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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Q&A with DEVO's Jerry Casale

Q: Is guitarist Bob 1’s injured hand back to normal now?
Yeah, finally...There was a long period of therapy after the tendon healed and reattached. There was scar tissue, muscle atrophies and everything else you can imagine.

Q: So you haven’t had to tailor the set list toward less strenuous Devo songs then?
No, man. He knows we can’t do that. We’re like Charlie Sheen. We only have one speed: go!

Q: Are you still performing live with those cool animated video images synchronized to the music? Is the set list set in store because of that or can you diverge on occasion?
Yes. In the first part of the show, you can’t. Later on, you can.

Q: Does having the 'Something for Everybody' songs to play live keep the gigs more interesting for you?
A lot of bands that have been around as long as us, when they put out new material, it’s very devoid of energy and doesn’t sound much like they used to. I have to say in Devo’s case, the new songs are right on par with an album like ‘Freedom of Choice.’ When we do them, they have the same power and energy as older songs and people love them. I’m happy we have new songs to do, especially songs like “What We Do” that we are just releasing as a single. We have this great interactive video coming out that we shot to it. The user can navigate the video and decide what they want to see and when they want to see it. No edit. You can pan left and right, zoom in and out, tilt up and down. It’s as if you are in the video with a steadicam.

Q: Is that an option for viewing on any computer?
Yeah. The way it’s going to work with YouTube is they have to create a link and you go to it because it’s an html thing. Any modern computer, yeah. You get a file, click on it and it opens this widescreen format on your browser. You go and navigate in real time. You never see the same thing twice because the camera system is 360 degrees in a ring, pointed outwards, capturing the whole environment. That is in the round, so there are things going on every 10 degrees. As you pan left and right, you find something to see, but that means you miss something at the 9 or 3 or 6 o’clock positions. You get to go back over it and check out new things.

Q: The previous animated and live action videos for “Fresh” and “Don’t Shoot (I’m a Man)” were amazing, so your fans probably have high expectations.
This one is beyond that. This is something you haven’t seen before. We’re really excited about it.

Q: Did it take long to work out the technology?
Luckily, we didn’t have to. Jason Trucco pioneered the system with his tech team. It’s done on a hi-def camera system, all input into a computer that stitches it together into a seamless 360 degree strip of visual information.

Q: Since the album came out last summer, are you pleased with how it turned out and has been received?
I wish more people knew about it. I certainly think the way it was brought to market could’ve been more effective and impactful. What was great is that – and this matters to me as a creative person – all the rock reviewers that I respect gave it anywhere from a B+ to an A. The critical reviews were really great [I included it in my top 10 best of 2010-GAP]. It would have been so easy to trash a legacy band like Devo and say, ‘why should we listen to these old guys when we got [quotes LMFAO lyric] ‘drink all day/play all night/let’s get it poppin’/I’m an L.A. trick’? It wasn’t like that.

Q: Why do you think that is?
I think that’s because the material was up to par with what you’d expect from Devo songs.

Q: You had inquiries from other younger musicians who wanted to work on the album.
Yeah. James Murphy [from LCD Soundsystem] was ready to do something and Al from Hot Chip. But we couldn’t wait any longer. 

Q: How difficult was to find time to finally make the album considering all of your various projects and sporadic tours?
Not really. Actually, all the songs – this is the truth; this is how long deal-making takes – were done by Oct. 2009. None of the songs on the album started being written until Jan. 2008. Between that [period], every song that made it to the record was written. We wrote about 36 songs in all.

Q: Is it easier to wear the new masks than the energy domes onstage?
No. The energy domes feel like they’re growing straight out of our heads at this point. We’re so used to them. The masks are much more confining. It’s like bondage and discipline – a little bit of sensory deprivation.

Q: “No Place Like Home” is dramatic and quite a departure for Devo, especially with those classical piano flourishes. How did it come about?  
Mark had written some music for a movie. Then it didn’t happen. I always liked the music and asked if I could work on it. I wrote the lyrics and decided as a senior citizen, if I can’t sing a serious song without some smart ass wink, then I’m never going to be able to do it. The time was now or never. I just wanted to do a song that didn’t have any cynicism to it. It’s basically about saving ourselves, like ‘people, if you want to stick around, you’ve got to change.’

Q: Was “Later is Now” inspired by people who stir up trouble writing negative comments on blogs?
That’s exactly what I was thinking about. We always procrastinate and put our heads in the sand and deny. Then the big monster grows bigger. And the 800-pound gorilla becomes an 8000-pound gorilla. That’s basically a ‘running out of time’ song I wrote.

Q: Among the newer crop of musicians today, do you see anyone following in Devo’s footsteps, being innovative both musically and visually?
Certainly there are ones stylistically that kind of follow in Devo’s footsteps. Not content-wise. There are a lot of bands we really like that popped up in the last five years. We love LCD Soundsystem and The Ting Tings. We like Lady Gaga a lot. We think the people she works with are very powerful visually. Their idea of how to stage a show is just tremendous – the best I’ve seen since Trent Reznor.

Q: Do you guys find a certain satisfaction that much of what you said about devolution in the 1970s has come true?
You would think that’s what we’d feel, but you know what? We don’t really get any pleasure in having been right. We didn’t want to be right. It was just kind of an artsy warning. It’s depressing that we were right [laughs].

Q: In 2006, the band worked with Disney on the “Devo 2.0” children’s album, where your classic songs were sung by kids and the words were altered a bit. Were people surprised by that alliance?
Yeah, they couldn’t believe it. Frankly, I couldn’t [either]. When they asked us to do it and if we had an idea, I said, ‘let’s find kids who can actually sing and play.’ Deliver our songs to the young demographic because they are going to watch kids they can relate to playing our songs. They said, ‘sure, let’s do it.’ They picked the songs. We recorded the kids and I shot all the video elements with a computer graphic artist. Worked on that for about six months and put that CD/DVD out. Then I did a middle school tour with those kids of the east coast and Midwest.

Q: How was that?
Actually, it was fun.

Q: Also in 2006, your alter ego Jihad Jerry released a bluesy rock album. What kid of reaction did that receive?
He didn’t get the love [laughs]. I think I was misunderstood. You would think that a senior citizen, in a ridiculous theatrical turban and bad suit, looking more like Sam the Sham from 1966, would’ve been taken as satire – which is what it was at the heart of the Bush administration’s egregious wrongs and hideousness. The satire was lost and people were angry at Jihad Jerry. Muslim people were writing me threatening emails. Infidels were like, ‘this is too heavy, man.’ I had this New York radio programmer tell me, ‘I really liked three songs on this record and I’d play the song “Danger” in a minute of it was a Devo song, but I can’t play Jihad Jerry because I can’t tell anyone that’s the name of the artist.

Q: Is it still as enjoyable for you to direct and make music videos these days?
Yeah, because I’m a creative person. That starts when you’re young and you don’t have an audience at all and it makes no money. Then it’s great when it does make money. Then later on, you have a smaller audience and you’re still just as excited about creating because you were in the beginning. It doesn’t change it for me.

Q: Among all the videos you’ve directed for Devo and others over the years, which ones stick out as favorites?
Devo’s “Beautiful World.” Silverchair’s “Freak.” Even though that was a problematic group, I really liked the video.

Q: If you had to choose, which Devo albums do you think still stand the test of time?
The first one and ‘Freedom of Choice’ are the essentials you’d have to have.

Q: Many new wave-era albums sound dated, but yours really don't.
The whole idea of what’s dated is completely changed. We live in an amorphous pop culture where all the decades are mixed and shuffled like a deck of cards. What used to be a putdown, like [adopts affected voice] ‘they sound just like the Rolling Stones in 1974,’ now it’s like a badge of honor to have a critic say that.     

  

DEVO interview

My interview originally appeared in the North County Times and can be viewed at nctimes.com/entertainment/music. Devo performs Saturday at Club Nokia in L.A. and Sunday at the Belly Up in Solana Beach. For more info, go to clubdevo.com. 


“Fresh” opens Devo’s long-awaited studio release “Something for Everybody,” but the song could also describe the current state of the influential new wave band’s career.

For starters, their always important visual image has changed. Those famous energy domes now gleam bright blue, while the uniforms are silver reflective titanium with matching masks. Fans helped choose the colors, album cover art and track selection via focus groups.

“We embraced marketing techniques that ad agencies use when trying to sell a laptop or cereal brand. We did it with a sense of humor, while commenting on how we live in a culture where all that matters is marketing,” explained bassist Jerry Casale from LAX, before catching a flight to a Seattle show.

“At the same time we were using those same techniques, it was fun for us creatively. That in itself was a statement. We didn’t have big expectations, so we were pleasantly surprised” by the results, he said with a laugh.

The Akron, Ohio act formed in the early ‘70s when Kent State University classmates Casale and Bob Lewis conceived a joke theory about the de-evolution of mankind. Fellow art student/singer Mark Mothersbaugh joined them and brought his own unusual ideas.

Several musician changes, warped home videos and theatrical live performances later, the “classic” Devo lineup: Casale, Mothersbaugh, their guitarist brothers (both named Bob) and drummer Alan Myers unveiled debut record “Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!,” produced by onetime Roxy Music keyboardist Brian Eno, in 1978.

A success in America, it eventually went gold on the strength of such college/underground radio faves as “Uncontrollable Urge,” “Mongoloid” and a strange take on the Stones’ “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction.”

Devo pioneered the music video long before MTV came along and used the medium to their advantage. The 1980 clip for top 20 hit single “Whip It” – from Devo’s platinum third album “Freedom of Choice” - became one of the era’s most memorable. Over the next decade, the group put out five more discs before going on hiatus in 1990.

Mark Mothersbaugh became a sought after film and TV soundtrack composer, Jerry Casale branched out from directing Devo’s videos to doing ones for The Cars, Rush, Soundgarden, Foo Fighters, Silverchair and others before transitioning to TV commercials. The band reunited for Lollapalooza 1996, occasional tours and musical endeavors, but another full-length disc took forever to materialize.

“We had collaborated on things for video games, TV commercials and movie songs, but not ever written an album’s worth of material as a band in those 20 years. Mark wasn’t interested in doing anything like that,” admitted Casale.

When they finally convinced the front man they should give it another shot, it was a matter of “going back to the well and rediscovering what we used to do.”

During the 2000s, electronic/new wave music saw a popular resurgence and several young musicians cited Devo as an influence. Once word got out that the band was open to outside recording help, there was no shortage of offers.

Previously, “we always did everything ourselves. We were a self-contained unit, almost hermitically sealed. This time, we said, ‘let’s collaborate with producers.’ We never really did that [much].” So they teamed with Greg Kurstin (Bird and the Bee, Geggy Tah), John King (Dust Brothers), John Hill and Santi White (Santigold).

Everyone “gave it their own twist and said, ‘here’s what Devo should sound like.’ From a production level, we let loose the reigns for once. We wanted to see how other people make things sound.” The result was a “more ear friendly delivery. They put some fairy dust on it, but nobody sped anything up,” said Casale with a laugh.

What resulted was Devo’s strongest and best reviewed collection since “Choice.” Was it a challenge to be contemporary and retain their classic dance/rock noise?

“Not really. I’ll tell you why: we can’t help but be Devo. We couldn’t do anything else if we tried.”

Devo has been sidelined since last fall, when lead guitarist Bob Motherbaugh severely injured a hand that required major surgery and recuperation. “That was scary and protracted,” noted Casale, who kept busy with the upcoming “What We Do” video, which utilizes interactive 360 degree technology as well as continued work on a proposed Devo musical (“a chance to bring back the narrative and concepts behind the musical spine of Devo and actually tell a story”) and long gestating film biopic (“I’m not going to give up on it”).

Now Casale is anxious to start a short run of West Coast and Texas dates. “Believe me, I love playing live and wish we’d been doing it a lot sooner.” If Casale had his way, the band would tour and record more often, but “that’s just the way Mark wants it.”

Photo by Joshua Dalismer/courtesy of Warner Bros. Records

Q&A with Ed Kowalczyk

Q: What can fans expect from the shows?
It will touch on my work in Live, all the sing along songs and a good cross section of my solo album as well. Who knows? I could throw some surprises in there...I’m going into a new area with this power trio I haven’t tried yet, which keeps me having fun. That translates to really good shows and excitement all around for the fans. After close to 20 years of the same lineup, this is a breath of fresh air for me as an artist and a performer. Everything I’m doing now, I can’t wait to get back out on the road and try new things...With [the current live format], it’ll keep a ‘Storytellers’ kind of environment going on, but at the same time have a good intensity musically.

Q: In many ways, your vocal delivery on the new songs harks back to the mid-90’s Live era. Was that a goal?
That really just came from finding this excitement and passion about the process again. It just came out that way. I recognized it right away, like ‘this sounds like 10 years ago from me.’ The fans immediately responded to that. That was really a result of reconnecting with that passion for the music again. With my delivery, it just fired everything up.

Q: How did working with this new group of guys in the studio compare to Live in terms of dynamics?
It was quite a different experience than I’ve had with the recent past records with Live.

Q: “Zion” has a really different sound for you.
Yeah. I went into that after getting my crash course in guitar evangelists like Blind Willie Johnson. I was always admiring his ability. Obviously coming from a spiritual orientation and an intense, somewhat dark rock element, it spoke to my heart about how I might want to approach doing this. I allowed that to color "Zion." We actually sang those hums through this tiny $5 mike you use to tune acoustic guitars. It sounded really good and we went for it.

Q: You co-wrote “Drink” with Chris Daughtry. Would you consider him a kindred spirit?
Absolutely. He’s and amazing singer and a great guy. Incredible musical intelligence with melody and arrangement. We weren’t even planning on writing together...When Chris sings, you really get the sense that he’s just so connected to his music.

Q: Where did the brief street noise sound effects at the beginning of “Rome” come from?
They are actually Roman city street sound effects. You can find anything on the internet. For $10 or $15, I purchased a snippet of a sample, like a movie sound effect. I wanted to recreate the environment that inspired that song. My first trip to Rome was actually a couple years ago. The traffic jam and all that is kind of historical and real in my life, the rest is interpretive. I wanted to try and recreate how wild and crazy that city is, but at the same time, how deeply rooted in history it is.

Q: Did it take an adjustment going the independent label route after being on Radioactive/MCA and then Epic Records with Live?
I’m enjoying it. It’s challenging. I never had that entrepreneurial relationship with my music as much as people who’ve always been independent have. Being on a major label, you’re a little bit distanced from that. You don’t have those day to day responsibilities. Taking that barrier away and having my own label, and being in a partnership with MRI and RED [distributing], being hands on as I’ve been, has been exciting. Just the thrill of it – it’s sink of swim on your own.

Q: Do you enjoy engaging with fans via Twitter and Facebook?
I do. I use Facebook. I’m newer to Twitter. I tweet as an extension to Facebook. It’s really inspiring to do a show, go down the road and look on my iPhone 4 and [see all the comments]. It’s a fun media, I really enjoy it. I did have tweet fatigue for awhile. I’m much more of Facebook person. If you miss a week on Facebook, it’s ok, whereas if you haven’t tweeted every 30 seconds, it’s like ‘where’d he go?’

Q: What was it like to take part in the 2010 Light of Day benefit concert with Bruce Springsteen in New Jersey?
It was a dream. I got this call at the last minute: could I come and do this? I jumped at the chance. I had never met the Boss. I always wanted to thank him for the first time I saw my crazy last name in Rolling Stone in late ’91 or early ’92, with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. He mentioned ‘this band Live and their amazing lead singer.’ I finally got to look him in the eye and thank him and tell him how much I loved his work too. He gave me a 25-minute full mentor lowdown on the length of his career and how it’s always been ‘damn the torpedoes’ and how from his perspective, he’s just had the best year of his career playing the Super Bowl and all that. He said, ‘every 7-10 years, they write me off and then I have my best year ever.’ I thought that was a great outlook. Just meeting him for the first time as I was about to embark on this new chapter, seemed totally scripted in some way. Having this heart to heart from the Boss at the outset was pretty much a dream.

Q: What is coming up on the horizon in 2011?
I’ve started to write for a new record. We’ve released the second single “Stand” and we’re promoting that. And I have my third baby daughter coming in April. I’m hoping to get back in the studio sometime in the next six months.            

   

Interview with Ed Kowalczyk (formerly of LIVE)

My interview originally ran in the North County Times and can be viewed at nctimes.com/entertainment/music. Kowalczyk performs Sunday at Stinger's in San Bernardino, Tuesday at Anthology in San Diego, Wednesday at the Coach House in San Juan Capistrano and Thursday at the Hotel Cafe in L.A. For more information, go to edkowalczyk.com.

Spirituality has always been part of Ed Kowalczyk’s lyrics. On “Alive,” the solo album he put out independently last year after leaving hugely popular alt-rock band Live, that quality is definitely more prevalent.

“I took a page out of the U2 book,” said the singer/guitarist, in a phone interview from his home in Ojai, Calif. 

“They’ve always had a universal approach. Nobody doubts they’re Christian, but there’s an open door to everybody in any walk of faith, to consume the music at any level they feel. I wanted to make sure that was the case with this record.”

Kowalczyk spent nearly 20 years in York, Pa. outfit Live, who racked up several big rock radio hits (“I Alone,” “Lightning Crashes,” “All Over You,” “Lakini’s Juice,” “The Dolphin’s Cry,” “Turn My Head”) and saw all four 1990s CDs go platinum or beyond.  Following their 2006 effort “Songs from Black Mountain” and his subsequent exit, the vocalist drifted into a creative malaise.

“I had to stare into the void of inspiration I was having and unpack it. I was bored and tired doing things the same way. As a songwriter and performer, the routine of it all was sitting on the process. Shaking that up was absolutely what the doctor ordered.”

So Kowalczyk started doing acoustic gigs for the first time three years ago.

“I decided to give it a whirl and fell in love with it,” he said. Not only did the change serve as a “reconnection with my craft,” but the “bare bones nature of the shows led to an intimacy I was able to create with the fans in that environment. The connection to the [old Live] lyrics was reinvigorating for them and me.”

Although recent tours to support “Alive” have been in stripped down solo and full electric band modes, the current jaunt will find Kowalczyk utilizing a “power acoustic trio” with bass, guitar and drums. That decision came about only recently.

“Actually, it’s going to rock a little bit more than I had anticipated, which I’m sure none of my fans will have any problem with…I’m excited, because one of the fun things about this new chapter in my life is being a lot more spontaneous.”

The recording process for “Alive” was also done in an off-the-cuff manner. Kowalczyk traveled to Austin, where producer C.J. Eiriksson (Live, Incubus, Jack’s Mannequin) owned a studio and recruited local musicians.

“I went down there on a wing and a prayer,” admitted the singer, “and didn’t really know anyone. If I had any reservations, within 48 hours, they were completely gone. Drummer Ramy Antoun totally rocked my songs and made me think about ‘em in different ways.”

While the album’s sound isn’t far removed from the soft/loud dynamic of Live, Kowalczyk pointed out distinct differences.

“It was like night and day,” he said. “They weren’t coming in with any conditions or approaches. Everything was completely fresh. That lent itself to a real open experience in the studio with everybody trying things. There was a real spark.”

Among the standout tracks are the quietly moody “Soul Whispers,” intensely dark “Zion” (a gospel-tinged nod to late 1920s slide guitarist Blind Willie Johnson) and “The Great Beyond,” driven by cascading The Edge-styled guitars. Antoun’s propulsive beats gave the latter “this amazing rock/dance feel that I’d never done before,” Kowalczyk said. The song will be featured on the soundtrack to Irish comedy film “Killing Bono,” opening in the U.K. next month.

The dramatic and inspirational “Grace,” originally inspired by the catastrophic Haitian earthquake, takes on added depth in light of last week’s more devastating one in Japan.

Kowalczyk’s knack for intriguing lyrical metaphors continues on rock ballad “Drink (Everlasting Love),” which could refer to a spouse of higher power. Here, he sings: “I drink you like water/drink you like freedom/drink you like the nectar that falls from Eden.”

The tune was close to being finished before Kowalczyk attended a Chris Daughtry concert in Ventura. The pair – who met and performed together on “American Idol” and later became friends - returned to Kowalczyk’s house afterward. “We played each other some new ideas. Next thing you know, we were co-writing the rest of this really special song together.”

Last fall, the singer did a USO tour and got involved with a World Vision relief organization project to provide wells for safe drinking water in Zambian villages. Fans can donate money at his shows and website; even Kowalczyk’s daughter got involved. “We’re $600 closer to our goal, because of her third grade class World Vision bake sale.”

The venture is “so fulfilling and rewarding and touches so many lives - way beyond what you can imagine in terms of impact.”

Photo courtesy of Fresh Clean Media





New album from Nelson

The new studio album (plus catalog collections) came out last month on Italy's classic rock specialist label Frontier Records, but I just got around to it and was pleasantly surprised. If you were a fan during Nelson's early '90s heyday or of current Bon Jovi, you should enjoy hearing the brothers' supple harmonies again. Here are more details...

Self-produced and playing most of the instruments themselves, LIGHTNING STRIKES TWICE finds twin rockers/frontmen Matthew and Gunnar Nelson seamlessly picking up where they left off with their multi-platinum debut AFTER THE RAIN (featuring the #1 single, "Can't Live Without Your Love And Affection."

Gunnar Nelson commented, "This is by far the best Nelson record ever made.  Ever.  Was it worth its 20 years in the making?  Check it out and decide for yourself - but I know for me, on every level it was."  Matthew Nelson added, "We set out to make a brand new classic rock record - and the critics in Europe have assured us that our mission's accomplished." Guitarist Steve Lukather of Toto makes a guest solo appearance on the song "To Get Back to You."

BEFORE THE RAIN features the 18 songs that secured Nelson their recording deal with Geffen Records, the original demo recordings that caught the attention of the label in 1989.  The album documents the story of their five year musical journey leading up to their multi-platinum debut. Matthew wrote the detailed liner notes.

PERFECT STORM - AFTER THE RAIN WORLD TOUR 1991, a live concert album, also contains reminisces from Matthew.

The name Nelson has always been synonymous with entertainment in America. Matthew and Gunnar follow grandfather Ozzie and father Rick's vision of connecting with people and audiences through all forms of media. 

St. Patrick's Day music picks

If you're looking for music to serve as a soundtrack to your St. Patrick's Day party, here is the official lowdown on a couple new album releases...

On Dropkick Murphys' seventh full-length studio album, "Going Out In Style" - which just debuted at #6 on the Billboard 200 chart, a career high -  the group crafted a raucous and rollicking romp overflowing with punk rock energy, folk soul, and Irish spirit. Fueled by fiery riffs and unforgettable choruses, "Style" traces the journey of Cornelius Larkin, whether it’s the Irish immigrant’s first person account of his own wake or the band’s in depth interpretation of his life and lineage throughout the album’s lyrics, it’s the party to end all parties.
 
Frontman Al Barr has said "this album was different because we were telling someone’s story. Yes, it starts with a rowdy, out-of-control wake. As the story goes back to explore the long life of the character Cornelius, we really started to become engrossed in the story and life of this man.”

Recorded with producer Ted Hutt (The Gaslight Anthem, Flogging Molly) in 2010, the album’s title track is a rousing celebratory anthem with guest vocals by NOFX’s Fat Mike and The Living End’s Chris Cheney. Dropkick Murphys also enlisted the vocal talents of Bruce Springsteen for a rousing version of the old standard “Peg ‘O My Heart.”

Since they first hit the scene in 1996, the Boston seven-piece have racked up record sales in excess of 3 million worldwide. Their smash hit single “I’m Shipping Up to Boston” exceeded platinum status and was featured in Martin Scorsese’s Academy Award-winning film, "The Departed." They even penned the theme song to the first Red Sox World Series win in 86 years.
 
Irish band The High Kings' latest, "Memory Lane," includes traditional songs ("Whiskey in the Jar," "Red is the Rose," "The Irish Rover") and instrumentation (bodhran, bouzouki, accordion, whistles), performed in a highly appealing style. 

Released in Ireland last year, it bowed at #5 on the Irish Music chartThe group has headlined the Oxegen Festival and played before a crowd of 80,000 at the All Ireland Hurling Final at Croke Park Stadium.

They’ve been named “Best Folk Group” for three years running by the Irish Music Awards. A self-titled debut came out here in 2008 here, where it landed in the Billboard 200 chart, ranked #13 on the Top Internet Album chart and #2 on Billboard’s World music chart.   
 
Band member Darren Holden (co-lead vocals/acoustic guitar/mandolin/accordion) starred in more than 1000 performances of Billy Joel’s production, "Movin' Out", and toured as part of Joel’s own band. Finbarr Clancy (co-lead vocals/acoustic guitar/bass/flute) is from Irish music’s legendary Clancy family. 



Monday, March 7, 2011

R.E.M. news

Check out some cool activities surrounding R.E.M.'s new album, also in stores tomorrow...

R.E.M. is gearing up to roll out the "Collapse Into Now" Film Project, a selection of films accompanying each song on the band's Warner Bros. release, directed by notable artists and filmmakers and personally curated by singer Michael Stipe. Directors include Oscar-nominated actor James Franco, filmmaker/photographer/conceptual artist Sam Taylor-Wood, and Oscar-nominated documentary filmmaker Albert Maysles. A full list of directors is below.

The films will be unveiled for viewing at broadcast and web outlets over the course of the next several weeks.


In its four-star review,
Rolling Stone calls "Collapse Into Now" - "a portrait of full-grown artists who reached the top long ago but decided to stick together and ride out the decades. You can hear a lot of shared history in the music, but you can also hear conflict, confusion, doubt, exactly the kind of recipe that R.E.M. thrive on." Spin finds the band "refreshed and refueled for a new alt-rock reckoning."
 
In related news, the band announced a remix project last month in conjunction with "Collapse" tune “It Happened Today.” Fans have the opportunity to remix the entirety of the song from the ground up by distributing the raw source for the song as both a Garageband file for Apple Macintosh computers, or as raw stem audio files for other platforms. Album producer Jacknife Lee prepared both sets of files, which delivers the song in its "raw" state with no reverb, mixing, or effects.

Users who visit the band’s website, www.remhq.com, can download all 16 tracks Lee used to create the song, including vocals by Michael Stipe and Mike Mills, as well as those by special guests Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder and The Hidden CamerasJoel Gibb, plus Peter Buck’s guitar and mandolin, Mills’ signature bass, and brass ensemble tracks from Bonerama. After creating their own versions of the song, fans are invited to submit their remixes on the band’s website to share with the members of R.E.M. and other fans around the world.
 
“It Happened Today” is currently available on iTunes as an “Instant Download” track for those who pre-order Collapse Into Now. The first U.S. single from the album, “Mine Smell Like Honey,” is currently available for purchase from all digital retailers. Visit R.E.M.’s YouTube channel for lyric videos for several tracks on Collapse Into Now at http://www.youtube.com/user/remhq.

R.E.M. Collapse Into Now Film Project
Directors

1) DISCOVERER

Directors: Michael Stipe and
Lynda Stipe

2) ALL THE BEST

Director: James Herbert

3) ÜBERLIN

Director: Sam Taylor-Wood

4) OH MY HEART

Director: Jem Cohen

5) IT HAPPENED TODAY

Director: Tom Gilroy

6) EVERY DAY IS YOURS TO

WIN
Directors: Jim McKay, Chris Moukarbel
and Valerie Veatch

7) MINE SMELL LIKE HONEY

Director: Dominic DeJoseph

8) WALK IT BACK

Director: Sophie Calle

9) ALLIGATOR_AVIATOR_AUTOPILOT_ANTIMATTER

Director: Lance Bangs

10) THAT SOMEONE IS YOU

Director: James Franco

11) ME,
MARLON BRANDO,
MARLON BRANDO AND I
Director: Albert Maysles
& Bradley Kaplan

12) BLUE

Director: James Franco
 
For more info, go to: www.remhq.com