Muses

By: Emma Nagouse & Dan Smith
  • Summary

  • Dan Smith (Bastille) and Emma Nagouse (You're Dead To Me) discuss the people in the songs on Dan's new project, Ampersand. Each episode is a conversation about history, music, mythology and popular culture, and how those things overlap.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Lead Mojo
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Episodes
  • Leonard Cohen & Marianne Ihlen, with guest Nick Broomfield (Leonard & Marianne
    Oct 16 2024


    In this episode Emma Nagouse (You're Dead To Me) and Dan Smith (Bastille) are musing about a muse: Marianne Ihlen, who inspired Leonard Cohen to write many of his most famous songs, such as Bird On A Wire and So Long, Marianne. Their relationship inspired Nick Broomfield's documentary Marianne & Leonard: Words of Love, which in turn inspired Dan/Bastille's song Leonard & Marianne, which you can listen to here: https://bastille.lnk.to/Leonard


    Emma and Dan are delighted to be joined in the studio by Nick himself, who explains how he first came to meet Marianne on the Greek island of Hydra in the 1960s, how he looks back on that community and that time, and how the Archbishop of Canterbury was (indirectly) responsible for his first-ever acid trip. Emma also catches up with Dan's homework, and instead of taking a deep dive into Dan's song, she takes a deep dive into the idea of muses, while Dan explains how the song evolved from a belter of a party piece to the more intimate, Billie Eilish-inspired version you can hear on the album.


    You can find out more about all the people we're talking about in this series at ampersannd.bastillebastille.com.


    Say hello at muses@leadmojo.co.uk.


    Muses: An Ampersand Podcast is presented by Dan Smith and Emma Nagouse. It is produced by Emma Nagouse and Ed Morrish for Lead Mojo productions.


    Cover photography by Bo Morgan, taken at the Walker Art Gallery, in Liverpool.

    Cover design by Chris Barker.

    Episode artwork by Harriet Bruce.

    Recorded at Plosive Studios.

    Mixed by Miles Wheway.


    Thanks to Dr. Melissa Gustin for arranging the location for the cover art, and to Moira Mack and Charlie Barnes for their help with the jingle.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Edvard Munch (Blue Sky & The Painter)
    Oct 9 2024
    In this episode of Muses: An Ampersand Podcast, Emma Nagouse (You're Dead To Me) and Dan Smith (Bastille) are talking about the painter of The Scream, Edvard Munch, the inspiration for Bastille's song Blue Sky & The Painter, which you can hear here: https://bastille.lnk.to/BlueSkyHow did his mental health affect his art? Did his work get worse when he was happy? Was he a Nazi? How happy would he be that his legacy is the Home Alone poster?Say hello at muses@leadmojo.co.uk.Muses: An Ampersand Podcast is presented by Dan Smith and Emma Nagouse, with research by Genevieve Johnson-Smith. It is produced by Emma Nagouse and Ed Morrish for Lead Mojo productions.Cover photography by Bo Morgan, taken at the Walker Art Gallery, in Liverpool.Cover design by Chris Barker.Episode artwork by Harriet Bruce.Recorded by Tim Lozinski at TL Multimedia.Mixed by Miles Wheway.Thanks to Dr. Melissa Gustin for arranging the location for the cover art, and to Moira Mack and Charlie Barnes for their help with the jingle.Sources:Berman, Patricia G. “Edvard Munch’s Self-Portrait with Cigarette” The Art Bulletin 75, no.4 (1993): 627-646Berman, Patricia G. “(Re-) Reading Edvard Munch” Scandinavian Studies 66, no. 1 (1994): 45–67Eggum, Arne. Edvard Munch, New York: C. N. Potter, 1984Finger, Stanley, and Elisabetta Sirgiovanni. “The Electrified Artist” Journal of the History of the Neurosciences 33, no.3, 2024: 241–74Kendzior, Sarah. “’The Face of ‘Scream’” Fangoria 189, no.29 (2000)Loren’s Ghost: The Haunted History Of The SCREAM Mask” FangoriaLund, Ida K. “Edvard Munch.” Parnassus 9, no. 3 (1937): 21–24Mcelroy Bowen, Anne. “Munch and Agoraphobia” RACAR 15, no. 1 (1988): 23–50Prideaux, Sue. Edvard Munch. Yale University Press, 2005Vernon, McCay, and Marjie L. Baughman. “Art, Madness, and Human Interaction.” Art Journal 31, no. 4 (1972): 413–20Wylie Jr., Harold W. “Edvard Munch.” American Imago 37, no. 4 (1980): 413-443“After Munch.” Munchmuseet Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Emily Dickinson (Emily & Her Penthouse In The Sky)
    Oct 2 2024

    In this episode of Muses: An Ampersand Podcast, Emma and Dan are talking about the American poet Emily Dickinson, who inspired Dan's/Bastille's song Emily & Her Penthouse In The Sky, which you can hear here: https://bastille.lnk.to/Emily


    They talk about Emily's life and work, including her "friendship" with a "gal pal", and why she may not have been as much as a recluse as her reputation suggests - as well as who is to blame for that reputation. They also talk about Hey Arnold a surprising amount (ie: at all), and whether Dan wants his unreleased music burned when he dies.


    Say hello at muses@leadmojo.co.uk.


    Muses: An Ampersand Podcast is presented by Dan Smith and Emma Nagouse, with research by Genevieve Johnson-Smith. It is produced by Emma Nagouse and Ed Morrish for Lead Mojo productions.


    Cover photography by Bo Morgan, taken at the Walker Art Gallery, in Liverpool.

    Cover design by Chris Barker.

    Episode artwork by Harriet Bruce.

    Recorded by Tim Lozinski at TL Multimedia.

    Mixed by Miles Wheway.


    Thanks to Dr. Melissa Gustin for arranging the location for the cover art, and to Moira Mack and Charlie Barnes for their help with the jingle.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 7 mins

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