© 2024 NPR Illinois
The Capital's Community & News Service
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

No Expiration Date

The Milk Carton Kids
Josh Rogosin
/
NPR
The Milk Carton Kids

Like Simon & Garfunkel, the legendary folk act they're often compared to, The Milk Carton Kids have a timeless quality to them. But the duo didn't start their careers working together.

Guitarist Joey Ryan first met Kenneth Pattengale at the latter's solo show in Los Angeles.

"We were both struggling artists," Ryan told host Ophira Eisenberg, "and 'artists' is a generous term [for it]." At that show, Pattengale played a song he'd written from the perspective of a dead dog. "I just knew the kind of uplifting material we could create together was going to be commercially viable," Ryan joked.

Since that fateful meeting, the pair have released four studio albums to much critical praise. Their 2013 album The Ash and Clay, was nominated for a Grammy in the folk category, and the duo was featured in a documentary by T Bone Burnett & The Coen Brothers about the music behind the film Inside Llewyn Davis.

As far as band names go, "The Milk Carton Kids" is pretty dark. "I like it," Eisenberg said, "but when you tell people your name, I'm sure it doesn't strike everyone as dark." "Thank you," Ryan replied. "It's supposed to be dark, but when you get on a plane with your guitar and the flight attendant asks the name of your band and you say 'The Milk Carton Kids,' 100% of the time they say, 'Aw, that's cute.'"

For this episode of Ask Me Another, Ryan and Pattengale performed two songs off their most recent album Monterey. Plus, we had Pattengale quiz Ryan on famous Seinfeld catchphrases.


Highlights

On working together

"I always thought it would be really rewarding to be in a duo." -Ophira

"It's not." -Joey

On what it's like to tour together

"We travel around in a pocket of calm." -Joey

"Joey doesn't have much of a personality, as you can tell." -Kenneth

Heard in The Milk Carton Kids: No Expiration Date

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.