How Crankdat Beat Burnout With Flame-Throwing Middle Fingers and a Fan-First Mission

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When the world was opening back up after the pandemic, Christian Smith, better known as Crankdat, found himself considering walking away from music altogether.

At that point, he’d been touring professionally since 2017 after dropping out of college to pursue music full-time. But after being dropped by his agency and watching bookings slow in an industry still adjusting to life post-global shutdown, he found himself questioning everything.

It was 2022 and the electronic dance music industry felt like it had reset. Momentum was hard to come by.

“I think my time’s up, maybe it’s time to just look at what’s next for me in life,” Smith recalls thinking in a candid interview with EDM.com. “Maybe I don’t want to do anything in entertainment at all anymore. Maybe I want to go do something completely different.”

Christian Smith, or Crankdat.

c/o Press

An inflection point came that summer after a pivotal conversation with his manager, Mike Lisanti, who challenged him to commit to just six more months and give it everything he had. “You’ve been giving it a hundred percent this whole time,” he said Lisanti told him at the time. “But give it 110%. Give it 120%.”

So he did. “If you’re going to quit, who gives a shit anyway?” Smith recalled hearing. “Just throw everything you have at the wall and let’s see what shakes. So that’s pretty much what I did.”

That mindset shift was a turning point for the rising dubstep superstar, who stopped worrying about what others in the industry might think. He instead started taking creative risks, and they started to pay off.

With perfectionism no longer looming, Crankdat’s early comeback was in full force. TikTok, once a platform he avoided, became the key that reignited everything. He launched a remix video series, posted weekly content and stayed constantly visible on the platform “until people couldn’t get away from me,” he jokes.

The experiment worked as his channel ballooned to over 1 million followers, growing his fan base organically while reintroducing him to the EDM community. “It felt like I was starting over, but with experience this time,” Smith says.

By early-2023, the Crankdat project exploded with “STFU,” a dubstep smash currently on the precipice of 10 million Spotify streams. The viral hit helped transform Smith’s burnout into the feeling of forward motion.

His cult following began translating over to the live music arena, culminating in a sold-out doubleheader at the famed Hollywood Palladium and a landmark set at North America’s largest EDM festival, EDC Las Vegas, which became the most-attended performance in the history of its beloved bassPOD stage.

Marcus Dossous

Since then, he’s been on a tear: a sold-out North American tour, “GET CRANKED!”; a surprise appearance to close out Coachella’s storied Do LaB stage; a coveted night-time slot at Ultra Music Festival’s 25th anniversary; and a pair of DJ sets at EDC Las Vegas.

Smith is now rolling into a jam-packed summer of festival sets at Bonnaroo, Electric Forest, Tomorrowland and HARD Summer, among many others. However, the North Star of his resurgence hasn’t been the high-profile gigs, but his deep connection to his fans.

“We talk about it every single week,” he says. “I say that line more than any other sentence in my entire life: fan experience is the number one priority.”

That philosophy has shaped every aspect of his live show. At the Palladium, he debuted “Middle Fingers Up” (MFU), a giant pair of flame-throwing middle fingers tied to the lore of “STFU.” What started as a one-off became a signature showpiece, later appearing at a secret show at Brooklyn’s Under the K Bridge Park.

Crankdat’s “MFU” show production.

c/o Press

But that was just phase one. For his 2025 tour, he retired the “MFU” stage design and built something entirely new: the ambitious “Crank Deck.” With its 360° stage design, the production brings fans in as close as possible—literally.

At each show, Smith and his team hand out Charlie and the Chocolate Factory-style “Golden Tickets” to diehard fans in GA, often those decked out in Crankdat jerseys or merch. The special passes grant access to an elevated area onstage so fans can experience the shows alongside their charismatic headliner.

This tour also marks Smith’s first major-budget production, the development of which was “hands-on in the literal sense,” he says. He flew in early to tour stops, worked alongside his crew at 9am load-ins and sometimes even built stage elements with his VJ just minutes before doors opened. Balancing large-scale production with this boots-on-the-ground energy is what makes Crankdat’s shows feel personal, even as the rooms keep getting bigger.

Developed specifically with his fans in mind, the “Crank Deck” is complete with immersive lighting elements and headbang-ready railings, infrastructure he called “really complicated.”

“Securing railings onto decking, because we wanted the railings to be headbang-able, we wanted the kids to be able to go ape-shit on those things,” Smith explains. “And that’s actually really hard to do.”

Another key addition? Lasers. Lots of lasers.

Crankdat performing at EDC Las Vegas 2025.

Mike Hook

Smith spent a lot of time considering how the dispersion of lasers would make his fans feel, no matter where they are in the crowd. “It is more than just seeing them,” he says. They have got to be going over their head so that they can look up and they’re like, ‘Holy shit.'”

But the connection doesn’t end when the lasers shut down. Through it all, a few things have stayed the same: build fearlessly and never take the crowd for granted.

“That is literally my favorite thing to do,” Smith says of fans tagging him in videos. “Just laying in my hotel room and tapping through all the tags I get. It’s the closest I’ll ever get to watching my own show. Phones pick up the crowd reactions, especially during big SFX moments. That’s what I want to feel. That’s the version of the show I care about the most.”

And there’s plenty more new music on the way.

“I have more original music than I have had basically in the past two years combined,” Smith confirms. “It’s going to come out this year, which is going to be fun.”

Follow Crankdat:

Instagram: instagram.com/crankdat
TikTok: tiktok.com/@crankdat
X: x.com/crankdat
Facebook: facebook.com/crankdat
Spotify: spoti.fi/3l8FXz0

Peter Capaldi – My Life In Music

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The post-punk Time Lord on the albums that shaped his universe: “Heard once, it stays forever”

The post-punk Time Lord on the albums that shaped his universe: “Heard once, it stays forever”

THE JUNE 2025 ISSUE OF UNCUT IS AVAILABLE TO ORDER NOW: STARRING R.E.M., A DOORS RARITIES CD, BON IVER, PRINCE, SHACK, AMY WINEHOUSE, DIRE STRAITS, STEREOLAB AND MORE

FRANK SINATRA
That’s Life
REPRISE, 1966
I don’t really remember my parents ever going out to buy a record, but somehow there was a collection of battered albums under the record player. They would often have nights when drink was taken and fun was had, and this album would always go on. You’d never describe an album of Sinatra’s as lacklustre, but every song is compact, like they want to get it over with. But when he hits the groove of “That’s Life”, he’s kind of unbeatable. If “My Way” is about imposing your will upon life, “That’s Life” is a hymn to how powerless you are to deal with whatever fate throws at you, so the best thing is just to get on with it and have a laugh when you can. It’s the best shrug in popular music.

DAVID BOWIE
David Live
RCA, 1974
Like many things in life, I was quite late into David Bowie. In order to dig into his back catalogue, I bought this double album, which appeared to contain many of his hits. But of course, a lot of them are reworked and don’t really fly. I’ve subsequently discovered that they’d just had a big fight in the dressing room because the musicians didn’t know they were recording a live album. But I love all that angst. I love Earl Slick, who rips the whole thing up. But ultimately for me, it’s Bowie’s voice. There’s a kind of terror in it. The version of “Rock ‘N’ Roll Suicide” on Ziggy… is a bit Judy Garland, but on this one you really believe he’s not going to make it to the end.

SIMPLE MINDS
Life In A Day
ZOOM, 1979
I like a lot of Glasgow bands – that first Blue Nile album was great. And I used to really like Simple Minds. I actually like their first album that <they> don’t like. You can see a theme here: I like the albums that don’t seem to be very successful. I saw them in Glasgow at that time, in a tiny little place called The Mars Bar. They weren’t doing blues, they weren’t doing Status Quo, they were doing some weird arthouse stuff, and they had a great song called “Life In A Day”. It’s the first time I’d really seen a band that excited me, and also where I thought, ‘It’s possible to do that.’ Because they’re all just guys from Glasgow, although the world they were evoking was very different.

TALKING HEADS
Fear Of Music
SIRE, 1979
This album got me through a lot of all-nighters at art school, when I wasn’t as attentive to my studies as I should have been. It’s Talking Heads exploring a lot of the stuff that will become more finessed and polished later on. It confounded my expectations of what a song could be, because the narratives are so strange, but they’re not dislocated. The band are very concerned about making sure the songs have an engaging structure and that there’s a chorus that will work for you, but the narrative is shifting all the time. The songs are inventive and funny, but they’re also a bit scary. You’re never quite sure whether or not you’d be happy if David Byrne showed up at your door.

CRAIG ARMSTRONG
It’s Nearly Tomorrow
BMG CHRYSALIS, 2014
A lot of actors use music to help them get into the zone. For instance, when I was doing Malcolm Tucker, I would have “Scary Monsters” playing, because it’s quite jagged and hard to relax to. And It’s Nearly Tomorrow is the one that did it for me in relation to the rather well-known character of Doctor Who. I was keen to try and bring some kind of melancholy to the role, I guess because I was older, and this album provided a way into that. It seems to be about time, loss, humanity, love, confusion and fate. The music is infused with this dark, relentless power, like the forces at work in the universe, so it would help me think about how to be a strange, alien Time Lord.

ENNIO MORRICONE
The Mission OST
VIRGIN, 1986
It’s often said of Ennio Morricone that you know it’s him from the first note, and that’s absolutely true of this album. The film is about the European incursion into Latin America and how the Jesuit priests would set up missionaries in the jungle to try and convert the indigenous peoples to Christianity, which all goes terribly wrong, as you might imagine. Morricone illustrates that story by combining his typically heartbreaking European, classical, choral sound with these indigenous rhythms and voices. So it’s a little bit like world music, but not quite. He’s a master composer of soundtracks, so he evokes this whole thing for us in a very beautiful way. He’s the greatest film composer – apart from Bernard Herrman – because he infuses his material with so much emotion.

WILLIE NELSON
A Song For You
HALLMARK, 1983
Willie Nelson was huge in the ’80s, but I did have a fear that getting into him meant going the full Ken Bruce, and that easy listening would take me over like the fungal virus in The Last Of Us. So I dug deeper into Willie’s back catalogue looking for purer country stuff. There was plenty, and it sounded great. But so did the standards. I finally accepted this when we found the album <A Song For You>. My partner Elaine and I played it all the time on a battered cassette as our life together unfolded. His versions of these standards have everything – they’re moving, frank, wise and for the ages, all culminating in his version of Kris Kristofferson’s “Loving Her Was Easier”, the song that we danced to at our wedding.

JAN GARBAREK & THE HILLIARD ENSEMBLE
Officium
ECM, 1994

In 2004, I went to make a film in Iceland. It’s one of the strangest and most haunting places I have ever been, and I loved it. The film was low-budget so I was not put up in a hotel, but lodged in the Reykjavik basement of a fabulous bohemian couple named Sverrir and Eda. They left me a CD player and a number of CDs. This was the first one I put on. The Hilliard Ensemble is a vocal quartet devoted to early music; Jan Garbarek is a Norwegian jazz sax and clarinet player. The combined sound is haunting, medieval, yet kind of jazzy. The track “Parce Mihi Domine” plays like the theme music to some lost Icelandic noir movie. Heard once, it stays forever.

Peter Capaldi’s new album Sweet Illusions is out now on Last Night From Glasgow

The post Peter Capaldi – My Life In Music appeared first on UNCUT.

Köln you dig it?

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Plenty of music biopics are unable to use songs by the artists they depict. Some, like the 2020 Bowie-related movie Stardust, struggle as a result; others, like Backbeat or Nowhere Boy, find ways to tell a more introspective tale. “For me, it was a beautiful obstacle to overcome,” says Ido Fluk, the Israeli writer and director of Köln 75, which dramatises the events surrounding Keith Jarrett’s famous Köln Concert without being able to feature a single note of his music. “It’s about this legendary concert where a pianist has to improvise for an hour on a broken piano. As artists, the creative process is often about dealing with obstructions and obstacles. Telling this story without using any of the original music was our broken piano.”

Plenty of music biopics are unable to use songs by the artists they depict. Some, like the 2020 Bowie-related movie Stardust, struggle as a result; others, like Backbeat or Nowhere Boy, find ways to tell a more introspective tale. “For me, it was a beautiful obstacle to overcome,” says Ido Fluk, the Israeli writer and director of Köln 75, which dramatises the events surrounding Keith Jarrett’s famous Köln Concert without being able to feature a single note of his music. “It’s about this legendary concert where a pianist has to improvise for an hour on a broken piano. As artists, the creative process is often about dealing with obstructions and obstacles. Telling this story without using any of the original music was our broken piano.”

THE JUNE 2025 ISSUE OF UNCUT IS AVAILABLE TO ORDER NOW: STARRING R.E.M., A DOORS RARITIES CD, BON IVER, PRINCE, SHACK, AMY WINEHOUSE, DIRE STRAITS, STEREOLAB AND MORE

Fifty years ago, the American jazz pianist Keith Jarrett turned up to play a solo gig at the Cologne Opera House and, instead of the 10ft-long, half-ton Bösendorfer concert grand that he was expecting, he was given a weedy, 6ft rehearsal piano with broken pedals. A furious Jarrett wanted to cancel but ended up reluctantly playing the gig, using the instrument’s limitations to improvise in a completely different way. Against the odds, a live recording of the show ended up shifting more than four million copies, becoming the biggest-selling solo piano album in history and turning Jarrett into a star.

Köln 75 explores the chaotic events leading up the concert, with John Magaro playing a spiky Keith Jarrett and Mala Emde playing Vera Brandes, the feisty teenage promoter who ultimately talked him into playing the show. Fluk says that his aim was to “move the focus away from Jarrett, the brooding artist, and instead look at the people who help to facilitate art. Vera Brandes was 16 when she started booking concerts. She’s a legend in Germany, and her story is as important to the Köln Concert as Jarrett’s. When I decided to make the film, I tracked her down and found her living in Greece. She said she’d been waiting 50 years for someone to tell her story!”

Switching between English and German dialogue, Köln 75 often breaks the fourth wall and uses an elliptical narrative approach that goes off on entertaining tangents. “Many music biopics are very formulaic,” argues Fluk. “The origin story, the tortured genius, the excesses of addiction, the triumphant comeback concert, etcetera. I wanted something more freewheeling. My spirit guide was Michael Winterbottom’s 24 Hour Party People: fast, energetic and fun.”

The famously reclusive Keith Jarrett had no input into the film, but his brother Chris – also a renowned pianist – was a script advisor. “We wanted to make sure we got our portrayal of Keith right,” says Fluk. Help also came from the film’s producer Oren Moverman, who co-wrote two of the more impressively unorthodox music biopics of recent times, I’m Not There and Love & Mercy.

The Köln Concert is the subject of another upcoming film called Lost In Köln, a documentary that forensically interviews dozens of people involved in the show. Brandes was involved in both projects, and Fluk sees them as complementary. “But my film certainly isn’t a documentary,” he emphasise. “I also didn’t really want it to be a jazz film, just as The Köln Concert isn’t really a ‘jazz’ album – it’s as much a piece of country-rock, blues and classical music. I wanted to make something similarly genre-free, something that wasn’t gatekeepy, something accessible to everyone.”

Köln 75 will be released in the UK later this year

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Avatar’s Johannes Eckerström Says New Album Will Be Out This Year

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Johannes Eckerström teases Avatar’s next album, which should be out later this year, and reflects on his appreciation for Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath. Continue reading…

Eulogy in Code: How deadmau5 Developed a Gaming Tribute to His Late Cat, Meowingtons

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Back in 2012 inside a Toronto penthouse, a domestic shorthair cat once gazed out over Yonge–Dundas Square, his own face beaming back at him in LED glory from a billboard below. “Do you even fucking know? Do you care?” Joel Zimmerman, better known as deadmau5, recalls asking him of the massive album ad featuring his face.

The cat didn’t. Typical.

But in true deadmau5 fashion, where innovation meets self-deprecation, Meowingtons’ indifference didn’t stop him from becoming a muse. And now, posthumously, a playable one.

Zimmerman has unveiled Meowingtons Simulator, a tribute to his late companion, who sadly passed away in August 2023. Developed under his newly launched Oberha5li Studios banner and powered by Epic Games’ Unreal Engine, it’s a rhythm-based rag doll game where players control a digitized, dancing Meowingtons in a virtual nightclub.

“Meowingtons was basically a rag doll in real life,” Zimmerman tells EDM.com. “You’d pick him up and he’d just flop. You could make him dance and he was just cool with it, which was really funny.”

A famous 1935 thought experiment by the theoretical physicist Erwin Schrödinger illustrated the oddity of quantum mechanics by imagining a cat in a sealed box that is simultaneously alive and dead until someone observes it. Like Schrödinger’s cat, Meowingtons now exists in its own quantum state of parody and poignancy.

But don’t mistake Meowingtons Simulator for therapy in disguise. While it does function as a sort of eulogy in code, it’s more so a seedbed for Zimmerman’s big ambitions with his new game development studio.

“It’s not a grief process or coping mechanism,” he insists. “Meowingtons lived to be 16. That’s pretty alright, so it’s not like ‘woe is me.’ I processed it in a day, maybe two. It happens.”

Ever since Zimmerman got into game development, he says, he’s been learning about rag doll physics in Unreal Engine. One of his earliest experiments was building a cat model that behaved and looked like his own, the first prototype of which was a low-poly kitty with no fur, flopping around with the grace of a drunk sock puppet.

When activated by the cue button, the cat transitions from procedural animation into rag doll mode, where its movements are entirely governed by gravity and physics. Zimmerman compares the dynamics to a concept he admits is “really dark”: imagine holding a lifeless cat by its head and tail, then watching it flop around as though it’s “nodding to the beat.”

The sim’s rag doll physics create the illusion of the cat dancing to the music, akin to a puppet’s movements, but without showing the strings. Zimmerman likens it to the unsettling realities behind the production of hot dogs: it works, but it’s better not to ask how.

The “Meowingtons Simulator” game from Oberha5li Studios co-founders Joel Zimmerman (deadmau5) and Cameron Rockey.

Oberha5li Studios

It’s the kind of thing that only someone who’s spent years in Unreal Engine forums and nerding out over real-time audiovisual mechanics can appreciate. That passion led him to meet Aaron McLeran and Max Hayes, Epic Games’ Lead Audio Programmer and Senior Audio Programmer, respectively. They worked on the bleeding-edge Quartz subsystem, a sample-accurate timing engine that syncs audio with precision far beyond standard frame rates.

Zimmerman emphasizes the need for hyper-precise synchronization between audio and visual elements to avoid lag in game engines, where even minuscule misalignments are noticeable. In most games, he explains, visuals are rendered at a relatively low rate of between 60 and 120 frames per second. However, audio operates on a much finer timescale, at 48,000 samples per second, which means audio events can happen in sub-microsecond intervals.

This massive difference, which he refers to as a “chasm,” makes it difficult to tightly sync visual cues with specific audio samples, like a kick drum or snare hit. That’s where the processing of Quartz came in.

Running parallel to Unreal Engine, the tech, for which Zimmerman has a deep fascination, essentially acts as a reliable metronome for audio within it. The system enabled him to cue visuals and gameplay events exactly in time with the music, even at unconventional tempos with pesky decimals like 128.6 BPM.

“So it’s that technology that really drove me to [game creation] and finding these different use cases,” he says. “Then it was a marriage of, let’s take my rag doll cat and attach it to the port system so that every beat, the handle would go up. And if I changed the BPM up and down, the cat would perfectly be in sync. And I thought, ‘This is funny as hell. I should make a game.'”

The “Meowingtons Simulator” game from Oberha5li Studios co-founders Joel Zimmerman (deadmau5) and Cameron Rockey.

Oberha5li Studios

But this wasn’t just about noodling with the physics of a noodle-legged cat. Despite the hilarity of it all, Zimmerman realized early on that a floppy feline wasn’t quite a game. So he brought in veteran programmer Cameron Rockey, who added multiplayer features, cosmetics and, perhaps most crucially, a sense of community.

“What are the little things we can add to build a community feel?” Rockey recalls asking. Under his direction, what began as a quirky, simplistic simulator quickly evolved into a more immersive, socially-driven experience.

One of the first things he did was replicate dance variables across players’ cats so everyone could jam out together, even if they were listening to different tracks. “The cats in the nightclub are synchronized to your local music rather than us sharing the music,” Rockey explains. “So you could be hanging out together, but doing something different at the same time.”

Rockey, who has over two decades of dev experience, then layered in leaderboards and a “mau5head builder” that lets players assemble custom deadmau5 helmets using collectibles gathered around the map.

“We started adding more and more little features like that for the community to do and customize their experience within Meowingtons, but staying on-brand for deadmau5,” he says.

The mau5head builder in the “Meowingtons Simulator” game.

Oberha5li Studios

While the co-founders’ passion for game creation drives the project forward, its development process remains refreshingly unpretentious at its core. Behind the expanding features and growing fan involvement lies a partnership unburdened by corporate game development conventions—just two avid creators following their instincts.

“Don’t get me wrong. I like to think I’m pretty talented, and I know Cameron’s very talented with game design,” Zimmerman says. “But we’re just two dudes fucking around on Discord and making a game.”

That’s underselling it. After fetching an estimated $55 million through Create Music Group’s acquisition of his timeless music catalog, he says he has big plans for Oberha5li Studios, which is shaping up to be much more than a passion project.

“We’re at our first little thing and I anticipate growing this company over the next couple of years,” Zimmerman says. “Maybe two years from now, I’ll be 10 employees deep and we’ll have a bigger, more AAA-looking title on the go. So the ambition is high.”

Meowingtons Simulator is available now on Steam.

Bridget St John: “They all had kind hearts”

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A new mini-album celebrates her lost ‘brothers’: Nick Drake, John Martyn, Kevin Ayers and Michael Chapman. Bridget St John explains all to Uncut…

A new mini-album celebrates her lost ‘brothers’: Nick Drake, John Martyn, Kevin Ayers and Michael Chapman. Bridget St John explains all to Uncut…

UNCUT: On Covering My Brothers, you pay tribute to four artists who were important to you. Did you feel like a sister to them?
BRIDGET ST JOHN: They were my brothers – never lovers! They were people that stayed in my life, other than Nick, who died so young. I saw John Martyn three months before he died, he came to New York [where St John has lived since 1976]. Even though I didn’t see them all the time, the connection was there, like it is with good friends.

THE JUNE 2025 ISSUE OF UNCUT IS AVAILABLE TO ORDER NOW: STARRING R.E.M., A DOORS RARITIES CD, BON IVER, PRINCE, SHACK, AMY WINEHOUSE, DIRE STRAITS, STEREOLAB AND MORE

You’ve really put your own stamp on these songs, including an experimental take on Michael Chapman’s 10-minute “Aviator”.
I only cover a song if it has got inside me. I can sing these songs because I relate to them as if I’d written them. “Aviator” was about a personal thing for Michael, a problem with the Inland Revenue, but for me it’s about the world and what’s going on now. So I changed a few words, with his wife Andru’s blessing. Michael’s version is much more aggressive than mine – I think he was really angry when he wrote it!

You cover Nick Drake’s “Fly”, and you knew him back then too – as much as anyone could…
I related to him very strongly because we were both so shy – it’s hard to be so shy and be onstage. I don’t think I was as introverted as him, but I felt he was a kindred spirit.

Yours and Kevin Ayers’ voices worked very well together – almost like male and female versions of each other.
I always loved playing with Kevin. I’m not a perfect singer, I often don’t sing exactly on the beat, and I think we just could feel where the other one was. Here, I play “Jolie Madame”, which we recorded together originally. I can speak French, but Kevin was properly bilingual, so it was completely finished when he played it to me.

The oddity on this EP is your version of John Martyn’s “Head And Heart” – a demo you made for 1974’s Jumblequeen, lost and recently discovered.
John was originally going to produce the album, so I recorded some demos for him. There were six songs, and “Head And Heart” was one of them. I’d totally forgotten doing it until last summer when Mhairi, John’s daughter, got in touch and said, “I have this reel-to-reel.” I really like this version.

John was the first of these four you met, wasn’t he?
I met him in 1967, when I was at Sheffield University, through Robin Frederick who also knew Nick Drake. He was the one who took me to Al Stewart‘s house to record my first demo, which got to John Peel, which led to everything opening up for me. John Martyn helped me buy my first steel-string guitar, because I only had a nylon string. I did several gigs with him, until it became clear that he was so far ahead of his time, with the Echoplex and his way of playing… his audience didn’t relate to me so much, as a quiet singer-songwriter, so we did fewer gigs together, but still some, and sometimes with him and Danny Thompson.

Did you try and keep up with their hell-raising?
No, after two glasses of wine I’d need to go to bed! But all my ‘brothers in music’ had kind hearts. They might have had rough edges, or deeper than rough edges… but I think I’m drawn to the good and the depth of people.

What have you got coming up after this release?
I’ve got a couple of songs I definitely want to put down, so I’ll probably go to the studio upstate, where I recorded “Aviator”, in May or June.

Covering My Brothers is available on 10” vinyl by Shagrat Records

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