10 episodes

Hosted by Last Music Company founder Malcolm Mills, the Last Music podcast features music, interviews,a bit of music history related to its various artists and historical re-issues..

The Last Music Podcast Malcolm Mills

    • Music

Hosted by Last Music Company founder Malcolm Mills, the Last Music podcast features music, interviews,a bit of music history related to its various artists and historical re-issues..

    The Last Music Podcast: Hannah White ~ Sweet Revolution

    The Last Music Podcast: Hannah White ~ Sweet Revolution

    Like many emerging artists, Hannah White has self-released several albums. But since "Car Crash" won the coveted Song of the Year Award at the Americana UK Awards earlier this year, things have gone up a gear.

    Her newest album, SWEET REVOLUTION, is out November 3rd, Worldwide, in digital, CD and LP formats.

    Malcolm Mills sits down with Hannah, on the heels of her Norway appearances in this short podcast to talk about the album.

    You can find the album for pre-order or pre-save here: Sweet Revolution (lnk.to)

    • 32 min
    Where In The World Is Bill Kirchen?

    Where In The World Is Bill Kirchen?

    In this episode, Malcolm Mills sits down with the Titan of the Telecaster to talk about the new Lost Planet Airmen album, "Back From The Ozone," his fall tour, and what's on the horizon.

    • 21 min
    In Their Own Words: The Chilli Willi and The Red Hot Peppers Story

    In Their Own Words: The Chilli Willi and The Red Hot Peppers Story

    Here’s Malcolm Mills with another podcast from The Last Music Company. This one is a stumble down memory lane to London in the early 1970s.  It’s the story of those pub-rock pilgrims Chilli Willi and the Red-Hot Peppers and how they emerged from the remains of Mighty Baby after the first Glastonbury Fayre in 1971.

    Fifty years after the actual event, we start with a telephone interview Malcolm did with John Coleman who was the co-founder of Revelation Enterprises.  This is a vital piece of oral history which finally dispels many of the legends on the subject because Revelation was the label that released the fantastic triple LP set of that festival.  The reason the interview is included here is because Revelation followed up the Glastonbury Fayre release with Kings of the Robot Rhythm - the debut album from Chilli Willi and the Red-Hot Peppers, which he also co-produced.  

    John’s is a genuinely marvellous tale of those times recalled here in great detail.  His company defied all the laws of economic gravity to release a couple of records that are of museum-piece quality because of the “no-expense-spared” design of the packaging by Barney Bubbles. Coleman had taken over the responsibility for the performing schedule from Jeff Dexter and was stage manager for that first Fayre putting him at the heart of the event.  So this is absolutely essential listening for Glastonbury historians and all music fans…straight from the horse’s mouth!

    The next telephone interview you’ll hear after John Coleman is with a guy named Colin Hansford.  Chilli Willi was formed very soon after that first Glastonbury when Phil Lithman hooked up again with Martin Stone after returning from San Francisco.  Lithman had been in The Residents while he was out there, which is where he earned the nickname of “Snakefinger.”   Martin and Phil had originally known each other in various bands where they were close neighbours in the south London blues delta of the early 1960s.  That period before Phil went to America and Martin joined Savoy Brown Blues Band is recounted by former bandmate Colin from when they were all in groups like Smiley, Junior’s Blues and Junko Partners.

    Stay tuned after that--and for the first and probably only time--you’ll cop the story of the group from three band members in the 2021 zoom interview Malcolm did with them.  

    Pete Thomas, Paul Riley and Paul Bailey spin a yarn or two about the cast of characters caught up in the vortex of their admirable enterprise and put the story straight (at great length) of how the group transitioned from acoustic duo to a five-piece touring band.  They also explain how they had to make a couple of different attempts to produce the material that wound up on Bongos Over Balham.

    If a band like the Willis existed today, they would almost certainly be a success, but back then things were different for these guys as you’ll be hearing.  

    In the space of a couple of years despite playing over four hundred gigs, appearing on radio and TV and releasing two albums, it was all over by 1975.

    Some of the sound quality of the interviews isn’t great because nobody was ever in the same room and there was a variety of microphones and telephones used.  Nevertheless…it’s an illuminating trip.

    The anthology of Chilli Willi and t he Red Hot Peppers recordings - REAL SHARP - released by The Last Music Company is a two CD set with a twenty-four page booklet that’s filled with great photos and images plus Barney Bubbles’ artwork.  It covers the recordings the band made for Kings of the Robot Rhythm and Bongos Over Balham plus a few live tracks.  The whole set is still available from the usual retailers and if you just want to hear the music all the tracks available digitally.

    • 3 hr 11 min
    The Hot Club of Cowtown's Elana James and Whit Smith talk about the making of "What Makes Bob Holler," Side 2.

    The Hot Club of Cowtown's Elana James and Whit Smith talk about the making of "What Makes Bob Holler," Side 2.

    Perhaps the first thing one notices when listening to the Hot Club of Cowtown is its lack of irony, self-consciousness and forced hipness in embracing a style of music that so easily lends itself to such things…Stylistically, the band steps out from the shadow of its influences to become more than a faithful retro band that likes to raise its tempo every now and then. It’s writing more of its own songs and varying its delivery… conscious always that above all else, the music is for dancing and an old-fashioned good time. ~ Neil Strauss, New York Times

    In this podcast, Elana James and Whit Smith talk about the making of What Makes Bob Holler back in 2010, while listening to it for the first time on vinyl. The Hot Club of Cowtown celebrates 25 years in 2022.

    Did you miss Side 1? Check it out HERE.
    To order or stream "What Makes Bob Holler," click here: https://smarturl.it/bobholler

    For more information, visit https://www.lastmusic.co.uk

    You can find The Hot Club of Cowtown's upcoming tour dates and other news at http://www.hotclubofcowtown.com.

    • 39 min
    The Hot Club of Cowtown's Elana James and Whit Smith talk about the making of "What Makes Bob Holler," Side 1.

    The Hot Club of Cowtown's Elana James and Whit Smith talk about the making of "What Makes Bob Holler," Side 1.

    Perhaps the first thing one notices when listening to the Hot Club of Cowtown is its lack of irony, self-consciousness and forced hipness in embracing a style of music that so easily lends itself to such things…Stylistically, the band steps out from the shadow of its influences to become more than a faithful retro band that likes to raise its tempo every now and then. It’s writing more of its own songs and varying its delivery… conscious always that above all else, the music is for dancing and an old-fashioned good time. ~ Neil Strauss, New York Times

    In this podcast, Elana James and Whit Smith talk about the making of  What Makes Bob Holler back in 2010, while listening to it for the first time on vinyl. The Hot Club of Cowtown celebrates 25 years in 2022.

    Check out "Side 2" here: https://www.buzzsprout.com/605989/9854621
    To order or stream "What Makes Bob Holler," click here: https://smarturl.it/bobholler

    For more information, visit https://www.lastmusic.co.uk

    You can find The Hot Club of Cowtown's upcoming tour dates and other news at http://www.hotclubofcowtown.com.

     

    • 42 min
    Geraint Watkins Talks Balham Alligators with Malcolm Mills

    Geraint Watkins Talks Balham Alligators with Malcolm Mills

    In this fifty minute podcast, Watkins details how he, Robin McKidd and Gary Rickard formed the basis of the band that stormed the London pub scene of the 80s once they were joined by Arthur Kitchener and Kieran O’Connor.

    He tells of how Arthur funded the recording of the first album from a Thatcher hand-out and relates stories around the recording of the other four albums.

    Along with his recollections of “crackling” times on the road with the various incarnations of the band, the podcast contains music from each of the five records they released.

    In his own words, The Balham Alligators were ‘Never mediocre, we were either brilliant or bad’.

    As a companion piece, you can LISTEN to  a 44-track compilation of The Balham Alligators' recordings here....and;

    READ MORE about their story at our website  here.

    • 52 min

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