Blogcritic’s Bill Sherman Reviews Fairyproof

A big thank you to Bill Sherman — my former Blogcritic.org colleague for the the thoughtful review of Fairyproof.

Please check out the short excerpt below, and follow through to Blogcritics to finish reading.

A contemporary fantasy romance, Constance Phillips’ Fairyproof (Crescent Moon Press) centers on Monique, a fairy princess who has fled her world to escape a forced marriage to a slimy piece of work named Eero. Pursued by her Protector brother Keiran, who is beholden to the duplicitous Eero, she winds up in Elgin, Illinois, where she meets handsome, if somewhat OCD-hampered, financial planner Daniel Elliot. Expecting to be able to use her fairy charm to immediately win him over, our heroine is startled to discover that Daniel appears to be resistant to her magic.

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Best of: An Interview with 30 Seconds to Mars

While I am in Anaheim CA, enjoying RWA 12, I am sharing some of my previous interviews and articles from days-gone-by.  I interviewed 30 Seconds to Mars in April of 2006. It was first published at Blogcritics.org.

About a week ago I had the chance to sit down with Matt Wachter and Tomo Milicevic of the band 30 Seconds to Mars and discuss their music, their videos, and how they stay connected to their ever-growing fan base. The band had been running late with back-to-back interviews so Jared and Shannon Leto were unable to sit down with us, though Jared was able to join us for a few minutes midway through. The interview took place on the band’s tour bus on March 31.

When I was prepping for this interview I came across the Mars TV podcast. How did you come up with the idea?

Matt: Actually, that was something that Jared came up with, something to be one more facet to the world of 30 Seconds to Mars and actually (he calls out) Andre … oh Andre, (then explains to me) Andre is our video editor. He’s the guy who films and edits with Jared. They put all the footage together.

It’s really great, I’ve never seen anything quite like it before.

(Andre comes up from the back of the bus): Oh you’re asking about the video podcast?

Yes

Andre: Yeah, it’s just another way for us to spread that … connectivity …

To the fans? I noticed you have a huge internet following.

Tomo: Yes! And you get to see what happens in our boring mundane life until we take the stage for an hour. Other then that it’s pretty dull.

Matt: I wouldn’t say dull in the true sense of the word. There is a lot going on.

Repetitive maybe?

Matt: No, not even repetitive, there is something new every day. We’re getting ready to shoot the video for “The Kill.” So tomorrow we play Chicago, then we’re going to go back to Toronto and we’ll shoot the video for two days. It’s going to be a busy week.

And with your schedule the shows happen one right after the other.

Matt: No rest for the weary! We will sleep when we’re dead.

How often do you plan to update the podcast?

Andre: As often as possible, I mean we’re definitely not lacking in material.

Tomo: What Andre is planning is it will be Mars TV and every week will be a new episode. So ideally, if he can keep on his game, which is easier said than done.

Matt: We usually make sure he keeps on his game.

Yeah, you do. I’ve seen him running around here while I’ve been waiting. You keep him busy.

Tomo: He’s a hard-working man.

Matt: Everyone in the family is hard-working. There is always something to be done.

In the first podcast, Jared mentioned you had finished the concept for the next video, that was for “The Kill?”

Matt: Yes.

Do you, as a band, always set the vision for the videos?

Matt: Yeah, we’re basically involved with every aspect.

Tomo: Yeah, there is nothing that happens that we didn’t create or come up with on our own.

“Attack” was just an incredible video; you did a beautiful job with it using the scratch negative technique.

Matt: That was very painstaking. A lot of time was put into that video.

The new album is so much more intimate and personal then the first one. Was that a conscious decision?

Tomo: I’m sure it was in some way conscious.

Matt: That is really more of a Jared question, but I think he definitely wanted to open up a bit.

Tomo: He still wrote it in his “Jared style” as far as the lyrics being kind of metaphoric.

And that’s what is great about the songs, everyone can draw their own interpretation of them.

Tomo: That’s the beautiful thing about music and kind of art in general. Even a painter that paints houses and trees leaves things open to interpretation.

(Jared walks on to the bus and hesitates when he realizes he is interrupting. He then joins us) Jared: Hi! How are you?

I’m great, thank you.

Jared: How is everything going in here?

Real good.

Jared: They have me slaving away out there. I’d much rather be in here having a nice conversation with you.

I understand completely. (Jared excuses himself and goes to the back of the bus, closing the door between the front compartment and the series of bunks.)

Actually, this next one is more of a Jared question too – but I’m interested to hear how you will answer. I read you took 40 songs into the studio. How do you even begin to take that down to 10?

Jared: (peeks back behind the door) Scissors! (and then slides the door shut again.)

Matt: (laughing) We flip coins. It’s difficult but the songs that are going to stand out start to stand out very quickly.

Tomo: And we picked the 10 that told the story the best.

Yes, there is a real connection between the songs.

Tomo: Right, there is cohesiveness and a flow to it.

How are they translating live?
(Jared slips back into the front compartment.)

Matt: Real well.

Tomo: Amazingly well.

Jared: Like Tchaikovsky (with a laugh).

Matt: You will see tonight.

Yes! I’m looking forward to tonight.

Matt: It’s certainly no secret, the kids know the words to the songs. It really is exciting because in the very beginning it was a little difficult.

Because no one knew the songs?

Matt: Right.

Tomo: But I will say this, in the beginning there were people singing “The Fantasy” back to us.

Matt: Oh yeah, right!

Tomo: And I’m sitting back thinking, wait a minute the album’s not even out yet.

The Internet?

Matt: Yeah, we had Internet leakage.

(To Matt) I heard you cut your finger and actually had to cancel a few dates in the beginning?

Matt: I sure did!

How’s it doing?

Matt: It’s actually completely healed. I’ve actually lost some feeling in the tip, but I’ll survive. (smile and a laugh)

Good! Well, I won’t keep you any longer. I know you have somewhere else to be. I appreciate your sitting down with me, and I look forward to the show tonight.

Best of: Interview With Frank Black

I am in Anaheim CA this week at RWA 12. In the meantime, I’m sharing some of my “best of” articles. In November of 2006, I conducted this interview with Frank Black. Enjoy!

Before his October 30 show at the House of Blues in Cleveland, Ohio, the singer/song-writer known as Frank Black sat down with me on his tour bus to discuss his music, life on the road, and the possibility of getting some new music from the Pixies.

The lyrics of some of your songs are sort of odd, and some might say controversial, Incest? Biblical violence? Los Angeles? Where do the ideas come from?

Well… I don’t know. My main challenge, I guess, is to figure out what rhymes with cinnamon. You know what I’m saying? Or any word – pick a word. That’s the level I’m working and the songs come out the way they come out. Some of them are real friendly sounding and some of them are real scary sounding.

At the end of the day, it’s entertainment and it’s about rhyming words with other words, playing word games, being cryptic, and sometimes not being cryptic. Sometimes it’s disguising what you really want to sing about. Sometimes it’s just real spontaneous without a lot of rhyme or reason to it. It’s like that famous poem by Lewis Carroll, of Alice in Wonderland, (“Jabberwocky”) “Twas brillig, and the slithy toves” and something or other. You know what I’m talking about? There’s a lot of that going on in my music and I think in most people’s music.

Fast Man Raider Man was recorded over several sessions with a wide cast of players, was it hard to stay on track so the finished product has the cohesive sound it does or did you not worry about that?

I didn’t worry too much about that. I let the producers worry about it. I just wrote songs and showed up for my sessions. Usually I would book the sessions, too. I would say, ‘Hey, I want to record in a couple of months. You want to set something up for me?’ I would invite some musicians to come and play with me and I wouldn’t worry about cohesiveness.

So you don’t worry about the over-all tone of the album?

No, not really. I just do it and hope for the best. Sometimes cohesive can be great. Sometimes very uncohesive can be okay too, if it’s balanced.

It’s just a big soup is all it is. And how is this particular soup going to taste this time around. Or another simple analogy would be making a painting. Sometimes you throw lots and lots of paint up on the canvas and you can’t get enough paint up there. Give me more paint, I need more paint. I need more canvas. I need more. Sometimes you’re like one of those modern art painters rolling around on the canvas, and other times it’s just a little line here and a little line there and you say, ‘Hey, it’s done.’

I don’t try to plan things too much. I just try to do the best I can. I think the most important thing is that you enjoy what you’re doing and not get too caught up in the music business or ‘What are people going to think?’ Will it be successful or will it be unsuccessful.

You can’t worry about that anyway.

Right, you have no control.

The song “Los Angeles” was it Zach Galifianakis or VH1 who called and asked to use your song for Late World With Zach?

Well… actually… they didn’t ask.

They didn’t?

Actually, I’m not supposed to talk about that.

We don’t have to –

We worked out an arrangement to satisfy everybody. It’s just one of those things where sometimes people will just use some of your music and you don’t find out about it until after the fact and then you have to go back and say, ‘We have to make some kind of arrangement here, because the songwriter hasn’t been taken care of.’

I don’t have anything negative to say about it. I’m satisfied with our understanding over the mis-usage of the track. But I didn’t have anything to do with the song being used. I didn’t even find out about it until the show had come and gone.

(We took a break so he could take a phone call from his wife, which was the perfect lead-in for my next question.)

I read you brought your family out on the road with you recently. How did that work out? Obviously they’re still not out here with you.

No. I have four kids and toddler boy was not into it. He didn’t like it, and was kind of stressed out. We were always changing, going to different towns, different hotel room, and we couldn’t really explain it to him.

I couldn’t say, “The road is really bumpy right now, you have to sit down,” ’cause he’s not really talking yet. With the big kids I could say, “Hey, play your Nintendo for a little bit.” Or “Sit down till we get out-of-town. The road is really bumpy.”

So he was constantly bumping his head and everything. He’d be running down the aisle here or if we weren’t looking, suddenly he’d be pressing all the buttons and all the lights would go out. He was just a lot to keep track of. Anyway, they stay at home now.

You talked about the difficulties, but did it make it easier in any way to have them out here with you?

Oh yeah, I didn’t miss my kids. My wife and I had no free time whatsoever, even though we had a nanny with us. We didn’t have any time to see each other. And little baby didn’t mind as long as she had her momma. She was pretty happy.

I think when the two babies are a bit older it will be okay to try again. I really did like being with them. I didn’t have to worry about them. I didn’t have to worry that my wife was far away. It was nice to give up all the domestic stuff… you know the stuff you do at home like taking out the trash. It was like this was our little world right here (motioning to the bus).

You were away from the normal grind, so it’s sort of a vacation, even though you’re working.

FBlack_scratch_hiI would do it again, but I think we just have to let toddler boy get a little bigger. Of course, when toddler boy is a little older, the girl will be a toddler.

So you’ll have to wait just a bit longer. Who has had the biggest influence on your life, musically or generally?

The biggest ones I always like to say are The Beatles and Bob Dylan because those are the first rock-n-roll records I listened to a lot when I was a kid. Certainly I listened to a lot of other things along the way. I like to mention Leon Russell. I like to also mention Donovan. Basically so many things influence you; it’s hard to say it’s this thing or that thing. Those are the ones I would say when I was real young.

They are the ones that steered you toward music?

No, I was already steered toward music. I was into music at a pretty young age. I think I was attracted to drums and things like that when I was real little, and that’s what got me going.

What would be the oddest song someone might be surprised to find on your iPod/MP3 Player?

(long contemplative pause) Burl Ives, I have a lot of Burl Ives on there but not the Santa Clause stuff – the ol’ folk stuff. I think some people might not expect that from me.

I think you’re right.

He’s great! He’s a really great singer, a really great personality. I encourage people to check out Burl Ives.

Definitely. Have you ever been surprised by the way an audience receives a song? Like you had a really good feeling about it, but when you presented it live, the crowd reaction was luke-warm?

Not surprised, I guess, because I’ve experienced a mediocre reaction lots of times, or an enthusiastic reaction lots of times. It’s just the way things go.

Well, once I hadn’t played a Pixies song in some years, and I had built up such tension about it, and made a big deal. Then when I did it, it was like no big deal at all. You know? People liked it, but it was no big deal. So I’d built it all up into something it really wasn’t.

Which leads me to the inevitable question, I’m sure you’re getting sick of being asked about it, but we’re all wondering. Is they’re going to be new Pixies CD?

I don’t know. I just got off the phone a little while ago, boy; I just don’t know. One of the band members is a little resistant, I can’t say who she is. But we’re tying to coax her.

Best Of: An Interview With Hal Ketchum

This week I am in Anaheim CA attending the 2012 Romance Writer’s Of America National Convention. In my absence I’m republishing some of my best of’s.  This is part of an interview I conducted with Hal Ketchum in February of 2008. It first appeared on Blogcritics.com

I planned to ask about “Poor Lila’s Ghost.” It’s quite an epic story and song. Did you have any concerns at all about it being such a non-traditional length?

I just thought it was worth it. It was worth recording. It’s such a journey; I really wanted it to make the record.

The beauty of doing a European record is they are very open to… song length is not an issue. I knew from my previous work in the U.K. that the English don’t get hung up on how long a song is. So, it seemed like a good way to get it out there. And now that I’m playing it live, people are into it and it’s really okay. People are going to either really love it or really hate it.

You’re right about the song really being a journey. I really enjoyed the track, but immediately wondered about how it would translate live. It’s good to hear it’s being received well.

It was surprising how well it was received, yes. It’s really a joy to play it. I did it with just two guitars and it really worked out. People hung in there and it was fun.

Another song on the new album is “Forever Mine.” There’s a story in the PR sheet for the album about how you wrote the song around something you overheard your wife say. Is that the first time something like that happened?

Oh no! That happens all the time in some capacity. It really does. Sometimes it’s a misunderstood phrase on an airport PA or maybe it’s a half conversation overheard. You know, eavesdropping is a great way to get material. A lot of times, it might not be exactly what somebody might have said, but that inspires a phrase that just works for me.

Do you find most of your songs are built around lyrics then?

Usually it’s lyric first, but sometimes it’s melody. And I carry a hand-held recorder everywhere I go so I can just hum or whistle a melody if one hits me. Sometimes it’s both simultaneously – lyric and melody at the same time – those are a little confusing to me, but sometimes it comes in that form. I just feel like I have my own little radio station and sometimes the static clears and something beams in from out there.

And some days it’s really fuzzy reception, right?

(Laughs) You know. You’re a writer, you know. You just can’t chase it. The beauty of it, for me, you can’t make it happen. That’s the beauty of it; I have absolutely no control over it. It’s not mine to manipulate. If I’m quiet and I sit down and clear my mind, it will present itself.

That’s the intriguing part, it’s free. Isn’t it? You can’t go buy it. You can’t sit down and say, “I think today I shall write.”

It doesn’t work that way.

No, that’s usually the kiss of death, for me anyway.

 

We were talking about “Poor Lila’s Ghost” from One More Midnight, if you go further back through your albums there is “Someplace Far Away” and “Daddy’s Oldsmobile,” which are also really well-crafted stories as well as songs. Have you ever considered story or novel writing as another creative outlet?

You know, I have. I have. I have a whole pile of short stories that I… you know. I just don’t know. I think songwriting is my niche. That’s what I do, write those little movies. I don’t know if I could pull something off in novel form. I’m just not sure.

With my short stories, I try to find resolution with everything so they’re a little too clever, I think. They’re not really stream-of-consciousness. That’s a hard thing to do.

I don’t think there’s such a thing as too clever. Do you really think there is?

I don’t know yet. I just don’t know.

Kate Miller-Heidke – an Introduction and Steven Page Concert Review

Below you’ll find my Review of Steven Page’s show at the House of Blues, Cleveland, OH, on Nov. 2 that was published on Blogcritics today.

I’m adding for my readers here a couple of video treats. At the show I was introduced to Kate Miller-Heidke and would like to pass her music on to my readers who haven’t heard her yet.

A video for her song “Caught in the Crowd” can be found on Youtube, and one for “Are you F*cking Kidding Me” aka The Facebook “Song.”

My review of the concert I went to on Tuesday is posted at Blogcritics:

“Time marches forward” and “Nothing remains the same” may be two clichés rooted in truth, but what we sometimes forget is that change can be a good – and even a freeing — thing.

page one art

I’d been living with and enjoying Steven Page’s new album (Page One) for a while and was looking forward to seeing the tracks from this — and possibly his previous solo album The Vanity Project — performed live. But what of those perfectly classic Steven Page songs that could be classified as belonging to that other part of his life (For those who’ve been living under a rock Page left Barenaked Ladies, the band he co-founded twenty years ago, last year)? Would there be none of them? If so, would I leave disappointed?

There was no reason to worry.

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Video of “Indecision,” from Page One

New Articles

This week I’ve resurrected two features at Blogcritics.org that I had set aside.  Check out Making the Rounds at General Hospital, updated weekdays after 5pm, and BC Music Goodie Bag, updated two to three times a week.

Published at BC: Win a Free Copy of Koko Dozo’s Feel The Zuzz

Koko Dozo is giving earthling fans a chance to win their new EP Feel the Zuzz by way of their newsletter: Space Alien Nation.

All participants need to do to be eligible is follow the link to the newsletter, download the “Spaceman” track, and get creative. Koko Dozo wants you to play producer and remix the track. Aside from a free copy of the EP, the big winner will also have their track featured on Koko Dozo’s MySpace profile page and serve as spokesman in an upcoming advertisement.

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Published on Blogcritics: General Hospital Tackles Tough Teen-Abuse Story

For a little over two weeks, we’ve been watching the culmination of a story that began months ago. Kristina Davis, daughter of mob-boss Sonny Corinthos and attorney Alexis Davis, has been involved in an abusive relationship with her boyfriend.

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Preview Video

Published at BC: American Idol Finalist, Jason Castro, Kicks off First Headlining Tour

Jason Castro, who finished third on the 2008 season of American Idol, announced his first ever headlining tour today. The tour will launch on April 17 at The Loft in Castro’s home town of Dallas, Texas – just days after his debut, self-titled album hits the shelves — and will continue through mid-May. A second round of summer dates are slated to be announced soon.

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At Blogcritics: Review: Koko Dozo: Feel The Zuzz

Putting Koko Dozo or their recent five track EP, Feel the Zuzz, on a particular genre shelf with a clean, neat label is a difficult task.

That pounding, repetitive rhythm could convince you to slide them into the dance category, but what about those eighties pop hooks and keyboard riffs? And let’s not forget the obvious disco sparkle and the inexplicable urge to pull on some polyester while listening.

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