What happens when one artist’s work is read through the lens of another? Tré Burt’s rambling bluesman sound means his music is constantly compared to that of Bob Dylan, but as a Black man living in 2021, his writing draws from very different perspectives. In this interview, Tré and Adia distinguish what it means to write from experience versus observation, share how working blue-collar jobs has fed their artistic careers, and remember the late, great John Prine. Hear a playlist of songs curated for this week’s episode at https://bit.ly/cr-tre. / Music In This Week's Episode / Tré Burt, “I Cannot Care” Waxahatchee, “Light Of A Clear Blue Morning” Lil Nas X, “Sun Goes Down” Adia Victoria, “Carolina Bound” Buster Benton, “Money Is The Name Of The Game” Bill Withers, “Lonely Town, Lonely Street”
What happens when one artist’s work is read through the lens of another? Tré Burt’s rambling bluesman sound means his music is constantly compared to that of Bob Dylan, but as a Black man living in 2021, his writing draws from very different perspectives. In this interview, Tré and Adia distinguish what it means to write from experience versus observation, share how working blue-collar jobs has fed their artistic careers, and remember the late, great John Prine. Hear a playlist of songs curated for this week’s episode at https://bit.ly/cr-tre.
/ Music In This Week's Episode /
Tré Burt, “I Cannot Care”
Waxahatchee, “Light Of A Clear Blue Morning”
Lil Nas X, “Sun Goes Down”
Adia Victoria, “Carolina Bound”
Buster Benton, “Money Is The Name Of The Game”
Bill Withers, “Lonely Town, Lonely Street”
/ Show Notes /
Tré Burt’s latest album “You, Yeah, You,” is available now on Oh Boy Records.
Tré says “Pay Day” by Mississippi John Hurt is the song that’s giving him life right now.
/ Credits /
Call & Response is a Sonos show produced by work x work: Scott Newman, Jemma Rose Brown, Adia Victoria, Ann Marie Awad and Daniel Rayzel. Our engineer is Sam Bair of The Relic Room.