Tag: interview (Page 4 of 7)

Interview: Damaris Phillips

I caught up with Chef Damaris Phillips, star of Food Network’s new show Southern at Heart and the winner of last season’s Food Network Star.

Damaris shares her take on the relationship between food and music, her favorite Louisville bands and venues, and the best Taylor Swift karaoke songs.

Damaris Phillips

After The Show: Do you ever listen to music while cooking? Would you recommend that people use music as a way to enhance the cooking experience?

Damaris: When I am throwing a party, I always listen to pop music of today OR the ’90s. I like to dance around the kitchen singing and gearing up for fun. For mass quantity of cooking, I’m going modern country, not too loud, but perfect for singing along and breaking up the monotony.

Thanksgiving cooking, I pull out old favorites from Ryan Adams or Lucinda Williams. And for Christmas, I ALWAYS listen to Christmas music. All-time favorite is Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas Is You.” Seriously, music makes everything more fun, more real, more alive.

Louisville, Kentucky plays a big role on your show Southern at Heart. What are your favorite local Louisville bands and venues?

I have always been a big fan of Joe Manning’s music….Also Cabin. And my favorite venue has to be Headliners. It reminds me of seeing G. Love and Special Sauce when I was 20 years old. I felt so cool. Also, I am always pleased when a concert is at The Palace Theatre.

Sites like Turntable Kitchen try to pair songs with recipes. Do you see any connections between music and food?

In my life, my mood affects my cooking, from technique to creativity to balance. Music highly impacts my mood so it would reason that if music affects my mood and my mood affects my cooking, then music affects my cooking. College Intro To Logic at its finest! I loved that class.

Since you described yourself as a “karaoke superstar,” what are some songs by southern bands that you love to sing? Would you ever share your singing talents on Southern at Heart?

I am often caught singing Dolly Parton songs at karaoke. Also the Dixie Chicks, Shania Twain, Miranda Lambert, Johnny Cash, Randy Travis. Maybe it would be easier to say which southern bands I DON’T love to sing. And in regards to karaoke on Southern at Heart, I don’t know if people can handle it!

On Food Network Star, you completed a lot of challenges under intense time pressure and stress. How did you achieve calm/balance and mitigate stress?

I would focus on my breathing to calm and re-center. I find that’s what I do most when stress starts to close in. I breathe lots of deep breaths.

And finally, what are your favorite Taylor Swift songs?

“You Belong With Me” because it is going to be AWESOME for karaoke. I’m saving it for my birthday party! And “Begin Again” because, let’s be real, we’ve all been there.

Ok that’s all I got. Thank you for this interview. Music and food – what a lovely couple. Almost as perfect as food and love!

Thanks Damaris! Tune in to Southern at Heart on Sunday mornings at 10:30 on Food Network, and check out DamarisPhillips.com

Interview: Wesley Verhoeve

Photo by  Julia Robbs

Photo by Julia Robbs

Wesley Verhoeve is the founder of NYC-based music company Family Records, an independent label and artist management/development firm.

He’s also the co-founder of GNTLMN and writes about the intersection between creativity, tech, and business.

After The Show: You work on so many projects – what’s the breakdown like? Take me through a typical week or day for you.

Wes: It depends on the week and day. Some weeks I’ll have a client in town. Other weeks we have a new product launch…we’re working on watches right now for GNTLMN. Sometimes a new music release. I’ve realized it’s not so great if I try to work on multiple projects in one day…It really just depends on what’s more important that week.

On Sunday mornings I always take a couple hours to review my past week and see if I maybe missed something or got caught up on something. So, look back and then look forward to the next week and block off days for specific projects.

Tell me about the work you’re doing to connect tech and music start-ups in Europe to the American market.

That’s a newer thing…I’m trying to figure out how I can add the most value, for example to a company that’s successful in Germany and trying to come over to the US. Because I’ve lived on both continents, I can give them advice on how to adapt their product or marketing. So there’s product-focused strategy, and marketing-focused, and also introduction based (introducing them to people). It’s really pretty diverse…sometimes also curating.

What project do you find most challenging?

Family Records. I’m spending more time thinking rather than doing. The problem with music releases is that there’s so much released, and it’s so ephemeral. I’m thinking about how to make releases stickier.

How do you reach a balance between consuming and creating?

That’s a good question. It’s a little bit in flux. My friend Frank Chimero is a designer and he had an article about this particular topic – being a freelancer/creative can be kind of lonely. I can get caught up in talking a lot. It’s very easy and fun for me to consume magazines, books, and all that stuff, but while you’re doing that you’re not actually making anything. Making is more important for me.

I’m trying to be very conscious of that. I’ve scaled back some on the podcasts I listen to, blog posts I follow, people I follow on Twitter…there’s so much to consume that I can’t create anymore. Doing things like going out into nature is more interesting to me than reading about it.

Where do you get ideas for the articles you write on your website?

It’s either something I’m dealing with myself – and writing it down to help work through or crystallize it – or something a friend talked about. A lot of times it will be sparked by something I hear or read.

It’s funny…my most popular/shared one is the coffee shop post [published in Fast Company, “Why You Should Work From A Coffee Shop, Even When You Have An Office”]. That was a quick one to write and turned out to resonate more than articles I’ve spent a full day slaving over. You never know!

Thanks Wesley! Keep up with his latest projects at WesleyVerhoeve.com.

Interview: Mahina Gannet

Mahina Gannet is a tour manager and leads the Artist Relations team for Governors Ball Music Festival. She has served as Production Coordinator for huge Death Cab For Cutie and The Postal Service tours and is currently tour managing Neko Case.

Mahina Gannet After The Show

After The Show: What’s your background career-wise – how did you get started working in music?

Mahina: I started as an intern at Superfly Presents, a concert promoter based in New York City during my senior year at NYU. That internship led to my first full time job in music, working for Superfly as their Office Manager.

What’s a typical day for you when you’re working on a tour?

A typical day on tour depends on where you are, the type of show, the size of your band and crew and what position I’m filling. Currently, as TM for Neko Case, I start my days earlier than load in, simply to catch up on emails and all the other advance work I can’t accomplish once we start loading in the show. There’s usually a bank run, a hotel run and then load in.

My job really focuses on backstage, not the stage itself, so I spend load in time putting up information, setting up dressing rooms, the production office, catering. I make sure the band has whatever they need. I work with the promoter rep on backstage security, guest lists and show settlements. I work on the logistics for getting to our next city. I’m sure there’s a lot more but essentially it’s just making sure everyone (band, crew, management, agents) is well informed for all show related items and as happy as possible.

How helpful was attending NYU Stern School of Business…do you apply what you learned to your current jobs?

I’d say attending NYU is directly related to what I do now. But it was completely unintentional and not because of New York University, per se. It was one of those “right place at the right time” situations. A very good friend of mine, Tom Russell, now co-owner of Founders Entertainment and The Governors Ball Music Festival, was a displaced Tulane University student during the fall of my senior year due to Hurricane Katrina. A Manhattan native, he transferred to NYU while his school recovered from the storm. He was at the time already an intern at Superfly and happened to be in my International Marketing class. We had to partner up for group work and he was the only person, aside from me, not wearing the typical Stern suit and tie uniform. I immediately introduced myself.

Tom eventually got me my internship and we’ve been friends ever since. So – was NYU helpful in getting me my first job? I’d say for its location and the notch on my resume, yes. But up until that point, I had no intention of working in the music industry. And I honestly only had two classes from NYU that still stick out in my mind as useful: my business law class and my entrepreneurship class.

The actual Governors Ball festival is only one weekend, but how long do you work pre and post that weekend? And how do you remain so calm and in control in the midst of the chaos of working a festival?

Gov Ball is essentially 7 months of work for me. I usually start working on it in January and don’t finish till a month after the festival.

And RE: Calmness During Chaos – lots of deep breaths. Managing Artist Relations at a festival is by and far the most consuming gig I have. It really does take a lot of energy to maintain a state of calm. But in all seriousness, I practice a lot of yoga in my personal time and really do try and apply those fundamentals to working in such a chaotic environment.

Besides being able to manage schedules, logistics, and accounting for bands, what type of personality makes someone well-suited to being a tour manager?

I think someone is a good fit to be a TM if they have a well-balanced personality themselves. The TMs I admire not only have a great job, but have great home lives as well. For me, it’s a combination of being relaxed, taking charge and being aggressive, being super organized, punctual and a good traveler. And at the end of the day, knowing it’s just a job and that I can go home to my loving family anytime I need.

I’ve heard horror stories about dishonest promoters and ill-equipped venues. What’s the most challenging thing that you’ve ever dealt with as a TM?

Gosh – I don’t know if there’s anything specific…Assuming that it’s not the tour’s fault for not advancing the show properly, awful promoters / venues are usually due to a lack of awareness about the other parties involved. Most bad days are due to either bad communication or a lack of understanding that most touring people just want simple comforts: a clean shower, clean towels, a safe place to put their stuff, laundry machines, good food. These things are the least difficult but most commonly overlooked – that’s when it’s most frustrating for me.

Is it ever a struggle to balance being professional and in charge while also being fun and friendly? It seems that once you’re traveling and living so closely with bands, a TM could easily go one extreme (too business-oriented / babysitter) or the other (too friendly and like another member of the band).

Yea – but I think a lot of people struggle with that balance in any job. I think it’s more accentuated on tours because you are working, living and traveling with your co-workers. But I just find that there’s a time and place for both. I’m there to get a job done, and when it’s done, I love to hang out. A lot of TMs I’ve seen definitely can go to either extreme (some actually thinking they are a member of the band, some so distant the band can’t talk to them) but it’s like everything else in life. It’s about finding your own personal balance that then can be translated to all the other facets of your life.

What are your current favorite albums or songs?

To be honest, ever since I’ve been touring full time, I don’t listen to as much music. I think that’s because it’s so hard to find time when it’s quiet. But, I will say over the last couple years, I’ve loved a band called Surrogate more than any other. I highly recommend them. There’s also this band Bad Rabbits I love, I always go back to LCD Soundsystem and recently I fell in love with Haim.

Any future projects you’d like to share, music or otherwise?

My most current project is that I started a Supper Club (aka an underground restaurant). A few friends and I essentially create a restaurant for the night at a house, invite 15-20 people we know and serve a three – four course meal paired with cocktails. I’m super lucky that I live in an area surrounded by amazing agriculture, so everything we bring to the table is made locally. It’s pretty awesome and will hopefully lead to me starting my next company, a local restaurant in Chico, CA.

Interview: Eric of The Wild Honey Pie

I sat down with Eric Weiner, the founder of The Wild Honey Pie, to talk about running his Brooklyn-based music site, managing bands, and organizing & promoting shows in New York.

Eric Weiner After The Show Interview

After The Show: The Wild Honey Pie puts on shows. What does that process of organizing and promoting a show entail from start to finish?

Eric: A lot of times we’ll have artists come to us and say ‘we’re coming to New York at this date, we’d love for you to curate the show.’ And I’ll book the venue, I’ll book the rest of the bands, negotiate what they’re going to get paid, figure out if we can bring on some sponsors for it so we can pay them some more and get the word out in that respect, and then from there it’s just about making it an event instead of just a concert.

So we’ll work with our illustrators to make a beautiful poster, we’ll promote it on the website, email blasts, Twitter, Facebook. It started with putting together great line-ups and hoping that those bands would sell out the show, but now more than ever before we’re bringing out people to these shows and exposing them to these bands, and very carefully putting together the line-up so that we can expose each band’s fans to each other.

I really like Knitting Factory and Mercury Lounge…what are the best venues in NY for both bands and audiences?

I think Cameo Gallery has made some huge strides. It went from being a really beautiful venue that was sort of hidden, and now they’re taking some great steps and making it a staple of the NY music scene. I’ll never turn down a show at Music Hall of Williamsburg – love it. Glasslands is great…Shea Stadium is a cool DIY. Living Room is a nice show depending on who you’re seeing, and same with Rockwood – great venue.

The Wild Honey Pie has a social media presence on Vimeo, Hype Machine, Twitter, Facebook, SoundCloud, YouTube, Foursquare, Tumblr…Is it important to reach all those platforms, or does it fragment your audience at all?

No…I do think Vimeo and YouTube fragments it. We’ve decided that YouTube is our platform – we don’t really upload to Vimeo anymore, although I do love what they have, YouTube subscribers are more important than people who follow you on Vimeo. It’s just the way it is.

Each platform does something different, so I think it’s important to have a presence on all including SoundCloud and Spotify. Spotify for example, I think we went from 400 followers to about 1500 in a month, so that number has become increasingly important.

Are you personally spending the time to update all those different platforms?

It’s not like it’s a part of the job – it just has to be a part of your life. With our social platforms, it’s important for me to have a very personal relationship with our readers and viewers. I personally manage all the social platforms…it’s important to have that personal element; it’s a person doing it as opposed to a machine.

How do you discover new bands?

We get a lot of emails. That’s how I’ve found some of my favorite artists. Some press releases from different PR agencies. Word of mouth, Bandcamp searches, SoundCloud searches, YouTube searches. Again, part of your life. It has to kind of run through your blood that you want to go out and find these artists and that it gives you some kind of intrinsic reward.

Some people like discovering and choosing songs much more than doing licensing paperwork & contracts. What parts of your music coordinator job at MTV job did you like most?

I really enjoyed placing music. I would get the episodes without music and tell the editor ‘here’s three songs to try here, here’s three songs to try there.’ That process of taking a scene without music and giving life to it – music is another character.

Do you read Lefsetz Letter? He said recently that music curation, as opposed to music tech, is not scalable, which I thought was an interesting idea. What’s your revenue model?

There’s a lot and I think that’s a good thing for us. We do a lot of different things – it all falls under the same umbrella – management, event promotion, video production, ad revenue, merchandise. There’s a few things I can’t reveal right now just because it’s in the works that are larger revenue streams that are really exciting.

You do so much – supervision, video production, concert promotion, artist management…what are your goals for the future – do you eventually want to focus on one area?

I think it’s about continuing to build The Wild Honey Pie. It’s about continuing to work creatively with other people who do similar things to me but also artists that I love and want to support. And getting to a place where we can post an article and have a substantial positive effect on their career, because we don’t waste our time writing negative reviews. We don’t waste our time talking about any bands that we don’t love.

Thanks Eric. Check out The Wild Honey Pie + follow @TheWildHoneyPie + Facebook.

Interview: Stacy of Eisley

Stacy King of Eisley answered some questions about the band’s new album Currents, changing up songs when playing live, and transitioning from a kid musician to an adult musician.

Eisley is currently on tour with Say Anything — catch them tonight and tomorrow at Irving Plaza in NYC.

Stacy Dupree King Interview

After The Show: Lyrically the songs on Currents are more whimsical and figurative than the songs on The Valley. Was it a conscious decision to move in that less literal/straightforward direction?

Stacy: Yes, I think the lyrics are overall just a bit brighter. I think it made for a nice change from The Valley where we were going through some hard personal things. We were angry at a lot of people. Now that we’re in a better place I feel that it’s reflected in both the music and lyrics.

On Currents, I really like the choir effect at the end of “Save My Soul,” as well as “Real World” and “Lost Enemies.” What songs do you most connect with on the new album?

We are big fans of the choir! We grew up all singing together so I feel that it represents our family’s history. I connect a lot with “Millstone” because it was Chauntelle’s first contribution in so many years and I feel very proud of her.

When playing live, you add an intro to “I Could Be There For You,” and several years ago Weston added an amazing drum fill after the bridge of “My Lovely.” How do you decide to make little instrumental or vocal variations when playing live?

The intro to “ICBTFY” just came about because I felt like the show needed something new and we didn’t have any new songs to debut at the time. It’s hard to find ways to add something completely new and different so I thought I’d just build off of a song. Kind of like a prequel.

You were 14 when Warner signed Eisley – being a kid and the youngest sibling in the band, how has the transition to being an adult in a band been? Especially now that you have a family of your own, does it feel like a completely different life/experience?

It was sort of hard in the early days. I often felt a lot of pressure to succeed and please everyone. There were so many forces trying to shape who I was as an artist but after everything I’ve gone through (in regards to all of that) and by failing a few times, I’ve learned to not fear so much. It’s good to be pliable and listen and learn but deep down, you just have to trust yourself.

You recorded Combinations in Malibu – what do you remember about that experience?

It was sort of depressing and beautiful. We were in a gorgeous environment next to the beach but I felt so much pressure and pessimism in regards to the record and the label we were on. There was so much money being spent and people breathing down our necks. I just remember feeling stressed but I have tons of fond memories of us as a band hanging out, laughing… we made some great memories!

Sucre’s “Place To Be” cover worked perfectly, as did your “In The Aeroplane Over The Sea” and “Lion’s Mane” covers. Given that so many great songs exist, what are your criteria for picking the right ones to cover?

I chose songs that are very special to me. Both Stevie Nicks and Nick Drake have played an integral part in my development as a song writer and inspired me so much. That’s why I like to sing them; I just feel honored and grateful.

+ Check out Eisley’s upcoming tour dates 

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