My NTS
Live now
1
London
23:00 - 01:00

MOBBS chopping up whatever he finds ohm.mobbs@protonmail.com

2
Los Angeles
00:00 - 01:00

The narrative is bursting with color and impossible to fit into a 60 minute timespan - but here is an effort to both timehop a personal story and nod to a timeless musical vignette of influences and inspiration that spans intensely amongst all corners of the artistic globe: shining bright into film + design + literature + circumstance as much as the sonic palette itself presents. Here’s a little exploration and adventure celebrating both the underbelly of the unknown with all that is beautifully pop.

Scott Witte

Scott Witte

Scott Witte has been played on NTS in shows including Geologist Presents: The O'Brien System, featured first on 13 January 2020. Songs played include Grow and Sailors Dream.

Beginning in 1966 at the age of eight on a mahogany Epiphone, Scott Witte of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, was taken under the wing of an asteroid on the local bar rock scene and given private guitar lessons on the side. High school saw Witte go electric and form a group called the Seventh Circle, but his approach to guitar was permanently altered after he picked up a copy of the Fahey/Kottke/Lang album. He enrolled at the Milwaukee Conservatory under the auspices of studying flamenco guitar. Using money from his father and his factory job making outboard motor fuel, Witte recorded his debut album in 1980. No small fan of Lang and Kottke, Witte chose Minneapolis’s Sound 80 studio for recording, mixing, and mastering Sailor’s Dream. The title track displays Witte’s most accomplished finger work, building and billowing at a rapid-fire pace on a flat-top Mossman Tennessee 12-string.

Witte was aware of the self-determination of Fahey and his peers, but he also knew that there was little chance a label would release his recordings. Without a reputation or even a local following, he pressed up Sailor’s Dream on his own Piggy Rooster label. Sold live from the stage and on consignment to a handful of Milwaukee record shops, the album was just barely available in Witte’s home state. Shortly after the record was pressed, Witte moved to Santa Monica, California, in hopes of attaching himself to the state’s burgeoning interest in New Age. He wound up as a disc jockey for a community radio show and frequently used copies of his own failed album as a promotional giveaway. Scott Witte continues to write and play, recording his sophomore album in 2007 after a brief 27-year break.

read more

Scott Witte

Scott Witte has been played on NTS in shows including Geologist Presents: The O'Brien System, featured first on 13 January 2020. Songs played include Grow and Sailors Dream.

Beginning in 1966 at the age of eight on a mahogany Epiphone, Scott Witte of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, was taken under the wing of an asteroid on the local bar rock scene and given private guitar lessons on the side. High school saw Witte go electric and form a group called the Seventh Circle, but his approach to guitar was permanently altered after he picked up a copy of the Fahey/Kottke/Lang album. He enrolled at the Milwaukee Conservatory under the auspices of studying flamenco guitar. Using money from his father and his factory job making outboard motor fuel, Witte recorded his debut album in 1980. No small fan of Lang and Kottke, Witte chose Minneapolis’s Sound 80 studio for recording, mixing, and mastering Sailor’s Dream. The title track displays Witte’s most accomplished finger work, building and billowing at a rapid-fire pace on a flat-top Mossman Tennessee 12-string.

Witte was aware of the self-determination of Fahey and his peers, but he also knew that there was little chance a label would release his recordings. Without a reputation or even a local following, he pressed up Sailor’s Dream on his own Piggy Rooster label. Sold live from the stage and on consignment to a handful of Milwaukee record shops, the album was just barely available in Witte’s home state. Shortly after the record was pressed, Witte moved to Santa Monica, California, in hopes of attaching himself to the state’s burgeoning interest in New Age. He wound up as a disc jockey for a community radio show and frequently used copies of his own failed album as a promotional giveaway. Scott Witte continues to write and play, recording his sophomore album in 2007 after a brief 27-year break.

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Grow
Scott Witte
Piggy Rooster Records1980
Sailors Dream
Scott Witte
Piggy Rooster Records1980