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Tim Minneci
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You Could Be My Aramis Podcast
Episode 90 - Tim Minneci
Tim Minneci is a musician, podcaster, and author based in Columbus, Ohio. Our lengthy conversations answers some important questions, such as: How does Tim decide which characters to kill off in a book? What authors, films, and music give him inspiration to write? What does he hope readers take away from his books? You'll the answers to these questions and more in this episode. Dig Me Out podcast
2023-03-24
1h 21
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#504: Dummy by Portishead
Portishead may remain the most interesting enigma of the 1990s. First is Beth Gibbons, who channels Liz Fraser of the Cocteau Twins, Billie Holiday, and Jane Birkin into an unmatched vocal for the decade. Second is Geoff Barrow, creating 60s and 70s sounding spy movie and spaghetti western sound scapes via downtempo, gothic, and hip-hop samples and influences, with the tone-perfect playing of Adrian Utley on guitar. Though cast with trip-hop peers Massive Attack, DJ Shadow, and Bjork, Portishead forge an entirely unique path. Songs In This Episode:Intro...
2020-09-08
50 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#503: Athens, Georgia in the 1980s and 90s
The Athens, Georgia music scene might have been put on the map by R.E.M., but in truth they were one piece of a vibrant, diverse puzzle that included Pylon, The B-52s, Love Tractor, and others. A college town with nowhere to play in the late 70s and early 80s, bands and artists made their own spaces happen. Thanks to day-long drive to New York City and an influential college arts program, the sleepy Georgia town transformed in the 80s into one of the most important centers of musical, political, and social expression in the country. The 90...
2020-09-01
1h 55
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#502: In The Aeroplane Over The Sea by Neutral Milk Hotel
Very few bands can claim the influence and legendary status as Athens, Georgia's Neutral Milk Hotel. While the band released just a pair of records, an EP, and single in their ten years, 1998's In The Aeroplane Over The Sea has grown from critically appreciated to cult status over the past two decades. With enough distance from the release, it's easy to see why, as 2000s bands such as The Decemberists, Arcade Fire, Beruit, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, and more picked-up on the lo-fi, psychedlic sounds that countered the late 90s/early 00s mainstream push of processed and...
2020-08-25
1h 18
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#501: Cure For Pain by Morphine
Were the 90s just Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and various other grunge bands and their followers? Of course not, but revisiting Morphine's 1993 album Cure For Pain makes a strong case that the true alternative of the decade never bubbled up to MTV TRL, Clear Channel playlists, or Rolling Stone covers. A horn driven, blues and jazz influenced rock band that channeled Tom Waits and The Velvet Underground was never going to sell ten million albums. But along with fellow outsiders like those in Soul Coughing, The Jon Spencer Blue Explosion, and others, there was room on college radio and 120 Minutes...
2020-08-18
46 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#500: Nevermind by Nirvana
It's episode 500 of Dig Me Out! At our Patreon page, we asked our patrons to pick a record for this special occasion, but not just any record. We gave them the top ten best-selling rock albums of the 1990s, and let them choose from Alanis Morissette, Kid Rock, Santana, Hootie & The Blowfish, No Doubt, Matchbox 20, Metallica, Green Day, Creed and Nirvana. Thanks to their votes, we got the chance to revisit possibly the most iconic and legendary album of the decade - 1991's Nevermind. But we weren't alone, as we invited our patrons and past guests to join us...
2020-08-11
1h 59
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#499: In Thrall by Murray Attaway
Aimee Mann. Jackson Browne. Jon Brion. Nicky Hopkins. Benmont Tench. Steve Nieve. Jim Keltner. What do all those names have in common? They played on Murray Attaway's 1993 album In Thrall. But wait, there's more! Pat Mastelotto of King Crimson and Mr. Mister. Robbie Blunt from Robert Plant's solo band. Alex Acuña of the Weather Report. Sid Page of Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks. Steven Soles and David Mansfield from Bob Dylan's band. How did all these people end up playing on the lone solo release by the former singer/guitarist of Athen's, Georgia jangle-pop band Guadalcanal Diary...
2020-08-04
1h 04
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#498: B-Sides Of The 90s
The 1990s may have been the most bountiful of decades when it came to the concept of the B-side. Originally singles provided just one extra song on the second side of a 45 RPM single. That expanded to 12" singles for dance 1970s remixes and 1980s longer cassette singles. For music obsessives, the 90s provide the rare opportunity to hear three, four or more tracks from a band not included on an album. Non-album studio tracks were accompanied by demo, live, remix, acoustic, radio edit and more of album and non-album tracks, as well as covers, instrumental and acapella versions. Some...
2020-07-28
1h 13
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#497: Mack Avenue Skullgame by Big Chief
Funk music might be most commonly associated with 1970s bands like Funkadelic, Parliament, Sly & The Family Stone, the Ohio Players, and other more, but the 1990s saw their fair share of funk enthusiasts slip into the alternative mainstream. The Red Hot Chili Peppers had become an MTV staple, Primus and Faith No More explored the outer edges, while bands like the Beastie Boys, Living Colour, Infectious Grooves and more put their own spin on the sound. In Ann Arbor, Michigan, the remnants of 80s hardcore bands the Necros, Laughing Hyenas, and others formed Big Chief, whose 1991 skewed towards the...
2020-07-21
51 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#496: To Bring You My Love by PJ Harvey
In 1995 PJ Harvey was relatively unknown in the US, aside from college radio and others tuned into the underground. Thanks to the breakout single "Down By The Water," for a brief moment she was in the same spotlight as Tori Amos, Bjork, Sarah McLachlan, Liz Phair, and other female artists who transcended the dominance of Seattle grunge and guitar rock. On To Bring You My Love, Harvey bounces between the minimalist blues of the title track and the krautrock drive of Working For The Man, and the blistering distortion of Meet Ze Monsta and pounding drive of Long Snake...
2020-07-14
53 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#495: Desert Rain by Indian Ocean
Thanks to our Patreon community, every so often we get to step outside the our 90s comfort zone of American, UK and Australian alternative and indie rock. Having previously gotten hip to the rock en español of Café Tacvba and the Indian/Britpop fusion of Cornershop, this time we're getting the fusion from a different starting point. On the 1997 live recording Desert Rain by Indian Ocean, the fusion starts with the North Indian style of Indian classical music known as Hindustani, and from there incorporates elements of jazz, rock and folk. Able to stand on its mightily on...
2020-07-07
53 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#494: Tribute Albums of the 90s
Maybe more so than any other decade, the 90s pumped out tribute albums at a furious rate. Whether it was loving takes on beloved artists, exposing underground heroes to new audiences, or updates with kitschy and nostalgic themes, nearly every month a new tribute compilation CD was probably at your local record store. Our roundtable shares what makes a successful tribute album and what can derail an effort, whether it's simply cloning the original song, or completely ignoring it. We also investigate the phenomenon of random, lesser-known bands popping up in tracking listings alongside a group of heavy-hitters, and...
2020-06-30
58 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#493: Blokes You Can Trust by Cosmic Psychos
The cross-pollination of punk and rock between the United States and Australia has been going on for decades, but one of lesser-known but most interesting (to us, at least!) is the 1980s and early 90s grunge scene, and how Australian bands like The Scientists, The Birthday Party, and Cosmic Psychos had an influence on their American Pacific Northwest counterparts. In the case of the Cosmic Psychos, it was finding commonality with bands like Mudhoney and the Melvins, and releasing their 1989 album on the then upstart Sub Pop label. In 1991 the band recorded with Butch Vig following the Nirvana's Nevermind...
2020-06-23
1h 03
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#492: Born To Quit by Smoking Popes
If you remember the Smoking Popes, it's probably thanks to their Buzzbin / Clueless soundtrack single "Need You Around." Lead singer Josh Caterer got tagged as punk-rock Morrissey, and while the band continued on, many were left with the impression that the Smoking Popes were something of a novelty. As we dug into this album for the first time, the realization quickly set in that the early Morrissey comparisons were way off base, as both Caterer, along with his brothers Eli and Matt, and drummer Mike Felumlee, are significantly less punk than expected. Sure, you can hear the energetic down...
2020-06-16
44 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#491: Hello Halo by Pollyanna
Pollyanna's 1996 EP Junior and 1996 debut album Long Player scored them multiple hit singles in Australia and put them on the national radar, which means the sophomore follow-up Hello Halo in 1997 had expectations attached. As we discovered, the band expanded their pallet. While the record is full of radio-friendly alternative rock ("Peachy Keen" and "Brittle Then Broken)", where the group really excels is their willingness to take some detours, like on the horn-backed tracks "Pulling Teen" and "Butterman," or the Helmet-esque post-hardcore of "Tank." Thanks to the deft production of Paul McKercher (Violetine, Ratcat, Falling Joys, Spiderbait, You Am I...
2020-06-09
40 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#490: Electro-Shock Blues by Eels
Thanks to a reliance on off-kilter retro sounds and lo-fi instrumentation, Eels were often compared to Beck (and not always favorably). On their second album, 1998's Electro-Shock Blues, they utilized one of the producers who helped Beck transition from one-hit-wonder status with Loser to the layered mastery of 1996's Odelay. But instead of matching the mayhem, singer/multi-instrumentalist Mark Oliver Everett constructs a sixteen-track somber affair with a few noisy interludes delving into personal loss at a bone-chillingly intimate level. What struck us was the deliberate shift from their debut that produced the hit single "Novocaine For The Soul,"...
2020-06-02
57 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#489: Origins - Muse In The 90s
When they released their debut album Showbiz in the US in 1999, Muse were one of a number of bands compared to the Pablo Honey/The Bends era of Radiohead thanks to Matt Bellamy's Thom Yorke like tenor and Johnny Greenwood's guitar acrobatics. But Muse were doing it as a three-piece, and over time the band shed the unfair comparisons to forge a path that paid as much homage to the bombast of classic Queen to the aural assault of Rage Against The Machine, all the while releasing a slew of hit singles, moving from opening slots, to sheds, to...
2020-05-26
1h 21
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#488: Dig by Dig with Scott Hackwith
Thanks to old friend of the show Chip Midnight, when patron Dewey Cole suggested revisiting the 1993 self-titled debut album from Dig, Chip reached out to lead singer and guitarist Scott Hackwith to have him join us to revisit this record. Dewey only came to record recently, so he provides a unique perspective of discovering an album seventeen years after its release. Chip interviewed Scott when the band was just starting out, gigging around the country with frequent stops in Ohio in the early-to-mid 1990s. Scott, who started out as a guitarist in T.S.O.L., learned to be...
2020-05-19
1h 26
Get Published Podcast
Tim Minneci - Promoting Your Book in a Limited Podcast Series
In episode 555 of the Get Published Podcast, Host and 15-Time Bestselling Author Paul G. Brodie talks with Tim Minneci about promoting your book through a limited series of podcast episodes. Find out more about how we can help you Share Your Story at www.GetPublishedPodcast.com
2020-05-18
00 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#487: Spanaway by Seaweed
If you've listened to this podcast long enough, you know that we are not always in agreement about what works and doesn't work for us on various albums. One of the earliest disagreements was back in Season One when we checked out the 1993 album Four by Seaweed. Thanks to a recent listener suggested poll on our Patreon site, we're back ten years later to check out the 1995 follow-up Spanaway, the band's only release on the Hollywood Records label. While the band faced the tired "sell-out" label for signing to a major, in reality, the band stayed close to what...
2020-05-12
50 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#486: Michael McDermott and Brian Koppleman revisit Gethsemane
While we have chatted with many artists over the years, rarely have we been able to get the record label perspective on the various ups and downs of the 90s. For this episode, we're lucky to get singer/songwriter Michael McDermott, who has been making records for thirty years, and the A&R rep who helped kick off that career, Brian Koppelman. While Brian is better known for his screenwriting (Rounders, Ocean's 13) and showrunning (Billions), his life in the music industry dates back to high school with A&R stints at Elektra Records, Giant Records, SBK Records and EMI...
2020-05-05
48 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#485: Lilith Fair in the 90s
While the 90s were dominated by the touring festival as opposed to the current day destination festival, the first half and second half had decidedly different approaches. Lollapalooza took a variety of artists from across genres with the intention of exposing artists across differing fanbases, whereas the Warped Tour, Ozzfest, H.O.R.D.E. Tour, and Lilith Fair each narrowed their focus. In the case of Lilith Fair, the simplistic history is that it was a female-centric folk tour, headlined by the likes of Sarah McLachlan, the Indigo Girls, Suzanne Vega, and Sheryl Crow. In reality, over the...
2020-04-28
1h 05
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#484: Less Is More by Even
Forging a sound out of American grunge and alternative along with British Invasion hooks and power pop melodies may seem like a recipe for disaster, but on their 1996 debut Less Is More, the Melbourne, Australian trio Even find the right balance. Channeling a Kurt Cobain cadence on one track and a John Lennon howl on another works best when the band keeps the songs short and tight, with plenty of catchy guitar riffs toss around. While we dug the high energy performances that pre-date the garage rock revival to come at the end of the decade, some of the...
2020-04-21
48 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#483: Good Weird Feeling by Odds
Once the alternative gold rush hit for bands in the 90s, one song could make or break an album. But for every Sex And Candy, Cumbersome or Possum Kingdom, hundreds of other bands failed to make the Top 40 for a variety of reasons that have nothing to do with the quality of the music. Take Vancouver, Canada's Odds, whose third album Good Weird Feeling is a smart combination of alternative guitar rock powered by two strong singers with a knack for lyrical twists. The two obvious singles, "Eat My Brain" and "Truth Untold" never found a home on American...
2020-04-14
51 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#482: Music Has The Right to Children by Boards of Cananda
Though not as lauded as grunge, Brit-pop, the rise of pop-punk or other 90s-centric genres, electronic music evolved throughout the decade as well thanks to subtler sounds coming out of the UK. While electronica and trip-hop each had their moments in the mainstream spotlight, groups like the brother-duo Boards of Canada from Scotland slid under the radar with slightly different takes, theirs being a more chill, downtempo approach utilizing vintage synths and drum machines, tape loops and field recordings. Music Has The Right To Children, their 1998 debut after several well-regarded singles and EPs, takes full advantage of the tools...
2020-04-07
45 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#481: Ebbhead by Nitzer Ebb
Though the mid-to-late nights are more regarded for the commercial rise of electronic music, specifically in the form of UK electronica from the Chemical Brothers, Prodigy and others, the mainstream interest in high octane beats and synth-over-guitar was nothing new. As the 80s transitioned to the 90s, bands like Depeche Mode and New Order were firmly established global phenomenons, while up-and-comers like Ministry and Nine Inch Nails were bringing industrial sounds to the mainstream on MTV. Nitzer Ebb began in 1982 and established themselves throughout the decade as an Electronic Body Music (EBM) pillar, but when 90s arrives the band...
2020-03-31
45 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#480: Sophomore Slump Revisited - American Highway Flower by Dada
As we have learned in our Sophomore Slump Revisited roundtable series, there are many factors and circumstances that can sink a band's second album, especially when coming off a hit single. In the case of Dada and their 1994 release American Highway Flower, the lack of an obvious radio single to match Dizz Knee Land off their debut is a fair consideration. Rather than repeat a formula, the skilled trio of singer-guitarist Michael Gurley, singer-bassist Joie Calio and drummer Phil Leavitt pushed the band in a variety of directions while maintaining a more consistent sound than their first release. But...
2020-03-24
1h 02
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#479: Choochtown by Hamell On Trial
Edward James "Ed" Hamell, better know as Hamell On Trial, has been writing, recording, and touring for over thirty years, bouncing from major labels to minor labels to his own, with either a studio or live album out almost every other year. While production values have shifted, the fiery anti-folk and spoken word approach has remained constant, and his 1999 album is definitely on the lower end of the recording quality spectrum. That doesn't impact the performances or songs, as Hamell On Trial makes stunning use of his Gibson acoustic guitar, plucking out staccato rhythms on one track before leading...
2020-03-17
1h 02
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#478: LP2 by Sunny Day Real Estate
Sunny Day Real Estate has famously been a band of influence but impermanence, with multiple break-ups and rumors of an unfinished album in the can for over a decade. On their second release, the 1995 self-titled or Pink Album or LP2, vocalist/guitarist/lyricist Jeremy Enigk left unfinished vocals as placeholders as the band splintered. What it creates is something unique, while words or phrases pop in occasion, the majority of the record utilizes the vocals as an instrument in a way that a band like My Bloody Valentine features vocalist Bilinda Butcher. But what makes SDRE special is the...
2020-03-10
50 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#477: Caviar by Caviar
So many bands got signed to major labels in the 1990s it could keep our podcast going well into the 22nd century. Rarely did artists get a second go-around as a new act, as was the case with vocalist Blake Smith and bassist Mike Willison after the breakup of their band Fig Dish. After recruiting a new guitarist and drummer, they formed Caviar and in 2000 released their self-titled debut on Island Records. While Smith's catchy melodies are still present, the band takes advantage of their second major-label chance by adding a variety of samples, including a bossa nova intro...
2020-03-03
50 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#476: R.E.M. In The 90s Roundtable
Lots of bands were successful in the 90s, but few reached the decade long highs and success that R.E.M. managed while constantly shifting their sound. Perhaps only U2 matched the same levels of critical acclaim and pushback, album sales and slumps, turmoil and triumph of R.E.M., conquering not only their home countries but stadiums around the globe. In our past "In The 90s" episodes, we've looked back at bands that first gained success and notoriety in the 1980s and traced their path through the alternative landscape of the 1990s, but it could be said that...
2020-02-25
1h 48
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#475: Satisfied Mind by The Walkabouts
Among the many signings by the legendary Sub Pop label in the 1980s and 1990s, a few bands get tagged with "the first" label. The Afghan Whigs were the first band from outside region to be signed to the label, and in the case of this week's episode, The Walkabouts were the first country (or folk, or Americana, or alt-country) band to be signed to the label. Core members vocalist Carla Torgerson and vocalist/songwriter Chris Eckman started playing together in 1984, and by the time of their sixth album Satisfied Mind released in 1993, the band had built up quite...
2020-02-18
47 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#474: 100 Broken Windows by Idlewild
You may ask yourself, why is a 90s-centric podcast revisiting an album from 2000? Well, we are nothing without our listeners, and if they suggest and then vote for an album that came out in 2000, but was from a band that got their start and had several releases in the 90s, who are we to argue. And it turns out revisiting Idlewild's 2000 album 100 Broken Windows gave us an excellent opportunity to look back upon the decade and see how its various sounds and genres were interpreted by younger artists. In the case of Idlewild, with veteran producers Dave Eringa and...
2020-02-11
55 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#473: Red And Clear by Giants Chair
It took twenty-three years for Giants Chair to follow-up their 1996 sophomore album Purity And Control with the 2019 album Prefabylon, which we discussed briefly in our 2019 New Albums Roundtable. Though we've covered plenty of 90s bands reuniting a decade or two later to make new records, prior to Prefabylon Giants Chair weren't on our radar. Thanks to one of Patreon patrons we got the chance to revisit this Kansas City, Missouri band's 1995 debut. While the post-punk math-rock sounds fit nicely into our previously expressed admiration for bands such as Jawbox, Shudder To Think and Quicksand, as well as the neighboring...
2020-02-04
55 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#472: Albums of 1990 Roundtable
1990 is a strange, contradictory year for music. How else do you explain alternative and underground bands like Jane's Addiction, Concrete Blonde, Faith No More and The B-52's taking up regular MTV rotation slots next to MC Hammer, Warrant, Paula Abdul and Vanilla Ice? There's a good chance you saw They Might Be Giant's "Birdhouse In Your Soul" right after Billy Idol's "Cradle of Love," or "We Die Young" by Alice Chains on the same Headbanger's Ball episode as "Unskinny Bop" by Poison. What we're saying is, there was a lot going on, and we attempt an overview of...
2020-01-28
1h 09
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#471: Hormone Hotel by Bandit Queen
One and done bands are always an interesting listen, whether they were full-formed bands, one-off side-projects or solo albums, or something else entirely. In the case of Bandit Queen, they formed out of the ashes of Swirl, retaining three of the four members and an indie rock sound. Gone were the jammy rhythms and chorus'd guitars for a more straightforward approach, reminiscent of American female-led alternative acts like Throwing Muses and The Breeders. While the harmony vocals and honest production kept us interested throughout, a few more soaring vocal hooks would have made Hormone Hotel a can't miss record.
2020-01-21
38 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#470: Apollo 18 by They Might Be Giants
There are plenty of anomalies in what did and didn't become popular in the rise of alternative music during the 1990s. Take for instance They Might Be Giants, who's breakthrough 1990 album Flood with almost thirty tracks of weird and quirky songs that combine humor and musical knowledge into a wholly unique recording. So what then to follow it up? The band decided to produce themselves, and rock out a bit more on the 1992 follow-up Apollo 18. While the experimentation with a slightly more traditional pop-rock sound on songs like The Statue Got Me High and Dig My Grave made the...
2020-01-14
57 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#469: Post Orgasmic Chill by Skunk Anansie
By 1999, the musical landscape had seen the rise and fall of a variety of genres touted as the next big thing. The electronic sounds of The Chemical Brothers and The Prodigy offered varying takes on electronica, which bands would incorporate elements of over the years that followed. In the case of Skunk Anansie and their 1999 album Post Orgasmic Chill, it means adding layers to an already layered sound. Guitars are buzzsaw aggressive on one track, followed by a pop ballad approach on the next. Feedback is replaced by orchestrated strings. Booming drums by breakbeats. And making it all work...
2020-01-07
41 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#468: Season Nine - Year In Review
Our look back at Season Nine of the podcast really highlighted how much growth we've experienced and how much more we have ahead of us. We turned over the selection of our roundtable episodes to our Steering Committee and Board of Director level Patreon patrons, and the results did not disappoint. Our poll selected episodes were as interesting and diverse as ever, and our patrons selected reviews also provided us with a chance to revisit some familiar names (Nirvana, The Verve Pipe, etc.) as well as expand the sounds and genres to include rock en español, symphonic metal...
2019-12-31
31 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#467: New Album Reviews for 2019 Roundtable
For our final roundtable of 2019, we invited several of our Patreon patrons to discuss the new albums released this year from artists connected to the 1990s. Turns out, 2019 had dozens of albums that qualified, over a hundred in reality. We talked about new releases from bands like UK shoegazers Swervedriver and Ride, the long-awaited return of Tool, a stellar new release from The Sheila Divine, plus names you know like Bob Mould, Fastball, UNKLE, Beck, Sleater-Kinney, etc., as well as lesser-known releases like Giants Chair and New Rising Sons. Songs In This Episode:
2019-12-24
1h 36
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#466: Animal Bag by Animal Bag
Bands like Animal Bag were dime a dozen in the early 1990s. Getting signed, putting out a record, the musical landscape shifts, and suddenly your sound is outdated and the record label is in flux. Their 1992 self-titled debut has reverb-filled production that pins it to the start of the decade, and taking cues from fellow Californians like Faith No More, Jane's Addiction, and Red Hot Chili Peppers. But their funk and weirdness only shows up in short bursts, as this band could easily be lumped in with the jeans and t-shirt alternative metal and grunge bands like Raging Slab...
2019-12-17
1h 01
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#465: Sleep's Holy Mountain by Sleep
Where is the line between rock and metal? What about stoner or desert? And what is doom besides a video game and bad movie? All questions worthy of discussion as we revisit the 1992 album Sleep's Holy Mountain by Sleep. Baked into the sound of Sleep is the ever-present influence of 70s Black Sabbath, but with an occasional pummeling dirge closer to The Melvins, while trafficking in the same sun-soaked low-end riffage of Kyuss. It's dark, heavy, psychedelic, drone-filled head-nodding rock that works best when the rhythm section gets to swing. Songs In This...
2019-12-10
43 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#464: San Diego In The 90s
San Diego may be known for beaches and year-round mild weather, but the second-largest city in California is also home to a vibrant if isolated music scene dating back to the 1960s with Gary Puckett & The Union Gap and Iron Butterfly. As per our "Digging Your Scene" episodes, we're interested in sounds of the 1990s - where those bands played, bought and sold records, recorded their music, read and listened to other bands, and all the other interesting and unique elements that help define a scene. What we discovered is a deep and vast collection of guitar rock heading...
2019-12-03
1h 15
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#463: This Is Greta! by Greta
Greta was and is definitely not a household name when discussions of 90s bands come up. But like so many, major labels still found them and on occasion put out stellar releases that have gone forgotten, which is sort of the entire point of this podcast. Their second and final album, 1995's This Is Greta! may not fall into the stellar and must-have category, but it's got a lot going for it. Tight alt-rock songs with tinges of Beatle and Cheap Trick pop on a few tunes, hard-driving rockers with big guitars, all backed by a solid rhythm section...
2019-11-26
37 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#462: Split by Lush
By 1994, shoegaze was no longer the hip, underground music scene the UK press was enamored with just a few years prior. The Britpop of Blur, Oasis, Elastica, and Pulp had taken over, My Bloody Valentine had collapsed, and blissing out on feedback and layers of guitar was no longer novel. Smartly, the singing/songwriting/guitar-slinging tandem of Miki Berenyi and Emma Anderson of Lush evolved, and on 1994's Split, the band toe the line between the underground dream pop and shoegaze sounds that got them started, while mixing in some less noisy and more melodic tunes. It sounds both...
2019-11-19
35 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#461: In Utero by Nirvana
A lot of ink has been spilled on the biggest band of the 90s. Whether it was reviews, interviews or in-depth cover stories, or modern retrospective or anniversary pieces, it's not hard to find a "your favorite band's album ranked" clickbait article on nearly every "grunge" platinum seller. What is there anything left to say about these bands? When Nirvana's 1993 album In Utero enter into our review queue, it timed nicely with our recent Producers Of The 90s roundtable, because it's hard not to discuss In Utero without the sonic contributions of Steve Albini. For as slick and radio-friendly...
2019-11-12
48 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#460: 20th Anniversary of Through Being Cool by Saves The Day with Chris Conley
Twenty years ago, emo wasn't a Hot Topic brand or a nostalgic DJ night. It was the sound of teenagers and twenty-somethings taking the urgency of punk, combining it with emotional and confessional (re: not sad) lyrics, and playing to a generation of kids too young for the early 90s grunge wave. If you were apart of that scene, hitting all-ages venues or DIY punk houses at the end of the 20th century, there's a chance you caught Saves The Day on one of those nights, perhaps after the release of their 1999 album Through Being Cool. Joining us to...
2019-11-05
59 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#459: Music Producers Of The 90s Roundtable
Steve Albini. Nigel Godrich. Butch Vig. Bob Rock. Jack Endino. Michael Beinhorn. J Robbins. Sean Slade. Paul Kolderie. Youth. Ric Ocasek. Dave Fridmann. Ken Andrews. Brendan O'Brien. Brad Wood. Rick Rubin. Ted Niceley. Stephen Street. Flood. Terry Date. Dave Jerden. Alan Moulder. Dave Ogilvie. Chances are, if you purchased a CD in the 1990s and read through the liner notes, whether it was a major label release or a regional indie label, there is a possibility their name, or someone else you may recognize, is listed as the producer. But what does a producer do, and how do they...
2019-10-29
1h 21
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#458: Re by Café Tacuba
When our listeners bring us an obscure 90s album to check out, it's usually something along the lines of a rock band on an indie label that managed one or two releases before fading into obscurity. On the flip side, we have Café Tacuba - a massively successful band around the world, including the United States. Unless you are tuned into the rock en español bands, you've probably never heard them or of them. While rock en español goes back decades, the 90s saw the incorporation of a variety of sounds, including ska, industrial and alternative rock...
2019-10-22
44 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
Patreon Preview: Junkyard by The Birthday Party
If there is a new episode of Dig Me Out in your feed on a Thursday, that can only mean one thing - we are sharing with you a preview of our latest Dig Me Out '80s episodes. With the help of our Patreon Board of Directors and Steering Committee tiers, we're revisiting another album from the 1980s based on suggestions and votes of our patrons. This month we're checking out the 1982 album Junkyard by The Birthday Party. Join the DMO Union for as little as $2 a month and get access to bonus content like this episode, vote...
2019-10-17
05 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#457: World Of Noise by Everclear
Though best known for their string of pleasant if repetitive mid-to-late 90s alt-rock radio hits, Everclear started out as a scrappy, rough-around-the-edges early 90s trio with as much fire in their sound as their lyrical content. On their 1993 indie-label debut World Of Noise, singer/guitarist/songwriter Art Alexakis was able to channel the trendy soft/loud verse/chorus format made commercially successful by Nirvana without devolving into a Nirvana clone. The reported $400 recording sounds immediate and visceral, pairing well with his matured voice and lyrical content, and left us wondering what would have happened if the band had kept...
2019-10-15
36 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#456: whitechocolatespaceegg by Liz Phair
The 1993 debut Exile In Guyville by Liz Phair was declared a landmark album that helped define the 1990s almost as soon as it was released. To be a decade-defining artist can be a stifling burden, but Phair managed to release a worthy follow-up in 1994 with Whip-Smart, sticking with mostly the same group of players and studio folks for both. On her third album whitechocolatespaceegg from 1998, all the lo-fi was stripped away as 3/4's of R.E.M. and a bevy of other musicians and studio pros joined the team on Phair's quest to reinvigorate and reorient her sound. From...
2019-10-08
47 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#455: This Is The Way It Goes And Goes And Goes by Juno
Having a three-guitar band can often mean the lead singer simply strumming chords on an acoustic while the other two do the heavy lead lifting and riffing. That's not the case with Juno, and their 1999 debut album This Is The Way It Goes And Goes And Goes on DeSoto Records. Like their then label-mates Shiner, Juno unleashes a big, layered guitar sound, but Shiner sound much leaner in comparison, as Juno gets full usage out of their three axe attack. The sound shifts from a hoe-gaze influenced, wall of sound approach that dips its toes in the space and...
2019-10-01
41 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#345: Mindfunk by Mindfunk
Sandwiched between 80s metal and 90s alternative, Mindfunk occupy the same limbo space as Mother Love Bone and Saigon Kick. We’re checking out their self-titled 1991 debut, a mix of big metal riffs, groove rock with funk influences and some slow burn nods to what would later be called desert or stoner rock. While Jason was familiar with this from when it was released and bought it on cd when it came out, Tim had never heard a note prior to reviewing the record. Does it still hold up for Jason? Is it a worthwhile discovery for Tim? Tune...
2017-08-22
34 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#336: Eternal Nightcap by The Whitlams
We don’t often get a chance to check out bands from the 90s where the terms ragtime or waltz get tossed around, but The Whitlams qualify. We’re checking out the 1997 album Eternal Napcap by this Newtown, Australian band. Led by vocalist/pianist Tim Freedman, The Whitlams can tow the line between indulgent Rufus Wainwright-style balladry and Ben Folds-esque pop, remaining radio friendly with mature lyrical content. Does it all work for us? Tune in to find out.Songs in this Episode:Intro - No Aphrodisiac11:42 - You Look...
2017-06-20
32 min
Vinyl Emergency
Episode 57: Tim Minneci of Dig Me Out Podcast & Music Reissues We Need
Since launching in 2011, Dig Me Out has been essential podcast listening for music fans, as Tim Minneci and his co-host Jason Dziak dive head-first into classic albums, one-hit wonders, specific music scenes and more -- all within the alt-rock/indie universe -- often accompanied with an intriguing artist interview or a roundtable of journalists, musicians or fellow podcast hosts chiming in. Today, Tim drops in to discuss the current (and future) state of vinyl reissues, his work as a college radio DJ and program director, record stores near his native Buffalo NY suburbs, how fans of Dig Me Out are...
2017-05-19
1h 46
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#320: Interview with Tim Kasher of The Good Life & Cursive
Tim Kasher of The Good Life and Cursive has a new solo album out this March (No Resolution) on a new label (15 Passenger). We talk to him about the why he decided now was the time to start the new label away from Saddle Creek and the plans for reissuing late 90s Cursive material later this year. We discuss the transition in the mid-00s from writing as a band to writing alone at home and how that changed not only his writing style, but the way he sings. We chat about his current move out to Los Angeles...
2017-02-28
1h 25
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#293: Disappearing Acts Roundtable
This week were exploring the bands that sold millions of albums in the 1990s, but by the time the ‘00s rolled around, had disappeared from the sales charts and radio stations they used to dominate. The Cranberries, Live, Creed, Blues Traveler, Hootie & The Blowfish and more we try to figure out what happened - where they overexposed and people got bored? Did follow-up albums flop? Did the collapse on under the weight of their egos and success? To help us do so, Eric Peterson (Love That Album podcast, YouTube) of and our show announcer Katie Minneci join us to...
2016-08-23
1h 25
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#253: Trace by Son Volt
It’s been twenty years since Son Volt released their debut album Trace, which means it is up for repackaged remastered re-release and reappraisal. Always compared to Wilco thanks to their time together in alt.country pioneering band Uncle Tupelo, Son Volt finds Jay Farrar at his songwriting peak, easily shifting from uptempo rockers to acoustic slow burns with radio friendly production tying it all together. Does it stand the test of time? Is Tim’s love of Son Volt still strong? Has Jason come around to any of it? Tune in to find out.Songs in...
2015-11-17
44 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#245: Dyslexicon by Dandelion
After Jason’s pick last week, Tim takes a shot and brings Dandelion’s 1995 sophomore (and final) album Dyslexicon to the table on the strength of the single “Weird-Out.” The album owes a heavy debt to Nirvana, from the familiar vocal style to big drums and guitars. The question becomes: when does influence become imitation?Songs in this Episode:Intro - Trailer Park Girl3:23 - Weird-Out5:39 - History of the Band14:29 - Retard19:33 - Melon from HeavenOutro - Snow JobFollow on Twitter / FacebookRequest A Review / Buy A T-Shirt
2015-09-22
34 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#233: Acetone by Acetone
Our requested review this week is the third album by Acetone, 1997′s self-titled release. Like one-time label mates Low, Acetone delivers a slow and deliberate performance with sparse arrangements and mostly hushed vocals. Rarely do Tim and Jason find themselves in almost total agreement on a record, but in this case they do. Tune in to find out if that is a good or bad thing. We apologize for the brief interruption discussing the new season of True Detective, which we have dubbed Sad Detective.Songs in this Episode:Intro - Every Kiss3:19 - History of...
2015-06-30
30 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#230: Round Table Discussion on Concerts of the 90s
This week we’re talking about concerts of the 1990s for our June round table discussion. We’re joined by frequent suggester/commenter David “Dirty Gert” Gorgos, Rocketfuel Podcast host and Punktastic writer Jeff Takacs, and the voice of Dig Me Out, Katie Minneci. We talk about our favorite shows and venues of the decade along with our least favorites as well. When did an opening band blow away the headliner? What bands make us want to jump in a time machine to check out? Why did the traveling festivals end? Were the Woodstocks nostalgic cash-grabs like we remember...
2015-06-09
1h 27
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#136: Good Feeling by Travis
For our latest episode, Tim makes a pick from his favorites-of-the-past archive: 1997's Good Feeling, the debut album by Travis. Combining the brit-pop guitar bombast of Oasis with the melodies and hooks of The Beatles and Kinks, topped off with stellar production thanks to Steve Lillywhite, Good Feeling failed to connect with audiences, something their sophomore release The Man Who did thanks to multiple hit singles. Hopefully Travis fans discovered Good Feeling on their own, if not, that's why we're here - to sing the praises of an overlooked gem.Songs in this Episode:Intro - Good Feeling4:48...
2013-08-20
40 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#135: For The Masses - A Tribute to Depeche Mode
Thanks to our latest Facebook poll, we're tackling our first tribute album - For The Masses, featuring sixteen covers of Depeche Mode songs. Both Tim and Jason were familiar with this release back in the 90s, but haven't revisited it in quite awhile. Does it stand the test of time? Are any of the covers better than the originals? And can any explain the temporary fascination with Rammstein? Tune in and find out.Songs in this Episode:Intro - Enjoy The Silence9:06 - Somebody14:37 - Master and Servant16:45 - I Feel YouOutro - Never Let Me Down Again
2013-08-13
29 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#131: Give Out But Don't Give Up by Primal Scream
In our latest episode, Tim brings an oddball to the table - The Rolling Stones and Small Faces inspired fourth album from Primal Scream, 1994's Give Out But Don't Give Up. As fans of Vanishing Point, XTRMNTR and Screamadelica can tell you, Give Out... is a hard one to figure out, where honky tonk piano, blues guitar riffs and soul singers abound. Does Primal Scream make take successful detour, or get lost in the weeds? Tune in and find out.Songs in this Episode:Intro - Rocks2:53 - History of the Band10:11 - Jailbird17:16 - Give Out But...
2013-07-16
42 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#121: Interview with Tim Steward of Screamfeeder
For episode #121, Tim Steward of Screamfeeder joins us to fulfill a listener request to review their 1996 album Kitten Licks. The lead singer/guitarist of the Australian three-piece shares his experiences in the 90s alternative music scene on the other side of the planet, what it's like to have multiple songwriters in a band, and much more.Songs in this Episode:Intro - Dart11:04 - Static31:14 - Bruises33:14 - Dart35:39 - AntOutro - Summertime
2013-05-07
49 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#112: This Conversation Is Ending Starting Right Now by Knapsack
For episode #112, we're tackling the third and final album from Knapsack, 1998's This Conversation Is Ending Starting Right Now. Jason brings a favorite of his to review, and Tim's never heard it. Will Tim share Jason's appreciation for an album that got plenty of Facebook love, or is disagreement on the horizon? Tune in to find out.Songs in this Episode:Intro - Arrows to the Action2:46 - History of the Band10:42 - Cold Enough To Break15:56 - Shape of the Fear
2013-03-05
40 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#108: Kent by Big Ass Truck
It's Tim's turn to make a pick, and this one brings the first big disagreement of the 2013 season as we tackle the sophomore album from Big Ass Truck, 1996's Kent. The gentlemen from Memphis combine Southern rock, funk and a little Ska with touches of Dust Brothers production ala the Beastie Boys and Beck. It's definitely an acquired taste, and one host did not acquire it. Can you guess who? Tune in to find out.Songs in this Episode:Intro - Theem From2:28 - History of the Band
2013-02-05
33 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#106: Isola by Kent
This week we review a band that has sold over two million albums over a seventeen-year, ten-album career - and most people outside Sweden have never heard of them. It's Kent, and their 1998 album Isola. Well, 1998 is the release of the English-language version, the Swedish-language version came out a year earlier, but that's not the point. We're hear to talk about the music, which in it's finest moments recalls Pablo Honey and The Bends-era Radiohead. But are there enough fine moments to call this a worthy album? Tune in to find out.Note: Tim is now...
2013-01-22
34 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#104: Floored by Pusherman
For episode #104, Tim sifted through his college radio archive to dig out the lone album by Pusherman, 1996's Floored. Combining the long-form jams of The Verve with the attitude and pop-sensiblity of Oasis, the band pushes the envelope on song and album length, usually bad signs when we get our hands on a record from the 90s. Through in a harmonica and some dance beats, and it sounds like a recipe for a disaster, but is it, despite the term "timeless" being used to describe it? Tune in to find out.Songs in this Episode:
2013-01-08
36 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#102: Season Two In Review
Season Two of Dig Me Out is in the books! For the last episode of 2012, we're taking a look back at our sophomore year and picking our top five favorite songs as well as our new album discovery.We've got plenty of thanks to dispense to those who made Season Two a huge success: all of our great guests and folks who suggested albums, and of course our listeners.Lastly, towards the end of the show there is a special announcement regarding something brand new in 2013 (hint: it's music related)....
2012-12-25
32 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#094: Mic City Sons by Heatmiser
Another listener suggestion! This is one is a band both Tim and J are surprised they never got around to on their own. On episode #94 we're checking out the 1996 album Mic City Sons, the last by Heatmiser, after which co-leader Elliott Smith went on to carve out a well-respected if too short solo career. Mic City Sons shows off a different side to Smith, as well as shines the spotlight on his bandmate Neil Gust. We discuss that, why serial killers wouldn't enjoy Elliott Smith, and much more.Make sure to listen to the beginning of...
2012-10-30
37 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#084: No Pocky For Kitty by Superchunk
For episode #84, we're joined by fellow podcaster Kim Ware to check out her suggestion, Superchunk's 1993 album No Pocky for Kitty. Kim spent time drumming and booking shows in Wilmington, North Carolina in the 1990s, where the legendary and lesser known Chapel Hill bands regularly gigged around town.Tim and J were both more familiar with the later Superchunk releases than the early Matador years, so how does No Pocky For Kitty stack up? Does the energetic and sometimes frantic mix of punk, power-pop and indie rock come together? And why is Majesty Shredding so hard to...
2012-08-21
1h 01
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#082: Troublegum by Therapy?
On episode #82 of Dig Me Out, we've got another listener suggestion. This week we tackle one of the more prolific and perplexing bands of the last twenty years - Therapy? No, it's not a question, the name is Therapy?, and we're checking out their 1994 album Troublegum.The band has confounded many with their quick-witted lyrics and musical mash-up of metal, punk, rock, industrial and more. So what did we make of this equally exciting and jarring album? Tune in to find out.Songs In This Episode:Intro - Nowhere
2012-08-07
39 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#075: Fitzcarraldo by The Frames
With the release of Glen Hansard's first solo record, we thought it was about time to revisit his pre-Swell Season, pre-Once band, The Frames, and their sophomore album from 1996, Fitzcarraldo. Many people know Hansard from the movie (and now Tony Award winning broadway musical) Once and his other band The Swell Season, but Hansard actually cut his teeth with his Dublin, Ireland outfit The Frames starting the early 1990s.For Tim and Jason, this album goes back to the college radio days, and they've been singing it's praises ever since. Find out why this album is "...
2012-06-19
52 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#064: You'd Prefer An Astronaut by Hum
On episode #64, we're back with another listener suggestion. Actually, it's a multiple listener suggestion episode - lots of folks have told us to revisit Hum's 1995 album You'd Prefer An Astronaut, and we aim to please. Tim knew he was going to struggle to be objective since Hum is one of his favorite bands of all time, so in order to avoid a blubbering gush-fest, we invited a special guest to help us review the album - director Shawn Foster. Check out Shawn's website for videos of his work with the Deftones, Drive-by Truckers, The Sun and more.
2012-04-03
1h 08
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#051: Fossil by Fossil
Dig Me Out is back for Season Two, and we return with a good, old-fashioned disagreement. In episode #51 we review the one and only album from Fossil, their 1995 eponymous release. J contends there are too many lame attempts at bad funk, Tim still thinks 'Moon' is one of the best college radio singles of the decade and it somehow devolves into a discussion on the disappointment of Live's post-Throwing Copper releases. Tune in, then leave a comment on our website, or visit our Facebook page to chime in.Segments - :00-5:18 - Intro, 5:18-6:26 - History...
2012-01-03
43 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#040: 24 Hour Revenge Therapy by Jawbreaker
On episode #40, Tim and J venture into the nebulous world known as Jawbreaker. Are they punk? Are the emo? Are they pre-emo? Are they post-punk? Who knows, but we try to figure that out and give a listen to their 1994 album 24 Hour Revenge Therapy. Visit digmeoutpodcast.com for links to our Facebook page and Twitter feed. Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-10-18
47 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#038: Still Feel Gone by Uncle Tupelo
On episode #38 we're again joined by guest Neal Schmitt to review one of Tim's favorite all-time albums, 1991's Still Feel Gone from alt-country pioneers Uncle Tupelo. There plenty to discuss on our first hour-long episode - the varied songwriting, lyrical and musical styles of co-lead singers/songwriters Jeff Tweedy and Jay Farrar, and the drumming of Mike Heidorn are rich for review. The discussion leads to this question: has there been another band since Uncle Tupelo that produced a pair of talented singer/songwriters? To comment, visit digmeoutpodcast.com for links to our Facebook page and Twitter feed. ...
2011-10-04
00 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#037: Porno for Pyros by Porno for Pyros
On episode #37 we tackle the 1993 self-titled Porno for Pyros album. J and Tim find a mixed bag with the first album from ex-Jane's Addiction members Perry Farrell and Stephen Perkins. While the songs got shorter than your typical Jane's tune, the unique combination of funk, metal, world music and grunge collide to uneven results. To comment, visit digmeoutpodcast.com for links to our Facebook page and Twitter feed. Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-09-27
39 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#036: Get In Get Out by Mink
On episode #36, it's another Ohio band. We've already tackled Sons of Elvis from Cleveland and Gaunt from Columbus. This time it's Dayton's Mink, and their 1998 album Get In Get Out, an album Tim and J both discovered back in 2000, but are happy to revisit and spread the word about Mink. To comment, visit digmeoutpodcast.com for links to our Facebook page and Twitter feed. Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-09-20
40 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#035: Phaseshifter by Redd Kross
On episode #35 we review the 1993 album Phaseshifter by Redd Kross. J bought it new when it came out back in the day, but Tim had never listened to any Redd Kross before reviewing this. We're in total agreement on this one - Phaseshifter is a criminally overlooked album ripe for rediscovery for people who dig the power pop of Cheap Trick and Big Star. To comment on this episode, visit digmeoutpodcast.com for links to our Facebook page and Twitter feed. Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-09-13
40 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#033 - On The Turn by Kerbdog
On episode #33 of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1997 album On The Turn by KerbdogIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-08-30
40 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#032 - Reloaded by Green Apple Quick Step
On episode #32 of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1995 album Reloaded by Green Apple Quick StepIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-08-23
47 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#031 - Dead Letter Chorus by Llama Farmers
On episode #31 of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1999 album Dead Letter Chorus by Llama FarmersIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-08-16
38 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#030 - Auntie Ramos' Pool Hall by The Sidewinders
In the thirtieth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1990 album Auntie Ramos' Pool Hall by The SidewindersIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-08-09
43 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#029 - Angelfish by Angelfish
In the twenty-ninth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1994 self-titled debut album from Angelfish.If you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-08-02
34 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#028 - Strap It On by Helmet
In the twenty-eight episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1990 debut album Strap It On by HelmetIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-07-26
44 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#027 - Sumo by The Superjesus
In the twenty-seventh episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1998 debut album Sumo by The SuperjesusIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-07-19
35 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#026 - The Cult by The Cult
In the twenty-sixth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1994 self-titled album by The CultIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-07-12
48 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#025 - Hot Saki and Bedtime Stories by Catherine
n the twenty-fifth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1996 album Hot Saki and Bedtime Stories by CatherineIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-07-05
35 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#024 - Example by For Squirrels
In the twenty-fourth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1995 album Example by For SquirrelsIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-06-28
32 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#023 - Manic Compression by Quicksand
In the twenty-third episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1995 album Manic Compression by QuicksandIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-06-21
41 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#022 - Hot Boxing by Magnapop
In the twenty-second episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1994 album Hot Boxing by MagnapopIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-06-14
1h 07
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#021 - The Supersonic Storybook by Urge Overkill
In the twenty-first episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1991 album The Supersonic Storybook by Urge OverkillIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-06-07
30 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#020 - Four by Seaweed
In the twentieth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1993 album Four by SeaweedIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-05-31
41 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#019 - Be A Girl by The Wannadies
In the nineteenth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1994 album Be A Girl by The WannadiesIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-05-24
36 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#018 - The Word and the Flesh by Band of Susans
In the eighteenth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1991 album The Word and the Flesh by Band of SusansIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-05-17
26 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#017 - Mezcal Head by Swervedriver
In the seventeenth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1993 album Mezcal Head by SwervedriverIf you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-05-10
48 min
Dig Me Out - The 90s rock podcast
#016 - Illuminated by 360s
In the sixteenth episode of the Dig Me Out Podcast, Tim and Jason review the 1991 album Illuminated by the 360s.If you want to suggest a forgotten 90s album for us to review, or just want to say hello, visit us at: http://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/Follow us on Twitter @digmeoutpodcastAnd visit our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/DigMeOutPodcast Get on the email list at timminneci.substack.com
2011-05-03
27 min