MUTEMATH

Date: 
Saturday, February 18, 2012

October 17th, 2011 — Currently wrapping up their Odd Soul Introduction Tour, rock innovators MUTEMATH will kick off 2012 with another tour that begins January 26th and criss-crosses the U.S. before finishing up on March 18th in Atlanta. The band are touring in support of their new album Odd Soul, which was released October 4 on Teleprompt/Warner Bros Records. The Grammy-nominated band, which is Paul Meany (vocals/keyboards), Roy Mitchell-Cardenas (bass), Darren King (drums), and Todd Gummerman (guitar), will also appear on The Tonight Show With Jay Leno on November 4.

“Blood Pressure,” the first single from Odd Soul, is climbing the charts at Alternative Radio, while the video premiered on MTV, MTV2, MTVu, MTV Hits and MTV.com. MUTEMATH have been selected as VH1's "You Oughta Know" artist for the month of November. The band, which received a "Best Short Form Music Video" Grammy Award nomination in 2007 for its single "Typical," conceived, coordinated and shot the "Blood Pressure" clip in less than 24 hours. It was edited entirely by drummer Darren King. "Blood Pressure" and Odd Soul are already receiving critical praise. The NY Post called the track "fantastic" and Alternative Press praised the album as "brimming with raw, bluesy riffs and psychedelic guitar squeals...MUTEMATH explore emotional depths both sonically and lyrically, bringing a new sense of urgency to their music. 4½ stars."

MUTEMATH
MUTEMATH
Performer: 

MUTEMATH

Photo by Claire Vogel

Primarily written and recorded at singer/keyboardist's Paul Meany's New Orleans, Louisiana home, MUTEMATH’s new album Odd Soul is the band's third studio release and their first self-produced effort. After the departure of longtime guitarist Greg Hill, Meany, bassist Roy Mitchell-Cárdenas and drummer Darren King were staring at a crossroad as they pondered how to move forward. "As we began to work on songs, we quickly realized that having fewer people in the creative process was better. Roy's a great guitar player, and we all started feeding off of this new inspiration for the kind of record we could make… all we needed was to be left alone until we got there."

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There’s a spontaneity and spark to all of the songs on Odd Soul that's unmistakable, something Meany credits to the fact of starting the recording process right after working on their 2010 DVD Armistice Live. "We really wanted to just cut to the chase on this album and compose music that would work for us on stage. We were craving more high-spirited music for this album so any song idea that came close to depressing got nixed," he continues. "We're not good at being dark so we wanted to see how far we could go into creating something glaringly bright." Despite the fact that many of the songs on Odd Soul—such as the garage-inflected title track—will inevitably make bodies move, the album simultaneously addresses some deeper themes hovering around all of the head nodding. "The lyrical idea of this record is loosely based on our upbringing in what I guess you could call eccentric Christianity," Meany explains, adding that this is also the first album where Meany and King fully collaborated on lyrics. "We wanted to address a lot of the stories we've gathered over the years in what is an admittedly odd culture," he continues. "And not only that, it's our culture, and we know it well… I think writing this record certainly gave us a new appreciation for it, and it gave us a chance to be much more up front about ourselves."

"I learned through these years to treasure my hyper-literal, overly-ambitious, loose wire adolescent adventures in attempting to out-Jesus even Jesus,” King adds. “We wanted to celebrate, up front and center, what we used to think was best kept in the shadows, our weird religious roots. The challenge we took on with this record was to become more lyrically honest, vulnerable, and specific than before, with music that was as exhilarating as some of the most charged up shows we had done up to that point. I am proud to have been raised in an environment that valued intensity, that felt it was important to have something to get all worked up over, that allowed music to be spontaneous and loud and innocent (aka youthful). So this record is the start of us telling the stories that surrounded all of that." Artistically, Mutemath has made a rock album that is unmistakably and inherently their own. Rooted in New Orleans rhythm and blues, fusing elements from psychedelia to traditional gospel to modern electronica, Odd Soul is constructed to live up to its title. "I think the title describes this record in every context." Meany summarizes, "It's who we are, where we've been, and what we incidentally sound like when set to music."

Special Guests / Opening Acts: 

CANON BLUE

Rumspringa is the 11-song orchestral pop marvel from Canon Blue, the solo project from American singer-songwriter Daniel James. The record was written while touring the world with Danish indie rock band Efterklang, and primarily recorded in the off-hours at their Copenhagen studio. A tour de force if there ever was one, Rumspringa is a classical exploration of emotions, with nuanced arrangements of woodwinds, brass and percussion lending a unique tenderness to modern melodies and lyrics.

Venue: 

First Avenue

Location

First Avenue
701 First Avenue North
Minneapolis, MN 55403-1327
United States
Phone: 612-332-1775
44° 58' 43.3416" N, 93° 16' 33.762" W

Event Details
Saturday, February 18
Mainroom / 6:00 pm / ALL AGES
MUTEMATH
$25.00 adv | $25.00 door
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