4.3 • 749 Ratings
🗓️ 31 March 2016
⏱️ 19 minutes
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0:00.0 | I'm Bill and Brian, my regular co-host, could not make it today. |
0:43.1 | So I'm just going to be doing this bonus song Thursday episode on my own. |
0:49.2 | So what we do here every week on the podcast is take a different album of music and talk about what makes it great, |
0:56.0 | usually featuring a track-by-track review of the entire album. |
1:00.0 | But what we also do is we release an additional episode. |
1:04.1 | That's just a bonus song where we take a song that is either another song by the same artist or at least tangentially related |
1:13.0 | to the artist in some way, like a cover or something. |
1:15.8 | And we talk about that song the same way we kind of go into detail about the main full album. |
1:24.3 | So what we're talking about today is pavements spit on a stranger off of their final album, Terror Twilight, which I believe came out in 1999. |
1:36.3 | On Monday, we were talking about 94's Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain, which was kind of their breakthrough album. |
1:44.3 | It was their second album, and it had, you know, the minor hit, cut your hair on it, |
1:52.1 | and also Gold Sounds, which is a well-known song that is especially known for being |
1:58.1 | pitchfork's number one song of the 90s. |
2:01.4 | Now, on the other day's episode, I didn't, I myself, Bill, we had a guest, which was Jim |
2:08.3 | from Cool Dad Music, a music blog that, as you would imagine, talks about music. |
2:16.1 | That is cool from a guy that is a dad who is also cool. |
2:22.0 | And we got to learn how he kind of first started listening to Pavement |
2:27.6 | around the time that they came out in the early 90s, |
2:30.5 | or first started making an impact in the early 90s. |
2:34.0 | But, you know, Brian and I don't |
2:35.8 | really share our stories when we have a guest about how we first experienced the music. So I'm |
2:42.3 | going to go ahead and do that now because it actually relates to this song, Sput on a Stranger. |
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