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Tag Archives: Tadpoles

Martian Eye-Candy

Had the honor of being asked to contribute some eye-candy to the Todd Parker and the Witches new release, Martians…even though I have no idea what I’m doing…but at least Parker does. You can read about it in an interview with Parker and get some info about Martians here, and check out his ‘video album’ for Martians here.

Zero Sum

Helium Breeze

Martians

Conduit

Todd Parker and the Witches/Martians

MartiansTodd Parker and the Witches step out of the star chamber, and bring greetings from the red planet on Martians. Martians extends Parker’s hand even more from his ‘return’ on Greetings from The Star Chamber, using its launch pad while still building on his legacy with Tadpoles. It’s a darker album, embracing some ominous tones, but also tipping his hat to a love of pop, of all kinds, both aspects made evident on the admitted Cure-ish Zero Sum. A brooding outing, Zero Sum finds kinship with other moody cuts like the closer, Conduit. Wrapping arms around some throbbing, repetitive drone, Conduit is deeply tied to Parker’s often big closing statements; Sunrise Ocean Bender from Tadpoles’ swan-song release Whirlaway, the indirect reconnection of Disconnect from Star Chamber. At the same time, it’s a definite new tangent, revealing more detail with each pass. Martians is far from a full-scale downer invasion though. CuidadoHelium Breeze…cuts rooted in psych pop, but with a stronger loyalty to ‘song’ that frees them from being confined to a strict genre add more waves to the transmissions. In between, tracks like the outstanding Malacandra and the exotic Nakhla meld both sides into a pliant and elastic ensemble. As good as Star Chamber is—as a loose homecoming and album on its own—Martians feels more realized, more conceptually whole though there is none…sort of….That in turn makes Martians come across as more personal. Due partly to Parker approaching Martians as a coven of one as much as being a more current and vital application of where he is now, and how he got here…and there. The production is bubbly thick while paying respect to the space inside the spheres as well as in between them. Rich bass pops and bounces, animating Martians’ dynamics, especially grabbing your attention from the get-go on Malacandra. The bobbing and nodding also points the head to a New Order vibe, a band and, more tellingly, a time that had a big impact on Parker, even when buried under the psych fuzz of Tadpoles. Those kind of vapor trails and trace elements bind with where Parker’s head space is now lending Martians a sheen that’s not tied to one time, but still sounds of the now; familiar and fresh without being transient. If Star Chamber was Parker getting ‘back into the spaceship,’ Martians is the sound of the cap’n enjoying the flight without the weight of destination’s payload. Go ahead, stretch the legs inside that tin can.

Parker put down his Tang recently, had an oxygen hit, took a breath and lent his insights to Martians and what makes them tick…and finally addresses the nagging “Seger Question” that has plagued the release of Martians.

How do you perceive Martians, in relation to your ‘return’ on Greetings? Continuation, new flight plan, synthesis…?

Greetings from The Star Chamber was me getting the rust off from sitting basically idle, musically, for a decade. My equipment, other than 1 or 2  guitars, was literally in storage since Tadpoles ended in 2000. So, those tunes were culled from about a 20 year period of unfinished demos, half-baked ideas as well as a few brand new things. Additionally, it was also a reunion with drummer Mike Audino and a renewal of a creative relationship that started the Tadpoles out as a band in the first place. So, there was rust there too. But, I felt like we shook it off with Star Chamber and I was ready to jump back into making music again, albeit in a modified way, essentially as a studio-only entity.

After Star Chamber, Mike proposed that we rework a very old Tadpoles cassette album that had gone unreleased called Beautiful Music For Ugly Children from 1989 (Retitled Evil Bliss for the Witches version). That was the first serious thing he and I did together back then and really led me down a life-altering path in that I moved to NYC to form the group with Mike and went on to meet my other collaborators in the Tadpoles, as well as develop a personal life there, being married, having a daughter. So, since he was into giving that album its “due” after all these years, we decided to go back in time and approach that album again as if we were heading into the studio with our 1989 brains and proceeded to cover ourselves almost note for note, sound for sound  to the original cassette version, but with superior equipment and sound quality now. While it was a fun trip back to Weird Wonderland, it wasn’t representative of us currently.

So, It became important to find my modern voice so that the Witches project did not become an exercise in nostalgia for days gone by. As it turned out, it became obvious that Mike and I had wrapped up whatever unfinished creative business we had together through producing Star Chamber and Evil Bliss and we both decided it was time to move on once again. He made some wonderfully quirky videos for the Evil Bliss album that I hope more people get to see over time.

Martians is apparently where I’m at presently. All new songs, all written since Star Chamber. No old demos or rehashed tunes. Didn’t really plan it out, but went with my instincts and it developed song by song that ended up being the running order of the album.

They’re both your babies, both great records, but do you feel Martians is a ‘better’ album in the context of being newer material overall? More of statement than Greetings?

Thanks. I do think Martians is a better album and more of a pure statement than Greetings From the Star Chamber, which, while fun to make, is more of a hodgepodge of styles and sounds from a very wide period. Some good stuff on there, though. I think Disconnect from Star Chamber is one of the best songs I’ve ever recorded. Technically, it was a Tadpoles’ demo from the early 90′s that never saw the light of day, so I finally gave it some light in this new version. But, it was of that era. With David Max playing bass on it, Mike on drums, you have essentially the same core of musicians that recorded the Tadpoles first album, 1994′s He Fell Into The SkyMartians is probably the most personal album I’ve done. It has little to do with Martians of the little green men variety. But, I love the sci-fi imagery, and possibilities for metaphor in the theme.

Martians has a definite darker tone, aura—Zero Sum, Conduit—but also feels more personal this time around. Was that just a natural tact that emerged on its own, or a conscious choice?

Yes, darker at times. Though there are also a couple of pretty poppy tunes in Cuidado and Helium Breeze. Cuidado even has a real chorus! The personal, probably introspective side to this came naturally, I think, from working totally on my own this time. I haven’t done that over a whole album since way back when I started making songs with my 4-track in my college apartment in the 80′s. Solitude can sometimes bring that 3rd eye introspection. And without the dark, there is no light. So, I acknowledge that too. I also no longer write specifically with a band in mind that needs to play the tunes like I used to do in Tadpoles. So, there are more of the keyboards and instrumentation choices that I used to use back in the 80′s that I stopped using so much with the Tadpoles guitar-based assault.

There’s a definite flow to the record, especially leading up to the close, Conduit. How important is sequencing the record, how much decides itself? Do you think taking the time to sequence a record deeply plays into the overall tone, or message, of the record? It seems pushed to the side frequently these days.

The art of the album is unfortunately becoming a lost art in the digital download era. But, it’s certainly not lost for everyone, and not lost for me. I still appreciate a well-sequenced album that takes you somewhere, rather than a front-loaded selection of individual tracks. Not that every album has to be a concept album per se, but without getting too hippy-dippy here, there is an energy level throughout a well-considered album song sequence that ebbs and flows and directs the listener’s mood and perceptions. I think that as artist, you want to have control over that. Part of the new social network stuff that perplexes me is the idea that artists are having fans vote on song sequences, album titles, whether a song is good or not, whether it needs more or less bass, etc, all in the name of “engagement.” Even Devo, whom I respect immensely, did that for their last one. See, I’d rather hear a Devo album the way Devo wanted it, not the way a random group of  fans wanted it. I think they ended up coming to their senses and released their own version as the standard. Anyway, I’m happy to see the resurgence in the interest in vinyl releases as the idea of song sequence was very important on vinyl due to the limitations and the idea that you have essentially two opening tracks, for Side A and Side B. Even though vinyl releases have not been in the limited Bakery (Parker’s label) budget, I’ve always approached all the Tadpoles and Witches stuff that way in terms of sequencing. There is a first half of each album and a second half.

Is there a message with the emphasis on Mars?

Probably a theme I’ve worked on throughout my whole career … kinda out there. On one’s own. Alienation. That sounds kind of dark or negative, right? But, there’s the other side, too. Traveling to inner and outer destinations unknown. Exploration. While waving your Martian freak flag high. I can embrace both. Tadpoles albums, He Fell Into The Sky and Far Out come to mind with those themes. Whirlaway, too. And, I suppose I was locked away for a decade in some far off Star Chamber before sending the Greetings that I was still alive in 2010 when I got back into the spaceship.

After being in the game for more than a few plays, how much impact does what’s going on in the music universe play into where you’re at? Or does that tenure allow you to disconnect from that kind of pressure, or perceived pressure?

At this point, it’s all the bonus round for me. With my work with the Tadpoles in the 90′s, I really achieved what I had set out to do with my music to various degrees. Made a bunch of albums that I’m really proud of, that people still discover and enjoy. I played with a lot of excellent musicians, collaborators and partners, many of whom are still dear friends. I played a bunch of shows all over New York City, did some touring on the east and west coasts, and we presented ourselves as we intended to the best of our abilities and resources. So, really, that was the career. Jumping back into this a few years ago has also been very gratifying. With the technology available now, with the internet, with the social networks, I can really just focus on creating what I want to create and leave it at that. I don’t need anything else from the music universe. And, I’m happy to drop whatever I’ve got cooking into the current cosmic musical stew and I’m satisfied if it has the opportunity to reach some people who might get something from it. And, it’s still fun to meet some of these new people who like what I’ve been serving up.

Was it a conscious choice to release Martians on Bob Seger’s birthday? How do you feel about accusations of coattail riding?

Ha, If I had known that you were going to premiere Martians right on Seger’s birthday, I would have flown over to Richmond and set up a Chooglin’ party right there at the station so I could lead the midnight staff in an accapella rendition of Katmandu. Hey, that’s not a bad idea anyway. Maybe I should do a Kickstarter for that…

Martians is available via BandCamp and the usual suspects. Green or otherwise.

Get Baked and Make a Difference

Believe it…Bakery Records, home of Todd Parker & The Witches, Tadpoles, Wigdoor and most recently the long-awaited co-conduit for Tony Mentzer‘s vast catalog, is stepping up to the plate for WRIR, home of Sunrise Ocean Bender, during our fund drive. If you don’t know, the show took its name, and in many ways part of its spirit, from said Tadpoles song. A song, and band, that has had big impact on what goes on around here. And now, Bakery Records is making its own impact on WRIR and asking you to do the same.

Make a difference for independent radio, for independent media, for independent voices…not just in our outpost here in Richmond, but across the globe…and if Bakery Records and I have anything to say about it, across the universe.

All of them.

Here is your flight plan:

During WRIR’s ’13 Spring Fund Drive, if you donate $50 or more you not only get the sweet new WRIR t-shirt, but you’ll get 7 CD’s from one of America’s finest,

Tadpoles

tadpoles

Smoke GhostHe Fell Into The SkyFar OutWhirlawayKnow Your Ghosts EPDestroy Terrastock LiveUse With Headphones Late At Night – best of

PLUS, the opportunity to take a whiff of Tony Mentzer‘s seminal Smell My Finger

Ethel Had A Raincoat, from Smell My Finger:


All you have to do is donate $50 or more online at WRIR, say you dig Sunrise Ocean Bender (so we know who you are…don’t forget) and we’ll ensure the baked goods get to you. With an overwhelming whiff of gratitude and the knowledge that you waved your freak flag high–very high–for a worthy cause.

Support WRIR lp 97.3 FM, Richmond, baked to perfection.

boombox_horiz_med

Todd Parker & The Witches/King of the Castle EP

1519265302-1Todd Parker & The Witches are set to release the King of the Castle EP December 18th (available gratis for a limited time).  King of the Castle is stocked with alternates and extras from their earlier Evil Bliss outingSandwiched in-between alternates of King of the Castle is the just-eerie-enough Tammy’s Secret Wish, an orphaned Tadpoles cut from the 90s that gets a ’spacier makeover’ here. Wish fulfilled. Slip Number 2, another dark seed from Tadpoles, gets a new lease on life…appropriate considering the back-story of yet another lost king…

“David Max, Mike and I were riding the Staten Island Ferry back from Manhattan to our rented house on Staten Island where we lived and had our rehearsal studio. David had just joined the Tadpoles. A seemingly confused and disturbed individual walked up to us on the boat and asked us ‘How do you get down to the lower level?’. This was an odd question since in order to be up on the top-level of that particular boat, you had to go up the stairs. So, obviously, you go down the stairs to get to the  lower level. We directed him down there and the next thing you know, the boat was stopped in the middle of the harbor. Word got around that a guy had just jumped off the boat. Hearing the description, we knew it was our guy.  Rescue boats came and didn’t find him. This kinda freaked us out, so when we got home, we just jammed for a bit and came up with Slip Number 2, recorded it on the 4-track.   Guess we got that out of our system and we never went back to the song as it creeped us out. This remake contains the core of the song and it’s still dark, hopefully in a Joy Divisionish way. “

You can read an interview with Todd Parker and Mike Audino here.

Todd Parker & the Witches :: Evil Bliss

Todd Parker and Mike Audino Get Ugly

In early 1989, Tadpoles (then a duo of Mike Audino and me) produced a cassette-only album on our 4-track called Beautiful Music For Ugly Children and gave it out to a few friends before promptly moving on to the next batch of songs…That’s just how things we done in the days before MP3, the web and file sharing…In the 90′s, two of those songs, Judas, This is Jesus and Old Dirty Mushrooms appeared in freshly recorded form as bonus tracks on Tadpoles Far Out album and the Know Your Ghosts EP.

And that was the last Beautiful Music we ever played for Ugly Children.

Until now…

The Tadpoles, in any form, have always had an off-kilter undercurrent running through them; often buried under layers of neo-psychedelia, often more overt. This loopy bag of tricky whiffs have often been hard to nail down as to where exactly it was coming from. That is, as Parker says, ‘until now.’ In some ways Evil Bliss can loosely be viewed as a bookend to last year’s Feel Like a Freak: A Historical Sideshow of Missing Links, but with a much deeper grasp…and grope. Both reveal possibly overlooked aspects of the ‘tads catalog, but on Evil Bliss Parker and Audino stick their hands way down deep into the fertile soil; down with the old dirty mushrooms, ants and the ugly children that we all start out as. Though retooled for the modern age, Evil Bliss is inescapably of its time. Not in the stale reheated out-of-fashion fickle oven of time, but in pinpointing where, and what, the ‘tads d/evolved into. Evil Bliss roots them in the same kind of soil and era that birthed other left, right, top and bottom of center outfits like Ween, Flaming Lips and Butthole Surfers, who all in one way or another, morphed into something more tangentially ‘straight-ahead’ without abandoning the grips of their ugly childhoods. Obvious cuts like Judas, This is Jesus and Evil Bliss are signpost heavy, while others like the delightfully chirping What Is Made Is How It Is or Scrotumhead lay out a more circuitous detour prone route through their timeline.

A funny thing happened on the way to recording an album of brand new Witches material. We got sidetracked. Mike always said BMFUC was his favorite Tadpoles album. He wanted to give it another chance.

So we did.

There may be only path to where you are, but nothing says it has to be a straight line. If you look, and listen, closely enough there’s a lot happening between Point A and Point B. God forbid you grow up along the way…in the spirit of pursuing Evil Bliss and in honor of cracked rearview mirrors and fractured prisms, Parker and Audino agreed to another detour…track to track…

> Bastard is Born The Pretty Things began their seminal S.F. Sorrow with S.F. Sorrow is Born, birthing for many the definitive concept album. You delivered Bastard as the lead-in cut…is Evil Bliss a concept record, and if it is, will you admit it?

Todd Parker: That was Jimmee’s birthday song…the Tadpoles’ feisty imaginary manager, mascot and muse. That set the tone for the concept of both album and career!

> Trippingpongballing in NY I can’t say what the #1 rule of the sporting game Fight Club is, but what’s the #1 rule of Trippingpongballing?

TP: The #1 rule of Trippingpongballing is that it is only to be played in honor of Mr. Mishkin while at a picnic for Teddy Bears. Know your Kim Deitch!

Mike Audino: The first and last get switched.

> Old Dirty Mushrooms One of my favorite books when I was a real ugly child was Under a Mushroom. Free associate on this image from a childhood fave:

TP: A scene that plays out under my shoe while we sit in our dusty Staten Island basement rehearsal studio listening to answering machine messages that I feed through my echoplex on infinite loop, totally freaking out our young padawan bass player. Poor kid grew up and became a son of the void.

MA: You may see yourself under there.

> Evil Bliss What’s the opposite of ‘evil bliss?’

TP: Strawberry Shortcake served up fresh on a Perfumed Pillow by your favorite Whirling Dervish.

MA: Wincing Acquiescence.

> King of the Castle If you were adrift on a lifeboat and you had to throw one passenger overboard to make it back, who would you toss: the King of the Castle, Lord of this World or the Master of the Universe? And why.

Read more of this post

Follow Your Evil Bliss

In early 1989, Tadpoles (then a duo of Mike Audino and me) produced a cassette-only album on our 4-track called Beautiful Music For Ugly Children and gave it out to a few friends before promptly moving on to the next batch of songs.

That’s just how things we done in the days before MP3, the web and file sharing.

In the 90′s, two of those songs, Judas, This is Jesus and Old Dirty Mushrooms appeared in freshly recorded form as bonus tracks on Tadpoles Far Out album and the Know Your Ghosts EP.

And that was the last Beautiful Music we ever played for Ugly Children.

Until now…

Follow your bliss with Todd Parker & the Witches…available gratis for a limited time…more to come…in the meantime, Todd Parker & the Witches have a complete video album on their YouTube Channel…it is for the kids, the ugly children after all…

Tadpoles :: The Farm Tapes, Vol. 1

Todd Parker digs even deeper into the Tadpoles’ catalog to unearth, and replant, The Farm Tapes, Vol. 1. The first in a collection of ‘sonic experiments’ The Farm Tapes Vol. 1 give a glimpse through warped colored glasses of where Tadpoles planted those first seeds.

The Farm Tapes Series will feature demos, finished recordings and sonic experiments recorded between 1985 and 2001 by Todd Parker with the only requirement being that the recordings were produced on a cassette 4-track machine. A Fostex X-15 was used until 1989 and from then on a Yamaha MT3X was the primary recorder.

The Farm Tapes, Vol. 1 contain recordings that span the era from 1988′s twisted Dance With the Wicked Witch through the late 90′s psychedelic demos for Percolate and Jimmy Colored Glasses which appeared in re-recorded form on the Tadpoles’ albums, Smoke Ghost and Whirlaway.

Todd Parker Presents The Farm Tapes, Vol 1. is available via Todd Parker/BandCamp

Ride the Soul :: Tadpoles :: Todd Parker Presents The Farm Tapes, Vol 1. (2011, Bakery Records)


Tadpoles :: Feel Like a Freak (A Historical Sideshow of Missing Links)

Still more tasty activity in the Bakery Records camp…and a reason to wave your flag if you do indeed feel like a freak.

A companion piece to the 2001 best-of retrospective,”Use With Headphones Late At Night,” this compilation features 10 previously unreleased recordings and mixes detailing the more expansive aspects of the distinctive neo-psychedelic space-rock of the Tadpoles.

Bakery Records is making this a free download until the official release date of Sept. 6. So, get some. More info on the release and notes on each track are available at their BandCamp locale.

It goes without saying, and I do say it a lot, that Tadpoles are one of my all out favorite outfits, so this is a real treat. I didn’t cop Sunrise Ocean Bender for nothing…

If you don’t know them, here’s a chance to get a slice of ‘pole pie for nothing and get to know them. These may be alternate takes and mixes, but there is no mistaking who they came from, and where they were aiming. There’s been a flurry of activity over at Bakery, especially with Todd Parker & the Witches’ Greetings from the Star Chamber recently, some psychedelic ukulele and return visits like this with the formidable Tapdoles in various forms.

Let’s hope it keeps coming.

Todd Parker & the Witches’ Uke Fluke

Todd Parker keeps up the momentum with yet another release after dropping last year’s Greetings From the Star Chamber and the companion Star Club E.P.. This time around, Parker lifts off from a different kind of launch pad: the ukulele.

Psychedelic Uke? Yes! Its about time…. A digital-only EP from Todd Parker and the Witches featuring new Ukulele interpretations of two tunes by the Tadpoles, Todd’s 1990′s neo-psychedelic band. The Ukulele Colored Glasses EP contains the tenor ukulele as the only stringed instrument on the psychedelic-flavored foundation. Jimmy Colored Glasses, from Tadpoles’ 1999 album Whirlaway, gets a trip-hop beat and Nazareth, from Tadpoles’ 1996 album, Far Out, features Todd Parker on vocals for the first time as the Tadpoles’ version featured Nick Kramer. Instrumental versions of both songs complete the EP.

Ukulele Colored Glasses E.P. is available gratis at BandCamp until March 1st, when it will be availabe through iTunes, Amazon, etc …

Nazareth {Instrumental} :: Todd Parker & the Witches :: Ukulele Colored Glasses E.P. {Bakery Records, 2011}


:: Todd Parker interview

:: Check Mr. Parker on valis’ Wayback Machine

Todd Parker & the Witches :: The Star Club E.P.

For a cat that laid low for 10 years after Whirlaway closed the door on national treasure Tadpoles, Todd Parker has had a busy year. Not so much re-inventing his past outfit’s glory as re-visiting and expanding on it, you can say Parker picked up right where he left off.

But he hasn’t.

This year’s Greetings from the Star Chamber {Bakery Records} was not only a welcome return of Parker to the musical fray, but also a record that wasn’t content with being Tadpoles 2.0. Touching on key ingredients of his work with Tadpoles, GFTSC inverted a lot Tadpoles influences bringing some of the more subdued flourishes of his work to the forefront while really pointing out Parker’s savvy, yet off-center, grasp on pop. There was a fair chunk of GFTSC that name-checked earlier career Tadpoles beyond the return of drummer/producer Mike Audino and others to the fold. The Star Club E.P. does the same, only differently.

Squigs {Star Club Version} re-introduces and re-invents itself in seemingly surprising ways that really make sense if you’re listening. Given a New Order coat of paint, the earlier more spacier version of Squigs re-emerges as a whole new animal with its skeleton intact. It’s not shocking, or distracting, to hear more club/post-punk influences swirling to the surface: Tadpoles may have been one our best outfits of psych-rockers, but if you invest any amount of time in their catalogue you know they absorbed much, much more from the ether than just Syd and Jason Pierce. Parker and Co. were … are … too savvy to be that narrow-minded.

Next up, Pink Skies, Candy Eyes does much of what GFTSC did in re-visiting earlier Tadpoles over their more overlty rocking wares. More in-line with Ween and the Butthole Surfers, early Tadpoles was a heady mix of absurdity, whimsy and sly humor, tempered with the rock. An earlier version of Pink Skies, Candy Eyes {from Tadpoles’ Ride the Soul E.P.} danced on the edge of a more fractured, schizophrenic pop cliff. Here it gets re-invented through more electronic/loop-based filters just as Squigs got a transformation. And like Squigs, the song remains intact and doesn’t fall victim to being a ‘remake.’

Jamie’s Ambien Dream and The Star Chamber are newer tracks that fall lock-step in line with the start of the e.p., but reveal even more of Parker’s arsenal:

” … Jamie’s Ambien Dream and The Star Chamber … are closer to the synth/layered sound of The Orb than anything the Tadpoles ever attempted.” — Todd Parker

Way back in the day, there was a little band called Roxy Music that wasn’t content on just remaking what had already been done. They knew what Todd Parker & the Witches know still holds true: you have to re-model as well. Does that make it ‘new and improved?’ In a small, vague way, yes. But what’s as interesting and intriguing as Parker behind the wheel again, and probably more important, is that he wasn’t interested in driving the same car again … but are those Tadpoles’ dice hanging on the rear-view?

Squigs {Star Club Version} :: Todd Parker & the Witches :: The Star Club E.P. {Bakery Records, 2010}


:: Star Club E.P. on BandCamp

:: Todd Parker interview

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