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How Bruce Lee Inspired Margaret Glaspyā€™s New Record

Margaret Glaspy

The indie-rocker tells Cory Wong how the legendary martial artist inspired her gritty new record, and goes deep on the dangerous game of celebrity.


Hot off an eight-show stand in New York with Vulfpeck, plus a guest appearance with Dave Matthews Band at Madison Square Gardens, Cory Wong sits down with indie-rock bandleader Margaret Glaspyfor an in-depth dialogue on artistry, celebrity, and the wisdom of Bruce Lee.

Glaspy shares how she cut her latest record, Echo The Diamond, live off the floor, with most of the ā€œhomeworkā€ happening beforehand and studio performances happening in-the-moment. ā€œIt really felt like air blew through the studio and then the record was made,ā€ she says. ā€œWhat youā€™re hearing is mostly what happening.ā€ The songs are like photographs of a particular moment, rather than an essential, unchanging thing; Glaspy says she values the ā€œdying artā€ of taking risks in music.

Glaspy runs down how she and husband Julian Lage work on each otherā€™s projects, and highlights one of their key criteria in assessing performances: are you your best guitar player right now? ā€œWould you hire yourself or fire yourself?ā€ poses Glaspy.

The conversation turns to Glaspyā€™s rig on the recordā€”she played through a Magic Amps rendition of a black-panel Fender Princeton, plus a Fender Champ comboā€”before revealing that these days, sheā€™s bypassing her tuner pedal and letting the audience hear the process between songs. ā€œLetā€™s not hide whatā€™s needed to make this actually go,ā€ she laughs.

Glaspy runs down how she and husband Julian Lage work on each otherā€™s projects, and highlights one of their key criteria in assessing performances: are you your best guitar player right now? ā€œWould you hire yourself or fire yourself?ā€ poses Glaspy.The conversation turns to Glaspyā€™s rig on the recordā€”she played through a Magic Amps rendition of a black-panel Fender Princeton, plus a Fender Champ comboā€”before revealing that these days, sheā€™s bypassing her tuner pedal and letting the audience hear the process between songs. ā€œLetā€™s not hide whatā€™s needed to make this actually go,ā€ she laughs.

The conversation turns to Glaspyā€™s rig on the recordā€”she played through a Magic Amps rendition of a black-panel Fender Princeton, plus a Fender Champ comboā€”before revealing that these days, sheā€™s bypassing her tuner pedal and letting the audience hear the process between songs. ā€œLetā€™s not hide whatā€™s needed to make this actually go,ā€ she laughs.Wong and Glaspy swap notes on Bruce Leeā€™s winning combo of talent and work ethic (and how one of his quotes inspired Glaspyā€™s record) before finishing with a fascinating philosophical dissection of artistry, pop culture, and celebrity. ā€œThe business of celebrity intertwines them in a way thatā€™s hard to escape,ā€ says Glaspy, who sees a clash between surface-level fantasy and bone-deep darkness in pop culture.

Tune in to the episode to learn all the gems from Echo The Diamond.

Wong Notes is presented by DistroKid.
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