Note: This piece gathers together a series of brief encounters I’ve had over the years with musicians whose work has meant something to me. None of these moments were arranged or particularly dramatic. Most of them happened in small rooms, hallways, or outside venues with cigarettes involved. In several cases I barely spoke to the artist at all.
That’s partly the point.
Live music has a strange ecology around it. The concert itself is only the visible center. Around it orbit all sorts of smaller human moments: waiting in line, wandering the wrong neighborhood looking for the venue, sharing a cigarette on a porch, talking to a guitarist you’ll never meet again, watching a performer interact with family, or occasionally—very occasionally—receiving an unexpected gesture that lands with real human weight.
The encounters recorded here took place over roughly two decades and across a handful of cities: Flagstaff, Kyoto, Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, and Brooklyn. They involve musicians from several corners of the indie and folk worlds, from Richard Buckner and the Thompsons to Spencer Krug, Jay Som, and Matthew Houck of Phosphorescent. What they share is not a common genre but a certain intimacy of scale. None of these moments occurred in arenas. They happened in rooms where the distance between artist and listener was small enough for ordinary human contact to remain possible.
As with many essays on this site, the goal is simply to record these moments before they fade. Music culture is full of stories about bands, albums, and movements. What interests me just as much are the fleeting intersections between artists and listeners that occur around the edges of those larger narratives.
Sometimes those edges are where the real memory lives.
Epigraph
“There’s a girl with cherry chapstick on / and nothing more.”
I. Richard Buckner — Flagstaff, 1999
My first close encounter with a musician wasn’t really an encounter at all.
It happened in the dead of winter in 1999 in Flagstaff, Arizona, at a tiny bar where maybe twenty-five people had gathered to see Richard Buckner. There was no stage. The gear sat right on the floor. You could reach out and scratch someone’s itch if you felt like it. Buckner warmed up literally five feet from where I stood.
At the time Buckner had just come through his small breakthrough with Devotion and Doubt, a record I loved deeply. The Hill hadn’t come out yet. For a while before the show he seemed distinctly grumpy. He mentioned he’d driven solo through the mountains, through Four Corners and across long empty roads to get there, and he looked tired in the way a touring musician sometimes looks tired—bone-deep, like the road had followed him into the room.
I got a drink at the tiny bar. The place was so small that it felt less like a concert than a gathering.
Then he started playing.
He ran through most of Devotion and Doubt, and as the set unfolded the grumpiness lifted. Something about the songs reset the room. It was one of those nights where the distance between performer and audience collapses almost completely.
I never spoke to him.
But I remember the night vividly. Seeing a musician like Buckner that close, playing songs that mattered to me in a room barely larger than a living room, felt like glimpsing something essential about music itself. Not the industry, not the mythology—just the simple fact of a person standing there singing.
II. Linda and Teddy Thompson — Kyoto, 2013
Years later I found myself in a very different room: Taku Taku, a small venue on the south side of Teramachi in central Kyoto.
The room is wonderful: long wooden tables where everyone sits together, cheap beer—about five hundred yen—and a kind of relaxed intimacy that suits folk music perfectly.
The show was around 2013 and featured Linda Thompson and her son Teddy Thompson.
I had actually seen Teddy there the year before with Sachie and had been impressed. When I heard he was returning with Linda we immediately got tickets.
The dynamic between them was fascinating.
Teddy opened the show and it became immediately clear that he was acting as both performer and curator of his mother’s legacy. Linda had struggled with severe stage fright dating back to the days of Richard Thompson and their partnership in the 1970s. She had even cancelled a tour the year before that was supposed to include this very venue.
Teddy’s set was upbeat country-rock, confident and generous. He handled the room beautifully.
Then Linda came out.
She had an entirely different presence—quieter, cooler, almost regal. There was something transcendent about her, something that seemed to carry decades of musical history into the room.
She sang “Bright Lights” and “Walking on a Wire.” The room fell silent in the way good rooms sometimes do.
She didn’t play two of my personal favorites—“Did She Jump or Was She Pushed?” and “Dimming of the Day”—but it hardly mattered.
After the show Teddy stood around happily talking with fans, signing things and chatting with anyone who approached him. Linda spoke to almost no one except Teddy.
Watching the two of them together gave a glimpse into the quiet gravity of family life inside a musical career.
III. Spencer Krug — Kyoto, 2018
Another Kyoto night, another small venue.
This time it was Urbanguild in 2018, where Spencer Krug was performing under his project Moonface.
Maybe forty or fifty people were there.
The room felt reverent, almost like a chapel.
Krug played solo piano and performed essentially the entire album Julia with Blue Jeans On. When he played “Julia”—a top twenty song of all time for me—and “Barbarian,” the room lit up completely.
Oh man was it on.
At the end of the set he apologized to the venue for one mistake he felt he’d made and joked that he’d beaten their piano to hell.
Then he stepped into the second-floor hallway for a cigarette.
I joined him.
We smoked together and talked for a few minutes. I told him how much I loved Moonface and Wolf Parade. He thanked me and talked about how wonderful their trip in Japan had been—about pasta, mountain cabins where they’d been playing shows, and the strange practical question artists like him face about housing.
He mentioned that for a working musician it’s not always clear whether buying a house is even possible.
It was a fascinating glimpse into the everyday realities of touring musicians.
That night remains the greatest musical moment of my life, followed only by Annie Hardy once playing “After the Gold Rush” on a piano in Band Home.
IV. Jay Som — Boston, 2018
Later that same year, in mid-December, I saw Jay Som in Boston at a tiny club.
There was no stage. Cables snaked everywhere like a rat’s nest across the floor. The band was maybe five feet away from the audience.
Thirty minutes before the show Jay Som stepped out to take a walk and see some friends. I remember briefly wondering whether she’d make it back in time.
Outside on the small porch I ended up smoking with the band’s guitarist. I offered him a cigarette made from fancy black tobacco I’d bought on 42nd Street.
He lit it and laughed.
“Man,” he said, “I haven’t had one of these in forever.”
We talked for a while. He asked my story. I told him I liked Jay Som a lot but was really in town to see Phosphorescent.
Then, for no particular reason, I told him about Isobel.
He listened patiently for several minutes, then told me about some of the women in his own life. It was one of those brief porch conversations between strangers that somehow becomes unexpectedly real.
Then Jay Som returned and everyone drifted back inside for the show.
V. Matthew Houck and the Phosphorescent Run
In December 2018 I followed Matthew Houck and Phosphorescent across several East Coast cities.
Brooklyn. Philadelphia. Washington, D.C. Boston.
It felt less like attending concerts than like a small pilgrimage.
Brooklyn
The first show was at Brooklyn Steel.
I got lost on the way because I mistakenly went to Brooklyn Bowl, where I’d seen a Hold Steady show earlier that week. I used their Wi-Fi to look up directions and the map claimed Brooklyn Steel was fifteen minutes away.
It took closer to an hour.
Eventually two guys outside an electrical shop pointed the way and mentioned that the building used to be a foundry. I walked another five blocks and found the place, still early enough to be the first person in line.
I smoked a few cigarettes, watched the roadies unload equipment, and studied the program.
The show started around seven.
The band sounded fantastic. Pedal steel, keyboards, guitars, bass, drums, Houck at the center introducing each member with his trademark warmth. I thought the highlights would be “A New Birth in New England” or “C’est La Vie No. 2,” but the song that truly stunned me was “These Rocks.”
After the show a young woman helped me borrow Wi-Fi so I could order an Uber back to my Best Western in Brooklyn. Without it I would have been completely stranded.
Philadelphia
The next night was Philadelphia, at a medium-sized venue somewhere between First and Tenth Street.
The crowd was rowdier than Brooklyn, which had felt a bit corporate and sedate.
The show itself was better.
It also happened to fall the night before a strange and memorable evening in the city—an encounter I later wrote about in a short story called Simona.
I’ll leave it at that here.
Washington, D.C.
The peak of the run came at the legendary 9:30 Club.
I arrived early enough to watch soundcheck and spent time talking with the merch girl. I bought a black sweatshirt with gold C’est La Vie lettering.
When she asked where I was from and I said Japan, and that I’d flown across the world to see the band, she smiled and said she’d be sure to tell Matthew.
The show was extraordinary.
“A New Birth in New England.”
“Song for Zula.”
“Wolves,” with Houck’s distinctive keening vocal.
After the show Houck came offstage sweating, a towel around his neck, and began greeting fans along the rope line—handshakes, fist bumps, quick thanks.
Maybe fifty people in he spotted me.
He stepped over the rope.
Then he gave me the biggest bear hug I have ever received in my life.
Boston
The final show was at Royale Nightclub on December 8, 2018.
After the show it happened again.
I was wearing the same C’est La Vie sweatshirt. Houck saw me in the line, stepped over the rope once more, and engulfed me in another huge hug.
The show itself was good—the third best of the run after DC and Philly—but the moment that stayed with me was the hug.
What stayed with me wasn’t the hug itself, but the certainty behind it. Most gestures come wrapped in hesitation or self-consciousness; people soften their own impact before they even reach you. Houck didn’t. And part of the weight was this: he’d been through it himself—not abstractly, not a decade removed, but in the very songs he wrote on Muchacho, the record he made after his own life had come apart. He’d talked about it publicly, openly, without varnish. So when he came down off the stage to hug me, it wasn’t fandom or performance or politeness. It was recognition—one human being who had already walked through his own fire seeing another who was still in it.
And the thing about weight is that you feel it instantly.
For a second, you’re not holding yourself up alone.
Someone else is taking on a share.
That’s why I remember it.
Not because it was dramatic.
Because it was unmistakably real.
Dedication:
May All Your Favorite Bands Stay Together