Author: h

  • Jimmy Eat World at the Midland Theater

    Night one of The Buzz‘s holiday shows went off smoothly in the beautiful Midland Theater last night, dampened only by the disappointing absence of Sleigh Bells (1).  I love on-time sets and reasonable stage changes.

    Jimmy Eat World pulled their set from their whole six-album catalog, smartly bookending it with hits from “Bleed American” and playing a track each from “Static Prevails” and “Clarity.”  (I would have voted for a couple more “Clarity” cuts, myself, but no complaints!)  We cheered for up-tempo hits from “Futures” and “Chase the Light,” and the crowd even seemed to know and respond to several tunes from this year’s “Invented.”  The band was looser than I expected – this being my first Jimmy show, I’d imagined them as a seamless pop production – and it worked well for them, demonstrating some personality that the airless back half of their discography lacks.

    These guys are still have a sense of semi-awkward seventeen-year-old-ness about them: Jim kicking around stage and swinging his head around, Tom stoically strumming away at his SG (downstroke 8th notes are their stock in trade, almost to a fault, if they weren’t so influential), Zach’s short-sleeved plaid.  It was very humanizing; I like them more, having felt that.  An extra garage-y take on “Authority Song,” “by request” according to Jim, added to the impression; it looked like it had been a long time since the band played it, not really finding their way until the second verse, and it was fun to see for precisely that.

    The show has left me listening to “Clarity” last night and “Bleed American” this morning, which I always think is one of the best things a concert can do.

    Openers Free Energy, who I came in inclined to like, were much more classic guitar rock than their James Murphy-produced dance-rock record ever indicates.  They had heart, though, and seemed to be having a good time.  (The kick/bass mix was a problem all night; giant, thunderous kick drum drowning out the bass.  Unfortunately, all four bands’ bassists might as well have stayed home.  The Midland should address that immediately.)

    Sleigh Bell-replacements Cage the Elephant were much better 20 years ago, when it was called the Pixies.  CA (2) pointed out the singer performed an amazing feat of balance, standing on the crowd’s upstretched hands during the last tune, to which I replied that when that’s the best thing about a band, it’s time to write some songs..  Dirty Head was fascinating as an argument for the perenniality of the stoned white guy reggae/rap thing, which I’d assumed peaked about 1995 with 311 (3); my mistake is no credit to their jams, though.

    (1) Due to health issues.  Get well!

    (2) Happy birthday!

    (3) UPDATE: I’m afraid 311 came off much worse than I meant here. My point was that 311 hit on something cool in 1995, and it’s weird to me that what they did, which is very much of that particular time and place for me, is still resonating among the kids these days (4).

    (4) This still doesn’t make Dirty Head any better, though.

  • MR|Review – Girl Talk, “All Day”

    You’ll find your own moment in All Day, when a favorite or long-forgotten pop hook comes at you sideways from the flurry of samples, and you smile like an idiot. That’s what Girl Talk is about, and it’s a beautiful trick.

    AllDay.jpg Must-hear!
    Recommended
    Good
    Fans only
    Skip this
    Owww! My ears!

    Mine came toward the end of “This Is The Remix,” when the chords hits from INXS’ “Need You Tonight” took over a beat that had been built out of “Cecilia” and Kid ‘n Play.  It was a little moment of pure joy.

    The pickle is, now that I’ve had it, it’s had.  The juxtaposition won’t work for me again, since I can anticipate it; I’ve internalized whatever it has to offer in that mode, and can’t discover it again.  The power – a beautiful, fun power, for sure, and the product of amazing curatorial and technical craft – is gone.

    (Bit of background – Greg Gillis is a DJ who goes by Girl Talk, and makes sample-crazy remix/mash-up music, mostly rap vocals over non-rap beats, switching songs in and out of the mix every 10-20 seconds.)

    Since the effectiveness of All Day diminishes quickly with repeat listens, it may be best to think of it as an ad for Girl Talk’s live show.  Having heard the record, I’d happily make the trip to recordBar to hear Greg throw down for a couple hours.  But even more than that, All Day is an argument for a hypothetical Girl Talk app.  Isn’t that the end game of this aesthetic?

    Imagine; a database of drum beats, bass lines/chords, rap verses, vocal and instrumental hooks, breaks, etc., and an algorithm that shuffles them all together into and endlessly mutating stream of pop music, creating new opportunities for juxtaposition and joyful surprise every time we listen.

    Then, make it tweakable; set your own preferences for beats per minute, “ADD” level (how long samples play on average before being switched out), even allow users to upload and tag their own samples, effectively crowdsourcing Girl Talk.  How fun would that be?!

    Even if All Day has have a larger point about our cut & paste culture, or perhaps even can be interpreted to comment on spiritual ideas like Buddhist impermanence, wouldn’t the hypothetical app just reinforce that as well?

    In rating All Day, I fell back on my own criteria; if you’re interested in music in 2010, you should check out Girl Talk and enjoy what Greg is doing, or better yet, go see him DJ live.  But along with that, this album has zero stars in my iTunes.  My preference is for work that has the potential to sustain repeated, in-depth attention with new insight and meaning.  While you could spend hours studying the taxonomy of All Day‘s samples (or just go to the wikipedia page), I don’t find much here after the bursts of pleasure at hearing things like 2Pac over Sabbath, or Katy Perry and Snoop over “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” have passed.

    MR|Review directs readers’ limited attention among works via ratings, and within works via prose, focusing on works where our opinion diverges from critical or popular consensus, or we have significant insight that compliments or challenges readers’ aesthetic experience.
  • Re-purpose the Pain

    Re-reading Heaven’s Reach this week for the first time since late high school or early college, I ran across a character development that had such a huge impact on my own growth that I’d nearly forgotten its origin.

    ! Massive spoiler alert !

    Emerson D’Anite’s brain has been purposefully damaged – basically, his left temporal lobe removed – for reasons he cannot remember, robbing him of speech.  For a while, he cannot communicate at all.  Slowly, he re-learns how to grunt, gesture, and eventually discovers that he can express himself musically, appropriating snatches of half-remembered song lyrics to communicate with the people around him.  When he tries to remember what his life was like before his injury, the events that led to his maiming, who did it to him, or why, he suffers awful pain.

    That is, until he realizes that the pain was put into his brain by the same beings who injured him, specifically to discourage him from thinking about those memories and questions.  This insight fills Emerson with a healthy spitefulness and he learns to dive straight into the pain, taking it as a sign that he is on the right track and thereby turning it against the beings who inflicted it!  Bit by bit, he wrenches some of his memories and speaking ability back as the pain – which isn’t diminished in and of itself – is tempered with satisfaction and excitement and, yes, a constructive kind of revenge.

    I have taken this lesson and incorporated it into my own self and my thinking habits.  When I notice psychological pain, whether through reflection or someone bringing it to my attention, I try to counter the instinct to avoid it by going straight into it, thinking about it, writing or talking about it, making sure I don’t forget it.  There’s still the problem of noticing the pain/avoidance response in the first place, but with lots of practice I may even be getting better at that.  Through a long and continuing slog across this territory, I’ve partially re-trained my internal reward mechanisms to better support my practice of Emerson’s insight.

    In a way, vengeance plays a role for me, too; on my subconscious, on natural selection, on cultural conditioning, on anything other than my conscious self that determines my behavior and experience.

    Too often I forget that this is an unusual habit of thought, and when others express some kind of psychological pain or discomfort I immediately start going after it (because that’s what I do in my own head) when they would rather not.

    The Uplift series made a strong impact on me in at least one other way; the relationship between Tom Orley and Gillian Baskin as an example of a highly developed, equitable and caring life-partnership.  (Primarily in Startide Rising.)  As readers of MR|link and the blog know, the author, Dr. David Brin, has contributed a lot to my general worldview, though at the moment I can’t think of an example of a specific, direct impact on my jams.  -h

  • But, Marty…

    “You Have To Wear The Boots” tracking is finished as of 5 PM yesterday, when Tim completed flute tracks for the Cowboy and Clara’s pieces.  (In time to get down to Minsky’s and watch the Huskers’ OT win!)  Congrats to all who have sung, played, and/or supported singers and players.  Final mixing/mastering starts as early as this afternoon, and we’ll have it out before 2011, maybe even this month.  -h

  • A Series of Sneak(y Updates)

    mrfuriousrecords.com – Tonight I updated the Buddypress core and Facebook login.  That broke some things…  but everything (except Facebook – which I will work on presently) is back and the Activity page actually looks better than ever.  ALSO: FINALLY got the main nav drop-downs in line, though there’s one more little bit to fix there.  Thank Ifni for Firebug; would never have found the problem without it.

    Shows – In a moment of actual semi-rock-star-ness, I rolled out of bed 10 minutes before needing to hit the road for the pancake gig.  And forgot my songbook.  So the 105-minute set (!) consisted of hastily scribbled down tunes from “…not nothing,” “Ventura,” Five Star Crush, Cory, and even a couple from “It’s a Trap.”  But it was a ton of fun, Tim jammed along, and everyone seemed cool with it (including an off-duty cop).  Since then I’ve also done four 15-minute sets at work to promote the last round of “Songs of -h,” which I’m offering in exchange for a donation to the local scholarship fund.  I’ve done “Coast & Plains” and “Snow is a Bear” at each one, and then mixed in other stuff for the third tune.

    “…Boots” – Tim and I went way long at his first session, so we had to plan another.  And he was sick over the weekend, so we missed it, and are now aiming for early November.  I’m still hoping for a November release, especially since I don’t know of any forthcoming XMAS jams for 2010.

    Loud Weird Band – Still technically without a name, the band-maybe-known-as-Exploder-Mode-or-Anteatereater-or-Phantom-Nukes-or-Chrome-Satellites had our first practice with my new bass amp (ridiculously great) and I have a new round of mixes of the first six tunes out to the other guys that I’m finally satisfied with.  Drew and I have also done vocals on the 7th tune (he did lead, and murdered it) and are ready to mix that.

  • Live Set & Breakfast Next Saturday

    I’ll be playing next Saturday, Oct. 9, from 8-10 AM for Community Assistance’s Council‘s Flapjack Fundraiser at the Applebee’s at Truman Corners, Grandview, MO.

    From the press release:

    Community Assistance Council is announcing the start of a new program for transitional housing in south Kansas City. Seeds of Hope, an area home purchased by CAC, will allow a family time to live in the home, while working with a case manager to develop life skills and stabilize finances with the goal of reaching self-sufficiency in six to nine months.

    “There’s been such a need in this area for transitional housing. Currently, families that want to live in this area, but have credit issues or other barriers that keep them from renting or owning a home have only local motels to stay at,” Carol Bird Owsley, Executive Director of CAC, said.

    … St. Luke’s [United Methodist Church] started a pledge drive with its membership and has hosted numerous fundraisers to raise the money needed to purchase the home … Community Assistance Council is now hosting its own Flapjack Fundraiser on Saturday, October 9, at the Applebee’s at Truman Corners, from 8-10am.

    CAC staff and volunteers with help from St. Luke’s United Methodist Church volunteers, will cook and serve breakfast, which will include pancakes, eggs and sausage, as well as a beverage for $7/person. There will even be musical entertainment provided by Howie Howard from Mr. Furious Records (www.mrfuriousrecords.com). Proceeds will be used to pay for ongoing expenses the first year, such as insurance, taxes and utilities. “Eventually, the program will be able to fund itself,” Owsley stated. “But the first year costs need to be met.”

    Tickets for the Flapjack Fundraiser can be purchased in advance at Community Assistance Council, 10901 Blue Ridge Boulevard, or at the door. More information regarding Seeds of Hope, the breakfast or CAC can be provided by calling the agency, 816-763-3277.

    In unrelated news, Jill sent me this screenshot from Facebook:

    Facebook Mellensong

  • Boots Sessions; One Left

    Tara Varney blessed us last night, recording The Knight’s parts for “You Have To Wear The Boots.”  (In semi-related news, there was a Back To The Future marathon last weekend, and I happened to catch that line in the few minutes I watched in between football games.)

    I have the final session scheduled in a couple weeks with Tim.  He’ll play flute on the Cowboy & Clara’s songs, I’ll finish the mix/master (it’s almost done already, since these parts we’re adding will merge pretty seamlessly with the previously recorded stuff), and we’ll hope to have it out in November.  -h

  • RE: Nirvana

    From: cory@thesleepoverisyourgeneticfather.com
    To: howie@interwebscom.edunet

    So, although I’d heard most of the songs on it, I’d never owned “In Utero”, so I downloaded it from iTunes the other day. It’s different from “Nevermind” in many ways, and there’s a huge difference in production.  Anyway, I remember you once saying that you weren’t really a Nirvana fan and that part of the reason was because of all of the Cobain stigma, although I am guessing there’s more to it than that. I kind of just wanted to hear more about that (this isn’t a challenge, like “Why don’t you like them YOU SHOULD LIKE THEM”), I am just really curious. Mostly because Nirvana were such a big influence on me and I like them a ton, and since we’re in the same generation, I just wondered what the differences were in our Nirvana experience. (And maybe I have your view completely wrong, or maybe it’s changed, or who knows!)

    From: howie
    To: cory

    I have Nevermind and From The Muddy Banks of the Wishkah, that’s all.  Let’s back up and let me re-phrase how I feel about Nirvana, OK?  Try to wipe out what you remember me saying.

    Mostly what I feel is the tension between Kurt’s feminism / pro-gay position / feelings about celebrity culture / etc., and the way that the knuckleheaded bros of our generation (and the corporate  structure of the next generation older) were able to accept and use Nirvana’s music at the surface level without being challenged by its politics and social criticism. That discrepancy just makes me feel sick, and never sicker than when I hear “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” I pretty much can’t listen to it. I can sort of listen to the live version from “Wishkah.”  I guess in sum, I just hate the shallow read that Nirvana gets in popular culture.

    So, Nirvana is a pretty big deal to me, but I think it would be hard to call me a fan or say I like them a ton, and I almost never listen to their music. Does that parse? I don’t know how to categorize my feelings about Nirvana.

    Thanks for asking, I hope you’ll have some stuff to say about it. -h

    From: cory
    To: howie

    No, that’s totally interesting! I didn’t think that you thought they were a terrible band or anything like that, and it sounds like you don’t think that; it’s more that the context in which you experience(d) Nirvana is a lot different than mine.

    I think the main difference might be that I either didn’t directly witness or was totally ignorant of the very real Bro/Corporate misinterpretation/exploitation of Nirvana’s music. I am sure people I thought sucked listened to Nirvana in Middle School/High School, but looking back, it feels like almost everyone I knew who liked Nirvana were nerds.  I am specifically thinking of people like Josh Oberndorfer, who was obsessed with “Bleach”/”Incesticide”/weird b-sides and crud. That’s kind of my conception of the typical Nirvana fan; the nerd/loner who finally found a band/message they could relate to.

    Also, I think this matters: my first contemporary record (the first record I listened to that wasn’t played for me by my parents) was a cassette tape of *Nevermind* that was dubbed for me by my Uncle Bob, and I remember sitting my room and playing that thing over and over and over as an 11-year-old outcast (this was when I was in 6th grade). It was my first year of Middle School and I had transferred to a new district the summer before, and so I didn’t have any friends from Elementary School there with me.  I was also really short, really heavy, I had braces and headgear that I had to wear during school hours, I had a bowl-cut, and I played the baritone in band.  Hey Laaaaaaadieees!

    I’m not saying all of this because I want to reverse-brag about my nerd-dom, but I think it’s important to note that I discovered Nirvana when I was very much looking for something I could relate to, and I think that explains a lot regarding why I am not/was not bothered by a lot of the stigma that bothers you. Although of course, I totally agree with your assessment; I just never experienced it in a direct way.  I am also sure that there are bands I can’t fully enjoy because they are fatally connected to other negative things in my mind, although I can’t think of an example off the top of my head.

    I don’t know. I think your feelings about them make sense, and I think both of our views on them are perfectly valid. And I think that helps me understand completely why you can’t just sit down and listen to them and enjoy them without kind of going, “Lord, this is a shame.”

    From: howie
    To: cory

    Yeah… when I hear Nirvana, or think of Nirvana, I can’t avoid thinking of the weight room in high school and the singles from “Nevermind.”  I was a little later coming to Nirvana than you, since I was more into Boyz II Men in 1991/92.  And when I was getting really into music, probably starting freshman year (1995-96) or maybe a bit earlier, I was also starting to discover politics, and non-conformity was really important to me, creating a self-image that was partly defined through almost reflexive opposition to what i perceived as mainstream, etc.

    You’ve got a really cool story for discovering Nirvana!  I remember the first time I heard “Dookie” – it was 7th grade algebra, and we were reviewing for a test or something and finished early.  This guy in my class, Leon Smallbear, was playing the tape on a little boombox.  And of course, he was showing us the hidden “all by myself” track.

    My teacher in the class was super-cool. At one point, she played me this song by a friend of hers, “Addicted to Carmex,” and it was one of the first times I can remember being introduced to the idea that you could know someone personally who recorded music or made rock-ish type music. The song itself was a kind of Violent Femmes-sounding acoustic punk affair.  I think she played it because she’d seen me with Carmex, and she liked Carmex too.

    6th grade for me… let’s see; frog t-shirt? Check. Yep, braces; check. (No ‘gear, though, you win that one!) 14 oz. of hair gel per day + side-part? CHECK. Large metal-frame glasses? Check. My friend, we are in business.

    From: cory
    To: howie

    That “Dookie” story is rad: Green Day (and that record in particular) were my next foray into contemporary music. I guess that would have been 1994-ish, and I remember actually being kind of weirded out about how different Green Day was to anything else I’d really heard. They were catchy but weird and semi-profane and didn’t sound anything like the Fleetwood Mac or Genesis or .38 Special my parents listened to. It was delightfully disturbing/eye-opening because it was so unsafe at the time, which is funny, because Green Day’s one of the safest bands around these days!

    I am betting that if I were somehow able to see a visual representation or measurement of how much Nirvana, Green Day and Weezer influenced/still influence my songwriting and how I think about music, I would be shocked.  I think that, because of when I got into those bands, they have a stronger hold on me than I’d like to admit.

    I love the piece about finding out that real, un-famous people can make music too, and not only that, they can make good music! I remember being at camp and finding out that my FRIENDS could write songs that were just as good (if not better) than the stuff on MTV. I just always assumed that songs on MTV/radio were there because they were the best songs. In retrospect, that’s a really cute/sad/naive thought :) Good thing I was just a kid!  I would be terrified/intrigued to know how many adults still think in that way.

    From: howie
    To: cory

    I think my single biggest influence might be a quote. I read somewhere, around when I was first writing songs, Elvis Costello saying something like “my goal is to put words and music together in the most interesting ways possible.”

    Could you speak to any enduring influences you hear in my music?  Obviously, DMB on the earlier h&s stuff, 5*C on “not nothing”… but consciously, I see more of how I go through an influence, pick up some things, and then sort of move on. I’d be interested if there are longer-term things I might not recognize.

    The MTV thing reminds me of that study I know I’ve told you (& everyone) about where like 50 groups of people rated a set of songs, some seeing others’ ratings and some not, and they showed how strong the purely *social* influence is on what we consider aesthetically good. (I assume the same process works at every level, from national/international down to local sub-cultures.) (BTW, I don’t think that necessarily leads to total aesthetic relativism, but that’s a different conversation.)

    From: cory
    To: howie

    That’s a good quote. I try really hard to make my songs really fun/rewarding to listen to. Sometimes it’s fun to make songs that are creepers and maybe they’re not fully awesome until you’ve listened a few times, but either way, I want the fun-factor to be the same. And there’s obviously nothing wrong with writing songs that pay off upfront. I think people think that this is wrong, though. Especially these days.

    When I get really into a band, I’ll say, “I want to try and write a song that sounds kind of like them, but that sounds mostly like me,” and I think the more bands I get into, the more diverse my songs become, and the more tricks I get up my sleeve. But then the main goal, I guess, is to make all of those tricks my own instead of emulating bands outright. I think I get better and better at this, especially when you consider my 20-year-old-self’s Bright Eyes/Cursive obsession!

    I am not sure if I hear any outstanding specific influences in your music, or at least, not in the last many years. Which is a good thing.  Maybe with the first few h&s records there was a lot of folk/rock there and maybe the DMB stuff was more present, but now, I just mostly detect certain themes/priorities in your songs. For example, you usually stay away from any kind of conventional chord progression/melody. Either you’ll mess with the time signature, or you’ll break the rules on purpose regarding the key you’re in, or you add some other factor(s) to keep it from being too straightforward. I know from personal experience that your songs are trickier to sing/play than they sound. “Snow is a Bear” is really tricky to play. I’m OK with just listening to it and singing along :)

    But in spite of all of this, you’re still really attentive to hooks.  You won’t write a weird song that just meanders and doesn’t stand out aside from just being unconventional. Songs like “Berlin” and “The Picture Song” and “New Slow Sea” and “Green Christine” are all examples of songs that have weird elements in them to make them interesting, but they’re still really catchy. And when you hear the “weird” parts, you don’t think, “Man, that’s really weird and it doesn’t make sense,” you just see that it’s totally appropriate and makes the song MORE hooky, not less.

    I know when I was younger I had bigtime Weezer/Superdrag influences, and then probably Elliott Smith for a while, but I think (hope!) I’m doing something pretty Kiblery now.

    From: howie
    To: cory

    “I think people think that [writing songs that pay off upfront] is wrong, though. Especially these days.”  Really? You mean just in Lincoln, or in general? What about the success of Robyn in the indie scene, etc.?

    The theme you pick out is good; I really like trying to make something weird into something catchy. (“In Rainbows” is kind of like the ultimate example of a band having massive success at this!) One way or another, that figures in to almost everything I do.

    “You won’t write a weird song that just meanders and doesn’t stand out aside from just being unconventional.” – :-) Actually, this is precisely what I did, until we started working together! You are the vector through which an interest in writing hooks/catchiness even got on to my radar.  So, thanks! I remember early on in college talking about songwriting, and you said something about working hard on writing melodies, and in my head I thought “Huh. Writing… melodies. Paying attention to vocal melodies with the purpose of making them singable. I never really thought about that!” Before that, my vocal lines were just the first thing that popped into my head.

    You know, another thing that I’m not sure I’ve said before, is that I’m on a mission to write something really immediate and visceral, and that’s totally a reaction against my earliest stuff. Those first tunes were so cerebral and unconventional-for-unconventionality’s sake, that since getting interested in hooks and rocking out, I’ve always been afraid my songs would be haunted by that more emotionally distant kind of approach forever and I wouldn’t be able to write something that just had some raw power.  I’m definitely still on that mission (See; Exploder Mode, “not nothing”) even though I think I’ve had some (at least partial) successes.  “signs” has something about it, even though it’s something I’m not sure many people understand (I don’t fully understand it myself, which I love), or even bits of “comets,” there’s maybe hints of it, like in the whimsy of “Yes Song” or the way that “The Picture Song” resonates with people for some unknown reason.  But that tension might be the beating heart of my creativity; constantly fighting against my cerebral/distant/unconventional instincts.

    I think I’ll listen to “Oceans of Ice…”

    From: cory
    To: howie

    I guess what I meant by that statement was that, within the indie community, there are certain artists who are totally accepted when they’re simple and catchy, and there are other artists that will get crapped on for it, no matter what, even if they write amazing stuff. For some reason, motherforkers totally accept/love/praise Justin Timberlake and Kesha and Lady GaGa and Robyn and Timbaland and all of those artists, I guess because they’re somewhat urban or dance-y or whatever. I am not sure. (And I love a lot of them too!) But you would *never* see a Pitchfork rave review about a rock and roll equivalent such as Fall Out Boy or Panic at the Disco or Blink182, even though Panic at the Disco’s last record is WAY more creative and catchy than a lot of that other radio-pop stuff.

    It’s like Panic or Fall Out Boy remind hipsters what they used to genuinely love in high school, and they’re ashamed or something and so they can’t think it’s cool so soon after they turned their back on it. But they probably always hated on people like Lady GaGa until recently, and since it’s socially acceptable for hipsters to love Lady GaGa (even hipsters are totally susceptible to the social influence!), they’re totally OK with liking radio-pop in their older years, even though they wouldn’t be caught dead anywhere NEAR their Reel Big Fish tour t-shirt.

    Related note: the new Maroon 5 single is actually really rad. On the surface, it doesn’t deviate a ton from their basic formula, but the chorus is really good, esp. the falsetto part.

    I am glad I had some influence on your desire to write hooks! :) Hooks are my favorite part of music, whether that be a vocal line or a sick guitar riff or a drum thing or the weird sampled tones in “Idioteque.”  Anything to make me go, “Dang, this is HOT!” I very much look forward to your stripped-down experiments with songwriting. No matter what you try, I don’t think you could ever let your songs get too simple in a bad way, so it sounds really cool. For what it’s worth, I think you pulled me in the opposite direction, i.e., caring a lot more about the meaning of a song and its poetry and lyrics and story instead of just singing whatever cliche stuff. So there!  I SAID STRIP DOWN

    NOW

    From: howie
    To: cory

    Ah – I get it. So, arbitrarily depending on genre, it’s OK/not OK to be really hooky and immediate, and you’re calling that out. Check.

    I’ve been anxious for M5, since I know they went to Germany or wherever to work with Mutt Lange, but I haven’t heard it yet. I didn’t get the second record; I liked the fast songs, but there were tooooooooooooo many lame sappy slow jams for me.

    We’re the Voltron of songwriting. -h

    From: cory
    To: howie

    Yes, sorry: it was really general at first when I said it. I guess it’s hard to be a really catchy rock band without people who are “in the know” dismissing you.

    That second M5 album mostly sucked. Unfortunately. Next time I’ll play  before I pay!  The new M5 song is “Misery,” just in case you want to hit it up on the ‘shark!

  • Site construction update

    Hey, all – it’s one thing after another with building the new mrfuriousrecords.com, but I’m making progress, and learning a ton.  Every thing I want to do, I find out there’s three other things I have to do *first.*

    But it’s (mostly) working at this point, so as soon as the theme looks decent enough, and I can import all the current content, I think we’ll go ahead and go live.

    Musically, we’re continuing to slowly mix and record vocals for Exploder Mode, and I heard this week from Greg (White Air); he’s working on a new release, and we may well collaborate with him on that again.

    -h

  • MR|Review – Jed Whedon, "History of Forgotten Things"

    Whedon’s quirky, warm indie-pop is recommended if you like the Shins, Imogen Heap, or The Postal Service, though Jed’s album is more theatrical (in a good way!) and diverse than any of those groups.  (Stream 3 tunes here, including the incredible “Tricks On Me,” which drew me in to the record.)

    Whedon.jpg Must-hear!
    Recommended
    Good
    Fans only
    Skip this
    Owww! My ears!

    UPDATE 19-Aug: As I listen to the record at least once a day, the word that comes to me is “compelling.”  It’s got hooks, yeah, but it’s got something more that keeps pulling me back.  Beautiful.

    Vocal melodies and performances, and production, are “History…”‘s strengths.  I hang on this album’s words in a way I only rarely do, and the lyrics are supported by a strongly identifiable melodic voice and instrumental sounds and arrangements that give each song its own vibe.  Whedon covers a lot of territory, too, from the spacey “Ancestors” to the soft alt-country vibe of “Tricks…”.  Each tune has a sprinkle of wonderful little sonic details; even different sections of songs are jumping out to me after repeat listens (like the bridge in “To Be Money”).

    A couple songs feature drum fade-ins that highlight the GarageBand-ness of the whole project and forgo the opportunity to make higher-impact entrances, but you may well find that endearing instead of how it mildly disappoints a structure-nerd like me.  For future tours and/or recordings, a live drummer (hi!) could add another dimension of rhythmic and dynamic variation to Jed’s tunes.  The drum programming is good overall, and there are some nice touches, so I assume Jed got what he wanted out of whatever tool he used; I just would have made some slightly different choices in that department.

    “History…” bears its relationship to the rest of the Whedonverse – “Dr. Horrible’s Sing-a-long Blog” and “Commentary! the Musical,” “Dollhouse,” Felicia Day (who shows up on violin here), Maurissa Tancharoen, and brother Joss – lightly.  Previous encounters with this network of artists may add to your appreciation of the album, but are not at all prerequisite. -h

    MR|Review directs readers’ limited attention among works via ratings, and within works via prose, focusing on works where our opinion diverges from critical or popular consensus, or we have significant insight that compliments or challenges readers’ aesthetic experience.
  • Finest Worksong

    I finally listened to the “Document” LP I picked up over a month ago, not realizing that one of my favorite R.E.M. songs is called “Finest Worksong” and is on that album. Bit by chiming bit, I am becoming an actual R.E.M. fan.

    Some bits & pieces:

    – Had a great session yesterday doing a full mixing pass on “You Have To Wear The Boots.” Cleaned up the big concerns from the most recent mix, and made several small but good changes to the overall sound – cleaner drums, clearer vocals – that I like. I’m ready for Tim’s flute and Tara’s voice (as The Knight).

    – Unofficially, it sounds like the cast of Khan! The Musical will be coming over in a couple weeks to complete the official soundtrack/original cast recording. Very cool.

    – If you saw the new site up for a few minutes earlier tonight, I was testing the functionality of using facebook accounts to log in to the new site. (A feature that may be more important to the Exploder Mode site I’m planning than MFR, but we’ll see.) With CA’s help, it was successful.

  • MFR site update

    Hi, I’m starting a massive site update that will be unfolding over the coming weeks.

    You can always visit the current site here; I’ll have to take the automatic re-direct down when I’m working on the new one, which is what’s happening if you’re reading this.

    Thanks for your patience; music should be available throughout the update. -h