00:00¿What do you check right after a show?
00:01Occasionally I'll check Twitter to see what the response to the show was.
00:04And if it's not good, I barricade myself in my room and order a Taco Bell.
00:08And if it is good, barricade myself through and order a Taco Bell.
00:17I'm playing Fenway Park tonight.
00:23Do you ever worry that this is the peak?
00:25That's all I think about, really.
00:27I think I was close to giving up music.
00:29I didn't know what my own voice was.
00:31And suddenly I was thrust back into Vermont.
00:34Three, two, it kind of changed everything.
00:36It finally felt like there was some kind of story in the music.
00:39Once called me forever, now you still can't call me back at all.
00:43And then it became like this huge thing.
00:47Stuck and mom, she...
00:51Make a new album before 2026.
00:55No one makes our family's dirty laundry just seem like being human.
00:58We brought my mom's living room on the stage.
01:00We can't quite replicate the generational trauma, but we did our best to fit it in.
01:04The exponential growth that we've been experiencing is unheard of.
01:08Thank God he has a really great head on his shoulders.
01:11Some people have an HR department.
01:12Some people make life-size tenatas of themselves.
01:14The music is mad!
01:17I know that I'm most happy when I'm home and when I'm making music.
01:21And that's what I'm kind of most scared of.
01:22You want to take a break from it?
01:24That I have to be like at my mom's house, that I have to be in Vermont, that I have
01:26to be struggling or in pain to make music.
01:29I think the thing that I need to do is jump on the diving board.
01:32This is it.
01:33Three, four...
01:53What do you think the more dangerous job is?
01:55Being a firefighter and a blacksmith or being a singer-songwriter with folk pop tendencies?
02:01Yeah, singer-songwriter.
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