gonna try not to repeat anything that lucius rec'd Coffee: Matryoshka: except this one i will repeat because it is that great. i'm a regular here because the folks there are lovely, the vibe is very cozy and fun, and the drinks are AMAZING. like the coffee alone is just solid but they also make the wildest specialty drinks. Retrograde: Shagbark latte>>> Weak Coffee: lil coffee cart hosted in a drum store in east, there's also All or Nothing Bagels in the parking lot which slaps IMO but east coasters may be underwhelmed Restaurants: Tempo: Texas style breakfast/lunch place with great coffee too Bill's Sandwich Palace: their french onion shroom sandwich i would do terrible things for Jerusalem Reebar Restaurant: slept on palestinian food place, great schwarma and best pita & hummus in town Hearts: gotta disagree with lucius here, this place has the best sprouts. Dicey's: fun pizza restaurant with a nice outdoor area Soy Cubano: mojo pork and plantains go crazy, also good coffee! Bars: Dino's: classic spot, good dive bar vibes with solid food as well. perf for after a night out since they're open late Bearded Iris Sylvan Supply: if you're into craft beer, they got nice draft cocktails too Bay 6: tiny lil microbar with excellent cocktails in east but they have good outside space so make sure to go when it's nice out Stores: East Nashville Antiques: antique mall with a great selection of vintage Starland Vintage: they got some wild stuff here Rooted: if you're into sneakers/streetwear Parks: Warner Parks: if you want a place to hike they got miles of trails twisting through here Shelby Bottoms: lovely park along the Cumberland, if you take the trail along the river there's a pedestrian bridge that crosses it Others: Belcourt Theater: for all your indie movie needs Play Dance Club: only place i've found with a decent DJ in town Howdywood/Soft Junk: if you're into punk/noise and there's a show on while you're here you GOTTA experience this place
Mar 25, 2024

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I was born in Nashville and moved FL when I was 9, but I was lucky to return for an internship last summer and do some exploring! My fave spots were Dicey's Pizza, The Vinyl Tap, Starland Emporium, Grimey's, The Groove, and the Five Points area. Vanderbilt and Belmont campuses are also worth wandering around on because they have some beautiful buildings and cool shops around there. I also linked a guide made by Starland Emporium that saved me so many times when I was looking for something to do after leaving work. Love that city so much!!
Dec 9, 2024
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grew up in dallas! here's what's good, very food/shopping heavy but that's dallas for ya. don't expect any yee-haw, expect yuppies Coffee: best espresso: LDU best specialty: Houndstooth Food/Drink: best burger: Maple & Motor, tho Burger House is a nostalgia fav for me best tex-mex: Chuy's (has gotten worse since being franchised but the OG Knox street location is still a personal fav, the beef fajitas and frozen margs are the move) best BBQ: Pecan Lodge or Slow Bone best southern food: Bubba's on Hillcrest best restaurant: Petra & The Beast craft beer: Craft Beer Bar in Lakewood wine & dine: Sixty Vines in Uptown diner: Cafe Brazil best pub: Old Monk on Henderson best brunch: Kuby's in Snider Plaza best margarita: Doce Mesas, also has the best guac. Shopping: vintage/thrift: America 70s on Greenville, Vagabond Vintage streetwear/sneakers: Centre (Bishop Arts location has the best selection) mall: Northpark, stores are super bougie but it's also a very pretty building and has a lot of art and sculptures around menswear: Stag record store: Good Records in east dallas Art/Museums: Perot Museum Nasher Sculpture Center Meadows Museum Nature: dallas is seriously lacking on this but there is some Trinity Skyline Trail: great views of downtown! great wildflower blooms too depending on time of year Oak Cliff Nature Preserve: a bunch of preserved undeveloped grassland, got some nice hiking trails but nothing crazy Parts of Town: dallas is NOT walkable but these areas are doable on foot and have a bunch of random fun stuff Lower Greenville: some good night life here, plenty of restaurants and stores Knox/Henderson: Knox is pretty bougie nowadays but accross the highway is Henderson and there's a ton of shops and restaurants all up and down it Bishop Arts: a ton of cool lil stores, bars, and restaurants Deep Ellum: kinda the night life hub in town, kinda rowdy tho. all the good concerts are here. Mockingbird Station: a couple of cool restaurants but also the Angelika Theater!! always a good selection of indie movies over there. Oak Lawn: colloquially known as "the gayborhood," the best DJ in town is at Roundup Saloon
Mar 19, 2024
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memory den, hollywood vintage: warehouse-size thrift stores with incredible vibes. i have to spend at least 90 minutes in here every time. skip house of vintage, popular but insanely expensive and the selection kinda sucks tokyo sando, snappy's: places for incredible sandwiches. just been very into sandwiches lately daily feast: my favorite diner. try the biscuits and gravy. they also serve Spella coffee which is my favorite locally powell's and mother foucault's: polar opposite bookstores, powells is very touristy and a bit expensive but really fun to explore and deserves most of the hype. foucault's is tiny, packed to the rafters and super cute
Oct 30, 2024

Top Recs from @royallmonarch

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just sit still and listen. drink it in.
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I consume a lot of music regularly, and a huge part of keeping a fresh diet of new listens going is having enough sources of recommendations that aren’t an algorithm that either 1) reinforces your existing listening patterns, keeping you stagnant in your tastes, or 2) platforms whoever paid enough to push their product to the top, serving you something that may not inherently be of inferior quality, but may not align with your tastes, may not be exciting beyond just being a new release, and realigns your current listening habits to be more in line with what the average user on the platform is also listening to — which socially might have benefits but which creates a homogeneity of consumption that can become bland since you’re listening to something really just because it’s the next product on the assembly line to have its public moment and not because anything about the music actually captured your attention. the current landscape of streaming is designed to keep you at an all you can eat buffet where you take what’s served to you, and as a result a lot of us have forgotten how to look at a menu and order. so what does taking a more active role in your own music curation look like? for me, it’s meant not using streaming as a primary listening platform. I mostly use my local Apple Music library on my phone that I curate with the vestigial iTunes Library framework that’s still a part of Apple Music on my laptop. probably going to find an alternative soon since apple seems to be cutting integration progressively. I like this method because it forces me to choose what to sync to the limited storage space I have, forcing me to take inventory of what I actually listen to and what I can offload. the files I get are mostly from Bandcamp or Soulseek depending on whether it’s available for purchase or entirely unavailable online (as is the case for a lot of electronic music that was on vinyl only, which is where soulseek comes in clutch). I also have freedom here to change the ID3 tags to better sort and organize, rate, change track info, and track my own listening data. Bandcamp and other music purchasing platforms are great because 1) it reshapes my relationship to music away from consumerism and back towards curation. I have to pay actual money for this thing now if I want to use it, so i’m forced to consider its value (usually i’ll stream a release first to gauge my interest). 2) having to spend money helps me to course out my meals so to speak, as i’ll buy a few releases i’ve accumulated in my cart over the month and cash out on Bandcamp Friday when 100% of my money is actually getting to the artist (TOMORROW IS BANDCAMP FRIDAY BTW!!!), and between purchases I can actually chew and savor and digest my last orders, they don’t get swept up in the deluge of new releases. my plate is full until i’m done and then I order more. also for the times of the year like now when new music isn’t coming out as regularly I take time to find older music that I would normally overlook while keeping up with new drops. currently very into early 80s/late 70s music with early digital production, kinda stuff that would evolve into synthpop and dance music. so how do you know what to order? for me, I’m getting recs through trusted curation platforms. whether it’s bandcamp daily, y’all lovely folks here on PI.FYI, friends, or most importantly musicians who I follow on socials that share their tastes through posts, stories, playlists on steaming, interviews, etc. I like this last one especially because it’s kind of like a musical game of telephone. if I like an artist and they share their interests and influences it’s like every layer in this process is stretching my palate further from the sound that I was originally interested in and into a new territory that has some shared DNA but would never have been recommended to me by an algo because there’s no shared category or label between them, only the musical influence and interpretation of it made by the artist. as an example, I was a huge Skrillex stan, he signed KOAN Sound to his label, they collab with Asa who collabs with Sorrow, Sorrow takes huge influence from Burial, Burial makes some ambient adjacent stuff and takes huge influence from 90s rave music and drum and bass and 2000s rnb, now i’m listening to Brandy - All in Me, William Basinski, Aphex Twin, none on whom would get recommended by Spotify to me from Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites. LAST thing i’ll say — because in yappin about this i’m realizing how actually passionate about this subject I am: MAKE LISTS! playlists are cool, but they can flatten your music into vague categories of ā€œvibesā€ and ā€œaestheticsā€ and encourage picking one-off songs from artists that you never form an active audience relationship with. I make a practice of making my own year end lists of top 25 albums (plus some honorable recs and top individual songs) and keeping them in a notes doc that I regularly update and rearrange over the course of the year. this forces me to consider the actual relationship i’m forming with what i’ve ordered for myself. did I like it in the moment but it didn’t have staying power? is it slowly growing on me? it also encourages taking albums as a whole. maybe I liked one or two tracks a lot but the rest wasn't resonating. that’s ok! maybe I rank it lower but now i’ve actually taken time to consider it, it’s in my library, and maybe (quite a few cases for me) something I ranked like bottom 5 albums becomes a retroactive favorite from that year as my tastes evolve. also 25 albums to take with me from each year is really more than you'd think, i struggle sometimes to even find 25 that I formed a true connection with. I think the biggest thing the itunes era ruined that led into now is the single-ification of music, the ability to separate the hits from the deep cuts. albums are meant to be taken as a whole, and then once you've really sat with the whole you can find what actually stuck. even then I like to keep the whole around because soooo often i’ll write off a track that yeeeears later I come to love. trust the artist, they made it like they did for a reason. aaannyyyywayy TLDR: get recs organically, be more active in deciding your listening patterns, fr*cken pay artists yall, trust the artist embrace the album, really consider what you consume
Feb 29, 2024
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