Category: News

  • 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

  • I love you guys

    …and I’m doing a ridiculous amount of homework.

    But I swear to myself, in your presence, that I will get “…Boots” and the first Exploder Mode (formerly Fifty Bears in a Fight) stuff out this fall.  This.  Fall.

    Swear.  -h

  • Khan!

    KHAN! The Musical: In space, no one can hear you sing

    “Go back to the future in this 1980s rock-n-roll Enterprise.  It’s a new musical from Bryan Colley and Tara Varney … with original music by Tim Gillespie and Michelle Cotton.”

    With performances between July 27 and August 1, if you’re in the KC area I hope you’ll check out Khan!  You may know Tim from various performances with me, or the Bryan & Tara team from their string of hits in the past few KC Fringe Festivals.

    Tim’s previewed a couple tracks for me, and I think this is going to be a lot of fun. -h

  • Independence Day playlist

    Here’s a mix of some tunes about independence, citizenship, and the democratic process.

  • MFR Listening Project 023-027

    Today I return to the Listening Project series (pt.1pt. 2pt. 3pt. 4pt. 5); As our fifth birthday passed last September, I’ve been listening to every release roughly in order, making notes as I go.

    MFR023 – Pat Bradley, “The Musical Tales of Pat Bradley”

    • As leader of Lincoln’s Tangelo, Pat is responsible for one of my favorite records ever (“Year of Saturdays”).  Scoring “The Musical Tales…” for MFR continues to feel like a huge coup.
    • I don’t know exactly how long these songs were recorded before we released them in March 2008, but Cory had been telling me about this unreleased CDR of Pat’s he’d heard for at least a year.  Cory gets full credit for discovering this project, and keeping after Pat until we were able to put it out.
    • Since the music was already recorded, my only involvement was mastering.  I have really clear memories of driving south on hwy. 71 in KC, just southeast of downtown, listening to test masters and thinking about notes and changes.  It took me a long time to master, not because it was hard or the songs were very different in sound from each other, but I think just because I enjoyed listening to Pat so much.  I usually am tired of a project by the time the master’s finished, and I need a break from it in order to come back and enjoy it; that was not the case with “The Musical Tales…”
    • The songs are amazing, I love how bite-sized they are, I love Pat’s voice and playing… I am always happy when one of these songs comes up in shuffle.  Pat captures an honest folk/country feel without falling into genre traps or coming off as affected at all.  He just nails it.
    • Plus “Sunny Farm” is ridiculously awesome.

    MFR024 – “Songs of -h”

    • This is kind of an unusual release for us; a CD compilation of my best stuff I put together to sell as a fundraiser for a house-building trip to Mexico.  In addition to songs from the echoes EPs and “Lone Wolf,” the first two Sally Ride records, and “XMAS,” it had three unique tunes: an acoustic recording of “Major & Minor,” made especially for the comp, “Stop Walking (live),” an unreleased cut from howie&scott’s “Summer’s End” sessions, and “Set You Ablaze” from Lone Prairie Records’ “Killers in the Nebraska Territory” compilation.
    • I had a terrible time with the plant that pressed the discs.  A bunch of them had weird pops and clicks.  I tried to warn everyone and even give people who I don’t see often two copies in case one was bad, but if you have a poppy one, let me know; there’s a few left, and I’ll get one to you.  Because of the bad discs, I had the plant send some replacements – no more than 50, but I can’t remember for sure – so there are some un-numbered copies in circulation.
    • Friends & readers helped pick some of the tunes (the acoustic “Open Columns,” “New Slow Sea,” and “The Picture Song”); it always surprises me what jumps out to others as favorites, compared to what I think of as the best stuff.  Sometimes there’s consensus, but just as often, not.  (I guess that could mean it’s all about the same.)
    • It’s always so good to hear others’ voices pop up; Cory, Scott, everybody on “Back in the Fire…”
    • Been a long time since I heard this; it sounds better than I expected.  Happens with time, sometimes.  It’s not as comprehensive as I’d like – there’s sides of my songs that aren’t represented – but that’s my own fault, since they’re from albums I haven’t finished yet!  There are days when listening to this could super-bum me out, but this weekend is not one of those.
    • I’ll look for the digital liner notes, hopefully to post Monday.  (Updated 28 June 2010: Songs of h liner notes.pdf.)

    MFR025 – Arturo Got The Shaft, “A Life Without Fireflies”

    • My thoughts on this album are already documented fairly exhaustively in the credits/liner notes.
    • I remember we’d done a bunch of vocal takes on “Pants and Backpacks,” and Rob was getting a bit tired and frustrated.  As we started yet another take and Rob reached the line “We’ll create modern art…” on impulse I ran over to the mic and finished it (“…with some grape pop-tarts”) like we did sometimes live, just to goof off and break up the situation.  You can hear that that’s the take we ended up using.
    • Looking back, the track sequencing is right on.  1-4 rock pretty hard, with a slight break at 3.  5 takes it all the way down, leading the way into 6’s epic size.  7 starts tight and driving but it takes the vocals a while to enter; the long, taut intro is a sort of palette cleanser for the record’s endgame.  So 7-10 mirror 1-4; two rockers, a break, and another rocker, saving the punkest for last.
    • “Hey, Gordon Shumway!” is one of a very very few songs with 5-star ratings in my iTunes, and the only one in which I had any part of creating.
    • The more I try to explain “Fireflies,” the farther words seem to take me away from its heart.  I see myself keep trying, though; it might have something to do with those precious emails from old friends or people who just caught a Shaft show, asking about more music.  *Something* is coming across in translation to some folks, at least, and if that’s not enough then what could ever be?

    MFR026 – The Sleepover, “The Sleepover EP”

    • I hadn’t heard much from Cory about the Sleepover’s first recording sessions for this EP, so I was kind of surprised when he sent it over to master and release.  I knew they were doing *something,* but then it was like it just showed up, complete.
    • “I’ll take it easy somewhere without humidity / All the booze I can drink” is a rad line, especially for those of us from Nebraska who understand what’s implied by reference to getting away from the damp air.
    • As always, I love Kibler’s semi-Pavement-like anti-solos (see also; “What U Do 2 Me,” “Talk Me Down”)
    • Great scream in “Always the Liar,” which is hard to do.  Tricky to master, too, because the levels at the end of the song are so much higher than at the beginning; had to use a bit of automation to bring the mix down so the output would be more balanced, which the band OK’d.

    MFR027 – The Golden Age, “Calla Lily EP”

    • For a long time back in late ’04 or early ’05 when this came out, I only had a burned version from Jaimie Tucci, which I was fairly obsessed with.  I tried to buy it at Homer’s every time I was back in Lincoln, but couldn’t find it.  I was hooked on “Serenade” the way I rarely get with specific songs (it’s usually albums), and it still speaks volumes to me.
    • Credit again to Cory for securing Rob’s blessing to re-release this gem.  It’s beautiful and perfect, and I don’t know if I can say much else about it.  I didn’t touch the audio at all; MFR’s re-release is exactly the original CD EP.
    • At the same time we got a hold of “Calla Lily,” we heard Rob had an unreleased full-length…
  • The Sleepover's "Oceans of Ice, Island of Terror" Available!

    Lone Prairie Records has released Cory & Co.‘s latest effort on CD; messages from Cory below.

    Hello, all! As promised/threatened, I am sending this e-mail out once more to remind you about the CD release shows, and to let you know that the CD is now available for purchase online through Lone Prairie Records! To buy one for a mere $10, just go here!:

    http://loneprairierecords.com/?page_id=4

    From that page, you can click on four of the songs which will take you to our reverb nation page for streamings. But really, go buy this CD. You will be shocked and amazed and maybe even a little bit more fashionable.

    Hope to see you at the CD release shows! If not, make haste and snag a copy as soon as you’re able :)

    Cory + The Sleepover

    And:

    I thought I’d send out this review from lazy-i.com to everyone who worked on the record: it’s pretty dang complimentary, I would say!

    (The Sleepover review link)
    I tried to talk up everyone who worked on the record equally in the e-mail I sent him, but I think he mentioned Eric on account of the resumé. But either way, he praises the production value very highly, which speaks really well to Chris, Eric, and Howie! And he seems to like the songs, which is rad. My favorite quote is when he’s talking about our record and the Scott Severin record, and he says, “The only way this record could be more opposite from Severin’s is if it incorporated a gay choir and an orchestra of vuvzelas.” I love it!

    Anyway, I hope you enjoy!

    Cory

    The gang worked this record hardcore, and it shows.  Cory’s voice has never sounded so good, the arrangements are beautiful, and I’m proud to have played my part in it, too. -h

  • Boots News

    I’m on vacation from work through Wednesday, with the goal of recording all the drums (4 songs) and the remaining bass tracks (11 or 12) so that I can start mixing “You Have To Wear The Boots.”  Knocked 2 of the drum tracks out this morning (!) which is a great start.  Aiming for a September release at the latest – less than a year since “…not nothing”! -h

  • MR|Review – How To Destroy Angels’ "Free Digital" EP

    It’s hard to imagine a passionate How To Destroy Angels fan.

    How to Destroy Angels - EP - Digital Cover Art.jpg Must-hear!
    Recommended
    Good
    Fans only
    Skip this
    Owww! My ears!

    As favorably inclined as I am toward Trent Reznor’s work, there’s just not much I can recommend here; the “How To Destroy Angels” EP resembles nothing so much as “The Fragile” b-sides, albeit with a better signal-to-noise ratio.

    On the other hand, the good news is that the creative partnership between Trent and Mariqueen Maandig works at a fundamental level, and has potential for the future. Concept’s solid, it’s the execution that fails here. There’s just not enough cool ideas to work with as in NIN’s better material, and what is here hasn’t been used to maximum effect. The result is slightly noisy chillout music; fine, I guess, but nothing I can get excited about. -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.
  • Live Five Star

    For a break from (non-)50B work, I’ve been remastering some Five Star Crush live tracks from back in 2007.  At the time we were playing what we thought could well be our last show, and I hired a guy to multitrack it, so it’s a pretty good-sounding recording.

    We haven’t done anything with it and I don’t know that we ever will, but if you make a comment and include your email address, next weekend I’ll send the six songs to you via YouSendIt.  Just put your email in the “email” field; it’s secure and won’t be published publicly, it’ll just show up on my side.

    Some of these versions I like listening to better than the studio cuts, because they sound much more like being on stage feels; they bring up stronger sense-memories.

    The tracklist:

    1. Cali

    2. Aasta

    3. Silver-Yellow Girl

    4. Ms. Trouble

    5. Transient

    6. Under Spinning Lights

    -h

  • Short of piracy…

    …where can I stream full albums?

    I’m looking for a replacement to Lala.com, which shuts down at the end of this month due to an Apple buyout.  iTunes store & Amazon mp3 don’t stream full songs or albums, which is what I’ve used Lala for to check out new music.

    Hopefully p4k will find a new partner, but in the meantime, what do you suggest? -h