It’s the first show of 2020, and we’re honored to have Hebdo join us in the studio to kickoff the new year.
We take an interesting and informative retrospective journey with long-time musician Joey Hebdo’s self-styled Adventure Folk on this week’s show. You’ll hear about a childhood immersed in music and the major influence that Motown has on him. We chat about his family’s Lebanese culture adding nuance to his songs, as well as comparisons to John Sebastian (Lovin Spoonful), Stephen Stills, Canned Heat and more.
He reveals that he’s working on new material for the new year, and that he credits his long-time musician friends that make up the band with the consistent thread running through all of his songs. We also talk about the excellent version he performed of Bob Dylan’s You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go, which you can listen to HERE.
After kicking off the new decade of 2020 with wonderful Hebdo on the show, we thought a bit of funk was called for... This week, a few of the guys from PronToh stop by the studio to carpet bomb our aural synapses with their jungle funk missiles. Aaron Sinclair, Nick…
This week, we're excited to have Columbus singer-songwriter and all-around good guy Zach Frost in the studio with us. He's releasing his sophomore EP Bucket List on November 1 and celebrating with a release show at Craft & Vinyl. In this week's show, we chat about his high school band…
This week we're joined by the wonderful Sapphira Vee for a sonic journey through the ether that includes a WORLD PREMIERE from her new EP Duet (available 7/2/21). She describes her music as "dark trippy music with an industrial edge - no boundaries...and very few filters..." Vee joins us from…
Rick has been involved with music in many capacities for over 30 years, bringing his experience in terrestrial and digital radio, live music and journalism to Music In Motion Columbus. He's a writer, raconteur and consumer of eclectic music/coffee.
~ Yesterday's weirdness is tomorrow's reason why ~
Hunter S. Thompson
“I say, play your own way. Don’t play what the public want - you play what you want and let the public pick up on what you doing - even if it does take them fifteen, twenty years.” ~ Thelonius Monk
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