LSQ

Jenny Eliscu

Interviews focus on key moments of discovery, and the songs/artists that have soundtracked the guest's life. Hosted by journalist and radio presenter Jenny Eliscu (@jennylsq), these are laid-back but in-depth discussions about the journey to find their creative voice and process, and how it has evolved over their career. Episodes also occasionally feature clips from Eliscu's extensive archive, which includes 25 years' worth of interview audio. read less

Our Editor's Take

Listeners who could always jump into a conversation about music are sure to love the LSQ Podcast. The LSQ Podcast tackles all things music-the industry, the artists, the inspiration-from every angle. This podcast focuses on the stories behind the artists and songs that shape society's music taste.

This show, hosted by Jenny Eliscu (pronounced L-S-Q), focuses on those special “aha!” moments that inspired incredible music. Eliscu brings a fresh perspective to every episode. From exclusive interviews to sneak-peeks of her own life, there's always something entertaining. With a comfortable and casual style, LSQ Podcast flows like a good conversation.

Listeners can consider this a discussion podcast where nothing is off limits. It feels like sitting down with a pal for an open-ended chat about music. What are the best songs out there? What inspired the lyrics behind the most popular songs? Eliscu is open and inviting, seamlessly creating an easy-listening vibe. Episodes don't only focus on artists; they also talk about the music and meetings that shaped and inspired them. Mostly, this podcast centers around pivotal moments in music history. The LSQ Podcast brings in illustrious guests like Belle and Sebastian, the Goo Goo Dolls, Robert Glasper, and Tame Impala. Each episode features an interview with a new guest or focuses on a different key moment in music. Listeners will get freeform chats with artists. But they'll also feel like they're getting a VIP experience.

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Episodios

Remi Wolf
09-09-2024
Remi Wolf
Remi Wolf is my favorite kind of modern artist: a young music-maker who truly doesn't give a flying eff what genre names folks might use to try to neatly categorize her sound. Remi knows that, as she once said, "genres are pretty obsolete at this point." She continued (in this interview with Spin): "I think artists are their own genre, where every artist is creating such a world for themselves that they are becoming the sound and the thing." The world Remi has created over the course of the past several years and two full-length albums, including her awesome new sophomore LP Big Ideas, is kaleidoscopic and soulful and trippy and funky and full of humor. I had a blast talking to her about her childhood experiences with music and her own creativity, and how they overlapped with her experiences as a serious athlete who was involved in competitive skiing until music proved to be a stronger calling. We talked about the stuff she heard around the house -- Prince, Aerosmith, Led Zeppelin -- and the artists she got into on her own when she was a little older, from My Chemical Romance to the Red Hot Chili Peppers to Amy Winehouse to Snarky Puppy, and how they informed her own music. She also shares what she learned from her brief experience as a contestant on American Idol back when she was seventeen (you can see her audition here), and how she found began to find her own sound as a songwriter during her college years. Remi and her band just started a huge North American tour and you can get tickets here.
Jason Isbell
20-10-2023
Jason Isbell
After years of admiring Jason Isbell's gifts as a songwriter and storyteller, I finally got to ask the alt-country artist about his earliest sparks of creativity, and it was fascinating to hear his memories of sitting on the front porch, singing with members of his extended family during weekly Sunday evening gatherings, and of listening to his Pentecostal preacher grandfather playing guitar, and introducing him to gospel and mountain songs and bluegrass and the blues. "Music was something that was presented to me as something that was directly tied with family," he says. "The way creative pursuits were presented to me, it was something people did because it made them feel better, and because they could control the machines. And they had grown up very poor and didn't have control over much else. I think that combination of lack of options and just a genuine love for the way the arts were presented to me from the beginning culminated in my identifying with it so closely. And then something sort of made me a fool. Something in there somewhere told me to actually pursue this to the ends of the earth if I had to. That's the part I don't exactly understand." Isbell also talks about his love for Hendrix and Pearl Jam, about the lessons he learned from teaching guitar in his early twenties, how his songwriting process has evolved, and more. Jason and his band the 400 Unit are playing shows at Nashville's legendary Ryman Auditorium this week and have additional US dates early next year. Following the awesome new Isbell & The 400 Unit album Weathervanes earlier this year, he recently put out a deluxe, 10th anniversary reissue of 2013's Southeastern. You can get a copy, and tickets for the upcoming date, here. Isbell can also be seen in the new Martin Scorsese film Killers of the Flower Moon.