• Music Saves Lives

    At 5*C’s show with Kill Hannah a few weeks ago, a band opened for us called Liam and Me.  They were on their way back east after recording their debut album in California.  They didn’t have copies, but they had a sampler called Music Saves Lives – Warped Tour ’07 and I have some thoughts about that comp.

    1. Liam and Me, “Don’t Say a Word”
    2. Head Automatica, “Lying Through Your Teeth”
    3. New Found Glory, “On My Mind”
    4. Run Doris Run, “From Now On (remix)”
    5. Sugarcult, “Riot”
    6. Anberlin, “Godspeed”
    7. Blinded Black, “Can You Hear Me Now”
    8. Hod Rod Circuit, “Stateside”
    9. K-os, “Sunday Morning”
    10. Jack’s Mannequin, “La La Lie”
    11. Stacy Clark, “Say What You Want”
    12. Mae, “Painless”
    13. Sink to See, “Calling”
    14. Daphne Loves Derby, “The Best Part About It Honey”
    15. Kaddisfly, “Games”
    16. Tokyo Rose, “Goodbye Almond Eyes”
    17. The Panic Division, “From The Top”
    18. This World Fair, “White Flag”
    19. Relient K, “More Than Useless”

    So this is what the kids are listening to these days.  Bold tracks are songs I thought were worth a third listen.

    At first, I was ready to pan the disc for its incessantly formulaic emo-pop-punk.  And that’s mostly true; the songs I don’t mention are that and nothing more.  If you dig it (Nick!), great!

    But I was surprised by a few bands still finding ways to make alright emo-pop-punk-sounding music.  Like Sugarcult and Anberlin, two reliable bands operating in that territory.  Sugarcult’s anthem outruns its own predictability and reaches radio home-base, and Anberlin has just enough 80s and metal influence to pull off a gem like “Godspeed.”

    I really loved Liam and Me live, but was dissappointed by “Don’t Say a Word.”  I can’t find any keys in the mix, and their energy, soul, and fun-spirit were much more prevalent at recordBar.

    Who knows how K-os got on this comp, but “Sunday Morning” is a hooky cut of melody and groove that is mos def worth pulling off iTunes.  Love the drum sound.

    Not bad, Stacy Clark!  A remix might do your song even better, though.

    Mae’s “Painless” prog-pop works if Coheed & Cambria is too weird for you (it’s not, but I’m keeping Mae around anyway for the shuffle).  Tokyo Rose charmed me because they’re more enthusiastic and less polished than every other emo-pop-punk band.

    But Music Saves Lives seems to beg the question, Where’s the rebellion?  Is this the soundtrack to a generation’s exploration and revolution?  Dookie was a snotty shot across the establishment’s bow when I was in 7th grade; after endless iterations, is it the same sound kids are turning each other on to between classes?  Warped Tour thinks so.  This comp’s best tracks are novel enough to be good pop, but aren’t changing the game or even trying to advance it.  I’d like to hear a disc, or see a tour, of bands that are young and brash enough to take a stab at something I haven’t heard.

    \\\\

    Reading the re-formatted SPIN Magazine’s reviews had led me to the position that 4-star rating systems best.  SPIN has a 5-star system, and they seem to give every damn record three stars, which is really helpful let me tell you (no it’s not).  So I will hereby have a 4-star system:

    • * – This record isn’t good.
    • ** – Not recommended, but not completely terrible.  Truly committed fans might like it (if they’re forgiving).
    • *** – Recommended; worth it if you like or are interested in the band or new music generally.
    • **** – This record is super-good and you should like it.

    I will reserve an off-the-charts five-colored-stars rating for records that would make my list of ten to take to a deserted island for the rest of my life.

    ** – Music Saves Lives – Warped Tour ’07, with the qualifier that if you get it for free (like I did) or see it used for a buck or two, you’ll get a few good tracks for your iTunes and that’s cool.

  • Well, I re-routed everything

    Wednesday night.  So all the recording of …Boots I did over the weekend and Monday became glorified practice.

    Reason: tracks 3 and 4 of my 4-track barely record.  It’s too late to return it.  However, track 3 used to work a couple months ago when 5*C was doing demos for Red.  So hopefully, it’s correctable.  Step one is probably to clean the heads, though they shouldn’t be dirty.  Step two is to call the guy who fixed the headphone knob on my Digi001 last year.

    So now, I’m using the 4-track as a mixer, and the cheap solid-state electronics have their own charm.  I’m going to try fingerpicking everything on the electric guitar, and then do additional picked or acoustic takes for any songs that aren’t working at that point.  Being in Mexico the 13-20th will interrupt (“delay” may be a better term) things.  Cory may come down on the 23rd to do his three songs.  Hmm.  I didn’t think about his overdubs until just now.  We’ll talk.

    This setup has me thinking about vintage mixing consoles.  Given my tastes, something in that department might be a really good piece of gear for my studio.

    In other news, MFR has been party to an exciting conversation this week about the possibilities for releasing a project by an established Lincoln artist.  This musician was the main force behind my favorite record from that scene (well, tied with You Make Your Own Self Fall, but that’s for entirely different reasons).  I’m super-pumped and hope I’ll be able to share details soon.  -h

  • Cowboy Songs

    Kansas Citians know I’ve been talking about cowboy songs for a long time now, but the rest of you may not.

    “Cowboy songs” are what I’m calling Sally Ride’s next record, You Have To Wear the Boots.  Boots is a collection of more-or-less-folkish songs about a variety of characters in the town of Dodge, in the old West.  I wrote the first ones, “Set You Ablaze” and “Ballad of the Ends of Our Ropes” about four years ago.  Save for a couple rough sketches, the rest have been written in the past year, beginning last June when I was mainly writing It’s A Trap and intensifying after we finished Trap.

    Several of the songs you may already know; besides “…Ablaze” from Lone Prairie Records’ murder ballads compilation, “David S. Addington and Your Democracy” (re-titled “Have We Forgot the Code of the West?”), “A Come-On,” Cory’s “Easy Kill,” and a cover of the Killers’ “Jenny Was A Friend of Mine” will be part of Boots.

    Sally Ride records have “rules” – self-imposed restrictions on the recording process to give the record a certain sound.  The rule this time is that we have to record the basic guitar and vocal tracks live, with no editing allowed.  We’ll also be recording the basic tracks to 4-track tape, and putting everything into ProTools later.

    As I’ve been practicing the songs, I think that Boots represents some of my strongest writing up to this point.  I’ve gotten deep into writing little stories, and though Dodge and its citizens are fictional there is a lot of me in them.  The opener, “Storm & Stake,” is adapted from a true story about my grandma literally holding her family’s tent down in a Wyoming thunderstorm.  The whole story of Gramp’s activism is close to me.  As I wrote the struggle between the Teacher and the Barman, I looked back and saw I’d put some things in their story that came from my own.

    I’m going to start setting up the recording today, and maybe get a song or two down.  We’ll see.

    Oh yeah – like all Sally Ride records, the title comes from a popular 80’s movie.  Do you know what it is?  (Do you know what movies “Don’t Let Them Take Us Alive” and “It’s A Trap” come from?  Those may be trickier, since the lines are so generic.)  -h

    1. Storm & Stake

    2. Easy Kill

    3. Iron Horse

    4. A Cracked Piece of Sky

    5. August Wind

    6. Into the Fire

    7. Jenny Was A Friend of Mine

    8. Have We Forgot the Code of the West?

    9. Johnny Got His Gun

    10. It Was You, Kid

    11. A Come-On

    12. Goddamn

    13. Set You Ablaze

    14. Harvest Moon

    15. Ballad of the Ends of Our Ropes

    16. Pushing Over the Continental Divide

  • More Russian, Bandit Ties, and the Weekend in Music

    Cory translated the Russian blog that linked to The Silent Woods:

    Style: [indi]-[folk], acoustic [indi]- fate. Extremely unoriginal [indi]- fate and [indi]-[folk] under the acoustic guitar with inconsistent high man (sometimes [duetnym]) [vokalom]. It is recorded in the bedroom in Cory, is on top somewhere superimposed synthesizer and all this only is processed on the computer (obviously it is, as a minimum, passed through [garmonayzer]). This simple and unassuming domestic record, is not more. Minus is mark for the [sintezatornuyu] inaccuracy. 3/5

    They seem pretty bummed about it, but still gave the record 3 of 5 stars!

    I wonder if the “high man” is the harmony-singer (me) or the higher-pitched notes-singer (Cory).  Because the “inconsistency” could be my f’d up harmonies or Cory’s live vocals.  I wonder what “garmonayzer” is.

    Cory and I continue to be super-happy about the album.

    5*C plays tomorrow night at RecordBar with Flee the Seen and Kill Hannah, which is pretty cool.  It’s early/all-ages; we play at 5 PM sharp, and the show will be over by 8:30.  Still light out then.

    I’ve been expirimenting with new accessories for my stage look, including the “casual ascot,” the “bandit tie,” the “theater scarf,” and the “faux-scot.”  High hopes.

    I read www.pitchforkmedia.com every day, but listening to the Forkcast this morning for a couple hours I am dismayed at the blandness of the playlist’s eclecticism.  Paradox?  It all seems to indie-predictable, including the pop-dance stuff and the Lil Wayne fetish.  I’d like to hear more metal, more lo-fi, more pop *songs,* and more roots/folk/world stuff.  New songs from Okkervil River and Au were really good.  LCD Soundsystem is always solid.

    -h

  • Musings

    It’s Wednesday, but the middle-of-the-week blogging in the aftermath of The Silent Woods isn’t ideal.  I’ll return to Saturday postings this very weekend.

    Tonight 5*C is playing in the finals of 93.3’s Best Local Band contest; winner opens for the very big Red, White, & Boom! show in a few weeks.  Whether we win or not, we’ve made a bunch of friends, so that’s a victory.  The Kill Hannah show on Sunday night will be rad no matter what.

    Speaking of The Silent Woods, at least 407 individuals have downloaded a song or more from it!  We love the Internet Archive’s new download-counter, for sure.  And thanks for the link, this-blog-in-Russian!

    Listening-wise, I’ve been on a big Elvis Costello kick.  TV on the Radio.

    Haven’t been able to start You Have To Wear the Boots rehearsals yet.  I’m super-looking-forward to it, though.  You guys have no idea.  -h

  • Update

    Keeping it short.

    If you’re in KC, come see Five Star Crush tonight at Blaney’s in Westport, 9 PM, and stay ’til the end to vote for us to play at Red, White, and Boom this summer.

    The new counting process at archive.org has been really encouraging for us; Cory Kibler’s The Silent Woods is at 339 downloads as I write.

    With Cory’s record out, my plan is to begin rehearsing for Sally Ride’s You Have To Wear the Boots in my free time.  Because the plan is to record the basic guitar/vocal tracks live  to tape (not digital), it’s going to take some practice.

    Last Friday 5*C played in Lindsborg, KS at Bethany College’s Swedestock event.  Because of a cancellation, we were asked to play as long as possible, so in addition to the regular set we dug up re-worked versions of “Strange,” “Ghosts,” “Kalispell,” and other odds and ends.  The bandshell in the park was still painted for last summer’s production of South Pacific.  The kids were mostly hanging out in the shade, eating burgers, which was cool.  Sun in our eyes and hot.  It was fun.

    The band that followed us was really good.  They gave me that discovering-a-great-band-at-an-outdoor-festival feeling I haven’t had in a long time.  At the time they were Amsterband, but on Sunday they changed their name to Ha Ha Tonka.  I’ve been listening to their sh*t-kicking indie record, Buckle in the Bible Belt, nonstop since then.  Visit their MySpace page and hear “St. Nick on the Fourth in a Fervor.”

  • THE SILENT WOODS / Cory Kibler

    Download all via .zip from archive.org

    1- The Silent Woods
    2- Joanna (You Forgot the Time)
    3- How We Can Know
    4- The Fast Track To Success
    5- The Lonely Lumberjack
    6- Easy Kill
    7- Top Secret Pizza Party
    8- Into The Fire
    9- Violently Real Reality

    Co-release with Lone Prairie Records

  • Vote for 5*C ASAP – Tonight or Tomorrow!

    http://www.mylocalbands.com/promos/fobcivic/vote.asp

    If we win, we’ll open for Fall Out Boy this Saturday night in KC!  THANKS!

    -h

  • Cory Kibler to Have CD Release Party

    Permalink via the Lincoln Journal-Star

    By ALEX HAUETER / Lincoln Journal Star

    Friday, May 04, 2007 – 02:54:41 am CDT

    A career in music is hard, and getting started can be expensive, so Cory Kibler is in it to just enjoy himself. In fact, he has no problem just giving away the fruits of his labor.

    Although the recording industry and established artists have objected to the spread of music online, the Internet has been a valuable tool for up-and-coming musicians to share their work. Kibler and his friend, producer C. Howie Howard, who works with local bands Skink, Robot, Creep Closer! and the Killigans, have taken that to another level.

    The two friends started Mr. Furious Records in September 2004. In the label’s short history, it has released 19 albums.

    Without pressing a single CD.

    Mr. Furious Records takes advantage of the Creative Commons Public License to release its artists’ work for free online. The label was born out of a need for artists to be able to get their music out there without losing money.

    “We felt it would make music a lot more fun if we took the monetary aspect out of it,” Kibler said.

    Kibler, the frontman of Robot, Creep Closer!, used to play around Southeast Nebraska in a band called Shacker, but said it was frustrating to spend money on studio time and CDs that people weren’t interested in.

    Howard has faced the same problem.

    “The economics of selling music on CDs got stressful,” he said. Bands will often pay for 1,000 CDs but sell only 200 or 300 and barely manage to break even.

    Something had to give, and the idea for the low-overhead Mr. Furious was born.

    Howard runs the label from his home in Kansas City, Mo., pays about $160 per year for Web hosting and uses recording and mixing equipment he already owns for his for-profit work with artists.

    Starting a Web label is something anyone could do, he said.

    “Somebody could do it for a couple hundred bucks with a four-track machine,” he said.

    Despite the label’s low cost and the free exchange of music it allows, Kibler stressed that the contributing musicians — mostly friends from the Midwest and his old home in California — all take it seriously.

    “We want the recordings to be studio quality and the songs to be totally legit,” he said.

    Howard added that the downloads are all variable bit rate mp3 files, which makes them of equal or better quality than music purchased from sites like iTunes.

    Kibler’s new CD, “The Silent Woods,” will be Mr. Furious’ 20th release, and he’s celebrating Wednesday with a release party at Duffy’s Tavern. To keep with the spirit of Mr. Furious, he’ll be giving away copies of the CD, which consists of nine original folk songs he’s written over the past three years and recorded this winter.

    For Robot, Creep Closer! fans, the release party will offer a look at Kibler’s mellower side. In his solo work, he attempts to tell stories that his listeners will relate to rather than being highly personal.

    “The solo songs are so much more mellow, and not just because it’s acoustic guitar and vocals,” he said. “In Robot, Creep Closer! we’re all about being ridiculous. We try to put on a show so that people will be into us even if they don’t like all our songs.”

    Reach Alex Haueter at 473-7254 or at ahaueter@journalstar.com .

  • Silent Woods Co-release

    Mr. Furious Records and Lone Prairie Records will partner to release Cory Kibler’s new album The Silent Woods online May 9th.  Cory’s release show is at Duffy’s in Lincoln, NE that night with Gene Hogan and Dan Jenkins.

    Lone Prairie has recently posted a six-song EP by Last Leg (Jeff Iwanski of Honey Stump), and is exploring further possibilities for online releases.

    “We’re interested in reaching the most people possible with Cory’s record.  The partnership between MFR and LPR is a great step along that path.  This is our third point of contact, after Robot, Creep Closer!’s EP and album and the Killers in the Nebraska Territory comp, and I don’t expect it will be the last.

    “In the mid- to long-term, we also expect an increase in web traffic to our sites.  Releasing music freely under Creative Commons license is obviously a viable artistic model; I believe it also has the potential to be a viable business model for bands and collectives, who can give their music away and survive on shows, t-shirts, and added-value releases such as DVDs.” -howie

    After The Silent Woods, MFR’s next scheduled release is Sally Ride’s You Have To Wear the Boots, an album of cowboy songs in one act by Cory and howie.

  • Meteorites and the Origin of the Solar System

    Cory went to New York a while ago, and this happened:

     

    SRCKNYC-400.JPG

     

    Who knew?

    His record is coming right along; I think we hope to have it out and up in a couple of weeks.  It has the magic.

    5*Joel is coming over in a bit here to work on a killer new demo-jam we wrote at practice Thursday night.  ALSO: Duane, our engineer, found the stem-mixes from our Sleepless Nights EP, so Joel and I anticipate re-recording the guitar and key parts only very soon.  This project, with the new Red EP, would build toward a full-length with one more 2-3 song recording session.

    IF YOU ARE NEAR LINCOLN, NEBRASKA TONIGHT, THE KILLIGANS ARE RELEASING THEIR NEW CD ONE STEP AHEAD OF HELL AND ROBOT, CREEP CLOSER! OPENS AT KNICKERBOCKERS.  Check out tracks at www.thekilligans.com.  Early (6PM) and late (9PM) shows: Robot! is at the late show.  -h

  • 5*C Red EP

    New Five Star Crush music is up at our myspace:

    myspace.com/fivestarcrush

    Hear “Ms. Trouble” and “Black Machine” from our new Red EP, which also includes “Transient” and “Aasta (I Miss You).”  This is what has basically occupied the last five weeks of my life; it’s been trying but I can’t imagine being happier with the finished work.  Last night’s gig with Bowling for Soup went.  We have a short break before three big weekends of shows in May.

    I played some keys for Cory’s record this morning.  I’m most happy about “Success,” everything else is either subtle or kind of weird and I want Cory to hear it before deciding whether to like or not.  He’s in San Fransisco.

    And, apparently, “howie-rocks”:

     

    HowieRocks

     

    Thanks, Jill. -h