We Came From Celluloid
Welcome back to We Came From Celluloid, the podcast where two middle-aged musicians talk about movies and, apparently, sometimes talk about everything except movies. I'm Nicky P here with the great Brian Pritchard, and I'll be honest with you — we fully intended to talk about film this week. That didn't happen. What did happen? A genuinely candid conversation about what it actually takes to keep a band together, survive the recording process, and still like the people you play music with when all is said and done. What We Cover: * The current state of Puma Thurman's recording process — mastering is happening, acapella and instrumental versions are being prepped for licensing, and yes, we're still waiting on the final cut of "Beetlejuice." * Song structure philosophy: why "less is more" works for a punk two-minute ripper but Brown Coat Man needs every layer it has. * Brian's composing instincts vs. Nicky's "hey can we have a chorus?" vocalist reality. * The "Speed Song" time signature war — how two people can play the same song and be counting beats from completely different places. * Tool, math rock, and Stewart Copeland being an absolute slippery genius on the drums. * Copeland's journey from punk guy in The Police to orchestral film composer — and how bringing in Andy Summers changed everything for that band. * The real reason bands fall apart: money, ego, and what happens when a paycheck changes every decision you've ever made. * Sting holding himself back for the band and the resentment that comes with it. * How to handle creative friction without blowing up friendships that matter more than the project. * The Deftones and Mastodon as models for navigating lineup flexibility without the band falling apart. * The "minimum viable product" acoustic duo concept — Nicky and Brian as a lean two-piece to start building an audience now, not later. * Wayne Gretzky, dribbling the ball forever, and why "don't let perfect be the enemy of progress" is the most important thing a working band can internalize. The Real Talk: This episode is basically a therapy session for anyone who has ever tried to make something with other humans. The stuff about The Police is textbook — Sting was ready to be Sting for years before he actually became Sting, and whatever that cost him in terms of creative freedom built up into resentment that likely contributed to the whole thing eventually going sideways. You love the band. You love your people. And then one day the money shows up and suddenly every decision is a negotiation with stakes. Deep Dive — Friction as a Feature: Nicky drops what might be the most honest line in the episode: some of the best songs he's written were written as a "loving fuck you" to a previous collaborator who kept pushing back. That tension — different people pulling in different directions — is the thing that makes creative work surprising. Nobody wants comfortable sameness when they could have something that sounds like two worldviews smashing into each other. The Bottom Line: Puma Thurman is getting closer to releasing new music. The mastering process is underway. "Stay Gold Pony Boy" and "Snow Falls" are incoming. In the meantime, Nicky and Brian are building the infrastructure to perform as a duo — which is maybe the most pragmatic move they've made yet. Also featured: raccoons in the bathroom vent, birds in the kitchen, and a brief meditation on why renting, actually, has its advantages. Subscribe, rate, and review We Came From Celluloid wherever you get your podcasts. And if you've ever had a creative partner who counted beat one in the wrong place — this episode is for you.
14 episodios
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