Nakedly Examined Music Podcast

Why do musicians create what they do? Why do they create in that particular way? Mark Linsenmayer (aka songwriter Mark Lint, and host of The Partially Examined Life) talks to songwriters and composers about specific recordings, which are played in full. We cover lyric meanings, writing and recording techniques, arrangements, band dynamics, the stories behind the songs, and even music theory.

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NEM #28: Jill Freeman on Fairy Tales and Psychological Truth


Jill was part of a 3-woman vocal band in the '80s called The Life is Grand Band, and then in 1995 released Songs About Sex & Depression, and only in 2015 unveiled her long-awaited study of the dark psychology of fairy tales, A Handmade Life.
We focus on this most recent project, discussing "Letters from Murdertown" and "Eyes of Fire," and playing at the end "Walking on Glass." Our third discussion song goes back to the previous album with "Everything Makes Me Cry." Opening music is The Life Is Grand Band's "Harry’s Song" from Feel Like Makin' Art (1989).
Watch Jill and her husband/producer Joel Wachbrit perform and further explain "Letters from Murdertown"; here's another explaining more about the project and playing another song from the album, "Completely Unaware." Here's another new interview with both of them about the album, and here they are playing one of my favorite Byrds songs "Feel a Whole Lot Better."
Here's a rundown of that story "Vasilisa the Beautiful" that "Eyes of Fire" focuses on.
You can get more information and read lyrics at jillfreeman.com.
Here's her band all dressed up in carnival garb:

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 November 12, 2016  1h0m