Wednesday, April 6, 2011

April 19 - Indie Rocks Lansing's Core: Paleo/Alex Hug/Night Thoughts/Stargrazer/Jazzy Knives

Nestled at the end of an unassuming alley that also contains the landmark, lugnut-topped brick chimney that looms over the intersection of Michigan Avenue and southbound Cedar Street, Basement 414 combines all the best attributes of an intimate live setting with the unassuming decor of a DIY art space and/or bicycle co-op.

ITAV is excited to present eternally-touring songwriter Paleo, best known for 2008's 365-song mega-album Song Diary.  For the first time ever, Paleo will be touring with a backing band, which includes bassist C.J. Boyd (you may remember C.J. from our post about his compilation supporting Wikileaks).

Also appearing will be Lansing's Night Thoughts, a '50s and '60s inspired R&B/R&R juggernaut featuring ex members of Squonky Tonk and the powerful pipes of singer Cathy Illman (a.k.a. Veloura Caywood).

Bringing things into the acoustic indie-folk realm with electronic flourishes that run the gamut from cinematic soundscape to krautrock will be Alex Hug and a newly revitalized Stargrazer.

And grinding everything into a spiky, colorful pulp, sound-saboteur Jazzy Knives will engulf your musical sensibilities with cut-and-paste sonics and unexpected textures.  Last time we played with Jazzy Knives, his tape deck nearly caught on fire -- really!

The show goes down Tuesday, April 19th at Basement 414 (click the link for a map).  It's all ages and free.  Doors are at 7 PM, music starts at 8.  

It would be thoughtful if you brought a small contribution for the touring acts, or bought some of their merch. 

Several of these artists appear on ITAV's compilation In The Orchard Of Osiris (stream/purchase here), which came out this past December -- alongside tracks by White Pines, Drunken Barn Dance, Small Houses, James Collin, Arms And Sleepers, Horde Of Two, and more.  Come see what they can do in the live setting!

[by the way, In The Orchard Of Osiris is now available at Encore Recordings in Ann Arbor, as well.  We'd like to thank them for their continuing support of original music.]

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

It can't always be good news -- Nanobots full-length delayed!

The Nanobots' full-length debut Pink Circuits, due out March 29 (today), has been delayed.  PETERBOT, 1/2 of the tiny duo, was flush with excitement over the clamorous finished product -- which flirts with ambient soundscapes as much as with white noise, drone, and passages that sound like a gamelan being kicked down a flight of steps -- and decided it would be a good idea to take the master tapes out for a night on the town and play the new album for some friends.


In the ensuing blur, the master for Pink Circuits was misplaced -- perhaps left in the back seat of a cab?  Or could it still be in that friend-of-a-friend's PS2?

We apologize for the delay while this mystery is being solved.  If you, by chance, know the whereabouts of Pink Circuits, please contact ITAV headquarters.  In the event that the master tapes cannot be located, we will rebuild the album from its basic tracks and have it out as soon as possible this spring.

* PREPARE TO BE SMITTEN *

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The master tapes for The Nanobot's new full-length, Pink Circuits, have been misplaced (in the style of Hendrix's Axis: Bold As Love)! Have you seen them? Please leave their possible whereabouts in the comments section of this blog post (below). Most creative sighting of Pink Circuits will win an exclusive, handmade 1-of-a-kind physical copy of the album!!

Example:  "I was looking at a grainy photo of the Sasquatch, and I'm pretty sure he was holding a copy of Pink Circuits."

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Monday, March 14, 2011

3-Way Singles Club launches May 1st!

ITAV's "3-Way Singles Club," hearkening to all those great singles series of the distant (and recent) past where you would receive a 45 RPM record in the mail every month, will launch May 1st with a very special 3-song/3-artist tribute, in miniature, to beloved indie rock/slowcore band Low.

Envisioned as a monthly series of digital triple-A side singles, each volume of the 3-Way Singles Club will feature 3 exclusive songs by 3 different independent artists.  Some of the singles will have themes, some will be more freeform in nature.  Some of them will juxtapose musical styles, others will celebrate particular genres.  Right now, we have about the first 6 months worth of singles lined up, featuring an all-star cast of Midwest musicians such as The Plurals, The Hat Madder, Cavalcade, Narc Out The Reds, The Playback, Flatfoot, Frank And Earnest, Jet Lag Superstar, RxGibbs, Karyatid, Cat Midway & The Knick-Knacks, and many more.

For the inaugural May single (Vol. 1!), 3 bands will cover Low songs:  Double Saginaw Familiarity will interpret "Dragonfly," Joshua Barton & The Brothers And Sisters will perform "Shame," and Stargrazer will record "Hand So Small" (from the great out-of-print E.P. Low did in conjunction with electronic duo Spring Heel Jack.)


Volume One of the 3-Way Singles Club will be FREE!  Stay tuned for the link, which will be provided May 1st!  You can also visit the 3-Way Singles Club Page for more information on the series and to see upcoming singles.

Volume 1's miniature tribute to Low precedes ITAV's planned summer release of a full-length Low tribute recorded by East Lansing sound engineer/producer Bryan Kay.  Bryan assembled a collective dubbed Cardboard Academy to record "Metal & Fire: Songs Low Taught Us."  Look for more information on that upcoming release around the same time Volume 1 drops -- and by the way, the 3 songs on Volume 1 are all different than what will appear on the full-length!

To all of the artists on Volume 1, Low has played an important and influential part in their lives and in their development as musicians.  The spare, stately harmonies of Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker, Low's principal members, combined with music as melodic as it is minimal, presents just as many openings for interpretation as it does challenges.

Dan Pehachek, a.k.a. Double Saginaw Familiarity, experienced Low in perhaps their most ideal setting, live:

"I first fell in love with Dragonfly hearing it live, and the memory is mostly an emotion set off by a guitar tone and harmonized vocals filling a small room.  Low taught me how to project emotion through sustained tones and silences, and I wanted to capture some of that in my cover.  I also wanted it to be something I could easily recreate live, so that whether I play it in a venue or a listener plays the recording loud in their room, the experience can trigger the same set of emotions and memories."

That sense of immediacy that is so integral to Low's music is also something Joshua Barton (of Fields Of Industry and their parent collective, AvE Records) seeks to capture.  He also confided in me that Low had provided part of the soundtrack for his relationship with his wife, Mary Jane.  Initially, his cover of the elegaic "Shame" off of the Long Division album was envisioned as a duet between he and she, however the idea expanded to include other members of AvE who also shared connectivity with Low's music.

Of the recording, Joshua aims to "record as live as possible and utilize harmonies beyond just Mary Jane and I."  If that isn't tantalizing....

Finally, I was unable to keep myself away from this project.  In addition to making a cameo appearance on Songs of Metal & Fire, where I play the last few bass notes of the closing song "Point Of Disgust," my own musical life has benefited so much from exposure to Low.  As a solo bass singer/songwriter, minimalism is the ocean I swim in (as a certain polar bear once said, of warfare).  Learning to let the spaces between notes sing is something I can trace directly back to their work.  The Bombscare E.P. that they recorded with drum 'n' bass duo Spring Heel Jack, circa 2000, was my first real exposure to them -- a slightly more ornamented sound, but one infinitely sensitive to the underlying, beautiful songcraft.  Therefore, Stargrazer delivers my own unique lo-fi interpretation of "Hand So Small," a song I hear in my dreams and deep within the fabric of every note I play.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Fiona Dickinson / The Break-Ups / Stargrazer / Families - LIVE March 13 at B414

Sunday March 13, Stargrazer (my solo project) will have the distinct honor of opening for Bellaire, MI-based singer/songwriter Fiona Dickinson, who is making her first Lansing appearance at the free-thinking art spot Basement 414.  Here's a map to B414.  You can get there by walking to the end of Jay Street, a half-block long street that runs off of southbound Cedar St., behind The Nuthouse Bar.  You'll know you're there when you see a tall brick chimney (however I suggest parking on Michigan Ave. or in one of the lots nearby, as Jay Street itself is a tow-away zone.)


Dickinson's debut album, Duende, can be streamed or downloaded here, and it is truly a gorgeous and emotionally evocative set of songs displaying her incredible range and songsmithing abilities.  Here's a short bio I clipped from her bandcamp page:

Fiona Dickinson is a British singer/songwriter currently residing in Michigan. Taking a cue from Bjork-esque vocalists, as well as adding elements of shoegaze, old time folk, and lush string arrangements, Fiona creates a beguiling dark sound. While the instrumentation of reverberated guitars, violins, and cellos is invariably complex and often provide unexpected hooks that draw a listener in, Fiona's most affecting instrument is her voice. Rich and mature, she drives it fluidly between sweetly breathed coos and full-throated wails. Her live shows are intimate and deep, begging the undivided attention of the listener. You can feel her voice pushing back the demons as she digs deep into a growl, and then angelically welcome in the healing process with the voice of tranquility. 

I'm truly looking forward to seeing her live performance, as I find the album quite bewitching: sonically timeless and yet very of-the-moment with current Michigan independent music.

Also playing Sunday night will be my labelmates at GTG Records, The Break-Ups.  Led by Timmy Rodriguez, the Break-Ups have the ability to shapeshift from Beatles-meets-Velvet Underground noisy pop to thrilling forays into 90s-style alt rock that hits the sweet spot.  They're one of Lansing's best kept secrets and put on a hell of a show.

The fourth band on the bill, Families, hail from the Detroit area, however a google search of "Families" and "Detroit" proved fruitless, so if anyone can provide a link to them I'd really like to check them out.  I've heard good -- albeit vague -- things about them, so they'll be the surprise treat for the evening. 

As for Stargrazer, I'll be debuting a half-electric, half-acoustic set -- bringing out all my toys for a live one-man-band debut that probably owes more to Can and The Mountain Goats than to more polished loopmeisters like Andrew Bird.  I'm pretty excited for this!  The electric set will consist of a single song that I've been calling "Thing," followed by a set of new songs and old favorites on my trusty Ferrington acoustic bass with some witchy atmospherics thrown in.  If you've seen my set before, this will be something else entirely, the culmination of several of my lo-tech experiments of the past coupled with my purchase of a decidedly hi-tech Boss loop station.  I am having so much fun with it!

Doors are at 8 PM, and the show will probably kick off around 9 PM.  There is no charge at the door, and this is an ALL AGES show.  Bands will have music and other merchandise on sale, and it'd be great of you if you could bring a donation to help cover the travel expenses of the bands from out of town -- I'm sure they'll pass a hat or something.  Also, B414 is a spacious, inviting, and acoustically pleasant art gallery, so please drag your friends with you for an evening of music they won't regret.  

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Vintage ITAV Music Trove Unearthed!

LANSING, MI -- Whitney Spotts, lead singer of 80s cover band Starfarm and former chanteuse of indie-punk shredders Bit, uncovered a rare stash of 12 original pressings of ITAV's first official release while on an expedition to clean her desk.  Spotts, realizing the rarity of these mini-LP sleeved CDs (catalog numbered ITAV 004), brought them to ITAV's world headquarters, eliciting yelps of surprise and delight from ITAV's staff.


"We haven't seen this thing in years," said ITAV founder Peter Richards, rifling through the small stack of slightly worn sleeves, "and all the discs are still pristine!"

Indeed the sleeves show some wear, like your uncle's record collection -- slight spine creases, bent corners, and a little sun-fading of some of the bright colors; yet the Kinko's-produced liner notes and the the professionally pressed CDs inside look like they're being handled for the first time.

ITAV's first release, a 20-track compilation called First-Hand Accounts, Theories, And Their Repercussions that was distributed for free in 2006, boasts an intriguing tracklist of Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, and Texas musicians, and stands as an important document of the eclectic middle-period of this past decade:

Canada - Hooray For Shipwreck
Nick Schillace - Green Green Grass (live on WCBN)
Jen Sygit - Writer's Block
Rubber Band Banjo - Winter Safety Rules
Oh My God - Funhouse Mirror Mother
Phil Avalos & The Quiet Lanes - Got
The Mnemonic Devices - Young James
That's Him! That's The Guy! - Angry. Vengeful.
Stare Into The Sun - Run
Bit - Love Song
The Casionauts - Dr. Chocula Web-MD
Animal - Art Party/Wizard Of Wor
XU - Horns And Halos
Pat Zelenka - Platypus And Dolphin
Rattling Wall Collective - Citizen
Bradford - Forget It
Freel - Ghosting
Brickburner - The Future Doesn't Need Us
The Strawberry Explosion - Baby Baby Boo!
Sam Corbin - Please Come Home

Among the gems on the comp were many previously unreleased tracks and hard-to-find rarities.  The entire collection was mastered by Scott Bozack at Thin Black Line Studios in Williamston, Michigan.  It was pressed in a limited edition of 1,000 copies which were quickly distributed, and the CD disappeared into the golden glow of local music history.  Or so everyone thought.

So, what will become of these dozen, ridiculously out-of-print copies of the original edition?

"ITAV 004 was meant to be a free document," says Richards.  "That was the original deal with the artists -- that we would get their music out to lots of people, and in return they would put their best musical foot forward, give us great material to work with.  I learned a lot putting that comp together.  It's great to see that it still exists.  It's like running into an old friend."

ITAV plans to give away these slightly worn copies of First-Hand Accounts, either with purchase of some of our other releases or to individuals who make a good case for why they should have one.  In other words, free to a good home!  But we'd rather give them to people who will genuinely enjoy them than to someone who just likes to amass free stuff.  So tell us, in the comments, if that person is you!  Let us know how it won't cost us anything extra to give you a copy, how it will make us feel good, or how it will make someone else feel good.  Offer good while supplies last.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Lansing Event: (SCENE) Folk Fest IV - February 11 & 12

For the past few years, Earthwork Music has been teaming up with the like-minded arts promotion organization Fox On A Hill and downtown East Lansing art gallery/performance space (SCENE) Metrospace to put on a two-day mid-winter folk festival.  Organized by musician Brandon Foote (of Gifts Or Creatures), the event is centered around the prolific Michigan independent singer/songwriter community, for which "folk" is a somewhat inadequate term.  A quick glance at this year's lineup reveals what might be the best year yet, with a strong showing from the indie-folk camp as well as some of the Mitten State's more forward-thinking traditionalists.


Since opening in 2004, (SCENE) Metrospace has steadily built a reputation as the premier all-ages music venue in East Lansing.  Just steps away from the campus of Michigan State University, (SCENE) is a wide-open, contemporary space that showcases cutting edge art in all mediums.  I've witnessed everything there from motion-detecting, inflatable sculptures to experimental film.  From rock shows to modern classical performances, (SCENE)'s stage has seen a constant stream of performers -- especially since moving to their current location at 110 Charles Street, in the lower level of the colorful "Habitrail," a.k.a. the Division Street Parking Garage (next door to Georgio's Pizza).

Earthwork Music is a collective of musicians founded by singer/songwriters Seth Bernard and May Erlewine (Daisy May).  Headquartered in Lake City, Michigan, Earthwork' s artists are scattered across the state, and in the case of a few, like Daniel Kahn and Luke Winslow-King, call New Orleans their home.  Earthwork blends social consciousness with a DIY work ethic and a passion for contemporary folk music.  The collective hosts an annual gathering, The Harvest Gathering, at the Bernard family's Lake City farmstead, which has bloomed from a simple weekend of camping held for an extended family of friends, into one of Michigan's most acclaimed mini-festivals.

Jen Sygit, Sam Corbin, and Gifts Or Creatures all appear from the Earthwork artist roster.  Brandon from Gifts Or Creatures commissioned the poster, pictured above, that I designed to promote the festival.  I've had the pleasure of designing the posters for this festival ever since its inception in 2008.

Also appearing are two artists who appeared on ITAV's most recent release, the In The Orchard Of Osiris compilation.  Steven Leaf, a Lansing-based songwriter, contributed the lush, layered instrumental "India Pale Ale" from his recent debut album We Are Ghosts.  Leaf's music belies the folk tag: although it is primarily acoustic it is also clearly informed by electronic music and indie rock.  We'd love it if Steve would consider ITAV as a home for his sophomore release!  The other artist who appears on I.T.O.o.O. is mid-Michigan musician Chris Bathgate, who contributed vocals to the Syscrusher track "Between The Breath Of Infinity."  We are big fans of Chris's music, and eagerly awaiting the follow-up album he's working on to A Cork Tale Wake, which is the album my wife and I fell in love to.

Someone I'm really looking forward to checking out is Photographers, based in Chicago.  I've just heard intriguing things about Photographers, and tantalizing scraps of music.

My label-mate on GTG Recordings, Small Houses, will also appear at the (SCENE) Folk Festival.  Small Houses is a unique blend of sparely gorgeous melodies, economic arrangements, and rich brevity.  I happen to know there's some new music coming out soon from Small Houses, because I am designing the cover art -- utilizing some breathtaking photography by Maren Hoopfer (of Photographers, the band).

Also in the old friends category is the folk duo Nervous But Excited.  Nervous But Excited is the fusion of two dynamic singer/songwriters, Kate Peterson and Sarah Cleaver.  Both powerful performers in their own rights, Nervous But Excited have been touring and performing together since 2004, evangelizing their extremely engaging brand of "pleasantly aggressive folk."

And the wild cards, for me, are Doug Mains and Ryan Anderson.  Who are these enigmas?  Everyone loves a good mystery.

A quick hopscotch through the multitude of links in this post should give you a pretty good idea of the caliber of performance you can expect at (SCENE) Metrospace next Friday and Saturday.  I would advise not showing up late, as the venue can only hold about 150 people and is known to sell out.  Tickets are $10, available at the door only, and the music starts at 8 PM each night.  Doors each night are at 7 PM.  

Perhaps I'll see you there?

I have some other exciting things to write about, like a friend who found a cache of ridiculously out-of-print ITAV CDs that I'll probably devise some sort of giveaway for; an upcoming Stargrazer show; new developments with the 3-Way Singles Club... but those will have to wait for another post, because it's time to hit "Publish."

Friday, February 4, 2011

Inspirations

During the process of gathering tracks and sequencing the compilation album that would become In The Orchard Of Osiris, I was acutely aware of the power of music to inspire more music.


From the start, I knew what kind of feel I wanted the album to have, and the word that keeps coming to mind is "autumnal."  I've always really loved Autumn.  It may be my favorite time of year, especially the early part when the days are still warm and the leaves are especially colorful.  Living in Michigan, there are lots of maples, and maples have a wide range of colors they can potentially turn: flaming bright red, a whole orchestra of oranges, golden, a sort of deep cabbage purple, tawny, and every combination you can imagine shot through with limpid green.  A drive north on US-127 will bring you to the birch forests -- unending white-barked trees with leaves turning golden, as vivid as the Gustav Klimt paintings, but real.

Even when the leaves drop and the branches are bare against the sky, there's lots of beauty (although the impending sense of winter can have its emotional downside.)  Last fall, I was driving past a golf course on a fairly windless day, and a couple of the trees had dropped their leaves all at once, almost vertically straight down onto the manicured grass.  They were standing naked in perfect pools of red, shaped like their shadows.  I wanted to go home and paint it.

Autumn is an ideal expression of the interface between life and death, growth and decay.  The forest floor is a rich layering of years and years of fallen leaves, rotten logs, bugs, worms, mushrooms, ferns.  Out of all of that springs the vital and living forest.

To me, this life process, full of color and variety and the complex shapes carved by boring insects and the fervid smell of life processes has a sound, and that sound is Joe Scott's (of White Pines) voice.  That sound is the fluent, elegiac electronics manipulated by Arms And Sleepers. It's in the instrumentation, and deep within the genetics of the songwriting.  That's what I mean by autumnal.

In addition to that abstract, synesthetic definition that blurs sound and wordcraft with images of Autumn, I also had some very direct musical inspirations -- other compilations that I listened to quite a bit while I was putting together I.T.O.o.O. that, in one way or another, fueled my process.

First on that list is Dark Night Of The Soul, the collaboration between Sparklehorse and Danger Mouse that spent much of the two-year period while I was curating I.T.O.o.O. tied up in legal disputes that delayed its release -- as it turned out, until after Mark Linkous had died of a self-inflicted gunshot.  This tragic loss aside, the album is a beautiful listen, encapsulating that autumnal feeling quite well.  NPR had been streaming the entire album even while the record label was barring its release, and I spent quite a lot of time listening to it.

Besides being a collaboration, it also functions as a compilation, since each song is sung (and co-written in many cases) by a different singer.  Each singer brings their own stamp, musically, to each piece; each piece joins fluidly into the whole.  The album blends consistently strong writing with skillful production (although Danger Mouse sometimes sands the edges off things a little too skillfully for my tastes) and great performances from the likes of The Flaming Lips (who apparently appear as an entire band), Gruff Rhys (of Super Furry Animals), Jason Lytle (of Grandaddy), James Mercer (of The Shins), Iggy Pop, Frank Black, Nina Persson (of The Cardigans), Vic Chestnutt, Suzanne Vega, Julian Casablancas (of The Strokes), and filmmaker David Lynch -- who not only sings two songs, but also provides a suite of appropriately dark and surreal photography, making this not just an audio collaboration, but also a visual collaboration.  I appreciate that boundary-crossing aspect of this project.

In a lot of ways, Dark Night Of The Soul listens like a mix tape.  Each singer's contribution sounds a lot like their own band.  And while I could have asked for a slightly more fractured beat here or there, or a little dirtier texture à la one of Sparklehorse's solo albums, this was a collaboration, and one thing Danger Mouse brings to the table is a studied approach to production.  In that regard, it's an unqualified success, and a definite inspiration for my own approach to crafting a compilation.

A second compilation album which I found highly rewarding and inspiring is Lost Tribe Sound: One.  I was given this compilation at a Benoit Pioulard show, and it contains two of his tracks, including a beautiful acoustic performance of his song "Hirondelle."

Like I.T.O.o.O., Lost Tribe Sound: One is only available as a CD.  It's well over an hour of intriguing music from independent artists all over the world, including many who I've never encountered before but who made a lasting impression on me.  I got this album right as I.T.O.o.O. was getting mastered, and my first thought was, "wow, this is exactly what I'm trying to do."

It's an impressive cross-section of exploratory music, difficult to pigeonhole, but full of indie, instrumental, post-rock, electro-acoustic, and evocative sounds.  From the Lost Tribe Sound website:

"Lost Tribe Sound: One isn’t merely a selection of some of the most vital, idiosyncratic and heartfelt music around, but also a statement of intent. Brimming with earthy, woody music that creaks and rumbles, these sounds conjure up those inexplicably elusive yet intensely powerful emotions and will envelop you like a forest floor coming to life."

Hyperbolic?  Perhaps, but pretty accurate also.  I found this to be a very enriching listen, and I'm interested in digging up more from these artists and learning more about this label.  It's generally a downtempo listen, rich with subtle melodies.  Subtlety is really a good descriptor for this album: it's wonderfully recorded and even when it's experimental it's a tightly woven fabric of cellos, intricate counterpoints, sedate tempos, and dark timbral backgrounds that are never distracting, they all serve to transport the listener.

You can listen to a preview and purchase the album here  -- although Lost Tribe Sound prefers the term "barter."  This one has my whole-hearted endorsement, if you're looking for something new, interesting, varied, and versatile.

Finally, the third CD I found inspiring was an older compilation called The Machines 1990-1993, a compilation gathering the groundbreaking 7" releases put out by Simple Machines Records.  Simple Machines was founded by Kristin Thomson and Jenny Toomey, both of whom are very active in independent music, both as musicians and as arts activists.

Toomey is perhaps best known as a member of the bands Tsunami, Geek, and Grenadine.  She founded Simple Machines initially to put out a series of 4-song 7" releases, respectively called Wedge, Wheel, Pulley, Screw, Lever, and Inclined Plane.  The records featured their own songs plus their peers in the indie-rock community such as Lungfish, Bricks, Nation Of Ulysses, Jawbox, Velocity Girl, Scrawl, Unrest, Rodan, and Superchunk.  The label later released a jaw-droppingly good tribute album to Beat Happening.  If you know me, you know that this is all musically right up my alley.

Toomey has gone on to be appointed Program Officer for Media and Cultural Policy in the Media, Arts and Culture Unit at the Ford Foundation.  So for those of you who regard participating in art and music with a baleful eye and a muttered "get a real job," she did!  And she now works to make it possible for other artists to make a living at what they do.

In 1990 I was an awkward high school sophomore, and only vaguely aware of indie rock.  Though my tastes have always been fairly catholic, I think I was listening to a blend of Robert Johnson, fIREHOSE, The Cult, Quicksilver Messenger Service and Iron Maiden at the time.  It would be a few more years before I knew what a Superchunk was.  If I saw The Machines at the mall music shop (which I think I did, actually),  I probably regarded it with curiosity but passed it over.  After all, the sleeve was embellished with silver ink and the song titles were arranged around an exploded diagram of some sort of gear-laden machinery -- my type of visual nerdery.  Had I taken a chance on it, my fledgling mind would no doubt have been melted by its punky blend of murky guitars, impassioned singing, spoken word performance, and cover versions of Simon & Garfunkle's "I Am A Rock" and Wire's "Reuters." 

It would be many, many years later that I would stumble on it for four bucks at a resale shop.  Actually it was this past fall when I had stopped in to put up a flier for the previously mentioned Benoit Pioulard show.

And there, ensconced in the liner notes, was the label's philosophy: 

  • put out music we love and sell it for a fair price;
  • make everything we do beautiful, interesting and friendly;
  • pass on skills and information (to avoid reinventing the wheel);
  • use our record packaging to educate, not just to decorate;
  • see personal pleasure and fun as measures of success;
  • endorse a measured application of caffeine (within reason) to humans who have the drive to do something creative and often exhausting with their spare time, so they can still get up and go to their dehumanizing jobs so they can make enough money to buy more caffeine;
  • support our peers' efforts by working with other small labels, bands and local businesses to sustain a productive, self-sufficient punk/la la network and;
  • answer our mail and return phone calls.

Simple Machines Records really epitomized the DIY mentality:  most of their releases included an extensive booklet detailing exactly how to put out your own records.  I'm adopting many of their principals, and I've definitely benefited from their openness about the joys and frustrations of putting out independent music.  You can read the Simple Machines story here.

Honestly, nothing happens in a vacuum.  I don't feel that acknowledging my influences diminishes ITAV's output in any way at all -- I think it enriches and elevates the experience.  When I was going to college for my studio art degree, I remember there always being a student or two in every class who denied having any influences, and resisted studying the work of other artists.  They were fiercely protective of what they saw as their artistic purity.  I think I understand that stance -- we all pass through it at some point as creative individuals -- but I also find it patently ridiculous.  It seems more like an indicator of artistic insecurity; something that stunts your growth and, more often than not, accompanies work that is either highly derivative or revolves around a "bag of tricks" that ultimately goes stale.

I think it's impossible not to be influenced by nearly everything; and perhaps most of all by the experiences -- the great records, the stunning paintings, the beautifully-written novels -- we revisit over and over because we find aesthetic resonance in them.