Episodes

  • THE MUSICIANS SHED PODCAST: MARIEL BILDSTEN
    Jun 9 2026

    What does it take to leave a comfortable local music scene and completely reset your standard of excellence? In this episode of The Musician’s Shed, host Samar Newsome connects with the incredible New York-based trombonist and septet bandleader Mariel Bildsten.

    From her accidental start picking up the trombone at ten years old just to hang out with friends in Santa Barbara, California, Mariel charts her high-stakes leap of faith to study at The New School in New York City. She dives deep into the raw psychological realities of being an independent artist, sharing her personal "cliff-jumping" philosophy on taking massive creative risks and using every technical setback as a launchpad for a growth mindset.

    Samar and Mariel shred the toxic industry myth of the "isolated, lone-wolf musician," breaking down why learning to delegate, build a trusted team, and pass genuine structural ownership to your collaborators is the ultimate secret to career longevity. If you are an aspiring brass player, bandleader, or independent creative looking for a blueprint on how to handle business at home without burning out your artistic spark, step into the Shed for this essential masterclass.

    Key Highlights From This Session:

    • Embracing the Butt-Kicking: Why leaving a small-pond environment and stepping into highly demanding competitive circles is the fastest accelerator for your musicianship.
    • Micro-Shedding Architecture: Mariel’s exact blueprint for tearing down practice anxiety by isolating microscopic, slow harmonic goals instead of burning out on mechanical exercises.
    • The Harmony Hurdle: Transitioning a single-note melodic mindset into deep harmonic mastery by remaining a humble student and taking piano lessons from peers.
    • Standing Sturdy in Your Taste: Why your intuitive artistic compass is precious, and how protecting what you dig insulates you from peer pressure and standard industry box-checking.
    • Sneak Peek at the 2027 Septet Album: Exclusive details on her upcoming vocal-concept record—recorded during pregnancy—which explores the expressive, buttonless physical parallels between the trombone slide and the human voice.

    Connect with The Musician's Shed:

    • Host: Samar Newsome
    • Follow Guest: Mariel Bildsten (@marielbildsten)
    • Subscribe: Tap that follow button on your favorite RSS stream to lock in your weekly masterclass!

    Real Talk. Real Musicians. Real Growth.

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    31 mins
  • THE MUSICIANS SHED PODCAST: DR. WILLIAM FARLEY (PART 2)
    Jun 2 2026
    In this deeply emotional, full-circle second half of Episode 20, host Samar Newsome continues his conversation with his high school music teacher, mentor, and "music dad," Dr. William Y. Farley Jr. Transitioning from their early history, this session tackles the profound psychological, spiritual, and intellectual realities of running a music program.Dr. Farley peels back the layers on his graduate research regarding "monotone" singers, details the stark cultural shift from the testing-focused environments of Irvington to the AP-heavy pressures of West Orange, and candidly confesses to the introverted self-doubt and imposter syndrome he battled despite changing thousands of student lives. Samar and Dr. Farley celebrate the 25th anniversary of the award-winning West Orange step teams Dr. Farley founded, honor deceased alumni choir legends, and analyze why mastery is the ultimate magnet for cultivating excellence in the modern urban classroom.Key Discussion Highlights1. Music as an Intellectual AcceleratorSamar and Dr. Farley dive into the systemic barriers where modern students are pulled from music classes to accommodate heavy standardized testing cycles or aggressive Advanced Placement (AP) tracks. Samar advocates fiercely for the cognitive rigor of instrumental music, noting that reading and playing forces the brain to run high-level processing simultaneously across both hemispheres. Dr. Farley details how he leveraged this reality to protect his students:"When they're doing something they enjoy, it manifests in their other classes. They become better students. I had to talk the talk with guidance counselors and tell them: if they are in this music room, they are going to succeed everywhere else."2. Dr. Farley's Academic Research: Hymnals & Monotone SingersFor the first time on the podcast, Dr. Farley reveals the focus of his advanced academic degrees:The Master’s Thesis (Monotone Singers): A research study mapping out why "tone-deafness" is rarely a vocal disability, but rather a disconnect between the ear, the brain's audio processing centers, and vocal execution. Dr. Farley reinforces his belief that everyone possesses a voice and the inherent desire to sing, provided the neural dots can be trained to connect.The Doctoral Dissertation (The Disuse of the Hymnal): An investigation into modern church culture moving away from traditional hymnals, arguing for their intentional retention to preserve critical music literacy and theological history.3. The Introverted Master: Battling Self-DoubtIn one of the most transparent moments of the series, Dr. Farley admits that despite his staggering success, his introverted nature caused him to internally doubt his value.The Missing Confidence: Dr. Farley reflects that he spent years struggling to see himself the way his students saw him. He notes that if he had possessed more baseline faith in his early gifts, it would have fundamentally changed how he approached his classrooms.Providing a Blueprint: Samar counters by pouring flowers on his mentor, emphasizing that Dr. Farley served as a steady, visible, consistent icon of strong manhood and structural humility for thousands of urban youth who lacked present fathers or were inundated with degrading media stereotypes.4. Co-Teaching, Step Teams, and the West Orange HighlightsDr. Farley details his transition to West Orange, highlighting his artistic triumph in tackling elite choral works like Brahms’ Requiem and Pinkham’s Christmas Cantata alongside standard-setting band colleagues.The Reality of Co-Teaching: Dr. Farley notes that while co-teaching can provide excellent student support, a choir program ultimately needs one clear visionary director to prevent conflicting operational methodologies.A 25-Year Legacy: The duo celebrates the 25th anniversary of the West Orange High School Step Teams—originally founded as an extracurricular under Dr. Farley’s supervision—which recently won national recognition on the Sherri Shepard Show.5. Honoring Lost Voices & The Retirement ChapterThe episode takes a solemn, bittersweet turn as Samar and Dr. Farley remember iconic, generational vocal powerhouses who passed through Dr. Farley's programs but have since passed away, including Carlin, Katrina (remembered as one of the finest contralto voices in New Jersey history), and Malik Jones and Gemini.Host's Final Takeaway:"You were a historic blueprint for character, patience, humility, and consistency. In our community, simply showing up every single day and remaining a reliable anchor speaks volumes. You gave us the joy of music, and your impact is miles long." — Samar Newsome#TheMusiciansShed #MusicEducation #MusicPedagogy #MusicBusiness #MusicianLife #MusicTeacher #EarTraining #ChoirDirector #ChoralMusic #GospelMusicians #ClassicallyTrainedSTAY Connected on YouTube , IG and Facebook.The Musician's Shed Podcast!Subscribe to our video podcast on YouTube.Follow us on IG and Facebook.Engage by leaving a comment if ...
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    47 mins
  • THE MUSICIANS SHED PODCAST: DR. WILLIAM FARLEY (PART 1)
    May 26 2026

    In PART 1 of this incredibly special, full-circle episode of The Musician’s Shed, host Samar Newsome sits down with the man who served as the spark for his own musical and educational career: his high school mentor and "music dad," Dr. William Y. Farley.

    From growing up in a musical church household in South Jersey—likened to the "New Jersey Jacksons"—to a surprise five-year stint playing for multiple United States Navy bands, Dr. Farley's path to becoming a pillar of North Jersey music education is a masterclass in preparation meeting divine favor.

    In this intimate and nostalgic conversation, Samar and Dr. Farley look back at the history that shaped them. They pull back the curtain on Dr. Farley's historic decade building a legendary touring gospel choir program at Irvington High School, transitioning into the elite classical choral literature spaces of West Orange, and the distinct cultural differences between North and South Jersey music scenes. Whether you are an independent artist, a working music educator, or a student navigating your own creative path, this episode is packed with timeless wisdom on developing your craft, mastering the language of music, and learning when to let a season gracefully end.

    Key Highlights From This Session:

    • The Late-Blooming Spark: How a high school performance of Brahms' Requiem instantly turned a late-blooming junior into a lifelong classical and piano enthusiast.
    • The "Worst" Interview Ever: The hilarious story of how a quick performance of Amazing Grace bypassed standard teacher protocols and changed Irvington High School history on the spot.
    • Navy Bands & Mojave Deserts: Dr. Farley's journey navigating the intense jazz-reading auditions of the military to secure a rare, lifetime spot across concert, rock, and jazz ensembles.
    • The Anatomy of the Shift: A raw look at the bittersweet reality of educational budget cuts, charter school shifts, and the literal "fire" that signaled it was time to step into a new professional season.
    • Formal Education vs. On-The-Job Training: Why learning the "universal language" of all 12 keys unlocks the ability to communicate effortlessly across orchestral, jazz, and funk rooms alike.

    Connect with The Musician's Shed:

    • Host: Samar Newsome
    • Subscribe: Hit follow to ensure you never miss a weekly masterclass dropping real jewels for real musicians.

    Real Talk. Real Musicians. Real Growth.

    STAY Connected on YouTube , IG and Facebook.


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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • THE MUSICIAN'S SHED PODCAST: JAMES BISCUIT ROUSE (Full interview)
    May 19 2026

    In this powerhouse episode of The Musician’s Shed, Samar Newsome sits down with the multi-talented James "Biscuit" Rouse. Known across the industry as the ultimate pocket drummer, a soaring vocalist, and a master musical director, Biscuit breaks down his incredible journey from the woodshed to the world stage.

    From driving the rhythm section for Ms. Lauryn Hill and executing high-stakes television arrangements with legendary MD Ray Chew, to bringing the thunderous energy required by rock icons Living Colour, Biscuit’s career is a masterclass in versatility. This conversation pulls back the curtain on what it really means to shed with intention, remain adaptable, and build a sustainable career at the highest levels of commercial music.

    Key Highlights

    • The Anatomy of the Shed: Biscuit discusses how "shedding" evolves as you mature. It shifts from purely shedding technical chops to shedding for musicality, endurance, and learning how to serve the song rather than your own ego.
    • The Art of Multi-Tasking: Balancing the roles of a premier drummer and a lead/background vocalist. Biscuit shares his secrets on maintaining pocket while delivering flawless vocal performances simultaneously.
    • Navigating the Legends: * Ms. Lauryn Hill: The intense preparation, musical spontaneity, and deep focus required to back one of hip-hop and neo-soul's most meticulous visionaries.
      • Ray Chew: Learning the high-pressure world of television, award shows, and large-ensemble musical direction where accuracy and professionalism are non-negotiable.
      • Living Colour: Stepping into high-energy rock environments and understanding how to bring heavy, aggressive dynamics while maintaining a soulful groove.
    • Mindset & Professionalism: Why your attitude in the green room, your reliability, and your mental resilience matter just as much as—if not more than—what you play on stage.

    Key Takeaways

    Topic | The "Biscuit" PerspectiveVersatility | Don't box yourself into one genre. To survive at the top, you must speak the musical language of rock, R&B, hip-hop, and gospel fluently.
    The Pocket | Flashy fills might get you likes on social media, but an unshakeable, solid groove is what keeps you hired by major artists.
    Preparation | True professionalism means knowing the music so deeply that you can adapt instantly when the arrangement changes on the fly.
    Longevity | Protect your body, guard your ears, and treat people with respect. Your reputation is your currency.

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    55 mins
  • THE MUSICIAN'S SHED PODCAST: DAVE "DOC" WATSON (Full interview)
    May 12 2026

    In this episode of The Musician’s Shed, Samar Newsome sits down with a living legend of the horn section: Dave "Doc" Watson.

    If you’ve ever danced to the "Apache" beat or felt the soulful swell of an Alicia Keys ballad, you’ve heard the work of Dave Watson and Chops Horns. With a career spanning over four decades, Dave has navigated the evolution of music from the birth of Hip-Hop at Sugar Hill Records to the global stadium tours of The Police.

    But perhaps his most enduring legacy isn't on a gold record—it’s in the classroom. Dave joins us to discuss his 26-year journey as a cornerstone of music education in New Jersey, proving that you can be a world-class performer and a world-class mentor at the same time.

    In the Shed Today:

    • The Sugar Hill Era: Dave takes us back to the legendary sessions at Sugar Hill Records, providing the brass foundation for the tracks that defined early Hip-Hop.
    • The Savoy Connection: A look into his work with the Savoy Records Gospel Division and how the discipline of Gospel music shaped his professional standards.
    • Stadium Status: Behind-the-scenes stories from the road:
      • Touring with The Police during the iconic Ghost in the Machine era.
      • His deep collaborative history with Alicia Keys, from "Songs in A Minor" to "As I Am."
    • 26 Years of Impact: Dave reflects on his dual life as an educator in the New Jersey Public School system (Bayonne and Harrison High). He shares how he balanced high-stakes touring with the responsibility of shaping the next generation of musicians.

    Key Takeaways:

    • The Versatility of the "Yes Yes Man": Why being able to play everything from R&B and Jazz to Rock and Hip-Hop is the secret to a 40-year career.
    • The "Educator's Heart": How teaching makes you a better musician, and why giving back to your community is a professional necessity.
    • The Chops Horns Blueprint: The mechanics of building a horn section that legends like the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan call on speed dial.
    "You have to be a student of the craft before you can be a master of the stage. My students kept me sharp while the road kept me inspired."Dave "Doc" Watson

    🔗 Connect with Dave "Doc" Watson:

    • Official Website: davedocwatsonyesyesman.com
    • Chops Horns: chopshorns.com
    • Instagram: @davedocwatson

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    • Host: Samar Newsome @samarnewsome

    #TheMusiciansShed #DaveDocWatson #ChopsHorns #AliciaKeys #ThePolice #SugarHillRecords #MusicEducation #NewJerseyMusic #SaxophoneLife #MusicMentor #TheYesYesMan

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    46 mins
  • THE MUSICIAN'S SHED PODCAST: JEREMY WARREN (Full interview)
    May 5 2026

    In this soulful and rhythmic episode, Samar Newsome sits down with world-class drummer Jeremy Warren. From his humble beginnings in Little Rock, Arkansas, to the high-stakes stages of New York City and his current impact in New Jersey, Jeremy shares the blueprint of a career built on versatility. Whether he’s keeping time for legendary jazz icons or providing the backbone for hip-hop royalty like The GZA (Wu-Tang Clan), Jeremy’s journey is a masterclass in musical adaptability and dedication.

    Key Discussion Points

    • The Arkansas Roots: Jeremy reflects on his early childhood in Little Rock, the influence of the church, and the pivotal moment he realized music was his calling.
    • The Transition to the North: The leap from the South to the competitive Northeast music scene. He discusses the "culture shock" and the hustle required to establish himself as a first-call drummer in the tri-state area.
    • The Jazz Discipline: Having performed with some of the finest names in jazz, Jeremy breaks down the mental and technical preparation needed to play at an elite level.
    • Crossing Genres with The GZA: A deep dive into his role as the drummer for Wu-Tang’s The GZA. Jeremy explains the nuance of bringing live instrumentation to classic hip-hop and the "bridge" between jazz improvisation and hip-hop pocket.
    • The Educator’s Mantle: Beyond the stage, Jeremy discusses his passion for teaching in New Jersey, emphasizing the importance of passing the torch to the next generation of percussionists.

    Memorable Quotes

    "You have to be a chameleon. Whether it’s a jazz trio or a Wu-Tang track, the heartbeat of the music is the same; it's just the language that changes."

    Takeaways for Listeners

    1. Versatility is Currency: Learning multiple genres isn't just about fun; it’s about professional longevity.
    2. Education is Essential: Jeremy highlights how teaching others actually sharpens your own craft.
    3. The Journey Matters: Success isn't overnight—it's a long road from Little Rock to the world stage, paved with practice and persistence.

    Where to Follow Jeremy Warren

    • Instagram: @jwarrenmusic
    • Check out his latest project: Jeremy Warren & The Rudiment

    STAY Connected on YouTube , IG and Facebook.


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    38 mins
  • THE MUSICIAN'S SHED PODCAST: MISHA JOSEPHS (Full interview)
    Apr 28 2026

    In this compelling episode of The Musician’s Shed, host Samar Newsome sits down with versatile guitarist Misha Joseph. The conversation maps out Misha’s expansive journey—not just across genres, but across the globe—detailing his evolution from a young dreamer in Uzbekistan to a seasoned professional in the American music scene.

    Key Discussion Points

    • Roots in Uzbekistan: Misha shares memories of his early life in Uzbekistan, discussing the cultural atmosphere that first sparked his curiosity and the initial challenges of accessing diverse musical influences.
    • The American Dream: The transition from Central Asia to America. Misha reflects on the "culture shock" and the drive required to establish a new identity in a highly competitive musical landscape.
    • Finding the Voice: The moment Misha realized music wasn't just a hobby, but a calling. He discusses the specific artists and experiences that pivoted his path toward the guitar.
    • The Professional Grind: A transparent look at what it takes to "make it." From rigorous practice schedules to the importance of networking and versatility, Misha breaks down the reality of life as a working musician.

    Final Thoughts

    This episode serves as an inspiring blueprint for any aspiring artist. Misha Joseph’s story is a testament to the fact that while technical skill is vital, persistence and adaptability are the true keys to a lasting career in music.

    Where to Listen

    • Available on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.
    • Follow the Guest: Check out Misha Joseph’s latest projects and performances on his social media channels.

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    59 mins
  • THE MUSICIAN'S SHED PODCAST: AARON "Mr. Lab" MONROE (Full interview)
    Apr 21 2026

    In this episode, Samar Newsome sits down with the man who turns every track into a masterclass: Aaron Monroe, better known as Mr. Lab.

    Aaron’s journey is a testament to what happens when raw talent meets relentless curiosity. From the high-energy drum throne of the church to the cutting edge of global Afro-pop and the inner circle of icons like Missy Elliott, Aaron breaks down the "Lab results" of a career built on versatility.

    In the Shed Today:

    • The Foundation: Aaron discusses his early introduction to music as a church drummer and how the "gospel shed" prepared him for the world’s biggest stages.
    • The Afro-pop Shift: How he mastered the rhythms of one of the world's fastest-growing genres and what it takes to produce authentic, global sounds.
    • Working with the Queen: Aaron gives us a rare look behind the scenes of working with the legendary Missy Elliott. What does a pioneer like Missy expect when she steps into the studio?
    • The "Mr. Lab" Philosophy: Why Aaron treats every session like a scientific experiment and how he continues to reinvent his sound.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Drummer to Producer: Why understanding rhythm is the ultimate "cheat code" for music production.
    • Cultural Fluency: The importance of studying different genres (like Afro-pop) to remain indispensable in a global market.
    • The Missy Standard: Lessons learned from working with a legend about work ethic, creativity, and staying ahead of the curve.
    "The church gave me the feel, but the lab gave me the formula. You have to be a student of the sound before you can be a master of the hit."Aaron Monroe (Mr. Lab)

    🔗 Connect with Aaron Monroe:

    • Instagram: @theonlymrlab

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    54 mins