Welcome back!
• Peter and Eden catch up on life, touching on:
• Why modern society feels like a "hellscape."
• Eden's unique take on a book club (it's really just a reason to meet at a bar and talk about books).
• A foray into Bad Movie Bros, a community dedicated to watching and laughing at terrible films.
• Highlights from their recent March Badness-- including absurd movies like The Core and the utterly bizarre 1980 film The Apple.
Cultural Tangents & Side Discussions
• The joys of intentionally bad movies and their ability to bring people together.
• The absolute madness of The Apple, a musical disaster that features a literal rapture via a spectral Buick.
• Eden's ongoing quest to master Riichi Mahjong-- and the realization that half of the players in Mahjong Soul are either total newbies or unbeatable experts.
• Peter's thoughts on Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson and the daunting length of his books.
• Tsunami Sea by Spiritbox and why Peter thinks they are the next big thing in metal.
• Bioluminescence by Dawn of Ouroboros, blending prog, death, and jazz influences.
• A surprising deep dive into Poppy, a genre-defying artist oscillating between pop, metal, and chaos.
Main Segment: Desert Island Albums
• How We Chose: Instead of just picking favorites, Peter and Eden each framed our choices as "Which five albums would I be most sad to never hear again?"
• No Live Albums or Compilations Allowed!
Our Picks:
• Eden's Five:
1. Koyaanisqatsi (Philip Glass) -- The haunting neoclassical score from the experimental documentary.
2. Systems/Layers (Rachel's) -- A genre-defying, deeply personal post-classical album.
3. F# A# ∞ (Godspeed You! Black Emperor) -- A post-rock masterpiece of apocalyptic soundscapes.
4. The Harp of New Albion (Terry Riley) -- Experimental piano music with a tuning that bends reality.
5. Promises (Pharoah Sanders & Floating Points) -- A jazz masterpiece that Eden describes as the finest piece of jazz music ever recorded.
• Peter's Five:
1. Through Silver and Blood (Neurosis) -- An impenetrable wall of sound and raw emotion.
2. Terrasite (Cattle Decapitation) -- A brutal yet oddly cathartic death metal record.
3. Slow Forever (Cobalt) -- A riff-heavy American black metal album that never gets old.
4. Dreaming Neon Black (Nevermore) -- A concept album of insanity, grief, and power.
5. Folium Limina (The Otolith) -- A haunting, violin-infused post-doom album that Peter has written three books to.
Honorable Mentions:
• Rush's Permanent Waves and Moving Pictures (though both hosts realized they could mentally replay these albums in full without ever hearing them again).
• Mariner by Cult of Luna & Julie Christmas.
• Catharsis by YOB.
• Chopin's Opus 28 Preludes, specifically Amy Kobayashi's recording.
Final Thoughts
• Reflecting on how music shapes personal identity and memory.
• The joy of rediscovering albums that remain impactful years later.
• Eden's experience revisiting The Harp of New Albion and realizing its timeless brilliance.
• Peter's increasing excitement for The Otolith and the music that fuels creativity.
Thanks for listening and join us in two weeks for another fun episode!