SKU: 85830257106

Adam Ostrar - The Worried Coat

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Description

Adam Ostrar - The Worried CoatAdam Ostrar is a parent, maybe just like you, that worries about the world his kid is inheriting. He lives in an over priced city (Austin, TX), drinks too much coffee (a bottomless cup), and suffers from insomnia (don't try to tell him this might be related to the former) and etc. He's anxious about the damaged and ravaged U. S. of A. You know, that country no one ever thought was perfect, but never knew how bad it could get. This Waking Nightmare

Adam Ostrar is a parent, maybe just like you, that worries about the world his kid is inheriting. He lives in an over-priced city (Austin, TX), drinks too much coffee (a bottomless cup), and suffers from insomnia (don't try to tell him this might be related to the former) and etc. He's anxious about the damaged and ravaged U.S. of A. You know, that country no one ever thought was perfect, but never knew how bad it could get.

This Waking Nightmare (Trump thinks this is what "woke" means, I hear...) is what subjects the various narrators in his new album, The Worried Coat (out April 5th 2019 on Super Secret Records).

Before the 2016 election, an album like this might be called a "dystopia"; now we call it "did you see what he tweeted?" On Ostrar's new album, he weaves together disparate voices, like a non-fiction version of Our Town written by Wyatt (Robert), not Wilder (Thornton). There's no "good guys" or "bad guys"; there's no "white hats" and "black hats"; there's no "red" and "blue".

There's just a lot of under- medicated neuroses bringing out nastiness and empathy in these sonorous participants. Or, as Ostrar explains when nudged for a TV Guide asterisked pick-of-the-week summation, "It's twelve narratives on otherness, self-identity, and our personal relationships with anxiety. How we often betray our best intentions through willful ignorance."

Ostrar creates these characters over the course of 12 songs, each wearing a different hat: In "Alex the Cretin" you hear the evangelical snake-oil salesman high on Wizard A True Star-era Rundgren; "Bloody Waves" is the Bossa Nova buoy of a refugee's displacement; in "Kansas City," we hear Kevin Ayers, as Joe the Plumber, looking backwards on his false nostalgia; "Stormed the Beach" is the sound of Cluster employed by Greenpeace; "Walk the Savages Home" is the gurgle of Nativism and Corruption; And in "Morning Said," Ostrar drops his tuning down to D and fills the page with pre-Page accent riffs while speaking to our forgotten good intentions.

Recorded in part in Mexico City courtesy of Richard Davies (The Moles) hand-me-down studio time and the other half at a ranch in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona, Ostrar wrapped and warped his Gretsch Country Gentleman guitar around these groovy nuggets of capitalistic despair, cretinism, gas lighting, nationalism and nativism, false heroism, and that good-time tug-of-war (psssst, this game is rigged) called Inherited Wealth vs. Inherited Debt.

But he wasn't alone in making this album, so don't worry too much about him. He brought along Michael Krassner (Boxhead Ensemble, Lofty Pillars), Wil Hendricks (Califone, Simon Joyner), and Stephen Patterson (Hamilton Leithauser, White Rabbits). This is Ostrar's second solo album, the follow-up to 2017's Brawls In the Briar. Before that, he led the early 2000 shag-carpet art-punk of Manishevitz, an early Jagjaguwar band that toured with The Mountain Goats and Edith Frost before the Internet tracked these things.

When he isn't stressing out, you can find him teaching guitar and Ubering to gigs in Austin, Texas. Some days he has a beard, some days he doesn't. The Worried Coat is Ostrar at his best even though 2018 wasn't the best year. So take your own Worried Coat out of the closet and bundle up with him. It's getting colder.

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SKU: 85830257106

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KT
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Works great, good quality and colors
Color: Beige
Just love this remote control holder. Have two in the living room, two in the bedroom and gave some to our children. Sure beats the mess of having remotes laying all over the furniture. And at night I can reach for a remote to change the height of my adjustable mattress in the dark, because I know the location right at the beginning of the holder. Pretty colors and blending with furniture well. Built to last and perfect size.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2025
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Joey
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
Great organizing remote holder
Color: Antique
We love this remote holder, it consolidates all our remotes in one place and frees up room on our table. Very nice design, too.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2026
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Darko
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
It works and looks great!
Color: Antique, Color: Antique
It looks exactly as pictured. Fits all my remotes. 10/10 would recommend. It looks small but my biggest remote in the back fits just fine. Good quality.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2026
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Laura B
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 4
Helped solve a long time problem
Color: Black
Looks nice and really help keep the remotes in one place and in order
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Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2026
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Maxine
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Good organizer for glasses and finding the is remote is easier
Color: Black, Color: Black
I bought 2 more, really like them, good quality
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Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2026

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