Episode 492 - The Power of Raw Rebellion: Electro-Punk Artist Peter Pepper on Music as Therapy

APR 9, 202639 MIN
When Words Fail...Music Speaks

Episode 492 - The Power of Raw Rebellion: Electro-Punk Artist Peter Pepper on Music as Therapy

APR 9, 202639 MIN

Description

In today’s episode, host James Cox—a self‑declared “professional handicapped” host who’s turned his own struggles into a mission to help others—welcomes the electrifying Peter Pepper, a pioneering electro‑punk artist who fuses raw punk rebellion with glitch‑laden electronic edge.From the chilly winters of the U.S. to the tropical creative hubs of Indonesia, James and Peter trade stories about escaping the cold, networking with global artists, and the evolution of the electro‑punk scene that exploded around the turn of the millennium. Listeners get a crash course on the genre—how synthesizers meet punk attitude, the early influencers (Devo, Mindless Self‑Indulgence, Screaming Monkey Boner) and the cultural moment before MySpace ever existed.The conversation dives deep into the emotional core of music:How aggressive, high‑energy tracks serve as cathartic releases for both creator and fan.The shift from instinct‑driven songwriting to the pressures of making a living, and why Peter now makes art “solely for the sake of making art.”His upcoming blues project—a stark departure from electro‑punk that he describes as “crying into the mic at one in the morning”—and why it feels more therapeutic than traditional therapy.They also tackle modern industry realities: the rise of EPs and singles in the streaming era, the looming influence of AI on music creation, and whether “organic music” will ever command a premium price like organic food.Finally, a rapid‑fire “lightning round” reveals Peter’s quirks—old‑school digital preferences, a love for synthesizers, a reverse cymbal effect, and his favorite bands (Nine Inch Nails, Dead Kennedys, Pink Floyd, and the Blues Brothers).Tune in to hear the raw, rebellious, and surprisingly heartfelt journey of an artist who turned his outsider angst into a soundscape that helps listeners navigate their own dark moments—proving that when words fall short, music always speaks.