Video: Benjamin Booker gives Florida good love in ridiculous interview with Nardwuar

Skipper's Smokehouse, Rachel Goodrich, and community radio all get shout outs in Booker's interview with the Human Serviette

bookernarduwar.jpg

Landing an interview with Nardwuar is a sure sign you're making it in today's musical landscape. Yesterday, Tampa-refined big deal Benjamin Booker hit that milestone when the Human Serviette himself welcomed him — along with bandmates Max Norton and Alex Spoto — to British Columbia by pulling off another characteristically awesome chat complete with gifts (a 45 RPM single by cross-dressing Canadian soul singer Jackie Shane) and more than a few really random facts.

The nine-minute video clip even digs up a 2012 email Booker sent to Nardwuar asking for an internship. Nardwuar suggested he head to his local college or community radio station, and even asked Booker about his Sunday show on Gainesville's community internet radio station — Grow Radio.

What's really great about the interview is the way Booker — who did end up doing some intern work at beloved local music rag REAX — talks about using journalism as a way to talk to bands he liked (Miami folk-pop princess Rachel Goodrich even gets a shout out). Norton and Spoto — who once anchored long-gone beloved local act Roppongi's Ace — even get to chime in and mention seeing The Henchmen play Skipper's Smokehouse back in 2005.

"We were teenagers," said Spoto. "Skipper's is very fine establishment off the I-275 corridor in Tampa — they have fantastic alligator chili."

There's also talk about Chicago bluesman Tampa Red, whose slide guitar-laden output was partly inspired by the streets of Ybor City, and why blues purists don't gravitate to Booker's brand of brash, bluesy rock.

Watch and enjoy the whole thing below. You can catch Booker & co. when they come come to play the Coral Skies Music Festival in October. More information on that show is available here, and you can read Leilani's review of Benjamin Booker's debut LP here.


WE LOVE OUR READERS!

Since 1988, CL Tampa Bay has served as the free, independent voice of Tampa Bay, and we want to keep it that way.

Becoming a CL Tampa Bay Supporter for as little as $5 a month allows us to continue offering readers access to our coverage of local news, food, nightlife, events, and culture with no paywalls.

Join today because you love us, too.

Ray Roa

Read his 2016 intro letter and disclosures from 2022 and 2021. Ray Roa started freelancing for Creative Loafing Tampa in January 2011 and was hired as music editor in August 2016. He became Editor-In-Chief in August 2019. Past work can be seen at Suburban Apologist, Tampa Bay Times, Consequence of Sound and The...
Scroll to read more Music News articles

Join Creative Loafing Tampa Bay Newsletters

Subscribe now to get the latest news delivered right to your inbox.