Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is an iHeart podcast guaranteed human.
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Speaker 3 (00:48):
Hey, Hey, Hey, what's going on? Guys. Welcome to another
incredible episode of Vigilantes Radio live right here on iHeartRadio,
and I am your host, Aennie. We have a very
special guest for you. Guys. You could definitely want to
stick around for that, and as a matter of fact,
text your buddies, your family members are even shared on
(01:09):
social media right now and let them know that we
are about to dive deep into another interview. Before I
bring my guests on, I want to say, don't lose sight.
This is the frequency of the fearless. Okay, guys, look
around for just a moment. We live in the most
(01:29):
connected period in human history. Billions of messages sent every
single day, millions of followers. Well I don't have followers,
maybe a couple of thousand, maybe like nineteen point whatever. Anyway,
millions of followers share it between all of us, right likes,
digital conversations happening every single second, and yet so many
(01:54):
people still fell alone because connection isn't measured by Wi
Fi signals or by notification, is measured by something deep presence, frontability, honesty,
and the courage to let someone truly see you. Tonight's
Guest built an entire musical project around that tension, the
(02:19):
craving for intimacy and the fear that often stands in
the way of it. The immersive electronic production, haunting vocals,
and deeply honest songwriting. She's exploring what it means to
reach for connection in a world that sometimes keeps us
emotionally distant. Her new single We Want Connection captures that
(02:41):
push and pull, dark, dastable, emotional, and reflective all at once.
Because sometimes the most powerful music doesn't just move your body,
it actually asks questions about your heart. You're not here
just for a talk show. And this isn't just radio,
this is revival for your mind, body, and spirit. This
(03:03):
is Vigilantes Radio Live. My name is Coachdini and chain
is possible. Tonight's episode is sponsored by Noah guihvak dot com.
Are you ready?
Speaker 4 (03:20):
You're listening to the Bigelanes podcast on iHeartRadio. I'm mo
founder and owner of Noah Guy Heating and air Conditioning.
We're given away twelve free HVAC systems this and if
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at a time. This is Digitalanes podcast on iHeartRadio. You're
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and owner of Noah Guy Heating and air Conditioning. We're
given away twelve free HVAC systems this year, and if
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a Guy hsvac to go this mission. We're also seeking
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Speaker 5 (04:13):
Are you ready? Are you ready? Are you ready?
Speaker 3 (04:30):
Well, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go again.
You're listening to VRL. That is Vigililantes Radio live right
here on iHeartRadio. My name is Deani, and our interviews
are designed to go beyond music, news, books, art, acting, films, technology, education, entrepreneurship, entertainment, spirituality,
(04:51):
and sometimes even past the thing that we call the ego.
Our interviews are designed to go behind the scenes into
the minds of these brilliant people, you know, the ones
who are out there giving it. They're all for me,
for you, and for the world. Well, ladies and gentlemen.
Which Cabin is the artistic moniker of singers, songwriter, and
(05:11):
producer Tracy Marcelino. Born in Brooklyn and raised in San Francisco,
she blends underground electronic music with alternative pop and emotionally
raw lyricism. Named after the cabin in the woods where
she writes much of her music, O spooky, not just playing,
(05:32):
but which Cabin represents both a creative space and a
psychological one. A graduate of the Red Bull Music Academy,
her work has appeared in film television, including Gossip, girl,
and she has shared stages with artists like Jesse where
(05:53):
we have Jesse were on the show once. So without
any further ado, please join me in saying welcome friend
to which cabin? Welcome, Welcome, Welcome. That's a going.
Speaker 1 (06:09):
Him video or.
Speaker 3 (06:12):
Audio if you want people can see you.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
Wow, that's okay, Hi, what's happening?
Speaker 3 (06:23):
Hey yeah, our people can good Yeah? Oh yeah yeah.
This was like I don't know if you've ever seen
those interviews like flat TV, just the focus is on
the person who's been interviewed. Yeah. Yeah, so we just
(06:46):
want to focus on you. I'm a bit flashy. I
don't want to take any of the attention. A bit
quirky too, So any anyhow, well, welcome to the show, Tracy. Yes,
before we begin, I like to just set the premises
and just see what's on your mind and heart lately,
(07:09):
especially as we want connection begins reaching listeners and sparking
conversations about intimacy and this digital age.
Speaker 1 (07:20):
What's on my mind? The virus of the record is
exactly that it kind of wasn't supposed to be a
record about that. It wasn't. It was just me a
record of songs, and it became a theme that kept recurring.
Then that song became the flagship, the mothership of the
record that will be slowly coming out. But it's just
(07:42):
about kind of realizing we're in a time when these
people are super detached and almost I don't know how
to connect anymore, and the missignals and the opportunities that
get missed, and then the disconnect is just everywhere right now.
(08:05):
I don't know if it's a post COVID meets app
culture meets I don't know what situation, but it feels
it feels sad to me, and I've just been kind
of deserving it and found myself writing about it.
Speaker 3 (08:21):
Yeah. Yeah, it's just something that you personally experienced or
you kind of watching it in real time with you know, friends,
maybe connections, yes and yes, hm hmm, yeah, you're right,
you know, post COVID just kind of really turned everything
(08:43):
upside down. But personally believe we were headed towards this
type of I don't know feeling maybe for some time.
I've been in the music industry for a while, and
I could tell you I've been in some large rooms,
but I you know, say, hey, there's such and such,
but I still feel alone in those large rooms, Like,
(09:05):
why am I really here? You know? But I don't know.
It's just my personal experience with the connection. I don't
know what time period you were raised in. I was
born in the eighties, raised in the nineties, so it
was like pre internet. It. Oh nice. So see, you're
the perfect spokesperson for this because you were there before
(09:29):
like the Internet age. I mean the Internet was there,
of course, but not like it is now. Right.
Speaker 1 (09:34):
No, I remember being at being at this little warehouse.
I was in San Francisco, and the little warehouse in
the Anbarca Jarrow was right on the water, and we went,
my friend and I went because we heard that there
was a live streaming broadcast and it was so early
that it was we couldn't believe that her boyfriend at
home could see us waving.
Speaker 3 (09:55):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
We thought it was the most miraculous thing that has
ever happened.
Speaker 3 (10:05):
Yeah, great times, great time. So here we are.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
Now.
Speaker 3 (10:12):
What do you hope that the song will do?
Speaker 1 (10:18):
That will for me? It starts with it, I how
do you think? But what I hope it'll do? Now,
you know, there's several things. One, I hope it'll make
people move. I hope it'll make people feel good and
not alone, because you know, if I'm having this experience,
so are you. Or if you're having it, I am too,
(10:39):
and you're not alone with it. And also I like
to dance, so there's always elements of dance music in
my music. I like of fat bass, So it can't
be all that bad. If you can dance, it can't
be that bad.
Speaker 3 (10:58):
Then.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
I do wish that people we're getting to experience like
deep love and deep connection and maybe this is one
more voice, because I feel like a lot of people
are saying that that will maybe push the needle back
to like, hey, we have to fix this broken thing,
Like what are you getting out of repeatedly dating one
(11:19):
person one tide? Like what are you getting out of
continually telling the same jokes and saying the same things
with fresh eyes, Like it seems like everyone would rather
stay in that space than get any depth. And I'm
hoping that maybe this is one more voice in the
direction of death of worth it it really.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
Is, yeah, yeah, So hopefully you know, deeper conversations start
because of this all I really hope. So a lot
of people are feeling alone and don't really know what
to do about that.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
Are things like they're also creating it, Like there's such
a an emphasis on detachment as like some sort of
almost moral high ground. And I think it's just the confusion, like, yes,
we want to be independent, we want to be strong,
we want to be bad ass, we want to be
all the things. But with a ride or die homeie
(12:17):
right by your side, that's supporting you and there at
the end of the day to hear about it is
a really wonderful thing. And yeah, you could keep repeating
yourself on apps, but I don't know what that does
for your soul. Like you know, I kind of read
the Riot Act to someone that's I won't go too
(12:38):
deep into it, but I did ask the question like
aren't you tired of hearing yourself say the same things?
Like aren't you tired of yourselves? Aren't you tired of you?
And you're cute, but so's everybody. Everyone's cute, Everyone's going
to be cute with tramatic up keep, like what are
you going to get and give that bigger than that
(13:01):
while you're here on this earth, because it seems like
your ego just needs a new new supply, like a
new feed every every day, and I don't think that
that probably really announts to anything meaningful in the end.
Speaker 3 (13:17):
M okay, okay, okay. So you are against like I
won't say against a bad word you don't care for,
like monogamous relationships. Oh no, I'm saying, no, you do.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Yeah, I didn't even think it's a lack of monogamy.
And it will say they want monogamy in ninety percent
of people will say that. But I think, you know,
I joke that you should should to put on your
your profiles the truth, which isn't looking for monogamy in
a long term relationship. It should be looking to sample
as many people as possible because that's kind of more
(13:58):
of the truth. But no one wants to say it.
Speaker 3 (14:01):
He has like, Ah'm sorry, he has like a job interview.
You know, you kind of got to go through the
applications so you get the right candidate.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
I'm finding when people get a really big candidate, they're like,
I wasn't ready for them. Stop trying to people wanting
to like connect or like go deeper is some sort
of kind of it's being perceived as I control or
like I don't know. The responses I get seem like,
(14:38):
I'm like, really, because I invited you out and just
didn't want you to plaque. And what I'm getting is
you think I'm trying to control you. And I don't
know how that happened, but it's it's so far apart
that I feel like it's sad.
Speaker 3 (14:54):
Mm hmm yeah, yeah, yeah, I get that. You know,
people don't really know themselves, and I think that's a
part of the connection, you know about you.
Speaker 1 (15:08):
Yeah, people are afraid to look under husband mm.
Speaker 3 (15:14):
Yeah, you're afraid of that. We'll blame it on COVID.
I'm trying to absolutely. Okay, So this song you said
was on the inside of you had to come out.
Then you started to notice that, you know, it's truth,
(15:36):
it's truth for that. But when did you first started
noticing that tension in the world around you?
Speaker 1 (15:46):
And I suddenly became angle after twenty years, uh yeah,
and was like, wow, this is what you guys are doing.
This is crazy. It's project to me, but yeah, I
sort of I call it the cryogenic freeze, like I
woke up, you know when people in movies wake up
(16:06):
and they're I got a different planet after being cryogenically frozen.
I felt like that yeah, I'm gonna close my door
because it's trash.
Speaker 6 (16:17):
Here.
Speaker 3 (16:24):
Oh you're good, You're good. Your nails are beautiful, by
the way. Yeah, so you had to get back into
the dating room. You find out that there is a
lot of walking dead out there. It's like, whoa what
world am I here?
Speaker 1 (16:43):
Like I thought it was for at Christmas time. You know,
they do the Spotify rapped and you can put like
your top five songs.
Speaker 3 (16:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (16:54):
First of all, mine are all like video game soundtracks
because I got a kid, so in my mind is
all up. But I just the top five discards of
twenty twenty five and I did like, instead of a song,
I did that the way that the discard happened, and
I thought it as and my mom was like.
Speaker 3 (17:14):
Absolutely.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
There was the there was a ghost, there was the
the heartbreak. I'm sad too, there was I'm just you know,
look for someone to put something platonic but then change
their hinge profile to the Southeast Asian city. Wow, okay,
I guess about almost fun.
Speaker 3 (17:36):
Yeah, comical? Who raised these humans?
Speaker 1 (17:46):
Good doing? So, Like I'm happy step back and be like,
you know, let's let the world figure this out. I'm
going to be producing so.
Speaker 3 (17:59):
You know what Tree see, I blame television because it
paints false and narrators.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
See, yeah we love those reruns.
Speaker 3 (18:10):
Well, okay, like current TV, you know where you know, yeah,
at least in my experience, you know, it's they want
the prince to just conquer the entire world and always
come at their back and call, you know, drop everything
in a hot flash. You know, Renig on a million
(18:33):
dollar deal just to hold her hand, those type of things. Yeah,
it's crazy. I can't deal that.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
As Wow, yeah, we don't have to.
Speaker 3 (18:54):
And then it like force you to lower your expectations
because people are just I don't yuh.
Speaker 1 (19:01):
Are inherently good. I believe that. I don't think it's
about being bad or good. I just think I like
it's it's sort of normalized so much that it's it's
it's like a habit where Yeah, a certain age. You know,
everyone has these ages, and you look back in history
and it's so clear and I feel like this is
the age of disassociation and and disconnect.
Speaker 3 (19:26):
Yeah all right, so one song turned into an EP.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
We're doing one time time and now we're a public system.
Stuff that I have not just the loons anymore. So
there's a bit of a strategy involved, but not every
song is like you know, the theme song of We
Want Connection, but it just there's a different ways. There's
(19:58):
songs about my dadad and my and different it's not
all just that that it kind of leans back into connections.
Speaker 3 (20:07):
Yeah, it sounds like it's turned into something very personal too.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
Yeah. Yeah. I always my music is value. It is
pretty personal, but this is definitely as personal as it gets.
Speaker 3 (20:23):
I love it.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (20:30):
All right, So I will have to mention this because
this is an honor I get in my world. But
the song received a perfect ten ten industry score at
Rock Nation's Mike Maddness Showcase. What was it like receiving
that kind of early reaction before the official release?
Speaker 1 (20:52):
It was great. I was starting to feel like, you know,
I took a break, a big break from music, and
I started to feel like, am I living? I mean,
I usually I'm pretty good at turning delusions into reality,
Like I feel like something ahead of time. I start
to bring it into reality. But as much as you
can do that, you still doubt yourself. And I think
(21:14):
I was going through this like am I pretending that
I'm getting back into music? Like does anyone care what
am I doing? And I'm getting so much like what
am I doing? And that night I just put the
song on the mike madness because I was home, and
I thought, you know, you got to like keep putting
yourself out there. And it's mostly hip hop cist, it
wouldn't be quite the right thing for it, but I
(21:35):
just needed to move forward somewhere. And then the response
was crazy, Wow, it was really nice, and I thought, Okay,
I see now that this is going to resonate, and
I see now that what I am doing Israel.
Speaker 3 (21:52):
Yeah, so you turn the mic off for a while,
then you turn it back on what brought you back?
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Big life changes And I always knew about five years ago.
I went to go visit friends in Brulin and they're
all they don't have kids. I have a kid, and
I had started a catering company. I do like food
design stuff, and and I didn't think it was possible
for me to be me anymore. And I cried to
(22:20):
my friends when ber where did I go, like who
is this person? I need to be making music? And
they almost like pushed me like a little baby chick,
you know, like with their beats on me like, you
need to go back to this, and so I slowly
started doing it, and then when things in my life
kind of broke open, it was the first thing I
turned to. And the interesting thing though about being a
(22:43):
little older and taking some time away is there's zero
of course I want. I want to be huge. I
want to do all the things and play all the
festivals and be you know, appreciated. Of course I'm not
pretending I do, but that is not what motivates me
to write or to make the music I make, and
(23:03):
I don't. I didn't have the expectation of that at
all going into this nice I don't feel like, you know,
if someone was asking recently do you play it? Do
you find you write for that algorithm? And I was
like not one bit.
Speaker 3 (23:19):
Yeah, so see that's why it's so good, because you're
not writing for the algorithm. It's not forced, you know.
This is like you said, this is something from inside
of you had to come out. And it's such a
record that I don't know, I don't think anyone could
fake it if they wanted to. Well, I'll take that
(23:40):
back to ste just the industry, who are we kidding?
But but yeah, yeah, but this is such a breath
of fresh air. So you wrote deuced and you performed
this song yourself.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
Of course, I had like a co producer that came
in at the end. She was amazing and Liz Maduscalco,
and I have someone that helps you because I like
to have an outside ear for that. Yeah, and she
does a great job. He comes with really cool, weird
(24:18):
harmonies and ideas that I would not have thought of
that are in.
Speaker 3 (24:25):
Yeah. How much did the record change once these additional
people came into the picture.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Well, it's a give and take, right because they made
it better, which made me realize I want to be better.
And it keeps going back and forth. They keep showing
me what's possible, you know, So I go and being
like I need to produce her to kind of help
me and laboring things I couldn't have imagined. You know.
Liz is just really good with those tiny little moments
(24:55):
sound design. She just added this sound design element that
really made it it pop and also interesting. And yeah,
I think it changed just having that those people put
input the vocals as well. I knew the minute I
wrote this song that it was that it was a
(25:16):
thing like I felt that some songs you toiled over forever.
This one popped out this since the since part happened first,
and I was talking about recently. But like the way
it played. My finger kind of fasomed and pressed it
twice and it has a weird tag at the bass
base and it was an accident. And as soon as
(25:37):
I heard it, I was like, this is a song.
I know it and I just had to like get
it out.
Speaker 3 (25:43):
Yeah, I love it. So the meaning of which cabin.
I know some artists in need like chaos of a
city to write music, but you're seen to come from solitude.
You write in a cab than it was. That's maybe dark.
(26:04):
I'm sure, Like, I'm sure you like candles and things
of that nature, but tell us about that.
Speaker 1 (26:10):
I like, I forget to light a fire. I do like,
but it's it's it's not dark at all. The reason
I call it the Witch Cabin is because we painted
at black. I own it together, so we painted it
black because we wanted like a cool scandale looking like
woody cabin, and we called it the Witch Cabin. And
(26:32):
I just went there because you know it's funny. I
don't totally thrive in solitude. I am kind of a
pack animal, and I love I grew up in a city.
I love cities, Like sometimes I feel like LA is
almost two suburban I like. So the cabin for me
(26:54):
is almost forcing me to focus, right, And when I'm there,
I just hyper focus. So sometimes you know, it's just
to get away from distractions. I love you know, well,
don't get me wrong, but like it's not what I need.
In fact, I spend a lot of this time and
(27:15):
we'll continue to recording in New York, and the people
I work with are in New York, and New York
feels is very much ingrained in the songs as much
as the cabin does.
Speaker 3 (27:26):
Yeah, but see doing that solitude and hyper focus. Now
we have a great record and a great EP that
may turn into a full album. So yeah, keep going
to the cabin. Yeah, I just want to ask, are
you a witch as well? Or is that just.
Speaker 1 (27:52):
I am not a coffee of rwitchy. I just that's
the cabin and I fussed up recently talking to someone.
But the truth is you are always available mm hmm.
And right now that's coold like the actual you are
out with like which cabin nesting extra all the vowels
and it said. It told me I want to be
(28:14):
your band name because I exist to the U R L.
Speaker 3 (28:17):
Nice. All right, guys, are you ready for some music?
I am ready to get up and dance a little bit.
We have we want connection by which cabin and then
we'll be right back with more tracy. So stay tuned.
Speaker 7 (28:49):
Pushed me away and asked me to stay.
Speaker 6 (28:52):
I want connextra the trace, the war that you're saying
I want connection. We're smelling me each other, like can.
Speaker 8 (29:10):
Your smooth, soft skin.
Speaker 3 (29:12):
Drawing me in?
Speaker 8 (29:14):
I could cry. I've known you a hundred lives.
Speaker 7 (29:18):
It's your perfection.
Speaker 6 (29:27):
By morning we've decided.
Speaker 7 (29:29):
It's a sick, smiling check while you express your regrets.
Speaker 6 (29:35):
We've lost in Nexture.
Speaker 7 (29:40):
We've losting Nexture.
Speaker 8 (29:53):
Versive fire game for self protection. I'm digging my bones
to bill Walls.
Speaker 6 (30:05):
It's pure expression.
Speaker 7 (30:10):
All the digital ways we can cause each other paint
me to grat trade, upgrade and move on up the
chain on the street. I am a race.
Speaker 8 (30:21):
Why do I want the chase?
Speaker 1 (30:23):
Fall from grace? So I got micro grade.
Speaker 6 (30:27):
It's a rejection.
Speaker 7 (30:36):
Push me away, then ask me how to say I
want connection?
Speaker 3 (30:44):
What can close.
Speaker 8 (30:46):
Betrays the words.
Speaker 5 (30:47):
That you say. I want connection.
Speaker 7 (30:52):
This last connection.
Speaker 3 (31:43):
All right, all right, welcome back again, guys. That was
we want Connection by which Cavin Alright, So I love
the song. I love to dance. I was up dancing.
When did I have to show you guys my dance
movement like they're superb? Anyway, enough about me. What I
love about this record is like, from two minutes and
(32:07):
thirty seconds all the way to the end, the vocal performances,
it takes me to another place, Like I literally just
closed my eyes and went there. I wanted to play
it again, but I got to talk to you guys,
so we'll hit it again. Don't worry about that anyhow.
I love the entire song, but that last part just
it's a sweet spot and it took me there. So
(32:29):
let's go ahead and bring Tracy back. Hey, welcome back.
Incredible vocals. My friend love it absolutely, So are we
going to get a music video for.
Speaker 8 (32:47):
There is.
Speaker 1 (32:49):
A video that my friend made him. It's just me
and my friend today in a boxing ring, boxing and
you know, it's a we des ourselves And it felt
to me I suddenly was thinking about what do I
want to do? What do I want to do. And
my friend was in town and he's like, also in
(33:10):
something for you, And I thought, I just want to
have a boxing match, like like, because that's what that
song feels like. It feels like it should be. You
want it to be something warm and safe and instaid.
It's a boxing match. Mm hmm.
Speaker 3 (33:30):
Mm hmm. All right, where can we watch it?
Speaker 1 (33:37):
But you yeah, where are us?
Speaker 3 (33:46):
All right? Cool? All right, guys, we will include the
link and the description of the episodes that you could
check it out too. Uh So, Tracy, finish this sentence
for us. True connection begins when.
Speaker 1 (34:10):
Some reason every kids begins with. Okay was what popped up.
But real connections when when you are lowering, when you
are lowering your defensive I truly I was thinking recently,
like my son was talking about if I was if
(34:32):
I could have any superpower, be immortal, and I was like,
if I had a superpower, I would end defensiveness across
the world.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
Mm hm force everyone to be truthful.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
Sense like they're like, huh oh, I'm sorry. I didn't
mean to A B and C. I didn't see it
like that. Here's how I thought. It seems pretty easy
to me to have that conversation. Now it's like a
on the me and I don't know what, but it's you.
It feels like an easy conversation because I'm always confused
(35:08):
or like have to re remember the skill that people
don't have right now.
Speaker 3 (35:13):
Yeah, I think we maybe headed towards it, you know,
once we get our get out of our own heads
and get of our own ways and realize that there's
different worlds and lives happening around us, and sometimes it's
just not all about us.
Speaker 1 (35:31):
A bid actually is not good for control.
Speaker 3 (35:35):
M Yeah. So you mentioned that you like to dance.
What kind of dancing do you like to do.
Speaker 1 (35:44):
I'm I'm a inner club kid at heart. I a
lot of my younger years on boat parties and dancing,
and in San Francisco it was all kind of at
the time. I had tons of drum and bass, DJ
friends and hip hop and house you know, but you
know I love to dance to ninety tip hops and
(36:11):
and uh yeah, dance music.
Speaker 3 (36:17):
Love it all right? And where can our listeners connect
with you on the internet and check out more jams?
Speaker 1 (36:27):
Also, Princeoper and I didn't mean to do that, it
just happened. Wow, I think that's gonna be the next
song that I put out with a few really fun
bab remixes, is the plan, so look out for that.
But in the meantime, We Want Connection and my first
single life Like are on Spotify and all the other places.
(36:48):
Just search we will Want Connection and you will find
me Instagram, which Cabin Music, and those are the main places.
I'm in all the other places too, but those are them.
That's the mean spots something high, all right.
Speaker 3 (37:05):
All right, well, listeners, just in case you need those
links and I know you will, I will have them
in the description of this episode and in the show notes,
So all you guys have to do is just click
the links. We'll make it super simple for you, all right.
Tonight's conversation with which Cabin reminds us that music can
mirror the emotional complexity of the modern world. You know,
(37:27):
disconnect every now. Then, her single We Want Connection is
more than a dance track. It is a reflection of
the human longing for closeness in a period where distant
often hides behind a screen. So make sure you scream
the new single and keep an eye out for the
upcoming We Want Connection EP. And remember we are not
(37:51):
just here for a talk show. And this isn't just radio,
this is revival for your mind, body and spirit. This
is its Vigilantes Radio Live. Thank you so much, Tracy.
It was a pleasure having you here with.
Speaker 1 (38:09):
All.
Speaker 3 (38:09):
Right. Hope you take care and we will be watching
and rooting for you. Thank you, take care, Bye, Thank god, guys,
we have more on the way. Peace to all. My
name is Danny.
Speaker 9 (38:30):
I am the host of Vigilantes Radio Live. I think
that we are beyond just asking cool questions and getting
cool responses.
Speaker 3 (38:43):
I think that we are here.
Speaker 9 (38:44):
As creatives to provide an example that you can do
things different outside of expectations. Because some of us simply
we're not going to the club, but there is perhaps
the door window, the backgate, and we can leave the
(39:05):
group for.
Speaker 5 (39:06):
You to get into.
Speaker 9 (39:08):
Life is short, so there were plenty of moments to
drive and get it right. Pursuing your dreams and learning
from mistakes may be tough, but regret it's tougher to
book your interview. Email us at radio at only one
media boo dot com. That's a as in Victorians, or
(39:31):
visit only one media move dot com.
Speaker 3 (39:35):
Count on you, heaven, we.
Speaker 9 (39:37):
All are counting to step into your purpose and your passion.
You are listening to Vigilantes Radio, Live by Heart Radio,
providing you with an opportunity.
Speaker 3 (39:50):
To die.
Speaker 1 (40:00):
Your expression.
Speaker 7 (40:04):
Of the digital ways we cancast each other, paint new
de great trade upgradon Moran of.
Speaker 8 (40:11):
The Chain, I Am the Race, Why do you Want You?
Speaker 2 (40:17):
And now listening to vigil Lances Radio, the People's choice
for quality interviews, art, music and hot topics, hosted by
Demetrius Houdini Black Reynolds. All episodes of this podcast are
available for free download at www dot only one media
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