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Birdsongs of the Mesozoic

 
Artist: Birdsongs of the Mesozoic
Birdsongs of the Mesozoic

Group Members:

Erik Lindgren, Ken Field, Roger Miller, Rick Scott, Michael Bierylo, Martin Swope

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Rick Scott, Martin Swope

Formal Connection With:

The Space Negros, Erik Lindgren, Roger Miller, Ken Field, Frankenstein Consort, The Moving Parts
  • Formed: 1983, Boston, MA
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Sonic Geology", "The Fossil Record, 1980-1987", "Dawn of the Cycads
  • Representative Songs: "Lost in the B-Zone", "Pulse Piece", "The Beat of the Mesozoic, Pt. 1

Biography

Birdsongs of the Mesozoic began as a side project by Roger Miller and Martin Swope, who were members of the Boston band Mission of Burma. They were joined by Rick Scott and Erik Lindgren for their debut recording, a self-titled EP, in 1983. With Mission of Burma dissolving at about this time, Birdsongs of the Mesozoic became a full-time band. The group released the LP Magnetic Flip in 1985 and an EP, Beat of the Mesozoic, in 1986.

Miller left the group in 1988 and was replaced by Ken Field on saxophone, keyboards, and percussion. The new lineup released Faultline and Pyroclastics. Swope left the group and was replaced by guitarist Michael Bierylo. This last lineup released the CD Dancing on A'A on Cuneiform.

Birdsongs of the Mesozoic plays a unique mix of rock, punk, classical, minimalism, and free-form music. Instrumentation is piano, two synthesizers, guitar, saxophone, and electronic and acoustic percussion.

Previously unreleased music by the band's original formation is presented in The Fossil Record 1980-1987 (Cuneiform). This CD includes music the band composed for To a Random, a film by Boston filmmaker Michael Burlingame. The band has collaborated with New York City's "Wooster Group" and composed music for two PBS series, Nova and Sesame Street. In 1994, members of the group were invited to be Artists-In-Residence at Dartmouth College, Massachusetts College of Art, and Emory University. During 1998, Birdsongs of the Mesozoic collaborated with NPR commentator David Greenberger to present the spoken-word/music performance 1001 Real Apes for a five-city tour. The work was expanded into a new Birdsongs album, released one year later. In the summer of 2000, the band released a new album of entirely new material, Notes From the Mesozoic. Petrophonics was also issued that same year. ~ Jim Dorsch, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Birdsongs of the Mesozoic
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Birdsongs of the Mesozoic is a musical group founded in Boston, Massachusetts in 1980.

The music of Birdsongs of the Mesozoic is almost entirely instrumental, and incorporates many different musical elements; critic Rick Anderson writes, "Very few bands have ever managed to straddle the worlds of modern classical music and rock as successfully as this one did." [1] In his liner notes for their Beat of the Mesozoic EP, Boston rock critic Eric Van dubbed them "the world's hardest-rocking chamber music quartet." Another memorable description came from Jim Sullivan of the Boston Globe: "classical-punk-jazz-car-wreck music."

Contents

Band history

Origins

Birdsongs owes its origins to the 1978 breakup of the Boston post-punk band Moving Parts, which included Erik Lindgren (vocals, keyboards) and Roger Miller (vocals, guitar). Miller went on to form the seminal post-punk group Mission of Burma (1979-1983; 2002-present), while Lindgren concentrated on production work in his home recording studio.

While the Parts' breakup had been civil, Lindgren felt the need for an act of overt reconciliation, and in late 1980, he offered free studio time to his former bandmate should Miller have any non-Burma material he wanted to record. Miller had just written his first solo piano pieces in years, and jumped at the offer. Lindgren volunteered to provide some keyboard overdubs. Given that musical differences had led to the breakup of their earlier band, both musicians were surprised at the effectiveness of the collaboration. Burma tape loop artist Martin Swope was then enlisted for further overdub work on electric guitar.

The recording project might have ended there had not Boston's Modern Method record label approached Miller and asked for a Burma track for a compilation album. Miller instead offered "Pulse Piece" from the sessions, naming the makeshift group "Birdsongs of the Mesozoic," a reference to a Birdsongs of America album that Swope had sampled during the sessions and to then-new theories about the dinosaur ancestry of birds (Miller having been a dinosaur aficionado as a young child). The Mesozoic era covered the period of roughly 65 million years ago to 248 million years ago, and is sometimes called the "age of dinosaurs. The band created a Pterosaur silhouette as a logo, which they still use as of 2007, in a slightly modified version.

Birdsongs established and performs live

Nothing further might have come from the project had not Modern Method also asked Miller if Birdsongs could perform at the album's 1981 record release party. For this performance, a lineup was assembled consisting of Miller on piano, Lindgren on synthesizer, Swope on guitar, and Rick Scott on electric organ, with all members doubling on percussion instruments. (Miller and Scott had both previously lived in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and had been bandmates in the short-lived Red Ants in that city.)

While there had been no intention to play more than the one gig, audience response was so strong that further shows were booked. The ensemble became a significant side project for Miller and Swope, and recorded a six-song eponymous EP (virtually the entire repertoire at the time) for Burma's label Ace of Hearts. Birdsongs opened for Burma at least once, and Burma's drummer Peter Prescott contributed to Birdsongs recordings and performances.

When Miller's tinnitus worsened in 1982, the existence of Birdsongs as a quieter alternative was a significant factor in Miller's decision to end Mission of Burma in 1983. In fact, he stopped writing Burma material and began writing more aggressive material for Birdsongs, such as "Shiny Golden Snakes" (which became the lead track of their first full-length album, Magnetic Flip.) After Burma's breakup, Birdsongs became democratized, and Swope, Scott, and especially Lindgren began composing original material.

They did occasional cover songs, which demonstrated the breadth of their influences: An adaptation of Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring, the theme songs to two animated television shows (Rocky & Bullwinkle and The Simpsons) and two different versions of Brian Eno's "Sombre Reptiles".

After Miller and Swope leave

In 1987 Miller left the group he founded to concentrate on his Maximum Electric Piano project, which he had recently begun as a side project to Birdsongs. Miller was replaced by another Ann Arbor expatriate, saxophonist/keyboardist Steve Adams of Your Neighborhood Saxophone Quartet (who had shared many memorable bills with Birdsongs). With Adams onboard, Birdsongs music had a new jazz element to their sound. Within six months, however, Adams was offered a position in the Rova Saxophone Quartet, and was replaced by saxophonist/flautist/keyboardist Ken Field. This lineup recorded two albums for Cuneiform Records (the first featuring Adams as well).

Swope left in 1993 and was replaced by guitarist Michael Bierylo. This lineup has remained stable to 2009, and has recorded several further albums for Cuneiform. The music of the current lineup has less punk sound and more modern classical and jazz colorings than the original line-up, but their music is still very eclectic.

In 2006, Birdsongs released Extreme Spirituals, a collection of traditional American gospel songs and spirituals, with singer Oral Moses.

Discography

Albums

  • Magnetic Flip (Ace of Hearts, 1984)
  • Soundtracks (Arf Arf, 1987)
  • Faultline (Cuneiform, 1989)
  • Pyroclastics (Cuneiform, 1991)
  • Dancing on A'A (Cuneiform, 1995)
  • Petrophonics (Cuneiform, 2000)
  • The Iridium Controversy (Cuneiform, 2003)
  • Extreme Spirituals (Cuneiform, 2006)

EPs

  • Birdsongs of the Mesozoic (Ace of Hearts, 1983)
  • Beat of the Mesozoic (Ace of Hearts, 1986)

External links


 
 
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