The Sharp Notes with Evan Toth

Evan Toth

The Sharp Notes is a conversation podcast about music, sound, production and media hosted by Evan Toth.

  1. Zev Feldman Digs into Bill Evans and Art Pepper and Continues the Quest for Hidden Jazz Treasures

    22 JUL

    Zev Feldman Digs into Bill Evans and Art Pepper and Continues the Quest for Hidden Jazz Treasures

    The introduction most often associated with producer—and champion of unfairly unheard music—Zev Feldman, compares him to an archaeologist: the “Indiana Jones of jazz,” as The New Yorker wrote in 2023. Fittingly, Feldman’s occasional SiriusXM radio show is cleverly titled Jazz Detective. In a reissue landscape often focused on bringing listeners albums they may already own in triplicate, Zev shines his producer’s flashlight into unexplored corners of the archive: frequently unearthing recordings that may not have seen the light of day since they were first made. We’re on an adventure in audiophile archeology, so let’s meet the hero of this serial. A devoted record fanatic from a young age, Zev made his way into the music industry through retail, eventually landing in distribution. It was there he met Resonance Records’ George Klabin, who encouraged him to lean into his passion for music, collecting, and archiving, and to try his hand in the producer’s seat. Since then, Feldman has produced albums not only for Resonance, but also for Blue Note, Prestige, Riverside Records, and many others. While our conversation was originally focused on two recent Elemental Music releases—Bill Evans Further Ahead: Live in Finland (1964–1969) and Art Pepper: An Afternoon in Norway – The Kongsberg Concert—it quickly evolved into something more. We found ourselves excavating the heart of Zev’s work, asking the essential question: how does the digger do the digging? Dig in to find out.

    48 min
  2. Dennis Diken on the Legacy of the Smithereens, Vinyl, and the Lifeblood of Rock and Roll | The Sharp Notes Interview

    9 JUL

    Dennis Diken on the Legacy of the Smithereens, Vinyl, and the Lifeblood of Rock and Roll | The Sharp Notes Interview

    For over four decades, Dennis Diken has embodied the enduring spirit of American rock and roll as the drummer and co-founder of The Smithereens. In this wide-ranging conversation, Diken reflects on the band’s legacy while underscoring the urgency and relevance of their music in 2025. As the industry shifts toward streaming and fragmented attention, Diken and his bandmates continue to value the full-album experience, recently reissuing 2011 on vinyl—a record originally created as both homage and evolution of their earlier work. Recorded with producer Don Dixon and at Mitch Easter’s Fidelitorium studio, the album offers a vivid snapshot of a group still energized by collaboration, memory, and craft. Diken speaks with clarity and affection about the band’s late singer, Pat DiNizio, whose presence remains central to their existence. He also addresses the band’s deep New Jersey roots and blue-collar ethos, where directness and commitment shaped both sound and identity. Throughout the interview, a throughline emerges: the notion that music, when rooted in authenticity and executed with intention, doesn’t age—it resonates. Whether reminiscing about their musical influences, navigating the business realities of the 21st century, or highlighting emerging rock bands that echo their passion, Diken offers thoughtful insight into the persistence of the band format in a rapidly changing landscape. The result is less a look back than a testament to rock and roll’s lasting vitality—and a reminder that, for some, playing music isn’t a phase. It’s a lifelong calling.

    37 min
  3. Jenny Owen Youngs on Revisiting "Avalanche", Buffering the Vampire Slayer, Collaboration, and the Beauty of Imperfection | The Sharp Notes Interview

    18 JUN

    Jenny Owen Youngs on Revisiting "Avalanche", Buffering the Vampire Slayer, Collaboration, and the Beauty of Imperfection | The Sharp Notes Interview

    Singer-songwriter Jenny Owen Youngs has never been one to shy away from transformation. In revisiting Avalanche for its deluxe edition, she offers listeners not just a deeper look at the record but a fuller portrait of herself: one that is shaped by collaboration, reinvention, and a willingness to let imperfections breathe. For Youngs, songs aren’t just crafted; they’re lived in, layered, and continually reinterpreted. The deluxe edition reflects this ethos, blending intimate demos, reimaginings, and remixes that speak to a creative process rooted as much in community as in craft. What emerges in conversation with Youngs is a portrait of an artist who balances vulnerability with wit and depth with disarming warmth. Throughout our chat, punctuated by laughter, storytelling, and a shared appreciation for physical media and flawed beauty, it felt more like catching up with an old friend than interviewing a seasoned professional. Her openness about the artistic process, emotional stamina, and the strange alchemy of songwriting reveals a creator unafraid to blur the lines between the personal and the universal. Youngs is as reflective about her own journey as she is generous with her insights. Whether discussing the accidental poetry of a rain-soaked piano take, the tactile pleasures of vinyl, or the resonance of her music with listeners both young and old, she speaks with the kind of clarity that only comes from years of growth and self-inquiry. It’s a conversation about music, sure, but also about time, presence, and the strange comfort of hearing your own story echoed in someone else’s life.

    46 min

About

The Sharp Notes is a conversation podcast about music, sound, production and media hosted by Evan Toth.