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Taste in Music

Eating on Tour with Indie Musicians

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A Pitchfork Best Book of 2024

A Saveur Best Narrative Food Book of 2024

In this unique and deeply thoughtful collection, musician Alex Bleeker (Real Estate) and food and travel journalist Luke Pyenson (formerly of Frankie Cosmos) take readers on tour with a diverse lineup of inspiring indie musicians from around the world, sharing meals and travel experiences, peeking behind the curtain at this singular and singularly misunderstood way of life.
Through original essays and engaging conversations with dozens of indie musicians representing several subgenres, scenes, and eras, food takes center stage in stories about being on tour and eating on tour and how this basic human necessity can create a sense of community and interconnectedness in one of the most mobile industries in the world. Based broadly on the subject of eating on tour, these entries each spin off into their own focused and exciting behind-the-scenes story, but all confirm what Pyenson and Bleeker suspected all along—food looms large in the lives of touring musicians, and it can be used as a gateway into understanding what going on tour is really like.
Featured contributors include:

  • Robin Pecknold (Fleet Foxes)
  • Chris Frantz (Talking Heads)
  • Natalie Mering (Weyes Blood)
  • Mark Ibold (Pavement)
  • John Gourley (Portugal. The Man)
  • Lily Chait (touring chef to boygenius and Phoebe Bridgers)
  • Amelia Meath (Sylvan Esso)
  • Greta Kline (Frankie Cosmos)
  • Devendra Banhart
  • Bob Mould (Hüsker Dü)
  • Brian "Geologist" Weitz (Animal Collective)
  • Dawn Richard
  • Sasami Ashworth (SASAMI)
  • Sadie Dupuis (Speedy Ortiz)
  • The Beths

  • In addition to wide-angle meditations about eating on tour, Pyenson and Bleeker have gathered stories that take place on five continents, in private homes and street-side stalls, in temples of fine dining and in actual temples, backstage and in the van, early morning and late at night. Stories that deal with the best parts of touring: meaningful cultural exchange, hospitality-induced euphoria, and the opportunity to build relationships around the world. And the worst: loneliness, exhaustion, estrangement from family and friends, struggles with disordered eating, and unsteady access to medical care.
    So the question isn't, "How was tour?" It's, "What do you eat on tour?" Like the best songs or meals, these conversations and essays evoke something central about the human experience. They show us all the ways that music and food bring us together, break us down, lift us up, and add color to our lives.
    NOTABLE AUTHORS: With over twenty years of experience in the music industry, Alex Bleeker and Luke Pyenson are your perfect guides into the world of touring. Having toured with their own bands—Real Estate and Frankie Cosmos, respectively—they're asking all the right questions, shedding light and understanding on the lives of touring musicians and the people feeding them.
    FOOD ANTHOLOGY & MUSIC SCENE DEEP CUT: With interviews and essays from about forty different musicians, chefs, and promoters—ranging from Chris Frantz from Talking Heads to boygenius's private chef Lily Chait—not only is this book a treasure trove of knowledge and insider information, it also offers something for foodies and music enthusiasts alike.
    ARMCHAIR TRAVEL: Go behind the curtain all around the world, from America to Russia, Japan to Italy, and dozens of places in between. Read about your favorite musicians' experiences abroad, all from the comfort of your home.
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    • Reviews

      • Publisher's Weekly

        June 10, 2024
        In these colorful if predictable essays gathered by Real Estate bassist Bleeker and journalist Pyenson (formerly the drummer for Frankie Cosmos), musicians share memories of what they ate and drank on tour. Talking Heads drummer Chris Frantz recalls a night when the band opened for the Ramones in Paris and sampled escargots. Meg Duffy writes of a strapped-for-cash evening she spent in Reykjavik in 2016 as the guitarist in Kevin Morby’s touring band, when the comically spare gourmet tasting menu paid for by Morby’s manager had to be supplemented by “the familiar comfort of a grayish hot dog” (“There were probably as many bites in the hot dog as there had been courses in that hypercurated, high-class meal.... I enjoyed every one of them”). Chantal Masson, who hosts and feeds musicians in Dijon, France, paints food as a source of comfort and continuity amid bands’ busy touring schedules. Fans of the artists included here will find plenty of interest, but the repetitive nature of the essays, which are full of nostalgia for the contributors’ early touring days, gives the collection a one-note feel. Despite a few appetizing moments, this fails to satisfy. Photos.

      • Booklist

        September 1, 2024
        Ask any musician about how their last tour went, and their answer won't be about sex and drugs. It might be about rock 'n' roll, but more likely it will be about food. "Sometimes," write indie musicians Alex Bleeker (Real Estate) and Luke Pyenson (formerly of Frankie Cosmos), "musicians remember their meals more vividly than their shows." The authors have assembled a vibrant cast of musicians, promoters, and chefs for this anthology about eating on tour. Their contributors write about the delights of British and Japanese rest stops, the dangers of harmless-looking backstage brownies, and the restorative power of a home-cooked Thanksgiving dinner for a band on tour overseas. "If you take care of the band," writes Cole Furlow (Dead Gaze, Dent May), "the band will take care of you." Even mediocre fast food is valued for its reliability, as described by Robin Pecknold (Fleet Foxes) in his standout essay, "My Savior, My Destroyer, the Subway Veggie Patty." A quirky delight for indie rock aficionados.

        COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    Formats

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    Languages

    • English

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