
Stereo Embers: The Podcast
Hosted by Alex Green, Stereo Embers: The Podcast is a weekly podcast airing exclusively on Bombshell Radio (www.bombshellradio.com) that features interviews with musicians, authors, artists and actors talking about the current creative moment in their lives.
A professor at St. Mary's College of California, Alex is the Editor-In-Chief of Stereo Embers Magazine (www.stereoembersmagazine.com), the author of five books and has served as a Speaker/Moderator for LitQuake, Yahoo!, The Bay Area Book Festival, A Great Good Place For Books, Green Apple Books, and The St. Mary's College Of California MFA Reading Series.
Stereo Embers The Podcast Theme: Brennan Hester
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Twitter: @emberseditor
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Visit Alex Green: www.alexgreenonline.com
Latest episodes

Jan 12, 2022 • 1h 9min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0258: Colin Blunstone (The Zombies)
“Time Of The Season”
The Zombies got their start in the early '60s and since then, they’ve been one of the most enduring bands in rock and roll history,
The British outfit, which is led by the core of Colin Blunstone and Rod Argent had a mad streak of singles—She’s Not There, Tell Her No and Time Of The Season—that pretty much cemented their reputation as a massive pop force. Their album Odessey and Oracle is considered one of the greatest albums ever made and in 2019 the band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Blunstone’s voice is one of the great wonders of the world and the band’s material is ageless, timeless and affecting. Blunstone has put out solo records, appeared on albums by Alan Parsons and Steve Hackett and the band’s recent output like 2015’s Still Got That Hunger demonstrate that they remain as potent as ever. In this chat, the genial Blunstone talks to Alex about his casual relationship with his work ethic, the evil that lurks in the music business, and why he’s not burdened by competition or envy.
www.zombiesmusic.com
www.bombshellradio.com
www.alexgreenonline.com
Stereo Embers:
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com

Jan 5, 2022 • 1h 15min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0257: Christopher Turpin and Stephanie Jean (Ida Mae)
"Click Click Domino"
Christopher Turpin and Stephanie Jean were in the Bath-based alternative rock band Kill It Kid who put out three fabulous albums. With a sonic attack that fell somewhere between Nirvana and The White Stripes, Kill It Kid were a ferocious live act that radiated intensity and heart. After the band called it a day Turpin and Jean formed the duo Ida Mae. Influenced by Delta Blues, JJ Cale, John Martyn and obscure British Folk, the band hit the ground running with their 2019 debut Chasing Lights. Having left their native England for the rich musical soil of Nashville, the band dug in and got to work, playing shows all over the world, including the Newport Folk Festival and opening slots for Willie Nelson, Greta Van Fleet and Blackberry Smoke.
They’ve recored with M. Ward and T Bone Burnett, been hailed by everyone from American Songwriter to Rolling Stone
and the release of their sophomore album Click Click Domino has cemented them as one of the most exciting bands around.
A wicked blend of bluesy howl, folky finesse and affecting harmonies, the husband and wife team of Ida Mae
bring to mind everyone from Fleetwood Mac to The Record Company. In this intimate chat, the two talk to Alex
about their record collections, family support and how to do a Meet and Greet in a COVID world….
www.idamaemusic.com
www.bombshellradio.com
www.alexgreenonline.com
Stereo Embers The Podcast
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com

Dec 29, 2021 • 1h 13min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0256: Kurt Neumann (The Bodeans)
“Still The Night”
Since the early '80s the Wisconsin-bred Bodeans have been playing some of the catchiest and most compelling rock and roll you’re likely to hear. With nearly 20 albums to their name including Love and Hope and Sex and Dreams, Outside Looking In, Mr Sad Clown and Still, The Bodeans discography is a riveting blend of American music played with heart and soul and truth. They’ve had quite a career and it’s one that found them opening for U2 on the Joshua Tree tour, playing Farm Aid, recording with Robbie Robertson, being produced by everyone from T. Bone Burnett to Jerry Harrison of the Talking Heads, releasing a killer double live album, having a massive hit with "Closer To Free" and touring all over the world. They’ve gone through many iterations of their lineup, but original member Kurt Neumann is the man holding down the Bodeans legacy and with the addition of legendary drummer Kenny Aaronoff, the Bodeans sound better than ever. In this conversation, Neumann talks to Alex about coping with depression, starting his own podcast and why he loves the Violent Femmes. He also chats about a life-changing epiphany he had at McDonald’s...
www.bodeans.com
Staring At The World With Kurt Neumann Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/11EvIZy3RXLaEFpHrzczaS
www.bombshellradio.com
Stereo Embers
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com

Dec 25, 2021 • 1h 51min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0255: Arielle ("We Will Rock You," "Nashville")
“Analog Christmas”
Arielle is one of those rare talents that comes along where you look at what she’s capable of and it kind of knocks you out. A guitar virtuoso who also is blessed with a four-octave voice, Arielle has played on stage with everyone from Queen in the "We Will Rock You” musical to Cee Lo Green at Coachella. She’s opened for Guns 'n Roses, Larkin Poe and Heart, collaborated with Eric Johnson and Kings and Daughters' Talia Dean and appeared regularly on the TV show “Nashville." She studied at the Institute of Contemporary Music Performance in London, put out EPS and albums, including her latest—Analog Girl In A Digital World—and, along with Queen’s Brian May, she designed a guitar, the retro future BMG Arielle. May said of the instrument: "It’s a new dimension. To understand why this guitar was irresistible to me, you have to hold her in your hands. She’s light, smooth, agile and she sings like a bird.” An activist, an artist an engineer and a master technician, Arielle’s gifts are profound and powerful. And she’s a lovely human being. In this open and candid conversation she talks to Alex about her take on possessions, staying in touch with people and why a ride in an ambulance was deeply important to her as a musician.
www.imarielle.com
www.alexgreenonline.com
www.bombshellradio.com
Stereo Embers The Podcast:
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com

Dec 22, 2021 • 1h 9min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0254: Kelly Monrow
“Finding Your Voice”
Before we get to Kelly Monrow, let’s have a quick chat about Kelly Dowdle. The Oklahoma-born and Texas-raised Kelly Dowdle is an actress who has appeared on Billions, Lucifer and American Crime Story. Growing up, she always knew she loved music, but it wasn’t until recently that she discovered she also loved making it. Kelly found her voice. And her voice kept finding her—so much so, that she named her musical identity Kelly Monrow. Monrow dresses like a dreamy blend of Janis Joplin and Stevie Nicks and her music is a cross between '70s cosmic Americana and southern soul. Her new EP PRONOIA is just the start because as an artist, Kelly Monrow is picking up speed and realizing the world is hers to conquer. It’s kind of like waking up with a superpower and going out into the world to test it. Well, the testing is done. Monrow is the real deal and watching her spread her creative wings is going to be one of 2022’s great joys. This is a really cool chat because we cover what it means to find one’s voice and what to do with it when you do. But we also hit some really interesting territory that I’ve never hit before in these chats—I don’t want to spoil anything, but it has to do with maintaining your personal identity in a relationship and how if you’re not careful, you can sacrifice your artistic self without even knowing you're doing it.
www.bombshellradio.com
www.alexgreenonline.com
Stereo Embers
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com

Dec 17, 2021 • 1h 5min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0253: Kevin Whelan (Aeon Station, The Wrens)
“Observatory”
Now the name Aeon Station might not sound familiar but their music probably does. And there’s a simple reason for that. Aeon Station is basically 3/4ths of the personnel of the legendary New Jersey band The Wrens. So why is the band Aeon Station and not the Wrens? Well, there’s also a simple reason for that but it’s one of those simple reasons that’s actually kind of complicated and probably deserves its own podcast by way of explanation. So let’s just go with this. The band is Aeon Station because it’s not the Wrens. Confused? This should clear things up. The Wrens formed in '89, put out three perfect albums, including Secaucus and The Meadowlands. The Meadowlands came out in 2003 and the band was poised to translate their critical acclaim capitol—of which they had a massive amount—into a profile that was bound to be larger, but, long story short: they didn’t. Now, almost twenty years later, Singer/guitarist Kevin Whelan who shared Wrens songwriting and singing duties with Charles Bissell in a kind of Jones and Strummer way, decided he would step forward with a batch of songs he’d been sitting on, including five that were intended for the follow up to The Meadowlands. Whelan's longtime Wrens comrades—his brother Greg and Jerry MacDonald—play on Aeon Station’s Observatory and the results are nothing short of captivating. A dramatic song cycle of indie rock soundscapes powered by wondrous melodies and lilting choruses, Observatory is stunning work. Falling somewhere between Remy Zero’s Villanelle, Radiohead’s OK Computer and the crunchy beauty of Canada’s Aerogramme, the album is a breathtaking blast of melodic wonder. It’s affecting, it’s arresting and it’s utterly thrilling—it reminds us that whether beauty rises or falls, its always spectacular. In this chat Kevin Whalen talks to Alex about The Wrens’ misadventures, the genesis of Aeon Station, his daily musical practice and what’s in the Whelan musical vaults….
www.facebook.com/aeonstationband
www.subpop.com
www.bombshellradio.com
www.alexgreenonline.com
Stereo Embers The Podcast
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com

Dec 15, 2021 • 59min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0252: Jacomo Bairos and Sam Hyken (Nu Deco Ensemble)
"A Creative Classical Cauldron"
Formed in Miami in 2015, Nu Deco Ensemble have have completely reimagined what a modern orchestra can do. Sam Hyken and Jacomo Bairos are two of the most respected and in-demand artists in classical music and they’ve come together to create an innovative artistic collective that incorporates dance, mixed media, classical, hip-hop
blues and well, pretty much everything else, into its creative cauldron. And what a cauldron it is—bubbling with innovation, nerve, craftsmanship, diversity, equity, equality and life, Nu Deco Ensemble
is, quite simply, an astonishing fusion of culture and music that results in one of the most transfixing and inspiring experiences you’re likely to have in the arts. Or anywhere. The ensemble has collaborated with Macy Gray, Larkin Poe, Stephen Marley, Jacob Collier, Kimbra and Ben Folds, and they’re not stopping there. Their album with the Grammy-Nominated Larkin Poe is called Paint The Roses Live In Concert but
that’s not even scratching the surface of what these guys do. We’ll let them explain...
Nu Deco online: www.nu-deco-org
Nu Deco Unfiltered Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nu-deco-unfiltered/id1559846018
www.bombshellradio.com
Stereo Embers The Podcast
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com

Dec 8, 2021 • 1h 19min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0251: Julie Doiron (Eric's Trip)
“I Thought Of You”
Julie Doiron got her start at 18 with the band Eric’s Trip. The first Canadian band to be signed to Sub Pop, Eric’s Trip put out modern
classics like Forever Again and Purple Blue and though they called it a day in ’96, they reformed for shows as recently as 2007. As for the New Brunswick-born Doiron, she embarked on a solo career that to date has found her releasing close to fifteen albums, including Loneliest In The Morning, Woke Myself Up and her brand new one, I Thought Of You. We’ll get to that in a second—but before we do, here’s a partial list of her accomplishments. She won a Juno award with her collaborative album with the Wooden Stars, her 2007 effort Woke Myself Up was shortlisted for the Polaris Music Prize, she’s put out records in Spanish and French, she’s appeared on albums by The Tragically Hip, she was in the band Shotgun and Jaybird, June 7th was declared by the Mayor of Bruno, Saskatchewan to be Julie Doiron Day, and her track "The Life of Dreams" was used in an iPhone commercial. I Thought Of You is her first full length solo album in nine years, and it’s a stone cold killer. A riveting batch of wobbly indie rock that’s a perfect blend of fire, vulnerability and grace, I Thought Of You is one of the most moving listening experiences of 2021. In this intimate chat, Julie and Alex talk about relationships, the complexities of love and the difficulty of taking compliments.
www.julie-doiron.com
www.bombshellradio.com
Stereo Embers:
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com

Dec 1, 2021 • 1h 7min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0250: Dave Monks (Tokyo Police Club)
“I’ve Always Wanted To Be Me”
You might know Dave Monks from his work with his band Tokyo Police Club. Since 2005 The Canadian-bred TPC have been one of the most exciting indie rock outfits around, putting out winning albums like Champ and Elephant Shell. They played on Letterman and Craig Ferguson played festivals like Outside Lands, Lollapalooza and Coachella and though the beloved Juno-nominated band are still an ongoing proposition so is Monks' solo career. His sophomore album I’ve Always Wanted To Be Me is a nervy blast of life-affirming indie rock that’s big and crunchy, hook filled and catchy—but it’s also lyrically direct and emotionally vulnerable, making it one of the most memorable albums of the year. In this equally memorable chat, Monks talks to Alex about being competitive, the benefits of having a partner who’s also in the music business and the changing shapes of his daily practice.
www.tokyopoliceclub.com
www.davegoeswild.com
www.bombshellradio.com
Stereo Embers:
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com

Nov 24, 2021 • 42min
Stereo Embers The Podcast 0249: Jude Cole
“Coup De Main”
The category of “Things That Jude Cole Does" is pretty crowded because Jude Cole does a lot of things. A singer/songwriter, a guitarist, a band manager, a producer, a music critic, a record label founder, and a businessman—Jude Cole is a busy dude. The Illinois-born musician got his start playing in Moon Martin and the Ravens in the late 70s. In 1980 he joined the English band The Records and played on the Crashes album as well as touring with them all over Europe. After leaving the Records, Cole got his solo career going and he quickly knocked out a series of perfect pop albums like A View From 3rd Street and Start The Car. He put his solo career on hold to both manage and co-write songs for Lifehouse, then in 2003 he and Kiefer Sutherland formed Ironworks Studio and Records, signing artists like Ron Sexsmith and honey honey. He also recorded interview segments for Extra, where he interviewed The Rolling Stones and Bob Seger Over the years he’s collaborated with Dave Edmunds, Rhett Miller of the Old 97s, Beth Orton, Styx and Peter No-one. So yeah, Jude Cole is a busy guy. What’s he got going on lately besides a lot? Well, he’s got two new albums—Coolerator, which is comprised of doo-wop covers from the '50s and Coup De Main, an album that reminds us why Cole is one of the most talented and riveting songwriters on the planet. Filled with acoustic numbers, mid-tempo rockers, breezy '70s pop and an infectious synth-tinged number, Coup De Main is a poised and hook-laden collection that’s catchy, affecting and unforgettable. In this chat, Cole talks to Alex about playing the banjo, why not everyone is a champion and what it was like to be a young man in a band in England in 1980.
www.judecole.com
www.bombshellradio.com
www.alexgreenonline.com
Stereo Embers:
Twitter: @emberseditor
Instagram: @emberspodcast
Email: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com