• THE MUSICAL TALES OF PAT BRADLEY

    DOWNLOAD .ZIP (256-kbps mp3s) from archive.org

    MFR023 The Musical Tales of Pat Bradley cover1- Sunny Farm
    2- Durango
    3- Two Days in the Valley
    4- Answer?
    5- Baby Blue
    6- Maybe
    7- Memory Lane
    8- Cavernous Hole
    9- Cabin Fever
    10- Fire Safety

  • Two Days in the Valley

    “Two Days in the Valley,” a song from The Musical Tales of Pat Bradley, has been added to MR|Mix. We’ll drop the album tomorrow. Pat is playing a show in Lincoln on Tuesday night; please comment if you have further details!

  • Site Requirements and the Weekend

    In order to display mrfuriousrecords.com correctly, you’ll need to have Firefox or update to Internet Explorer 7.  I’m still planning to update some of the deeper content soon.

    dollarcd.com is apparently defunct, and that was my plan for the howie-comp.  I’m pondering backup plans.

    Around the web, NPR is streaming some great stuff from this week’s SXSW conference.

    I picked up tickets to shows in the next couple weeks by Mike Doughty and SPOON.

    The longer I’ve thought about pay-what-you-want, the less I like it.  I’ve been thinking about doing some merch via CafePress.  Then I discovered they do CDs, too.

    50 Bears are meeting with a potential singer on Tuesday.

    And 5*Joel is unexpectedly back in KC for the mid- to long-term.  I haven’t seen him yet, but will soon.

  • New Site, Saturday Update

    I think the new site looks good enough to launch, so here it is for good.  Leave a comment or email mr (at) mrfuriousrecords.com if you encounter technical/aesthetic difficulties.

    Since this took all morning, I don’t know how the rest of the day is going to play out.  I’d like to finish & sign off on my mastering for Pat Bradley’s record, and I’m kind of itching to lay decent scratch vocal tracks on the “There is Something and not nothing” material and burn discs for Matt and I to listen to.  We’ll see about that.

  • Site Update

    I will be starting to fool around with a new theme, starting tonight.  The site may look different from moment to moment as you click around, but all the music should remain accessible.  -h

  • New 50B Jams, Vinyl, and a Project Update

    Last weekend I cut a new practice tape with Fifty Bears in a Fight, and the results are up on our myspace, including new songs and better versions of old ones.  We’re still looking for a singer/howler/yeller/wailer.

    I spent an hour yesterday at Half-Price Books, burning time between work and play, and picked up all this outstanding vinyl for $10:

    • Prince, Purple Rain
    • Chicago, Chicago Transit Authority and Chicago at Carnegie Hall (Sides V-VIII)
    • Led Zeppelin, III
    • Pretenders, Pretenders
    • Pat Benatar, Crimes of Passion (“Hit Me With Your Best Shot”)
    • Bruce Springsteen, Born in the USA
    • Neil Young, Harvest and Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
    • Billy Joel, The Stranger

    Jill, Tim and I watched a documentary on U2’s The Joshua Tree that was pretty great.  It was cool to hear Daniel Lanios talking about how different songs were recorded, tracks they didn’t use, etc.  Flood is a giant music nerd (= awesome) and it’s still my pie-in-the-sky dream to have him produce a record of mine.  I think the doc came out a couple years ago, though the album reissue is just a couple months old.  It left me wanting more, and wanting to get the record out and listen to it, which is probably the point.  I was amazed to see footage from the Zoo TV tour of the band playing these passionate, heart-on-sleeve, rural-America inspired tunes; I didn’t know they were still playing a lot of that stuff on the Zoo tour.
    Projects:

    The Sleepover – I finished mastering the first EP for Cory’s new band this week.  We’re going to put one track on Furious Instance, and the rest will be available via the band.

    The Combine – Nick tells me they’re about done writing the new tracks that we’re going to bundle with a few from their album for a MFR EP release.  Super-looking-forward to that.

    Pat Bradley – I’m listening to and tweaking a second master version, anticipating a MFR release in a few weeks.

    There is Something and not nothing – I’ve finished all bass, keys, and guitars for Sally Ride’s fourth.  (It’s fourth in my mind even though it will probably come out before Boots.)  So when I get my voice back I’ll start singing, and Matt will come play drums soon.  I gave him a disc with three songs on it that had rough vocals and drum loops, and I think he was pretty surprised even though he’s heard the demos.

    Howie comp – I think I’ve got a tracklist nailed down, I haven’t decided on a title, and I’ve been too sick to even think about recording an acoustic “Major & Minor.”

    MFR – Once Pat Bradley is out, I’m going to spend some time working on new images for the site and possibly a whole new WordPress theme.  -h

  • Cory's New Band: The Sleepover

    I guess we’re not SUPER new, since we’ve been practicing since last fall, but we’ve only played a few shows. Here are the vitals:Members: Cory Kibler (guitar, vocals, songwriting), James Tucci (bass, songwriting), Sarah Rosenau (keys, background vocals), and Brock Beckman (drums).

    James and I have been in like 4 bands together including The Sleepover (if you count Axeface). Sarah is classically trained, and she also plays with Lincoln Americana heroes Loup River Band & Street Choir as well as a folk group called Blood & Ready. Brock Beckman is by far the most experienced member, having been in Lincoln bands since the 80’s (including Rascal Basket, World Record Players, The Sissies, Wide, and most recently Strawberry Burns!!!).

    Sounds like: Well, we’re not hard dance-metal-punk-rock like Robot Creep Closer, and we’re not as “indie” as Shacker… but we’re somewhere in between. I mean, we’re pop rock, but we also have elements of folk and grunge.

    As always, James and I are influenced by Superdrag, Nada Surf, The Pixies and Weezer, but there are new influences in the music including Wilco and The Hold Steady. When I was younger and in bands, I was always really hesitant to border on anything I might consider “Americana”, and I was always a little afraid of being too earnest. It’s easy to write cool-sounding songs that are ironic or cynical or sarcastic, but it’s really hard to write a good pop-rock song with earnest lyrics, because there’s a danger of being cheesy. Now, I see this as one of my challenges; I want to write sincere, earnest songs without sounding lame.

    Where you can see/hear us: We don’t have any shows in Lincoln scheduled for the future, although I am sure we’ll have one scheduled soon. We are playing in Omaha sometime in May, and along with various Lincoln shows, we hope to make it to places like KC, Denver and Chicago sometime relatively soon. Also, right now Howie is mastering our 4 song EP, tentatively titled, “When Bands Have Attractive And/Or Cool-Looking Members, People Care More Than They Would Otherwise, All Things Being Equal.” Soon, we’ll have the four songs up on myspace so folks can stream them, and we’ll have a physical copy for sale in the next couple of months. We’re also putting up the smash single from the EP (ha!) up on MFR called “Built For It.”

    So, I hope you can meet us soon in some form or another, and we hope you enjoy it!

    Cory Alan

  • MFR is a Mission (Not an Institution)

    mis*sion

    -noun

    http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/mission

    16. an assigned or self-imposed duty or task; calling; vocation.

    17. a sending or being sent for some duty or purpose.

    18. those sent.

    in*sti*tu*tion

    -noun

    http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/institution

    1. an organization, establishment, foundation, society, or the like, devoted to the promotion of a particular cause or program, esp. one of a public, educational, or charitable character: This college is the best institution of its kind.

    With time, I’ve come to appreciate mission statements. Both of my employers have excellent ones (though one is unofficial, it’s widely used – much more real within our community than the one on the books!). A mission statement provides identity, and direction; it says who we are and where we’re going.

    The mission of Mr. Furious Records, a community of artists with roots in Crete, NE, is to facilitate the creation of excellent sound recordings and to curate and distribute the recordings in ways that enhance the community’s creativity and integrity. (v 1.0)

    I left out that we’re a “netlabel.” A netlabel is a type of distribution model; we are currently using that model, but the model is not what we are.

    We are not an organization. We organize, but our core identity is not institutional; it is communal. If the community goes away, MFR is gone as well. There is no content to MFR; it is an empty scaffolding, carefully conceived, that exists to support artists’ content. As artists identify needs or concerns, the community may respond, but MFR does not push content out to artists that does not speak to a previously discerned call within the community.

    We are a mission. We are not any of the means we may use to fulfill our mission.

  • Howie Comp

    Friends – I’m drawing up a tracklist for a compilation of my best songs, and I’m asking for your help. Out of all my stuff, can we write a list of 10-12 songs that make me come off as an OK songwriter?

    My thoughts at this point in the process are below, and I’ve already included some stuff I anticpate you would pick (“The Picture Song,” “New Slow Sea”) that I might not have on my own. But what am I missing? What is essential?

    This list may end up being a limited-run physical CD release with artwork and everything that I’d sell as a fundraiser to help me take kids to Mexico in June to build a house. Or, it may just be the list I burn for new friends. Either way, help me figure it out.

    I also need help with the title, which I’d like to be a phrase taken from a song’s lyrics. (The song doesn’t necessarily have to be included on the comp.)

    TITLES:

    “You Couldn’t Know Whose Fire It Was”

    “No Need To Be Fair”

    “A Minor Change in a Major Key”

    “It’s Good to See You Home”

    “The Weight You Carry In Your Voice”

    “Try and Leave and it Kills You”

    \

    Songs of -h

    \

    SONGS:

    Snow is a Bear (XMAS)

    New Slow Sea (Sally Ride, It’s A Trap)

    Coast & Plains (Furious Instance)

    J. Cougar Mellensong (echoes, Be A Ska Rat EP)

    The Picture Song (Tonight the Lone Wolf Rides… Alone)

    A Come-On / Relieved (Sally Ride, …Alive!)

    Set You Ablaze (Murder in the Nebraska Territories)

    Open Columns (echoes, nickel EP)

    Back in the Fire (Sally Ride, It’s A Trap)

    Tired Chords -live (howie&scott, Summer’s End)

    new acoustic track? – 5*C? / I’m Coming Home (Shacker, Knowing Her > Best…)

    The Last Song (Sally Ride, …Alive!)

  • Cory's PlanetTexas Interview

    CLICK HERE TO HEAR CORY’S PLANETTEXAS INTERVIEW IN A FLASH-BASED POPUP WINDOW VIA ARCHIVE.ORG!

    Thanks, PlanetTexas!

    -h

  • Cory Interview; Thursday Night!

    Hey, I have been meaning to tell you this all week, but I am being interviewed by Harold over at www.planettexas.net tomorrow (Thursday) at 8 pm central time. It lasts for 20 – 30 minutes, and he showcases a couple of my songs. It’s a streaming indie station; check it out!

  • Pat Bradley "Signs" to MFR

    And by “signs,” we mean “last night he gave an 11-song CD of solo material to Cory, with the understanding that we would master and release it.”

    Pat is the Lincoln, NE-based genius behind the band Tangelo, whose Year of Saturdays is one of my top ten favorite records ever in the history of everything.

    Neither Cory or I have heard the music yet, but we trust Pat to be his bad self.  -h