The Wooden Birds * Bowery Ballroom, NYC * September 27, 2009

Sunday night we had the amazing chance to experience The Wooden Birds open for Great Lake Swimmers at the Bowery Ballroom. Okay, as soon as we found out that the band had both Andrew Kenny from American Analog Set and Matt Pond in it, we were intrigued.

The band, which is the brain child of Kenny, released Magnolia (Barsuk) back in May and have been supporting the album ever since. This is one of the greatest records I have heard all year, hands down. At their live show, the band gives even more life into the songs. Listening to the record, the first thing you notice that there are no drums on any of the tracks. A careful decision made by Kenny.

Onstage the band brings on drummer Sean Haskins to liven up the live show.  Guitarist and sometimes vocalists Leslie Sisson has one of the most beautiful voices you’ll ever hear, especially on stage. Matt Pond makes a nice addition to the live lineup, playing the new songs like an old pro. Kenny takes on the part of lead vocalist and bass player, with the most infectious bass lines you’ll ever hear. The Great Lake Swimmers had a hard act to follow that’s for sure.

Check out MORE LIVE Pictures of The Wooden Birds @ The Bowery After the JUMP

Check back later on in the week for our exclusive interview with Andrew Kenny!

 

Mix: Songs About Snow and Winter

If you live in the greater North East, you know we are being attacked by snow right now. At least it is a good excuse to stay in and listen to some good music, right?  The crew here at Modern Mystery has put a little mix together for your wintery snow day. We hope you enjoy it.

Matt Pond PA- Snow Day
Elk City- Cherries in the Snow
The Secret Life of Sofia- Snow Room
Elf Power- The Winter is Coming
Fleet Foxes- White Winter Hymnal
Olivia Tremor Control- Frosted Ambassador
Ben Weaver- White Snow
The Leisure Society- On the Last of the Melting Snow
Snow in Mexico- You and My Winter
Otter Petter- Winter Days
The Lisps- The Winter That I Missed
The Arcade Fire- No Winter for a Year
Harlem Shakes- Winter Water
O’Death-Crawl Through Snow (Live)

Modern Mystery’s Top 50 Albums of 2008

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Its been a big 2008 for Modern Mystery. We’ve meet some really amazing bands, seen some incredible shows, and made a lot of great friends. We know 2009 will bring even more and we’re very excited!

We have compiled our list of our Top 50 Albums of 2008. Though this was by no means easy, we think we’ve included our all of certain favorites of the year. Below our list you’ll see a few more Top Lists of 2008, so check that out as well.  Hope you like our Top 50 Albums as much as we do!

1. of Montreal- Skeletal Lamping
2. Morning Benders- Talking Through Tin Cans
3. Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin-Pershing
4. Miniature Tigers- Tell it to the Volcano
5. Ryan Adams and the Cardinals- Cardinalogy
6. Sloan- Parallel Play
7. MGMT- Oracular Spectacular
8. Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band- Self Titled
9. The Spinto Band- Moonwink
10. Okkervil River- The Stand Ins
11. Chairlift- Does You Inspire You?
12. We Are Scientists- Brain Thrust Mastery
13. Tokyo Police Club- Elephant Shell
14. Ra Ra Riot- The Rhumb Line
15. Margot and the Nuclear So and So’s- Animal and Not Animal
16.  Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks- Real Emotional Trash
17. The French Kicks- Swimming
18. The Stills- Oceans Will Rise
19. The Walkmen- You and Me
20. Vampire Weekend- Self Titled
21. Wyldlife- Self Titled
22. Jenny Lewis- Acid Tongue
23. Annuals- Such Fun
24. Ratatat- Lp3
25. The Headlights- Some Racing, Some Stopping
26.  Department of Eagles- In Ear Park
27. Dr. Dog- Fate
28. Born Ruffians- Red Yellow and Blue
29. Los Campesinos- Hold On Now, Youngster
30. The Little Ones- Morning Tide
31. Mason Proper- Olly Oxen Free
32. She & Him- Volume 1
33. Albert  Hammond Jr.- Como te Llama?
34. Death Cab for Cutie- Narrow Stairs
35. Joan of Arc- Boo Human
36. Deerhoof- Offend Maggie
37. Sam Roberts Band- Love at the End of the World
38. Fleet Foxes- Self Titled
39. Bon Iver- For Emma, Forever Ago
40. Atlas Sound- Let the Blind Lead Those Who Can See But Cannot Feel
41. Kings of Leon- Only By the Night
42. M83- Saturdays= Youth
43. Helio Sequence- Keep Your Eyes Ahead
44. Man Man- Rabbit Habits
45. Flight of the Conchords- Self Titled
46. Cold War Kids- Loyalty to Loyalty
47. The Mae Shi- Hlllyh
48. Secret Machines- Selt Titled
49. Santogold- Self Titled
50. Tim Fite- Fair Ain’t Fair

BEST EP OF 2008:
Matt Pond PA- The Freeep

BEST REISSUE OF 2008-
Pavement- Brighten The Corners- Nicence Creedence Edition

BEST LIVE SHOW OF 2008:
Of Montreal at Roseland, NYC. Kevin Barnes on a live white horse? Try to beat that!

TOP 5 NEW BANDS OF 2008:
1. The Morning Benders
2. Miniature Tigers
3. Chairlift
4. MGMT
5. Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band

Modern Mystery’s Top 25 Songs of the Year

Finally here it is.  Modern Mystery’s Top 25 Songs of the Year! Yes this was super hard to compile, and yes we left some stuff out, but here is what we consider our personal Top 25. Our Number 1 Spot truly deserves it.

Tomorrow we reveal our Top Records. Oh what fun!

1. Miniature Tigers- Last Night’s Fake Blood
2. Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin- Heers
3. Morning Benders- Damnit Anna
4. Chairlift-Bruises
5. MGMT- Kids
6.  Matt Pond PA- First Light
7. Of Montreal- For Our Elegant Caste
8. Casper and the Cookies- Little King
9. Sloan- Cheap Champagne
10. Ryan Adams-Fix It
11. Conor Oberst- Souled Out!!!
12. Sam Roberts Band- Them Kids
13. Okkervil River- Lost Coastlines
14. Vampire Weekend- Oxford Comma
15. Spinto Band-Summer Grof
16. Franz Ferdinand- Ulysees
17. We Are Scientists- Impatience
18. Mason Proper-Lock and Key
19. Ra Ra Riot- Dying is Fine20. Toyko Police Club- Graves
21. She & Him- Why Do You Let Me Stay Here?
22. Hollerado-Americanarama
23. Annuals- Confessor
24. Santogold/NERD/Julian Casablancas- My Drivethru
25. Mae Shi- Run to Your Grave

A Modern Mystery Holiday Party with Matt Pond

Welcome back to another installment of a Modern Mystery Holiday Party. We are nearing towards the end of our celebration, and we are glad to have with us Matt Pond, from the brilliant band, Matt Pond PA.  This year the band treated their fans to a free Ep titled ‘The Freeep’ which you can download at their site, www.mattpondpa.com. You would be a fool not to snag a copy.

I’m not sure what Matt Pond PA’s final plans are for 2009, but I hope it involves a tour and a new full length. I think we have a good chance of seeing this happen. Matt was nice enough to share with us his Top Albums of the year and other words. Let’s raise our glass for more Matt Pond PA in the coming year!

Matt Pond’s Top 10 Albums of the Year

Darker My Love 2
Lykke Li Youth Novels
Portishead Third
She Keeps Bees Nests
The Walkmen You and Me
Higgins Z’s
Spiritualized Songs in A&E
Black Mountain In the Future
The Kills Midnight Boom
Frightened Rabbit The Midnight Organ Fight

The Best Thing that Happened to Me this Year

Going to Spain was the best thing that happened to me. I now have an unquenchable hankering to reconstruct that feeling in New York City.

The Strangest Thing that Happened to Me This Year’

Listening to the critters scratching at the roof of a cabin in Bearsville, NY this summer. It went on for weeks. So it was more of a prolonged strange thing than a specific happening. But I never got used to it. And no matter how much I can withstand in the wild, the seconds became hours while I imagined a million different creatures trying to get in and steal my guitars.

My Favorite Holiday Memory

Holidays and me do not always get along. I accept them as long as they can accept me.

An Interview with Matt Pond….

Recently I had the opportunity of interviewing Matt Pond of the indie rock band, Matt Pond PA.   To this day I still remember hearing the band for the first time. I had been an intern in college at a record label, and someone had left the company and left behind all of their cds. As an intern perk we got to sort through them and take what we wanted. I had come across this random mix cd that had a few Matt Pond PA songs on it. I was interested to hear the band, because it was a name I have come across in a few magazines. Upon my first listen of ‘Lookout (Closest)’ I was immediatly hooked.

To this day Matt Pond PA remains to be one of my favorite bands. In my honest opinion, every note, every melody, every lyric is completely flawless. I want to hang their records on my wall as a beautiful piece of art.

Matt Pond, who is extremely kind, was able to answer a few questions for me which I was so ecstatic about. If you have yet to pick up a Matt Pond PA album, you should purchase one immediately. You are missing so much. I hope you enjoy this interview as much as I do.

What part of PA did you used to live in?

 

I lived in Philly. In a commercial loft space in Chinatown. A bookstore on the first floor, gambling and prostitution on the second and third floors. And then me on the fourth.

 

When you moved to New York, how come the ‘PA’ did not change? Does it represent more than just where the band originated?

 

The PA is where I learned to let it all out. Where I started stringing notes to other notes. I must honor Pennsylvania and the state it afforded my mind.
I still hold onto the mountains, Plymouth Dusters and extension cords from New Hampshire, the pockets of fog of New Brunswick, the manual lawnmowers of upstate New York and discarded chewing gum from the NYC.

 

 

How has the way you approach songwriting changed over the years?

 

I don’t know if I’ve truly changed…The mechanics have definitely changed.
I’ve always relied on tuning variations. If I were to be a pony with a trick, that would be it.

Sometimes I can hear entire songs in the made up chords. Sometimes even the words. Like some kind of un-gluing of anxiety.

Fossils may make fuel. (who says there is nothing in what’s beyond…we all might be burning bright as gasoline stars in a few quick decades). But me — I personally run on anxiety. Which is why I should be given my own personal island or forest to tend and protect: I’m not exactly right for this place.

…As a starter, I used to video tape my fingers playing pieces of songs I wrote. I’d listen to the pieces and erase and erase until I found the pieces I could fully trust. Panning for crusts of bread.

Now. Now I use Logic. I write down my tunings and have it all proper and clean…

I miss the clunkiness of the past. Massive gears to accomplish very little. They made me feel important. I even wore a badge.

 

 

What was the first instrument(s) that you learned to play? Did you take music lessons?

 

I learned to partially play the piano. I took lessons. And that’s what turned me away from music for so long. Having my hands grabbed and forced into the correct chord formations. I didn’t like that. Nope.

 

Who are your influences?

 

I think my influences are hunched over people shuffling through quick crowds. Maybe they need help with their groceries… They are the sentences I’m too far away to hear. They are the cashiers who look like they’ve got so much more in them than ‘have a nice day’. Or maybe they have nothing to say. That’s fine too. (music’s greatest gift may be the spaces in between. the sweet quiet)
 

 

In your opinion, is a song better if it is based from a personal experience or is about an event that actually happened?

 

Every song has had to happen in some way or another. I can’t judge their lineage.
Mine are both at once. Spinning around and around. Songs make me dizzy no matter where they come from.

To me, personally, your lyrics can be read as poetry. There is something very beautiful about the way your words fit together. In college I actually used the lyrics to ‘New Hampshire’ in a poetry class project of mine. Do you intentionally make your lyrics sound like poetry? Are you inspired by any poets in terms of writing and form?

 

 

That’s very kind of you. The skin on face area has changed color and I feel warmer than before.
I could say I’m inspired by poets. A total sucker for Anne Sexton and John Ashberry. Although I sometimes speak meekly incendiary declarations about how poetry is lazy prose. (not true, not true)

I’ve been criticized for colloquialisms, for ‘lay’ versus ‘lie’, for harping on about the grass and the trees and the leaves. My mind connects to parts of life — right or wrong — and doesn’t let go.

Which could be in contrast to the way I see the world going. It’s becoming critically questionable to maintain one’s sense of self. Individuality does not seem to be ‘the thing’ these days. Even among the open-minded.. And THAT is terrifying to me.

 

 

There has been some revolving members in the band. What is the cause of that?

 

Music making isn’t a stable environment for the supporting life. Yes it makes people feel alive. It also makes people feel desperate.
Your best friends will give up their lives in your defense. And then take your favorite pen and stab you in back.

This is why I want my forest or island. Anyone else can live there as long as they don’t believe in a hierarchy to humanity. Simple.

 

 

KC is mentioned in a few of your songs, as well in your latest record ‘Last Light’. Who is KC?

 

KC is my friend from Jackson, MI. She’s cut from the same thread as Eudora Welty and Sam Cooke. She’s an incredible person who can make anything, even birds. She wrote the liner notes to Last Light. Probably the most beautiful thing I’ve ever read…Her daughter’s name is Lily. She stirred a couple songs too.
She and her friends down there put on art shows/rock shows completely independently. Definitely worth checking out.  121millsapsave.com

 

 

How does the songwriting process for Matt Pond PA come about? Do you bring in a song already finished to the band? Or is there a lot of band collaboration and ideas floating around when you get into the studio?

 

I’ve mostly brought finished songs to the band. With Chris Hansen there’s more collaboration.
He kicks some serious ass.

I can ask Chris questions and he answers with analysis and intuition. Crazy.

(I had this idea of starting a band within the band, but it didn’t take. A utopia where everyone worked equally. Where everyone gave and received equally. Agendas,disagreements were to be held up to vote. A musical dreamworld….And that’s how it stayed. In dreams. Nobody else really ended up contributing. Just seemed like they were waiting for me to finish my damn hymns…I’m not bitter. Because I tried. And within that trying, I wrote a bunch of songs I believe in)

 

 

(And yet. Chris has come up with some recent instrumentals that blow my mind. Yes)

 

Where do you prefer to record your albums? I’ve seen several pictures of the band recording in more wooden looking, suburban, ‘peaceful’ areas that seem outside of the city. Is there any place you enjoy recording more than others?

 

There is no doubt that I’m more at peace when I’m outside the city.

Then again, recording with Rob Schnapf out in LA ruled in it’s own right. Hyperbole free, I’d say he’s about as cool as it gets in the entire recording world.

 

 

What is your favorite song to perform live and why?

 

Brooklyn

Stars. Because I almost dance. Or even dance. Depends on the way the wind blows.
 

 

I heard you are recording a new record. How is it coming along so far? Are we in for any unexpected surprises or changes?

 

We’re doing a free miniature album for Thanksgiving (I think). Because despite all my cantankerousness, I love people and I love food. And I love eating food with people… a soundtrack to all that could be a decent affair.
Surprises. I don’t know. I don’t know what surprises people. I just write songs. I rarely stuff them with firecrackers. 

The full-length is still a wrestling match. There’s really enough for 3 or 4 albums. But I’m not good at counting. I skip most numbers to get to eight. I love the number 8.
 

 

Are you ever nervous about going into the studio to record a new record?

 

Seeing that I’m always recording, I don’t think I think about it anymore.
I will yell at myself when recording. I’ll get frustrated and call myself a bastard…Maybe even this afternoon.

 

 

Will there be a tour to follow?

 

I think tours will always follow. Until I can’t stomach it any longer.

What are your favorite and least favorite parts about being on tour?

My least favorite goes back to the last question and my stomach. The least favorite part is the absence of consistently great food. The inability to cook my own meals for months on end stresses me out of my head.
My favorite parts (the reason I’ll never stop) are living in the moment and being able to connect with people.

Sometimes we’re gravely misinterpreted. And that’s too bad. But we won’t stop trying. No way.

 

 What is your favorite city to play a show in?

I don’t like hierarchies. I don’t think any city is better than another. It is truly the people and the energy that makes the shows go.
Still. I do love New York. Perhaps because I spend the most time here.

 

How have you changed on a personal level since the release of your first record, ‘Deer Apartments’?

Yes. Oh yes.
I understand what I want to do now…Whether I can achieve that or not, that is the question.

I would loved to have had a talk with my prior self. Though I’d never want to go back and live any of it. I like my memories where they are.

 

If you weren’t in Matt Pond PA, what would you be doing for a living?

History professor. Smoking a pipe. Grading papers. Many leather-bound books lining my shelves.

 

What album changed your life? What album made you decide to get into music?

 

Double Nickels on the Dime changed my life. It feels free.

 

I think Harvest made me commit. If I could feel what it was like to make that album, I’d surely float away forever.

 

What song do you wish you had written and why?

 

Most songs by Neil Young. Birds. Definitely Birds.

 

What do you love the most about music?

 

When it’s right, you forget everything else in the world.
At the wheel, heading straight for a ditch and singing the wrong words to Wave of Mutilation.

 

 

What board game can you kick anyone’s ass at?

 

I can walk on my hands. I can catch things in my mouth. Those are the only two things I’ll ever brag about.

Matt Pond PA has just recorded a song for ‘Guilt By Association: Volume 2’ which is available now on iTunes and will be on CD February 7th.  The band has recorded a cover version of My Chemical Romance’s ‘I’m Not Okay,’ which you can listen to here

Check out Matt Pond PA on Myspace