The Fisch Bowl

Sam Fisch

Are you a fan of all things Film, Music, Horror, Sci-Fi, Theater, and the Arts, then you are going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea and join Sam Fisch in the Fisch Bowl; where all your favorite aspects of the horror, music, entertainment, and arts industrie  are covered.

  1. MAR 7

    Chaos, Culture, And The Sound Of Dissent

    Send us Fan Mail Ever hear a lyric that flips on the light in a dark room? Jack Horner of the UK psychedelic duo The Dirt joins us to unpack Monkey Punch, a live-wire album tracked in just two days that insists albums should feel like stories, not shuffled singles. We dive into the line that’s still ringing in our heads—“Protons neutrons controlled by morons”—and use it as a compass for a bigger conversation about unity over division, resisting performative outrage, and building spaces where disagreement can breathe without turning toxic. Jack pulls back the curtain on process: recording live without a drummer, trusting first takes, and partnering with producer Jason Shaw to preserve grit, air, and momentum. We talk about why some songs need six and a half minutes, why vinyl’s 42-minute canvas still shapes better narratives, and how algorithmic skimming flattens meaning. If you’ve ever missed the feeling of flipping a record, this one’s for you. Culture threads through every riff. We map the parallels between long-form music and slow cinema—think Blade Runner and the rare sequel that dared to stretch time—arguing that patience isn’t a luxury, it’s a creative weapon. From social media’s shrinking attention spans to the resilience of underground scenes in the UK, US, and Japan, we make the case for art that outlasts the scroll. Monkey Punch is protest you can hum, a reminder that chaos can clarify when it’s channeled with care. Hit play to hear how a minimalist setup carries maximal intent, why the underground still matters, and how storytelling structure can turn an album into a world. If this conversation moves you, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves long songs, and leave a quick review—your words help keep the signal strong. Support the show

    47 min
  2. FEB 28

    Helicon, Sitar, And The Sound That Stings

    Send us Fan Mail Ever hear a sitar slice through a wall of guitars and think, this belongs in a film? We went deep with Helicon’s John Paul Hughes to map how a Glasgow psych band turns orchestral tension into thunderous finales, why beauty lives inside noise, and how structure makes chaos hit harder on stage. From the Beatles’ psychedelic turn to Brian Jones’s restless curiosity, we explore the instruments, scenes, and accidents that shape Helicon’s sound. John shares an exclusive: the band was invited to help recreate and expand music from Brian Jones’s lost 1967 soundtrack, transforming fragmentary cues into fully realized pieces—one razor-bright sitar theme, one wild harmonica burner, and one dirge-like organ work—planned for release on Jones’s birthday. We also talk shop about curfews, timing, and rehearsing the “improvised” parts until they breathe, so finales land before the lights snap on. The conversation spirals through film culture—love for scores, skepticism toward biopics—and a candid take on authenticity, legacy, and why making music for yourself is still the only compass that lasts. Looking ahead, Helicon is building a new chapter with LA producer Al Lover, blending breakbeats, dub textures, and electronica into their sitar-and-guitar surge—a lineage closer to Primal Scream’s XTRMNTR than purist psych. Along the way we shout out key influences and peers, from Spacemen 3, Mogwai, and the Jesus and Mary Chain to modern torchbearers keeping the drone, dream, and feedback alive. If cinematic psych, lost soundtracks, and the craft behind explosive live sets light you up, press play. Then tap follow, share it with a friend who loves bold guitar music, and leave a review telling us which psych record you’d want scored for the screen. Support the show

    52 min
  3. FEB 21

    Helicon, Glasgow, And The Fight For Real Rock

    Send us Fan Mail Step into a smoky Glasgow rehearsal room and meet John Paul Hughes of Helicon, the psychedelic rock band turning influence into something fiercely their own. We go deep on craft, why permanence beats hype, and how to build songs that still feel new decades later. If you’ve ever argued that guitar music is alive and well, this is your proof. We trace the DNA from The Velvet Underground, Pink Floyd, and Led Zeppelin to Ride, My Bloody Valentine, and The Jesus and Mary Chain, then follow the sound into today’s shoegaze, dream pop, doom, and stoner rock. John Paul breaks down what “psychedelic” really means—less pedal worship, more form-breaking and emotion-driven architecture. Along the way, we celebrate a global map of scenes across the UK, Europe, Australia, and even Cambodia, showing how far this music travels and why it keeps finding new ears. The conversation lands squarely on the realities of making art now: streaming platforms that make uploading easy and discovery hard, attention spans stretched thin by short-form feeds, and a film ecosystem locked on IP and remakes. We talk arts funding, practicing until the ideas click, and starting a band later in life with a clear sense of purpose. The core takeaway is simple: make the work for yourself first. Listeners can smell the difference between a song built for a trend and a song built to last. If you care about shoegaze, psychedelic rock, indie craft, and the fight to be heard in a noisy world, you’ll feel at home here. Hit play, share it with a friend who says rock is dead, and leave a review to help more curious listeners find the show. Support the show

    1h 5m
  4. FEB 14

    Wearing The Colors Anyway

    Send us Fan Mail The shine of a big break doesn’t always light the path ahead. We sit down with character actor Robert LaSardo to explore what success really feels like when the cheers fade and the measuring starts—how to wear your colors after a loss, why loyalty outlasts gossip, and what it takes to keep your spirit intact inside a machine that rewards visibility while testing your soul. Robert brings us into the surreal joy of working on The Mule with Clint Eastwood—from a simple self-tape to notes, a greenlight, and then the quiet shock of meeting a legend who leads without ego. He shares how Eastwood “plays jazz” on set, trusts improvisation, and eats with his crew like family. That humility becomes a masterclass in creative leadership: protect the work, respect people, and let honesty breathe. We also touch on a tender moment with Andy Garcia that affirms how old-school respect still matters and how being seen can reset your day. From there, the conversation tackles film literacy, lowered standards, and the seduction of spectacle. Robert contrasts meaningful storytelling with the numbing effect of relentless visual stimulation and weightless violence. He champions writing what you know, building teams around authenticity, and using craft to entertain without dumbing down. We thread Scorsese’s evolving style, Woody Allen’s neurotic wit, and the enduring power of films like The Poseidon Adventure, American Graffiti, and The Exorcist—stories that last because they carry consequence, atmosphere, and soul. Robert closes with American Trash, his new film in post-production: a raw, compassionate portrait of PTSD, apathy, and environmental care set in Los Angeles. It’s a 1960s spirit reimagined for right now, asking us to look at the ground under our feet and the people beside us, then choose community over indifference. If you care about acting, directing, or simply watching better movies, this conversation is a compass—equal parts grit, gratitude, and guidance. Enjoyed the episode? Subscribe, share it with a film‑lover, and leave a quick review to help more curious listeners find the show. Support the show

    51 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.7
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Are you a fan of all things Film, Music, Horror, Sci-Fi, Theater, and the Arts, then you are going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea and join Sam Fisch in the Fisch Bowl; where all your favorite aspects of the horror, music, entertainment, and arts industrie  are covered.