260 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
260 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1303
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Title: HPR1303: A Music Pairing Under Unlikely Circumstances
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1303/hpr1303.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 23:13:32
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---
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Hi this is Dave Morris recording for Hacker Public Radio and I'm here in South
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Morningside in Edinburgh interviewing two people, one of whom is my son Tim and his
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friend and I'd like you to introduce yourselves Tim. My name is Tim Morris, I'm Dave
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Sun, I study music full-time as a student at Napier University in Edinburgh. I'm
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currently finished my second year and I'm going into my third and I specialize in
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composition. My name is John Pavlik, I am a resident of Michigan USA and I am a
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full-time software developer and .NET, all that sort of stuff and I'm over here on
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holiday. So you guys have been friends for a number of years, how did you
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actually meet in the first place? Oh well it was a while ago, it was in 2006 and I
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think John had posted a post on an online forum called Internet DJ, all
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things, asking for someone to do a collaboration with him and at this time I'd
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been producing for a couple of years beforehand and I really wasn't getting
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anywhere very fast in my opinion so I thought a collaboration would really help
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me pick up some more techniques to use. Little did Tim know that I posted that
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thread in the collaboration subforum because I was even more of a rank
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amateur than he, having only, you know, been using the software for about six
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months and with no real formal musical training or talent to speak of, I was
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hoping to get, you know, paired up with someone with, you know, all kinds of
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experience that would show me how to crank out the number ones in a pretty
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timely fashion. So that was kind of what I was going for, but Tim was the only
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person who responded to the thread. So I thought, well let's see where it goes. So I
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listened to some of his music on his profile and I thought, oh, this kid's a pro.
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And so friendship was forged. I think really the skill levels were quite
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matched and I think that's why we ended up doing so much work together and
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ended up becoming friends because our skills set matched pretty much perfectly
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that time. Well, music reduction wise, but and we shared a lot like a lot of
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similar views, but our backgrounds were very complete or just completely
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different, really. I don't think we realized how different until possibly
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until this week. Actually, yeah. There's a lot of things which you don't mention in
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instant messenger or online. I mean, a lot of details that end up being
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on set. So you spent quite a lot of time communicating when with one and
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another outside the music context. Well, we say that we, well, they all started
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from a collaboration, but the amount of collaborations you actually finished
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was over over the seven years or so that we've known each other. I think we
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finished maybe two. And mostly, mostly the other time it's just been chatting.
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We did finish a few pieces, but we really didn't we're not much of a completionist
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as I suppose. What happened is that we just we started talking and we realized
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that we had a lot in common despite the you know, let's fight the the
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distance and the completely different cultures and the completely different
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backgrounds. We did have a lot in common and we were going through some of
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the same stuff, you know, both being teenagers, both being in high school, both
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trying to find ourselves in our way in the world. And socially awkward as well.
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But I wasn't going to mention that. I suppose this is a hands-together sort of thing.
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So yeah. So what type of music was it? Then what's your
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main interest or is it very wide? Well, it matched up, I would say, back then.
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More or less, definitely more than it does now. We both like we like trans music a
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lot back then. And I guess we were both trying to replicate it, but in different
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ways and using different approaches. I remember when we first were doing
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collaboration, you were banned from using kick drums in the tracks. I grew up
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in a somewhat oppressive religious environment. And it was a bit more
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extreme than probably was healthy in my my mother at the time had banned me
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from using any sort of percussion really because she thought that it was the
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work of the devil. So I was trying to write trans tracks without kick drums and
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that was that was a bit of an exercise. Trying to find a sense of rhythm and
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propulsion without using any frequencies pull out like, you know, 200 hertz was
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quite frankly impossible. One of our first collaborations though, indeed
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doesn't have any kick drums right the whole thing. And it really did make us
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think outside of the box because I mean like you're saying like the huge part
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of the trans genre is having a constant 4-4 beat the whole time that people
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can dance to and you can mix mix two tracks together with and we had none of
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that. It was yeah, it wasn't like we were trying to write ambience or something
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where we wanted to need it any percussion. We were trying to write dance music
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with that. And it'd be like trying to to dice it on even thought a knife. So yeah.
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Yeah, yeah. So how did things develop from there? Did you did that take you
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up into different music genres or what? I would say that a big part of being
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an electronic musician especially in the internet age is that you are
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constantly exposed to new ideas and new styles of music and new ways of thought
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and that I mean we've both kind of been all over the shop in different in
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different directions over the years. We I mean we started on pretty much the same
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road but there's there was so many developments and trends and and different
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parts that we ended up taking that now we have we both still enjoy electronic
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music a lot but it's that our our taste are wildly different really. Like if
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you if you compared our iPods together I think you might find about maybe three
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or four artists that would be the same and that would all be from a very
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specific time period in probably two thousand seven two thousand eight when
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the whole blog music thing was really big and 90 percent of my music was
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stuff that Tim sent me over G-talk and I downloaded and kept yeah I know I
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know Tim's moved away from trance because I seem to have all his collection in
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my house. So yeah so your friendship just kept kept on and sort of seemed
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to grow I guess and I yeah as an outside observer I just knew you Tim were
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constantly mentioning oh I said such and such to John today and John said so
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and so and so and so it developed until November 2011 what would tell us what
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happened then. Right well our I mean the our relationship really just
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transcend music very quickly because like we're saying we had so much in common
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and we we basically kept ourselves updated throughout throughout all the
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things that are happening through our lives you know I I went to college and did
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full-time music for the first time and I wanted to uni while John was was doing
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all sorts of things I went to college for a bit and moved out of the house and
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met a girl and it was just kind of whirlwind I mean through high school we
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pretty regularly we I'd say that most of our most of the time we spent together
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was during high school because we both really didn't have schedules or anything
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major going on we'd come home I come home from school and signing the G-talk and
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there would be Tim and we'd be like hey what's up and then be like hey man you
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be like hey I just got a dreamcast this is the best thing ever. Well what's a
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dreamcast and you'd be like you know the Sega one from the 90s you know and it
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was just like this it was just we both really had at least I know myself I
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trouble fitting in with my peers so our friendship was kind of like 90% of my
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social life if not more it was it was a breath of normalcy and acceptance you
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know that's amazing yeah yeah so in November you you got married John
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November 2000 married the girl and I was thinking you know who can I have
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good I guess man because I moved away from the area I grew up in and at the
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time I didn't really feel particularly close to any of my schoolmates they
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just we never really got on that well to be honest and I thought well I wonder
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Tim would be up for a trip over I mean I wonder if that would be too much to
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ask of a person that never actually met real life to be a best man but he's
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kind of the only person qualified he's one of the few people in my life right
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now that I've known for any length of time I mean I've known Tim longer than I've
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known my wife and fortunately he said yeah sure I said are you serious he's
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like yeah absolutely it'd be great and it was actually it was quite a trip
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that yeah I went over for 10 days it's for I think I arrived probably about a
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week before the wedding so I was in I was in kind of last stages of getting
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everything sorted for the wedding so in that time we didn't get through a
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couple of rehearsal dinners and all that kind of stuff and John was still
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working before his wedding right until the very last day well music wasn't a
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very big part of that but I think that's I think that's reflected that reflects
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our whole relationship really that it was based on music and it's still it's
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based on music but it's it it really becomes so much so many other things as
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well yeah yeah that's fantastic and John you were saying that your outlook was
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was changed quite a lot by having a foreign friend yeah it was Tim exposed I
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was I grew up in a very insular and segregated community and Tim was Tim was
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very different from that he was a bit more I guess worldly wise I suppose I
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never knew that people were interested in fashion and I never knew that people
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were you know I don't know he's just very different I was used to I guess
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people that were very boring and didn't really do a lot outside of going to
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church and particularly religious ceremony and Tim kind of he introduced me to
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a lot of interesting things and we had a lot of interesting discussions about
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philosophy and I mean we're 16 in discussing philosophy so there was
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probably pretty basic but to me at the time I had never been exposed to anything
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like that and I don't know it was just it was very different and just you know
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talking to this in some of the words too he told me oh I went out and bought a
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jumper in the States a jumper is a dress worn by you know little girls in
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kindergarten that in I was like why is Tim buying jumpers is this normal and you
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know when it was actually just a jacket so yeah it was it was interesting to do
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that and to meet someone from another place and get to know him so you were
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saying to me earlier this week that you're coming over to the UK was was
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something of a big big leap in comparison to many people in your
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your part of the States yeah did you put that down to you or to your friendship
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with Tim oh absolutely just like the mindset that that seems to be more
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common over here and that I picked up from him a bit is that the world is a
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really big place that deserves to be traveling explored and I feel like
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traveling is a bit more common over here than it is in the States or people are
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more than content to you know go to school for 20 years work for 40 live for
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another 20 on a pension and then it's dying and that the I don't know
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America seems to at least my little part of the Midwest seems to be very
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comfortable and staying there and not exploring much or not doing anything
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uncomfortable so yeah I would say that for sure yeah yeah so have you have
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you thought about being over in the UK what's what's your impression overall I
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really like it a lot it's it's it's it's a very different form used to but I've
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noticed a lot of things are really efficient really well done the public
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transportation system in Edinburgh is really nice everyone seems to be more
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eco-friendly more interested in preserving the environment and not in a look at
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me I'm a soccer mom trying to lay this trend sort of way really you know I
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would really like to be living on this earth for another several millennia sort
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of way yeah so I mean that that's kind of cool too it's a bit more sustainable
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over here yeah in the food's amazing wow that's not what you expect to hear
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people say usually say British food is rubbish you just see his face when we
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introduce into the half pizza suffer which is if if anyone doesn't know it's it's
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a frozen pizza of the usually of the cheap variety which is kind of half and
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then deep fried and you serve it with chips and it's and it's called a
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supper so I've got to say that's probably the most American thing I've ever heard
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off it wasn't fried pizza right after I ate that I strongly
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considered going out and getting an eagle tattoo on my bicycle yeah so what
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about going back to the music it you have you been writing any
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collaborating on anything recently well we we do try things I mean it's I
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don't think well I don't think a long period of time like a half a year goes
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by without us attempting something but the amount the amount of
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commitments that will especially John has then we both have means that like
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doing something where we were both to far apart and things move really quite
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slowly it means that it's hard to be motivated for a long period of time
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maybe you're working on a track for a very long period of time because I mean we
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both work in a similar way which is getting is getting it done like the
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base work done and sorted in a very short condensed period of time and then
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putting the filling and finishing touches on it later on yeah yeah yeah it's
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it's really important to preserve that momentum that you get when you first
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start a story an idea because if you can't get that if you can't get the if you
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can't get most of track written in the first few studio sessions then it just
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usually ends up rotting and never being finished and you start to hate it
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because you've heard it so much in the end yeah but it's really been nice
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because we have we didn't really get we didn't have time I was about to get
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married the last time I saw him there was some time to work on anything and we
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tried a few different times but we really didn't have any time to sit down for
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hours and time to be like all right we're gonna we're gonna report some
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to make it happen yeah but since I've been over here we've actually had a
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little bit of time to work on some material and it's gone really well and we
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were pretty close with finishing a track that I think it's probably some
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probably the nicest sounding thing I've ever worked on to be completely honest
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and it's been cool to see that our workflow we can work so well together and
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so quickly I don't know I just felt it felt very natural there wasn't I wasn't
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like okay so were you gonna do what am I gonna do one of us will sit at the
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computer one of us will sit at the keyboard and then after a bit we'll swap
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and it just works really well it's never for a lack of ideas that things don't
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get finished is for a lack of time yeah yeah yeah the fact that just during
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this week you've been here John you're just living up the road from from Tim's
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flat yeah you've been able to get up early and and come down here and and do
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stuff together yeah that's that's that's that's pretty good that's really good
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they should have had a longer holiday I keep telling that yeah I'm convinced now
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that the that it might be a wise investment to save up a good bit of money and
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then take a leave of absence for a few months and just stay over here and maybe
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explore some other parts of Europe as well because I mean this is my first
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this is my first time really properly being out of the country out of the
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states and the world seems so much bigger now so I definitely would like to do
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that simple next year so to wind up then is there anything that we can point
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the listeners at in terms of your music is there anything online that we can
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point out or anything we can we can add to a sample to the to this particular
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episode well unfortunately the the only part we have finished were things
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about five or six years ago and we've changed a lot since then you know
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rather not yeah sure as a yes we'd rather not but we would like to finish
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something soon and we would like to get up online and I think if we keep the
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listeners posted on that yeah okay so we'll we'll we'll try and do a brief
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follow-up maybe and and introduce what whatever you'd manage to compose in
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yeah yeah that'd be nice okay and also if it would be possible to to to upload
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some of our tracks over the time period that we we we'd be working together it
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would be quite funny it would be funny to to see the evolution and music and
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maybe that and maybe that would maybe give some kind of idea of how we've
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both changed yeah yeah and also pretty much at the same pace throughout the
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whole thing and I think that's I think that's why we've our friendship is
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managed to endure for so long is because we generally we generally been
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changing at the same pace you know going to similar similar parts of our life at
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the same time I mean obviously John had did get a head start because he got
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married and a job but right that was that was a that was just a very unique
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set of circumstances that put me in a position to where I could do all that
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very quickly and just get it out of the way move on with my life but I don't know
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things would have gone that way if I would have done that if you know a very
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very specific sense of circumstances hadn't existed but it's another thing that
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I joke about with Tim on occasion is that it's funny how if you look at our
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lives there are some very interesting and unexpected parallels and I like we've
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been interested in the same things not even knowing it I mean obviously music
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was the first one recently I started racing BMX bikes and I told him hey you
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know I race bikes and he said what cycling really I said yeah and he said oh I've
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been you know I'm in a touring and and he you know about the same time he had
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gotten into cycling in a really major way and earlier this year he just
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completed like what 250 miles across Europe or something unbelievable like that we
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did 700 miles actually he just completed a 700 mile bike ride and it's just
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crazy to see there's been a few other things like that we both got into
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things at completely different times no at the same time but in slightly of
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course in slightly different ways so I mean it's kind of funny to me but it's
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I'm not I'm not really surprised by it that's amazing yeah well let's hope we
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hear him or this maybe the next time you visit it will be a long cycle ride
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across Europe and we can do a recording about that perhaps that would be
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obviously we could we could keep an audio journal day three legs will never move
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again
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cute stroke unbearable okay guys thank you very much
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio it's Hacker Public Radio
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we are a community podcast network the release of shows every weekday on
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day three Friday today's show like all our shows was contributed by a HPR
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listener like yourself if you ever consider recording a podcast then visit
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our website to find out how easy it really is Hacker Public Radio was founded
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