Basic Folk – Brian Dunne

I am feeling #blessed and #grateful to be sharing today’s interview with our listeners. Brian Dunne is one of my dearest pals in the music biz, not to mention one of my favorite songwriters working today. Brian’s songs are always clever and sincere, dark and fun, honest and imaginative. He’s got a way with words, a killer voice, and big time rock star vibes. These are a few of the reasons why Loser On The Ropes, Dunne’s Kill Rock Stars debut, is earning this indie rocker critical acclaim and a ton of new fans.

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Brian is a New York-born artist who knew he wanted to be a musician from the first moment he saw Bruce Springsteen on television. After graduating from Berklee College of Music, Brian started making records and figuring out his sound. He’s become a stalwart in the New York music scene both with his own music and as a member of the super-silly supergroup Fantastic Cat (shoutout to bandmate and Basic Folk alum Anthony D’Amato!)

In 2022, Brian got word that a live recording of his song “New Tattoo,” which had been recorded during a 2018 soundcheck, was climbing the charts in the Netherlands. His unexpected European star turn has not gone to this working artist’s head one bit; in fact he has delved even deeper into themes of failure and humility in his recent songs. But what keeps people coming back to Brian’s music is his hopeful spirit in spite of all the darkness.


Photo Credit: Alana Urcia

Basic Folk – Matt Sucich

Lately I have been fascinated by musicians who are creative not only in what they create, but also in terms of how they share it. This curiosity has made me a fan of Matt Sucich, an artist who has cultivated a passionate fanbase via his live performances, Instagram livestreams, and thoughtful email newsletter. We are living in a moment of history where there is more music available than ever before, and more ways of interacting with creators than ever before. But it can be challenging to sift through all the noise and get to the heart of things. True intimacy in creative community is rare and I admire those who are able to sustain it. Matt is one of those people.

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If you are new to Sucich’s catalog, I suggest starting with his thoughtful, inviting, pandemic-era album, Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself, and then diving into his latest release, Holy Smokes, which is out now on Five and Dime Records. Matt and I talked about how the recording process for this new album differed from past releases, the role humor plays in his music, the open mic night that changed his life, his passion for puppets, what it means to show your work, and the songwriters who have shaped his worldview. He is one of the New York music scene’s best-kept secrets, so welcome aboard the Sucich train!


Photo Credit: Laura Partain

LISTEN: Melanie MacLaren, “Tourist”

Artist: Melanie MacLaren
Hometown: New York, New York
Song: “Tourist”
Album: Tourist
Release Date: April 20, 2023

In Their Words: “I wrote ‘Tourist’ for my nieces and nephews during a time when we were all grieving an unimaginable loss in our family. Most of the songs I’d written during that period were songs I kept to myself because they just felt bleak and counterproductive, and I thought if I was going to write about this at all (and go so far as to record it), I should write a song that lyrically and musically provides some comfort; otherwise it felt wrong. Overall the song is here to say that most everything is temporary, but that there are some things out there that we don’t understand that are true and eternal.

“The love between a parent and child I think can be one of those things — it stays with you when you leave or when the person that loved you leaves. If it’s true, then it stays. The title is kind of a riff on that, talking about something serious in a really corny way. All the songs on the record deal with similar themes — memory, family, loss — and when I wrote this song I realized that they’re all actually about grief in some way or other, and learning how to come to terms with loss by ascribing value to things that are fleeting. Because all things are, but that doesn’t make them pointless.” — Melanie MacLaren

Melanie MacLaren · Tourist (unreleased)

Photo Credit: Liza Epprecht

WATCH: Robinson & Rohe, “Where I’m Coming From” (One Mic Live)

Artist: Robinson & Rohe
Hometown: Brooklyn, New York
Song: “Where I’m Coming From”
Album: Into the Night
Release Date: May 26, 2023
Label: Righteous Babe Records

In Their Words: “I often write songs because I have a question, and the songwriting process gives me a slower pace to think it through. I wrote ‘Where I’m Coming From’ in 2018 in an attempt to trace the story of the people who made me: where they’d been, who they’d become, and who I was, as a consequence of their journey. I was thinking of the broader culture that shaped me: that of European immigrants who came to the United States in the last century and a half, fleeing wars and hunger and poverty, only to land smack in the middle of the US’s foundational racism and injustice. They navigated this thorny terrain and survived, even made better lives for themselves. Their struggle is inspiring and also terrifying. It is, in part, the story of becoming white in America.

“This has always been a threadbare identity, unreal and yet so very consequential. When I laid out the tale of ‘Where I’m Coming From’ beat by beat, the simple irony of it — the descendants of immigrants and refugees now clamoring to build a wall — spoke for itself. ‘Oh, dream of America / Oh, how the dream wears thin / Once your ship comes in, America.’ I wrote this song with folk ballads and balladeers in mind, in particular Woody Guthrie, whose original songs immortalized and uplifted stories of working people, but also the many troubadours who have carried traditional ballads forward til today. Robinson & Rohe humbly add our voices to this river of song. This story isn’t over. My peers, my descendants, and I have the chance to write a different future. But first we need to know where we’re coming from.

“NOTE: After cutting the more ‘hi-fi’ album version of this song — where each voice and instrument had its own microphone and sonic isolation — we decided to play the song one last time all together in one room. This video is a one-take, one-mic, one-camera alternate version. We hope you enjoy!” — Jean Rohe, Robinson & Rohe


Photo credit: Aidan Grant

WATCH: The Chapin Sisters, “Bergen Street”

Artist: The Chapin Sisters
Hometown: Nyack, New York
Song: “Bergen Street”
Release Date: March 31, 2023
Label: Lake Bottom Records

In Their Words: “I always write songs about places I leave. When I left Brooklyn for the Hudson Valley, I sat down at the piano in our home studio and ‘Bergen Street’ came out. The first time I played it for my daughter, it made her cry and I couldn’t play it around her for a while. She said it was too sad.” — Lily Chapin

“It’s such a universal story — not just for our individual families — but for so many parents of young kids. We thought we’d be city people forever and would somehow make it work and raise our kids in a one-bedroom apartment, but eventually the call of the country grew too loud.” — Abigail Chapin

“Having the space to work in makes the recording process more fluid and less restricted by time. We work around our kids’ schedule and our work schedule running a shop in our hometown that is a family business. The new songs that we are working on reflect this and we are finding ourselves writing songs about family, our kids, and also the simplicity of country life: Bugs, dirt, and cooking.” — LC

“We have an album’s worth of songs in the works to follow up ‘Bergen Street.’ With four kids between us, including two babies, it means that our recording process is slow. We get in the studio when we can in-between nursing babies and playing cards with our big kids between takes. Sometimes we hold babies during vocal takes and sometimes the big kids sing backups.” — AC


The Chapin Sisters (L-R): Abigail Chapin, Lily Chapin. Photo credit: Mia Bieber

BGS 5+5: Dougie Poole

Artist: Dougie Poole
Hometown: Brooklyn, New York
Latest Album: The Rainbow Wheel of Death

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

Once I was playing at The Glove, a great old DIY venue in Brooklyn. It was a hot night in the summer and I was playing to a fairly empty room. I started a song called “Elbow” which is a country waltz that probably tops out at around 80bpm. And when I did, a group of four or five friends began to writhe and grind right in front of the stage. It was such a silly sight, these young sweaty kids grinding to a slow country waltz, that I caught the giggles and couldn’t get through the words of the song. For years after, if I happened to think of that night during another performance, I’d lose my place in the song or forget the words and start laughing spontaneously all over again.

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc — inform your music?

I watch a lot of television. TV writers are masters of short form story arcs, constructing conflict and resolution and tension and release over the course of an episode arc. And in some cases, tying those small episode arcs into the arc of a larger season or series. To me it seems not dissimilar from writing a song that fits in the larger context of a record. I’m a huge, lifelong fan of The Sopranos, Seinfeld, Star Trek: The Next Generation — stuff that was primetime TV when I was growing up. I revisit them often.

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

I like to have a weak drink or two before we perform. Something like a bitters soda or a digestif with enough of a kick to loosen me up, but not strong enough to make me sloppy. It’s not my healthiest habit, and they start to add up over a long tour. I’ve gotten some suspicious looks trying to order a Cynar or something at the wrong dive bar.

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

I’ve gotten great advice from lots of people, directly and indirectly, throughout my career. It’s hard to boil down into a bite-sized nugget, but I do remember when I was in my 20s seeing a commencement address that Patti Smith gave at an art school. I think it was Pratt. She said something to the effect of: build your name. Not in the sense of fame or branding or anything like that. But just to focus on honing your craft and doing good work and trying to treat other artists and other people with kindness and respect, and to let your name carry your code as an artist. To listen to your conscience and take care of your teeth. And that if you do this, success will define itself for you.

Since food and music go so well together, what is your dream pairing of a meal and a musician?

This is a cool question because it’s not like: “Who would you love to talk to for an hour?” I love cooking and eating. And I love spending a whole day overeating and sitting around outside. Like a barbecue or something. So it’d have to be someone who also ate a lot too, so I didn’t feel self-conscious about eating way too much. Lowell George famously overate — maybe we’d have a nice time just sitting in silence and eat ribs together or whatever. If I were sitting across from a table from like Prince or something, I’d be too nervous to eat.

WATCH: Maura Shawn Scanlin, “Nuala’s Tune”

Artist: Maura Shawn Scanlin
Hometown: Based in Boston, Massachusetts; from Boone, North Carolina
Song: “Nuala’s Tune”
Album: Maura Shawn Scanlin
Release Date: May 5, 2023

In Their Words: “We recorded this track out in the Catskills of New York at a beautiful studio called Spillway Sounds at the end of September, with Eli Crews engineering. I was really lucky to be joined by Owen Marshall on bouzouki and Conor Hearn on guitar — some of my favorite musicians ever! We had a sweet day at the studio recording this tune and one other that will also be on the album, and our friend Dylan Ladds came out to shoot a video for this track during the golden hour. The name for this tune comes from a very sweet and very energetic dog named Nuala! This is the first single from my upcoming album and I am so excited to share it. Thank you for listening and watching this video! I hope you enjoy the music.” — Maura Shawn Scanlin


Photo Credit: Louise Bichan

LISTEN: Ben Krakauer, “Brushy”

Artist: Ben Krakauer
Hometown: Swannanoa, North Carolina
Song: “Brushy”
Album: Hidden Animals
Release Date: March 22, 2023
Label: Adhyâropa Records

In Their Words: “I was thrilled and honored to have such wonderful companions on this album – Duncan Wickel and Ella Jordan on fiddles, Dan Klingsberg on bass, and Nick Falk on drums – that really brought this music to life. ‘Brushy’ is a burning banjo and fiddle tune that I originally envisioned as slow and moody, but we recorded it at twice the intended speed because Dan, Ella, Nick, and Duncan were all feeling it as a rager! I had a hard time keeping up, but it was fun to do. I wrote it to feature the open tone of the banjo and to explore one of my favorite pentatonic modes (1 2 4 5 b7). A centerpiece of this recording is Nick’s drumming, which is wonderfully nuanced, explosive, and intricate, and is informed by the best of banjo/fiddle/flatfooting tradition; it also echoes further back to the banjo’s African roots and its place within a percussive ensemble. Also listen for the twin fiddling and the traded phrases between Duncan and Ella, like a nouveau old-time ‘Tenor Madness.’” — Ben Krakauer


Photo Credit: Aaron Stone

LISTEN: Grant Gordy, “Journey to Miniera”

Artist: Grant Gordy
Hometown: Brooklyn, New York
Song: “Journey to Miniera”
Album: Peripheral Visions
Release Date: March 3, 2023

In Their Words: “This music has been a long time coming: I made my debut record, Grant Gordy, 14 years ago with much the same band (Alex Hargreaves on violin, and Dominick Leslie on mandolin), and there’s been a small but consistent clamor for another ‘Grant Gordy Quartet’ record in the intervening years. Somehow it just took this long to come around to it. This time, it was us three with the great Aidan O’Donnell on bass — Aidan and I have been working together frequently since meeting here in NYC almost a decade ago, and we play in the band Mr. Sun together. So I have long-standing relationships with all three of these musicians, and I think that though the GGQ isn’t a full-time project (hence, to some degree, the record’s title Peripheral Visions), that spirit of experimentation and camaraderie comes through in the music. I played with the David Grisman Quintet/Sextet for six years and I feel like ‘Journey to Miniera’ displays the most direct connection to Dawg music on the album, though there are other musical inspirations at play here, too. The title is a dedication to some beautiful friends I’ve made working over in Italy, at a music camp called Minieracustica, truly a paradise-on-earth kind of situation. I can’t wait to make the return journey to Miniera.” — Grant Gordy

grantgordy · Journey To Miniera

Photo Credit: Jacob Blickenstaff

LISTEN: Upstate, “Catalpa”

Artist: Upstate
Hometown: Hudson Valley, New York
Song: “Catalpa”
Album: You Only Get a Few
Release Date: March 31, 2023
Label: Royal Potato Family

In Their Words: “‘Catalpa’ begins with the backdrop of a cold spring rain, but draws quickly to the familiar sounds of a summer night. Spring is such a beautiful but fleeting time of year. The flowers brighten the landscape but they’re gone as quickly as they come. I wrote ‘Catalpa’ after falling in love with tall catalpa trees in the Hudson Valley. They stuck out to me because they bloom in June, after the flowers, which I thought would be a lovely musical image. The chorus came almost as a surprise and carried a much deeper meaning than I had known was there when I was just dwelling on their loveliness. The song moves through moods like seasons, from a melancholy quiet spring morning to a warmer summer night, and the brute urgency of the chorus’ reminder that time is unrelenting. Still I think the song finds a reassuring calm in Mother Nature’s ever new promise of spring.” — Melanie Glenn, Upstate


Photo Credit: Bridget Badore