MMJ return home to craft new LP - article

Started by SaraBananaBear, Mar 30, 2011, 03:54 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

SaraBananaBear

Found here: http://www.myspace.com/music/blog/2011/3/29/my-morning-jacket-return-home-to-craft-new-lp

QuoteThe 32-year-old was driving around listening to a song from a Thai pop compilation that had inspired a yet-to-be-titled track on the album. James' head was suddenly overtaken by the voices of screaming women: they were yelling 'Black Metal'. Just like that, James decided to add backing female vocals to the song, which came to be known as 'Holdin' On To Black Metal'.

:D
Europe ♥ My Morning Jacket

oistheone

I feel like I've never eagerly anticipated anything as much as I am eagerly anticipating this album.

SaraBananaBear

Quote from: oistheone on Mar 30, 2011, 04:15 AM
I feel like I've never eagerly anticipated anything as much as I am eagerly anticipating this album.

Second that emotion! :D
Europe ♥ My Morning Jacket

petemoss

Myspace is blocked at my work, is there any chance someone could copy and paste the text in here?  ;D
I tried google cache, too new...

SaraBananaBear

Sure thing, here it is:

In the three years since releasing 2008's Evil Urges, the members of Kentucky's My Morning Jacket explored their respective impulses: frontman Jim James put out a solo EP of George Harrison covers under the moniker Yim Yames before forming Monsters of Folk, an indie-folk supergroup with Conor Oberst and Mike Mogis of Bright Eyes and M. Ward, guitarist Carl Broemel released his second solo album, All Birds Say, drummer Patrick Hallahan periodically played drums for the Black Keys guitarist Dan Auerbach's solo band, and keyboardist Bo Koster manned the boards as producer for rootsy-rock trio Middle Brother's self-titled debut LP. While apart for these various projects, according to James, this musical exploration helped give My Morning Jacket — which also includes bassist Tommy "Two Tone" Blankenship — perspective when they finally regrouped to record their new album, Circuital. "We know we love each other," James says of his 13-year-old band. "We all encourage each other to play as much music as possible and have as much fun out there learning, (but) it always feel great to come back to what we have."
.
Whereas Evil Urges was recorded in a proper NYC studio, for Circuital — the band's sixth full-length, set to be released on May 31st — the five-piece opted for far more casual digs: tracks were cut in a church gymnasium in the band's hometown of Louisville, while others were birthed from intense jam sessions in James' own basement. "We had never made a record in Louisville," the shaggy-haired frontman explains of trekking back to familiar grounds. "The gym and church became home to the record and the spirits there. It just felt nice to be home."
.

Several cuts, including the more-than-seven-minute title track, were the product of these casual basement sessions, which James says have become a regular occurrence. "We work on things a lot this way," James says of this uninhibited, loose creative process. "There will be an idea and then we will play with it, knock it around and explore (it)."
.
This same brand of sporadic creativity came to James one afternoon during the recording of Circuital. The 32-year-old was driving around listening to a song from a Thai pop compilation that had inspired a yet-to-be-titled track on the album. James' head was suddenly overtaken by the voices of screaming women: they were yelling 'Black Metal'. Just like that, James decided to add backing female vocals to the song, which came to be known as 'Holdin' On To Black Metal'. It seems, for James, this process of musical excavation, is forever ongoing. "You are always hunting and searching," he says. "You could listen to a new song every minute of every day of your life and still never hear it all."
.
Despite Evil Urges being the best-selling MMJ record-to-date, James wanted to flip the script, eager to create a new listening experience. For James, one way to articulate his band's musical metamorphosis is via culinary comparison. "Evil Urges," James says, "is very bubbly or  triangular — like Sprite or soda or beer. Circuital feels more smooth like milk or water.

"(It) deals with returning to the same place that you started as everyone has to do," James concludes of Circuital,
seeming to hint at the way in which the album, in many ways, mirrors the band's zig-zagging path towards it. "Hopefully you do learn more and come back to that same place as a new being with fresh thought."
Europe ♥ My Morning Jacket

BH

I didn't realize that Bo produced the Middle Brother lp.
I'm digging, digging deep in myself, but who needs a shovel when you have a little boy like mine.


touchingmept2

Backing female vocals? Whuuuut!?! Talk about anticipation! Man I can't wait! ;D
The time is near, to come forward with whatever killed your spark.

marino13

Quote from: BH on Mar 30, 2011, 10:49 AM
I didn't realize that Bo produced the Middle Brother lp.

He and Carl also worked on Delta Spirit's last one I think.  Since I found this out, I have been dreaming of a gig with Delta Spirit opening for MMJ.  Not sure I could handle it though!

johnnYYac

Quote from: marino13 on Mar 30, 2011, 12:20 PM
Quote from: BH on Mar 30, 2011, 10:49 AM
I didn't realize that Bo produced the Middle Brother lp.

He and Carl also worked on Delta Spirit's last one I think.  Since I found this out, I have been dreaming of a gig with Delta Spirit opening for MMJ.  Not sure I could handle it though!

Didn't Bo also have a hand in Everest's latest, both playing keys and producing?  I know he sat in with them at T5 #5 and MMJ and Everest toured Europe together, with lots of collaborative sets (check out You Tube, such as below, with Jim, Carl on steel, and I think Bo on keys).

" You Aint Going Nowhere" Everest & Jim James
The fact that my heart's beating is all the proof you need.

YouAre_GivenToFly

Quote from: BH on Mar 30, 2011, 10:49 AM
I didn't realize that Bo produced the Middle Brother lp.

I don't think that part of the article is entirely accurate. Theres no notes with the album regarding a producer, but I've seen a few articles crediting Adam Landry with production.

Bo did prpvide some keys on Delta Spirit's EP "The Waits Room".
The wind blew me back, via Chicago, in the middle of the night.