Walls of Sound

Brendan Canty (Fugazi, Rites of Spring, The Messthetics, etc.) on Why Playing Public Spaces for Diverse Audiences Matters More Than Ever

42 min · 1 de feb de 2026
Portada del episodio Brendan Canty (Fugazi, Rites of Spring, The Messthetics, etc.) on Why Playing Public Spaces for Diverse Audiences Matters More Than Ever

Descripción

On this episode of Walls of Sound, we sit down with Brendan Canty, drummer, producer, composer, and a central figure in the D.C. music community through Deadline, Rites of Spring, Fugazi, and The Messthetics. We recorded this conversation a good while ago (as you can probably tell from the Kennedy Center discussion), back when we were still finding our footing with the podcast. Brendan reflects on formative spaces like Fort Reno, DC Space, and the 9:30 Club, along with free shows, all ages rooms, and the strange, fragile ecosystems that let scenes actually take root. It’s a wide ranging conversation about touring, venues, and why the places still matter as much as the music.

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9 episodios

episode Brendan Canty (Fugazi, Rites of Spring, The Messthetics, etc.) on Why Playing Public Spaces for Diverse Audiences Matters More Than Ever artwork

Brendan Canty (Fugazi, Rites of Spring, The Messthetics, etc.) on Why Playing Public Spaces for Diverse Audiences Matters More Than Ever

On this episode of Walls of Sound, we sit down with Brendan Canty, drummer, producer, composer, and a central figure in the D.C. music community through Deadline, Rites of Spring, Fugazi, and The Messthetics. We recorded this conversation a good while ago (as you can probably tell from the Kennedy Center discussion), back when we were still finding our footing with the podcast. Brendan reflects on formative spaces like Fort Reno, DC Space, and the 9:30 Club, along with free shows, all ages rooms, and the strange, fragile ecosystems that let scenes actually take root. It’s a wide ranging conversation about touring, venues, and why the places still matter as much as the music.

1 de feb de 202642 min
episode Walls of Sound Case Study: The Honky Tonk – Part Two artwork

Walls of Sound Case Study: The Honky Tonk – Part Two

On Part Two of our Honky Tonk case study, we pick up when the genre hits the national spotlight. We start with Urban Cowboy and Gillies in Pasadena, when a real club turned into a movie set and the movie turned into a blueprint. Neon spreads, mechanical bulls become symbols, and the honky tonk stops feeling local. From there, we follow how honky tonk starts pulling in opposing directions. One side leans toward polish and crossover. The other stays tied to the barroom roots. We talk about how venues change when entertainment competes with the stage, how tourism districts turn into curated versions of themselves, and how the culture keeps pushing back through new traditionalists and smaller scenes. Part Two is about that tension, and why honky tonk never really disappears, even when it gets dressed up and sold back to us.

21 de ene de 202642 min
episode Walls of Sound Case Study: The Honky Tonk – Part One artwork

Walls of Sound Case Study: The Honky Tonk – Part One

In Part One of this two-part episode, we look at the honky tonk as a real place, not the cartoon version people picture today. We talk about why these bars existed and who they were for. Honky tonks were working-class spaces where people went after long days to drink, dance, blow off steam, and get through the night. We trace how honky tonks grew out of older Southern nightlife like saloons, barrelhouses, juke joints, and dance halls, and how the rooms shaped the music. Loud crowds meant louder bands. Jukeboxes and electric instruments were practical tools in packed rooms where no one was going to stop talking. From Texas and Oklahoma to Bakersfield to Nashville and beyond, we follow honky tonk’s rise through the 1940s and 50s and the artists who helped define it, including Hank Williams, Lefty Frizzell, Kitty Wells, and Webb Pierce. Part One sets the groundwork for why honky tonks mattered in the first place.

10 de ene de 202646 min