then vice president Trump and other aids. According to Pence's
notes, Trump made knowingly false claims of election fraud, including quote bottom line,
won every state by one hundred thousands of votes. I'm sorry, hundreds
of thousands of votes. The way it's written here is a little funny,
and we won every state. And asked about a claim that Justice Department officials
previously informed Trump was false, including a recent as recently as the night before
about quote two hundred five thousand votes more in Pennsylvania than voters unquote. Pence
knew this was all bs. Pence previously appeared before the grand jury investigating Trump
and jan six, and as contemporary, I can't say that word all of
a sudden. Contemporaneous notes could prove to be a critical piece of evidence moving
forward. The indictment details several other conversations between Trump and Pence in which the
former pressures the latter to overturn the results. In it references one conversation previously
detailed in Pence's memoir in which the then vice president called Trump on Christmas morning,
only for Trump to quickly turn the conversation to claims of election fraud.
What else would you discuss on Christmas Day? Right? And in a January
one, twenty twenty one call that was also detailed in Pence's book, Trump
rated Pence after learning Pence had opposed a lawsuits seeking a ruling on the vice
president's authority to reject electoral votes. When Pence said there was no constitutional basis
for him to reject the votes, Trump replied, quote, you're too honest.
And the final revelation from the indictment, Trump rejects request from Sippoloni to
withdraw objection. Is it Sippoloni or Sipalone? I've heard it said both ways.
I like Sippoloni, though I don't mean I like him the person.
I like his name. I like saying his name that way. Following the
end of the riot at the Capitol, Trump and Giuliani made a series of
calls to members of Congress to urge them to delay the certification of the Electoral
College votes. According to the indictment, can you imagine by the way,
you've just been through that, you've just been through all that happened that day,
and then you've got and then he's calling you saying, Hey, I
know it's been a hard day, been a little stressful, but I just
wanted to talk to you about DA And it's like, oh my god,
leave me alone, dude, It's over It's over come on anyway, It's
said to be very frustrating. Two White House aids called two senators to try
to connect them with Trump, while Giuliani called five senators and one House member
at The indictment states that co conspirator Number six tried to confirm the phone numbers
for six senators whom Trump had directed Giuliani to call to further delay the certification.
While Giuliani was calling senators on Trump's behalf, White House counsel Pat Sippoloni
at roughly seven PM called Trump to ask him to withdraw his objections and allow
the certification to be completed, but Trump refused Sippoloni was one of the star
witnesses for the House committee that investigated the events of jan six, and his
testimony featured prominently during the panels public hearings. So there you go. That
is from the Hill dot Com. Five revelations from Trump's January six indictments.
So it just keeps piling up. Now the good news about that for Trump?
And you might say, what good news? Oh, yeah, no,
there's there are silver linings, of course, because for him, because
everything that happens legally in terms of legal problems, just helps him, helps
him raise more money, you know, and and solidifies his uh, his
support among the base. His poll numbers continue to rise among Republicans. And
you know, like I've said all along, I mean, he will be
the nominee. So we continue to be in this weird dynamic that we've never
seen before in American history, where we've got a you know, we've got
a I always call him the presumptive presumptive nominee because I presume that he will
be the presumptive nominee. I will presume. I presume that he'll start winning
primaries and eventually be officially the presumptive nominee. When when the time comes when
our primaries begin to happen. By the way, last I heard speaking of
primaries, last I heard New Hampshire is still scheduled to go first. So
I hope that holds j fed in the chat room, says a billionaire that
needs your money. Well, yeah, apparently apparently he's burning through cash because
what's going on, And this has been in the news two recently that three
out of every four dollars that the campaign takes in, or the pack to
be more precise, the political action committee that they take in, is going
to pay Trump's legal bills. And there's been although one thing about that,
and there's been a lot of speculation about, well, how are his supporters
as they learn this, how are they going to feel about that They're they're
donating money and then it's just getting used to pay his legal bills. But
I don't know why anyone would care. I mean, if you're maga,
if you're a Trump supporter, why would you care. I mean, this
is just you know, either way, you're helping him. So I don't
imagine. I mean, again, I've heard people speculating about that, but
I don't know why any Trump supporters who are donating money would particularly have a
problem with it. But oh, but to finish the other point, though,
it's such a weird dynamic where we're in the city situation where you know,
the more legal jeopardy he's in, the more likely he is to be
the nominee because the more the more he is able to um, you know,
the more is his support increases among the base of the party. But
at the same time, so it makes him it makes him that much better
a potential and I do believe inevitable nominee, but that much worse of a
general election candidate because having a general election candidate with all these indictments, yeah,
you know, the base he tells the base of the Republican Party,
you know, they're not just after me, They're after you. You know,
I'm I'm getting indicted because I'm fighting for you and all that, and
they believe it. They eat it up and they give him money. But
but that's not going to help him in the general election because what's happening is,
yeah, his support increases among the base of the party, but who
is this winning over for the general So assuming he is the nominee, in
assuming Biden is the nominee, which he will be. He's the incumbent unless
you know, something happens to him, but which is possible. I mean,
the man is eighty years old. But assuming that all holds, who
is being one over? Who is being one over? Who didn't support Trump
in twenty twenty? Who is being won over to support him? Now?
You know? Who are the independence who went for Biden in twenty twenty who
were going to say, well, you know what, I have some ambivalence
about Biden, but Trump's got all these criminal indictments. Maybe I should give
him another look, you know. So he's not expanding his base among you
know, he among independents, he's or any opportunity to peel off some disaffected
Democrats or or even you know, suburban moderate Republicans who maybe you know,
kind of held their noses and voted for Biden in twenty twenty. They're not
going to look at him and say, oh, the guy who's who's out
all this legal trouble. Yeah, you know, I think maybe I will
give him a try after all. Um, I just don't think that's uh,
I don't think that's going to help him. Um. That is not
to say that he can't win. He can win. A lot of people
say he can't win. No, he can because there's any number of things
that could go wrong with Biden. You know, if if you know,
Trump could be Trump could be on his way to prison. But what if
Biden is uh, you know, starting to slip and fall down a lot
more? He starts, uh, I mean, you know, I hate
to hate to say it, but what if something they're about the same age,
Joe Biden and Mitch McConnell. What if Joe Biden has something similar happened
to him, that happened to Mitch McConnell where he Because that's all it would
take, That's all it would say. I honestly believe this. Let's say
you know, we're we're just we're a month out from the election. Trump's
got all these legal problems he's desperately hoping to win, so at least some
of it he can make go away. Federal charges, he can make go
away the secondies president, he can he can make that all go away.
Um, tell the DJ yep, that's it, forget forget that, and
he can try to pardon himself and which might work. Um, but say,
say we're a month out from the election. Trump is uh in all
kinds of legal trouble, may have been maybe a felon at that point,
if any of these trials, you know. I mean, we'll see what
happens schedule wise, but he could theoretically, he could at that point be
a felon. Right by the way, there's no law that says he can't
be elected as a felon to the presidency. Um, So let's say we've
got a convicted felon, just hypothetically in the future, We've got a convicted
felon, but his opponent Joe Biden. And let's say Joe Biden, Yeah,
he's probably gonna win. And then all of a sudden, Joe Biden
is giving a campaign speech and has a Mitch McConnell moment, or they're having
a debate and Joe Biden has a Mitch McConnell moment. That's it. Trump
wins. I'm telling you, I really believe that something like that happens to
Joe Biden. Joe Biden has to be the absolute healthiest that he's capable of
being to win a second term. You know, again, Trump will be
a horrendous general election candidate with all this legal trouble, or as our friend
Sarah said on the phone that day, that Huey the Gecko was here the
first time covered in legality. But most of you won't know the reference,
but if you remember, that was probably pretty funny. But Biden can take
himself out easily by having just something go wrong again. Either he starts falling
down more he starts he seems like his energy is even lower than it already
seems. At times, sometimes he seems really up, you know, like
the State of the Union for example. Actually, he's given some very good
speeches where he seems really just full of energy and vigor. And other times,
oh no, But if he has a Mitch McConnell moment, it's over,
it's over done. Whoever his opponent will be, even if they're a
convicted felon, they will they will be able to beat him. So so
Trump can still win. But I'm just saying, all this legal trouble,
while it makes him a stronger and stronger prospective nominee, and I'm more certain
than ever he will be the nominee, it makes him worse and worse general
election candidate. But oh good time. So on that note, we are
going to take a break. We're going to show some love to our amazing
sponsors. We'll play a little song and then when we come back, we
have a wonderful musical guest here with us and I'm really looking forward to this.
So there is plenty more Matt Connerton Unleashed coming up. Don't go away,
Come on down to the Hop Knot at one thousand Elms Street, Manchester's
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the novels you call yourself phenomen believe as some kind above might You're like a
ghost now you don't think you're there I've beaten the way of the world a
break like hand minute twenty. Hello Foo World, I'm mistake again for one
that's fair. I've seen you driving a man something made a visited all words.
I've only breathed the saving swan thing. Helloco World, I'm my friend.
I'm gonna for you. You're always upping all the anti to prove you're
not afraid to lose. This world's a ruthless vigilante. It knows your limits.
Just a room, Oh World. You said a man's a dreaming and
he'll help his dreams up off the page. Unprovoked, you start to draw
the curtain before the actus leave stayed. You're trying to guarantee your saying,
but only make your sharpness dough. The world is waiting to drink from the
goblet of your skull. I've seen the way the world to break you like
hangman twisting in the air. Hello cruel World, I mistake again to one
that's fair. I've seen you driving a man to something meet up as if
it all words true. I've lonely breath to save this one thing. Hello
cruel World, I'm not running hand. I'm gonna for you. The world
is waiting on the sunset to wake you up from all your dreams, leaves
you to your people devices to write your him from panic's screen. Oh World,
you fill a man the mountains and you can impel him towards the time.
But he's on the morrow. You know he's only got one shot declining.
Don't destroy him. It just deludes him that he is not. I've
seen the way the world will break you, like hangman twisting in the air.
Helloco World, I'm the state, the one that's fair. I've seen
you drive a man to something made up as if feed all words true.
I've lonely granted to say this one. Hellocal World, I'm not running.
It takes you love and tries to bring you as if you only prove you
wrong. It's all the certain you won't make yourself dumb and drove the curtain
where I'm still a stay stand up, Hellocal World, I'm not running.
Hello Foo World, I'm not honey. Hello not funny, Hellooo not runny,
Helloo not running? I like that. That is Hello cruel World.
That is Andy Klesenski. Did I say it right? Oh? I'm sorry,
let me I forget to bring your mike up there. Hey, there
we go night. Oh yeah, I can hear me now. Very good,
very good, welcome. Yeah. I like that song a lot.
That's good. It's catchy and um, Jenny and I got a big big
kick out of when we first watched that that YouTube video where it's you playing
outside. It's like twenty minutes long and you're doing some different songs. That's
a lot of fun. That was. That was kind of my introduction to
you seeing you online and perfect. Yeah, I said, yeah, we
gotta definitely got to get him on. If you're just joining us. This
is Matt Connerton unleashed as we are entering our second hour New Merrow Dose here
on WMH ninety five point three FM. Here in Glorious A, downtown Manchester,
New Hampre, also on Comcast ninety seven if you're in Manchester, and
hello to all of our online listeners across the nation and around the globe.
You can go to my website Matt Connerton dot com for all your live streaming
options, social media links, contact info, show archives, et cetera,
et cetera. Today is Wednesday, August second, two thousand and twenty three,
and Andy Klecenski is our musical guest. He's gonna he's gonna play for
us. We're gonna chat a bit between songs, and this will this will
be a lot of fun. Um and go ahead and play a little Andy,
if you would just kind of get some levels here, sure, thing
should be good. I'll kind of ride the faders as we go. I'm
I'm I'm a sound guy, so I'm pretty uh, I'm pretty uh maniacal
about it. Almost all right, Okay, that's fine, Yeah, human
compressor. Here we go, very good. Uh So, yeah, what
are you what are you gonna play for us? You want to tell us
anything about the Yeah, I'm gonna play a song called Idea Man that's off
of that same album, um as the previous tune and uh yeah, I
mean that's yeah, that's that's That's about all I got on it right now.
Okay, all right? Cool. Here is Andy Klesinski live in studio.
Here on Matt connerchon Unleashed idle Doodles are dreams rising off for the pain
Come be a idea Man came in a flashing agonizing the head. The twistom
mustache shall be tying news to the track. I'll be round the lightning eating
peg and wise didn't not touched with fire. That which was lifeless now respired.
Idle doodles are dreams rising all for the page. Call me an idea.
Man amusing gig Superman or a park can't know? I am the booth.
Call me an idea, man, transformer of the truth for a couple
of yucks over a couple of bucksh No, no such buy content. Consumers
all say, for the love of the game, you still show up the
play. You ain't got any leverage, we ain't gone a pay what the
saying idea? Anyway? I will Doodles of dreams rising off for the pain.
Call me an idea, man, I'm musing a cage supermanraca can't no.
I am the boots. Call me an idea. Man, transpond the
light bulb, brook screw crew choke. I'm never lipping electricity, but I'm
rising occasion the fella boy that will never build. I'm a dark horse.
Turn up, yeah, every manner of dark horses. The champions coming,
get get it up until I'm finally in saddled and trenched in battle. I
ran away my teamon's saddled on me. Now I'm breaking Away and there's now
looking back, Ain't no thinking of dreaming lonely whoss on track I Get,
I'm breaking the Crown, freend Castle, swans Wor Shocks and Highways blue once
called the Secks, I go Doodles, the dreams rising off of the page,
comb an id Man, Amusing gig Superman, HU can't know I am
the booth Cambi an id Man, Treans Boomer of the Jew love it,
Thank you. Andy Klasnski is here with us live in studio. That song
is called idea Man and uh Barbe Barton Feeler is in the chat room,
says. Barbe says woo hoo, Andy sing it, and Jenny says woot
woot. Yeah, good stuff, thank you. And that's on. So
is that on the RPM Challenge from twenty twenty Yep, that is that's on
the I NFP. That's the that's the first tune. Yeah, very cool.
Um. Yeah, I hear a lot about the RPM Challenge on the
show. And now what is it You've got like you got to make a
song a day for how many days? No you make an album in the
month of February. Yeah, twenty twenty eight days to make a full full
length album. Yeah, what what's the minimum number of songs required to count
as an album? And either ten songs or thirty five minutes. That's oh
okay, I got you. Yeah. I usually end up with eleven songs
and I'm usually in right around thirty five minutes. Yeah, thirty seven.
Um, is that the only year you've done it? Is twenty twenty and
now I did it a bunch of years. Oh yeah, I went back
to two thousand and seven, um, with some other projects and such.
Uh wow, yeah, so it's yeah, that's that's how I started making
albums and oh recording. Yeah, before that, I was just doing stuff
with a little four track in my room and yeah, writing writing songs they
had to cut, you know. Yeah, junior high band. You know.
I was in a couple of bands, not even bands really, just
people would get together a little bit in high school. But it wasn't really
doing a lot with it, Yea. It kind of fell by the wayside
when I left high school and uh and yeah, and then I picked it
up again. I don't know, early early twenties. Yes, so right
around I around two thousand and seven, Oh wow, yes, I made
a Yeah, they started doing that and then it just Yeah, that's one
of those things that like there are a lot of people who are are veterans
around that that they just make RPM albums. Yeah, over and over and
over again. Yeah. Yeah. Um, it's a fun challenge. Is
uh what is what does I n f P stand for? Oh so that's
the Myers Briggs personality identify or yes, and I should have known? Yeah,
introverted, intuitive, feeling perceptive. Yeah, okay, okay, I
don't remember why I U Yeah, I took that test once. I don't
remember what I I know that I was also an eye because I'm also an
introvert. Yeah, which is why I do this because I feel safest.
I would say I feel safest behind a microphone, much more so than like,
I don't go to parties or anything. I'd rather be behind a microphone
or on a stage or something. That's where I feel the most comfortable.
It's funny how that worked, isn't it. It is? Yeah? Yeah,
yeah, a lot of them. I mean, there's a lot of
famous people who are actually introverts, because you know, they they love performing,
but they'd rather do that than than do a lot of social things.
Some of the boisterous ones too. Some of the like like the bold ones
like Brince Freddie Mercury, Michael Jackson. Those guys were all, oh yeah,
quite introverted. Yeah, oh yeah absolutely. Um can you tell me
too, some of your songs are pretty funny. Um, oh, thank
you, there's that one. I wasn't going to ask you to play this
one necessarily. I'm not sure the lyrics would would fly on on on an
FM show. But you know the song I'm thinking of, I don't know.
I mean, you can be describing a lot of songs discography, that's
true. Why Yeah, used white Sab. I think it's called Oh you
don't think that's gonna fall? That's that's pretty funny. Well let me look
at the Let me look at the lyrics again. I was planning on plane.
Let me well, I might have a confused with another song. Let
me look at these lyrics again. Um, maybe, oh maybe I might
be thinking of a different song because these these look all right? See this
The thing is like, I don't I don't really drop a lot of like
F bombs anything like that. Yeah, that's true. It's innuendo and yeah,
that's the thing. That's the thing. It's like innuendo and oh kind
of having some you know. Yeah, you know what, Actually I might
have been thinking of a different song. I mean this one, there's a
line in here that's really funny. But I think it's actually fine. I
don't I don't see what the problem would be. Yeah. See, yeah,
I'm glad I looked at it because you're right, this one's okay,
it's funny. I see now I actually want to hear it. Oh yeah,
yeah, that's that's yeah, that's that was. That was gonna be
like one of my one of my closing I'm like, oh, we don't
pull that one over from under me? All right? Good good, yeah
great? Yeah yeah okay, um, well, in the meantime, so
it sounds like you want to save that one for later though. So in
the meantime, do you want to play you want to play something else?
You know, I mean we can, yeah, let me play something else.
Okay, let me play something else first, all right? And if
you're just joining us, Andy Klesnski is here with us in studio Mike from
Queen City Cabinetry, one of our great sponsors in the chat room. He's
also enjoying your music. He says, very nice. Thanks, Thank you
all right, whenever you're ready, sir. Sure this one's called we can
take our time. This is a newer one. This isn't on a record.
Nice don Doy. You can know with Jane you mind beingingyy doing week
and take time to meet the world face to face. They always look at
me so strangely. I come from out of space, but I'm not the
only one who feels out of place. We built the bed of pain.
Do the fudge it takes like I was in the rain, Boober, Never
break. What is lost and what remains one and the same. You choose
as to make dunly doomy. You can always change you mind being and even
dull and weak can't take god time? Who tell me? Is the song?
And I can say to change you mind? You can't think it over
and dun and night hard to find. We can take our time. We're
in the world. Will we go when it seems the world just doesn't want
or even wants to know. I'm not the only place we live in,
live and grow. We're women. Then disdain any inform it takes Like I
was in the rain, Boober, never break. You don't have to go
with all on your own. You can believe then your nine alone. Duly
dooly, you can always change you mind being you dull and we can't take
time. Oh dall me use this song and I can say to change you
mind. You can think it over, dull and night fine. We can
take all time. We can take on time, we can take all time.
We can take all time. Very nice, Thank you, very nice.
Andy Klesnski is here with us live in studio. If you have any
questions or comments or anything at all for Andy, the studio line is open
six zo three two five six seven six three two five o six zero seven.
Just make sure you get in between songs, of course. But if
you want to talk to Andy, and of course we have the chat room
open on Facebook, you can also text me at six one seven nine one
seven four four seven six. Here's our new name in the chat room.
Might be a fan of yours. Tony Santess santiss and yeah Facebook friends it
yeah, very good. Yeah. He joins us in there, and Archer
Flight says h tell Andy k We say keep up the good work, excellent
and thank you. And Mike from Queen's City Cabinetry says, I really like
that one. Um, yeah, me too. Can you tell us a
little bit about influences Andy, I'm I'm hearing some different things in there.
But oh that song was kind of like a seventies motown inspired sort of thing.
Yeah. Yeah. It started off me like kind of trying to write
a Jackson five song. Oh no kidding. Yeah, you know, like
you know, maybe tomorrow or something something like that. Okay, um,
yeah, but it's a little this is the thing. It's like, so
I listened back to and I'll like go, okay, well, let's listen
to Jackson like that kind of air of Jackson five and to go back and
it never can say goodbye, and that's like tight, clean composition, like
that's very Yeah. I got like a ton of chords in the year and
stuff, so yeah, yeah, I have a hard time not not playing
a million chords. But yeah, I start playing seventh chords and it just
it just goes and goes. Yeah. Yeah. Do you always are you
always a solo act? Do you ever play with other musicians at this point?
Yeah, I'm pretty much always a solo act. Um. Yeah,
just getting hooking up with musicians, being able to put in you know,
the time to get things tight and get things where they need to be,
because my stuff's not you know, it's not it's not virtuosic. You don't
have to be remember Frank Zappa's band to play, but it's you know,
it's it's not exactly easy either, so right, right, I don't want
to make sure that everything's nailed down. Well you were saying too, you
know, you've got a lot of chords in there, and uh, yeah
you've played in bands before though, I would assume, right, or yeah,
a little bit here and there. Yeah, yeah, do you ever,
um, do you ever think about putting a band together to play?
Yeah? Periodically yeah, yeah, Um, but yeah, it's about about
getting the pieces to come together. Yeah. Um, gets trickier the further
away you get from you know, twenty twenty three, so yeah, you
know, yeah, but I'm definitely open to it. And um, looking
looking a little harder than I had been before. Really okay? Interesting?
Um, and you live in is it the Seacoast area where you live?
Yeah? I'm over right, technically I'm in Madbury, so I'm okay,
yeah, right in between Dover and Durham. Okay, Yeah, I was
commenting on the show earlier my dad, who um, you know, obviously
he's an older guy, but he's um, he's very into new music,
like he listens to w U n H. He lives out there. He
lives in Dover. Yeah, and um, you know he has gone out
to see some some live music. So I was commenting, he'll probably text
me later. I was commenting earlier on the show. He might have seen
you live at some point or just seen you around the scene because he's he
pays, he pays a lot of attention. But um, yeah, if
he I mean, if he frequents any open mic nights that all he's there's
a good good chance that he's definitely seen me. Yeah, yeah, no
doubt. Yeah. And this this is a lot of great talent from that
area. I've always really thought that, you know, the music scene around
there, and there's some good places to play too. Where do you,
um, where do you play? Do you do mostly open mics or do
you have or do At this point, I'm doing a lot open mics.
Um. Starting to play some more shows now, actually got one coming up
this Saturday, High Fi Brewing. Yeah, I'm opening for a band called
Marvel Prone. Yes, we've had them on the show. Yeah, yeah,
that might actually, that might Yeah, we got connected with Madison.
Oh yes, yes, Madison Rousseau. Yeah, absolutely excellent. So you're
gonna be opening for them? That's cool. Yeah, oh yeah, it
should be it should be fun, should be a good time. Um do
you um, do you often get to do that where you obviously you know
you're you're doing the solo thing, but do you have a lot of Does
I come up a lot where you get to open for a full band or
or do you often play? That's how I used to do it, to
be honest with you, Yeah, that's how I, um, you know,
I would get some shows here and there, kind of sporadically yea.
Um, but a lot of places they're looking to book a band, looking
to book somebody with some with a rhythm section, right, So a lot
of times what I would be doing is I would be opening for other musicians,
for other other acts, and um, yeah, there were a number
of them. Uh you know eight seven, eight ten years ago that I
was doing that with Oh okay, and I kind of I kind of left
the scene a little bit. Yeah, twenty eighteen ish nineteen, Yeah,
I wasn't really doing very much of anything. Yeah, yeah. Now now
I'm getting back out again, so yeah, yeah, a lot of fun
and um, when you record, we were talking earlier about the the RPM
challenge, where do you record? Do you just do you do everything at
home? And do you do you do that yourself for Yeah, so that's
that's where I was doing all my stuff. I've got a little standalone it's
called a Core D eight eighty eight. It's a little stand alone. It's
a digital, yeah, a recorder, but it's not a dot. It's
not using a computer, um, just a hard drive, an internal hard
drive and uh and I've been using that since two thousand and seven, no
kidding, the same the same machine things on its last legs. Yeah.
I just bought a Task Game twenty four track oh wow, less than a
year ago. It's it's a similar situation. So the idea is that I'm
gonna move over to this other one that's got more tracks available than I'm gonna
do all the basic tracking and then send it along to somebody who can collaborate
and make it, yeah, make it better. Yeah, that's cool though
that you know, I mean, if it still works, I mean,
that's that's great. And you've obviously gotten a lot of mileage out of out
of that cord. That's pretty cool, an awful lot. That's great.
Well you want to you want to play another song? Yeah, yeah,
I think I'll do that. I'd like to hear more. And uh so
this next one is called is a newer one as well. I don't have
this one. Um. There are a bunch of songs that I've been playing
out now. Yeah. Most of my life set is stuff that I don't
have on record yet. Okay, so this one is called U called Dancing
while You're Burning Alive? Do you mind if I do this without the cans?
Is that? Oh no, that's fine. Yeah, whatever works for
you. I'll make sure that I'm up here on the mic. Yeah yeah,
yeah, no worries. Thank you. By the way, Tony Santasa
says, sounding great digging the tunes from Maryland. Thank you, Tony,
Yeah, very good, very good. All right. I'm a man of
the world, but the world too small. Walk right up the bruising edge
and dare myself the fall. I'm riding in the ocean looking for my depth.
Settled in a billa in the border town, on the edge of life
and death. Got that divine execution. I'd wear her thoughts lightening out,
said, I can practice on my elocution, but you ain't gonna know who
what I'm talking about. If I can't find some solution, how am I
ever to survive? It's a full on conclusion, like dancing nobody burning alive,
ain't a freedom, no man in black going around and taking names.
Signed mine on the tided line with a puckered, curbing lip sixteen because my
brain is a bubble of talking just blue with the flash point. Ain't ready
to come down yet, can I'm halfway from my last joint part of mine
extricution. I'd wear them both to lightening out so I can practice on my
elocution. But you ain't gonna know what I'm talking about. If I can't
find some solution, I am I ever to survive? It's bold one conclusion,
like dancing a while you're burned him live. Yeah, the earth can
shitt beneath my feet for my legs, ain't gonna quit. I break hart
in the sugar glass. I'm donna mind that the candles on my birthday cakes.
And I'm gonna live. Why I said the side to side and I'm
a side fire down the mountain side, the confibrations like a congregation singing the
gospelcause of Norange sky. I'm shedding on my skin, kiding hold me in.
I'm melting like paraffin. I gotta cut off, get out, get
off, get out. You're gonna know what I'm talking about, because I'm
ten foot to fully broof in bad like Jesse James. They're gonna hanging in
the louver, but you're still trying to build a cream. I burn every
bridge to night and boost my skins little of the blames, and I'll be
huddling the rubb of the walk in the morning with only myself to blame,
and not divine Electrician that boats are lightening and wears me out. I said,
I can't practice on my illus, but even I don't know what I'm
talking about. Send song through the lightning, and if that storms, I'm
don't drive. You can find methending off the darkness dancing while I'm burning alive.
You can find me fending off the darkness dancing while I'm burning alive.
So you can find methingding off the darkness dancing, or while I'm burning,
I'm burning, I'm burning who I'm burning I'm burning it. Who I'm burning?
I'm burning. Oh, I'm burning. Nice. You do fit a
lot of chords in there, awful lot. Yeah. Tamson Churchill in the
Facebook live chat says love the energy, thank you. And we also got
a message on the text line Holly from Dover says, sounds great, very
good, very good. Thank you, Holly. If you are just joining
us here on Matt Connerton Unleashed, Andy Klecenski is here with us live in
studio, and if you have anything at all for Andy, any questions or
feedback or anything, you can give us a call six o three two five
six seven six three two five oh six oh seven. You can also interact
end Opine in the Facebook live chat, and of course you can text us
at six one seven nine one seven four four seven six. Kyle Clayton from
the Morning Show with Peter White, which you can hear of course weekdays from
seven to nine. I am here at WMH. Kyle in the chat room
says, save some sex for the rest of us. Dude, he's afraid
you're gonna gonna take it all. I guess with your music. Oh,
I guess, I guess that's what he means. Yeah, save something for
the rest of it. Don't be selfish. Yeah. Um, is there
any kind of a story to that song? I feel like a song involving
U being on fire and yeah, might might have a story. Yeah.
Um. So that was written in a style of um of a band that
I that I like quite a bit. There's some friends of mine and um
and so I I you know, just as an exercise, I'm like,
I wonder if I can try to write a song like that. Yeah,
So I did and uh yeah, and that's what came out. That's that's
that's I guess that's pretty much it. Yeah. Um, you know there's
a little bit of uh yeah. Yeah, that's a good question. It's
a good question. I didn't really I didn't really stop and think about it
too much. Do do lyrics just do lyrics come to you easily? Or
sometimes sometimes not? Yeah, more often than not, they don't, really
Yeah. Yeah, it's it's the melodies. The melodies and chords come easy.
Yeah. Um. Yeah. The last part is the lyrics getting those
to fit. I like to try to fit them, especially because I get
kind of particular about melody these days, so I like try to fit them
neatly. Over the melodies so that the accents of the words are going to
roll with the accents of the melody. You don't have those two two things
fighting gotcha, gotcha? Um has your style changed it all over the years
and or in terms of how you how you approach it and what the songs
are like, Oh yeah, very much so. Um. So early on,
I was trying to do stuff like Frank Zappa Captain Beefheart. I was
trying to do stuff that was that was pretty off the wall. Yeah.
Um, you know, there was a bit of like a bit of musicianship
going on there too, with like trying to you know, compose stuff a
little bit more. Um. I kind of settled in after a while,
um, doing like a singer songwriter thing, mostly out of convenience, to
be honest, um, because it's just me and the tar. Yeah.
So that's um, It's it's just a lot easier. It's a lot easier
to get out and perform your stuff to play. I know, I was
playing open mics a bunch, and I was trying to adapt these songs that
I had overdubbed all these guitar lines and bass lines and stuff. Thankfully,
it didn't do too much percussion, So you didn't you weren't missing too much.
You're missing a little bit of a you know, a cohone and some
moroccas. That was about it right recording. But yeah, it gets tough
to kind of balance all those elements. So yeah, just at a at
a convenience, I started writing the singer songwriter and now now I guess I'm
that guy. Did you ever do the looping thing live or anything like that?
Never did that? Um, To be honest, that's a terrifying.
It's a terrifying prop position for me, just because there's so many things that
can go wrong. You're tapping the thing like that, that learning curve.
A guy named Tim Bear. Um do I see at the open mic nights?
Shout out to Tim Bear tim Bear music. He uh he does looping
stuff. Yeah, you got called him loops. He's just he's that guy
and he's and he's got it down. He's got it down here. He
does a real good job with it. Yeah. The other thing too,
is about looping stuff. Um. For me, like when I write songs,
I'm they're always changing a little bit. Stuff's always shifting around. And
if I have like a chord progression that's kind of going around and around.
Um, I just like to dart and change directions so often, so I
can't commit to like a four or eight bar sort of thing very often.
I got. So that's that's the other thing too, is that, like
you know, as just compositionally like sitting down going like all right, well,
maybe I take the hit, learn how to deal with the loops and
you know, and you know, loop something and then play over it.
Um, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's I don't know, it's still
not out of the question, I guess, yeah, no, that makes
sense what you're saying, though. It's it's it's kind of like when a
band plays to a click track. Yeah, you know, like like especially
big arena bands who you know, they've got a lot of special effects and
whatnot, so they have to play to a click track and they have to
you know, can't I can't change anything on the fly, can't you know,
maybe add an extra chorus at the end of the song or anything that.
You know, they have to stick with exactly what they have because of
that click track, and they have to, you know, they have to
stay committed to it. And I guess with the looping, it It's kind
of a similar thing, right where you know, once you do that,
you have to commit to it, or because there's there's I mean, I
guess in theory maybe you could change change it on the fly, even with
looping things, but there is a lot that can go wrong. Yeah,
yeah, and I guess too, Yeah you can undo loops and redo loops
or something. Yeah, but if you're layering a lot of stuff, but
yeah, that'd be it seems straight. You know who who else is great
too? I don't know if you've ever heard of her two Yards You ever
heard of that artist? I don't think so she does. I think she's
originally at a mass um but h yeah, her name is Meryl Garbas and
she does these amazing things with loops. Um makes these great records and when
you see her live, like the way she delivers that and everything just lines
up, everything is like and she's building it like she'll build it there in
front of the thing with a loop thing is that you start it and you
build it up in front of everybody, And that's kind of like, yeah,
you know, part of the secret sauce. Yeah, um and uh
and yeah, she would do that, but everything is just right on.
It's almost like you might as well be on a click like a really grooving
click track, but like just how well, like she's able to lock that
in and change stuff on the floor. Yeah, right right, Yeah,
yeah, she's unbelievable. I saw that. She's almost like a virtuos Oh
no kidding. Yeah, yeah, some people get really adapt at pulling that
off. But yeah, I must take a while to really cut that down.
So do any of those songs that you did early on where you would
have to kind of adapt them for the live performance, did any of those
survived? You do play any of those now or or did you give those
up? I haven't played too many of them. A lot of them did
survive. Um, they were quite I mean, I say a lot of
them. I guess it was a relatively small percentage, but a good number.
Yeah, I've I've got a couple that I still play. I've got
a couple that I'm going to be playing pretty recent, pretty you know,
upcoming, um pretty soon. Uh yeah. So there are a couple of
those, Yeah, a couple of those that that there am dusting them off
right now. I've been so focused on playing the newer stuff. Yeah,
that you must do you know how many songs you've recorded, because it sounds
like you've recorded a lot with all the RPM challenges and recorded. I mean,
yeah, I don't know one hundred two hundred, so this just recorded.
I mean, I've been writing songs since I was eleven. Yeah.
Yeah, You've bits and pieces of stuff lying around all over. Do you
still remember the first song you ever wrote? Not well? Yeah, well,
I think mercifully not well. I get it. It wasn't very good.
I don't I don't think to ask everybody that, but I get I
get very different answers. Some people will tell me, oh, yeah,
I remember everything about it. I don't remember who it was, but I
had one guest who told me, yeah, I actually still play the first
song I ever wrote. It's like, wow, yeah, when did they
start writing? If that's the case, Like, I guess I wrote it
when they were like, you know, eighteen or twenty two or something.
Yeah, it would wouldn't be too cringe. But if you're eleven, I
mean, I it's funny. I you know, I'm a musician. I'm
not active in that at the moment, but I remember, I actually remember
some of the first songs I ever wrote. I thought I was a really
good lyricist when I was really young, and I and I also remember finding
those songs. It's a great preamblement. I thought I was a very I
thought I was, and then I remember finding those songs years later, and
I and I remember ripping them up and throwing them out because I didn't want
anyone ever see them. Yeah. Yeah, that's yep. Yeah, that's
that's a mood. Yeah. I was like, I mean, there's nobody
else in the room, and yet I'm looking at these papers and I'm like,
wow, that's really embarrassing. Yep. You know, like like like
John bon Joe movie, but with severe head trauma. You know, like
these are horrible lyrics. But uh oh boy. Yeah yeah, I mean
you got to start someone right, Yeah, exactly, exactly. Um,
well, let's uh, I'd love to hear another song. If you want
to play something, Yeah, yeah, I think I want to do that,
all right, awesome if you're just joining us. By the way,
uh Andy Klaznski is here with us in studio and he is playing live and
we're talking and we're having a great time. And uh we are live of
course here on Matt Connerton unleashed from the studios of wm NHM. This next
song is called used white sub Oh all right, I'm ready sorry, pardon
me, yeah, go oh yeah, No worries, standed fa TV dinner
or dooby and a standly claim. Look in the mirror, see who stand
in there morning, each thin gragging strains of hair. I have no illusions
about true romance infatuation at a pasting glance. All I'm hoping for is one
marchants dying my beard for the sceningle stands. And if all else fails,
I'm gonna wrapper roller quarters in the tube side stop it down the front of
my pangs. I'm punching out of my weight class tonight and I ain't leaving
that finger chance rap the mortar. Oh, I'll be cruising the streets,
do you know? Oh? Oh, I ain't no stretched limousine, No,
honey, I'm ana used by sip something you can drive and do the
ground with dignity. Time the one job. Reach into your jacket, pocket
of up this full of farm, lock me up and fog up my windows.
Turn up the goddamn stereo. We're on most stereo, and Nah is
playing back on the market. End of my brand cologne on the dresser for
ru Wan nightstand lotion on the nightstand in my cold right hand. Maybe the
bar scene on who week can nine? Or an algorithm on a dateing side,
buy the candle of my phone blue light finger reluctingly swipeding rid in seules
will be going at each other in the darkness, stumbling out of a pays.
I'll paple the drinks and the dinner, but I ain't buying heartbreaking it
dance maserati, always peeling away in the pale morning, like with your hearts,
gastly take a fire on a use my sob. Something you can job
and do the ground with dignity time the one for the job. Reaching your
jacket pocket, I've a bliss full of fog. Lock me up and fog
up my windows. Turn up the goddamn stairs. We'll most barrier. Oh,
I'm gonna use my time. Something you can john into the ground with
dignity time. Job can you take your pocket about distance full of farm,
lock me up and fog up my windows turn up. Got danced, We're
on most dail. Oh, nice used white sob from Andy Klasnski here in
the Facebook latch out Jenny says he's so much fun. I love it.
And uh, Holly A. Furlane says, clap clap, that name is
familiar Rashia musician. Yeah from uh oh yeah, yeah, yeah. I
think I think I've met her through Uh No, I can't remember his name
anyway, it doesn't matter. I see you meet so many people in the
scene, you know how it is. Yeah, yeah, but I think
I've met Holly before. Um oh yeah, I met her the earth Eagel
Earthiegal North open Mic in Summer's Worth. Oh okay, yep, yep.
Uh. Barb Barton Feeler says love it. And Jay Fed really oh,
Jay Fed really likes that as well. Oh and Ryan Walters is in the
Facebook lave chat and says all second the clap, clap, beautiful, thank
you, and we have a call. We'll grab this. I think this
might be our friend Charles from Florida. Charles, is that you? Yeah,
it's me. I want to ask him, is how how hard is
it to write a song? Do you do these things come to you like
Linden, like fifteen twenty minutes, or do you spend like days at a
time or weeks at a time trying to compose the song and get everything written
together. Lyrics first, or do you do uh? Do you do tunes
first? So sometimes it's incredibly easy to write songs to the point where they
just keep flowing and they don't stop, and it almost becomes a problem in
your life. At least for me. That's sort of a dancing while you're
burning a live kind of situation. Other times it's incredibly difficult to write them,
especially when you're trying to complete them. I guess I wish I had.
So it's not an original answer, but I think it's a fitting answer.
Anywhere from fifteen minutes of fifteen years, it can take an awful long
time to write songs. As far as words first versus music, it's almost
always music. For a while, I was writing melodies first, so I
would always have tunes that I was turning around in my head. So even
before I put my hands on a guitar or anything else, it was a
tune that I was working on. But mostly mostly now I'm sitting down with
a guitar, I'm playing around, I'm finding chord changes that I like,
and yeah, and then following yeah, you know, coming up with the
melody. Yeah, those it's going to feed each other. Oh, thank
you so much, appreciate it, very good. Yeah, just curiosity on
the ones that came with you instantaneously. Has that been one of the ones
you played today? Great question. Um, Dancing while You're burning alive came
pretty fast? Yeah, that came. Yeah, it's a bunch of words
and everything. That came pretty fast because it was it was so freeing because
I was writing other kinds of music and you know, stufinitely it gets it
gets kind of baroque after a while. A lot of chords, a lot
of melodies, a lot of range, and yeah, yeah, and you're
you're writing these words and you're trying to make them fit over something, and
then you do something that's kind of a straightforward rock and roll thing. The
cadence is a lot easier that like everybody kind of has written in that cade.
Not everybody, but a lot of people have written that cadence, going
all the way back to old country music. So you can just kind of
fall into it and then the words just kind of float, even if they're
not very obvious words, like you can just fit more words in there because
it's just it's an easier kind of form. To write in I find um.
But as far as those go, um, A da man came kind
of that came pretty quick as well. That came together. That was a
few days still, you know, because you you write down lyrics and you'll
get like an idea, you'll get some sketched lyrics or whatever. You get
a verse, but you won't get the rest of it. Or you get
the chorus, but you don't get anything else. And if you don't jump
on that quick, then you just have a chorus and you're sitting on that
for four years. Um. Yeah, So I guess those two came pretty
quick. Um. Yeah. The other stuff was a little bit labored.
How long Um, when did you first pick up a guitar? Like,
are you self taught or did you take lessons? How did you get to
be so crafty with with an instrument? Oh? Thank you? Um?
So I was fortunate enough to um to both have access to um uh you
know, lessons. Um. You know, my folks could afford to give
me less to get me lessons and stuff. And I also an older brother
who had a guitar, so there was always a guitar kind of around the
house at least starting I don't know, I think he got on these fourteens.
That would be like I don't know, seven or eight or something.
Yeah, yeah, so I mean I mean going all the way back,
like I mean, there are pictures of me like standing in front of a
television in diapers, like holding a tennis racket backward like a guitar. I
would I would watch MTV like as yeah, old enough to stand holding the
tennis racket as a guitar, so like it was always kind of there.
But a tennis racket is very, very far from a stratocaster, so like
you still have to learn a bunch of skills and stuff. And I that
was I've been doing a tar hero a part of your learning. Absolutely not,
absolutely not. No, I am off with that. I'm still off
of them because I tend to I tend to sit behind the beatum and if
you get something that's a little bit quick and you're behind the beat, and
you're because you're not supposed to be on there. You're supposed to be exactly
on the beat when you're playing guitar, because it's a video game. It's
back man, it's not right, it's not you're not playing in a band.
So yeah, endless source of frustration. Yeah, no, none of
that, Um is just an acoustic guitar and some black sabbath some black.
Yeah, nice black sabbath. Some Michael Jackson couldn't figure out how to make
the two meet until Yeah, I don't know. Very cool. All right,
well I'll let you too get back to it. Thank you very much.
All right, awesome, appreciate the call. Thank you, lean give
you the question, all right, very good, by the way, Holly
says in the chat room, Yeah, I thought, yes, Jim Tarrell
introduced us. I do remember, now, Holly. She said, Uh,
yes, Jim Tarrell was recording a show with you and I swung by
to check it out long time ago. Yeah, that was a long time
ago, but I do remember. I do remember that now. Yes.
Um. Also DJ Steve is in the Facebook lave chat of course. Dj
Steve I see every Friday night for retro Spectrum Radio, another show that we
do here at w mnah, he says, Hi, everyone, this guy
is great, really digging it. Thank you, very nice, very um.
Melanie had some questions about the lyrics for uh In uh in that that
uh that song used White SOB. But the questions are I think we'll we'll
leave those speaks. But that song, that song does make me laugh.
That that's a lot of fun. Yeah, Mission accomplished. Yeah, yeah,
that was based on that was kind of a like a yacht rock pastiche
yeah. Yeah, it's kind of supposed to have that sort of doobie bounce.
Yeah, a little bit of a little bit of Mike McDonald there.
Oh yeah, yeah, I like it. Boy, his name comes up
a lot on the show recently. I'll be done. Got the Michael McDonald's
shirt. Yeah, Oh that's so cool. Sultan of Smooth Baby. Yeah,
yeah, I don't. I don't know if you know this, but
um, so David Crosby before he died, it might have been the last
interview he did. He was on the Howard Stern Show, and um he
said during that interview that and I guess they were very close friends to uh
uh Crosby and Michael McDonald. But he said that, um, he believed
that Michael McDonald was currently the best male singer in the entire United States,
but nobody could sing better than Michael McDonald in his opinion. Yeah, I
mean at this in this date. Yeah, this one was well, this
would have been within the last year. But when he but when he said
it, he was speaking at the present time. He said, Michael McDonald's
Michael McDonald is the best male singer in the entire country. Yeah. I
mean, granted he's biased because they're they're very good friends too. I think
Michael McDonald is on doing some backing vocals on the last album that David Crosby
I did backing vocals like Nobody's Business. Oh yeah, the Steely Dan Records.
Yeah, and then well it was so much so that you if you
listen to other like kind of soft rock or yat rock tunes from that,
like late seventies, early eighties, there are a bunch of them that have
guys, Yeah, it's not Michael McDonald. They're just trying to sound like
Michael McDonald. They're like Michael donald clones, right right. Yeah. Um,
I find I found over the years to this day, some people don't
realize that. I like to use the example of the Christopher Cross song ride
like the Wind, Yeah, and a lot of people don't even realize it.
Yeah, the deep voice on that, that's Michael McDonald. A long
Way to Go. Yeah, I can't do there. You sounded like him
just now. When you did that, you really sounded I can't, you
know, I can't sound like him. You want to do that one more
time? That sounded really good? Do you sound like it's an easy one
to It's kind of I mean, if you got like if you get the
tenor thing, yeah, it's it's yeah. He I don't do impressions very
well, but that's one that you just kind of put one finger in your
ear like you're like you're recording something like the one cannon. That's awesome.
So you do sound like him? Yeah, I'm not gonna try to do
anymore. I don't quite have those high notes anymore, not today anyway.
But Tampson Churchill says, says, so good. I don't know if that's
in reference, So the Michael McDonald impression or the song you're both, but
yeah, I think it's in reference. I think it's explicitly in reference to
Michael. Yeah. I just playing a hunch on that one. You want
to play another song? Yeah, yeah, I got another one. Cool?
Cool if you're just joining us. Andy Klesinski is here in studio with
us, So this one's a newer one. I don't have this on our
record yet cool. That last one used white sob that's on that record.
I n f P. Yeah, it's the one of the kind of the
dark cover just my face on it. Yeah. Um, I think the
other one's a dark cover with my face on too. That it's not really
narrowing it down the one that does the one that doesn't have the jar babies.
And if you have to ask and then check it out, all right,
here we go. It's called Discotheque of One. Cocating cold champagne dying
in the more Miami sun, you might as well be boring rain dancing in
my disco deck up one. I'm spending on roller skates, but my heart's
about to break it. I'm crying to rhying soon, tears like chandeliers on
down my face. My mirror bald ties shimmered. Even when I'm not alway
disco tech discontent, I'm too busy crying to have fun agitations. What you
meant, baby, I'm a disco take up one. I'm working to earn
my living. Hardy any living get in done so if I'm making with the
giving living in my disco tech of one, tired of the tired, like
inspiration, calm to me on high, eluvie me, take me high,
you baby, like a fall of fire across the sky. All those spirling
lights and colors, cursing to my ros and cons, all the fights of
fear and fancy, fall and haf the microphone, all those aspirations, aspirting
in a hotel room alone, disco teching disk in time. I'm too busy
crying to have fun agitations. What you meant, BB, I'm a disco.
Take up one. I'm working to earn my living. Hardly any livings
get in done. So if I'm making with the eat, giving living in
my disco, take up one, whoopings private plane. Never was the light,
buppy, All that cocaine coursing through your veins, flying high and headed
for the trees. Look out, my feet are on the ground. Get
in the round. The empty dance plus shimmers, pools of tears, and
scattered like setting sun reflecting off my mirror ball eyes. My boogie night is
just be gone. Dancing in my disco, Take up one, dancing in
my disco. Take up one, dancing in my disco. Take up one,
dancing in my disco. Take up one. Nice. I love that,
thank you, I love that that is really really good. Uh.
Andy Klasinski is here with us a lie, I've in studio. Hey,
before we run out of time. I want to make sure that people know
where to find you online, especially where people might some people might struggle with
spelling your last name. Yeah, I don't know. Yeah, yeah,
that's I mean three three syllables. Three three were letters per syllable, all
phonetic, but it's a it's a weird string of phonemes, right, and
so it's Andy Klosinski k l O s is and Samuel E. N is
in Nitrogen s is in Samuel Ki Klousenski U dot com. Andy Klosenski.
Yes, you got a brand new website. I saw that it looks new.
U. It's pretty new. Yeah. Yeah. Oh. Joy Duran
joins us in the Facebook live chat. Hello Joy, And you said you
should mention too. You've got a show this weekend. Yes I do.
Yeah, we're at Hi Fi Brewing. Uh and uh that's that's in Portland,
so it's not local to Manchester. But yeah, yeah, we got
listeners all over online. So that's the beauty of the internet. This is
true. This is true. Yeah, So that's gonna be at eight o'clock
on Saturday, August fifth. So this Saturday UM show, it starts at
eight. I'm opening for Marvel prone yes, um so yeah, I'm on
at eight eight eight sharp, uh and uh and then they're on I believe
ninety. I think I'm going for a full hour. So oh cool.
Um, you want to sneak one more in? We got we got time
for for one more if you want good question? Probably ought to you shouldn't.
I let's do that. Yeah, sees a moment. Let's see.
I'm gonna do something off of one of my other albums called We're Alive.
Okay, this one is called Diane all right boa whoa, whoa, whoa.
I can hear the shower running over you, dying, steam all around
you like a crime. Whoa hot nights, moonlight tower around your head,
live limbs, warm skin, climbing into bed, maneuvering like poetry over me,
dying, each limb stands and each inch, and I am bright.
I find my few tangles up your head, read shout nine times the middle
of the night. But you not that you're dying. Whoa woo, the
ship sweeling my hand a woa a woo. But I'm longing for dry landing
whoa a woo on? Of course I no Australia and bring awake and night
to understand whoa I woke that a man just ain't a man. Then he's
back in your runs d yah yah entangle of bodies and sheets, over the
feeling of leaving your feet while loue wayward. We're still climbing so high to
our heads hit the ceiling again. Can't let you get away? I ain't.
I could have seen it coming from here to old shine. But every
time I play, I tip my hand, gnolling water spinning down the drain,
still bother when only lonely SuDS remain, because I can hear the shower.
We're running lonesomesian. It's running far from over you. I'm dying and
cascade that made tiny if you lads down your shoulders, face necking, freckled
breast dying a whoa a boo. The ship's wheeling my hand, whoa a
whoa. But I'm longing for dry land. Whoa whoa on? Of course
I know Australia and bring awaken night you understand whoa a whoa that a man
just ain't a man till he's backing your wrongs. Dying Yeah yeah, untangle
of bodies and ships over the feeling of leaving your feet Mill Loue Wayward,
We're stealing, climbing so high into our heads, hit the ceiling again,
who one dying, dyanee Zomy of my Past Believes, bring your love in
Thank tom Me da yah yah Dyanye Yeah yeah yeah Dan yea yea yea Dyanee.
Oh that's off my album We're Alive. Oh that is awesome. That
is awesome. Thank you so much. I'm glad. I'm glad we were
really get one more in, Andy Klasinski. This has been wonderful. Thank
you, my friend. Yes, thank you for having me. Likewise,
this has been great. Really enjoyed it. And if you're just joining us,
of course, if you missed today's show or any part of it,
it will be up in just a little bit at WMNH radio dot org and
on my website Matt Connerton dot com. And don't forget tonight is I believe
it's poetry Night at the hopnot our amazing sponsor right across the street at one
thousand Elm Street. And um, Andy, why don't you give your website
one more time too before we Yeah it's Andy Klosinski dot com. So Andy,
common spelling A and d y k l O s e n s k
I. Very good, very good, Thank you so much. And you
know we'll we'll have to do this again. Yeah, thank you, all
right, very good, Thanks Andy, Thank you everybody. And that's it
for me for now. Let's see, don't forget. Be back bright and
early seven am for the morning show with Peter White, and I will talk
to you all a little bit later. By everybody, it's really beautiful things.
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