#MattyMonday – “Ode to Jove” and “Untrue & Not Enough”

Welcome to the fourth edition of #MattyMonday, the streaming debuts of songs from my new album “Meta Dada”. Get caught up on previous releases: 

Episode 1: Tracks 1 & 2: “Satan Gave Me Sunglasses” and “Media Casualty” 

Episode 2: Tracks 3 & 4: “In Our Coldest Time and “Mild” 

Episode 3: Tracks 5 & 6: “I Need Another Vice” and “Sunburn” 

As always, the best way to experience the album is on vinyl; records are available at Rock N’ Roll Land and Green Bay UFO Museum in GB, at Eroding Winds in Appleton, and online via my Bandcamp page. But hey, in this cultural economy? I’m glad you’re checking out the songs in any method. 

If you haven’t heard the songs before, I recommend listening to them first before reading all the context and lyrics. For those who have heard the music, I hope these posts add magnificence to your “Meta Dada” experience! 

Boldly barreling into Side B this week with two more compositions, starting with perhaps the most *striking* moment of the record. 

Track 7: “Ode to Jove” 

Listen to “Ode to Jove” on Bandcamp

Listen to “Ode to Jove” on Spotify

The players 

Drums, Percussion: Ryley Crowe 

Keys: Alex Drossart 

Sounds: Anders Day, Batman Day, Roosty-Roosty (RIP) 

Electric Guitar, Electric Bass, Harmonica: Matty Day 

The session 

Ryley figures into Side B of the album in a big way, and it kinda cracks me up how this is his first moment on the album, kicking off with “the cowbell shot that sounded like somebody kicked open the door to your mind.” I bought that ridiculous piece of percussion for when Muddy Udders recorded “Kim Lee (Jewel of de Jungle)”; this is seriously only the second time it’s been of any use—but what use! 

Alex really made this sound super Dylan-esque, not just with his spot-on piano part but with suggesting what I did on bass. Not that there’s a ton to explicate on this one, but I talked about it on my Into The Music interview (about 30 minutes in) among a whole lot more. 

Sam is ultimately the real star on this one, though, for taking it riotously over the top. I knew we needed the lightning strike sound, and I recorded my dog Batman howling, my then-two-year-old son crying, and as a nod to Hamlet my then-living rooster crowing, which I recorded just before I cut his head off (he’d started viciously attacking my kids; might have to write a blog on that). I hated that bird, almost as much as I hated killing him; in the cosmic scheme he’s been immortalized on this track, so call it a wash. 

I had to step out of the studio at some point when Sam was whipping up this sonic masterpiece, and when I came back he and Alex were giddy with the results. They’d opted to lower the pitch and distort the crying to make it sound trippier and actually less disturbing. The other sounds—the twinkling bells, storm sounds, and volcano—were their inspired choices. 

I want to say that was the only song we worked on that night. Tough one to follow! 

Uh, Matty, what’s the deal here  

Again, I tried to explain the inexplicable on Into The Music. But what developed a nickname of “Bob Dylan Dies and Goes to Hell” started out not quite as mischievous. Years earlier I’d come up with the lyrics out of some annoyance at generic Americana music, but we got to joking in the studio and it very quickly turned into Dylan parody. In whatever sense taste can be considered, believe it or not we did use some restraint, opting for the muffled sounds versus the poor vocalist yelling utterances like “Infidels!” 

Tough to call anything audacious these days, but let’s just say I was overjoyed that one friend of mine in particular—who happens to work for a certain celebrity who happens to have created music which coincidentally resembles that which we’ve made here—was not offended by this piece. 

The title is of course a Greco-Roman-centric play on Beethoven’s work. Give the gods their due. 

Lyrics 

Well 

You know lightning is a bit like luck 

I’m walkin’ in the rain tryin’ to get str— 

Track 8: “Untrue & Not Enough” 

Listen to “Untrue & Not Enough” on Bandcamp

Listen to “Untrue & Not Enough” on Spotify

The players 

Drums, Percussion: Ryley Crowe 

Slide Guitar: Bill Grasley 

Back-Up Vocals, Arpeggios: Sam Farrell 

Keys, Harmonies: Alex Drossart 

Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Cigar Box Guitar: Matty Day 

The session 

First we set up Ryley to try and get the right drum groove for the verses—less a repeated part than a general vibe, somewhere between The Beatles’ “Ticket to Ride” and Aerosmith’s “Jaded”. Here’s a snippet from that session

I knew Sam could nail the harmony on the choruses. He and Alex did the response lines (i.e. “it’s not the saaame”) during the verses. Sam also came up with the arpeggiated guitar part to add jangle to the choruses, and Alex added organ super tastefully. 

You can see in the credits I added cigar box guitar. This was a gift from my late friend CJ Edwards. He had just gotten into building them, and he gave one to all three of us in Muddy Udders—on the condition that we play them on an album. That never happened with MU; the best I’d done was including the guitar in the stack of instruments on the back of The Priggs’ CD.

You’re supposed to play those with a slide, but I wanted to use the sitar-type sound it made when strummed open, so we just tuned it to the right key and added some effects. 

For the actual slide part, that’s all Wild Bill. These sessions were never about shoehorning people in just for the sake of having them on the record. That being said, I loved getting to finally be on a song with Bill. We’ve been buds for quite a while and have certainly jammed live, but never on a recording. I knew I wanted him to play the slide lick during the verses, but it seemed kinda silly to not have him do much else. I want to say that gave me the idea to add a bridge, which was the right move, and I absolutely love Bill’s work on that part.  

For the solo, I tried in futility a number of times to make it up on the spot, but ultimately had to put some time into it at home, using the Justin Hawkins technique of writing a solo just beyond one’s capabilities. Since “Sunburn” is an instrumental, this is arguably the first guitar solo on the album. 

For the lead riff, I’ve got a wah-wah pedal on but stationarily, for a bit of, ya know, edge. I’m told this was the first time a wah-wah had been used in The Refuge. A true honor! 

Uh, Matty, what’s the deal here 

I showed a sketch of this song to Alex after The Priggs’ album, thinking it’d go toward perhaps our second album. The verses were inspired by trying to do an impression of the type of stuff Kevin Barnes was doing for of Montreal, where an unusual chord progression is tied together with a catchy vocal line. 

Wish I had more insights than that, but like Rob correctly nailed, we were going for a Raspberries type of sound. It’s funny how aiming for something rather retro lands you somewhere less so; this tune sounds very ‘90s in a way I also appreciate, like Gin Blossoms or even “Tiny Music”-era STP. 

In some ways this song and the next two are the three song-iest songs of the album. Surely anyone who’s made it through the previous seven tracks has earned that! The earlier Shakespeare reference in “Mild”—the line “will we ever get past the prologue?”—feels like it’s finally resolved. Whatever arc there is to this album, it seems like, after a pair of lyrically scant tunes, it’s just now ready to assert itself following this power-pop kiss-off. 

Lyrics 

Darlin’ if you’ve been untrue 

Then I will have to set you free 

It’s gonna be so hard on you 

You’ll wonder 

How you blew your shot with me 

And how forgiving I can be 

Since the day you winced away 

I have been so happy 

Now I’ve seen what lies beneath 

Your sweet velvet wrapping 

(It’s not the same) 

Such a cryin’ crime to consent 

To self-kidnapping 

Couldn’t tell if the spells we’re under 

Were overlapping 

(It’s such a shame) 

Darlin’ if you’ve been untrue 

Then I will have to set you free 

It’s gonna be so hard on you 

You’ll wonder 

How you blew your shot with me 

And how forgiving I can be 

Is not enough 

It’s not enough for you to miss what we had 

That’s not what love should be 

(It’s a luxury!) 

I spent so long singin’ swan songs 

You nearly made me make a martyr out of me 

I’m settin’ you free! 

(You’ll wonder) 

Trusted you to heal me through 

Some pseudo-Tikkun Olam 

I handed you my heart and soul 

You just freaked n’ stole ‘em 

(Got to reclaim!) 

Darlin’ if you’ve been untrue 

Then I will have to set you free 

It’s gonna be so hard on you 

You’ll wonder 

How you blew your shot with me 

And how forgiving I can be 

Is not enough 

To take you back—NO 

The video

Ridley Tankersley did excellent work Hang Ten’s video for our song “Don’t Get Me Started”, so heck yeah I was wanting to work with him again. He had this great idea of getting us a soundstage from one of the buildings at Lawrence University, where he’s an alumnus, and Sam’s girlfriend works, so they figured it out. Admittedly I didn’t quite know what a soundstage meant, but it was perfect! I mean, we couldn’t drink there, but other than that.

I had the basic idea of doing a “band” video based on the context of the “Meta Dada” Soirees; with everything having been so abstract and dashing expectations for actual live music, I thought it’d be a cool, sort of grounding moment to have a representation of a band in the mix. Goes without saying I love n’ adore these dudes, so the chance to act like we were a band was a blast.

Couple other notes: 1. Sam had the idea for the giant pick, which I loved as a nod to my using a pick to play bass on this one, which I hadn’t done since “Stinky Hole Epidemic” for the first Muddy Udders album. 2. Alex is briefly seen playing the cigar box guitar in the video, too. Miss you, CJ.

I hadn’t given Ridley any direction beyond “you know, like a band video,” and I felt pretty bad about it, so I started to write what were some general suggestions but got super carried away, and ultimately gave him this huge document of time-coded shots and sequences for the entire video. Swung the pendulum from underguided to micromanaged. So I tried to walk it back and told him to take or primarily leave whatever ideas he wanted from it, but that dude seriously, mind-blowingly found a way to bring that mess to life, and do so way cooler than whatever I would’ve pictured.

Further, additional props for Ridley. Dude had total command of that soundstage, leaping across ladders, programming lights, scaling curtains and the like. Then he edited it masterfully and totally creatively. Man’s a gem. Ultra-talented musician, too. Thank you forever, Ridley!

And thank you for diving deeper on these tunes! We’re now two-thirds through. For some timeline context, at this point in recording we took a couple of months off; I had gigs with The Blowtorches and The Foamers? to study up on, and Hang Ten had our first shows to prepare for. 

See ya next week! 

-Matty 

New “Meta Dada” Interview: Into The Music

Just this morning my latest interview published—a phone chat with Rob at Into The Music. Rob came up with all these great questions, like asking what my humor influences are, and played four songs off “Meta Dada”, including some that have not yet been released via the venerable #MattyMonday series.

This is the first time I’ve gotten to chat about the songs since the record’s been out, and the whole thing was a ton of fun. Check ‘er on out!

Stream the interview: Matty Day Releases An Album As Eclectic As His Long Career

I’ve been a fan of this show for quite a while and it was an honor to be on ‘er. Exact same goes for my recent interviews on Rooted Wisconsin and Fox Cities Core.

Local independent media is totally unique and vital. Hope you’ve been getting a kick out of the “Meta Dada” media dash, and longer term, please support, follow, and share these platforms.

Darrell B. Love,

-Matthew T. Day

#MattyMonday – “I Need Another Vice” and “Sunburn”

Welcome to the third edition #MattyMonday, the streaming debuts of songs off my new album “Meta Dada”.

ICYMI (or T, for “Them?”), Episode 1 featured Tracks 1 & 2: “Satan Gave Me Sunglasses” and “Media Casualty”, and Episode 2 featured Tracks 3 & 4: “In Our Coldest Time and “Mild”.

LPs are available at record stores in Green Bay and Appleton as well as on my Bandcamp page, but each Monday I’ll be rolling out the songs online—you name the platform, they’re gonna be on it. If you haven’t heard the songs before, I recommend listening to them first before reading all the context and lyrics. For those who have heard the music, I hope these posts will add to your experience. 

*Note* — I am and likely always will be an Album Appreciator, and if you happen to also fall into that niche, you might consider waiting til all these songs are out (or, dude, just buy the record now) because I truly did try and shape these 12 songs for a single, continuous listening session. No judgment either way, though; mostly glad you’re checking out the songs, however be your bag.

Eyyy, it’s Side A! I keep thinking I’m gonna slow down to one song a week, but as is, it’s been so tough to not share all these at once. Enjoy another two-fer for today, anyway!

Track 5: “I Need Another Vice”

Bandcamp

Spotify

The players

Pedal Steel: Frank Anderson

Back-Up Vocals: Cory Chisel, Ryan Seefeldt

Drums, Percussion: Andy Klaus

Harmonies: Sam Farrell, Alex Drossart

Keys: Alex Drossart

Claps: All

Acoustic Guitar, Upright Bass: Matty Day

The session

I had Andy in mind for drums on this one because I hoped he’d bring a bit of extra musicality to some country drumming the way he did for The Priggs song “It Will Be Too Soon”. Boy, was I ever wrong. Iiii kid. I gave him no direction, yet Andy was fantastic. To a bit of his chagrin, we kept what may have been his second, at most his third take on drumming it. Andy’s an outstanding musician, but he’s not altogether used to working in more of a slapdash style as we embraced for these sessions. “Perfect is the enemy of good”—is that the phrase? It was certainly the ethos, and though I felt a pang of sympathy for Andy, he should never have questioned his completely loose and naturally spot-on playing; in fact that punk should’ve just been glad we let him hang out with us. Why can I not write this without ripping on him. I love Andy Klaus like a brother. He’s my daughter’s piano teacher for two years running, and just one of the greatest dudes. That’s him cracking open a cold one (of pop, if I recall) toward the end of the song.

And hey, I got a taste of this sort of trust-your-instincts-and-studio-engineers situation myself, as I went in intending to play bass in a very simple, unobtrusive way—to “serve the song,” as it were—but Frank Anderson was having precisely none of that. He told me to play… I forget how he would’ve worded it, but basically to play more interestingly. As per usual I hadn’t prepared my bass part, and with this newly insisted direction, I was unsure kinda like Andy must’ve been, but I didn’t whine about it like he did, that crying whiner. Granted, Andy may recall all of these events a bit differently, so I look forward to reading his blog responding to these allegations. The floor is yours, Andrew. Anyway, Frank was right. (Holy Concert Café flashbacks.)

Frank’s a brilliantly bold fellow, someone whose wisdom is cherished by many of us musicians. Cumulatively, I talked to Frank on the phone more than I talked to anyone else last year, largely at random moments, and primarily about music. Frank’s described himself as a Forrest Gump-type figure with music. (Check out the first interview and the second interview he did on Fox Cities Core. [He did a third interview with his excellent band Zebra Mussel, too.]) One of my favorite how-in-the-world moments of his was when he was in the parking lot of the mental hospital where/when The Cramps were performing inside. Frank’s dislike of The Cramps is one of the only areas where he and I disagree, but always respectfully.

Beyond his passionate opinions, Frank, having been a session musician for Butch Vig during the heyday of Smart Studios, is a boon to any session for musicality as well. Funny thing, though: when I asked Frank to play pedal steel on this song, I’d never actually heard him play before.

Soon as he plugged in I was floored—as advertised and then some. We decided that day to add a key change coming out of each instrumental interlude; I liked starting in the same key “Mild” ended in to somewhat orient the listener after that wild ride—but the key changes felt write for a country song with a simple melody/structure. Frank nimbly worked around those. We had him play a clean track, coming in after the second verse and going through the whole song. After this session I got to do a few gigs alongside Frank with Boy Howdy and The Electric Ranch Hands, and I gleaned all kinds of wisdom from Frank regarding instruments staying out of each other’s way (which I’m hoping to employ for Country Holla) and he did that masterfully on this track, just intuitively.

Originally I intended for Frank to take the first half of the solo on steel, then Alex have the second half on keys, which was also what we did for The Priggs’ “It Will Be Too Soon”, albeit with Bob Parins, then of the band of Montreal (and still, as we were shocked to find out, a Green Bay native) on steel.

But then Frank used some effects pedals that made his instrument sound incredibly like something Sneaky Pete Kleinow would employ, and it was pretty exciting since I’d expected him to just play it clean. I don’t know if we discussed Frank taking the whole solo, but it felt totally right.

For almost all our Wednesday evening sessions, I would leave work in Green Bay and drive straight to Appleton, and we did try, honest, to have dinner on occasion. I was told Frank’s a big McDonald’s fan, so got a bunch of that to eat—yet another glorious vice in the subtext.

Cory popped in for this session and suddenly it was a party. We showed him what we’d been working on and he started talking and singing in this crazy cartoony voice, and there was no way it wasn’t gonna make it on the song. Just way too fun. Fortunately I had the wherewithal to snap a few pics:

Andy Klaus
Frank Anderson, setting up his steel
Sam, dialin’ n’ profilin’
Andy, Cory, Frank

We bookmarked where we wanted Ryan’s Peppy LePew lines and had him add at another session. With retroactive apologies to Valentine, the actual French speaker on “In Our Coldest Time”.

Uh, Matty, what’s the deal here

Sometime in 2011, Tom Smith asked me to do a solo set to open for The Hooten Hallers at the Crunchy Frog. I think my Muddy Udders bandmates couldn’t do the date. So I challenged myself to not only play my first ever solo show, but to learn some new covers (Redd Kross’ “Play My Song”, Beck’s “Nightmare Hippy Girl”, Bowie’s “Black Country Rock”, and a one-man band, cigar box guitar version Alice Cooper’s “No More Mr. Nice Guy” a la Pat MacDonald) and to write and play a set of entirely new material. I was going to do almost the whole thing on acoustic guitar, with a tambourine around my ankle, and I bought a harmonica rack and some harps in different keys to make it happen.

I cleared a nice early summer day to just work on songs on my back porch on Stadium Drive, looking out at Lambeau Field, and finished a number of songs, some that were already started, others that I started and finished that day. A couple of these are good but still shelved; one was recorded for the fourth, still-shelved Muddy Udders album; two appeared on MU’s third album (“Rage Red, Sorrow Blue” and “I’d Trade It All For You”), and then “I Need Another Vice”.

Pretty fruitful day for me. Here are a couple shots from the show, billed as Matte Jones:

Pulling the tambourine over my shoe.

Worth mentioning that other than that show and a solo set I’m so glad I played at my grandma’s retirement home (about a year before she passed), the “Meta Dada” shows were the only “solo” performances I’ve ever done. I was glad I did that first one at the Frog, not just for the songs I wrote for it, but in the sense that it taught me I really wasn’t interested in playing solo, which was largely the reason why until this album, I never wanted to go it alone.

In 2012, on perhaps my favorite night of my favorite tour, Muddy Udders/F*ck Knights, after having a blast playing at two different house shows in Murfreesboro, TN, we hung out in some giant old house and passed a guitar around. Kyle Lewis was there, who I haven’t run into for a bit (looks like he’s still playing guitar for Maggie Rose). Roelke told me to play something I’d written. It was probably 4 a.m., but this one had stuck with me enough to remember it, and until “Meta Dada” I hadn’t played it since.

Lotta history there, huh. For the song itself, of course I’m showing a progression of attempts to fill The Void. Placed in the context of “Meta Dada” it works to further this evolution of figuring out how to get through life. The old kicks lose their thrill. It’s an ill-fated search for meaning, rather than actively creating it for oneself, imposing it a la Nietzsche’s active nihilism. I say ill-fated because that last verse—which so perfectly contained the happy accident of Frank making an atonal slide noise after his solo, perfectly sounding like a speeding car on a highway—I’d really intended as pondering suicide as some morbid final vice, and I’d meant for that last B Major chord to go minor and simply ring out for drama. Sam felt otherwise; particularly in that great studio setting, he was the one who pushed for it to end on a party, which made for Cory’s hilarious ad-libbing and everything, effectively taking what I’d intended as a low point and making it a high one. Just a great call.

After the sonic far-out-ness of “Mild”, about the only move was to 180 to something rootsy. Seemingly, at least; we tried to do something similar to Pete, Paul & Mary’s “I Dig Rock & Roll Music” where the accompaniment morphs with each verse.

Lyrics

Once upon a time I breathed my first

Every following breath got worse

So began my search

For ways to make life nice

First I found cartoons, then fruit snacks

Got lost in library stacks

Different distractions

Something to suffice

I Need Another Vice

Guess what: girls came

I did, too

Chased ‘em ‘round like Pepé Le Pew

Threw myself into

The nearest pair of thighs

(Mon chéri…)

I need another vice

Drugs, drugs, drugs, drugs

Drugs, drugs, drugs

Oh man, I’m pretty f#¢ked up!

A new view for my vulnerable eyes

I need another vice—I need one!

(I need another one)

I can hear the highway from my house

To me it sounds like Santa Claus

Every exit presents a paradise

I need another vice

(How ‘bout a Dilly Bar?)

Track 5: “Sunburn”

Bandcamp

Spotify

The players

Drums, Percussion: Ethan Noordyk

Trumpet: Brent Turney

Spiritual Chant: Ryan Seefeldt, Alex Drossart, Sam Farrell, Matty Day

Additional Electric Guitar: Sam Farrell

Keys: Alex Drossart

Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Upright Bass, Acoustic Baritone Guitar, Acoustic 12-String Guitar, Whistling: Matty Day

The session

I’d known Ethan for probably a decade. He was the drummer for the Overserved Gentlemen, featuring our mutual friend Craig Baumann (who I’d met back when he was in the Milwaukee band We Are Your Father), as well as Dan Kimpel. Dan not only plays pedal steel for Country Holla, but he lent me the upright bass I play on much of this album.

One day I went into my favorite local brewery, Stillmank, and was totally surprised to see Ethan working there—I had no idea he’d even moved to Green Bay. I’m still pumped about that; he’s such a good guy, and I’ve gotten to do some ice fishing out at his place on the Bay. Like Frank in the previous track, though a few years later, Ethan was also a session player at Smart Studios. He got that gig after drumming for a rockabilly band called The Blowtorches. Coincidentally, I was asked to fill in for the ‘Torches in 2022 for what would be their four-show swan song. The singer and bass player, Steve Golla and Dan Howe, are with me doing Country Holla now. Tidy stuff, huh?

Ethan’s mostly been playing jazz, both for the Standard Collective and for the Green Bay Jazz Orchestra, and occasionally filling in with Brass Differential. He was stoked to play on something a bit different. He was always totally inventive playing with Overserved Gentlemen, and he was game for anything, even my customarily underperformed demo. He brought a huge box of percussion instruments to add to this one. But his drumming and preparation were just incredible. Sam and Alex had never met him before, and he knocked their socks off.

I got to play an acoustic guitar with nylon strings that my grandma had given me; she had an idea to try to learn it in her 70s, but figured I’d get more use out of it. I also got to use Cory’s acoustic baritone, and my man Travis Pashek’s Gretsch electric, the red one I often played with The Foamers?.

Brent came recommended by Alex from playing together in Big Mouth and the Power Tool Horns. I’d always imagined trumpet there, but we had to wait quite a while to track it, really toward the end of all the recording, because of scheduling issues. In the meantime, I’d actually considered commissioning Theremin for what was going to be the trumpet part. I’ve followed Via Mardot on Instagram for a while, and she put out a post saying she was open for some commission work. I had this clever idea that she could try to harmonize two Theremin tracks, and I thought she’d be really excited about it, too, not to mention the cash I’d send her way. Turns out I was quite out of my league: she was soon busy recording with Roger Waters his updated solo version of “Dark Side of the Moon”, which struck us all as pretty funny when we found that out—Matty Day or Roger Waters; tough call there! The Theremin idea was really just me trying to come up with an unexpected, potential improvement due to the scheduling issues, but I loved what Brent did on it. He drove to Appleton from Stevens Point and knocked out his part with aplomb in like half an hour.

While I’d consider this song an instrumental, it was just begging for some sort of intense utterances or chants, which clearly meant we needed Ryan Seefeldt again. Ryan, Sam, Alex, and I—known, by us, as The Deadbirds—threw our hearts into this chant of Ryan’s concoction. Like David Lynch discussing “Eraserhead”, Ryan describes this chant as incredibly spiritual, but refuses to expand on that assertion. Perhaps unsurprisingly, we originally overdid the very-fun-to-do “wee-a-wop”s, and trimming them down was a comically serious endeavor.

Alex brought in all kinds of color to this one, and Sam added the wounded electric guitar swells before the buildup.

Another huge assist on this one goes to Domenic Marcantonio, leader of Beach Patrol, for which I was bassist for a year. I was desperate to add castanets to this song, but no one I knew had any, so I was prepared to drive to Oshkosh to buy some for over $100. I made one last desperate trip to Heid Music in Green Bay to see what I could possibly find, when I ran into Domenic, and when I told him my idea he suggested I use musical spoons instead, right there on the shelf for $10. Yes, yes, yes! I owe you one, Nick!

Uh, Matty, what’s the deal here

This is another tune based off an idea I’d held onto for a long time; I just found a partial demo of it from 2011, oddly enough like “I Need Another Vice”.

Of course it’s got this southwestern flare, but I’d still classify it as a surf tune. My first foray into instrumental surf was “Rugburn” for Muddy Udders. That one was sort of my attempt at a Ventures style song. Then I pushed myself into more of a Dick Dale direction with my next one, and called it “Drugburn” , also for MU.

I decided to name the track “Sunburn” so’s to complete a not-terribly-connected trilogy. I’d always imagined giving it a big cinematic sound, like The Shadows meet Ennio Morricone. I never could quite imagine Muddy Udders in a studio session that would be able to suggest that scope, but we never got around to trying it regardless, and instead the “Burn Trilogy” completes here.

The sense of “Sunburn” here, suggests an overdoing, with regard to “Vice” before it. But it still feels like an empowering piece rather than weakening, especially moving past the cold and dungeon vibes of earlier, not to mention replacing the dingy electric glow of screens with healthful sun.

Performance

Unfortunately, the video of the full “Meta Dada Soiree” release show in Green Bay did not work out as hoped. (Read more about it here.) But—thankfully, my father-in-law happened to record this full song; my mother-in-law had to leave the performance to take care of my baby daughter (since my wife was up on stage for this one), so my father-in-law filmed it so my mother-in-law wouldn’t miss it. Serendipitous:

Lyrics

(Approximately)

WEE-A-WOP

Half way through the album, six down and half a dozen to go! All gratitude to the fine folks who helped make these recordings.

‘Til next Monday,

-Matty

#MattyMonday – “In Our Coldest Time” and “Mild”

Pics by Tiffany Fellenz

Welcome to the second edition #MattyMonday, the streaming debuts of songs off my new album “Meta Dada”.

ICYMI, Episode 1 featured Tracks 1 & 2: “Satan Gave Me Sunglasses” and “Media Casualty”.

LPs are available at local record stores and on my Bandcamp page, but each Monday I’ll be rolling out the songs online—you name the platform, they’re gonna be on it. If you haven’t heard the songs before, I recommend listening to them first before reading all the context and lyrics. For those who have heard the music, I hope these posts will add to your experience. 

*Note* — I am and likely always will be an Album Appreciator, and if you happen to also fall in that niche, you might consider waiting until all these songs are out (or, dude, just buy the record now) because I truly did try and shape these 12 songs for a single, continuous listening session. No judgment either way, though; mostly glad you’re checking out the songs, however be your bag. 

I only meant to do two songs last week to introduce this concept, but I kinda like the way the two different songs can play off each other, so at least for this #MattyMonday, here’s another duo of “Meta Dada” ditties, starting with a particularly chill number:

Track 3: “In Our Coldest Time”

Links

Bandcamp

Spotify

The players

Monologue: Valentine Michel

Drums, Percussion: Sam Farrell

Keys: Alex Drossart

Acoustic Guitar, Electric Bass: Matty Day

The session

This song, ornate as it came off, was perhaps the most brisk (pun: accepted) of all the album’s songs. The structure itself is quite straightforward, and beyond Valentine’s monologue, it features no guest performers, which can’t be said for any other tracks on the album.

For whatever reason Alex wasn’t around when we started tracking. I had the structure/chords, the lead guitar line, the vocal melodies, the lyrics, and an idea of what the drums should do; as I did with “Media Casualty”, I had completely forgotten to come up with a bass part. I showed Sam my impression of what the drums should do, and he wound up recording himself doing an improved version and looping it. For what was to be a pensive late ‘60s song, it had a surprising, underlying groove. That foundation helped me play the guitar parts more delicately, but also inspired me to play the bass part more groovily, too, doing some Donald “Duck” Dunn-type runs. We may have considered using the drum loop as a scratch/placeholder, but there was something so satisfying about it, and by that time we’d built around it, so we delightfully kept it. Again, I was so pleasantly surprised at this rhythmic bedrock—I’d never messed with loops before, nor would this be the last time on this album—after which Alex joined and added all this delightfully baroque, pastel color.

From start to finish this song took us four hours, including chill time, naturally.

Uh, Matty, what’s the deal here

I’d had the main melody, sans lyrics, for perhaps six years. This is the first of three songs on the album I had imagined would be Priggs songs.

Not that they’re nonsense, but the lyrics were almost entirely made to match the melody. Other than the recurrence of the song title, it’s a bit all over; Van Dyke Parks style of wordplay, with some pseudo-rhymed finishing phrases (“Andalou”/”out the blue”). Maybe it corresponds to some sort of icy, detached academia, though sung warmly enough with double-tracked vocals. Blue coldness + red warmth = perfect for purple prose?

I’d had the idea for the French monologue intro, probably inspired by T. Rex and The Mystery Girls. Sam happened to have a French friend, Valentine (“val-en-Teen”), and wonderfully she was game to do record and send a simple phone memo recording. I had used an online translator to change my English-written intro, but she graciously cleared it up—though to this day I don’t know exactly what she says. One change, though, was that originally I’d had her use the French word for “Day” instead of saying my last name as is, but then it just sounded like a random snippet of French dialogue, so she graciously re-recorded it, and Sam dropped the file in and timed it up over Alex’s keys. Merci beaucoup, Valentine!

For those keeping track, so far you’ve heard English, Latin, and French—who knows what else you’ll encounter on this expedition! Not Italian, though, as I mentioned in this list:

I won’t belabor the album concepts/motifs introduced/perpetuated in this song because they’re probably pretty obvious to you, though maybe the Chronos/Greco-Roman mythology bit deserves mention. But in terms of album arc, by my estimation, so far we’ve rejected Christianity, amused ourselves to death, and found ourselves left in the cold. Le sigh…

Lyrics

(Approximate French translation:

Ladies and gentlemen,

Listen to this song with all your heart,

And let it change you deeply.

Presenting: “In Our Coldest Time”,

By Matthew Day)

In Our Coldest Time

Catch our frozen breath

Even in tropical clime

Scarcely recognize

The way we look inside

Breaking Un Chien Andalou

In our coldest time

Fail to see the sleeting waters

On our eyes

Feel our central nervous tics

Beatified

Sigh a final allelu—

Typical of the cynical types

To smile while they cry

Shifting the look from left eye to right

Trimming the eccentricities

Just to re-dandify

How many times do we learn not what to do?

Don’t surf sub-lunar tide

Bid it valedictory for

The first last time

Sighs of seismic ‘portionate,

Surprising prime

Peak a fine height out the blue

Onto ardent rendezvous…

Slow raindrops solidify

Upon my windscreen

No matter, no need to take a drive

Oh, I find you interesting,

You may not like why

All of us fell in love when we withdrew

As we acquiesce

Always searching

Chalk it up to experience

Do believe I’m done pining

For past movements

To progress, yes I’m prone

In our coldest time

Less concerned with messaging

Than words that rhyme

Hold the phone,

Caress the wristwatch you unwind

Toss Chronos another stone

Track 4: “Mild”

Links

Bandcamp

Spotify

The players

Drums, Percussion: Ryan Seefeldt

Back-Up Vocals: Jaci Day

Keys, Acoustic Guitar, Synths: Alex Drossart

Additional Electric Bass: Sam Farrell

Upright Bass, Electric Guitar, Electric Bass: Matty Day

The session

This song has three basic parts, which required at least three, several-hour, Wednesday night sessions. It started with getting the main upright bass riff, then have Ryan pound away to that, and then do another pass or two adding some more improvised fills. Loved bringing Ryan in to do something so far out; Sam, Alex, Ryan and I have played countless shows together, with Cory Chisel, J-Council, and Adriel Denae, but also backing up Shannon Shaw, Chuck Auerbach, Rev Sekou, and tons more of incredible one-offs.

Building up that groove was a blast. Cory popped in and bolstered the vibe, and somehow the idea came up for Ryan to shake one of those giant tubs of cheeseballs for percussion. Alex did some free jazzish piano plinkery, Sam filled in the low end with some murky electric bass, and I added something of a trip-hop guitar line. We did this before I knew what I was going to do lyrically, so we actually recorded quite a bit more than we needed. Loved the disoriented, hypnotic groove. We decided it would add to that by disregarding a more rhythmic cadence for the vocals, opting for laconic sing-speak.

For the second part, as per usual I supplied an awful demo, and Alex simply took it home and made a full righteous synth piece. We dirtied it up a bit with some distorted breathing a la Depeche Mode. Doing the low octave on the vocals was wild; it felt like Syd Barrett singing “Maisie”.

I hadn’t planned for a third part—I was thinking it would just menacingly fadeout—but something about it suggested Alex request I go full-on pop with it. With that bit of homework, I came up with the vocal, and we went as pop as possible. Jaci was game to record some “Vogue”-esque vocal snippets for us, Sam came up with the Nile Rodgers guitar part, and I added the Peter Hook bass. At some point a Shirley Temple was drank.

Uh, Matty, what’s the deal here

Great question: I’ll… get back to you on that.

Well, I had the first bass part in my back pocket for almost 15 years, and for whatever reason always imagined it going from this organic dungeon to something darkly electro. Going to something brightly electro was a mid-session revelation. On it’s face this is the weirdest song I’ve ever been part of. I’ve so primarily worked in rootsier genres, but electronic music started blowing my mind in my late teens and shattered my rigid sensibilities of what rock’n’roll is.

Writing lyrics across the drastic changes, it sort of feels like this move from (self-)loathing to radical (self-)acceptance—a warming up process of sorts, after the previous song, but hey, careful now: the pendulum may swing too far in the coming tracks!

Lyrics

(Heavy) like a gas can

On the side of a highway

I endure this blurred survey

What I had for the week,

I went through by Tuesday…

My whole life is a Mild seizure

I move like a action figure

I squander this tenure

For strangers

I’m ex-ex-extroverted

Exoteric *and* subversive

I summon the sun

While you call the curtain

Mild

And yet I cannot get a witness

I’ve got a healthy sickness

I’m an analog mess

You’re wireless

So we do the new dementia

You resent me, I repent ya

Disparate business,

Compliments offend ya—

How can we even talk?

Frankly, I’m a flawless angel

All my ideas are anti-fragile

It’s true by degrees I wager danger

Eternal Blaise Pascal

I burn internal bridges

Endless

I drive private wedges

Creative differences

Nix my solo projects

Cautious, on the fence

Still I will this selfish slog…

Will we ever get past the prologue?

Condemned to engine

I wanna be your cog

Mild

The sound of a robot breathing

Half-open blinds, Venetian

Dialed to mild

N’ no longer freezing

I haven’t come to complicate things

Benevolent manipulatings

Keep it on the D.L. I am

M-I-L-D, my friend

You wear a silver harness

You call it virtue

I call you a masochist

Snow in June

Kicked out of the scene

Stylishly realize your mildest dreams

And when she wants some good

She comes to me—mildly

That’s how I put it

So mild…

———————————————–

Just like that, you’re a third of the way through the album, and yet—as I bat my bedroom eyes—fully through to my heart for reading these so far. ‘Til next Mondee,

-Mattee

#MattyMonday – “Satan Gave Me Sunglasses” and “Media Casualty”

Welcome to the first #MattyMonday, the streaming debuts of songs off my album “Meta Dada”. The vinyl is available at local record stores and on my Bandcamp page, but I’ll be rolling out the songs online. If you haven’t heard the songs before, I recommend listening to them first before reading all the context and lyrics. For those who have heard the music, I hope these posts will add to your experience. 

*Note* — I am and likely always will be an Album Appreciator, and if you happen to also fall in that niche, you might consider waiting until all these songs are out (or, dude, just buy the record now) because I truly did try and shape these 12 songs for a single, continuous listening session. No judgment either way, though; just glad you’re checking out the songs, however’s your bag. 

To start this series with a big ol’ bifurcated bang, this debut post will feature two (2) songs off “Meta Dada”. 

1. “Satan Gave Me Sunglasses” 

Links

Bandcamp

Spotify

The players 

Harmonies: Cory Chisel, Sam Farrell, Alex Drossart
Mandolin: Tashi Litch
Fiddle: Evan Snoey
Piano & Organ: Alex Drossart
Acoustic Guitar, Upright Bass, Banjo: Matty Day 

The session 

We knocked this out quickly, in two, or was it one session? Alex was able to have Tashi and Evan, two students at Lawrence, recommended from someone in the music department, and they came to The Refuge, did one warm-up pass (both recording on the same track), and then nailing it on their second try. They said they’d been playing bluegrass a lot lately and yeah, they played super naturally. Cory was absolutely wonderful—I knew he would know exactly what to do, based on his outrageous music knowledge, and same thing, two takes at the most. My vocal take used was I do believe my first vocal take we laid down, intended at first as only a guide/scratch vocal, but when we went to replace it as intended, there was a solemnity to it that just fit the part, so we kept it. 

Uh, Matty, what’s the deal here 

I came up with this song maybe 15 years ago, when I was very much appreciating the melodies and harmonies of The Louvin Brothers’ gospel music. I was living in Milwaukee, but I remember going to the Green Bay Exclusive Company and sheepishly buying a CD of the Louvins’ “Songs That Tell a Story” compilation, worried Tom Smith (who I mega looked up to from the Concert Café/Rock n’ Roll High School days, but hadn’t yet befriended) would laugh me out of the store. Tom was open-minded about my selection, though, and with my heathen guilt absolved, I enjoyed the music and eventually came up with this song, my own modern crack at the style.  

One of the luxuries of working on this album so privately was the ability to confound nonexistent expectations. In this case, I guess I thought it’d be funny to make people wonder if I was using this album to declare my newfound Christianity. We managed to play it straight until the end. Upon repeat listens, it serves as about as bonkers an intro as I could have imagined, and toyed with scope and sincerity in ways that sort of blow the record open. 

Additionally, pseudo-Satanism has gotten kind of annoying; as “badass” as musicians think it is, operating within Christianity’s framework is ultimately more reverent than it is transgressive, at least by now. If I wrote this to piss off anyone, it wasn’t meek-aspirant Christians who “turn the other cheek” when attacked—where’s the fun in that? If anything it’s to weed out people who claim to be atheists but are still superstitious, or squares who don’t think their square, or people with rigid or absent senses of humor. If someone listens to this, gets a kick out of the confusion, and is still on board to hear more? Then we’re on the level! Said listener can and should proceed to Track 2. 

Lyrics 

Satan Gave Me Sunglasses 

Darkened down my days 

Jesus plucked those sunglasses 

Off my frightened face 

Had Jesus Christ not intervened 

My life would be a waste 

Thank you, Jesus 

Thank you, Lord 

You’ve brightened up my days 

My brights had dimmed 

My range had shrunk 

Just like the addict 

Who cannot kick junk 

I try to make my life meaningful 

Although it’s craving- and fiending-ful 

Track 2: “Media Casualty” 

Links

Bandcamp

Spotify

The players 

Drums, Tambo: Marko Marsh 

Organ, Noise: Alex Drossart 

Knobs: Sam Farrell 

Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Electric Bass: Matty Day 

The session 

Marko from The Lately struck me as the guy for drums on this one. My direction for him was basically to drum nonsensically, and to play to emulate a kid playing with the drum settings on a keyboard who keeps hitting the “fill” button at random. Marko’s an adventurous beast of a drummer and he laid waste to this one. Mike from The Lately also happened to be at The Refuge for this session. Alex and Sam helped to make it a bit more psychedelic and noisy at the end. I always intended it to be a fadeout, but we nearly kept what we had because of how fun it and candid the track ended. I’m glad we did keep it, because as is, both sides of the album seriously stressed the capabilities of how much music can fit on vinyl before the sound quality degrades. 

Once again this was all first- or second-take stuff that made it. This would be the first case of something that happened a few times, where I didn’t recognize until the session that I had no idea what I was going to do on bass. Sam suggested just playing a simple one-note driving part, which is 100% the reason this song works. 

Uh, Matty, what’s the deal here 

I came up with the guitar part perhaps seven years ago at Travis Pashek’s house before we started a Foamers? practice. I thought it might go toward that band, but I never pushed myself to make anything of it. The main riff always struck me as a Velvet Underground style, and the “chorus” like something The Hives would do. I only came up with the other, Eb to B part when I finally set about making a song out of it for this record. 

I didn’t have any idea what it’d be like vocally, though eventually the “chorus” melody popped in my head in a real Eagles of Death Metal way. Lyrically, the concept of a media casualty struck me over the last couple years, particularly with people who just seemed to have this new, entirely modern vacuity about them, whether jaded or humorless, which seems entirely the result of over-ingesting screen-based content. I’m hardly blameless in this regard, but I’d like to think I haven’t content-consumed my wits away (though, in a Dunning-Kruger sense, who wouldn’t want to think that).  

At any rate, I’m empathetic; we’ve never been faced with the awesome addiction of media stimulation, and I worry about the human brain’s ability to handle it. Just like the poor “acid casualties” of the late ‘60s who burned themselves out seeking… something… media casualties essentially do the same, though with far more socially acceptable (and in the case of iPads/phones given to toddlers, parentally mandated) means. 

I write this as a recovering childhood television junkie (among other media maladies), who also got to experience a good portion of pre-internet childhood. Though I have that perspective, I’m not promoting abstinence. Your brain is invaluable; seek what makes it stronger. 

Note: the song (and album, really) is laden with references to the works, philosophies, and anti- if not pre-Christian “immorality” of Friedrich Nietzsche. If Track 1 “took the toys away,” I had to try and offer not an outright (certainly in the metaphysical sense) replacement, but a means of overcoming one’s existence. Active nihilism—the willful imposition of meaning, not the shirking, passive whiling away of screen addiction. 

Lyrics 

Ladies and gentlemen: We’ll be doing away with dying. 

You see, long ago when the tiger smoked and the rabbit talked to dragons and all that crap… 

We begin our sprint down a predetermined digital path. 

Now, rather than stare at the void annoyed, miffed with infinity, 

A canvas can piss me off only so much before I glorify it. 

A work in progress—pre-apocalypse. 

A mess o’ molecules n’ memories 

Why plant a flower in a field of weeds? 

The end of history, birth of tragedy 

Alright: alligator prayers it is, 

Ads for graveyards. 

You didn’t ask but you got all access. 

Faberge eggs to the dregs, keg stands of NA beer… 

The virgins think it’s sexy! 

I wrote this song while you were all asleep 

Oh so susceptible to messaging 

Some people call it “compassion fatigue” 

No one bemoans a Media Casualty 

Oh no! 

Tonight the bottleneck cheered me up 

Yes I’m intense—but I just live once 

I mean… 

What kind of sad-sack would I be if I said “no”? 

I don’t ever wanna know! 

Get it off me! 

Bits of tail still stuck in my teeth (spit) 

See, I never woke up this morning, 

Cuz I never really went to sleep last night. 

Nope. The The… 

Teenage clicks, the elder scrolls, 

And the baby swipes… 

Unconscious stream-o’-genealogy o’ more-er’-less in hyper-real love 

I want ALL of the above! 

…Great service: but a bad product 

Hook it uppp 

I need some shuteye or a viral tweet 

Deciding between death n’ dopamine 

Crawl on your knees for authenticity 

Someday you’ll wish you had a man like me! 

I am a thing, you’re an idea 

Let us not perish via media! 

We’ll grab a front-row seat to this Shinola show. 

In latine: ecce homo 

Gimme just a minute to convince myself I care 

Ya know, it’s harder than it seems to keep these wise words 

From you baby birds n’ ne’er-do-wells 

And if you don’t believe me, I don’t know WHAT I’ll do! 

But consider this a warning I never got: 

Trading arms to buy new boxing gloves… 

Abandoned to novelty’s charms… 

I would if I could but FINE— 

Cauterize my bleeding heart! 

Easier done than said— 

Lean into the struggle, baby! 

Bruce Hornsby n’ brunch… 

Doing whippets n’ watching “Zeitgeist”… 

This GENEROUS universe… 

I’m giving Ma Nature a brand-new vacuum. 

But we can’t just bond over the things we think suck— 

That’s not enough! 

Society’s a social construct! 

Brainwashed, sloshed, n’ noshed by subtle cults… 

You Are Hereby Absolved of All Matters Grey, Matty Day! 

Activate the consumers!! 

…Paedomorph blues… 

The video 

When Frank Anderson came in to record on Track 5 we showed him the other songs we’d done, and he just loved this one—he made Sam pause it so he could adequately take it in. Almost immediately he said he wanted to do a video for this song, and he had the concept from the start. Filming was incredible. I even kind of trained for it because I knew how hard he would push me, and even still, what a rush! Frank is brilliant, and he and I will one day unleash mindblowing future work together. 

Enjoy this clip from before the video/album debuted: 

See you next Monday with Track 3!

-Matty

“Meta Dada” Soiree Recap and Stream Dreams

Photo by Tiffany Fellenz

Jumping right in…

The night before the first show, all three music videos were completed. The day of the first show, Oliver’s short film was completed. Four hours before the first show, the records arrived.

Those who’ve long endured my hopeless ways couldn’t be less surprised. Maybe I can blame my English heritage; I recently heard the assertion that an Englishman is at his best when it’s almost too late. But damn if it didn’t feel inevitable that this thing would come down to the wire.

We did it, though. I owe perhaps the biggest thanks to Oliver for his Herculean effort: creating the projections; finishing the “Midnight Diesel” music video; and finishing “Four White Owls” in time. During the shows he was also our stage director, making sure the stage effects and millions of props were ready on time.

Patrick Metoxen, who I’ve leaned on for countless live productions (including my wedding)… I’ve never leaned harder on him than for these shows. He was responsible for making sure each of the four videos worked; that the sound and projection were on point throughout; and switching to the music videos during the show, went off without a hitch.

The “cast”—Sam, Alex, Ryan, Jaci, and Zuzu—the fact that they were willing to do this with/for me will always blow my mind. I painted us into a ridiculous corner with these shows, and we somehow came out of it glad that we went through it! Unreal.

The venues: The Tarlton troupe were unbelievably cool throughout. Kylie is a pro’s pro. Ditto for Dana. And Tarl and Mark for accommodating the whole thing were just awesome. Kylie generously letting us rehearse there three days before the show proved indispensable—the sole reason the shows worked (to the extent they did).

And Gibson in Appleton, Melissa and Aaron were incredible for the day of. The absolutely huge thanks goes to Dave Willems for being willing to let us move the Saturday show to Gibson so last minute.

Originally the show was set to be at The Draw, which happened to be the site of what would be the last gig for The Priggs. We’d been working with John Adams who owns the building as well as first-floor tenants Coffee Wizardz (yes, Green Bay fans, they’ve got a second location in Appleton!) to pull it off. John’s a long-time amiable collaborator, and Sam from Coffee Wizards, shoot, we go back to freaking Kindergarten at Aldo Leopold, staying in touch when we both lived in Milwaukee in our 20s. The nature of these shows was entirely touch-and-go, but ultimately there were just one too many boxes we couldn’t quite check to make sure The Draw would be ideal. In light of it all, nothing but mutual love abounds.

The fact that Gibson happened to be available on a Saturday night was just a huge stroke of luck. My only regret is I hadn’t been able to promote the show’s happening at that location sooner, but it was clearly the right decision, difficult as it was to make.

For both venues, I also had to inform them the week of the show that I potentially would need to postpone; after monitoring the progress of my records being pressed, it was getting scarily apparent and increasingly likely the records might not be ready. That Tuesday was unbelievably stressful, when I had to absolutely decide whether to keep the dates as planned or push them back, and with only incomplete information to base it on: when you pay for a legitimate company to press your records, they can’t guarantee when they’ll be finished, because they need to inspect the records first, and there’s quite a bit of room for error in the vinyl medium. I’ve since heard from a friend who forced a company to jump the gun for his band’s records, telling them there wasn’t time for inspection, and later learned a good many of the records were damaged. I was not willing to risk that.

I was willing, however, to drive to Cleveland to pick them up if I needed to. I basically got to the point where if it took that extreme measure—even if it meant wiping me out with a 16-hour round trip before the show—I would do it. If there was any way to make it work, I’d make it work. I had numerous people traveling for these shows, including some from across the country. Another potential option was paying for overnight shipping, something to the tune of $500.–

You can imagine it sucked to consider all that. There were entirely logical reasons to push the bummer button and postpone the shows. I’ll forever be cosmically grateful that it worked out. Huge props to Gotta Groove Records for managing to hit my drop date. Bands, I know it’s tough, but I would not recommend booking your release shows unless you’re absolutely sure (even to the point of having them in hand) when your vinyl will be done. I left a three-and-a-half week cushion between my delivery estimate and my shows, and it was clearly inadequate and immensely risky.

Which is to say, this whole thing’s been decidedly less than assured. Would people come out to hear music they’ve never heard? Would people be pissed when they realized the shows wouldn’t have any live music? Would we—who’ve never tried anything like this—be able to make it not-a-disaster, let alone moderately entertaining—and with holding our first rehearsal just six days before the debut?! I also had nothing to base this on; the closest ideas were Alice Cooper, Tom Waits, and Sha Na Na, but those performances, theatrical and coordinated as they are, still had live music.

I had to just hope people would get it. Between all the different players and the myriad production magic, there was no way we were going to do these songs justice live. Not to mention, being absolved from having to play these songs live was a huge source of studio inspiration. But we needed to do something more eventful than just doing listening parties, too. So there you have it.

Still, once I’d committed to this outlandish release show concept, and even as I’d come up with the parts/scenes/vignettes/props/actions, and even after seeing Jake Phelps’ outstanding design for the programs for the shows, at least once a day I regretted what I’d gotten us into, and my cast mates probably more often than that!

And yet, the weekend worked. Even the ways in which it didn’t work, it worked. We got a standing ovation from a sold-out crowd at The Tarlton! And Appleton was just as cool—people being way too nice and telling us we should take this on the road. A number of people came to both shows! All the better, because as I’m sure is now understandable, we won’t be doing this show live again.

Tommy Burns did film Friday’s show—which we’re going to get together and watch at a private “wrap party” for the cast this week—but as a document it’ll be just that; if you missed the experience, what with the surprise of what we were going to do and all, now that that’s revealed there’s no re-revealing it.

On that note, it was very hard to keep this all a secret while promoting (necessitating Aaron Rodgers-esque obfuscation [Q: “Who’s in the band?” A: “The performers include…”]) and I’m just totally, completely touched people took a chance on coming to something so weird. I leaned entirely on whatever reputation I’ve built over the course of all the bands I’ve been in and projects I’ve done. I cashed in every favor and bit of goodwill to the point of indebtedness. I spent more time and money on this than any rational man should ever do, but hey, in the dada spirit, rationality is subjective, too.

Endless gratitude to all—cast, venues, audience, video producers—who made the “Meta Dada” Soirees possible. Here are some pictures people graciously shared—have a look (find even more on my Instagram highlights) and then see below for the plan on getting the music fully out there:

Photo by Tiffany Fellenz
Photo by Tiffany Fellenz
Photo by Tiffany Fellenz
Photo by Tiffany Fellenz
Photo by my dad
Photo by Elizabeth Engle
Photo by Elizabeth Engle
Photo by Tiffany Fellenz

Right: The Music!

First, thank you to all who have bought the record! Either from the shows, from Green Bay UFO Museum Gift Shop and Records, Rock N Roll Land, in person (like at last night’s Rodeo Borealis show), or on my Bandcamp page.

For my Bandcamp page, to clarify, I set that up primarily so people could order records through it. I do not have the music streaming there, or anywhere yet, but that’ll soon change—or start to.

A lower-key idea I’ve had for releasing this album is to release the music online a song or two at a time. Tomorrow will be the first #MattyMonday of however many it’ll take to roll out all the tunes. I’ll also be writing blogs about the songs, putting the lyrics online, and publishing the music videos as applicable.

Again, I don’t have much precedent for this strategy, so it will likely not be perfect, but I wanted to do something different, because again, since we’re not playing this stuff live, once all this music’s out there, that’s kinda it in terms of whatever eventfulness I can do for it.

If this is the first way people hear the individual songs, cool! I hope it’s fun to get a new song every Monday. Or, if you’re already familiar, I hope you’ll enjoy the extra context/content for them.

Tomorrow I’ll be rolling out the first two songs: “Satan Gave Me Sunglasses” and “Media Casualty”.

The cheeriest of cheers,

-Matty