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Event
Mister Heavenly, Mr Dream11/5
Mister Heavenly - Nick Thorburn (Islands/The Unicorns), Ryan Kattner (Man Man), and Joe Plummer (Modest Mouse/ The Shins) - http://www.misterheavenly.com/
Mr. Dream - www.myspace.com/mrdreamnyc
Metro Gallery 1700 North Charles Street Baltimore, MD 21201
www.themetrogallery.net
November 5th, 2011 :: 8pm Buy Tickets Here- http://sonar.thundertix.com/events/4194/performances
Mister Heavenly-
Mister Heavenly is a band, a threesome as charming and, sometimes, as tricky to pin down as their moniker suggests. They sing a theme song in which one voice pledges undying devotion, and another cheerfully asserts that he'll never be Mister Heavenly. Don't think of it as a conflict; it's more of a yin-yang thing. Mister Heavenly finds harmony in unexpected places.
Mister Heavenly is comprised of indie rock veterans Nick Thorburn (Islands/The Unicorns), Ryan Kattner (Man Man), and Joe Plummer (Modest Mouse). Their mutual admiration society was in place before Mister Heavenly took shape. Modest Mouse and Man Man toured together repeatedly, starting in 2007. Nick and Ryan met in Philadelphia in the final days of The Unicorns, or maybe the early days of Islands. They're not sure, but they hit it off instantly. They bonded over a lot of thingsmusic, cough syrup, being signed to the same labelbut it was one of their fundamental differences that inspired Ryan aesthetically. "I always thought that the two of our voices together would make an interesting contrast since they occupy very distinct ends of the vocal spectrum," he says.
Mister Heavenly is at the forefront of "doom wop," which is a state of mind rather than a nitpicky micro-genre. It is born from a shared love of 1950s vocal-based R&B classics by ensembles like the Penguins, the Platters, and the Moonglows, and also a fascination with ill-fated romance. The album title, Out of Love, is both a nod to passion as a motivator ("I did it out of love") and also the absence or dissolution of same ("She fell out of love with me"): two seminal lyrical themes in the annals of pop music. As it happens, the actual Mister Heavenly song "Doom Wop" owes as much to grunge and art-punk as it does '50s pop. When you mint your own style you can take such liberties.
Mister Heavenly is a songwriting collaboration, a creative push-and-pull. Sometimes Nick wrote a chorus, Ryan provided the verse, and then they hammered out the final product together. They only had three ground rules: a) Keep it short; b) Keep it simple; and c) Keep it rooted in some semblanceharmonic, lyricalof classic doo-wop. "I'd never had the opportunity to bounce songs off another person, especially one who I trusted would carry his weight, and it was very refreshing," admits Ryan.
Mister Heavenly is greater than the sum of its parts. From the outset, the participants realized they had something unique on their hands. "The songs were dark and strange but oddly addictive," says Nick. "They really sounded like a mash-up of our styles but at the same time a wholly new entity." This many-headed beast produced beguiling novelties such as the percussive rock-at-a-cultural-remove of "Pineapple Girl," a mix of sweet and unsavory inspired by the unlikely correspondence between 10 year-old Michigan resident Sarah York and ruthless Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega, and the swelling synth-pop/surf-rock fusion of "Harm You." "Reggae Pie" started out when Ryan attempted to pen a ditty in the style of American R&B singer Gino Washington but somehow migrated into burbling dub territory except for the midsection contributed by Thorburn, which suggests a more-than-passing familiarity with Paul McCartney and Wings.
Mister Heavenly is "pretty open and abstracted, and its future is undetermined, which is the way we all like it."
http://youtu.be/W0gghkzN19Q
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LocationMetro Gallery (View)
1700 North Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21201
United States
Categories
Minimum Age: 18 |
Kid Friendly: No |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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