Alex Bleeker Offers a Taste of Tour in His New Book on Music, Travel and Food

Alex Bleeker and Luke Pyenson (photo: Richard Law)

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“Going on tour has long been a heavily mythologized way of life, with ample touchpoints across pop culture. And yet, those who haven’t gone on tour sometimes lack the context to fully appreciate what it actually means,” Alex Bleeker and Luke Pyenson write in the introduction to their absorbing new book, Taste in Music: Eating on Tour with Indie Musicians. “We’ve gone off to play a single depressing college show in Pennsylvania, only to return home that same night and have someone ask, ‘How was tour?’

“One show in Pennsylvania? That’s not a tour. But tour’s also not Almost Famous, at least not for everyone. In our little corner of the industry, indie-rock, tour is many things—too many things, in fact, to sum up succinctly. And it’s different for all of us. Of course, tour represents the beautiful exchange between band and audience, the singular, ecstatic marvel of live music. But that lasts about an hour, sometimes two, rarely three. The rest of tour—the majority— is governed by two things: travel and food.”

From this starting point, Bleeker and Pyenson offer a variegated account of food consumption on the road, featuring essays by fellow artists such as Kevin Morby (“Thanksgiving in Porto”), Animal Collective’s Brian “Geologist” Weitz (“Eating in the Van”), Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold (“My Savior, My Destroyer, the Subway Veggie Patty”), Bob Mould (“Eating Econo”) and Natalie Mering, aka Weyes Blood (“Tapas Alone”). The pieces are much more than descriptions of favorite meals or restaurants—they’re barely, rarely that—but rather they’re often about companionship and self-care.

This conversation took place shortly after the passing of Phil Lesh. Bleeker, who plays bass in Real Estate as well as Taper’s Choice—which is described in the book as “a subversive jam band”—offers his thoughts on the iconic musician.

“This might be true for a lot of people in my generation, but ‘Box of Rain’ was, without a doubt, my gateway to the Grateful Dead,” he says. “I was obsessed with The Beatles and I was really into Pink Floyd and I knew about the Grateful Dead, but the Grateful Dead weren’t on classic rock radio when I was 13 in the same way that these other artists were. So I didn’t really have a window to discovery. Then, one day, my mom, who knew Workingman’s Dead and American Beauty from growing up in the ‘70s but was not what we think of as a Deadhead, was like, ‘I need to hear American Beauty, everybody get in the car.’ It was like a bolt of lightning had hit her, so we went down to Barnes & Noble, bought it on CD and then she played it in the car as we were driving back home in suburban New Jersey. When ‘Box of Rain’ came on, I can visualize exactly where I was. It was like this hand of God came down and was like, ‘This is for you, son.’ I was instantly transfixed and that CD became mine the next day. Then I was off to the races, but it was that song in particular that set me off. I feel such an affinity for Phil and his writing, also being a bass player.

“When I heard the news of Phil’s passing, it was emotional. He reached so many people in a really incredible way for so long. Since I live out in Marin, I saw him play at Terrapin Crossroads many times, and his commitment to the music was so strong. I never got to see Jerry, so in a weird way, Phil was my Jerry. He was the member of the band that I always looked up to and felt lucky to see. While I’m sad not to see him play again and I’m sad that he’s gone, I’m also so appreciative of him. So I just want to take a moment to celebrate Phil and say, ‘Thank you.’”

What are the origins of the book and how did it come together?

Even before I started touring, food had been a great motivating factor in everything that I do. I take great pleasure in seeking out interesting or delicious food, as well as downright unique places and things to eat.

When I started touring, that element of travel was on the forefront of my mind. I have this kind of almost obsessive desire to get the best, or most authentic, kind of delicacy in any region. Almost all the traveling I’ve done in my life has been in some way linked to music and touring. Wherever I am, I’m sort of driven to experience a place through its food.

As we know, food says so much about culture, and that has been a great driving force for me as far back as I can remember. So much so that sometimes the meal or the experience of eating will be at least as memorable as any show in any given city. It’s not necessarily even about the food. It’s about who I was with or what the circumstances were.

That’s always been the way I’ve operated as a touring musician. I’ve also found that there are a lot of other touring musicians who operate the same way, including my co-author, Luke Pyenson, who I met on a Real Estate tour. He was the drummer in a band called Frankie Cosmos. We realized that we were both like this, and it was the foundation of our friendship.

For a long time, I had thought of a different sort of book that would be a touring musician’s guide to eating—more of a human-interest kind of coffee table book. Where does Trey get ribs when he plays in St. Louis? Let’s get Bruce talking about disco fries at the diner. That was the first impetus that I had. I see musicians as a roving untapped resource for food and travel writing because musicians go everywhere.

I also assumed kind of wrongly—as you can read in the book—that everyone was exactly like me. So I reached out to Luke. This was during COVID, at a time when I was like, “I’d give anything just to sit in the back of a van for eight hours with my friends.” The way I was feeling was kind of like what Brian from Animal Collective says in his essay.

I was really directionless, so I called Luke and I said, “Hey, should we make that book?” He was into it but he steered us out of the guidebook thing. He said, “First of all, who knows what’s even going to be open when this is over? Also, Yelp exists and Google reviews exist and there are all kinds of people on the internet.” He saw it more as an exploration, with different people telling stories on the road through food.

So we started cold-calling people and saying, “Hey, we’re working on a book. It’s about food on tour. Do you want to talk to us about it?” We had no publisher, no agent, no nothing— but people got it right away and said they were down to talk.

How would you characterize the division of labor with Luke?

Luke inspired me to be able to create a book. He’s been a touring drummer in a band but he’s also a food journalist, so he has more writerly practices and was encouraging. He was like, “I think we should write intros to all of these.” I thought of myself as more of a curatorial sort of person helping put the book together—which I was—but I also wound up doing a fair amount of writing. He really pushed me to get there, which I appreciated.

It was great to be accountable to one another. We each appreciated having another person there who was relying on us to do our part. Early on, a lot of the artists came from our personal relationships and thinking, “I’ve had a great meal with that person.” It sort of spiraled out from there, so it’s our shared community and beyond that’s represented.

Did you have a target audience in mind for the book?

Broadly speaking, we call the people in the book indie. That’s a term that doesn’t really describe anything but it also describes a lot. You’ve got everybody from Chris Franz to DIY stalwarts telling stories. So I certainly thought that fans of these musicians or this scene in general, would want to read it. You have someone like Robin from Fleet Foxes who writes a great essay in the book and, if you like Fleet Foxes, you’d say, “Yeah, I want to know about that guy’s relationship to the Subway veggie patty.”

This is also a different sort of backstage, behind-the-curtain tell-all than Keith Richards’ Life. It’s not sex, drugs, booze and rock-and-roll. It’s really more of a day-in-the-life portrait of what it’s like to be a mid-level touring artist. It’s a way to talk about this level of touring and what it’s like to be on the road. I think you could read this book and find it interesting without necessarily having heard of a single artist.

I think the common perception or representation in popular culture of being on tour is crazy rockstar excess. That’s the imagination of what’s happening, and I’ll say, on the record, that every once in a while that kind of rockstar moment happens. But most of the time, it is a job and I see it as a very good job and a job that I’m lucky to have. I’m not ungrateful, but 95% of our time is not what the audience sees on the stage.

You’ve played a fair amount of gigs outside the United States with Real Estate. Has that touring impacted your view of eating on the road?

This is fresh on my mind because Real Estate just got back from a two-week jaunt in Europe and a lot of the food that you eat on tour is kind of incidental and on the go. You eat what you can grab at a gas station or maybe, if you’re lucky, at a nice grocery store.

In the U.S., there are a couple of regional delicacies at gas stations, like boiled peanuts. But otherwise, it’s pretty much this corporate sameness along the interstate. It’s kind of hard to differentiate and it’s hard to stay healthy out there.

But in Europe, it’s delightful as an American to be in some of these places and be like, “This is the most well-considered, put together, gas-station sandwich I could possibly conceive of. The brie is interacting with this apple and the bread is fresh and this woman standing behind the deli case clearly got here at 6 a.m. to make it.” People over there don’t see this because it’s still gas-station food to them, but it changes the mentality on the tour completely because, when I’m pulling into a gas station and I am in Belgium, I’m excited about what might be in there.

By comparison, I’ll use my great state of New Jersey, which I love, so nobody feels put upon. But in New Jersey, I’m not feeling the exact same way.

That also calls to mind another thing that came up, because we did talk to artists of varying sizes for the book, including artists who have graduated to touring in a bus. A number of them talk wistfully about the earlier days of touring. They’ll say, “Food used to be so important to us, but now we just kind of get catering.” If you’re in the bus, you’ve got to get an Uber to a specific place and you might not necessarily do that. You kind of stick with the touring party. So an interesting, eye-opening thing for me was that, in a lot of ways, the mid-size bands are more nimble, more able to explore culinary delights.

In the book, you’re forthright about acknowledging the body image anxiety you’ve experienced on tour. Can you talk about how that relates to the challenges and pleasures of seeking out those local delicacies you described earlier?

What I’ll say is that it’s really easy to eat non-healthy on tour.

I’ve never struggled with the stereotypical kind of addictions that plague musicians in popular culture. I’m not sober, but I never felt that I drank or used drugs to excess. I think it often happens because of the grueling nature of being on the road. No matter what level you’re at, you’re away from family, there’s repetition— even if it’s the great arenas of the world. Jackson Browne writes about it.

Having said that, I will acknowledge that greasy food is my vice. I am definitely down to go there and I am not abstaining from it entirely when I’m on tour because there are so many amazing offerings of that kind and they’re readily available. But the older I’ve gotten, I’ve come to recognize that it’s not the thing that makes me feel good. It’s not the thing that keeps me healthy. It’s not the thing that fuels the best performance.

In this day and age, we’re often photographed— not just by professional photographers, but by everybody who pulls out their phones and is putting up an Instagram Story. Now that makes sense because it promotes the tour, but there’s this factor that everybody can relate to with a camera in front of them—“Oh, God, is that really what I look like?” That can then feed into saying to yourself, “Maybe I shouldn’t get the cheesesteak in Philly, even though I want it so bad because I’m tired and I’m homesick.”

Balancing all those things is tough. But I end my essay by pointing out that sometimes it really is important to get the cheesesteak because that’s how you know you’re in Philadelphia, although sometimes it’s important to know when not to get it. It’s like the “everything in moderation except moderation” kind of idea. I really think that applies there, but it’s a tough balancing act.

As the pieces came in, was there an essay that surprised you for one reason or another?

A lot of them did, but I’ll say Eric Slick’s special brownies mishap backstage with the preeminent Frank Zappa cover band. Now, when I say that in a sentence, everybody goes, “Oh, yeah, we know what that is.” It’s funny and he talks about accidentally eating too many magic brownies, but there’s so much heart in it. He kind of inspired me. He talked about eating a giant plate of brownies as a kid and how he didn’t know how to take care of himself. He’s exploring it with a heartfelt, emotional, critical eye, taking that subject matter and being funny about it, then kind of bringing it home with the depth that he did. I was just like, “This is the wackiest story in the book, but also one of the sweetest.”

Now that folks have started reading the book, have you received any particularly satisfying feedback?

I think it’s biased, but my dad had heard of zero artists in the book except for maybe the Talking Heads, and he was like, “I’m glued to this thing. It’s a great exploration of this lifestyle.” It was cool for someone like that, who went in without weighing any particular story by the size of the band or artist, to have this complete moment of, “Lemme tell you what my favorite ones are.”

When we were putting it together, we kind of had this festival sort of mentality like, “Let’s make sure everybody’s represented” and “Let’s have another headliner.” But it’s great to leave that mentality and have people be like, “Hey, this is just a great piece of writing by this person.” It’s been really cool to see people react to it in that way.

In thinking back on all the memorable meals you’ve experienced on tour, what’s the first one that comes to mind?

There are so many of them, but this one is fresh in my mind. It just happened. We were in Sweden on a day off and I really appreciate the days off because then you can luxuriate in the meal and not have to think about where you’re going next. So we were in this little town in Sweden on our way to Stockholm when we stopped. We had a hotel on this lake and we had the night off, so we went and got this incredible Scandinavian meal—not a highfalutin Noma kind of thing, just a really good restaurant with incredible fish and high-quality local ingredients.

The food was amazing, but it was more about a nice moment with the band and our tour manager, where we could stop and pause and breathe. We could sit across from each other and appreciate where we were and take a second to be like, “Isn’t it great that we’re all in this small town in Sweden together?” The meal was excellent, but that’s what it was really about.

80 years later, movie tells story of SC woman’s battalion during World War II

COLUMBIA — When Charity Adams Earley was sent across seas in 1944 , she was faced with a monumental task: Get millions of pieces of mail to the soldiers meant to receive them.
Under her leadership, a battalion of Black women nicknamed the Six Triple Eight (for the 6888th) sorted and sent the mail in three months — about half the time one general predicted. Their story disappeared in much of the history of World War II, but with a new movie, the Columbia native has hit the spotlight, more than 20 years after her death.
After achieving the highest possible rank for a woman in the Army at the time, Earley became a fixture of the Ohio city where she lived. She died Jan. 13, 2002, 23 years ago Monday.
Charity Adams Earley

Born in Kittrell, North Carolina, Earley’s family moved to Columbia when she was young. Growing up in Columbia, Earley excelled. She was among a dozen elementary school students whose test scores were high enough to skip middle school entirely, though her parents decided to keep her in her grade, since she was already several years ahead of her peers.
Earley graduated as valedictorian in 1934 from Booker T. Washington High School, the first Black public high school in Columbia and the largest statewide.
She received an academic scholarship to Wilberforce University in Ohio, a prestigious Black college, where she studied math, Latin, physics and history, according to the National Women’s History Museum.
A portrait of Charity Adams Earley taken in the early 1940s. (Provided/U.S. Army Women’s Museum)
After graduating college in 1938, Earley returned to Columbia, where she taught math and science to middle school students. Over her summer breaks, she studied vocational psychology at Ohio State University.
When the United States joined World War II, Earley applied to enlist in the Women’s Army Corps. She was one of 40 Black women chosen to be part of the first officer training class.
By the time she left the service in 1946, Earley was a lieutenant colonel, the highest possible rank for a woman at the time.
The Six Triple Eight

As the military postal service tried to get billions of pieces of mail to soldiers stationed overseas, a backlog piled up. Letters and packages sat in warehouses and airport hangars, sometimes for years at a time, as morale dropped because soldiers hadn’t heard from their loved ones.
By the time the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion was sent to Birmingham, England, in 1944, millions of pieces of mail sat untouched. Rats had gotten into some packages containing food, and the warehouses were poorly lit and unheated, according to the U.S. Army.
On top of that, sorting was not as simple as matching names and addresses. Many pieces of mail were addressed using nicknames or common names, meaning the women had to search through thousands of soldiers to find the correct one. Troops often moved before the letters reached them, so the addresses listed were no longer correct. And some soldiers had died, meaning the women had to return the letters to the senders.
Earley, who was commanding officer of the battalion, scheduled the 855 women to work in three, eight-hour shifts each day. She later estimated the women went through 65,000 pieces of mail each day, for a total of more than 17 million packages and letters.
The officials who sent the women there expected the task to take them six months. Instead, it took them three.
“She was a very determined woman,” her daughter, Judith Earley, told the SC Daily Gazette. “To her mind, she was probably doing what needed to be done.”
After sorting all the letters in England, the battalion went to Rouen and Paris, France, to organize more letters. By 1946, all of the women had returned to the United States, where the unit was disbanded.
Delayed accolades

After disbanding, the Six Triple Eight received several medals recognizing their accomplishments. In the years following the war, however, their story was lost to history, said Stanley Earley III, Earley’s son, who lives in Prince George’s County, Maryland.
“Things happen when they happen,” the 71-year-old told the Gazette. “They should’ve received recognition decades ago.”
That began to change in 2018, when Fort Leavenworth in Kansas dedicated a monument to the unit. The next year, the battalion received a Meritorious Unit Commendation. In 2022, the battalion received the Congressional Gold Medal.
Charity Adams Earley talks businesses with other Women’s Army Corps members at her desk in Des Moines, Iowa, in the early 1940s. (Provided/U.S. Army Women’s Museum)
Earley became the first Black woman to have an Army fort named after her in 2023, when Fort Lee in Virginia was renamed Fort Gregg-Adams. The hyphenated title came from Earley’s maiden name and Lt. Gen. Arthur J. Gregg, the first Black Army officer to receive the rank of lieutenant general.
The South Carolina House recognized her with a resolution last year.
“Her hard work and contributions have not gone unnoticed, and the impact she has had on this great nation is remarkable,” reads the resolution sponsored by former Rep. Ivory Thigpen, D-Columbia, and adopted unanimously in February 2024.
A 2019 documentary, also called “The Six Triple Eight,” brought more attention to the story. A magazine article that same year inspired director Tyler Perry’s movie, which debuted on Netflix in December. A stage musical is also in the works.
The recent interest in the women, though belated, is a reminder of other forgotten stories about Black women, said Crissandra Elliott, who has been researching Earley for Delta Sigma Theta, the sorority of which both were members.
“Finally, somebody let the world know that what they did mattered,” Elliott said.
The movie

Judith Earley was apprehensive when she first heard from the filmmakers that they were interested in turning her mother’s story into a movie.
“You never know how these kinds of things are going to turn out,” the 66-year-old said from her home in Dayton, Ohio.
Judith Earley and her brother, Stanley Earley, did not play a major role in making the film, other than answering some family questions that came up. But at early screenings, they both decided their mother had been portrayed well.
The movie seemed to be accurate to what they know of their mother’s history, both siblings said. At the same time, though, they didn’t know their mom as the soldier who Kerry Washington plays in the movie.
Charity Adams Earley plays ping-pong in Rouen, France, on July 29, 1945. (Provided/U.S. Army Women’s Museum)
To Stanley and Judith Earley, Charity Adams Earley was the mom who remade a ragdoll lost in a house fire to look like her daughter and who played ping-pong with them on the family’s table.
Earley sometimes talked about her time in the Army, but the siblings didn’t realize until adulthood that their mother was a significant historical figure, they said. When historians several years ago got excited to see Earley’s journal from the time, for instance, her daughter was shocked anew at her prominence, she said.
“It’s just now coming into focus, because she’s my mother and I don’t think of her that way,” Judith Earley said.
Still, they saw the mother they knew shine through during certain moments in the film.
Soon after Stanley Earley had started a new job for the city of Dayton, Ohio, he found himself across the table with his mother, negotiating an agreement with the Red Cross board of which his mother was a member. She singled out one line of the contract, and Stanley Earley realized she had read every document all the way through.
That level of organization, as well as her ability to negotiate without disrespecting anyone, shone through in Washington’s depiction, Stanley Earley said.
“She was always really prepared, and that was always something that made her very successful,” Stanley Earley said.
Work after the war

While she told her children stories about the Six Triple Eight and her military service, that was only a small part of her life, Stanley Earley said.
Charity Adams Earley on April 3, 1983. (Provided/U.S. Army Women’s Museum)
“My mother was never really a person who focused on the past,” Stanley Earley said. “She did many, many things after this.”
After finishing her master’s degree at Ohio State University, Earley worked for the Veterans Administration in Ohio. She worked for several colleges, including as dean of students at Georgia State College.
Earley and her husband, Stanley Earley Jr., spent some time in Switzerland before settling down in Ohio. There, Charity Adams Earley sat on boards for the Red Cross, the local community college and a utility company.
The house in which she grew up still stands on Fairfield Road in Columbia. The Columbia chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, of which Earley was a member, now uses the home as its office, Elliott said.
“We’re very, very proud of her,” Elliott said.

A French Action Thriller Is The Top Movie On Netflix Right Now

“Ad Vitam” is currently the most popular movie on Netflix, according to the platform’s public ranking system.The French action thriller premiered on Jan. 10 and quickly zoomed up the streaming service’s trending list. “Ad Vitam” follows a former member of France’s premier police tactical unit who is pulled into a dangerous conspiracy when his pregnant wife is kidnapped. Advertisement

“Den of Thieves” is the top movie on Max right now following the release of the sequel “Den of Thieves 2: Pantera” on Jan. 10. The 2018 action crime film focuses on Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department officers in their efforts to stop a crew of former Marines-turned-thieves from committing their next big heist. “Den of Thieves” stars Gerard Butler, Pablo Schreiber, Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, O’Shea Jackson Jr., Evan Jones and Dawn Olivieri.“The Wasp”

EXCLUSIVE: Liza Minnelli’s Memoir ‘Set to Be Boring Promotional Book’ As Diva is ‘Refusing to Tackle Dad’s Sexuality’ or Wild Studio 54 Drug Days

It’s Over: Jennifer Lopez ‘Isn’t Wasting Time’ Moving on From Ben Affleck as $550 Million Divorce LoomsGossipIt’s all over all right. On May 14, just one day before news broke that Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez are allegedly headed toward a divorce, the singer was spotted house-hunting on her own in Beverly Hills, RadarOnline.com revealed.BY Aaron Johnson

‘Reading Opens the World’ Event Brings Nearly 30,000 Free Books to Community

Published January 13th, 2025 at 1:45 pm

The Rio Rancho School Employees Union and United Health Professionals of New Mexico partnered this weekend to distribute nearly 30,000 free children’s books to students, families and educators at Ernest Stapleton Elementary School.

The book distribution was part of the American Federation of Teachers’ national “Reading Opens the World” campaign, which aims to strengthen public schools and address learning loss, loneliness and literacy.

UHPNM and the Rio Rancho School Employees Union are AFT affiliates. The books were donated through AFT’s First Book program, which has distributed more than 10 million books nationwide.

“We are thrilled to host this community event, which brought together the Rio Rancho Police Department, Rio Rancho Fire Department, Nurses Health Professionals, Rio Rancho School Employees Union members and Sundance Dental to promote literacy, health and safety,” said Adrienne Enghouse, RN, Representative for United Health Professionals of New Mexico. “This collaboration reflects our shared commitment to supporting and uplifting our community.”

Enghouse, a Corrales resident, said the Jan. 12 event also featured free health screenings and activities for young students and their families.

Families could take up to 10 books per student, with a maximum of 30 books per family. Teaching staff could select up to 50 books for their classrooms.

In addition to books, the event offered:

Health Screenings and Safety Demonstrations:

Nurses and health professionals from UHPNM provided blood pressure screenings.

Dental staff offered dental care tips and education.

Firefighters and police officers taught safety tips.

Family-Friendly Activities:

The “Tales of Joy” reading room which featued therapy dogs.

Craft stations, including “Swifty-bracelet” making and a life-sized poster creation area.

 Over 240 volunteers spent Saturday unloading books and setting up the event.

“I Am Supposed To Be Here, I Was Meant To Be Here”: Jharrel Jerome Speaks On Overcoming Self Doubt, Perseverance And His New Film ‘Unstopabble’

I love that you said that you’re growing with every single role, and you’re tapping into a new emotion, new memories, or even creating new realities. With this role in particular, Antony Robles’ story is so inspiring, what part of his story inspired you the most?Jharrel: I would say his willpower, his mental drive. The reason we’re inspired by it is not just because he won, it’s because of how incredibly militant he was and how he persevered through everything. I can’t complain about nothing anymore, like if I’m too tired and I don’t wanna go to the gym I think of Anthony. I think “Well, would he be tired and I go to the gym?” He probably would be tired but he would still make it there. I trained with him for seven months, five days a week. I got to see his grit and his determination and I just want to take that and apply it to all aspects of my life. That sort of grit, that determination, that willpower, and the idea that I really can’t be stopped.And it was also the headspace to always overcome whatever society has said you must be, where you fit in this box. Jharell: Exactly.So how do you ensure that live your life past the expectations of what society expects of you as a young Black man?Jharrel: Just sticking to my word. Believing in me first. I have a lot of crutches in my life, my mother, friends, and even people on my team that I really truly care about and trust but at the end of the day, I have to trust in me first. That sounds a little selfish but it’s allowed me to be this selective and for you to compliment me the way you did in the beginning and say like “bang, bang, bang” – I’ve said being selective and saying no can be risky. Life moves on, finances and all these things exist so it’s a risk game to be like “no, no, no” but because I believe in myself it allows me to be in a room like this at the right times and in the right places, so I like just sticking to my word. That sounds like a cocky answer.Not really!Jharrel: Phew okay!If you don’t trust and believe in yourself, then who’s going to trust and believe in you? You have got to be your own number-one fan before you get another.