3 minute read
Music to His Ears
from Willamette Week, June 7, 2023 - Volume 49, Issue 30 - "The Rose Festival Is Decadent and Depraved"
Dan Cable’s intimate interviews with musicians have made him one of the most successful podcasters in Portland.
Al Di Meola is one of the fastest, flashiest, most virtuosic acoustic guitarists currently touring—and, crucially, one of the most flat-out fun to watch. Rising to fame as the prodigious guitarist of Return to Forever, Di Meola turned his fretboard wizardry and taste for Mediterranean flair into a million-selling solo career, and his classic live album Friday Night in San Francisco reverberates with the energy of an audience beside itself with ecstasy. Aladdin Theater, 3017 SE Milwaukie Ave. 8 pm. $45. All ages.
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BY MICHELLE KICHERER IG: @MichelleKicherer
What is Dan Cable Presents? In short, it’s a “progrum.” So says the catchphrase of the Portland music podcaster Dan Cable, who asks his guests to end each episode with that proclamation—a shout-out to Cable’s grandfather, who pronounces program that way.
Cable clarifies with a laugh that granddad is not from the Midwest, as his pronunciation might imply. “He’s just from California. It must be a generational thing,” he tells WW
Cable is friendly and funny, striving for each interview to be well researched but agendaless. “I’ve always had a really vivid memory for recalling things for sure,” he says. “Like, stupid good. Like, sometimes I wish the memory was not so solid. But it comes in handy.” with his brother Dom to Portland from Brazil.
“Stupid good” memory and unrelenting curiosity is part of what brings out the kind of storytelling that happens on Cable’s show. He points to a 2020 interview he did with Soft Kill’s Tobias Grave (Episode 235), in which Grave opens up about his history with substance abuse and some of his motivations for recovery.
“At a certain point I was like, yo, this means a lot to me,” says Cable, who shared with Grave that he had a good friend who had died of a heroin overdose. Cable hadn’t disclosed the information before going into the interview; it was just something that came up, and the episode ended up being one of his more moving shows.
Cable considers all of Franco’s performances to be amazing, whether they’re in a venue or on a street corner. So he went into that conversation hoping to break down the art of busking. “To me, [busking] was this very simple thing and maybe even sometimes an annoying thing that you come across when you’re walking about your day,” Cable says.
If you’ve been on the internet anytime in the past five years, you’ve likely heard the expression “goblin mode,” a rejection of societal expectations in a hedonistic manner without regard to self-image— very 2020s. But nobody has taken this animal state to the same extreme as Nekrogoblikon, the Florida metal band fronted by an actual, pointy-eared, havoc-happy goblin—or maybe it’s just some dude named Dave in a green latex mask. Hawthorne Theatre, 1507 SE 39th Ave. 8 pm. $25. 21+.
“They’re not like that every episode—and that’s the joy of it,” he says. “Some episodes are really goofy and fun and there are lots of laughs, then others get really heavy. So if [the guests] are going to get vulnerable, I’m going to do my best to jump in that water, too.”
Cable is wary of overshadowing anyone’s story by interjecting himself too much into the episodes. But the beauty of his hosting style is that it creates space for humanity and connection that comes out in shootin’-the-stuff conversations.
Cable says he begins his research process by asking himself, “What do I want to learn about this person?” He mentions Episode 328, in which he interviews musician and busker Johnny Franco, who moved
He adds, “Getting to really understand his mentality behind it just completely changed my thought process.” He realized that by busking, Franco was creating a soundtrack for peoples’ days, learning and perfecting the art of how to navigate the folks who might not be in the mood to hear his music, and how to play for the ones who are.
Since starting in 2016, Dan Cable Presents has had a new episode out every single week. As Cable’s audience and sponsorship continues to grow, his goal remains the same: to be ever curious and excited to promote both emerging and established artists across genres.
Cable cites podcasters like Marc Maron and Pete Holmes, whose openness encourages their guests to face a direction they might not normally look. “I think everybody brings out something different, you know?” he says. “I’m just trying to find that common ground or where to connect with them.”
LISTEN: Dan Cable Presents episodes stream at dancablepresents.com.