The Rambling Gypsy

Bones of Her Enemies

The Rambling Gypsy Season 4 Episode 7

The raw passion of pursuing music against all odds takes center stage as Bo Brummel joins Tiffany Foy in her "she shed" for a candid, laughter-filled conversation that traces his unlikely path to Texas stages.

Bo pulls back the curtain on his musical journey that began at age five singing in church, influenced by a grandfather who played piano and briefly performed in bands. With disarming honesty, he recounts the crossroads where he abandoned thoughts of baseball and law school to follow his musical calling, despite coming from East Texas towns where "it's not a place that encourages dreamers." The financial struggles of his early career – sometimes down to "ten dollars to my name and one pack of ramen noodles" – reveal the sacrifice behind the spotlight.

The conversation shifts to the formation of Timber Wilde with Garrett Mann, a musical partnership that blossomed from casual jam sessions to recording original music. Bo shares the surprising story behind their current single "Bones," inspired by watching his 13-year-old French Bulldog Daphne sleeping with her toys. This moment of everyday observation transformed into songwriting magic as he composed most of the track in just an hour – though he admits needing Garrett's help to figure out how to play what he'd written.

Listeners are treated to a glimpse of the vibrant New Braunfels music scene, where artists regularly join each other onstage spontaneously, creating unexpected musical moments. The episode culminates with Bo performing an acoustic version of "Bones," showcasing his distinctive raspy vocals that Tiffany playfully warns female listeners about experiencing while their significant others are present.

Whether you're a musician, an animal lover, or someone chasing dreams against practical advice, Bo's story reminds us that authentic passion resonates far beyond conventional success. Follow Timber Wilde on streaming platforms and watch for their upcoming releases throughout the year.

The Rambling Gypsy podcast is a behind-the-scenes look at the lives of real Texans doing real sh*t. We're pulling back the curtains on our daily lives - and you're invited to laugh and learn along with us.

Links:
http://www.youtube.com/@TheRamblingGypsy
https://www.facebook.com/GypsyMammaTiff/
https://www.instagram.com/GypsyMammaTiff/
https://www.theramblinggypsypodcast.com/

Speaker 2:

We are in the she shed. Hey everybody, I'm Tiffany Foy. Welcome to the Rambling Gypsy podcast and we are in my she shed Once again. We still say we are fortunate to be fortunate, even though my porch is not there and my she shed's in here. But all good. This is Beau Brumble.

Speaker 3:

That's me. Yes, how y'all.

Speaker 2:

Good, you good.

Speaker 3:

I'm great, are you good?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you had a big night last night.

Speaker 3:

I did.

Speaker 2:

Last night was the um. It's the proper name radio.

Speaker 3:

Texas regional radio report.

Speaker 2:

It's so many R's, that's why it is. That's what I was about to say. That's why they put the three in front of there, Cause I would have, I would stumble all over that and you went and you performed. I did your musician for everybody that does not know. Yes, I'd try to be, try to be to be, try to be.

Speaker 3:

that is such a crock of shit um, oh good, we can cuss on this podcast oh yeah, I got the big fat e on there.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I, we're like supposed to wait until the first, what 10 minutes or something.

Speaker 3:

But yeah, I don't you don't give a fuck. I haven't made it yet. I haven't made it I don't, I don't.

Speaker 2:

no, I try every single time. No, I don't, really't, really, that's a lie. No, and we try not to lie on my podcast, because brazenly ignore that, it's just a suggestion. It, yeah it, it just happens, it just comes natural to me. It is my favorite word. All of them are that you're not supposed to say the four letters, the three letters, the all, the all the things.

Speaker 2:

But, um, we've been friends for a very long time and I was thinking on the way over here, so I try not to pregame or talk to you guys before we do anything like this stuff before we started. Yeah, yes, because it and I learned this from a friend of mine that's done podcasts Like Tiffany, you need to stop stop thinking too hard.

Speaker 2:

You need to just free, flow it and it's really. It's so much more fun. But I was thinking on the way over here I don't remember where the first place that I saw you play.

Speaker 3:

I don't either. I know it was around like I moved to Austin in 2012. And I started playing around new Bromble's around that time.

Speaker 2:

Lily was tiny. Yeah, brumples around that time.

Speaker 3:

Lily was tiny. Yeah, she was uh six at that time.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, she's 19 years old it's insane, like when we were at fry height which you guys know we're new brumples, texas um fry heights country store that my adopted grandparents used to own way back then. And uh, it is now. It's still a staple. It was a staple back then, but you guys were playing on a random Sunday afternoon and I have not seen her and I mean maybe a year, and she was walking around.

Speaker 2:

I was like oh, we need to put some clothes on you, you were so little, just not that long ago ago, and I was like no holy pickles from like 14 to 19 is a pretty drastic change in a young lady. This woman is stunning, yeah, phenomenally beautiful stood after mom, thank goodness you have just done such an amazing job with that child. She is just the sweetest thing. But I was thinking about that on the way up here. I was thinking she was so little. And now, yes, no.

Speaker 2:

And just, it is terrifying, it's yeah.

Speaker 3:

As you should be.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I'm terrified, and she's not mine and she is, yeah, she's phenomenal, but you have been um playing for a very long time. Yes, I have, I have been what I like to tell or introduce everybody, that that introduce everybody that does not know who you are, where you came from, where did the music side of Bo come from? Where is that.

Speaker 3:

Church. I started singing in church when I was really young five or six years old singing and I just always loved it. My granddad plays piano and guitar and stuff and we'd sit around and mess with songs so it was in the family. Yeah my parents not so much, but my granddad yeah, my was even in a band. Briefly really way back, when there's a video floating around somewhere of him opening for neil mccoy.

Speaker 3:

Shut before he was still neil mcgoy then, Because he's from Longview, close to where I grew up, and so, yeah, he never did it professionally, but semi-pro, I guess, yeah, and then I took it way farther than anyone approves of.

Speaker 2:

Did you know that that's what you wanted to do?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, pretty much. I mean I wanted to do I talked about. You know I wanted to play baseball for a while but my commitment to conditioning was not great and I was more interested in we're going to talk about his conditioning skills here in a little bit Because we were touching base on it before we. I was more interested in like girls and beer and stuff. You know, music things, well then, sports things, right. And I briefly, you know, toyed with the idea of going to law school, but then I was just like man.

Speaker 2:

It's a lot of debating. It's so long, like all the spending the money and the time to do it. The wardrobe is so tight I could just be playing guitar this whole time. You know yeah, and so here you are.

Speaker 3:

Yes, I started playing full time or like put my first band together when I was like 25 or 26, up in Hallsville Texas, longview, texas, yeah, and they all started getting married and having kids and things and I was just like I'm not done yet.

Speaker 2:

So I moved to Austin and here we are, and here you are. Yeah, how long did you stay in Austin?

Speaker 3:

I was there for eight years, I believe, and I've been here for six, so that's it, mm-hmm. No shit, I almost lived here when I lived in Austin.

Speaker 2:

Well, I was going to say, wait, what yeah?

Speaker 3:

I would spend days at a time down here.

Speaker 2:

Yes, Yep, did you know? When you were in the longview area the back, did you know that new bronfels was such a a music town?

Speaker 3:

did you know, I knew austin was, I didn't really know you didn't realize, I visited new bronfels but yeah, I'd always, you know, at that time, especially that was before it's become what it's become, austin, you know it's like live music capital of the world.

Speaker 3:

That's where everybody goes and and so I did. And I had friends there, amy and April Rankin, the Rankin twins, their guitar player was looking for a roommate and Amy called me and was like hey, I know you've been talking about coming down here, like this would be a. He's got a nice place, he's a nice dude, you know, rent is affordable, all that like you're probably going to get a better opportunity than right now. And I had a four-year-old child how did you know the?

Speaker 3:

rankin twins. So how did you? I've known them since we were like kid kids really are they from the same area? Like around longview. Okay, um, they, I think, were originally from like the like coast area, gotcha. I'm like um port a-ish, portland, and, uh, they played sports against my younger sister, and so I knew them like in junior high wow and then we kind of lost each other for a few years and then ran into them randomly at the frio river um, just at the dance up there.

Speaker 3:

I was like man that looks like those girls, those pine tree girls. Yeah, I'm like, oh yeah, that's them. And so then we like reconnected, and they went to A&M and I would go drive down to College Station, we'd go watch Cross County Ragweed play and all the guys that were coming up on the scene at that time, right. And so, yeah, it was kind of strange that whole. I hadn't even thought about that whole evolution of it really in a while.

Speaker 2:

It's kind of random, it's really kind of wild when you go and it's the things that I have found and learned about people like yourself that I've known for a long minute in the music scene and go back to has been so interesting because I mean, I feel like these are the things, that it's kind of a wild ride for everyone.

Speaker 3:

I think it is you know and what I've.

Speaker 2:

I don't call it coincidence or whatever, but I think probably in the last month to two there has been more musicians like yourself, that baseball was where they were going and then, poof, yeah, out from the sky fell a guitar or a pair of panties or something from a stage or a concert and you're like well you know what?

Speaker 3:

It's funny how those two things coincide sometimes.

Speaker 2:

Maybe that ball, maybe I should be hitting something else. Baseball just doesn't look near as fun as that nice 34 double D that just landed across my.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, on the odds of making it actually making a college team are really, really slim, very. And then, if you you know, going beyond that to semi-pro is very, very slim. And then from there to like actually making a living playing baseball I mean you've won in a few million, right, and you know the odds are about that good of playing music.

Speaker 2:

Their odds are that good about anything? And right, if you really honestly lay it all out and you think about it you gotta just go with the thing that you love doing.

Speaker 3:

You do where it's like.

Speaker 2:

I don't mind being broke doing this right I mean well kind of like my podcast Right Right, I'm having a damn good time, but you know, it is so much fun I love it. I absolutely love it, right, but yeah.

Speaker 3:

I'll just make it work.

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 3:

As long as I'm not starving to death, and even then when I first like literally hungry sometimes.

Speaker 2:

yeah, you know I had ten dollars to my name, and you know one pack of ramen noodles in the cupboard.

Speaker 3:

You know it goes a long way. Well, when you're, when you yeah here we go here we go yeah, yeah gotta hope that's gonna last till friday yes, yeah, one noodle every hour.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we're gonna microwave one little noodle at a time. Blackberries on the side of the road, yeah hey look, if you need some fruit, we got some. I got some good mushrooms up here.

Speaker 3:

Fortunately, I'm making like dozens of dollars now. Yes, you're doing good. I eat fairly regularly now.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

Thank God, yeah, because we're going to go back to the drawing board. If not, in fact, we're going to go out and play some baseball. We have things that have. Things haven't changed On my bum knee, I do, you know. I've got all kinds of replacements here. We'll figure it out, we'll figure it out, so music happened, it did.

Speaker 3:

And I loved it. I really got full-blown addicted fairly young, but I just came from a place that just wasn't what you did.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

You know anyone from Longview, texas or Hallsville, texas it's still home. You know anyone from longview, texas, or hallsville, texas, grave, it's still home. You know I still love everyone but it's not a place that encourages dreamers. Right, it's, you know.

Speaker 2:

Get married, have babies, get your real job settle down right, you know, do the thing which nothing at all wrong with that no, if that's your gig, exactly it's not, no, no, it made me crazy.

Speaker 3:

It makes me crazy right now.

Speaker 2:

Thinking about it makes me like itchy yes, yeah, I don't sit still, I cannot do that. I work 20 where you know, 24, 7, 365. I am, I I don't sleep. I'm up hours on end and, yeah, I cannot. My brain would never be able to do the at eight o'clock. We have to be here at 12 o'clock.

Speaker 2:

We break for lunch and then at one o'clock we got to get back in, and then at five o'clock we get in our car and there is no groundhog day for this girl, absolutely not, it was not for me, no, and I had a couple of jobs like that.

Speaker 3:

I worked in oil and gas, I was a landman for a while and kind of had that kind of job, yeah, and the money was really good, but I just I hated it every day, you know, and I wasn't I didn't do a particularly good job, because I just didn't really give a shit.

Speaker 2:

Right, right, it wasn't your gig.

Speaker 3:

I had to bust my ass to. You know, make this rich guy richer and like doing things that you, things that I don't want to really run anybody's name through the mud or anything, but all companies are not particularly worried about it being fair or honest. Just give me more. It's a hunger game. That wasn't really for me either. I get it. I'm just like man. I'm not, and so this isn't. I didn't stick.

Speaker 2:

No, so you, the guitar is cruising and you do vocals, Did you cause I'm going to tell I'm always singing. I'm going to tell the world about your vocals.

Speaker 3:

It is, it is um, it is different.

Speaker 2:

It is's one word it is different, it is raspy, it is um. Girls, let me tell you something, all right, first of all. Yeah, if you have not heard this man's vocals, fuck off second of all you need to. Third, all you do not want to do it in front of your man or your significant other, or this needs to be um, yeah, so anyways while I'm sitting here wiggling in my seat.

Speaker 2:

Anyways, um, you played, we did um a big bash at the resort. We're going to go back to this, but I want to talk about your vocals for a second, because we had there was five of us that all turned 50. This was a couple years not us this one yeah this one and four others shut up.

Speaker 2:

Why are you talking about your knee? That's got a cramp in it, fuck off. Yeah, but yes, and we had a whole group of why are you talking about your knee? That's got a cramp in it? Fuck off. But yes, and we had a whole group of musicians and guys, and you guys all jumped up and played.

Speaker 3:

I left my guitar sitting down there that night.

Speaker 2:

There's a lot of things that have been left out there that belong to musicians, and thank goodness.

Speaker 3:

Might have had a little too much fun that day. A lot of us.

Speaker 2:

Yep, there was, yeah, there was yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, rio Trippiano came pulling up to the house and it was just got out and he was like hey man, uh, where's your guitar? Like oh man, like I mean just left it sitting in the parking lot.

Speaker 1:

It's not like sometimes need it, Sometimes late at night.

Speaker 2:

They say or sometimes at Gypsy River.

Speaker 3:

And fortunately he had picked it up for me One of the few times that he's actually gone out of his way to do something nice for me, you know, I love that. You just never know.

Speaker 2:

Big old bear, but there was a ton of people there. It was Gina's birthday too and she had a ton of people come in from in and out of town, which our whole crew. I was like, hey, this is what we're doing, I'm putting the thing together, I'm cooking. You guys come and play Boom, boom, boom. But for them they had never heard you guys play, so it was new. Some of them had heard, some didn't.

Speaker 2:

And then when you got up and it was right about the time that I was finally going to get to sit down and relax and chill, and around the concrete area we have what's called Cypress gardens. You've played there many a times and, um, it was for whatever reason, all the chairs were kind of going around this curved area and it was all women and I sat down and you got up there and played, and the look on their faces and everyone that was going and all I could turn around and look at all these women and I said I fucking told y'all, I told y'all and I told y'all, and I have recordings of these videos.

Speaker 2:

And then there is me in the background going my Lord, have mercy. That is not the blood that is flowing through here right now. Jesus, take the will. And so, yes, I'm going to play this snippet of me in the background talking about him and his vocals, so I don't want to embarrass you, but I'm going to. I just want you to know that if y'all have not heard this man sing you need to Thanks.

Speaker 3:

I didn't know.

Speaker 2:

Anyways, now that we've, already gone to church and back and. I should probably. I need some Jesus um. Had a band in Austin that you started and then you?

Speaker 3:

yeah, well, in east texas first, and then moved to austin and I never really had a like a set band in austin, uh, but I did play, for it was just boat rumble, you know, I didn't have. And then I met garrett man, uh, around the time. Well, I don't know, it's been a long time, but uh, we talked about playing together for a long time and then, finally, where did y'all? Cross paths, uh, around san marcos. He was still living in san marcos at the time.

Speaker 2:

Uh, a few he was, that's like a few girls ago uh you know, so yeah, I won't mention her name but he was living with a woman there and then, yep, uh, it's kind of like this undisclosed location that we're hanging out at right now and we've met.

Speaker 3:

I think kylie and I were hanging out like at their apartment in san marcos and we were, you know, talking about music and things and what we were into and all kinds of stuff. Man, we ought to get together and jam sometime. And maybe like a year after that he called me and was like hey, I've got this gig, this gig at Billy's, I need a singer. He booked himself a gig.

Speaker 2:

I mean, you know what I'm just going to run and stick my foot in the door.

Speaker 3:

I don't know what the hell I'm going to do when I get in there, but we're going to fucking figure it out. And so, yeah, whenever we played together once and it was like man, we've got to keep here we are.

Speaker 2:

Timberwild, timberwild, has it been that name, didn't y'all start?

Speaker 3:

We never really had any other names official. We were just Bo and Garrett for a long time. Then, when we recorded an album, it was like we got to come up with a name.

Speaker 2:

We need to figure some shit out, we need to put something on paper. I think what is really cool and I've talked about this before is with you guys in New Braunfels and it's not necessarily not all from New Braunfels the way that y'all can jump up on stage and, just like you said, garrett booked himself a gig.

Speaker 3:

Has no idea I'll figure it out what the hell who's going to plug in the microphone?

Speaker 2:

Who's going to whatever? I'm figure it out what the hell is. Who's gonna plug in the microphone? Who's gonna whatever? I'm just gonna get up there and we're gonna wean it. But y'all will jump up. It will start out with you and garrett. The next thing you know, court will walk in the door and boom's on stage.

Speaker 2:

Then you got all those mrc boys yeah, bd3, that'll just pop up and you have rio that'll randomly walk in the door. But what is so cool, and especially bringing up the the uh, 50th orgasmic birthday party that we all had, thank you very much, um is all of y'all getting up there and not not even knowing a song, or not? Right or whatever, yeah just getting in how does that happen?

Speaker 3:

uh, uh, just a lot of years of doing it.

Speaker 3:

It's not like y'all just sit back and study each other, or you just when those guys you know like it's mind, I'm not that kind of a guitar player where I can just jump in, jump in and I've kind of got to know the song, at least know. Uh, I'm more of like a rhythm player, so I kind of, I mean, I can kind of figure out the basic idea of what we're doing, right, and just kind of be in the background. Yeah, but those guys you know, like Eric and Garrett, and you can just kind of tell them what key you're playing in, it's ridiculous. And they'll just start playing and yeah, I can't do that and it is, it's amazing.

Speaker 3:

The amount of talent, lots of guys around here, yeah, the amount of talent lots of guys around here, yeah that, and, and women too, that I mean.

Speaker 2:

Just there's a lot of talent there is a lot of talent and to watch, hop into harmonies and hop in and play, lead or hop in, you know can and just jump up and all of a sudden it becomes a orchestra yeah, in the backyard and you're like wait, what the hell was that just I'm pretty sure we should print this or something you know I mean, yeah, it's, it's phenomenal, and if you've not witnessed it or you guys have never been to new brumples to watch and see how this happens, you'll it's never planned.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it can be very random we're very it is big on not making plans no, I mean god forbid.

Speaker 2:

If there was a plan, it would we've rearranged this plan three times.

Speaker 3:

okay, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

But wait for it, it's happening, we're here, we're here and it's happening. But yeah, it's really um, it's phenomenal and I've witnessed it a million times is how you guys can. One will pick up, one will start singing, one will take the lead, one will be watching the drummer. We'll pick up up one, turn around and look at the other guitar player and go, okay, you got this, I'm gonna grab it just knows how to do it and knows their role and, like, knows what, what they can add to it yes, you know everybody kind of knows what.

Speaker 3:

okay, well, that guy's doing that. So and me, you know, I mean I can play rhythm and I can sing, and so lots of times, if it's, I can kind of do a little harmony here and there. But you know, I've kind of got to be the guys jump in with me instead of the guy who jumps in. Yeah Right, I need a flotation device or my drone. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I got a nice wiggle.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 2:

Speaking of your, okay, and this is something, too, that, and I'm one of those I pay attention to a lot, I pay attention to to a lot in in musicians and, um, noticing the bass and the bass with the, with the drummer, and the blah, blah blah, um, you have a, a foot wiggle.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I do?

Speaker 3:

I see it in videos all the time.

Speaker 2:

And I will yeah it is. Yeah, it's like a the toe, doesn't? I will yeah, it is.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's like the toe doesn't move as much, it's the heel that moves.

Speaker 2:

You hook your boot on the back and if y'all mark my words, I will sit and tell this to so many different people and they're like no, I don't. Yeah, bullshit. Go back and go watch some of the gigs where everybody's recording you. But you will hook the back of the little bottom of the bar stool and you will and you wiggle.

Speaker 3:

And kind of like walk you do, Almost walk you do but you don't move, you're just sitting.

Speaker 2:

You're still on the bar stool, but yeah.

Speaker 3:

I don't think I don't realize I'm doing it until I see. You know, I've seen several people like send me, like look at your feet right Like you look like a little kid and you know, know, like barber stool yes and I'm a fidgeter and I never sit still and I'm always tweedling with something, I'm always jacking with shit, and so yeah, I'm just like keeping time you are, you are, but I'm paying attention when I'm watching you.

Speaker 2:

I'm paying attention to the time you're keeping, trying to figure out what's what time's going on down here versus what's going on up here. I'm like look at this guy you're, you're just, he's got all kinds of things going on over there. Yeah, bo, party of one, but I get it because I am not.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that process was not a planned process, that's right.

Speaker 2:

But there's, yeah, there's so many different there's, we all have our ticks right, I guess. But that's, that's pretty cool how you, how you do that and just keep on, you, just keep on trucking. But you're right there on that stage and nothing is moving. It's really cool. It is cool it is.

Speaker 3:

Thanks, it is there's. Both of our phones have been going crazy this whole time. Mine has buzzed it's like 15 times, I know it's like they know, it's just rude no one wants to talk to me all day long until I'm busy All day long, if I'm taking a nap or I start doing something like this, my phone immediately goes crazy.

Speaker 2:

Same Same. It's ridiculous. I don't like that many people. First of all, I don't know who is calling me right now.

Speaker 3:

I know that many people don't like it's one person texting 20 times 20 times it's an emergency.

Speaker 2:

Let's talk about Daphne. Okay, so you, daphne is, she's a staple yeah, she's been around a long time everybody knows that. I mean everybody, that's my Frenchie she is I. I am going to go back and dig out old pictures.

Speaker 3:

She's old, yeah, she's 13. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

She's been all over with you. She's been on a bajillion stages.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, lots of buses and lots of vans and lots of stages. She's been lots of states. She's probably been to more states than most people.

Speaker 2:

I had a pig that traveled all over with me. Pickles, and she has probably been on more stages and crossed more state lines and area codes. She had her own Facebook page and they called her the pig with a passport, which she did. She traveled all over with me and she turned 15 and I lost her and it was hard it was tough it was

Speaker 3:

really, really tough Deaf's, like blind and deaf now, and I know that I don't have a whole lot of time, yeah, and it like you can hear my voice shake just mentioning it, let me tell you I you know, delilah, I mean delilah, it was my golden doodle that has jumped on stages with you and and mighty soul, which is amber and um gar, and she yeah, that was when she's had two eyes.

Speaker 2:

And then you guys were playing at the Villa and she heard Marisol's voice and, with her one eye come to, she didn't give a damn. She was like wait, that's my Tia, and so she jumped up on stage and hung out with you, but I lost her a couple months ago and it was it's tough, holy shit, it's-. Pigs man, her a couple months ago and it was tough. Holy shit, it's um pigs man, golly. It just never it it. It doesn't get any easy.

Speaker 3:

It doesn't get any easier, but um I never made a her own instagram page because I was worried that no one would follow my page if I made one and you're right, just for her. That was very smart at that time especially. Yes, it's like people just got on my page just to see her.

Speaker 2:

Yes, and the amount of pictures Get them addicted and then dial it back. Yeah right, it's like dangling a carrot Right here you go.

Speaker 1:

I'm not as dumb as I look.

Speaker 2:

No, it's my dog, it's like going to pick up chicks at the H-E-B. Cute dogs, pretty girls, nice cars grocery girls, nice cars, those those things, those things, people are looking at them right. Guitars, yeah, guitars. You know, women we're sometimes, sometimes real stupid. We just be throwing things to any man with a guitar in his hand, more so than probably a baseball bat.

Speaker 3:

So that was good call just I mean, yeah, you know sure whatever I feel like you, like those guys that are major leaguers with millions of dollars and things.

Speaker 2:

They're that 1% to make it yeah.

Speaker 3:

Which I'm kind of old. That's not as important to me now as it once was.

Speaker 2:

We just had this discussion. Don't tell me about your age anymore. Stop.

Speaker 3:

That's a young man's game, oh.

Speaker 2:

Lord, you wrote a song that is About Daphne. You did.

Speaker 3:

Yes, it's our current single.

Speaker 2:

It is, and I remember when you played it for the first time and of course it was like you said, or I said it was nobody knew what that song?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it doesn't sound like I wrote it about a dog, no Right.

Speaker 2:

And it is epic and it is once you listen to it and you get it, and then you realize that this is actually about Daphne. It's cool as shit, yeah, and I love that song Me too, in fact, that's one that I did record in the 50th orgasmic party that we yep, in fact, yes, but she um, where did you write that song?

Speaker 3:

Um, I wrote it on my back porch Well, my former back porch now. You know where I was living over there off of river road, and, um, she was just laying there like on her little soft blanket with like all her bones piled up around her and just, you know, snoring, and I just I said, it just happened, Look at her over there just sleeping on the bones of her enemies. And just as soon as I said it, I was like, oh, I'll just make a little note of that.

Speaker 3:

And then, like it really didn't take long to write, it was one of those.

Speaker 2:

Was it a one nighter that you yeah?

Speaker 3:

I? It was one of those. Was it a one-nighter that you? Yeah, I mean I added to it later. I added a bridge to it later, but the verses and the chorus were like maybe an hour and I couldn't even play it. I didn't know how to play it on the guitar, I just had a melody in my head and then the next day he called Garrett Come over here and let me sing this to you so you can tell me what.

Speaker 2:

I'm doing Help. Yeah, there you go. Yeah, somebody call 911.

Speaker 3:

And showed me how to play the song that I just wrote, and so, yeah, it happened fast. Those are always the best songs, I mean a lot of writers will say that yes. Usually you have to kind of sit there and work at it, and, you know, think and think and then there's those where your pen can't keep up with how fast the lines are coming to you.

Speaker 2:

You know it was one of those. Yeah, it was just easy. So when, how?

Speaker 3:

okay, so how long ago was that? Uh, that was probably like a year and a half ago, something like that. Maybe it was longer than that, maybe two years ago, I'm not sure at least I don't remember exactly, uh, what time of year it was. Whatever, I feel like it was warm outside it's.

Speaker 2:

We're almost two years past the 50th birthday party okay so and I played it you played it at that, but yeah, yeah, I had heard it because I knew the whole damn song at the birthday party, so I know it was, we recorded it it's been, it's been like recorded for a year probably yeah and we just now kind of got had to get all our things lined up for it. You know, before we put it out, because we didn't want to just never plan.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, well yeah, but when you have something good, it's so okay, we can't just release this, we need to, you know, kind of set up some things and um, and so we've been doing that, like made a video for it yeah we've done some reels and some promotion and, uh, you know, extra, we've done extra things just because it was like that one's that one.

Speaker 2:

We don't want that to just be on spotify and have 50 spins the, the jive, the movement, the lyrics, right once you really realize exactly what it is about. But then you can turn it into it sounds like a mean woman.

Speaker 3:

yes, which daphne would be the meanest human woman?

Speaker 2:

Look, she's cute as hell, she's adorable she's a little sassafras.

Speaker 3:

If she was a human I would not put up with her For a second. Like you need to go awesome. Take your own grateful ass.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. Expensive and jealous, and beat it, it expensive and jealous that's her little horror. She's cute as hell yeah, she's like nick, she's cute as hell she is adorable she is so cute love her to life. Yep, she's good, but, yeah, bones of your enemy. It's good and so it's going to be. It's out now. It's out, yeah. The video, the, everything, the video.

Speaker 3:

We're supposed to get the final today. Yeah, like just the best positive. Oh my gosh you know, just reinforcing, like that's great, Completely.

Speaker 2:

That's great. Do more of that? Yes, I should try doing this and let me fix your hair Right and just having great suggestions and being open to our suggestions and having like he had a game plan, but also was.

Speaker 3:

It was very interactive and and just could not have been a more positive experience.

Speaker 2:

I was so grateful to see that he did that for you guys, because that was I was super excited because, yeah, he is one hell of a talented talented, talented kid.

Speaker 3:

He's pro. He was busting his ass. He knows busting his ass. He knows a hot day. Yeah, he's like he don't give a shit out there, you know carrying these. Can you see his arms like?

Speaker 2:

seriously, yeah, he'll squat down there, he'll get up, he'll climb a tree, he'll. Yeah, he's awesome yeah, yeah, he's epic. So, um, where are we going from here? We got this video coming out.

Speaker 3:

We've got where it's yeah timber wild yeah, and so we're going to. We have another song already recorded that Garrett wrote. I think we need to add like a little bit of Amber's harmonies on it, but it's pretty much done and that's going to be probably like May. We'll put that out once this one kind of runs its course, right, and we see what it does and how long it can hold people's attention. Yeah, it's not long these days You're talking to me but exactly, and everyone and so. But we're going to see what that does and when it starts kind of tapering off, then we're going to put that next one out and then have a couple more songs written that are and a cover or two that we want to record also nice we've got.

Speaker 3:

We're going to just every three, four months, put out a new single. Let them do what they do when they start falling, just put another one out.

Speaker 2:

Put another one out.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that's good, and then maybe after a year or two, put a little compilation.

Speaker 2:

A nice collab together. I like that. I like that. How did you guys come up with Timberwild?

Speaker 3:

That was Garrett's, I guess his sister. There's an elementary school in San Antonio called Timberwild that his sister went to. Elementary, my dear, and we were looking for.

Speaker 2:

We've been We've got to rewind this. Wait, what We've been trying Now all you've got to say is it's a? Catholic school or something.

Speaker 3:

I have no idea. I've never been to the school.

Speaker 2:

No, I mean, you know.

Speaker 3:

I grew up in Northeast Texas so I don't know. But we were trying to come up with a name and like throwing names at each other and we kept kind of, you know, just vetoing each other.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

And he said he was talking to his sister. And she said something about like oh, I just passed by a timber wild the other day. He was like, oh, that's kind of cool.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

And asked me about it, and it was one of those where I mean yeah, that sounds cool, like let me you know yeah. And it just yeah, it was the best we had.

Speaker 2:

Well, I mean from you coming from Piney Woods.

Speaker 3:

Right and right.

Speaker 2:

Timber yeah, it basically translates to like a wise man of the woods. Okay, now we're going to go back to this, because you and I talked about it and I said stop talking because this is funny as shit. So music video oh yeah, so.

Speaker 3:

I don't want to give too much away, but there's a scene in this video where Garrett and I have to chase after this car and we are startled, you know, and have to run, chase this car and mind you, garrett is wall of six foot he's like six four, six three.

Speaker 2:

I was gonna say because I've got a six foot seven, I have a six foot one and I have a six he's tall, his character right in his.

Speaker 3:

He is a fucking gazelle right yeah and so right, and I'm thinking we're wearing cowboy boots you know, and jeans, first of all it's hot out, yeah, and I'm sweating. I was you know, like I'm in character, kind of I'm not an actor. You know, I'm just like we're gonna kind of jog at my car.

Speaker 2:

And when he says action, you know like I'm just kind of like turning around like oh no you're doing a ballet jog, he's like and just yeah, oh shit, okay, we're running, we're running for real and he's 10 years younger than me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, and so that's so then I'm like all right, okay, we're running.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, good deal.

Speaker 1:

Take two, wait for me. I'll meet you there, I'll run Like I can hang with him.

Speaker 3:

He's faster than I am, but I can hang with him. And so then we do two takes where we're running hard in cowboy boots on a rocky you know, a San Marcos.

Speaker 2:

It's fastball yeah.

Speaker 3:

I mean, it's her, it's out here, and so and we're hauling ass and like, do it and my left knee 10 days later is still saying no.

Speaker 2:

What made you think that you could?

Speaker 1:

run, you could still sprint Keep up with Garrett Just sprint.

Speaker 2:

I ain't sprinting, no.

Speaker 3:

I'll bet, the last time I sprinted was when I tried to race Garrett Mann. When we first started playing together.

Speaker 1:

I'm fast boy, don't like. Yeah, don't let the skin.

Speaker 3:

And um, he, he, I've never beat him in a race, but I'm pretty fast. All things considered, he's faster. And, um, when we first started playing together, that's, we raced in the poorhouse parking lot because I was talking shit.

Speaker 1:

oh, imagine dude, I'm fast boy.

Speaker 3:

You can't like, don't and he got me in cowboy boots in the parking lot at poorhouse, you know which is not that parking lot is not very big no, no, by the time you got your groove going 30 yard, 40 yard, you know yeah, and yeah he got me.

Speaker 2:

I'm not ashamed to admit that he got me, I mean he's 10 years younger and a foot taller yeah, at least I mean he is one of his steps, like three of mine thank you, it's exactly what I'm thinking.

Speaker 3:

All I can see in my mind is Scooby-Doo and Shaggy and a little sprinting, yes, and then a little Frenchie, chase Right and your little your boobs on the deals that are going like this and you're not going anywhere like you do on stage, right, that's probably what was happening Exactly that's what's happening on the ground.

Speaker 2:

And he's long gone and and been like you need some water.

Speaker 1:

You catch her. Yeah, you go get her. You go get her. I'm going to sit right here.

Speaker 2:

Right, I'm going to sit right here and tell the po-po that she stole our car. Yeah and yeah.

Speaker 3:

So yeah. Me and Daphne are going to for the first time in my life, took all these years. First time for everything. I've learned, yeah, and sometimes there's a fifth time for everything.

Speaker 2:

Well, yeah, that's me. I never learned the first time Generally, no, yeah, no, we're not going to go there, it's kind of like the bones of the enemy. We're just going to bury them and sit down or whatever scatter around, just let her have them.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we're just going to bury them and sit down, or whatever scatter around, just let her. Have them, yeah, I cannot, I cannot.

Speaker 2:

I just wish I could have seen the whole.

Speaker 3:

It was funny. We had a great time. We were worn out but we went from like 1030 in the morning to you said you're still worn out.

Speaker 2:

It's been 10 days.

Speaker 3:

But I've had 12 shows in those 10 days and a lot of miles and stuff like this. I've done some podcasts and radio interviews.

Speaker 2:

Lots of promo. You stood up on stage last night I did.

Speaker 3:

I sang with Brie Bagwell. We talked about this Best friend, Brie.

Speaker 2:

She is an absolute doll face. I freaking love these shit.

Speaker 3:

We have a single out right now too. It's so good, and we performed it in front of all our heroes.

Speaker 2:

So that was kind of cool because we talked about this before.

Speaker 3:

So you need to tell yeah, I was really nervous because I'm not really a harmony singer, but that song I sing harmonies in that song. I was a bit nervous, but I was still like you know I've got it. Yeah, you know I've been doing this a long time.

Speaker 1:

I got to sing.

Speaker 3:

I got this and then I walk out on that stage and there's, you know, cross-canada Ragweed and Randy Rogers and Wade Bowen and Paul Eason, and that's right there in front row staring at me, just kind of like oh.

Speaker 2:

Shit got very real.

Speaker 1:

Don't look at them again you know, just keep smiling and look at right.

Speaker 2:

Smile and wave boys.

Speaker 3:

Hopefully I didn't embarrass Brie too much. She did great and I feel like I did All right, so we'll see. I haven't seen video of it yet, but I'll I'll. Regardless. I'll critique myself.

Speaker 2:

Have you ever been on a stage like that and gotten nervous like that before?

Speaker 3:

I mean I get, I get more anxious. I feel like then nervous. No, it's not like a afraid, it's more afraid of the unknown of it. That like once, once I'm in it and going like I'm good, but it's the two hours before where it's like oh shit. Okay, I gotta do this, you know gotta nail this and then and then, once it's going, it's, you know, just muscle memory and you know you're doing it. That's not that big a deal you are not um.

Speaker 2:

A lot of musicians I have found are very shy outside in the real world versus the stage. You're not one of those no, I'm not shy.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I'm not not in my opinion.

Speaker 2:

I mean you're?

Speaker 3:

yeah, I don't like go out of my way really to talk to people, but I but I'm, I'm good at it, you're yeah, I. I'm not shy.

Speaker 2:

It's ironic how many musicians to put in or have to sit on a podcast and to talk and do things are like absolutely not.

Speaker 3:

Listen, I grew up in East Texas with two sisters and a mom and a dad that all went to a Baptist church and like, listen, we, you know the hey, baby, how you doing.

Speaker 1:

Come and sit down, let me get you something to eat. I chewed the Wrigley's gum. We can yes.

Speaker 3:

I can talk for 10 minutes without saying anything.

Speaker 2:

Damn. Thank me too.

Speaker 1:

Just why tell me how's your mom and dad what they doing? They still over there.

Speaker 3:

Like you know, I've got 10, 15 minutes of that shit Right Before we ever really get to it Get to where we're going. Yeah, like, what are you doing for work?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, what'd you do last night? Anyways, never mind, let's go on to the. Yeah, the pecan pies.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's good. That's good. I'm from the deep piney woods.

Speaker 3:

You know, we got no problem finding words.

Speaker 2:

Well, you see, I was born and raised local from New Brunfels and that's how it used to be here, but nobody really spoke English. It was all German. Yeah, my whole family that's wild, how fast it's changed.

Speaker 2:

Holy pickles, holy pickles. It is insane. I was in green yesterday in that truck and trailer parked in the middle of the road, flashers on dropping off some wine barrels to the greenhouse. You guys have not been to the greenhouse right next to gristmill, right next to green hall, across from mosey's go she's adorable, great. And this gentleman was walking through, cause there's kind of like the little trails where you can go through to get to the different restaurants and what have you and this guy had a shirt on that said I miss the old new rompels. I wanted to hug him.

Speaker 1:

He said me too. You want to sit down?

Speaker 3:

and maybe I have a glass of wine and talk about it or something it was like yeah, and I'm fairly new to the place, so I don't even know.

Speaker 2:

Way back when.

Speaker 3:

I saw an old population sign, I think from 2000,. The population was like 15,000 people and now it's 115,000 people.

Speaker 2:

So when I was a tiny baby, when I said my adopted grandparents owned fry height, um, there's the bowling alley which was right next to to the restaurant and I used to run around in that bowling alley and nothing but a dapper, yeah, and my adopted grandpa which I still do that. Nothing's really changed, nothing's really changed, besides my height? And what are we reading here? The potatoes that.

Speaker 1:

I just settled in the wrong area.

Speaker 2:

You're welcome, yep, and uh but when I would get sleepy or tired they would. I would go over toy and rosie's and they had a room in the back and I had my playpen. Yeah, but that was. That was me growing up in fry, height and now looking at it, it was just a tiny little room and where the back area is that was like in the country back then.

Speaker 3:

That was their house that was their home. They lived right there and that's where I grew up, barefoot, yeah and that used to just be, since I lived here, that was just a field from there all the way to i-35, just, and now there's concrete the whole way it's infuriating it's insane since we're letting my old man flag fly what the shit is going on on River Road.

Speaker 2:

I cannot, I cannot, I cannot, it is.

Speaker 3:

Infuriating. Just destroying it, just destroying it.

Speaker 2:

It's so sad.

Speaker 3:

So sad.

Speaker 2:

It is so sad.

Speaker 3:

Just turn away all the trees and put them concrete on top of it. Just disgusting, yeah. Anyway, I don't want to like bring it down, but no, it's it. It took me a long time to get. There's all the, all the destruction and things and just and River Road ice house sitting there empty, just like all of it. Like what?

Speaker 2:

what happened. You know, scotty, is it?

Speaker 1:

was not long ago which scotty galaxy.

Speaker 2:

He is on our team and he um, we were talking about how, way back when very first started the singer song night coming in oh yeah it was just all of us and just inviting you know random people and dogs sleeping on the floor and Randy, my cousin. Randy sleeping on the floor, I know, and I was like I remember that night.

Speaker 1:

That was only like five years ago it wasn't it's not like this was, you know, last century it's crazy.

Speaker 2:

There's still pictures of Piggy. I'm saying my pig. Her name was Pickles. I had the passport with her in her baby bed laying there.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Billy used to hang out there all day.

Speaker 2:

Yes, run, run. I know Catching bugs Mom.

Speaker 3:

You can catch lots of bugs there. Now too, I'm sure. Yeah, you can catch some across you I. You can catch lots of bugs there now too, I'm sure.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you can catch some across you. I mean you're going to catch some, but you need a shot, yeah yeah, to fix that kind of a bug. Oh my Lord, yeah, yeah, yeah. Now we have the Dell web community that's going in on the deal. I can't which is scary as all get out.

Speaker 3:

It makes me too sad.

Speaker 2:

Let's move on.

Speaker 3:

Speaking of heart, speaking of all, yeah, speaking of old, I think our tickers are. Well, you blew yours out there, like I brought it up, it was my fault.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was like, by the way, yeah, what a fucking buzzkill.

Speaker 3:

Yeah I did this on on breeze podcast oh my god the name of my, my podcast. I did with three.

Speaker 2:

Like she gives them each a title I always get off my lawn Okay Cause I did this same shit.

Speaker 3:

She's like you know we're trying to get like young fans, to like some of them, kids.

Speaker 2:

man Little punk ass kids.

Speaker 3:

Daddy done sold their job. He's out there mowing their lawns Messing up everything.

Speaker 2:

It's so part of the course. Well, bo Brummel, is that really your name?

Speaker 3:

yeah, it is really I'm not gonna say my Christian name on this podcast, but my mother and father gave me a name that I did not agree with, and so I chose another one.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 3:

I was thinking about this earlier, for whatever, reason it hasn't been my name since I was like 10 years old.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's it. You're just going to leave it right there, that's not for mass consumption. Bones of Bones of Bo's Enemy. You're just going to leave it right there. Yeah, you're just going to. That's not for mass consumption. Bones of yeah, bones of Bo's enemy, if it is.

Speaker 3:

My sisters will be happy to tell you if you ever run into them. Well, I'll write them. Yeah, no, they love to tell us. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Okay. Well, let me tell you about mine and this. This is absolutely. I don't know why I have this name and I swear to pickles. If somebody tried, I mean you might as well, but my nickname as a wee little was Toot.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

No, don't say yeah, tootie, no, no, it stopped with a T-O-O-T.

Speaker 3:

What was the show there?

Speaker 2:

was no. I-e, there was no.

Speaker 3:

I. There was the show back in the day. Yes, there was no Y there was no.

Speaker 2:

What was the show back in the day? Yes, she was cute as hell With all the girls.

Speaker 3:

Yes, what was it called? We're really dating ourselves now.

Speaker 2:

The blonde was on there.

Speaker 3:

Joe was on there, blair and Joe, blair and.

Speaker 2:

Joe and Tootie, and all I can think of is golden girls, because that's what I am right now. What is the name of that show? Shit and the red-haired yes, it was like the yes house, like that. Yeah, the house, the den mother. If we only knew what we knew now back then we were watching that and everything was so innocent. I bet, if we go back and re-watch some of episodes you'd be like, oh the writing is on the wall.

Speaker 3:

I was in love with Blair yeah, who wasn't? But that from an early age I started learning that what you really, what you think you want, is not always what you really want. Right you know, like I it took you know a lot of learning.

Speaker 2:

that, on my own also, is not what you really want.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, like the thing, the shiny thing that you want to like reach out and grab is not always the best thing.

Speaker 2:

Right, it's hot, it'll burn your hand. It might burn your hand Right, and I'll still Look. I don't know, but I feel a song coming on, yeah, right wasn't different strokes.

Speaker 3:

No, it was oh, it was.

Speaker 2:

It came on before or after that one?

Speaker 3:

yeah, it was around that same time, it was yeah, anyway well my first heartbreak. There were many more to come after that you want to hear something really awkward?

Speaker 2:

Joe was mine beautiful that's beautiful. No, I don't judge, I listen no, it was because I was infatuated with her. Well, she was kind of masculine, she was, yes, but I was infatuated with her um overalls all right at which I happen to have a old vintage pair of original dickies, train engineer overalls, which, which is because she's turned half backwards and the cars. That was me. I had a tonka trucks when I was little.

Speaker 3:

I didn't have Barbie dolls. It's like she was like dating a man without having to date a man. It sounds like a pretty good deal.

Speaker 2:

Not to lie, it might be a good time. I'm just saying anyways, on episode number two of tiffany and bo and the good old days and the olden days yeah, way back when nick at night.

Speaker 3:

Let me tell you about nick, no shit nick at night.

Speaker 2:

No, mr ed, no, I think mr ed is right out there in that pasture. On that third pasture, yeah. Well, this has been fun, it's been a great time. I let out my secret. You didn't let out yours.

Speaker 3:

I can't do it. I've got too much of a legal record to be put on.

Speaker 2:

Legalities are real. I get it. I get it. But anybody that meets me out and about about, if you do call me um to, I will punch you straight in your face. I and you can ask any I might test you on it you see the size of this thing that could do

Speaker 2:

damage yeah, I mean yeah look, I designed um a ring piece of jewelry with samson gallery every single year. This was the very first piece that that I designed with them. And, and I love it, but it does um, it will hurt, it will leave a mark, and I'm my daddy taught me to never miss.

Speaker 3:

Right and and hit first.

Speaker 1:

And when you aim you fucking fire, and I mean hopefully that does it.

Speaker 2:

I'm pretty not, you fucking fire and I mean I am. Hopefully that does it. I'm pretty not gonna lie.

Speaker 1:

I'm pretty good at it Good.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

I did, I was, I did pitch ball for nine years.

Speaker 2:

Speaking of baseball, I was a pitcher, yeah, so anyways, but it's been fun, great time it's been real Bones Buried bones of the enemy. Buried bones. Bones bury the bones of the enemy.

Speaker 3:

Bury bones of the enemy, bury bones of enemies. Are we burying bones of enemies today?

Speaker 2:

We're burying my name that we just announced in front of God and everyone, but no Spotify.

Speaker 3:

Spotify, apple Music, all the streaming things, all the streaming things. It's just called Bones, bones, timber Wild, two words Timber. It's right there Bones Bones, timber Wild, two words Timber.

Speaker 2:

It's right there in the front oh beautiful. We'll share all the things. Garrett Bo, you'll catch Am doing some harmonies. That's our Marisol Yep, and this with a M-A-R-I capital, s, capital, o, capital, u, capital, l. Okay, marisol Mari.

Speaker 1:

Marisol, she Mari Sol, mari Mari Sol.

Speaker 2:

She calls me Anita. I call her Mari Sol. Yes, yes, that's our. It's been our joy for a very, very long time. But yeah, she is, has done some amazing harmonies and chimes with you guys.

Speaker 3:

She's great. It's phenomenal. I've watched you guys in the studio and she's absolute family.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but it's been fun.

Speaker 1:

Yep.

Speaker 3:

Thanks for having me.

Speaker 2:

You have to be back on again. We're going to catch this round two of our sprint to nowhere. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Can't wait to see you on the other side.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's fine. Yeah, we'll both be still sitting there. Going you, go ahead you go ahead, I'll meet you there.

Speaker 3:

Okay, should I do bones Of course. Okay, it's really better with uh, oh, yeah this is your guitar.

Speaker 1:

I know I was like look how pretty she is. I've got her sleeping in a nicer case than what. I picked her up. Thank, it's like a nice casket. She's never under down. Bet you're buying down or she can spend some. Heaven. Help me, if you ever look into her eyes. She collects hearts Like car vines in a jar.

Speaker 1:

She'll pick you up To knock you to your knees. She'll run away. She's never very fine. Her hands are steep, so I'm a bad man From bones of her enemies. She's the kind of guy who gives you hell when you're just a dead cheat. Her shitty attitude Takes up all the patience, thank you. As she sleeps on a bed made from bones of her enemies, she collects hearts like five vials in a jar. She'll pick you up and knock you to your knees. She'll run away. She's never very far. As she sleeps on a bed made from bones of her enemies, just imagine a really cool guitar solo from Garrett Madden. Your infatuation gets her heart a-pompetating For my chance. Manipulation. Your financial situation Can't keep up with the inflation. New administration Complete annihilation, she's yours congratulations.

Speaker 1:

She collects hearts like five pounds in a jar. She'll pick you up and knock you to your knees Congratulations. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones. I'm getting rid of my bones.

Speaker 3:

I'm getting rid of my bones.

Speaker 2:

Bones that's how that one goes Enemies, bones and enemies, all right, we good Golden.

Speaker 1:

That was fun, still lashes.

Speaker 3:

Straight fuck. I could tell that I got in late last night when I was singing that. Thanks for making me do that. Okay, you're welcome.

Speaker 2:

I'm just glad I got the pitter-patter you did, I saw you getting up and going yeah, and then, when I turned, it off. Then the other one started going. I was like that was the, but clearly it was not. I mean it was real black out my knee. Oh fuck off Standing up. I'm telling you man, yeah, I feel like I may have like Knee replacement hip replacement Hush.

Speaker 3:

I feel like I may have like maybe have a little tear in a ligament or something and like Did you hear that the what Cracking and popping?

Speaker 2:

Ah, exactly, there you go then. Now you want to bitch about your shit? No,