Mudboy's MUDMUX
Volume One reviews
"Garbled remixes of material recorded by Extreme Animals and Dark Dark Dark, committed by a typically jumpy Providence based polymath. The packaging is a goddamn riot of colours and textures. As to the music, well the A side is the most spunked-out cartoon soundtrack around, and the flip is dolorously recut accordian blues." The Wire Magazine
http://www.dustedmagazine.com/features/759
"Resuscitated remixes by organ grinder Mudboy of Extreme Animals and DarkDarkDark.
To say he makes an improvement on either is modest; that he may have found the
key within his own keys to make these pieces more meaningful than they’d
be on their own is more like it. Doesn’t take too many left turns, but
instead focuses on the inherent spookiness of the tracks themselves, and builds
on their very present “circus just left town” motif. 535 copies,
blue vinyl, impressive silkscreened sleeves. Other labels have committed to releasing
future installments of these remixes."
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"Eccentrics
seem to gravitate to the organ. From the straightlaced dudes romping on movie
house pipe organs to soul masters like Timmy Thomas to underground heroes like
Quintron, the keys off an odd home. Mudboy is the name now burbling about the
organ underworld. His album on Not Not Fun is a great mind blitz. Here he embarks
on what is to be the beginning of a series of him screwing around with other
people's songs. On Mudmux he remixes or adds to or something songs by the Extreme
Animals and DarkDarkDark for one eerie ballad of sorts and a tune that resembles
an outtake from a soundtrack of odd movie music." -SS (Z-Gun)
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"You gotta check this Mudboy http://www.normanrecords.com/records/101378 sleeve. It's all lovely and hand made and painted with lovely metallic paint and everything. It seems Mudboy have a habit of having records in wicked sleeves. 'MuDmUX <http://www.normanrecords.com/records/101378> ' is just kicking in with its intense drums and lovely John Carpenter synth sound that does the business for me as i love John Carpenter. There's clattering moments and then gentle breakdowns with trippy electronics This is way cool and you so need a piece of it."
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(From the Ear Conditioned Nightmare Blog)
The first in an ongoing series of remixes, arrangements and demolitions of other
peoples' tracks, MUDMUX was the first I'd heard of Mudboy. As far as I can
tell, Mudboy's based out of the lively Providence scene, but this is hardly
Lightning Bolt material. Rather, Mudboy plays the organ, whether it be old
school Wurlitzer style (he hunkered down to the most epicly ornate organ I've
ever seen at a free show at the Providence Performing Arts Center) or his own
contraption, the "Mudboy Minnie," which is basically a small organ
hooked up to a Yamaha FM synth. He'll even make you one for a cool grand if
you want. Actually worth checking out his little website, it seems to give
a bit of insight into his unique approach.
As I said though, this is the first in a planned series, each one released by a different label with a different color scheme. I should start by saying that Tynan over at DNT did a great job with the packaging here. I mean look at that cover, it's super intricate. I guess he enlisted the apparently substantial screen printing talents of R Lyon and Kevin Hooyman so cheers to them. The blue vinyl only adds to it.
As for the sounds, the first side is a remix of some Extreme Animals midi file called "RockRapPopRocks," which Mudboy claims was originally recorded onto a floppy disc! The remix is retitled "Lil John Carpenter Tribute Song." I don't know who Lil John Carpenter is, but this is some tribute. Starting off with a kind of pseudo-techno bass beat, the thing builds itself into real midi mayhem. It's pretty dancey stuff on the surface, but given that I have no idea which sounds are coming from Extreme Animals and which aren't, I don't really know who's doing what here. It's like some glitched out video game score, with the clattering and, well, muddy drums of--dig this name--Jeremy Lazy Animal Magnet Harris adding a weird sort of dementia to the whole thing. If I had to wager a guess, I'd say that all of the odd electronics in the background, lurching around like some manic circus sideshow score, are Mudboy making what once had to be a pretty grooving number a weird disfigured freak of the hipster dance party.
The B side is another cover from a band I had only heard of to this point, DarkDarkDark. The original track was called "Come Home," and it seems the new one is too, though who knows why he would rename one and not the other. Consisancy is over-rated I guess. That said, this one's super weird. Odd little girl vocals a la Joanna Newsom are meshed with the accordion additions of Nona Marie Dark to create a super weird street performance diddy. The whole thing keeps slowing down and getting more and more looming, eventually warping from sun-shiny Shirley Temple stylings into a dark little sea chanty as sung by the captain's crippled daughter. The voice, despite the subtle background textures and increasingly warped accordion lines, maintains some semblance of it's cutesy delivery, cutting through the murk no matter how slow it gets until the very end, when everything is broken down to such a degree that the digital signals start to reveal themselves--a grim fade out indeed. The "backup fingers," whatever that means, are provided by Alec K Redfearn of the Eyesores.
It's all very beautifully mixed and Mudboy clearly has a talent for putting
his own touches on things without completely destroying the integrity of the
songs themselves. Though the originals sound like they probably aren't exactly
my bag, Mudboy keeps it interesting and intensely oddball--this is clearly
someone with a grasp on their aesthetic. The next edition of the series will
be orange and called Dub This! which sounds a little more like my style. Given
what he did with this material, I'd love to see where he takes that one. Limited
to 535 and still available from DNT as far as I can tell.
Posted by Henry Smith at 6:29 AM