MP3: Jason Collett – “Love Is A Dirty Word”

Posted on Wednesday 9 December 2009

JC_RATT

Muzzle of Bees favorite Jason Collett will release his brand new album Rat A Tat Tat on March 9th. Jason’s 2008 release, Here’s To Being Here, was one of our favorite albums last year, so we’re very excited to hear new material is on the way in 2010.

For more information on the new album, go here. Below, peep the Rat A Tat Tat track list and download the first single, “Love Is A Dirty Word.” If that’s any indication of what the rest of the album sounds like, we’ll be very, very pleased.

Rat A Tat Tat track listing:

1. Rave On Sad Songs
2. Lake Superior
3. Love Is A Dirty Word (mp3)
4. Bitch City
5. High Summer
6. Cold Blue Halo
7. Love Is A Chain
8. Long May You Love
9. The Slowest Dance
10. Winnipeg Winds
11. Vanderpool Vanderpool

Buy: Jason Collett

uwmryan @ 12:10 pm
Filed under: Albums andMP3s andNews
The Mumlers

Posted on Wednesday 9 December 2009

mumlers-frontcover425

I have to thank Common Loon for turning me onto The Mumlers, who they apparently ran into while in the area recording a Daytrotter session.

The Mumlers released Don’t Throw Me Away a few months back. It’s a great late night record that sounds like a combination of Tom Waits, Leonard Cohen and The Walkmen. There’s some really brilliant stuff going on here. Plenty of great ways to check out their sound below, make sure you take “St. James St. for a listen.

Daytrotter: The Mumlers :: A Friendly Hell Where Love Doesn’t Happen

Buy: The Mumlers – Don’t Throw Me Away
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Myspace: The Mumlers
Video: The Mumlers – “Coffin Factory”
MP3: The Mumlers – “St. James Street”

uwmryan @ 10:33 am
Filed under: Albums andMP3s andNews
Review: Andrew Bird – Foellinger Auditorium, Urbana

Posted on Wednesday 9 December 2009

bird

By Jon Stone | @jwstone

Andrew Bird was last in town two-and-a-half years ago headlining our annual Pygmalion festival. I was new in town and I was still trying to get a feel for Champaign-Urbana’s musical potential. I had listened to Bird’s The Mysterious Production of Eggs and enjoyed it enough to check out his then new album Armchair Apocrypha. But, to be honest, I didn’t have high expectations. I was sitting way in the back on the balcony and I heard it was only going to be Bird without a backing band. How good could it be?

It was one of the best concerts I have ever been to.

You can imagine, then, what it was like sitting on the third row last night at Foellinger auditorium.

Bird is a juggler; an acrobat. His records, while wonderful, conceal this. Until you have seen him build his intricate loops — plucked pizzicato melody under several layers of bowed violin, under guitar, under whistles, under voice — you just can’t get a sense for his musicianship and mastery as an artist.  It took me by complete surprise that first time a few years ago. Last night, I knew what I was in for and was not disappointed.

Part of what makes seeing Bird play live so special is that his complex looping process mixed with his quirky, spontaneous style generates the feeling that the audience is experiencing something completely new and unique. Last night, Bird, dressed in festive red and green flannel and corduroy, played great songs from his catalog, but none really sounded like they do on the records. Part of this, of course, is due to the fact that he is playing the songs solo, without percussion or bass as a back-drop; but it’s more than that. After opening with “You Woke Me Up!” from Useless Creatures, he said that his long year of touring had got him thinking about the songs as they existed before they were recorded.  “Back when the songs were magma,” he said. I can’t think of a better way to describe the music or the night: magma. Lovely, molten magma.

From there he played “Sweetbreads,” an early version of “Darkmatter” (which you can find, if you’re lucky, on the first of the three self-released, live Fingerlings records). In its early conception, the song was less about darkmatter and more about eating cow brains, with all, he said, the attending philosophical ramifications and complications: “the sound of neurons blinking.”  Next and also from Fingerlings came the live favorite, “Why?” which is as much acting as it is music making. Bird said it was about an old needy roommate who complained to him that “we weren’t spending enough time together.”  The chorus, “damn you for being so easy going,”  became a frustrating theme, he said — a pattern — of several future relationships as well.

The rest of the night played out in a similar manner. Bird would introduce a song with a story and then play a phenomenal rendition of the tune. I loved the stories. He wasn’t so talkative last time he came through — it was fun. Other standout moments for me included versions of my favorite songs from this year’s Noble Beast, “Anonanimal” and “Natural Disaster.” Lyrically, “Anonanimal” might be his best work to date, and “Natural Disaster” is its lovely foil on the album, but took on new life as a live tune.

Also, he mentioned his upcoming church residency gigs in Chicago and Minneapolis and had acquired two more of those rad horn speakers for the shows. He said he runs his violin through them and that they would essentially be the P.A. at those mostly-instrumental shows in the near future. He then played “Carrion Suite” (also from Useless Creatures) to get warm for them. Also great was a little story about the original chorus of “Imitosis,” a line from a Sesame Street song (see below), and an impromptu visit from Dr. Stringz.  Oh! and we got “Headsoak” — a great old bluesy tune from “back in the Bowl of Fire days.”

His encore was a sweet version of the old standard “Some of These Days” and “Weather Systems.”

What a night.

[A shout-out, also, to Urbana's You and Yourn who opened the show. The auditorium could have been a bit big for their britches, but they filled it out nicely (though, work on that between-song banter, guys.)  Check out their new Parasol Records release "It Would Make Things Worse".]

Andrew Bird set list: Sweetbreads / Why? / Tenuousness / Nervous Tic Motion of the Head to the Left / Natural Disaster / Oh No / Carrion Suite / The Happy Birthday Song / Headsoak / We All Live in a Capital I (Sesame Street cover) / Imitosis / Anonanimal / Dr. Stringz (request from the audience) /Scythian Empire / Encore: Some of These Days / Weather Systems

Buy: Andrew Bird – Noble Beast (Deluxe Edition)

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For those of you who, like me, are interested in musical genealogy, concurrent with the Bowl of Fire days, Andrew Bird played violin on several of the early Squirrel Nut Zippers records. Remember them? They were better, I think, than the swing-dance fad that contained them. Writing this post reminded me of one of their best songs and videos, “Ghost of Stephen Foster” (from their 1998 record, Perennial Favorites). Check it out; Andrew Bird is all over it (if not actually in it): “Ghost of Stephen Foster”

jwstone @ 9:10 am
Filed under: Albums andConcerts andNews
Muzzle of Bees Video: Langhorne Slim “Land Of Dreams”

Posted on Tuesday 8 December 2009

In September Langhorne Slim was in town staying with drummer Malachi DeLorenzo for a few days before heading out on tour supporting their fantastic new album, Be Set Free. In between radio appearances and a performance at the Exclusive Co, we hooked up to record a handful of songs in video form.

The first installment is “Land of Dreams,” a delicate love song anchored by Jeff Ratner’s upright bass and steady brush beat of Malachi DeLorenzo. When Langhorne’s voice comes in it is just about perfect.

Buy: Langhorne Slim – “Be Set Free”
Video: Erik Ljung

uwmryan @ 10:58 am
Filed under: Albums andConcerts andNews andVideo
A Decade With Duke

Posted on Tuesday 8 December 2009

decadewiththeduke

Thanks to Stereogum for tipping us to the fact that you can now purchase the collaboration between Justin Vernon and Eau Claire Memorial Jazz I. The collection captures the Eau Claire concert last April.

Buy: A Decade With Duke (Eau Claire Memorial Jazz I, Featuring Justin Vernon)

uwmryan @ 10:03 am
Filed under: Albums andNews
Review: Dave Rawlings Machine – High Noon Saloon

Posted on Tuesday 8 December 2009

Over the weekend I began working on my year end lists, and, like always, was prepared to roll out my favorite concerts of the year this week. I held off on publishing that list because I had a ticket to see the Dave Rawlings Machine last night at the High Noon Saloon. The show was unquestionably great, probably one of the best sounding shows I have ever heard at this venue. No lie, for most of the night I actually felt like I was at a Midnight Ramble, only this wasn’t a ramble, rather a machine well-oiled by Dave Rawlings.

The night started out like a borrowed page from the Grateful Dead’s Reckoning, opening with “Monkey And The Engineer” and segueing the second song into “Candyman.” It was an unexpected turn so early in the show, and the first indicator that the crowd was in for a special night. It also proved the evening would be just as much about others material and highlighting the incredible assembly of talent on stage including the stunning Gillian Welch. It wasn’t long into “I Hear Them All” before Rawlings found a path to “This Land Is Your Land” and had the entire audience quietly singing along. They of course played “Ruby” the standout track of the recently released A Friend of a Friend and followed that up with a beautiful take on the Dlyan’s “Diamond Joe” performed as a duet by Rawlings and Welch.

Most of the night alternated between a full band of five members (including 3 members of Old Crow Medicine Show) and Dave and Gillian as a duo. After a rousing versions of “Sweet Tooth” and “Spottie Ottie,” Rawlings handed the reins over to Gillian Welch who took lead vocals for the first time on “No One Knows My Name” and “Wreaking Ball” to widespread applause.

The evening continued with “Method Acting” that ran straight into Neil Youn’g “Cortez The Killer,” which, great as it is on the new album, soars to even greater heights in concert. At this point they could have called it a night and sent everyone home satisfied. They were just getting started. The second Dylan cover of the night, “Queen Jane Approximately,” was a big surprise that was quickly overshadowed a couple songs later by Gillian Welch’s “Look At Miss Ohio.”

For the encore the band kept their promise to a fan up front and delivered an amazing take on The Band’s “The Weight” (see above video). After a brief departure from stage, the band returned, led by Welch on a foot-stomping, a capella version of “Go To Sleep You Little Baby” made famous in the film “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” Stunned doesn’t come close to describing how I felt as it finally came to an end. I walked in with great expectations last night and those were far exceeded.

Last night felt like a living room show. It was easily one of the best shows I’ve seen all year, might even crack my all-time list. It was that good. Don’t pass up a chance to see these guys while they’re still out there playing tiny clubs. Time to make room for one more at the top of the list of best shows of 2009.

Buy: Dave Rawlings Machine – A Friend of a Friend
Myspace: Dave Rawlings Machine

uwmryan @ 9:03 am
Filed under: Albums andConcerts andNews andVideo