Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 626

Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 626

Welcome to The Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 626. Our featured interview tonight is with Chris Mattioda of C. Martin Pipes. Chris is a 25-year old part time pipemaker from Enumclaw, Washington. He actually made a pipe before he smoked one as it was one of his chosen 9th grade wood shop projects. Later he acquired a wood lathe and was making pens and other items, but he became real serious about making pipes when he came across a video of pipemaker Jeff Gracik. At the top of the show Brian will follow up on a two year old tobacco review on Savinelli Janus. He let the tin age for two years and now he will explore the differences.

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Chris Mattioda
Chris Mattioda

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The Pipes Magazine Radio Show features interviews with pipe makers, tobacco blenders, pipe and tobacco aficionados, collectors, and more. Episodes air every Tuesday.

Our show is sponsored by SmokingPipes.com, Cornell & Diehl, Missouri Meerschaum, Savinelli Pipes and Tobaccos, Peterson Pipes and TinBids. Please give them some consideration when making your next pipe or tobacco purchase.

We hope you enjoy our 1-hour show produced just for you—the pipe smoker and collector.




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2 Responses

  • A tasty review of the aging Janus tobacco.
    Pipemaker Chris’ story of car building was quite interesting. His design work with pipes is remarkable for such a young maker. Nice looking pipes.
    “Out of the Woods” by Nickel Creek is one of my favorite tunes from this debut album.
    YouTube seems to pick up your choices and feed you related videos. Rather than try to eliminate content you don’t want, pick the stuff you do like and soon the other stuff is no longer showing up.
    Thanks for another always entertaining show.
    Dino

  • Nice review of aged Janus pipe tobacco.
    Chri Mattioda’s story of building a car was quite similar to the Johnny Cash song “One Piece at a Time”. The song was about a GM auto worker who smuggled out a car “one piece at time” and the fun the boys had in assembling it. Nothing like assembling a car out of parts that were stolen over a 20-year period. Interview was okay, but you could have easily put this under the newbie banner.
    To refer to the jackleg recording you played as “some kind of Bluegrass” was a gross misuse of the term Bluegrass. There was no way that piece of junk was bluegrass. From Bill Monroe to Billy Strings they all agree that was not Bluegrass.
    As Dino says YouTube seems to pick out things you have played in past and reduce the number of things you don’t want. I just wish they were better at it.

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