Following in the Outlandos tradition of Letters from the Road, our guest post this week comes from Skip Matheny of my new fave band Roman Candle:
Dear Fanny,
I saw your band/show last night. Thanks for putting me on the list and asking for advice, critiques, etc…. I’m not sure what to tell you exactly. You all were great. In fact, I imagine you will be very popular, and maybe better — very quickly. I don’t have a critique in the world about your show or aesthetic. You all seem to have nailed that down pretty well. However I might say the same thing to you I usually tell any writer, including myself, which is: think in terms of “songs” and listen to a fair amount music made before the year you were born.
Off the bat, that might seem like a nostalgic thing to suggest. It’s not. It’s about finding and learning about good art. Your band’s songs are great but if you want to make records for the next 10 or 15 years, artistically speaking, you will likely find more substance in songs than in guitar tones. I think there’s a lot to be learned by realizing you are a writer in a long tradition that stretches back before your own time, even (way) back before recorded sound — and the “thread” or the common thing through all of that tradition is the form of the song. It’s an interesting and mysterious thing, and it repays the attention you give it.
If you go listen to any of the records that came out last Tuesday and then listen to, for example, Joni Mitchell,”The Gallery” or David Bowie, “Life on Mars,” or Stevie Wonder, “Do I Love Her?” you’ll probably hear some similarities (verses, choruses, 3 minutes long). In contrast to the new records which, for the most part, are a bit vacuous when it comes to being interesting songs. You can blame the music industry or whoever you like but the unfortunate thing is how anemic most current individual songs are. I’m not suggesting there’s no great active songwriters or that “the past” is the place to be for good music. There were just as many turd songs in 30′s-70′s as there are now. It’s just that great songs were a bit easier to find in those decades and maybe harder to find now. Which is no small bummer considering there is equally about 5 squillion more recorded songs today, than in all those decades combined. I don’t mean to tangent. I’m just saying that unless you all develop into a strictly noise-core act, the song is going to be the medium in which you all work. So I am suggesting you give it as much attention as you can.
Also there’s plenty of books to read — and here again, I would say don’t be scared of the very old ones, Geoffrey Chaucer, Homer even. Often they are more ‘modern’ in style and subject matter than anything on the NY Times best seller list. Words are an underestimated medium in songwriting and it helps if you read authors using them well. Hopefully, they rub off.
Please don’t think I’m presuming to have any big answers here though. Writing songs is not easy and the more I do it, the more mysterious it gets, so I’m not sure how qualified I am to be offering all these suggestions. You’re a smart one though and I’ll probably be asking you for advice sooner or later. Anyway, I hope your band makes a killing.
Skip
10/5/09 | Comments (0)Tags: CUT THROUGH THE NOISE, David Bowie, Joni Mitchell, KATE BRADLEY, LETTERS FROM THE ROAD, OUTLANDOS MUSIC, Roman Candle, Skip Matheny —
So it’s off to Austin, Texas for me this Saturday. Going all-out this year for a 10 day stint, covering interactive, film & music at SxSW. If you’ve been before, you get that this is a fairly brave undertaking. Which is why I’ve got tons of Emergen-C, Tylenol, and eye-cream ready to go with. And I purchased an iPhone over the weekend to make it easier to navigate all those texts, etc., I feel so 21st century! God damn, this thing is friggin’ cool. It’ll be perfect once I transfer my “Truth Hits Everybody” ring tone from my old phone. In any case, by the end of Sx, all the walking, talking, the late nights, the tacos and Lone Star Ale having taken their toll, I’m sure I’ll feel at least 10 years older. But it’s a small price to pay. Showcases I’ll be at below, in case you happen to be in town
. I’ll have a blog for you guys next Monday for the full report of the front half of the festival, at least insofar as much as I can take in the first couple of days. In the meantime… here’s what’s been spinning around the office this month so far:
Simone White, Yakiimo
If you haven’t met Simone just yet, the above is a decent taste… a commercial that played all over Europe and the UK with her song, “The Beep Beep Song” from the first album, I Am the Man. Spectacular record. The new one on the way is Yakiimo, with a release across the pond scheduled for June. Working on getting it out here as well. I think of her as a modern-day Joni Mitchell. Fave tracks from Yakiimo include Victoria Anne, Candy Bar Killer, and You Are Loved. You can hear them all here. Totally worth the import price.
Clem Snide, Hungry Bird

When Eef Barzelay isn’t busy doing his solo projects (which I equally adore) he’s got his hands full with Clem Snide. Always a good buy. My picks: Me No (a rocker!) and Pray, so very R.E.M. Hear them here.
Glasvegas, Glasvegas
Lamely, the actual video is no longer embed-able (Columbia Records, you fucking idiots). But still, holy crap, this is heaven. So very very Brit Box. Glasgow pop at its uber-finest. Genius name. Can’t get enough and can barely stand the wait to see them in Austin. So God damn brilliant. Echo and the Bunnymen meets The Family Cat. Double-shit hot.
Sometymes Why, Joey

Yep, it’s a Concrete Blonde cover, gorgeous. You can get it on their new album, Your Heart Is a Glorious Machine.
Michael Miller, I Made You Up

Unfucking believable. It’s a creeper so make sure you hang with it. Really hard to decide favorite tracks because the whole thing just builds. Nonetheless, “Munkie,” “Sweetness,” “Carolina Skyline,” “Gomer Put Your Fist Down,” “Sutures.” Hear them here. I’m telling you, this is a five-star record, all the way. Due out this summer. Pete Yorn, Tracy Bonham, Amy Correa and others guest. Plus it’s an all-star backing band. How the hell isn’t this guy famous? Working on that.
That’s all for now, talk to you guys from Austin next week. Here’s where I’ll be among other places:
- Breath of Fresh Air Showcase 12-6 PM, Wednesday 03/18, Threadgills, 301 W Riverside Dr (Brownshoe, Jeremy Messersmith, Romantica, Chris Velan, The Secret, Life of Sofia, Amy Speace, Winterpills, KaiserCartel, The Damnwells)
- Bloodshot Records Showcase 12-6 PM, Friday 03/20, Yard Dog, 1510 S. Congress (Scotland Yard Gospel Choir, Ben Weaver, Charlie Pickett, Exene Cervenka, Deadstring Brothers, Ha Ha Tonka, The Meat Purveyors, Dex Romweber Duo, The Silos, Andre Williams, Justin Townes Earle, Rosie Flores, Waco Brothers
xo
3/9/09 | Comments (2)Tags: Amy Correa, Amy Speace, Brit Box, Charlie Pickett, Chris Velan, Clem Snide, CUT THROUGH THE NOISE, Echo and the Bunnymen, Eef Barzelay, Glasvegas, Ha Ha Tonka, Jeremy Messersmith, Joni Mitchell, KATE BRADLEY, Michael Miller, NOW PLAYING, OUTLANDOS MUSIC, Pete Yorn, REM, Simone White, Sometymes Why, The Damnwells, The Family Cat, Tracy Bonham, Winterpills —