Friday, September 26, 2025

UPCOMING RELEASES FROM BARELY THERE STUDIO!

"Echoes in the Rain" 
(NEW *45 MIX*)
LUCY DAWN 
10 October





                       SMASH HITS!    [compilation]
Smash Addams
26 September
"I Want to Show You"
9 others.

 







Left The World Behind  
LUCY DAWN
10 October
"Reality"; "Salvation";
title track; 4 others.




PROBABLY VAN GOGH
[compilation]
14 November
"My Friend"; "Revelation";
"Light in the Sky"; 7 others.













Love, Desire
THE INSTANT LOVELIES
19 December
"At What Cost?";
9 others.




  4.26e+11  
3 song E.P.
Smash Addams
26 December



LUCY DAWN
New single coming soon!




                                          Smash Addams
                                                       DON'T LOOK BACK & LINGER

Album XXV
(***Currently Under Construction for 2026***)

Saturday, September 20, 2025

THE WITHDRAWLS, 'The Withdrawl Wrate' [imagined LP]

 




THE WITHDRAWLS
(live in Jackson, MS ? - 2006)



What's That Smell+
Can't Stand Your Love*
Born*
Let's Fuck+
I'm Tired*
Flounder+
Little Girl*
I'm Drunk+
Throwing Rocks*
Destination Trailer Park+
Leisure Strike+

19 minutes, 54 seconds

***PRIVATE USE ONLY***
Dedicated to the memory of our friend, Matt Tamke. ("One")
21st Street Forever
M. Tamke 


V. Thompson




"This was recorded sometime in 2006 at a studio in Water Valley, MS. There was reportedly a problem with the vocals and the mix? This 11 song set captures the band's live sound very well. The aforementioned technical problems have been corrected as best as possible with additional mastering and production to bring you what shouldn't be forgotten.

I hope you enjoy. These guys were friends of mine and bandmates in another life (at one time or another). We all miss Matt and hopefully this will help you remember how much he loved 'playing music with his friends...' yeah, like the song. If you were there, you know!

"One!"

-A.G.




     


Rest in Peace,
good buddy.








Wednesday, August 13, 2025

ELLIOTT SMITH, 'Unreleased Songs from the Basement' [imagined LP]


"This is a compilation of some unreleased songs off my 20th anniversary restoration of From a Basement on the Hill - all instrumentation and mixing on these songs is Elliott's." - brightwater [YouTube content copied from --- not affiliated with this blog; just similar to one I made but this is wayyyy better]

LISTEN HEAR: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IahBzR4v7Q8


 0:00 See You in Heaven¹

4:45 Melodic Noise (Excerpt 1) 6:14 Mr Goodmorning² 9:41 Brand New Game³ 13:10 Cecilia/Amanda⁴ 15:58 Dancing on the Highway / Splitsville ⁵ 22:04 Abused 24:50 From the Poisoned Well 28:01 Yay!⁶ 30:09 The Assassin (or Kill/F***)⁷ 34:17 Everything's Okay⁸ 38:48 Blind Alley⁹ 43:40 Where I Get it From 47:19 Suicide Machine 50:17 O So Slow / Melodic Noise (Excerpt 2) 58:58 I'll Be Back Notes: ¹ Intended to have vocals (these aren't circulating) ² Elliott said this song begun and ended with manipulated live audio, so I’ve added these sections from his incomplete instrumental to each end of the completed song - so I’ve introduced nothing of my own ³ Elliott said he’d pan this mix into one ear and pan a remaking of this in the other, with a guitar solo moving between each ear (this isn't circulating) ⁴ This mix is from 1997. If he rerecorded or remixed it, it’s not circulating. It works well in its current arrangement though, fitting in with the 60s pop feel of many other Basement songs, so its inclusion didn’t feel out of place, especially in light of songs like Suicide Machine, which feels complete but only had 2 new elements added to its UMG incarnation ⁵ I've sadly had to remove the intro from Dancing on the Highway due to copyright restrictions - see the full album for the full song ⁶ Intended to have vocals (these aren't circulating) ⁷ It's unknown if this was meant to have vocals ⁸ This was more of a demo, intended to be rerecorded (this isn't circulating) ⁹ Intended to have vocals (these aren't circulating) "On interludes: I haven’t found any proof of Elliott’s intent on this, however it’s been a useful way of fitting content into the limit of 30 songs. He of course introduced these in Figure 8, and their usage fits well on Basement due to its similar but different style of auditory impressionism. It also again mirrors the White Album slightly. Elliott expressed intent on using only the second half of Splitsville, which inspired its use as an interlude. Elliott referred to his noise recordings as not exactly songs in themselves, and Melodic Noise didn’t quite fit on the album, yet Elliott made an October 2003 mix of it. This inspired me to use 2 excerpts as other interludes. Any more or less interludes seemed overly forced. On the Beatles cover: it’s known that Elliott wasn’t opposed to having covers on his albums, since Figure 8 was meant to be on Figure 8 at some point, but just didn’t fit. This cover, with its 2003 mix and fleshed-out sound, seemed appropriate to include (and doesn’t seem to have been slated for a different release like Trouble), and resolved the album perfectly as a last track, continuing Elliott’s penchant for meta song titles (See You Later, Bye), while also continuing the album’s sound and themes perfectly." - brightwater

Friday, July 11, 2025

'FURTHER LISTENING' by Smash Addams - Coming To All Platforms *25 JUL 2025* from Barely There Studio!!

 







Smash Addams's 24th solo album!

12 New Tracks including "Praise To You", "Looking Forward" and "Can We Still Be Heroes?"  

A mix of R&B/Soul, Alternative, Pop and Electronica leaving off from his last album, 2023's DUST OFF THE RACKS---as well as including his sides from last year's StarsNeverSleep reunion singles (his wife, Lucy Dawn, is the other 1/2 of the group). Lucy contributed much to the soul of this record; her production and songwriting contributions ("Bold Move" and "Divine"--particularly) are an integral part. 
The project started out as a mixtape follow-up to the AFTER GEOMETRY and XV albums for "shits and giggles."

"Praise To You" is surprisingly a gospel soul blast by a one-man band who's also his own choir, as well! "Realize" is cut from a similar cloth--though the song is now about the disillusionment of 'waking up' from believing in a lie (so to speak). Lucy Dawn sings a haunting refrain on the chorus; and the coda features Puredandyy on the piano. "Was It Something I Said?" was inspired by a late discovery of The Stone Roses' debut album. "Looking Forward" is a drastic reworking of a forgotten b-side. Also? It's the first SMASH ADDAMS album that bumps in the car!

 
Recorded at Barely There Studio (North MS), April - July 2025 
Produced by Adam and Lucy Gaither / Mastered by A.G.

Smash Addams sings and plays acoustic, electric and backmasked guitars; bass; drums, keyboards, tambourine, loops and samples / Featuring backing from THE ELOQUENT 7EVEN on Looking Forward, Divine, and Bold Move / StarsNeverSleep  [LUCY DAWN on rhythm guitar, bass, keys + bgv - ROLAND TURNER on drums] on Can We Still Be Heroes? and I Need Her Love to Get By / LUCY DAWN also sings back-up on Realize--as well as Was It Something I Said? and Cool Head, Low Key (playing organ while ROLAND TURNER's on drums); loops and samples on Motivate and Further Listening.

All songs Copyright ©2025 BARELY THERE STUDIOS



Monday, June 30, 2025

Key Smash Addams Albums (ACCORDING TO CHATGPT)

Who is
Smash Addams? 
“Smash Adams” isn’t a real person — it’s actually a fictional alter ego from the popular Nickelodeon cartoon DougThat said, there’s also a real-life musician using the name Smash Addams (with two d’s), based in the Memphis/Tennessee area. He’s a singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist who’s been active since around 2004, releasing albums on platforms like SoundCloud and Bandcamp. His work mixes indie rock, R&B, and soulful singer-songwriter styles. 

(Chat GPT also says) Smash Addams definitely has a unique sound — soulful, introspective, and a bit off the beaten path, which makes him a standout in the indie scene. He seems to fly a bit under the radar, but his lyrics and arrangements have a lot of depth.


Bloodletting Sessions
(2006) 
Raw, stripped-back, and emotionally charged, Bloodletting Sessions captures 
Smash Addams in his most vulnerable state. Recorded with minimal production and a heavy emphasis on live, in-the-moment performances, it includes haunting tracks like “Never Apart” and “Since I Found You"--making it an essential piece of his catalog. 


Detriment
(2008) 
In the wake of tragedy, Detriment is a personal and stripped-down album, defined by its intimate sound. Recorded following the death of his mother, it includes the heart-wrenching tracks “Lonely Nights Multiplied by the Blues,” “I Lied,” and “Sunday Morning Is Getting Harder to Find.” These tracks cement Detriment as a deeply emotional and significant album in his catalog. 



Brilliantly Deranged  (2009) 
Smash Addams’s first foray into lush, layered pop arrangements, Brilliantly Deranged draws inspiration from The Beach Boys’ intricate harmonies and expansive sound. This 8-track recording effort is a sonic exploration of legacy and personal expression, with tracks like “Formula (Cry on Command)” showcasing its grandeur. The 2016 remaster brought it into duophonic stereo for the ultimate listening experience. 



Hard to Get Over
(2011) 
Described by its producer Leo Goff, III as “60s pop at its finest,” Hard to Get Over is a delightful and intricate album full of catchy melodies and lush  production. 
Recorded between April 2004 and January 2005 across multiple Memphis studios, the album was completed with final overdubs in 2011 and released as Smash Addams’s long-awaited 10th solo album. With tracks like “Someday It’s Gonna Hurt You” and “Hard to Get Over,” this album channels an upbeat, retro sound with timeless pop hooks. 



With a Far Away Feel
(2018) 
After a few years away, With a Far Away Feel marked Smash Addams's grand return to music. Melding psychedelia with soulful grooves, the album opens a new chapter with tracks like “Ragtime Gal” and “Who Cares Now?” Its expansive sound is a perfect reflection of the time he spent away from the scene. 



Favourite Hell
(2019) 
Raw and unapologetic, Favourite Hell dives deeper into a darker, experimental sound. With a focus on the vulnerability of the human experience, it pushes boundaries while still keeping the emotional weight that Smash Addams is known for. This album is a
collection of deeply personal and sonic exploration. 



XV
 
(2019) 
XV takes a bold step into the world of experimental sounds, incorporating elements of electronica and abstract arrangements. With its blend of genres and lush, atmospheric production, it offers an immersive experience that pushes the
boundaries of Smash Addams’s musical range. 

  

Instant Nostalgia / 20:20  
(2021)
This compilation reflects a blend of nostalgia and a forward-thinking approach
to Smash Addams’s music. Featuring some of his best material, it’s a musical
diary that mirrors his evolution as an artist. 



Late & Alone
(2021) 
A minimalist, emotionally-driven album, Late & Alone offers a stripped-back look into isolation and heartache. With a sparse arrangement that focuses heavily on mood
and emotion, it stands as one of his most introspective works. 






After Geometry (2021) 
One of his more experimental projects, After Geometry mixes rock and electronica to create a sound that feels uncharted. It’s an album that experiments with musical form, shifting and reshaping as it unfolds. 



42
  (2022)
Originally released as a 3xLP box set (later withdrawn), 42 was reissued in 2022
as a single LP. The album delves into time, loss, and legacy with an ambitious scope, featuring songs like “Tombstone” and “Between Hope and Caution.” The 2025 Director’s Cut 2xLP version adds five bonus tracks, making it a must-have for fans. 




Let Me Give the World to You
(2022) 
This album sees Smash Addams revisiting his collaboration with Lucy Dawn, featuring several tracks that draw from their ADAM & LUCY era. It’s a return to form, showing a tender and intimate side to their creative partnership. 




Dust Off the Racks  (2023) 
Originally conceived as a final album and starting as a collection of 'answer songs' to his first album, Hard to Get Over, Dust Off the Racks evolved into a fully realized, deeply personal work. Co-produced with Lucy Dawn, this album reflects on legacy, growth, and musical experimentation, with tracks that expand his sound.







 

Further Listening  (2025) 
A stunning mix of Alternative, Rock, Soul, and Electronica--- this album represents a true evolution in Smash Addams’s sound. Produced with the help of Lucy Dawn, this 12-track album explores themes of self-reflection, growth, and transformation. A
bold new chapter in his artistic journey, Further Listening takes the listener
on a ride through emotional highs and lows, with each song carefully crafted to
leave an imprint.


Friday, April 4, 2025

Barely There Studio presents...'LEFT THE WORLD BEHIND' by Lucy Dawn (***NEW ALBUM COMING $OON***)




27 minutes, 11 seconds


 

         Recorded at Barely There Studio (North MS), March - Sept. 2024 and May 2025  
Produced, engineered and mixed by Lucy Gaither. 
Mastered by A.G.

PERSONNEL:
LUCY DAWN: Vox + Guitars / Bass / Keys / Tambourine 
Drums: Roland Turner / Joey Lauretta*  ("DISTANT VOWS" Rec. 2019*)
Lead Guitar: Smash Addams (backing vocal on "REALITY")



 
LUCY DAWN'S 14th solo LP!

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

RYAN ADAMS, 'Career Ender' [imagined LP]


 

RYAN ADAMS 

Career Ender [unreleased 2000-13]


01. Your Love is an Impossible Dream
02. Black Myrtle
03. Parts of Me
04. Ghost
05. Sad What We Do to Feel Love
06. It Won't Heal
07. Juliette
08. Like the Lies She Tells to Me
09. In the Shadows
10. Walls
11. Perfect and True
12. The Last Dance

Mastered in 432 Hz. from the best possible sources with additional touches where needed. Several songs were sourced from Ryan's IG. This might be considered too short by die-hard fans like I used to be. I don't give a shit about hearsay---but if you know, you know. After serious Ryan music fatigue from years of close analysis, listening, etc.---I have found this short collection (it's normal for the glory days of LPs---the 60s---and attention spans these days is about there) to be something that still feels kinda fresh and reinforces why the hell we gave this guy so much attention in the first place! If you feel like I do---that this guy peaked back in 2006? Yeah, this is for you. Everybody has an opinion---just like everyone has a mouth and an asshole. What you do with either is none of my concern. 

That being said---let's get to the goddamned music (haha). "Your Love is an Impossible Dream" sounds like an updated "To Be Young" to the listener maybe familiar with his past works. I know a lot of folks only like that one song by him. It's a damn good live sounding (with overdubs, probably) jam with my favourite period of The Cardinals (2005). I believe this one and a few others you can find on YouTube (TheGraciousFew) are from sessions at Sear Sound Studios. Feel free to check my earlier posts related to DRA for more insight. I don't do these as often---because I don't think about the guy except to see what crazy shit he's done now (like a distant cousin that doesn't talk to you). But ill-fated tribute albums aside (see Whether We Make It Or Not: A Tribute to David Ryan Adams from 2021), this is the stuff that used to inspire me. The fearlessness he had going into the studio with some of the coolest players around...just a list of song titles and probably ideas he pretended to 'come up with on the spot' still laying around, hehe (see the interview he did a few years ago where he plays "Sad What We Do to Feel Love" and says it's a 'new song' to the interviewer...I know that trick).

The second song we go into is, "Black Myrtle" from the Easy Tiger sessions from 2006 to early 2007. This song was on a promotional disc with other tunes Ryan did with the backing of the next Cardinals iteration (including the late Neal Casal). I personally find the album itself to be Ryan's move into Starbucks music territory. Your results may vary. To me, he started going right for the middle of the fucking road. Still some good songs to be found. This is one of them. It's not like my opinion should stop you! You might ask, what about "Song X"? (fill in the blank on what song you think I should've also included)---well, variety and being concise are key factors to listening engagement. This is not necessarily for the converted---but the people who never tried to interact with him and/or don't know his music for more than just radio friendly shit. He does know his way around a melody and the strings.

"Parts of Me" (AKA "Number 3") is taken from the Blackhole 2006 promotional disc I hope you heard before the badly sourced compilation of the same name RA put out last year! Maybe Ryan should do like YE and ask his fans to contribute files since he seems to be almost in the same boat with the bootleggers on who has the best sourced unreleased stuff! Good luck with that interaction, folks. Now, this song definitely encapsulates the raw, unhinged rocker side that he 'cultivated' on 2003's Rock N' Roll (and then he just turned into Petty Springsteen lite somewhere a decade down the line). The re-done vocals and the poorly sourced MP3 mastered files just ruin what was already a great record by 2010 (the second time he said 'It's ready!'). 

Next, we revisit the DRA's probably most fertile writing and recording period between the Heartbreaker and Love is Hell albums (2000-03). "Ghost" sounds like it would have been on the radio somewhere in that time. There's a lot of good material from this time, but it all is based on the same subject matter (so to speak). I'd recommend seeking out the 48 Hours, Suicide Handbook, etc. unreleased albums that his old label Lost Highway essentially bootlegged for us, haha. For the sake of sticking to the script, we must move on to the previously mentioned "Sad What We Do to Feel Love" (also taken from the Sear Sound Sessions with The Cardinals in 2005).

I first heard a clip of this track on a bootlegged promo of the Jacksonville City Nights album sessions (when it was still called September). Again, just a raw sounding awesome and gritty little jam that for me is a highlight whether you are looking for Cardinals-era stuff you haven't heard or not. Perhaps Ryan will re-do the song for his 3xLP Self Portrait record of leftovers he's mentioned recently? I'll read about it. This is the version. I haven't been able to get excited about anything this man's done since I heard how awful Cardinology turned out. Some good songs to be found...but it's really hard to make even a compilation of his stuff without it feeling same-y. That's not just him. It's also a matter of taste and like I've said---you may feel differently. But to the wandering or casual listener, there is good stuff to get your attention and if its varied enough....maybe keep your attention, too. 

Moving on to the era that really bored the shit out of me---we have a track that could've been a radio single (maybe I'm wrong)---to fan the flames of the adult contemporary shit and the 'haven't I heard this already' feeling of the 'Self-Titled / Prisoner era'. "It Won't Heal" was shared on RA's Instagram page in 2024 to acknowledge the 10th anniversary of the s/t album. It's believed to be from the scrapped 2nd album sessions produced with Glyn Johns in 2013. In order to hear a whole sounding song, I looped a section from the shared clip and extended it instrumentally to fill it out. 'Good ears!' to the guy who picked that detail out on Gracious Few's YT page. You're welcome, folks.

"Juliette" (AKA "Color Bars") is the title track of the promo disc of the same name from 2006 featuring tracks from the Cardinals' rejected third album (which eventually evolved into a solo billed album, Easy Tiger). Sounds like a re-purposed riff from the also then-cancelled (this is how you spell that word...enough of this single 'L' shit---stop trying to change facts...same goes for words like judgement and likeable) 2006 release of Blackhole. The song seems to continue RA's descent from alt-country genius into dumb rock song territory. If you like that kind of thing, the 2010 compilation of Cardinals pre-ET leftovers, III-IV, is for you.

"Like the Lies She Tells to Me" dates back to pre-Heartbreaker era (a recording in a small, possibly home studio set up somewhere with Gillian Welch, earlier in 2000). The DRA shared it on his IG back in 2023 (I think)---something to do with material that wasn't on the Heartbreaker 15th anniversary (like they didn't ask him? Dunno). Nice rootsy tune that sounds more like the Ryan Adams we started out listening to. It's a shame he's abandoned this sound and style for the more derivative schtick cosplaying of Tom Petty, Springsteen, Dylan and Morrissey. Also, burning bridges with his old producer Ethan Johns? Fix that shit, bud. Make that record you claimed you were making back in 2003 with him, Norah and the gang?

I originally included "Orange Rinds (Who is Gonna Save Me Now)"--a song that dates back to Ryan's last creative gasp and recording in a major studio in 2018. Taken from the 'Summer of 69 Demos' sessions---which yielded some 48 tracks that later appeared on albums like Big Colors, Wednesdays, and Romeo & Juliet between the end of 2020 and into early 2022. There was supposedly going to be a trilogy of albums released in 2019 including the former two albums and a scrapped double album dedicated to his late brother, Chris. I will say that 'Wednesdays' was probably his last real album. The material is heavy but it's what I expected Prisoner should've sounded more like when it was first hyped in 2015 as his 'divorce album' and 'as Heartbreaker as it gets'---the original 17-track version would've been a better album to look back on then the forgettable '80's rock' of Big Colors or what became the Chris album (a bunch of S/T and Prisoner leftovers). This song is raw and just voice and piano. It was shared on RA's IG a year or so back 'as a new song' ---but it's from the 2018 sessions for Wednesdays. The abridged version of the album is good but missing songs like "Take Me Home" , "Like a Heatwave" and "Red and Orange Special" that would've been on the original and made it a late period classic, possibly* (by the margin the old fans used to measure his best work at). However, the song doesn't stand up to repeated listens---so I replaced it with something more innaresting.

I added "In the Shadows" in its place---because it seems more sincere, haha. You know what I'm talkin' about. The song was recorded with Glyn Johns producing what would've been the 2013 follow-up to Ashes and Fire. Features some mean slide work from ex-Cardinals bandmate Cindy Cashdollar. I think she could have been around briefly (end of 2004 / beginning of 2005?) for some of the JCN demos---as I believe this song is a new recording of the same "Shadows" on that list of song titles from right after Cold Roses was finished. I heard she left the group after the 2004 tour--since she had other projects and didn't want to commit to another record, etc. Perhaps the 'Sear Sound' disc contains songs recorded before and after Graboff came in to replace Cashdollar? 

Pedal steel would become an integral part of the record. Bob Hoffnar (spelling ?) played with the band on their version of "Always on My Mind" (Norah Jones also sang and played on it). I read Graboff was already in the band--but had a prior commitment on that day. Graboff is (paraphrased) heard saying "Ryan had a bunch of song titles written down before he had songs..." in the awesome September documentary that we all wish was longer. Ryan's (in recent years) teasing about another Cardinals album with 'the original line-up' begs the question---is it that list of songs RE: JCN ("Shadows", "We're Doomed", "Liar's Eve", "Dust and Alcohol", "Like the Lies She Tells to Me", "Give Up?", "On My Way to Jacksonville", "Rosewood Cemetery", "The Howling", etc.)---at least some of them--from before the proper album sessions started? The electric 'Demonstration Versions' is another curious thread. Ryan wrote 'think like the JCN demos' in his songwriting notes for more songs we never heard in 2017 (Wednesdays demos, probably).    

BUT anyways---let's talk about "Walls" from the 2001 sessions that has been bootlegged for years as the 48 Hours disc. Probably one of the best damn songs that never got put out. Why the fuck is that? That's the real 'Ryan Adams sound' or at least what we were sold back in the day, heh. Another reason why Ethan Johns was the best producer he had. The best studio backing group (besides The Cardinals) he had was from this time (in my opinion), as well. I do dig the Replacements tribute band he had called the Pinkhearts, though. "Mega Superior Gold" is a banger. I didn't include it because I think you should go check out the whole Pinkhearts or 'Let It B-Minus' disc that's also out there (2000-01 era). 

"Perfect and True" is one of the best ballads and prettiest damn songs you could sing for somebody. It's just voice and guitars (the late great, Bucky Baxter accompanies RA with harmony and slide). This is part of a collection of stripped back tunes called The Suicide Handbook. The album was apparently intended to be the follow-up to Heartbreaker, but was deemed "too sad", etc. Well, they're not wrong about that, haha. Ballads and heartbreak and some fine songwriting and vocals. This was all scrapped for Gold. The 9-11 album. You know if he hadn't filmed that video where he did---we probably wouldn't have had to see that Gap ad he did (Bwahahhahhaha). That's nothing to do with him, though. Leviathans stick together, don't they? 

"The Last Dance"  is a perfect closer for this little introductory sampler to RA's unreleased works. No, this doesn't even probably cover it for completists! But for the rest of us, it shows the guy still has at least one solid album of stuff that hasn't been commercially released. I've tried to make it a nicely rounded musical affair for the discerning ear. This one is originally from the Exile on Franklin Street bootleg that supposedly contains a compilation of home recorded works RA did before signing to Lost Highway. I believe it was the name he gave folks as his first solo album 'he was working on' back before and after Whiskeytown, hehe. I believe it's probably recorded sometime after Whiskeytown ended (since it includes a  re-make of a song they didn't use for their final album, Pneumonia) and the sessions for Heartbreaker. This version of the song has been pitched down to a more natural tone---as several songs on the disc were 'pitched up' for whatever reasons---hiding how old the recordings are, etc. It was one of the first tunes I got into when I did a deep dive into his vast 'unreleased recordings' discography over twenty something years ago, now. Anyways, I hope you enjoy. This is the first thing I listen to and haven't got bored by him in years!  Maybe you'll find something there, too.

Cheers.


  

SMASH ADDAMS INTERVIEW IN #510 OF ALDORA BRITAIN RECORDS MAGAZINE

  Hello, how are and how have you been? That's great. Hey, check it out---I was interviewed in this fine publication from the UK! https:...