Thick in the Throat, Honey

Thick in the Throat, Honey
Thick in the Throat, Honey

Discussions on creativity and the parent-artist life. Parents John C. Savage, musician, and Claudia F. Savage, writer, interview parent-artists and answer your questions about balancing family needs, art-making, making money, and keeping marriage steamy without going (completely) crazy. All in under 30 minutes.

  1. 10/13/2018

    Episode 13: Interview with Amy and Brandon Conway (visual artist/comedian, and musician)

    Two artists interview two artists--with our children playing in the adjoining room sometimes, sometimes under our feet. Amy Conway is a multi-disciplinary artist whose work utilizes performance, drawing, writing, video, installation, collaboration, and comedy. Her pieces tend toward reflections of the personal. Brandon Conway is a guitarist who primarily focuses on free improvisation. He likes both minimalism and maximalism, spontaneous intuition and nerdy formalism. Amy let’s everything run together and percolate. Brandon compartmentalizes his art, work, and family life. They have two boys, Heywood and Alvah, aged 10 and 8, who love video games and comic books. “There are so many people, [who say] ‘I don’t like kids, I mean yours are okay.’ But you know what? You can go f**k yourself.” —Amy Brandon and Amy taking time to relax. “Brandon and I have a long history of arguing over art…” The Conway family wades in the surf. The Conway family in their mirror. Amy https://amyconwayart.wordpress.com/ https://www.instagram.com/glacierface/ he moves like the ocean: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FMkICKJ1pRc&t=2s this is how i communicate: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsycgtycouU&t=17s twist and shout: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIGuujRhOfA&t=7s Brandon https://halfbird.bandcamp.com/ https://soundcloud.com/halfbird-pdx https://soundcloud.com/nanrandcowboy http://nanrandcowboy.com/web/ “I’m pretty adamantly against delay and looping pedals, but if someone uses them I still like them.” —

  2. 03/07/2018

    Episode 8: Interview with Josh Gaines (writer and editor)

    "I like to say I ditched a promising military career to write books, run a profitless press, and build blanket forts with my daughter..." People become poets for many reasons, but stage fright is not usually at the top of the list. When Josh Gaines was an Air Force Captain he had terrible stage fright. Horrendous. "I would almost be sick and I had to give generals reports on weapons. So, I thought of the most embarrassing thing I could do. I had these 3 poems. I began reading them several times a week in front of open mike audiences, and, one day, I thought, I could do better. I can write better poetry." So, Josh became a poet and a regular at the open mike he started attending in Oklahoma, and, then, once he left the military he helped organize and run more readings in North Carolina and, then, Chicago, culminating in a graduate degree from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, a partnership and daughter, and a press, ThoughtCrime, where he supports the work of other writers and is supporting his desire for a better country.  "I like to say I ditched a promising military career to write books, run a profitless press, and build blanket forts with my daughter. My biggest challenge in making work since having a kid has to do with alone time at the right time. I get up, make her lunch, make her breakfast, and my wife takes her to school on the way to work. Then it's my time to write, but even getting into that head space takes a couple of alone hours for me. Then I start to stress and by the time I get to writing, I only have an hour or two before I have to run by the post office to mail books out and then go pick up my daughter. I admit I kinda quit here and there, and then I'll get to a point where I become a far less happy human and a few hours of writing brings everything back in line."

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Discussions on creativity and the parent-artist life. Parents John C. Savage, musician, and Claudia F. Savage, writer, interview parent-artists and answer your questions about balancing family needs, art-making, making money, and keeping marriage steamy without going (completely) crazy. All in under 30 minutes.

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