The Shadow People

The Shadow People Ep35 - MJ Biopic, Danny Demoted to Cowbell, Knicks in Finals

51 min · I går
episode The Shadow People Ep35 - MJ Biopic, Danny Demoted to Cowbell, Knicks in Finals cover

Beskrivelse

Nigel Hall, Derrick Freeman, and Danny Abel are back for another episode of The Shadow People. This week: the Michael Jackson rabbit hole continues, Danny tells the story of getting sent to Europe only to end up playing cowbell through the longest second line in Copenhagen history, the crew talks Knicks basketball, Ray J's boxing embarrassment, Very Good Tuesdays, impossibly fast tempos, and why releasing singles might actually make more sense than albums in 2026. Plus stories from the road, New Orleans music culture, and the usual complete nonsense. Sponsored by Lunascend Artist Management, Talent & Services. If you're enjoying the show, like, subscribe, and share! Cuz for Mayor! Produced by Drew Meez by way of BROWN HOUND SOUNDS 0:00 Danny's angry Europe photo1:00 Welcome to Episode 351:20 Michael movie discussion9:50 Best music biopics17:20 Ranking Michael Jackson albums25:30 Lunascend sponsor25:50 Danny finally arrives26:40 Danny's Copenhagen cowbell disaster28:50 Knicks playoff talk34:45 Ray J gets knocked out39:00 Jeff Landry discussion42:15 We played so fast it summoned Cuz47:05 Nigel's new single48:05 Singles vs albums

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episode The Shadow People Ep35 - MJ Biopic, Danny Demoted to Cowbell, Knicks in Finals cover

The Shadow People Ep35 - MJ Biopic, Danny Demoted to Cowbell, Knicks in Finals

Nigel Hall, Derrick Freeman, and Danny Abel are back for another episode of The Shadow People. This week: the Michael Jackson rabbit hole continues, Danny tells the story of getting sent to Europe only to end up playing cowbell through the longest second line in Copenhagen history, the crew talks Knicks basketball, Ray J's boxing embarrassment, Very Good Tuesdays, impossibly fast tempos, and why releasing singles might actually make more sense than albums in 2026. Plus stories from the road, New Orleans music culture, and the usual complete nonsense. Sponsored by Lunascend Artist Management, Talent & Services. If you're enjoying the show, like, subscribe, and share! Cuz for Mayor! Produced by Drew Meez by way of BROWN HOUND SOUNDS 0:00 Danny's angry Europe photo1:00 Welcome to Episode 351:20 Michael movie discussion9:50 Best music biopics17:20 Ranking Michael Jackson albums25:30 Lunascend sponsor25:50 Danny finally arrives26:40 Danny's Copenhagen cowbell disaster28:50 Knicks playoff talk34:45 Ray J gets knocked out39:00 Jeff Landry discussion42:15 We played so fast it summoned Cuz47:05 Nigel's new single48:05 Singles vs albums

I går51 min
episode The Shadow People Ep34 – Zach Mama: From Paris to 50 States, Comedy, Jazz & Life on the Road cover

The Shadow People Ep34 – Zach Mama: From Paris to 50 States, Comedy, Jazz & Life on the Road

TITLE: The Shadow People Ep34 – Zach Mama: From Paris to 50 States, Comedy, Jazz & Life on the Road DESCRIPTION: French-born comedian, drummer, world traveler, and all-around wild man Zach Mama joins The Shadow People for one of the most unpredictable conversations we've had yet. Before becoming a rising stand-up comic, Zach spent years touring as a professional musician, studying in Philadelphia, playing in churches, living in New Orleans, and eventually setting out on a mission to visit all 50 states while building a comedy career from the ground up. Along the way, Derrick Freeman and Nigel Hall dive into life on the road, bombing in front of audiences, dating while constantly traveling, becoming an American citizen, Richard Pryor, Eric Andre, jazz improvisation, tap dancing, roaches, bed bugs, and the surprising connection between stand-up comedy and music. It's thoughtful, ridiculous, hilarious, and occasionally profound—exactly the kind of conversation that makes The Shadow People what it is. Guest: Zach Mama Follow Zach Mama: @zach_mama The Shadow People Podcast features Derrick Freeman, Nigel Hall, and friends discussing music, culture, life on the road, New Orleans, and whatever else happens to come up. #TheShadowPeople #ZachMama #StandUpComedy #NigelHall #DerrickFreeman #Jazz #ComedyPodcast #NewOrleans #MusiciansLife #Podcast TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 Intro & Welcome Zach Mama 04:19 From Paris to Philadelphia 06:01 Leaving music for stand-up comedy 07:05 Becoming an American citizen 07:46 The quest to visit all 50 states 10:35 Nigel vs. Zach: Who finishes all 50 states first? 11:46 Performing comedy in a Kansas City gay bar 13:06 Bombing, improvisation & surviving bad gigs 14:03 Growing up in Paris 15:18 Making people laugh as a kid 17:15 The accidental Stevie Wonder story 19:50 What are you afraid of? 22:32 Dating, vulnerability & life on the road 26:20 Finding depth while constantly traveling 28:27 Bombing as a comedian vs. bombing as a musician 29:43 Why Zach hates tap dancing 31:09 Derrick's New Orleans roach story 34:05 Bringing comedy back to New Orleans 36:18 Reading the room & improvising a set 37:41 Eric Andre, comedy influences & musical comedy 39:45 Musicians, comedians & creative minds 41:12 The audience as an instrument 42:03 Comedy, music & "hiding the one" 44:15 Why unique stories matter 45:03 Making audiences uncomfortable on purpose 52:00 Comedy, truth & social commentary 58:00 Final thoughts 59:06 Outro

1. juni 202659 min
episode The Shadow People Ep. 33 – George Porter Jr., The Meters, Jazz Fest Stories & the Legendary P-Bass cover

The Shadow People Ep. 33 – George Porter Jr., The Meters, Jazz Fest Stories & the Legendary P-Bass

This week on The Shadow People, Derrick Freeman and Nigel Hall sit down with the legendary bassist of The Meters for a conversation that somehow manages to feel like a history lesson, a backstage hang, a musicians’ therapy session, and an old neighborhood bar conversation all at once.George talks sobriety, instinct, hearing harmony in real time, and the fear of wondering whether the music would still be there after rehab. From sneaking into the Dew Drop Inn as a teenager to getting embarrassed onstage by jazz veterans calling impossible tunes, George breaks down how New Orleans musicians actually learned the craft back then: by getting thrown directly into the fire.There’s also deep nerd business in here for the musicians:the famous P-Bass, fretless disasters, tendonitis, Allan Toussaint sessions, Bourbon Street gigs, lost airlines baggage in Spain, Jazz Fest economics, session records that never got their proper shine, and how The Meters accidentally became The Meters in the first place.Somewhere in the middle of all this, Nigel finally confesses to eating George’s Popeyes backstage at Tipitina's twenty-something years ago then disappears into full bass-nerd territory about vintage Fender necks and serial numbers, and George casually tells stories that most musicians would consider sacred oral history. Half the time, everybody’s laughing so hard the whole thing stops feeling like a podcast and starts sounding like what it probably would’ve been anyway if the cameras were never there.This episode is New Orleans music culture in its purest form: funny, heavy, loose, technical, emotional, deeply human, and completely impossible to fake.Featuring stories about:Allan Toussaint, Art Neville, Zigaboo Modeliste, Leo Nocentelli, Snooks Eaglin, Mac Rebennack (Dr. John), Stevie Wonder, Tipitina's, the Dew Drop Inn, Bourbon Street, Jazz Fest, and a bass guitar that probably belongs in a museum.Sponsored by Lunascend — creating elevated live entertainment experiences rooted in the culture of New Orleans, from brass bands and blues-Americana artists to refined luxury DJs, while also helping artists build sustainable creative careers through their upcoming educational platform.0:00 – Shadow People welcome legendary bassist George Porter Jr.2:45 – George talks sobriety, rehab, and rediscovering music afterward8:12 – Learning New Orleans music the hard way: getting called onstage cold13:40 – The origin story of The Meters18:55 – Allan Toussaint sessions, studio life, and classic New Orleans recording culture24:18 – Nigel confesses to eating George’s backstage Popeyes at Tipitina's36:20 – Jazz Fest, touring realities, and why live music economics have changed44:08 – Vintage bass talk, gear obsession, and Nigel’s serial-number rabbit hole52:31 – George reflects on legacy, longevity, and still loving the music#TheShadowPeople #GeorgePorterJr #TheMeters #NewOrleansMusic #JazzFest #FunkMusic #AllanToussaint #Tipitinas #Podcast #NewOrleans #BassGuitar #Zigaboo #LeoNocentelli #NigelHall #DerrickFreeman #Funk #SoulMusic #JamBand #DrJohn #MusicPodcast

14. mai 20261 h 13 min
episode The Shadow People Ep32 - Whistle Monster, Good Vibes vs Bad News & Saints Talk cover

The Shadow People Ep32 - Whistle Monster, Good Vibes vs Bad News & Saints Talk

The legendary Leroy Mitchell, better known as Whistle Monster, pulls up to the studio and the conversation is already in motion.We drop in mid-stream as Leroy reflects on turning 59 and what actually matters when life starts getting real. What begins as a story about his former therapist takes a turn into something deeper. Health, aging, and the quiet reality that all the accomplishments in the world do not mean much if your body won’t cooperate. It’s honest, a little heavy, and very human.From there, Leroy talks about perspective. How focusing on negativity rewires your entire experience. The same way buying a car makes you notice that same model everywhere you look, the news and its focus on negativity train people to see only the worst in everything. He breaks down gratitude, self-affirmation, meditation, and the mental space around sleep. Not in a preachy way, just lived experience. The reason behind his own platform, the Good Vibes Network, and why he’s committed to highlighting the good happening in New Orleans.Then, naturally, everything shifts.Saints talk.Free agency losses. Question marks around Alvin Kamara and Cam Jordan. The Etienne pickup and what it might mean. The future of the team, the long tenure of Mickey Loomis, and the complicated history of ownership under the Bensons. Leroy calls his shot again on QB Shough, just like he did before most people were paying attention.It’s one of those episodes that moves the way real conversations move. Heavy to funny. Personal to football. Philosophy to pure New Orleans.Just press play.Timestamps00:08 Turning 59 and the conversation begins in motion00:56 Whistle explains how therapy changed his life02:48 His former therapist now needs his help05:27 Health, aging, and what really matters07:12 Morning routines, alpha state, and building mental armor10:09 No screens before bed and ending the day with gratitude13:52 Whistle’s grandmother, faith, and where his mindset comes from16:49 The “buy a car, see it everywhere” analogy for good vs bad news20:49 Why Whistle started the Good Vibes News Network24:47 The conversation shifts hard into Saints free agency28:17 Cam Jordan, Alvin Kamara, and frustration with the front office33:13 Mormon jokes, BYU soaking, and the ridiculous closing callback

25. mars 202634 min
episode The Shadow People Ep31 - Doug Belote, Drum Lore, Studio Life & Ridiculous Impressions cover

The Shadow People Ep31 - Doug Belote, Drum Lore, Studio Life & Ridiculous Impressions

Part 1 of this split episode brings Doug Belote into the room, which means two things are guaranteed: deep drummer talk and hilarious hijinks.Doug sits down with Nigel and Derrick to talk about coming up between Lafayette and New Orleans, learning by listening, and getting his real education the old-fashioned way: standing too close to greatness and paying attention. He talks about his father’s studio work, early church playing, seeing Johnny Vidacovich, Herman Ernest, Russell Batiste, Willie Green, and other killers up close, and the particular way New Orleans rewires your idea of what music can be.The episode also gets into something musicians know but people tend to flatten into one vague category: teaching, touring, recording, producing, jamming, surviving. These are not the same job. Doug, Nigel, and Derrick get into the difference between being a studio cat, a road cat, and a teacher, and why each one asks for a completely different part of your brain and spirit.Then, because this is The Shadow People, the whole thing eventually bends back toward mortality, friendship, memory, and the weird grace of still being here long enough to laugh this hard.It closes the only way a Doug Belote episode really could: with impressions. Stanton Moore. Johnny V. Total nonsense. Beautiful nonsense.Part 2 with Whistle Monster is on deck.Timestamps00:00 – Doug Belote enters the chat and immediately explains nothing01:52 – Doug and Derrick on moving to New Orleans young04:34 – What kind of drummer Doug really is05:40 – Growing up around sessions, church, and Andre Crouch08:22 – The first time Doug saw Johnny Vidacovich10:40 – Herman Ernest, Bunchy Johnson, and learning by watching12:11 – Derrick’s Houston story and meeting Shannon Powell21:26 – Teaching music vs touring vs studio life26:10 – Nigel remembers first playing with Doug in the studio29:42 – A moment for Kofi, Herman, Russell, Carlo, and the ones we miss33:28 – Doug’s Stanton Moore and Johnny V impressions

18. mars 202635 min