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Music Video Monday: Vending Machine

This week’s Music Video Monday is a hot mess. 

For the latest record by Vending Machine, Robby Grant commissioned several Memphis directors to make videos, several of which have been featured on Music Video Monday. The latest one, which makes its world premiere today, is for the album’s title track “Let The Little Things Go”. Director G.B. Shannon makes ingenious use of splitscreen and multiple images to tell a harrowing, and surprisingly complex, story of love gone wrong. Brandi Gist, Nathan Ross Murphy, Jamie Harmon, Leah Keys, and Drew Fleming star in one of the best music videos we’ve seen this year.  

Music Video Monday: Vending Machine

If you would like to see your video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com

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Music Music Features

A New Path

Memphis musicians are often credited for a fiercely independent creative spirit that has been characterized at times with lofty platitudes such as “maverick” or “renegade.” While those adjectives ring true with several local acts, they are particularly apt when applied to the new local experimental/avant-garde duo known as >mancontrol<.

>mancontrol< is the latest project helmed by two of the Memphis rock scene’s most reliable and well-loved figures: Dave Shouse of the Grifters, Those Bastard Souls, and the Bloodthirsty Lovers, and Robby Grant of Big Ass Truck, Vending Machine, and Mouserocket. But this project is nothing like any of those rock/pop bands, as the “>mancontrol< manifesto” (a document composed by Shouse, who declined to be interviewed) explains:

>mancontrol< ([C14,  from New English, stem of  “manual control”] make music in the moment; experimental, improvisational music built from the most primitive of sounds: monophonic single waveforms. Arbitrary factors come into play with each new venue: the amount of ambient light, bodies in motion or curious light sources like swinging chandeliers and LED hula hoops. There is no stage at a >mancontol< show. We set up in a way that allows audiences the opportunity to affect our music. Anyone that makes light or interrupts it becomes a factor in the evolution of each song.

What this means, basically, is that Shouse and Grant manipulate simple synthesizer tones and encourage the crowd to participate by altering the light in the room, which changes the sound. In truth, the execution is likely as complicated as it seems it would be.

“Overall, the sound originates from a basic sine wave. Then it’s processed and built up using effect pedals and light,” Grant says. “We are both producing melody with our voices. We don’t have set ‘songs,’ but we do have goals for each performance. We know what we want to communicate and roughly how we will do it.”

The original idea for the band was conceived several years ago by Shouse but began to take shape in 2010 when he discussed the idea with longtime acquaintance Grant.

“When Dave invited me over to just play around, I wasn’t sure what was going to happen or if it would turn into anything. Heck, it took a year to solidify even what my instrument would be,” Grant says.

“When I first showed up, I brought a lot of pedals and stuff with me and made a lot of noise. Dave slowly suggested I simplify everything and create more space. Right now, we’re kinda like a two-person orchestra with Dave as the conductor.”

The newly christened >mancontrol< played a couple of low-key shows in town in 2011, aided by former third member (and New Mary Jane/John Paul Keith and the One Four Fives bassist) James Godwin, before paring the band down to two members and taking the show on the road. Earlier this year, they played highly successful shows in New York City (where the duo already has a booking agent) and Cincinnati.

“We were really surprised at the positive response to what we were doing,” Grant says.

With a few encouraging experiences now under their collective belt, Shouse and Grant finally feel ready to launch >mancontrol< as a full-fledged project in town. To that end, the group will be performing this Saturday, December 8th, at 8 p.m. at the Medicine Factory, an art space located at 85 Virginia Ave. West.

“This is our first show where we feel like we have evolved enough to promote it,” Grant says. “We did a video there [the Medicine Factory] a few months back and have stayed in touch. They asked us to play a December show, and we were happy to oblige.”

The show is not only a coming-out party for >mancontrol< but also features the debut of a mural by artist Gabe Martin and the unveiling of a musical innovation called the “eyelophone,” which was created by photographer/artist John Markham.

According to Grant, the gallery environment, among other locales, is more conducive to what >mancontrol< wants to achieve.

“We’re trying to find alternative spaces as much as possible,” he says. “We are totally self-contained, don’t need a soundman, and can play anywhere with power. The only place we don’t want to play is on a traditional rock-club stage — but in the corner or the bathroom is fine.”

facebook.com/mancontrol

medicinefactory.org

>mancontrol<

The Medicine Factory

8 S. Virginia Ave. West

Saturday, December 8th, 8 p.m.

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Music Music Features

Meeting in the Middle

The Midtown Memphis music scene has long been an incestuous network. It’s almost hard to find prominent musicians who haven’t worked together at one point or another. But one of the more interesting pairings in this world might be Robby Grant and Alicja Trout, who co-front the underrecognized indie-rock quintet Mouserocket.

Grant made his name on the local scene as the frontman for ’90s notables Big Ass Truck but has lately recorded most of his music via the somewhat-solo project Vending Machine, a home-recording-oriented “band” in which Grant tends to write quirky, dreamy songs about subjects such as his wife, kids, and home life.

Trout became a major player on the local indie/punk scene via the synth-rockers the Clears and, later, as a co-conspirator (alongside Jay Reatard) in the ferocious Lost Sounds. More recently, Trout’s signal band has the blistering power trio River City Tanlines. In Mouserocket, Grant and Trout meet halfway: Trout tones it down, and Grant amps it up.

“The whole pretext for me was that I wanted to make a lot of noise and play guitar and not write songs,” Grant says. “I think Alicja turned to me one time at band practice and asked, ‘What song are you going to do?’ So it’s kind of morphed into that. But what I like to do in this band is play really loud guitar and sing really loud.”

Mouserocket started out, a decade ago, as a Trout side project of sorts — an outlet for lighter, poppier, more playful songs that didn’t fit her other projects. But it’s developed over the years into a classic, collaborative band.

“Here you can bring a skeleton of a song, or less, and make something,” Trout says. “Everyone can come up with a part. It takes a lot to get to that point, but it’s a true band. The sound isn’t determined by the songwriters.”

The band members who have coalesced around Trout and Grant include former Big Ass Truck drummer Robert Barnett, cellist Jonathan Kirkscey, and bassist Hermant Gupta. Barnett also plays with Grant in Vending Machine, and, in a Midtown landscape where there seems to be a handful of talented drummers who serve an entire scene, he stays busy, playing with Rob Jungklas, Hi Electric, and a jazz trio with guitarist Jim Duckworth and Jim Spake.

“He probably plays in more bands than any of us,” Grant says.

Kirkscey plays in the Memphis Symphony Orchestra but lately has been bringing his classical chops to the rock world. Gupta, alone among his fellow Mouserocketeers, is a one-band man.

With its members involved in so many projects, Mouserocket is not the type of band that practices regularly or lives together in a tour band. But everyone agrees that, with a familiarity born out of a decade together, the band thrives on its looser framework.

“We’ve gotten to the point where we don’t play a lot together, but we’ve played together for a long time,” says Grant. “We’re not a band that practices once a week and that practices our old songs. We can play shows and come together without that.”

“Our shows are boring if we practice too much,” Trout says.

This fruitfully ramshackle quality is reflected in the band’s new album, Pretty Loud, only its second official full-length release and one that was recorded over several years. It features new versions of several previously recorded songs — two from Mouserocket’s past (“Missing Teeth” and “Set on You,” previously poppy rock songs here gone electro and country, respectively), one from Vending Machine (“44 Times”), and one from Trout’s solo project Black Sunday (the epic “On the Way Downtown,” which richly deserves a second life).

Along the way, the album presents a sonic variety — especially in guitar sounds — perhaps unique among Grant’s and Trout’s myriad projects.

“That’s probably a result of it being recorded over such a long time in so many different places,” Grant says of the variety. “But I love that about it.”

“What are you supposed to do when you’re a songwriter and you record a song on a seven-inch that sells 300 copies or whatever and then you record a better version with a band that’s playing live?” Trout asks about reusing old songs, particularly “On the Way Downtown.” “Black Sunday is my solo thing, but if I’m playing [that song] live and the version is totally different, I think you have the license to record it again.”

If Mouserocket has, at times, been secondary to Grant’s and Trout’s other musical outlets, now the band seems to be moving to the forefront. As the father of two, Grant isn’t as free to tour (or as interested in touring) as he was in his Big Ass Truck days. Trout, the mother of a six-month-old girl, is in a similar place.

“For me, when I was in Lost Sounds, it was very stressful, and I needed this band to remind me that music was fun,” Trout says. “I’ve put it on the backburner because touring was taking up so much time. Now that I’m not touring … You know, having a kid has given me less time in some ways, but it’s given me more time to think about [my music].”

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Music Music Features

One-Man Bands

Recorded under the moniker Vending Machine, Robby Grant‘s latest, King Cobras Do, is scheduled for release this weekend. On Saturday, February 3rd, he’s having an album-release party at the Hi-Tone Café; the self-released CD is also available at Goner Records and Shangri-La Records.

With 12 songs and guests ranging from former Big Ass Truck bandmates Robert Barnett and Steve Selvidge to current Glitches bandmates Adam Woodard and Jared and Lori McStay, King Cobras Do runs the gamut from frenzied pop (“Babies,” the album’s opener) to blues rock (“44 Times”) and surreal space music (“Saturn National Anthem”).

The stylishly experimental, electronic-flavored music favored by artists such as Beck — and, closer to home, former Memphian Shelby Bryant — factors in on “Memories and Actions,” “Desert Sun Played,” and the aforementioned “Saturn National Anthem,” while “Yawp” shares the same sonic space as Santo & Johnny’s “Sleepwalk” transmogrified with, say, Southern Culture on the Skids’ “8 Piece Box.”

“Shelby has had a big effect on me,” Grant admits. “When Big Ass Truck was recording Kent at Ardent, he lived right across the street from the studio. Later, when I started doing a lot of four-track sessions at my house, he was the first person I collaborated with. Recently, we’ve been in touch, writing and collaborating on songs over the Internet.”

By now, Grant has bypassed the four-track machine for Sony Vegas, a program similar to ProTools — and on King Cobras Do, he partnered with an up-and-coming lyricist, his 7-year old son, Five.

“He does a lot of free association,” Grant says. “Sometimes I use his words as-is; other times, I’ll turn a phrase around or just build on something he said.

“Upstairs, in my home studio, I have a piano and an acoustic guitar. I’ll start with little ideas, just bits and pieces that I’ll build on until the songs become what they become. I go back, listen quite a bit, and do a lot of editing, then move onto the next song. It’s a constant revision,” he says, noting that the process to complete this album, his fourth CD in six years, took 28 months.

“On ‘Saturn National Anthem,’ I had the song and the lyrics, but I felt like it needed something else,” Grant explains. “I extended the first part of the song, but it still needed a solo, and it popped into my head that Steve [Selvidge] could do a spacey, wicked guitar part. I gave him the files, and he recorded it. In the case of Robert [Barnett], a lot of times I have ideas in my head that I can’t play. He’s such a creative drummer, and I’m a more keep-the-beat kind of guy.”

When Vending Machine plays at the Hi-Tone this Saturday night, the band will be a five-piece, with Grant’s brother Grayson Grant on bass, guitarist Quinn Powers, and two drummers, Barnett and John Argroves. For more information, visit Vending Machine’s Web site at ChocolateGuitars.com.

Johnny Lowebow, the alter ego of Xanadu Music owner John Lowe, will also be celebrating with a CD-release party this weekend. His latest album, the nine-song Gonerfest III, was cut by Kyle Johnson and Robin Pack, the duo behind Rocket Science Productions, at The Buccaneer last fall; now Lowe’s returning to the Midtown bar for a performance Friday, February 2nd.

The night will be a veritable one-man-band festival, as Lowe, Florida musician Ben Prestage (who got his start on Beale Street), and Oregonian Rollie Tussing channel their inner Hasil Adkins on homemade cigar-box guitars.

“Ben and Rollie are both coming in for the International Blues Challenge,” Lowe explains. “There’s gonna be a bunch of talent in town, so I’m trying to give the one-man bands a showcase. It’s not at all a contest — it’s more like a cigar-box festival, which is usually just bonded by the instrument, with music coming from all different genres.”

Other highlights of the IBC weekend: the Friday and Saturday night Wordie Perkins Blues Jam at Orange Mound juke joint The Blue Worm and a rare local appearance from Grammy Award winner Alvin Youngblood Hart and his group Muscle Theory, slated to play the Buccaneer on Sunday, February 4th.