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(public post - official thing)

hello my loves.

i'm in new orleans, recovering from a long, weird, hard holiday season (more on that soon, i'm still in space) and getting ready for our company move to south africa. 

while i'm here i've made myself typically over-busy i've got one surprise video to make on saturday (you are going to love it, and i may need some local help/actors so STAY TUNED), i've just squeezed in two super-fast recording sessions (one involving ani difranco, about which i am thrilled, and one that i just thought up yesterday in response to some world news)...and i've one show to do (with jason and a few surprise guests, at tipitina's, on sunday the 21st).

i am, as they say, keeping myself busy. i'm not even sure what's happening anymore, frankly. but i do know this: this patreon is saving my life. i'm not sure where it's about to take me but i know that it is somewhere better.

i also know i want to write more long-form things...i have too many interconnected thoughts, reflections and stories in my head and they need to get out. i'm trying to figure out how to make that work with the patreon, and i'm going to be asking you for guidance and permission (well, you know, amanda-palmer-style permission, where mostly i ask if you're going to follow me into the stratosphere of new art rules). stay tuned for that, too. 

to the point of This Thing.

This Thing is a really beautiful Thing, and a Thing that i'm hoping to do more of. if you've been on the patreon for a while, you'll remember that i tried my hand at doing a podcast/interview with the australian singer-songwriter missy higgins when i was in melbourne about a year ago. it went OK, but i wasn't thrilled with the results...it wasn't particularly well-produced (some of the audio was annoying) and the conversation tended to wander a little. the live music that missy and i played was beautiful, but the recording didn't quite capture it, and i found myself a little dismayed. it was still totally Thingable, but i vowed to get my game up for future interview-podcasts, and i think the quality of this one kicks that one's ass.

as for my partner in crime, christopher lydon - for those of you who aren't familiar with him - is a long-standing radio interviewer (mostly found on National Public Radio in the states) and he's an old hero of mine. 

when the dresden dolls were still tiny and local to boston, and i was still regularly performing as a statue in harvard square, i wrote a sort of joke-y love song for him, and that song "christopher lydon", wound up on the dresden dolls very first album, "a is for accident" (which is free/pay-what-you-want on bandcamp).

i wrote him a fan letter back then (i'd forgotten about that, and he KEPT it and reads it in the course of this interview) and we developed a sweet kind of friendship over the past 15 years.

he was my #1 pick for an interview to continue this series...which i hope will keep evolving. i hope not just to be interviewed, but to interview, and to find really awesome, unexpected, strange, honest, deeply authentic people to converse with me as the Things Go On....so please, if you have any ideas, let me know. working on a realer podcast is on the top of my list of things to do lately...and i'm especially excited to use the podcast itself to inspire my own songwriting, and to wrap these things together in one delicious Thing-Package.

here we are.

without further ado: please listen!!

here's the stream....

https://soundcloud.com/amandapalmer/this-is-your-life-amanda-palmer-with-christopher-lydon-podcast/s-grmlh

$3 patrons: your download will be in your inbox in a moment.

as always, if you like it, share it.

i'd also love to read your comments, thoughts, feedback about the content (and if you want, the quality) of the podcast. talk to me. i'm reading.

it was recorded live at the First Parish Church in cambridge, MA, on november 27th, mere steps from where i used to stand as the eight foot bride my street performance character. there's a few live piano & ukulele songs ("in my mind", "christopher lydon" and "the ride").

these are lovely live-art drawings done my open source's resident artist, susan coyne...you can see more of her art at coyneworks.com 


one apology: the piano is ever-so-slightly out of tune.

we'd originally hired a kurzweill keyboard for the gig, but when i got to the church and saw they had a beautiful grand piano off to the side, i wanted. so even though it was slightly out of tune, i opted to play it instead of the keyboard, because...it was better.

one last plug, if you enjoy this (and i imagine you will), and you want to support christopher's OWN patreon - the open source patreon - please do.

if you're into podcast-listening, they are making really, really thoughtful and important deep-dive podcasts and christopher is one of the best interviewers, discussers and thinkers about there. they are relying more and more on indie funding and i know even a few dozen new patrons would rock their world and make a difference. their team is just fantastic and it was really wonderful working with them...they deserve the patronage big time.

go support them if you can:

https://www.patreon.com/radioopensource 

much more soon.

i love you all.

xx

a

  

---------THE NEVER-ENDING AS ALWAYS---------

1. if you’re a patron, please click through to comment on this post. at the very least, if you’ve read it, indicate that by using the heart symbol.

2. see All the Things i've made so far on patreon: http://amandapalmer.net/patreon-things

3. join the official AFP-patron facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/afpland

4. AFP-patreon-related questions? ask away, someone will answer:
patronhelp@amandapalmer.net

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Comments

Anonymous

I'll follow you where ever you take me. I haven't listened yet, but I'll download it to listen to soon. But I was thinking - perhaps if you could interview Weird Al? I know you've worked with him before, and he's a really great guy. Just throwing that out there, since First World Problems could even be a launching point of some really terrific conversation.

Anonymous

The best podcast are the ones where it’s like a hang out. Not really structured but a natural discourse. You have some questions that you really want to ask and keep them in the back of your mind then let the conversation go where it will and then ask them as apart of the conversation. Don’t try to steer the topic so much. That way you get to really see and know who and how someone is when your both relaxed. Don’t be afraid to have wine or a few drinks just try not to get too sloppy. Adding a video stream to it later when you’re more comfortable is also a nice touch too. As long as it’s not too structured it will be great cause it allows peoples personalities to come out and that makes the conversation genuine. Just hang out and have a good time. Shit will work out better. If it gets awkward fuck it. It gets awkward. Sometimes those are the best ones! You’re already interesting enough on your own so don’t try and force that. Just keep it sincere and genuine. G’luck, homie! You gonna crush them shits, dawg! Can’t wait!

Laura Wellner

I can't wait to listen to it! YAY!!!

Anonymous

Thanks for the direction to Open Source. X

Nicole Ives

I loved this :-:)

Anonymous

How is it you make me cry with both happy and sad tears often at the same time? How is it I feel a little less alone every time I read you and then hop into some of your art? This podcast was wonderful because I didn't need to imagine your voice from the glowing pixels and your art was so naturally interwoven. We live in interesting times. I feel fortunate to share moments, however much at a distance, with you.

Anonymous

I'm at a loss for words really but this was wonderful. I'd be over the moon for more episodes. Apparently I really needed to hear Ride again. In floods of tears and so effing grateful for it. Like a storm finally breaking.

Anonymous

Nice surprise to wind down while listening to this gig I missed. Hey, I didn’t see my dad for many years, too. Met him again when I was 14. I’m half Joe.

Anonymous

I finally got to listen to this last night, while frame some recent paintings and then spontaneously decided to paint a new painting while listening. I sang along with The Ride while doing it. Maybe I should tweet it to you... Thanks for sharing this with us!

SOB

Who knew you wrote "Drowning In The Sound" cos you needed the money?! Sometimes that deadline stuff really works :-) I love a good podcast, enjoying this while working through the weekend...deadlines for everybody ;-)

Anonymous

Love you from Petaluma, CA, Amanda. Keep on keeping on and doing what you do, and I will keep on listening, an reading it all.