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Topic ClosedNew Phideaux album "Number Seven" now out

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Phideaux View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 08 2009 at 17:46
Go with the Crayfish!  They are downtrodden, and really are our ancestors!  (sorry to hear about your shrew infestation, though!)  Meanwhile, I think the shrews look pretty mean on the album cover.  It's sort of like Spy Vs. Spy...  You never know which one to root for...

Hope y ou like what you hear Liquid and thanks for the kind words, Natewait.  Please do write a review.  Currently it's just a lot of ratings and some of them are from folks who have only ever reviewed 2 or 3 things.  It doesn't lend a lot of legitimacy to our standing (although we do thank them for their love)...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 08 2009 at 17:49
Incidentally, shrews apparently are very much loner rodents. They hate other rodents and they really hate other shrews. That's why they got really pissy in my bedroom. You know.

I really enjoyed what I heard. A few more listens through and I might be up for reviewing it. We'll see. Looking forward to 7 1/2, though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 09 2009 at 12:59
Well, I went ahead and ordered from CD Baby because, after all CD Baby loves me.
I decided to try a Discipline CD with it based on the sound samples.  Thanks again for the recommendations Phideaux. 


Edited by Slartibartfast - July 10 2009 at 11:53
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 10:35
Chupacabras arrived last night, too. So now I just have The Great Leap and Fiendish to go to have all of them. Hm. Anyways.

Did you notice how high Phideaux and Number Seven are stacking in terms of the front page? I mean, you know how when people search for an artist a lot, they show up in that list on the main page. Phideaux is something like the third most viewed or something lately. Also, Number Seven appears to be the first album since June to boot Black Clouds & Silver Linings from the most-viewed album spot! Well done, Phideaux, you've generated some interest.

Also, the ratings on Number Seven, while certainly going to drop, are still pretty impressive at the moment...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 11:54
^ Looks like we have another fanboy on his way to raiding the catalog. Big smile
I think you'll probably like everyone you get.  I know I did.


Edited by Slartibartfast - July 10 2009 at 13:24
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 11:58
I know the PX discography is on my list.  I really enjoy most of Chupacabras, especially the title track (and, strangely enough, "Party," which I thought was really weird at first).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 13:14
Just a fan, not a fanboy. Phideaux's music is strikingly less bizarre than I usually go for, actually.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 13:25
I didn't mean it in a derogatory fashion.  When I fall for an artist and find I have get everything in their catalog, I consider myself a fanboy.

Edited by Slartibartfast - July 10 2009 at 16:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 14:18
Originally posted by LiquidEternity LiquidEternity wrote:

ratings on Number Seven, while certainly going to drop, are still pretty impressive at the moment...


Thanks for the vote of confidence Liquid!  :-)  hahahaha, I guess you're not digging Seven all that much!  Actually, I was thinking it was pretty much of a bubble of hot air that was going to burst soon...

Naturally I hope people regard the album highly, and a few written reviews would certainly add legitimacy!

Meanwhile, it's good to know we're strikingly less bizarre than many other things in your queue.  I always think we are too bizarre -- probably we are to the general publick, but those with more discerning tastes can handle us.

Although, I do know what you mean because for me, the music is always very ordered and pleasant, not a lot of cacaphony or chaos -- although that is on the list of things to explore and places to go with the new live band format -- and with group writing and all that.  Hitherto I've written most of the stuff and then experimented with it as we build it up.  That does allow for some surprises, but not that many.

My natural bias is to "beautiful" and "melodic" music so I cop to the notion that ours would be the less bizarre in a collection! 

cheerio and thanks for the discussion.  We are naturally curious to see what people make of our new album, the direction we've taken...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 15:09
I'm trying to quell my completionist mania. So I'm at least going to make sure that I don't buy Friction just because...

Ha, that's not what I mean, Phideaux. I meant that initial reactions to new albums always move more towards an average rating over time. I really do love it, honestly, but at this point the only people who have it are those who decided to buy it straight away, i.e. predetermined fans. I'm commenting on a general trend from this site. That's all. It will still stay rated pretty well, though by the time it reaches (if it reaches) the number of ratings that Doomsday Afternoon, it likely will be a bit lower. I could be wrong, though. I'm just guessing.

Well, you see, lately I've been going for really different sorts of things. Mike Patton projects, some avant-garde things, experimental things, etc. You compose wonderful melodies and songs, which is the part of music that a lot of those prior genres fall short in. Again, I'm not sl*gging your music. Compared to Radiohead or something, you're off the charts in terms of weird. But compared to maudlin of the Well, you're pretty straightforward.

Venturing into cacophony and bizarreness in your music sounds great to me. But truthfully, if you keep writing with the quality that has marked your music since at least Ghost Story. This is a fan's vote of confidence, don't you worry. But the artists I respect the most are the ones who can sit on the level of everybody else, of their fans, and discuss things. And that's where you are, and that's a good part of what's cool about you and your music creation process.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 16:15
Received my copy today,what an excellent album!
 
You topped the excellent Doomsday Afternoon with this one!
 
ClapClapClap


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 16:19
Mine's on the way:
Your CDs have been gently taken from our CD Baby shelves with
sterilized contamination-free gloves and placed onto a satin pillow.

A team of 50 employees inspected your CDs and polished them to make
sure they were in the best possible condition before mailing.

Our packing specialist from Japan lit a candle and a hush fell over
the crowd as he put your CDs into the finest gold-lined box that money
can buy.

We all had a wonderful celebration afterwards and the whole party
marched down the street to the post office where the entire town of
Portland waved "Bon Voyage!" to your package, on its way to you, in
our private CD Baby jet on this day, Thursday, July 9th.

I hope you had a wonderful time shopping at CD Baby. We sure did.
Your picture is on our wall as "Customer of the Year." We're all
exhausted but can't wait for you to come back to CDBABY.COM!!

Thank you, thank you, thank you!

Sigh...

--
CD Baby

Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 16:28
Liquid, I'm just joshing you.  I totally know what you mean about the initial rating, in fact I was saying the same thing to band mates who were glowing over it.  I reminded them that those who initially vote are the ones who wanted to hear the album to begin with.

Also, I don't in any way mean to be responding to folks comments in a way they feel they need to justify or explain or make me feel good or whatever.  I definitely appreciate the candor and folks true opinions.  As for staying true to our sound, that would always be the case, but as with you and your musical tastes, we/I too have many different things which percolate in and eventually find their way into the music.

I have for some time been trying to push at our boundaries a bit.  For instance that's why we have the 7 min instrumental Love Theme on the album - to try out some heavier/jazzier stuff and get away from the vocal bias.

cheers and gratitudes for the talk and opinions - pro and con...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 16:35
Ha, don't take it personally that I felt I had to justify myself. I'm often a very awkward communicator, so I usually make it a practice to try again if people don't up and agree. Also, I'm not so good at picking up joshings through the internet.

It's hard to tell if you're trying lots of new things because I still haven't heard two (three, if you count that first one) of your albums. From what I've heard, you're going in a fun way. Love Theme is, by the way, a wonderful piano business. Few artists these days who try to incorporate jazz into their music do so effectively, but it sounds great in that one. I'm still always thrown by the Ruffian trilogy--it's just so heavy and toying with metal that it doesn't seem to fit into your music style. I love that kind of stuff. And the more progressive disco you can include, the better your music will be.

As far as I can say, the only consistent elements to your music is the slow, spacey sort of vibe that much of it seems to carry, even in short simple songs like on 313.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 20:17
Hi Phideaux,

As I was listening to the album while driving yesterday, I was thinking about how you recorded the album. Did you it act by act? How did it go? if you don't mind me asking.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 21:07
Phideaux, congrats on the new album, from the other posters it sounds wonderful. 

Here's a question, I've heard that you, Phideaux, make the most profit from direct sales, which makes sense from a business model.  With that being said, will you be selling your music at your shows, specifically 3RP?

Thanks and looking forward to hearing the new album.
-------someone please tell him to delete this line, he looks like a noob-------

I don't have an unnatural obsession with Disney Princesses, I have a fourteen year old daughter and coping mechanisms.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 21:29
Avestin, it's a long story, and I'm going to write a long winded thing that I will repurpose as a blog on my site as well:

In 2007, Phideaux, the 10 piece band, performed at Festival Crescendo in beautiful France.  We paid for a four camera crew to record the performance on video.  When we got the audio tracks from this production company we saw that 75% of the tracks were corrupt and had drop outs every 3 seconds.  The only track intact were the drums and vocals and guitars (but the acoustic guitar was submixed with the electric guitar which was waaaaay too loud).  So, in order to salvage something and try to create a passable soundtrack for the video (as well as to remember the arrangements for these live performances) Gabe and I had the members come back to the studio to re-record their parts over the intact drum/vocal and guitar tracks (although we replaced the guitar tracks as well ultimately).

ANYWAY....  After one of the sessions we had an extra day of studio time booked as we'd gotten more accomplished than we thought.  So I had Rich the drummer come and record some new material.


I had written the two long songs that were to comprise the album "Infernal" (Infernal and Eternal) which is the third part of the Doomsday Afternoon trilogy.  However, this was not something I wanted to get into right away because it too complicated to do in a day.  But, there was another song written called "Waiting For The Axe To Fall" -- about 12 minutes long.  This was considered an outtake and not something I had a vested interest in, so we could experiment and knock it about a bit.  Therefore, we spent the day putting down and piano/drum track for 75% of that song.  At this time, we had two songs "In the bank".  One was Tempest of Mutiny (8 min) which had been recorded with Rich Mouser the previous winter and the other was Out Of The Angry Planet (9 min) which we'd played live in France but had now been "re-recorded" over the bones of that live performance.  I thought these two songs should be released.  And now that I had another pretty good 12 minute song shaping up, it seemed a good idea to put together an album of odds and sods.  I decided to call the album "Number Seven" a neutral title that I hoped wouldn't seem like it was the third part of the trilogy we had begun in 2006.  I knew I didn't have the psychic energy to undertake that album at this time.

Later, I went to NYC to rehearse the remaining portion of Axe with Rich and ended up writing some extra bits to take the song into a more dynamic direction.  At the same time, we rehearsed some songs that were in the early stages of development (Gift Of The Flame, Have No Fear, Infinite Supply, Search For Terrestrial Life/Fistful).  By this time, I decided not to put Tempest on the album because it was a different producer and different musicians, so we needed needed new stuff to compliment Angry Planet and Waiting for The Axe.  Rich and I recorded, as we normally did, the basic tracks for the rest of these songs.

Now, I also had an outtake from Doomsday Afternoon called Darkness At Noon which was orphaned from Infernal.  So, Number Seven was going to be comprised of:  Waitin For The Axe, Darkness At Noon, Have No Fear (which is like Prequiem but heavier and with drums), Gift Of The Flame, Search For Terrestrial Life/Fistful, Out Of The Angry Planet and Infinite Supply.  Have No Fear was going to kick in right after Darkness, like Prequiem now does.  But with the drums and the tempo change, it sounded too strange.  It also sounded like an "end of album" song and that slot was to be Infinite Supply.   So, then Gabe and I recorded a more mellow and slow version with no lyrics which came to be known as Prequiem.

FLASH FORWARD:  Overdubs.  As the various members came and made their contributions to the album, I realized that there were many wonderful things that people brought to the songs and they were being pulled in a thousand cool directions.   There was a lot of opportunity for members to own a little piece of the album and make things their own.  As the tracks were shaping up, I felt there was something missing.  I also felt that Out Of The Angry Planet, because of its live/unlive recording history, wasn't up to the snuff of the rest of the album.  So, now I had another 9 minute hole in the fabric.  I called folks back to L.A. to do our first ever live recording with most everyone in the same studio at the same time.  For this purpose I composed, with some help from keyboard player B (Johnny Unicorn), the song Love Theme From Number Seven (including Storia Senti).  Everbody heard the demo, but we all rehearsed and recorded the song in the same weekend.

Now, the album was complete and there were only final overdubs and vocals and icing to put on the cake.  It was during a guitar session that I improvised the Dormouse instrumental theme.  We recorded it and then as the day wore on I'd keep playing this bit in between takes.  I wrote humourous words about Dormice and we recorded the Interview with a Dormouse track live.  Overnight I wrote the Dormouse End track and we recorded it the next day. 

While pulling together the lyrics, I noticed a flow to the theme of the music and realized there was a story happening, a hero's journey as it were.  Axe was about someone being trapped in a cult and their loved one leaving them behind (in order to save themselves).  Darkness saw a person being carried away on a boxcar to their death but claiming their soul/mind as their own.  Gift dealt with people who give up vs. people who fight for their lives.    Search is about waking up from insecurity/addiction/ineffective living and claiming the abundance that is available to all people if they want it.  Infinite is an extrapolation of that, perhaps from the perspective of a person who has come through it and realizes that the universe is so immensely wide they are but a speck -- but a speck that is a part of this amazing whole.

So, I saw a story arc and then seeded through the various elements I needed to pull them all together into one strand.  I always knew the basic structure and we were conscious about how one song would end and deliver us into the next, but we did record it all in bits and pieces...  Once the Dormouse pieces were written though, I had decided to organize the album around those pieces (which are a tongue in cheek reference to "Peace - A Theme" from The Wake Of Poseidon by King Krimsun).

I wonder if that answers your question, Avestin....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 21:32
Originally posted by Roland113 Roland113 wrote:

I've heard that you, Phideaux, make the most profit from direct sales


Profit?  What profit?  hahahaha, thanks for the kind words Roland.  We will be selling our albums at 3RP, but I think there will be some vendors there as well selling them.  We sell mostly through vendors and in fact, don't like to sell it ourselves.

However at 3RP we are going to be selling some of the copies we have of my early 1990s demo called "Friction"  I have about 800 of those things taking up valuable NYC space!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 10 2009 at 21:34
^ well shoot, I won't bother waiting then :)  Looking forward to seeing you next month.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 11 2009 at 00:03
Originally posted by Phideaux Phideaux wrote:



I wonder if that answers your question, Avestin....


That definitely answered it, thank you very much for the detailed answer! Smile
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